Lead Opinion
Opinion for the court filed by Senior Circuit Judge RANDOLPH.
Opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part filed by Circuit Judge BROWN.
I.
This appeal has its genesis in 26 U.S.C. § 4251, which imposes an excise tax “on amounts paid for ... toll telephone service.” Telephone service is taxed only if its price “varies in amount with the distance and elapsed transmission time of each individual communication.” Id. § 4252(b). Technological advances of the last few decades changed cost structures and, as a result, telephone companies began charging only by elapsed transmission time. The Internal Revenue Service, however, continued to collect the tax.
Beginning in 2005, the Service lost a series of cases challenging the tax. Five courts of appeals, including this court, held that § 4251 did not permit the Service to tax telephone service with distance-invariant pricing.
After two of the three plaintiffs — Cohen and Sloan — filed their complaints, the Service issued without notice and comment Notice 2006-50, 2006-
Cohen and Sloan amended their complaints to add claims relating to Notice 2006-50 under the Administrative Procedure Act (APA), 5 U.S.C. §§ 701 et seq. See Long Distance Tel. I,
Plaintiffs appealed the dismissal of their APA claims, and a panel of this court reversed,
The full court granted the Service’s petition for rehearing en banc to consider whether the Tax Anti-Injunction Act or the Declaratory Judgment Act barred the court from hearing plaintiffs’ suits. Cohen v. United States,
On remand, the district court held that Notice 2006-50 was promulgated without notice and comment in violation of the APA. In re Long-Distance Tel. Serv. Fed. Excise Tax Refund Litig. (Long Distance Tel. II),
Plaintiffs then moved for entry of final judgment and an interim award of attorney’s fees under the Equal Access to Justice Act, 28 U.S.C. § 2412(b) & (d). The district court entered final judgment in favor of plaintiff Sloan only on her procedural APA claim. It entered judgment in favor of the government against both Cohen, who raised only substantive APA challenges that the court did not need to address, and Gurrola, who failed to raise any APA arguments. In re Long-Distance Tel. Serv. Fed. Excise Tax Refund Litig. (Long Distance Tel. III),
II.
The government argues that we have no jurisdiction to hear plaintiffs’ appeal because district court orders remanding to agencies are not final appealable decisions. See 28 U.S.C. § 1291; Sierra Club v. USDA,
But the rule is not absolute. The government may appeal these sorts of remand orders because, unlike most private parties, the government may wind up with “no opportunity to appeal” later, after it has conducted proceedings in compliance with the remand order. Occidental Petroleum Corp. v. SEC,
We may, in any case, bypass complex questions dealing with appellate jurisdiction when addressing the merits would not require us to “reach[ ] a question of law that otherwise would have gone unaddressed.” See Sherrod v. Breitbart,
The Supreme Court has endorsed this “practical” approach to finality, particularly in the “twilight zone” where “it is impossible to devise a formula to resolve all marginal eases.” Gillespie v. U.S. Steel Corp.,
III.
Plaintiffs allege that the district court erred in vacating Notice 2006-50 and remanding, without specifically instructing the Service to promulgate a new refund procedure. When, as here, a rule is promulgated without notice and comment, the APA directs the court to “hold unlawful and set aside [the] agency action.” 5 U.S.C. § 706(2). The APA also permits a court to “compel agency action unlawfully withheld.” Id. § 706(1). But that provision applies only to “discrete action” that is “legally required ... about which an official had no discretion whatever.” Norton v. S. Utah Wilderness Alliance,
Plaintiffs have not satisfied § 706(l)’s exacting requirements. 26 U.S.C. § 7422(a), which plaintiffs cite, at most requires some form of tax refund procedure. Yet one already exists. See 26 C.F.R. §§ 301.6401-1 et seq. Section 7422 does not come close to requiring what plaintiffs seek — a specific refund procedure for the telephone excise tax. Even if the code did require some excise-tax-specific procedure, it affords the Secretary of the Treasury great discretion to design the details: what procedural requirements to impose, how much time must elapse before a claimant may sue, and which forms may be used. Cf. Comm’r v. Portland Cement Co.,
Plaintiffs argue that here, unlike in Norton, the Service has already acted and therefore must correct its error. But that distinction — between acting and failing to act — is irrelevant under the APA. Courts review both types of “agency action” the same way. Id. at 62,
IV.
A.
This brings us to the request for attorney’s fees. The government contends that plaintiffs may recover attorney’s fees only under 26 U.S.C. § 7430, which applies to “proceeding^] ... [brought] in connection with the determination, collection, or refund of any tax.” Plaintiffs argue that the general fees provisions of the Equal Access to Justice Act, 28 U.S.C. § 2412(b) & (d), apply.
Both statutes allow only a “prevailing party” to recover fees. A prevailing party is one who obtains a “material alteration of the legal relationship of the parties” through a “judgment on the merits” or a “settlement agreement enforced through a consent decree.” Buckhannon Bd. & Care Home, Inc. v. W. Va. Dep’t of Health & Human Res.,
Plaintiffs protest that this reasoning is overly formalistic because both Gurrola and Cohen raised potentially meritorious substantive challenges to Notice 2006-50 that the district court never reached. We disagree. One does not become a prevailing party “by simply filing a nonfrivolous but nonetheless potentially meritless lawsuit (it will never be determined) ... without obtaining any judicial relief.” Buckhannon Bd. & Care Home,
Sloan is a prevailing party. But we do not decide whether her request for fees is governed by 26 U.S.C. § 7430 or 28 U.S.C. § 2412 because she cannot succeed under either provision. A party may not recover fees under § 7430 without first exhausting administrative remedies. Sloan does not argue that she has done so here. That leaves § 2412.
B.
Sloan argues that she may recover attorney’s fees under 28 U.S.C. § 2412(b), which makes the government liable for fees “to the same extent that any other party would be liable under the common law.” She invokes the common benefit theory, which applies when “the burden of litigation ... benefitted others who in equity should share the expenses.” 10 Charles Alan Wright, Arthur R. Miller & Mary Kay Kane, Federal Practice & Procedure: Civil § 2675 (3d ed.1998). But that theory “ill suits litigation in which the purported benefits accrue to the general public” and is available only when “the class[ ] of beneficiaries [is] small in number and easily identifiable,” “[t]he benefits c[an] be traced with some accuracy, and there [i]s reason for confidence that the costs c[an] indeed be shifted with some exactitude to those benefiting.” Alyeska Pipeline Serv. Co. v. Wilderness Soc’y,
None of the Alyeska Pipeline criteria are satisfied here. The class of beneficiaries of this litigation is potentially massive, including millions of taxpayers who used telephones. But that class is nearly impossible to ascertain with any precision because it excludes taxpayers who already claimed a refund and those who were never entitled to a refund. Even if the class could be identified, the benefits of the litigation cannot be estimated, much less determined with exactitude. That is because Sloan did not secure refunds but, at most, made it slightly easier to obtain one. Sloan makes no attempt to estimate the value of the procedural benefit her litigation actually conferred.
C.
Sloan also argues that she is entitled to attorney’s fees under 28 U.S.C. § 2412(d), which awards fees to parties prevailing against the government “unless the court finds that the position of the United States was substantially justified.”
Although the question is close we do not think the district court abused its discretion in denying fees. The district court found the government’s position to be substantially justified because several circuit judges agreed with the government and dissented from the Cohen I and Cohen III opinions. Long-Distance Tel. II,
Sloan cites opinions suggesting that an earlier dissent does not conclusively show the government’s position was substantially justified. But those cases acknowledge that prior dissents are still “properly considered when conducting th[e substantial justification] inquiry.” Friends of Boundary Waters Wilderness v. Thomas,
Here, the existence of several dissenting opinions is particularly persuasive evidence of substantial justification for two reasons. First, the court granted en banc rehearing, which is reserved for “question^] of exceptional importance” or to preserve “uniformity of the court’s decisions.” FED. R. APP. P. 35(a). If existing law had plainly favored plaintiffs, there would have been no cause for en banc review, even of a high-stakes problem. See Coal. for Responsible Regulation, Inc. v. EPA, No. 09-1322,
Second, the legal issues in the earlier appeals were difficult and amenable to reasonable disagreement. Whether Notice 2006-50 was a reviewable final rule or a policy statement, Cohen I,
Against that evidence of substantial justification, Sloan argues that the Service unjustifiably failed to acquiesce to the Eleventh Circuit’s American Bankers decision invalidating the excise tax. See Am. Bankers Ins. Grp. v. United States,
It is true that the panel and en banc majority opinions described the Service’s position in harsh terms. On that basis, one might reasonably conclude that the Service’s position was not substantially justified. See, e.g., LePage’s 2000,
Affirmed.
Notes
. Fortis, Inc. v. United States,
. Cohen (but not Gurrola or Sloan) also appealed the dismissal of his refund claims. We affirmed that part of the district court’s judgment. Cohen v. United States,
. Plaintiffs do not argue that the denial of attorney's fees is, in itself, a final appealable decision. See Pigford v. Veneman,
. In her reply brief Sloan seems to suggest Alyeska Pipeline's criteria do not apply because the government is not entitled to the money it collected under the excise tax. Sloan has not cited, and we have not found, any authority supporting that argument.
Concurrence in Part
concurring in part and dissenting in part.
This is a complicated and frustrating case. It has lasted five years and accomplished nothing. In this litigation, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) has lost every round, but, as the court’s opinion confirms, the odds are always with the house.
Round one was Cohen I,
The Service announced the demise of the refund notice and resolutely refused to take any other remedial action. Though there is no dispute about the unauthorized nature of the exaction, it intends to keep the unrefunded portions of its ill-gotten gains — a few billion dollars. Indeed, the Service fares better than the Las Vegas casinos: even when they lose, they win. Since no law “unequivocally” requires the IRS to do the right thing, they have the discretion to do wrong. The taxpayers are out of luck. It was not always thus.
I join — without reservation — the court’s jurisdictional conclusion. As for the merits, however, I cannot say the same. The Service’s recalcitrance is disconcerting, and I do not share my colleagues’ confidence that no law imposes a duty upon the Service to create a workable refund scheme. In addition, I view the majority’s EAJA analysis as reasonable, but incomplete. I therefore respectfully dissent.
I
This appeal is not a refund case. But it is about refunds. It has long been understood that there is a part-legal, part-equitable right to reclaim what the government has wrongfully taken away. Cf. Stone v. White,
The fiction, like most, caused a few headaches. See William T. Plumb, Jr., Refund Suits Against Collectors, 60 Harv. L. Rev. 685, 697-98 (1947) (describing the procedural pitfalls commonly encountered by taxpayers attempting to obtain refunds from collectors). But it endured because taxpayers needed some workable mechanism to recover funds illegally demanded. Refunds were considered to be obligations of “natural justice and equity,” not gifts of statutory grace. See Cary v. Curtis,
The Service has maintained it has no affirmative obligation to provide refunds. Nearly 170 years ago, Justice Story pointed out the problem with the Service’s position. When the Court in Cary v. Curtis,
[w]hether Congress have a right to take from the citizens all right of action in any court to recover back money claimed illegally, and extorted by compulsion, by its officers under color of law, but without any legal authority, and thus to deny them all remedy for an admitted wrong, and to clothe the Secretary of the Treasury with the sole and exclusive authority to withhold or restore that money according to his own notions of justice or right?
Id. at 253 (Story, J., dissenting). He never arrived at an answer, but he felt no need to — the idea was so unimaginable that Justice Story felt Congress could not have possibly intended a dramatic measure that would trigger a structural constitutional crisis. See id. at 257. In the end, he was right — Congress apparently did not intend the bar against collector suits, and it patched the law in record time. See George Stewart Brown, A Dissenting Opinion of Mr. Justice Story Enacted as Law Within Thirty-Six Days, 26 Va L. Rev. 759, 760 (1940) (“In thirty-six days Congress passed, and President Tyler signed, [the law] which recalled the majority ruling in [Cary ] and made Judge Story’s opinion the law of the land.”).
As the Service has made amply clear, there are “off-label” ways a taxpayer can take back the money he never owed in the first place. See Appellee’s Br. at 22 (“[The Service] announced that it would continue to process claims for refund of the defunct telephone tax, either on Form 843 or on the 1040 series of income tax returns .... ”)
What a racket. To quote Justice Story, “[wjhere then is the remedy which is supposed to exist?” Cary,
No court, no jury, nay, not even the ordinary rules of evidence, are to pass between [the Treasury] and the injured claimant, to try his rights or to secure him adequate redress.... So that in most, if not in all cases where a controversy arises, the Secretary of the Treasury has already pronounced his own judgment. Of what use then, practically speaking, is the appeal to him, since he has already given his decision?
Cary,
To remedy an agency’s failure to act, the agency’s action must be “legally required” or “unlawfully withheld.” Norton v. S. Utah Wilderness Alliance,
The Appellants’ position — and the court’s arguendo assumption — that § 7422(a) imposes some sort of duty to provide a workable refund scheme — seems dubious. Nowadays, to treat a statute as both jurisdictional and substantive, as the Appellants suggest we do with § 7422(a), is odd. See Arbaugh v. Y & H Corp.,
The majority alternatively posits the Secretary has fulfilled whatever duty is owed; because he possesses “great discretion to design the details,” no further action can be compelled. See Maj. Op. at 634. The duty, however, is to create a workable refund scheme. What might work well to correct an individual overpayment is a completely inadequate response to a systemic irregularity. If one looks at the Service’s voluminous forms, announcements, notices, and rules, one would see a labyrinth with no exit. That makes me quite reluctant to join the court’s conclusion about the adequacy of the district court’s remand order.
II
Nor do I think the mere presence of a dissenting opinion gives “substantial justification” to the Government’s position. The district court concluded there was substantial justification because of (1) a reasoned district court opinion that we ultimately disagreed with; and (2) a dissent by three members of an en banc court. The court’s opinion relies on only the latter. But neither consideration should be the basis of denying an EAJA award. See United States v. Paisley,
First, Judge Urbina’s opinion on the plaintiffs’ APA claims cannot be the basis for determining the Government’s position was substantially justified. “The most powerful indicator of the reasonableness of an ultimately rejected position is a decision on the merits and the rationale which supports that decision.” Friends of Boundary Waters Wilderness v. Thomas,
As for the en banc dissent, I do not think it to be as potent as the court makes it out to be. For purposes of the EAJA, I put little stock into the “exceptional importance” language of Rule 35. Improbable as
Rehearing or no rehearing, a district court should certainly consider whether there is a dissenting opinion in appellate consideration of the merits of a case. But dissent alone cannot provide the Government with substantial justification. See EEOC v. Clay Printing Co.,
But the majority’s reliance on judicial dissent is but a quibble. The Service’s unwillingness to own up to its confusing and dysfunctional “refund scheme” is cause enough for granting an EAJA award.
The EAJA requires the Government to act reasonably during all stages of litigation, from the inception of agency action (or lack thereof) to the conclusion of judicial review. See Hill v. Gould,
Throughout this litigation, one of the Service’s main contentions has been that refunds are readily available under its current schemes, even notwithstanding Notice 2006-50. In fact, that’s not true at all. The confusing morass of a process that we identified in Cohen I still exists, having been present in this case since its genesis. See Oral Arg. Tr. at 33 (acknowledging the “confusing language” of Form 843 and conceding the Service’s failure to rectify the confusion). Compare Oral Arg. Tr. at 26 (“[F]or taxes other than income taxes, which would include this excise tax[,] you use form 843.... ”), with I.R.S. Announcement 2012-16, 2012-
So when the Service says a workable refund scheme exists under the current legal and regulatory regime, its contention is, at best, unreasonable, and, at worst, dishonest. Though it may be only a small part of the Service’s case, that is reason enough for me to conclude the district court abused its discretion in declining to award fees to the Sloan plaintiffs.
Ill
Once upon a time, public law concerned itself with notions of what was morally right, not just what was minimally required. But, as counsel for the Service has repeatedly reminded us throughout this litigation, those days are part of the dim (and not to be recaptured) past. See Appellee’s Br. at 37 (“After making the concession that limited the scope of ‘toll telephone service’ to which I.R.C. § 4252(b)(1) applied, the IRS was by no means required to notify every taxpayer potentially entitled to a refund, or even to publicize the availability of refunds.”). These days, no matter how unwarranted its exactions, whether the Service returns anything to the taxpayers — when circumstances do not fit the usual paradigm — is a decision within its sole discretion. Following the Service’s reasoning to its logical conclusion, the more larcenously it behaves, the lighter its obligations to plundered taxpayers become. No doubt this is a sign of the times, but it seems more an artifact of an administrative state gone deeply awry.
. As we noted in Cohen I, Form 843 facially does not allow for an excise-tax refund claim. See
. For the plaintiffs of this case, of course, the Service will suggest the statute of limitations is an insurmountable hurdle barring any further efforts at obtaining redress.
