Chapter 11
(Jointly Administered)
OPINION
INTRODUCTION
Before the Court is a motion filed by the Debtors
Herein, the Court finds that the IRS’s claim for Employer Liability is a pre-petition claim but that the IRS did not need to file a proof of claim by the Bar Date for such liability. As such, the IRS’s claim for Employer Liability taxes is not barred. Furthermore, the Court is without sufficient evidence to designate the tax payment to the Trust Fund Liability. As such, the Court denies the Motion, with prejudice, in part, and without prejudice, in part.
STATEMENT OF FACTS
A. General Background
On January 13, 2009, each of the above-captioned debtors (the “Debtors”) commenced a case by filing a petition for relief in this Court under chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code. Until the effective date of the Plan (discussed infra), the Debtors continued to manage their property as debtors in possession pursuant to §§ 1107 and 1108 of the Bankruptcy Code.
On March 16, 2009, each of the Debtors filed its Schedules of Assets and Liabilities (collectively, the “Schedules” and each a “Schedule”) and Statement of Financial Affairs (collectively, the “Statements” and each a “Statement”).
The IRS did not file a proof of claim related to the taxes at issue in this matter.
On December 23, 2009, the Debtors filed the Plan and related disclosure statement.
Pursuant to Section 6.2 of the Plan, as of the Confirmation Date:
[a]ny Claim that was required to be filed by the Bar Date or the Administrative Expense Claims Bar Date (as the case may be) that is instead filed after such applicable Bar Date or Administrative Expense Claim Bar Date shall be deemed disallowed without further action or order of the Bankruptcy Court or the Debtors.10
The Plan also contains a satisfaction provision which states, in part: “The treatment of and consideration to be received by holders of Allowed Claims pursuant to this Plan shall be in full satisfaction of such holders’ respective Claims against the Estates.”
B. Factual History
Pursuant to the terms of the Plan, the Debtors paid allowed wage claims (the “Wages Claims”) on December 17, 2010 and February 18, 2011. The Debtors withheld employment taxes from the Wage Claims (the ‘Withheld Amounts”). Goody’s LLC, one of the Debtors, filed the requisite 941 tax returns reporting the taxes associated with the Wage Claims.
The Debtors deposited all Withheld Amounts with the IRS utilizing the Electronic Federal Tax Payment System (the “EFTPS”). The Withheld Amounts that have been paid were equal to the employees’ shares of both the applicable employment taxes and income taxes (the “Trust Fund Liability”).
Thereafter, the Debtors requested that the IRS apply the remitted Withheld Amounts to the Trust Fund Liability. As it happens, the IRS applied the Withheld Amounts to the employer liability obligation (the “Employer Liability”), which
Although this issue is not presently before the Court, the IRS sent a notice pursuant to which it asserted that it was investigating whether any individuals, including Mr. Peek, should be treated as “responsible persons” liable for unpaid trust fund taxes.
The Debtors assert that the amounts must be applied to the Trust Fund Liability because the IRS did not file a claim for the Employer Liability and that the IRS is now barred by the applicable Bar Dates and the Plan Injunction from seeking any payment on account of Employer Liability. The Debtors further assert that even if the IRS has a valid claim for the Employer Liability, the Court should designate the tax payment to the Trust Fund Liability.
C. Procedural Posture
The Debtors filed the Motion Pursuant to §§ 105 and 505 of the Bankruptcy Code for Entry of an Order Enforcing the Plan Injunctions and Determining the Debtors’ Liability for Certain Employment Taxes (the “Motion”),
ANALYSIS
A. Trust Fund and Non-Trust Fund Taxes
Employment tax is comprised of trust fund and non-trust fund taxes. The Internal Revenue Code requires employers to withhold federal income and social security taxes from salaries and wages of employees.
The United States has no recourse against individual employees for the “trust fund taxes,” as such, Congress created a statutory remedy to ensure that trust fund tax revenues were not lost.
As set forth above, the Debtors remitted the Withheld Amounts to the IRS. The IRS applied these remitted funds to the Employer Liability (rather than the Trust Fund Liability as requested by the Debtors). Furthermore, the IRS alleges that Mr. Peek is a “responsible person.” As a result, the IRS is holding a personal tax refund otherwise owed to Mr. Peek for the tax year 2012 while the IRS investigates whether such refund should be applied to the Trust Fund Liability. The IRS’s imposition of liability to Mr. Peek would, in turn, trigger a claim by him against the Debtors, pursuant to the indemnification provisions in the Plan.
As a result, the Debtors are seeking an order enforcing the Plan injunctions and determining that the Debtors are not responsible for the Employer Liability.
B. It Was Not Necessary For The IRS To File A Proof Of Claim For The Employer Liability.
The Debtor argues that the IRS should have filed a claim for the Employer Liabil
The IRS has responded that the Form 941 returns were required to be filed with the IRS when the wages were paid and that the taxes did not become due until the Form 941 returns were filed, which was post-petition. The IRS continues that the tax code requires that taxes be collected by the employer of the taxpayer by deducting the amount of the tax from the wages, as and when paid.
i. The Employer Liability is a Prepetition Claim.
In U.S. v. Redmond,
In the case of In re Hillsborough Holdings Corp.,
a majority of courts have held that the date the taxes are accrued, rather than the date of assessment, is the date which controls. The mere fact that assessment of a tax does not occur until after the Bankruptcy petition is filed does not result in a tax relating to pre-petition activities being allowed as an administrative expense. To the extent that income was not earned by the estate during part of the tax year, but instead earned by the pre-petition debtor, the tax was not incurred by the estate and was not entitled to administrative expense.
The claim sought by the IRS to be allowed as an administrative expense relates to income received [before] ... the date the Chapter 11 case was filed by these Debtors, this income is clearly attributable to pre-petition activities. To charge the estate with these taxes as cost administration is a proposition which this Court is unwilling to accept. Therefore, this Court is satisfied that the taxes incurred prepetition by the Debtor are not properly allowable as costs of administration pursuant to § 503.39
Based on the above, the Court finds that the Employer Liability is a pre-petition claim (rather than an administrative claim as asserted by the IRS).
ii. The IRS Did Not Need to File a Proof of Claim for the Employer Liability.
As the Employer Liability is a pre-petition one, the next question is whether the IRS ought to have filed a claim. The IRS argues that “the liability for the tax withheld ... attached to the [responsible person] at the time they withheld the tax.”
In that regard, in Otte v. United States,
On further appeal, the Supreme Court affirmed concluding that a trustee in bankruptcy is an “employer” under the terms of the Internal Revenue Code when he makes wage payments to former employees of the bankrupt, and as an employer, the trustee is obligated to pay withholding taxes. The Supreme Court also held that
The wages that are the subject of the wage claims, although earned before bankruptcy, were not paid prior to bankruptcy. [The corporation] had incurred no liability for the taxes. Liability came into being only during the bankruptcy. The taxes do not partake, therefore, of the nature of debts of the bankrupt for which proofs of claim must be filed.49
Although also under the Bankruptcy Act, the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals subsequently held that Otte would have reached the same result for general unsecured wages claims.
As a result of the reasoning in Otte (although, admittedly, Otte was filed under the Act rather than the Bankruptcy Code), and as a matter of policy, it is not practical for the IRS to be required to file a claim for the Employer Liability without knowing if, how much, and when pre-petition wages will be paid. The Court finds that the payment of the pre-petition wages (and the subsequent filing of the 941 tax returns) triggers the IRS’s right to payment. As such, the IRS was not obligated to make a claim in these cases until the Debtors’ paid the wages. Thus, the IRS’ claim for Employer Liability taxes is not time barred by the Bar Date or the Plan injunction.
iii. Conclusion
The Court find that (i) the Employer Liability is not an administrative claim, but would have the priority set forth in § 507, if at all; and (ii) the IRS did not need to file a proof of claim for the Employer Liability resulting from pre-petition wage claims that were not paid until after the effective date of the Plan (and pursuant to the terms of the Plan).
C. The Court Cannot Direct the Designation of the Withheld Amounts Without Additional Evidence.
As the Court finds that the IRS’s claims are not barred by the Bar Date nor the Plan injunction, the Debtors also seek to have the Court re-designate the taxes paid by the Debtors to the Trust Fund Liability portion of the taxes owed (rather than allowing the IRS to apply such funds first to the Employer Liability).
As set forth above, the Debtors have a confirmed liquidating Chapter 11 plan and paid the taxes to the IRS though the EFTPS and “subsequently requested” that the IRS apply the remittances to the Trust Fund Liability. The IRS argues that designation of tax liability is limited to where the court concludes that allocation of the tax payment is necessary for the reorganization’s success.
In response, the Debtors argue that designation of the Withheld Amounts to the Trust Fund Liability is essential to the chapter 11 process even in a liquidation scenario. As the IRS did not file a proof of claim for the Employer Liability and the Debtors deposited the Withheld Amounts on account of the Trust Fund Liability, the Debtors did not reserve for the Employer Liability nor the Trust Fund Liability. The Debtors argue that designation of the Withheld Amounts to the Trust Fund Liability is necessary to maintain the integrity of the chapter 11 process, including reliance on the bar date and implementation of the Plan. Second, the Debtors argue that as a result of the EFTPS systems, Courts should designate tax liability as the electronic system does not allow contemporaneous designations of payments. Lastly, the Debtors argue that the equitable relief requested is justifiable whether the Withheld Amounts constitute a “payment” or a “deposit.” The Debtors urge that it would be absurd to subject the Debtors to a deposit penalty to convert the “deposit” to a “payment” before they are entitled to equitable relief from the Court designating the payment of Withheld Amounts to the Trust Fund Liability.
In U.S. v. Energy Resources,
On appeal, the United States Supreme Court affirmed the First Circuit, in part, and held that regardless of whether tax payments through a plan were voluntary or involuntary, a bankruptcy court has the authority to order the IRS to apply the payments to trust fund liabilities if the bankruptcy court determines that this designation is necessary to the success of a reorganization plan.
In Babcock vs. U.S.,
Section 6656 is nonetheless instructive because it provides one of the only means by which taxpayers are afforded a right to designate tax deposits. Yet, § 6656 provides a limited right to designate deposits and it does not expressly provide for the designation between trust fund and non-trust fund taxes, thereby indicating that Congress necessarily intended a very limited right of designation. Accordingly, not only is designation under § 6656 inapplicable in the instant action, it is illustrative thatCongress did not intend to provide the right of designation to persons like the Taxpayers. 66
The Babcock court continued that designation of the companies’ tax deposits to trust fund taxes would undermine the purposes of § 6672.
Thereafter, in In re Thome,
Based on this testimony, the court concludes that debtors had no reasonable method to ensure that their payments were to be applied to their trust fund liability short of tendering monies in full payment of their employment tax liability. Because the debtors had no means of making a designation as to how their payment of $71,046.40 would be applied, as they have a right to do, it would be inequitable to allow the IRS to make that decision for the debtors.72
In United States v. Pepperman,
upon consideration of the reorganization plan as a whole, in so far as the particular structure or allocation of payments increases the risk that the IRS may not collect the total tax debt, is that risk nonetheless justified by an offsetting increased likelihood of rehabilitation, i.e., increased likelihood of payment to creditors who might otherwise lose their money?77
Courts have been split regarding whether the holding in Energy Resources should be extended to Chapter 11 liquidating plans.
[t]he government argues that the Supreme Court holding in Energy Resources is inapplicable because Deer Park’s Chapter 11 plan is a “liquidating” plan and not a “reorganization.” We disagree. Such a broad statement fails to recognize that a debtor’s continuing participation in a planned, orderly liquidation may in fact be necessary to bring about the maximum recovery for the creditors, as opposed to the amount realized from a forced sale. The Bankruptcy Code recognizes this in § 1129(a)(ll), by providing that liquidation may be contemplated in a valid Chapter 11 plan of reorganization, despite the label “reorganization.” Although the word “reorganization” might commonly bring to mind ongoing operations, Congress explicitly placed language providing for liquidation within Chapter 11, which is titled “Reorganization.” Had Congress not intended to include liquidation as an acceptable type of reorganization plan, then presumably all provisions dealing with liquidation would fall within Chapter 7, which is specifically titled “Liquidation.”
We must therefore assume Congress placed this provision in Chapter 11 intentionally.
Liquidation under a Chapter 11 plan is not the same as a Chapter 7 liquidation. A liquidation under Chapter 11 allows the debtor in possession, one who is presumably more familiar with the assets of the debtor’s organization and its respective values, the ability to plan for an orderly divestiture of the assets over time as opposed to a Chapter 7 trustee, who is generally less familiar with the debtor’s assets. A Chapter 11 plan, even though a liquidating plan, must still conform to the same statutory requirements of any other Chapter 11 reorganization. A liquidating plan is desirable when the debtor in possession can bring about a greater recovery for the creditors than would a straight liquidation under Chapter 7.84
The Deer Park court held that the reallocation of tax payments and its impact on the debtor’s rehabilitation must be conducted on a case-by-case basis, and “not merely by whether liquidation is contemplated.”
As set forth above, there is a split in authority regarding whether Energy Resources would apply in a liquidating Chapter 11 case. Although, the Court believes the reasoning in Deer Park to be persuasive,
CONCLUSION
As set forth above, the Court finds that (i) the Employer Liability is a prepetition claim and not an administrative claim; (ii) the IRS’s claim for the Employer Liability is not barred by the Bar Date; and (iii) that the Debtors have not set forth sufficient evidence to determine whether designation of the Withheld Amounts to the Trust Fund Liability is necessary to the success of the Plan. As such, the Court will deny the Motion with prejudice as to (i) and (ii) above and without prejudice as to (iii). An order will be issued.
. This Opinion constitutes the Court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law pursuant to Federal Rule of Bankruptcy Procedure 7052.
. Capitalized terms not defined herein shall have the meaning ascribed to them infra.
. D.I. 479-492.
. D.I. 492 (Schedule E at p. 34 of 1390).
. On April 17, 2009, the Court entered its Order (i) Establishing General Bar Date and Procedures for Filing Proofs of Claim, and (ii) Approving Form and Manner of Notice Thereof (D.I. 590) (the "Bar Date Order”). The Bar Date Order required proofs of claim asserting
. D.I. 509 and 623.
. D.I. 997.
. D.I. 1101.
. See D.I. 1329.
. Plan at § 6.2.
. Plan Art. 12.1.
. The injunction provision states:
From and after the Effective Date all Persons that have held, currently hold or may hold a Claim or other debt or liability against any of the Debtors or their Estates, or who have held, currently hold or may hold an Equity Interest in the Debtors, are permanently enjoined from taking any of the following actions (whether directly, indirectly, derivatively or otherwise) on account of such Claim or Equity Interest: (i) commencing, conducting or continuing in any manner, directly or indirectly, any suit, action or other proceeding of any kind against or affecting the Debtors, the Estates, the Liquidating Agent, the Committee or the Post-Effective Date Committee with respect to any property to be distributed under this Plan including funds or reserves held or maintained by any of them pursuant to this Plan; (ii) enforcing, levying, attaching, collecting, or otherwise recovering in any manner or by any means, whether directly or indirectly, any judgment, award, decree, or order against any of the Debtors, the Estates or the Liquidating Agent, Committee and Post-Effective Date Committee, with respect to any property to be distributed under this Plan, including funds or reserves held or maintained by any of them pursuant to this Plan; (iii) creating, perfecting or enforcing in any manner directly or indirectly, any lien, charge or encumbrance of any kind against the Debtors, the Estates or the Liquidating Agent with respect to any property to be distributed under this Plan, including funds or reserves held or maintained by any of them pursuant to this Plan; and (iv) proceeding in any manner in any place whatsoever against any of the Debtors, the Estates, or the Liquidating Agent, Committee and Post-Effective Date Committee with respect to any property to be distributed under this Plan, including funds or reserves held or maintained by any of them pursuant to this Plan in any way that does not conform to, or comply, or is inconsistent with, the provisions of this Plan; provided, however, that nothing in this Section 12.2 shall prohibit any Persons from enforcing the terms of the Asset Pursuant Agreements, this Plan, or the Confirmation Order in the Bankruptcy Court.
Plan Art. 12.2.
. Plan Art. 8.3. See also Confirmation Order at Finding L.
. In pertinent part, the Plan states:
Notwithstanding anything in this Plan to the contrary, no Person serving as Liquidating Agent shall have or incur any personal liability as the shareholder, director or officer of any of the Debtors for any act taken or omission made in connection with Article VIII of this Plan, except for any personal liability of such Person that would not have resulted but for an act or omission of such Person that is determined in a Final Order to have constituted fraud, gross negligence or willful misconduct.
Plan Art. 12.4 (emphasis removed).
. In pertinent part, the Plan provides:
The Debtors will indemnify, hold harmless and reimburse the Exculpated Persons, the Liquidating Agent (including any Person serving as the Liquidating Agent) ... from and against any and all losses, claims, causes of action, damages, fees, expenses, liabilities, and actions arising from or related to any act taken or omission made in connection with or in any way related to negotiating, formulating, implementing, confirming, consummating or administering this Plan, the Disclosure Statement, or any contract, instrument, release, or other agreement or document created in connection with or related to this Plan or the Bankruptcy Cases, or any other act taken or omission made in connection with the Bankruptcy Cases, and the losses, claims and expenses of such Persons shall be paid from the Estate Assets as they are incurred by such Persons; provided that the Debtors will not indemnify, hold harmless or reimburse any Person pursuant to the foregoing provisions of this Section from or against any losses, claims, causes of action, damages, fees, expenses, liabilities or actions resulting from any act or omission that is determined in a Final Order to have constituted fraud, gross negligence or willful misconduct. All rights of the Exculpated Persons and other Persons indemnified pursuant to Sections 12.4 and 12.5 of this Plan shall survive confirmation and effectiveness of this Plan
Plan Art. 12.5.
.The 941 tax returns in connection with the December 17, 2010 and February 18, 2011
. The IRS issued a Proposed Assessment and has refused to provide Mr. Peek with the personal tax refund he is owed for 2012, instead the IRS is holding the refund in the event that the refund should be applied to the Trust Fund Liability.
. D.I. 1633.
. D.I. 1646.
. See D.I. 1672.
. 26U.S.C. § 3102(a).
. 26 U.S.C. §§ 3102, 3402, and 7501.
. Internal Revenue Manual 5.19.14.1.6.
. Slodov v. U.S.,
. Slodov,
Any person required to collect, truthfully account for, and pay over any tax imposed by this title who willfully fails to collect such tax, or truthfully account for and pay over such tax, or willfully attempts in any manner to evade or defeat any such tax or the payment thereof, shall, in addition to other penalties provided by law, be liable to a penalty equal to the total amount of the tax evaded, or not collected, or not accounted for and paid over.
26 U.S.C. § 6672(a).
. Slodov,
. Alsheskie v. United States,
. United States v. Energy Res. Co., Inc.,
. As the movant, the Debtors have the burden of proof.
. 26 U.S.C. § 3102(a) (citing 26 U.S.C. § 3101).
. Hr’g Tr. 13:12-14 (Apr. 1, 2013). D.I. 1672.
.
. Id. at 933.
. Id. at 934 (citing In re Scrap Disposal, Inc.,
. Redmond,
.Id. However, in U.S. v. Cleveland Indians Baseball Co.,
. Redmond,
.
. Id. at 320 (citations omitted). See Matter of O.P.M. Leasing Servs., Inc.,
Liability for income taxes accrues contemporaneously with the generation of the income. As such, the debtor may incur the tax expense pre-petition, even when no assessment ultimately takes place until after filing.
By contrast, liability for property or ad va-lorem taxes is triggered by ownership of the taxed property on the date of assessment. That is, notwithstanding any other fact, whoever happens to own the property in question on the date of assessment will bear the burden of that property or ad valorem tax. Thus, these taxes may be said to actually accrue on the date of assessment. When one applies the accrual theory in the context of property or ad valorem taxes, they, therefore, will find a different standard of timing in play, one focusing exclusively upon the date of assessment.
Id. at 974 n. 1 (emphasis provided; citations omitted).
.Redmond,
. Hillborough Holdings Corp.,
. Redmond,
. Teel v. United States,
. Davis v. United States,
.
. Id. at 47,
. Id. at 45,
. Id. at 55,
. Id.
. Matter of Armadillo Corp.,
. The IRS also seeks to distinguish Thome arguing that in Thome the IRS stipulated that the tax payment was voluntary which allowed for the IRS designation policy to apply. The
IRS policy has long permitted a taxpayer who 'voluntarily' submits a payment to the IRS to designate the tax liability to which the payment will apply. This policy reflects the generally recognized common law rule between debtors and creditors that the debtor may indicate which debt it intends to pay when it voluntarily submits a payment to a creditor, but may not dictate the application of funds that the creditor involuntarily collects from it.
IRS v. Kaplan (In re Kaplan),
. United States v. Energy Res. Co., Inc.,
. United States v. Energy Resources,
. Id. (internal quotations and citations omitted).
. Id. at 231 (citations omitted).
. Id. at 231 (citations omitted).
. Id. at 231 (citations omitted).
. Id. at 232.
. Id. at 232.
. Energy Res. Co., Inc.,
. Id.
.
. Id. at 910.
. Id.
. Id. at 912.
. Id. at 912-13.
. Id. at 913 ("Accordingly, because the purpose of § 6672 is to hold responsible persons liable and make the federal Government whole, this Court is unwilling to provide the Taxpayers with a right to designate certain taxes because that would impermissibly shift losses to the Government and implicitly disregard § 6672.”). See supra n. 25 for text of 26 U.S.C. § 6672.
. Id. at 914 (relying on Davis v. United States,
. Id. at 914-15 n. 8.
. In re Thorne, (No. 09-04515-8-SWH),
. In re Thorne,
. Id.
. Id.
.
. Id. at 130 (references omitted).
. Id. But see In re Klaska,
. In re Kaplan,
. In re Deer Park, Inc.,
.
. Deer Park,
. Id.
. Id.
. Id.
. Deer Park, Inc.,
. Id. at 819.
. Id. The Deer Park court found:
For example, Stoll’s initial participation was based on his belief that his potential
Deer Park, Inc.,
.In re Deer Park, Inc.,
. In re Kare Kemical, Inc.,
. The Locks Court interpreted the Third Circuit’s decision in Pepperman to apply to both Chapter 7 liquidations and Chapter 11 liquidations. Locks v. U.S. Tr.,
