The United States appeals the order of the bankruptcy appellate panel
1
affirming a judgment of the bankruptcy court,
2
which held that Gary Wayne Colsen’s debts to the IRS were dischargeable.
In re Colsen,
After Mr. Colsen failed to file timely tax returns for the years 1992 through 1996, the IRS prepared substitutes for the missing returns and issued notices of deficiency. By the middle of 1999, the IRS had assessed taxes, interest, and penalties against Mr. Colsen for the tax years 1992 through 1996. In late 1999, Mr. Colsen filed 1040 forms for 1992 through 1998, and four years later he filed a petition for relief under Chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code. He then initiated an adversary proceeding claiming that his federal income tax liabilities for tax years 1992 through 1996 were dischargeable despite 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(1)(B)(i). That statute provides that “[a] discharge ... does not discharge an individual debtor from any debt ... for a tax ... with respect to which a return, or equivalent report or notice, if required ... was not filed or given.” The United States moved for summary judgment, asserting that the 1040 forms that Mr. Col-sen filed were not “returns” under the statute because they were filed after the IRS’s assessment had taken place. The bankruptcy court disagreed and held that the 1040 forms qualified as returns and therefore Mr. Colsen’s tax liabilities from 1992 through 1996 were dischargeable; the bankruptcy appellate panel affirmed.
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We review the bankruptcy court’s interpretation of the bankruptcy code
de novo. In re Kolick,
Both parties agree that the appropriate criteria for determining whether a document is a return for present purposes are summarized in
Beard v. Commissioner,
The United States asserts that a 1040 form filed after the IRS has gone to the trouble and expense of preparing substitute returns and assessing the relevant tax liability serves no purpose under the tax laws and thus cannot have been an “honest and genuine endeavor” to satisfy the tax laws as
Beard
requires. The Sixth Circuit has ruled for the government in a similar situation, holding that “when the debtor has failed to respond to both the thirty-day and the ninety-day deficiency letters sent by the IRS, and the government has assessed the deficiency, then the Forms 1040 serve no tax purpose, and the government has met its burden of showing that the debtor’s actions were not an honest and reasonable effort to satisfy the tax law.”
United States v. Hindenlang (In re Hindenlang),
Along similar lines, the Fourth Circuit held that a debtor’s tardiness is relevant to the question of whether a 1040 form should be considered an honest and genuine attempt to comply with the tax laws, and decided that a purported return filed by a nonchalantly noncompliant debtor after the IRS estimated his tax liability did not meet the requirements of
Beard. Moroney v. United States (In re Moroney),
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The Seventh Circuit has also refused to recognize a post-assessment filing as a return for purposes of § 523(a)(1)(B)(i).
See Payne,
To be a return, a form is required to “evince” an honest and genuine attempt to satisfy the laws. This does not require inquiry into the circumstances under which a document was filed. The Supreme Court has observed that even admittedly fraudulent returns can be returns under the tax laws, if they “appeared on their faces to constitute endeavors to satisfy the law.”
Badaracco v. Commissioner,
The government’s essential position is that because Mr. Colsen’s 1040 forms were filed after the IRS’s assessment, they do not evince an honest, genuine attempt to satisfy the law and thus he has not satisfied the requirement that returns be filed in order for tax liabilities to be dis-chargeable. But we have no evidence to suggest that the forms appeared obviously inaccurate or fabricated; indeed, Mr. Col-sen’s 1040 forms contained data that allowed the IRS to calculate his tax obligation more accurately: The information contained in the forms was honest and genuine enough to result in thousands of
*841
dollars of abatements of tax and interest. This contrasts, incidentally, with the situation in
Hindenlang,
The IRS apparently has found post-assessment returns useful, as it has required taxpayers to file them before the agency would consider proposed offers to compromise tax liabilities.
See Payne,
We affirm the judgment of the bankruptcy appellate panel.
Notes
. The Honorable Barry S. Schermer, The Honorable Arthur B. Federman, and The Honorable Jerry W. Venters, Bankruptcy Appellate Panel, Eighth Circuit. Judge Schermer wrote the opinion for the panel.
. The Honorable William L. Edmonds, United States Bankruptcy Judge for the Northern District of Iowa.
