The estate of William Davidson Merchant III 1 appeals from a decision of the Tax Court denying litigation costs under 26 U.S.C. § 7430. We affirm.
BACKGROUND
This appeal has interesting origins. In 1981, Merchant’s residence was searched without a warrant by state officers, ostensibly on the theory that Merchant, as a probationer, had consented to the search as a condition of probation. The search was initiated after neighbors had reported gunfire in the area. 2 The state officers conducting the search discovered more than $300,000 worth of cash, 80 guns, and evidence of an illicit PCP drug operation in the house. Later that day, they notified the Internal Revenue Service of the discovery, and special agents of the IRS interviewed Merchant in jail that night. The next day, IRS agents participated with state officers in another search of a house, based on a warrant procured with the aid of evidence discovered in the earlier search.
At his resulting trial in federal district court on drug-related charges, Merchant moved to suppress the evidence discovered in both searches.
3
The district court denied the motion, and Merchant was found guilty. Merchant appealed and we reversed, holding that Merchant had not been on probation and had not consented to the unwarranted search. We held that the evidence seized in the search should have been suppressed because the state agents could not have had a reasonable, good-faith objective belief in the validity of the unwarranted search.
4
We also held the second search to have been tainted by the unconstitutional first search.
United States v. Merchant,
The government filed a petition for cer-tiorari with the Supreme Court, which was granted on June 30, 1986.
United States v. Merchant,
Meanwhile, relying on the evidence acquired in the searches, the IRS determined that Merchant had underpaid his taxes for the years 1980 and 1981. Approximately three weeks after our decision in Merchant, the IRS mailed to Merchant a deficiency notice for the years 1980 and 1981, which included a 50% fraud penalty for each year. On September 6, 1985, Merchant petitioned the Tax Court to redetermine the income tax deficiencies. In that petition, Merchant made clear that he planned to assert our decision in Merchant as a bar to the introduction of the damaging evidence in the tax proceeding. The Commissioner filed an answer to Merchant’s petition.
While the tax deficiency proceeding awaited trial in the Tax Court, the IRS, on March 12, 1986, made a “jeopardy assessment” against Merchant. The jeopardy assessment was based on the same deficiencies as those alleged in the deficiency notice awaiting final resolution in the Tax Court. Merchant challenged the jeopardy assessment by filing a civil action against *1392 the Commissioner in United States District Court pursuant to 26 U.S.C. § 7429. Merchant moved in that action, too, to suppress the evidence discovered by the state officers in the searches.
The district court heard evidence on whether there was a nexus between the state officers’ illegal search and the IRS’ participation which would require the evidence obtained in the search to be suppressed in the action contesting the jeopardy assessment. Applying the standard set out in
Adamson v. Commissioner,
On August 13, 1987, William Merchant died. In the Tax Court proceeding, the IRS then contended that Merchant’s administrator had no standing to object to the legality of the search, and that the evidence suppressed in Merchant’s criminal and jeopardy assessment eases was therefore admissible in the Tax Court proceeding. Merchant’s estate (hereafter “Merchant”), on the other hand, maintained that the district court’s June 1987 decision barred the use of the evidence under principles of res judi-cata. The tax deficiency action was finally called for trial on April 11, 1988.
Prior to trial, District Counsel for the IRS discussed the standing and res judicata issues with members of his national office. After these discussions, the District Counsel decided to concede the case. On April 11, 1988, the Tax Court entered a stipulated decision that there were no deficiencies or taxes due from Merchant. Merchant filed a motion for litigation costs. The Tax Court denied the motion. Merchant appeals.
ANALYSIS
The government concedes that Merchant exhausted his administrative remedies, and that he was a prevailing party in the Tax Court proceeding. Under the version of 26 U.S.C. § 7430 applicable to this case,
5
Merchant “may be awarded a judgment for reasonable costs incurred” in his Tax Court litigation if he can establish that “the position of the United States in the proceeding was unreasonable.” 26 U.S.C. § 7430. In making that determination, the reasonableness of the government’s prelitigation administrative actions, as well as that of its later litigating position, must be taken into account.
Sliwa v. Commissioner,
Standard of Review
We are met at the outset with a question concerning the standard of review. Merchant argues that the issue of the reasonableness of the government’s position for purposes of section 7430 is a mixed question of law and fact subject to de novo review. We so stated in
Sliwa,
In
Bertolino v. Commissioner,
In
Underwood,
the Supreme Court held that a district court’s determination whether the government’s position was “substantially justified,” for purposes of a fee award under the Equal Access to Justice Act (“EAJA”), was subject to review under an “abuse of discretion” standard. While there are differences between the relevant provision of the EAJA, 28 U.S.C. § 2412(d)(1)(A), and the version of section 7430 of the Internal Revenue Code that we deal with here, most of the Supreme Court’s reasoning applies equally to review under either provision. Whether the government’s position is “substantially justified” or is “unreasonable” are both fact-bound questions, of which much more is likely to be known to the trial court than to an appellate court.
See Underwood,
Reasonableness of the government’s position
Merchant first argues that the prelitigation activities of the government were unreasonable because the IRS agents participated in an illegal search, and then insisted upon using the evidence obtained from it. Merchant has not established the factual premise for his argument. IRS agents did not participate in the original, unwarranted search, and there is no indication that the state officers were acting from any motive that had any connection with the IRS. The second search, in which the IRS officers apparently participated, was supported by a warrant. Although that second search was tainted by the illegality of the first one, there has been no showing that the IRS officers knew or should reasonably have known that fact. We cannot say that the Tax Court abused its discretion in ruling that, in the absence of any other evidence, Merchant had failed to establish the unreasonableness of the IRS’s prelitigation activities. Our decision in
Merchant
contains no suggestion to the contrary; its rejection of the “good faith” exception to the exclusionary rule was based entirely on the conduct of state officers.
Merchant,
Merchant next argues that the government’s litigation position was unreasonable in light of existing law. Merchant concedes that in
United States v. Janis,
*1394 There is no reason, however, why the government was required to view itself as affected by Adamson during most of the time period in issue in this case. The government did not accept our ruling in Merchant that the actions of the state officers required suppression of the evidence they discovered. The government petitioned for certiorari, and the Supreme Court granted the writ. It did not dismiss that writ until March 24, 1987, after argument and briefing. By that date, virtually all of Merchant’s litigation expenses in the Tax Court had already been incurred. At least up to that point, we cannot say that it was unreasonable for the government to assert a legal position that the Supreme Court initially thought was debatable enough to justify a grant of certiorari and briefing and argument.
Merchant next contends that the district court’s decision of June 12, 1987, suppressing the evidence in the jeopardy assessment action, establishes that the government’s prelitigation and litigation positions were unreasonable. First, according to Merchant, the district court’s ruling was a strong indication of the IRS’ bad faith action in the search. We do not so read the district court’s memorandum decision. While the district court concluded that the IRS was called very shortly after the unwarranted search, and that it participated in later searches, the court did not rule that the IRS had been guilty of bad faith. It ruled only that its participation had so closely followed the unwarranted search that a “nexus” had been established that justified suppression. Taking into account all of the facts recited by the district court, we still could not say that the Tax Court abused its discretion in holding that Merchant had failed to establish unreasonable prelitigation activity by the IRS.
Merchant then argues that the decision of the district court suppressing the evidence in the jeopardy assessment proceeding was preclusive upon the Tax Court, and would have required the Tax Court to suppress the same evidence. That being the case, Merchant argues, the position of the government in continuing to contest the deficiency proceeding constituted an unreasonable litigating position. Here, too, we note that the district court’s order in the jeopardy assessment action was not filed until June 1987. The great majority of Merchant’s costs in this deficiency challenge were incurred in 1985, two years prior to that order. It seems clear that Merchant’s argument that the government’s litigating position was unreasonable because of the 1987 district court order must fail at least as to the government’s position prior to June 1987.
We turn, therefore, to the issue of whether the government’s position in the tax deficiency action after June 1987 was unreasonable in light of the suppression ruling in the jeopardy assessment case. A subsidiary question is whether the rule urged by Merchant, that a district court’s determination in a jeopardy assessment action under section 7429 is binding in a subsequent Tax Court deficiency action under section 7430, is such a well-settled rule that a challenge to it is unreasonable. We cannot say that the collateral estoppel issue is free from doubt. A jeopardy proceeding is an unappealable summary proceeding whose sole purpose is to determine the reasonableness of the jeopardy assessment,
see
26 U.S.C. § 7429(f); it has been viewed as unrelated substantively and proeedurally to
any
subsequent action brought in district court or the Tax Court to determine the correctness of the tax liability.
See e.g., United States v. Doyle,
*1395
Finally, we reject any suggestion that the fact that the government entered a stipulation conceding the tax case is proof of the government’s unreasonableness in earlier pursuing the deficiency. The government’s decision to concede, rather than to litigate an arguable legal issue, does not in itself indicate that the government’s pre-settlement position was unreasonable.
See, e.g., Allen v. United States,
CONCLUSION
The Tax Court did not abuse its discretion in ruling that Merchant had not established that the government’s position, including its prelitigation activities, was unreasonable in this proceeding. We therefore affirm the decision of the Tax Court denying Merchant his litigation costs under section 7430.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. William Davidson Merchant III died on August 13, 1987. His mother, Margaret Norling Merchant, was appointed administrator of his estate and is pursuing this appeal on behalf of the Estate of William Davidson Merchant III.
. Merchant’s disputed status of probation arose from his conviction in 1980 for brandishing firearms in violation of Calif.Penal Code § 417.
. For a detailed description of the criminal case, and the search at issue,
see United States v. Merchant,
. Without the evidence obtained in the search, the government lacked the necessary evidence to go forward with a retrial. Our decision, therefore, effectively ended the government’s criminal drug case against Merchant. The government’s civil forfeiture action folded with the criminal case.
. Section 7430 was amended in 1986 and again in 1988. The section now provides for litigation costs when the position of the government "was not substantially justified." 26 U.S.C. § 7430(c)(4)(A)(i).
. This rule of
Sliwa
does not apply to section 7430 in its present form, after the 1986 and 1988 amendments. The section now provides that the "position of the United States” in tax proceedings is to be determined from the date of the receipt by the taxpayer of the notice of decision of the Internal Revenue Service Office of Appeals, or the date of the notice of deficiency, whichever is earlier. 26 U.S.C. § 7430(c)(7)(B).
See Bertolino v. Commissioner,
. We also reject Merchant’s contention that it was unreasonable for the government to assert, *1395 for the short time that it did, that Merchant’s estate lacked standing to assert Merchant’s fourth amendment rights to suppression of the evidence. The assertion was not frivolous on its face, and any effect on Merchant’s litigation costs was clearly de minimis.
