OPINION
After the Internal Revenue Service sold Kenneth Hoogerheide’s property to offset unpaid taxes, Hoogerheide sued the IRS and several of its employees. Many of the claims fell by the wayside for one reason or another, leaving a money-damages claim against the United States, which the district court dismissed for lack of jurisdiction. We affirm the dismissal, though not the explanation, as Hoogerheide’s failure to exhaust the IRS’s administrative remedies did not deprive the court of jurisdiction over the damages claim.
I.
Hoogerheide, like most everyone, owed the IRS taxes. Yet, unlike most everyone, he neglected to pay them.
In May 2006, the IRS tried to collect some of his unpaid taxes by auctioning a piece of real estate he owned. Hoogerheide responded by offering a compromise and, later that month, by requesting a hearing. Over the next few months, Hoogerheide’s counsel sent fifteen more letters to various IRS officials and the Taxpayer Advocate Office about his situation. Some letters requested information under the Freedom of Information Act, 5 U.S.C. § 552, while others focused on resolving or *636 delaying the tax collection action. The IRS sold Hoogerheide’s property on August 15, 2006.
Two years later, Hoogerheide filed this action against the IRS (later replaced by the United States as the defendant) and several of its employees. The district court dismissed all of the claims against the individual defendants for failure to prosecute them. Hoogerheide withdrew most of the remaining claims, leaving a claim for damages and a request for a temporary restraining order designed to stop the collection action and return the auctioned property. See 26 U.S.C. § 7433. Because Hoogerheide failed to exhaust his administrative remedies, the court dismissed the damages claim for lack of subject matter jurisdiction and dismissed the request for a temporary restraining order as moot. Hoogerheide appealed.
II.
The district court had good reason to assume that a plaintiffs failure to exhaust the IRS’s administrative remedies deprives the federal courts of subject matter jurisdiction over a § 7433 damages action. We have said as much before.
See, e.g., Fishburn v. Brown,
Since these decisions, however, the Supreme Court has changed course. Concerned about the vanishing distinction between the mandatory requirements of a cause of action and jurisdiction over that cause of action, the Court in 2006 drew an “administrable bright line” between the two.
Arbaugh v. Y & H Corp.,
If the Legislature clearly states that a threshold limitation on a statute’s scope shall count as jurisdictional, then courts and litigants will be duly instructed and will not be left to wrestle with the issue .... But when Congress does not rank a statutory limitation on coverage as jurisdictional, courts should treat the restriction as nonjurisdictional in character.
Id.
at 515-16,
In the aftermath of Arbaugh, it no longer is appropriate to treat the exhaustion requirements for bringing a § 7433 claim as jurisdictional. Mandatory though the exhaustion requirement in § 7433(d) may be, it is not jurisdictional.
Three interlocking statutes and regulations define the terms and conditions for bringing this type of lawsuit. One, § 7433(a) permits a taxpayer to bring “a civil action for damages against the United States” if “any officer or employee of the Internal Revenue Service recklessly or intentionally, or by reason of negligence” violates a provision of the Internal Revenue Code. 26 U.S.C. § 7433(a). Two, § 7433(d) provides that “[a] judgment for damages shall not be awarded ... unless the court determines that the plaintiff has exhausted the administrative remedies available to such plaintiff.” Id. § 7433(d). Three, a Treasury Regulation provides one of the administrative remedies that must *637 be exhausted: “An administrative claim ... shall be sent in writing to the Area Director, Attn: Compliance Technical Support Manager of the area in which the taxpayer currently resides.” 26 C.F.R. § 301.7433-l(e)(l). The regulation adds that this administrative claim must include “[t]he dollar amount of the claim,” id. § 301.7433-l(e)(2)(iv), “[a] description of the injuries incurred by the taxpayer filing the claim,” id. § 301.7433 — l(e)(2)(iii), and “[t]he name, current address, current home and work telephone numbers and any convenient times to be contacted ... of the taxpayer making the claim,” id. § 301.7433 — 1(e)(2)(i).
Arbaugh’s “readily administrable bright[-]line” rule places this exhaustion requirement on the nonjurisdictional side of the line. The requirement “does not speak in jurisdictional terms or refer in any way to the jurisdiction of the district courts.”
Zipes v. Trans World Airlines, Inc.,
Section 7433(d) “establishes a condition” — exhaustion—“that plaintiffs ordinarily must satisfy before filing a[ ] ... claim and invoking the [statute’s] remedial provisions.”
Reed Elsevier, Inc. v. Muchnick, -
U.S. -,
The Court has not wavered from this rule. Each time it has construed a statutory requirement that a plaintiff proceed in another forum or seek redress in other ways before coming to federal court, it has construed the requirement as nonjurisdictional.
See Union Pac. R.R. Co. v. Bhd. of Locomotive Eng’rs,
- U.S. -,
It makes no difference that § 7433(d) requires a court to “determine[ ] that the plaintiff has exhausted” available administrative remedies. What is mandatory is not necessarily jurisdictional. The requirement simply imposes a precondition on an award of damages, akin to other nonjurisdictional preconditions on a plaintiffs right to relief.
Consider
Jones v. Bock,
Context also shows that this “limitation” goes to a plaintiffs right to relief, not to his right to enter the federal courts. Another provision of the Internal Revenue Code, indeed one in the same subsection of the statute, shows how an exhaustion requirement might establish a jurisdictional requirement. Section 7422(a) provides that
“No suit or proceeding shall be maintained in any court
for the recovery of any internal revenue tax ... until a claim ... has been duly filed with the Secretary.”
Id.
(emphasis added). Congress enacted § 7433(d), Pub.L. No. 100-647, Title VI, § 6240(a), 102 Stat. 3342, 3747 (1988), and recodified § 7433(d)’s exhaustion requirement, Pub.L. No. 105-206, Title III, § 3102(a)(2), 112 Stat. 685, 730 (1998), against this backdrop, and nonetheless it opted not to cast this requirement in jurisdictional terms. Different words have different meanings. Prohibiting a “judgment for damages” is not the same as forbidding any “suit or proceeding” from being “maintained in any court.” The latter is jurisdictional; the former is not.
See United States v. Dalm,
The United States responds that § 7433(d) is a term and condition of the United States’ consent to suit and that the government’s consent “defíne[s] th[e] court’s jurisdiction to entertain the suit.”
FDIC v. Meyer,
*639
That the district court should not have dismissed this case for lack of jurisdiction does not end the matter. It is quite possible that “nothing in the analysis ... below turned on the mistake [and] a remand would only require a new ... label for the same ... conclusion.”
Morrison v. Nat’l Austl. Bank Ltd.,
-
U.S. -,
Hoogerheide did not exhaust his administrative remedies, and the United States timely raised failure to exhaust as a defense in a motion to dismiss. For that reason his claim must be dismissed. The relevant letters, all attached to his complaint and incorporated by it, show that he failed to comply with the relevant exhaustion requirements. None of the letters from Hoogerheide or Hoogerheide’s counsel are addressed to “the Area Director, Attn: Compliance Technical Support Manager of the area in which” Hoogerheide “resides.” 26 C.F.R. § 301.7433-l(e)(l). None of the letters “include[s] ... [t]he dollar amount of the claim.” Id. § 301.7433 — l(e)(2)(iv). And none of the letters mentions a claim for damages against the IRS.
Hoogerheide claims that he substantially complied with the exhaustion requirement. But the existence of such an exception seems doubtful in view of the specificity of the Treasury regulations and the failure of Hoogerheide to identify any authority for one in this setting. Even if such an exception exists, however, it is hard to see how it would benefit Hoogerheide, given his failure to reference a claim for damages or otherwise come close to complying with the applicable regulations in his letters.
Nor may we excuse this exhaustion requirement on futility grounds. Section 7433(d) is mandatory. It is a congressionally established exhaustion imperative, not a judicially created one, and accordingly the courts lack discretion to waive it.
See Booth v. Churner,
Hoogerheide faults the district court for considering the United States’ motion, which did not perfectly comply with the court’s scheduling order or local guidelines. The court, however, had discretion to overlook errors in “its own local rules.”
Valassis Commc’ns, Inc. v. Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co.,
In his reply brief, Hoogerheide for the first time raises a concern about an ex parte communication in the district court, namely that the government’s attorney spoke to the court’s law clerk about a motion to dismiss. The argument comes too late, and accordingly it is forfeited. As Hoogerheide conceded, at any rate, the United States previously indicated that this conversation was a short, nonsubstantive exchange with the clerk confirming that the court struck the United States’ first motion to dismiss because it filed the motion before all of the filings were served. Nothing suggests the conversation went beyond this, and nothing thus suggests the court should be reversed on this ground.
III.
For these reasons, we affirm the dismissal of this complaint on failure-to-exhaust grounds.
