OPINION
Girling Health Systems, Inc. (Girling) appeals the November 20, 1990 order of the United States Claims Court,
I
Girling filed suit in the Claims Court for breach of an implied-in-fact contract. Gir-ling claimed that Internal Revenue Service (IRS) Form 2553, entitled “Election by a Small Business Corporation,” contаined an offer that IRS would act in a timely manner and that this offer was accepted when Girling filed Form 2553 to elect Subchapter S status for its fiscal year ending July 31, 1987. See 26 U.S.C. § 1361 (1988). The instructions to Form 2553 contained the following pertinent language:
E. Acceptance or Non-acceptance of Election. — IRS will notify you if your election is accepted and when it will take effect. You should generally receive determinаtion on your election within 60 days after you have filed Form 2553. Do not file Form 1120S until you are notified that your election is accept-ed____
You will also be notified if your election is not accepted.
Care should be exercised to ensure the election is receivеd by Internal Revenue Service. If you are not notified of acceptance or non-acceptance of your election within 3 months of date of filing (date mailed), you should take follow-up action by corresponding with the service center where the election was filed.
(Emphasis added.)
Girling alleged that the IRS breached an implied-in-fact contract when it did not act on Girling’s Form 2553, which was filed on October 15, 1986, until December 15, 1987. When Girling’s request for Subchapter S status was finally declined by the IRS, Girling then attempted to change its accounting method from cash basis to accrual basis. Girling’s application for change of accounting was denied because it was untimely filed. Girling contended that the government’s breach of the alleged contract prevented it from timely filing an application for change of accounting and it thereby suffered damages.
The Claims Court granted the government’s motion to dismiss fоr lack of jurisdiction. It concluded that there was no implied-in-fact contract on which to base jurisdiction, and that there was no reason to allow Girling to amend its complaint from an action based on contract to an action for a tax refund.
II
The Claims Court has jurisdiction over “any claim against the United States founded ... upon any express or implied contract with the United States____” 28 U.S.C. § 1491(a)(1) (1988). The Claims Court’s jurisdiction еxtends only to actual contracts, express or implied, and not to contracts implied at law.
Hatzlachh Supply Co., v. United States,
Girling argues that the instruсtions to the IRS Form 2553 implicitly promised that the IRS would respond to a taxpayer’s election request in a reasonable time. However, the language of the instructions does not support this contention. Thе instructions state only that the taxpayer “should generally receive determination on [its] election within 60 days after [filing] Form 2553.” (Emphasis added.) This language manifests no intent to be bound. The instructions also state that “[i]f you are not nоtified of acceptance or non-acceptance of your election within 3 months of date of filing (date mailed), you should take follow-uy action by cоrresponding with the service center where the election was filed.” (Emphasis added.) By instructing the taxpayer to contact the IRS if the IRS has not acted on the requested tax status within three months, it is clear that not all Subchapter S elections are acted on within the sixty-day or even the three-month period. Thus, nо contractual promise was made by the IRS to act within any particular time. A definite promise to аct within a reasonable time, as Girling would have it, cannot be gleaned from this IRS form. Girling’s filing of Form 2553, therefore, сannot be considered as an acceptance of a contractual offer.
We аre convinced that Girling did not show either the mutuality of intent to contract or the definiteness of terms that would be necessary to support an implied contract.
See Tree Farm Dev. Corp.,
Girling relies heavily on
Merrick v. United States,
Finally, the Claims Court properly declined to permit Girling to amend its complaint in order to proceed on a tax refund theory. Girling’s damage claim did not relate to, or allege, any оverpayment of tax. Moreover, Girling did not contend that any tax refund claim had been filed with the IRS, a jurisdictional requirement for commencing a suit for refund in the Claims Court. 26 U.S.C. § 7422 (1988).
Accordingly, the Claims Court’s order dismissing Girling’s suit for lack of subject matter jurisdiction is affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
