The plaintiff, an association of flight attendants employed by United Air Lines, filed suit in the Tax Court under 26 U.S.C. § 7476 seeking a declaration that the Internal Revenue Service had erred in determining that the conversion of United’s retirement savings plan for flight attendants to a 401 (k) plan had no tax consequences. The association wanted the plan terminated rather than converted and the plan’s assets distributed to the flight attendants, and it believed that this would happen if the new plan was denied the favorable tax status that the original plan had enjoyed.
The suit had to be filed “before the ninety-first day after the day after such notice is mailed.” 26 U.S.C. § 7476(b)(5); Rule of Practice and Procedure of U.S. Tax Court 25(a). The notice was mailed to the association on August 23, 1996; the day after was August 24; the ninety-first day after August 24 was Saturday, November 23; the last day for filing the suit was therefore Friday, November 22,1996. The association did not file until the following Monday, November 25. The Tax Court dismissed the suit as untimely. It also dismissed, as moot, United’s motion to dismiss the suit on the ground that United was a necessary party and the association had failed to join it. Both the association and United appeal. The association invokes the doctrine of equitable tolling to justify its untimely filing. The government asserts that the doctrine has no application to tax cases, and alternatively that the association has failed to make a case for equitable tolling.
We must consider first whether the association has standing to litigate over the IRS’s grant of favorable tax status to United. Ordinarily a person does not have standing to complain about someone else’s receipt of a tax benefit.
Allen v. Wright,
Since the members of the association had Article III standing, so did the association.
Hunt v. Washington State Apple Advertising Comm’n,
The doctrine of equitable tolling permits a prospective plaintiff to delay filing suit beyond the statute of limitations if despite due diligence on his part he cannot obtain the information he needs in order to determine, in time to sue within the deadline, whether he has a claim on which a suit can be founded. A closely related doctrine, equitable estoppel, allows delay in suing when the defendant, in this case the IRS, has taken steps to prevent the plaintiff from suing in time. (On both doctrines, see, e.g.,
Wolin v. Smith Barney Inc.,
United asked for a ruling from the IRS on the tax status of its new plan late in 1995. On August 14 of the following year, the association asked the IRS for copies of all comments or other correspondence that had been submitted to the IRS in connection with United’s request. Nine days later the IRS mailed to the association’s president a notice of a final determination (dated the previous day) that the new plan did qualify for continued favorable tax treatment. It was this mailing that set the period for the association to challenge the determination running, and the period expired as we said on November 22. The IRS had not replied to the association’s request for comments. On the contrary, on November 15 the IRS had notified the association’s president that it had forwarded her request to the appropriate office for consideration. She should have known that it was unlikely, to say the least, that a response would be forthcoming in time for the association to prepare a pleading due a week later. And in fact the IRS did not reply until February of the following year, when it told the association that it had re *576 ceived no comments apart from those submitted by the association itself. Despite not having received any comments, the association filed its suit three days (only one business day) after the November 22 deadline expired.
When asked at oral argument how, if the comments (or at least a denial that there were any comments) were essential to its being able to file suit, the association was able to file suit before it received either the comments or the denial, the association’s lawyer said that the petition for declaratory relief that he filed on November 25, 1996, was “unreal,” that it was really a request for additional time for filing the “real” petition. But if it was “unreal,” then the Tax Court was right to dismiss it irrespective of any deadline considerations, and the association should have filed the “real” petition after it learned in February of 1997 that there were no comments. Because the association has never filed what it considers a “real” petition, we cannot gauge what difference it would make to a challenger’s ability to file a petition to have in hand either the comments or a denial that there were comments. Probably very little. The “unreal” petition asked the Tax Court to overrule the IRS’s determination and rescind the plan’s favorable tax treatment. No more was required in an initial pleading, which under the rules of the Tax Court need only be a “clear and concise statement of each ground ... and the facts to support each ground.” Rule of Practice and Procedure of the U.S. Tax Court 211(c)(4)(D).
A regulation requires the applicant (here United) for IRS approval of favorable tax treatment of a retirement plan to make any comments received on the application “immediately” available to all parties. 26 C.F.R. § 601.201(o)(3)(xvii); see also
Stevens v. Commissioner,
Statutes of limitations are not merely traps for the unwary; they serve important social purposes.
Board of Regents v. Tomanio,
Since, so far as appeal's, the association could have sued in time notwithstanding the IRS’s foot dragging, the latter’s conduct or rather nonconduct did not work an estoppel because it did not make it impossi
*577
ble for the association to sue in time. It is implicit in the doctrine that the conduct alleged as the basis for the estoppel have been the cause of the plaintiffs not suing in time. See
Speer v. Rand McNally & Co.,
Because the association has failed to make a case for equitable tolling, we need not decide (as the parties invite us to do) whether the doctrine may ever be invoked in a federal tax case. In
Irwin v. Department of Veterans Affairs,
Taking a tack independent of
Brockamp,
the government argues that because the Tax Court, being a court of limited jurisdiction
(.Brockamp
was a refund ease and thus originated in a district court rather than the Tax Court), lacks the power to recognize equitable defenses not specified by Congress. This is also the position of the Tax Court. Rule of Practice and Procedure of U.S. Tax Court 210(c)(3);
Calvert Anesthesia Associates v. Commissioner,
Had Congress delegated to the Tax Court the power to establish nonwaivable jurisdictional rules, akin to those that limit the time for taking appeals, e.g., Fed. R.App. P. 26(b);
Torres v. INS,
*578
The argument that the Tax Court cannot apply the doctrines of equitable tolling and equitable estoppel because it is a court of limited jurisdiction is fatuous.
All
federal courts are courts of limited jurisdiction.
Kokkonen v. Guardian Life Ins. Co.,
Without citing
McCoy
or
United States v. Dalm,
At argument the government’s lawyer emphasized quite properly not dry legalisms about jurisdiction but instead the importance of prompt resolution of issues involving the tax status of retirement plans, and this may justify the extension of the holding of Brock-amp to the present case after all. But that we need not decide.
Our disposition of the association’s appeal moots United’s appeal. United had moved to dismiss the suit because the association had failed to join a necessary party, namely United. Rule of Practice and Procedure of U.S. Tax Court 215(a)(3). The Tax Court denied the motion as moot when it ruled that it had no jurisdiction over the suit because it had been filed late. Although United has appealed from that denial, the appeal is conditional on our reversing the Tax Court’s dismissal of the suit, which we have not done.
So: No. 97-3151 is affirmed and No. 97-3335 is dismissed as moot.
