MEMORANDUM OPINION
Denying the Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss
I. INTRODUCTION
When the taxman takes too much, how must he disgorge his unlawful gains? This is the question confronting the court in the plaintiffs amended complaint bringing an Administrative Procedure Act (“APA”) claim challenging the IRS’s refund mechanism for a now-defunct levy of telephone excise taxes. The defendant seeks dismissal of the APA claim on the grounds that (1) the plaintiff lacks standing, (2) the IRS’s action is committed to agency discretion, (3) the IRS enjoys sovereign immunity and (4) the IRS has taken no final action for which there is no other adequate remedy. Because none of these arguments withstands inspection, the court denies the defendant’s motion to dismiss the claim, permitting further review to proceed on the merits.
II. BACKGROUND
A. Factual History
For nearly forty years, § 4251 of the Internal Revenue Code empowered the IRS to collect a three-percent excise tax on long-distance telephone calls.
Nat’l R.R. Passenger Corp. v. United States,
The IRS heeded this juridical clarion and, on May 25, 2006, announced that it was discontinuing collection of the tax effective July 31, 2006. I.R.S. Not.2006-50, 2006-
B. Procedural History
The plaintiff, Neiland Cohen, is a resident of Wisconsin 1 who (having allegedly purchased long-distance telephone services while the tax remained effective and submitted an administrative refund claim to the IRS) filed a suit on his own behalf and that of similarly situated taxpayers on November 29, 2005 for an injunction against enforcement of the excise tax. Compl. for Permanent Inj. and Req. for Class Certification ¶¶ 5, 24. After the IRS allegedly denied 2 his administrative request for a refund, the plaintiff filed his first amended complaint adding a monetary claim for a refund on February 6, 2006. Am. Compl. for Perm. Inj. Relief and Damages, and Req. for Class Certification ¶¶ 16-19. The IRS’s acquiescence on May 25, 2006 to the judgment of the appellate courts mooted the plaintiffs request for injunctive relief, spurring him to again amend his complaint to add a claim for judicial review of the IRS’s refund mechanism under the Administrative Procedure Act. Second Am. Compl. for Inj., Decl. J., and Monetary Relief, and Req. for Class Certification (“Am.Compl.”) ¶¶ 26-29; 5 U.S.C. § 702. At this time, the plaintiff also updated his refund request to include the period from July 1, 2002 through July 31, 2006 (the last day the tax was collected), reflecting a total refund claim of $54.84. Am. Compl. ¶¶ 22-25.
In his APA claim, the plaintiff alleges that the refund mechanism constitutes final agency action that “arbitrarily, unreasonably, and unlawfully limits restitution of the funds unlawfully exacted” in that it: (a) limits restitution to funds exacted after February 28, 2003 rather than July 1, 2002; (b) requires the submission of requests on tax returns; (c) provides for “safe harbor” amounts that “fall materially below the likely entitlement of most potential claimants” and “conditions claims for larger amounts upon ability to produce documentation that phone-users could not be expected to retain”; (d) conditions use of the refund mechanism on the withdraw *39 al of a prior refund request; and (e) “arbitrarily and unreasonably disregards approaches that would increase the degree of reparation achieved without creating any risk of global overpayment.” Am. Compl. ¶¶ 26-28. The plaintiff asserts that “these and other deficiencies ... will improperly interfere with judicial consideration of appropriate class remedies and limit the restitution effected by the government to a minor fraction of the total amount unlawfully exacted.” Id. ¶ 29.
While the plaintiffs underlying claim for a full refund from the defendant of “not less than $54.84” and his request for class certification remain outstanding, id. ¶¶ 22-25, the instant motion does not encompass them. The instant motion seeks dismissal of only the APA claim, contending that the court lacks subject-matter jurisdiction over it because the plaintiff lacks standing, the IRS’s action is committed to agency discretion and the IRS enjoys sovereign immunity. Def.’s Mot. at 5. The defendant also maintains that the plaintiff has failed to state a claim, arguing that the IRS has not taken any final action for which there is no other adequate remedy at law 3 Id. at 15. It is to these arguments that the court now turns.
III. ANALYSIS
A. Legal Standard for a Motion to Dismiss Pursuant to Rule 12(b)(1)
Federal courts are courts of limited jurisdiction and the law presumes that “a cause lies outside this limited jurisdiction.”
Kokkonen v. Guardian Life Ins. Co. of Am.,
Because “subject-matter jurisdiction is an ‘Art. Ill as well as a statutory requirement^] no action of the parties can confer subject-matter jurisdiction upon a federal court.’ ”
Akinseye v. District of Columbia,
As subject-matter jurisdiction focuses on the court’s power to hear the claim, however, the court must give the
*40
plaintiffs factual allegations closer scrutiny when resolving a Rule 12(b)(1) motion than would be required for a Rule 12(b)(6) motion for failure to state a claim.
Macharla v. United States,
The level of scrutiny with which the Court examines the allegations in the complaint that support a finding of jurisdiction, however, depends upon whether the motion to dismiss asserts a facial or factual challenge to the court’s jurisdiction.
I.T. Consultants v. Pakistan,
C. The Procedure for Challenging an Unlawful Federal Tax
Before treading into this jurisdictional maze, the court pauses to review the established legal infrastructure for obtaining a tax refund. At the outset, a taxpayer challenging a tax must first file a refund claim with the IRS. See I.R.C. § 7422(a) (providing that “[n]o suit or proceeding shall be maintained in any court for the recovery of any internal revenue tax ... until a claim for refund ... has been duly filed with the Secretary, according to the provisions of law in that regard, and the regulations of the Secretary established in pursuance thereof’). The Secretary by regulation requires that claims for refund:
set forth in detail each ground upon which a credit or refund is claimed and facts sufficient to apprise the Commissioner of the exact basis thereof. The statement of the grounds and facts must be verified by a written declaration that it is made under the penalties of perjury. A claim which does not comply with this paragraph will not be considered for any purpose as a claim for refund or credit.
Treas. Reg. § 301.6402-2(b)(l). The requirement for filing a proper refund claim “is designed both to prevent surprise and to give adequate notice to the Service of the nature of the claim and the specific facts upon which it is predicated, thereby permitting an administrative investigation and determination.”
Computervision Corp. v. United States,
As regards refund claims for the instant tax, prior to the issuance of Notice 2006-50 purportedly implementing the new tax-return-based refund mechanism, no official forms or procedures facilitated the filing of an excise tax refund claim by an individual. Indeed, the bewildering sequence of tax code instructions available then read like a shaggy-dog story — the frustrating punchline being that only the collectors of the tax (telecommunications providers) were eligible for a refund. See 26 C.F.R. § 301.6401-2(c) (stating that all claims for refunding of taxes shall be made on Form 843); IRS Instructions for Form 843, 1 (2005) (warning the taxpayer, “do not file Form 843 to request ... [a] refund relating to excise taxes reported on Forms 11-C, 720, 730, or 2290,” but do “[s]ee ... Form 8849, Claim for Refund of Excise Taxes”); IRS Instructions for Form 8849, 1 (2005) (advising the taxpayer, “Caution: Do not use Form 843 to make adjustment to liability reported on Forms 720”; instead, “Use Schedule 6 for claims ... including refunds of excise taxes reported on Form 720”) (emphasis in original); IRS Instructions for Form 720, 14 (2005) (revealing that “[t]he person receiving the payment for communications ... services must collect and pay over the tax and file the return”).
If, despite the preceding, a claim is filed and the IRS denies it or withholds a response for six months, a claimant may file a refund suit against the United States in the Federal Claims Court or a federal district court. I.R.C. § 7422(a); 28 U.S.C. § 1346(a). In a refund suit, the taxpayer must prove both the excessiveness of the assessment and the correct amount of any refund to which she is entitled.
United States v. Janis,
D. The Plaintiff Has Standing To Bring His APA Claim 4
1. Legal Standard for Standing
Article III of the Constitution limits the jurisdiction of federal courts to cases
*42
or controversies. U.S. CONST. ART. Ill, § 2, cl. 1. These prerequisites reflect the “common understanding of what it takes to make a justiciable case.”
Steel Co. v. Citizens for a Better Env't
As the party invoking federal jurisdiction, the plaintiff bears the burden of establishing standing.
Defenders of Wildlife,
To demonstrate standing, a plaintiff must satisfy a three-pronged test.
Sierra Club,
The test for standing shifts focus when a plaintiff challenges an agency’s failure to comply with a procedural requirement.
Fla. Audubon,
If the plaintiff is suing under the APA, the plaintiff must show that the alleged injury falls within the zone of interests that the statute on which the plaintiff bases the complaint seeks to protect.
Lujan,
2. The Plaintiff Sufficiently Alleges that the Notice Procedure Injures Him
The defendant first argues that the plaintiff lacks standing because he has not alleged that he has or will use the Notice procedure to obtain a refund. Def.’s Mot. at 6. Without availing himself of the procedure, the defendant reasons, the plaintiff *43 cannot allege injury because he has not shown himself “to be aggrieved by any final agency action either in the implementation of the regulation or in having any offers-in-compromise denied.” Id. (quoting Brooks v. Snow, 313 F.Supp.2d 654, 659 (S.D.Tex.2004)).
The plaintiff responds that the Notice procedure is “grotesquely unrealistic” because, on the one hand, it “would not allow him to claim the safe-harbor amount while reserving the right to maintain his refund suit and pursue the additional money he is owed through it,” and, on the other hand, it “would [not] allow him to claim the full amount he is entitled to despite lacking the complete documentation that the Notice requires.” PL’s Opp’n at 5, 6. Thus, he argues, the Notice procedure injures his economic interest in an expeditious, full refund even though he has not applied under the procedure nor does he intend to do so. Am. Compl. at ¶ 27.
The plaintiffs rebuttal is well founded. The IRS continues to deny to the plaintiff a benefit to which he is entitled: the refund of unlawfully extracted taxes. This injury is economic- — -therefore, concrete; as well as ongoing — therefore, actual and present, not conjectural or hypothetical.
See McKesson Corp. v. Div. of Alcoholic Beverages & Tobacco, Dep’t of Bus. Regulation of Fla.,
Just as the plaintiff clearly has an ongoing injury, so too his claim is not deficient merely for failure to apply for a refund under the Notice procedure. The plaintiff is not seeking to use the Notice procedure; rather, he seeks only to enforce regulations that apply to it.
See Highland Petroleum, Inc. v. Dep’t of Energy,
Persistent, the defendant analogizes the instant APA claim with that denied in
Brooks v. Snow,
Brooks,
however, is not controlling and, in any event, distinguishable. First, unlike the plaintiffs in
Brooks,
this plaintiff has alleged that he applied for a refund and was denied. Am. Compl. ¶ 22. He hasn’t reapplied under the Notice procedure, but the law does not require him to reapply every time the IRS changes its mind or superceding case law appears.
See Starkey v. United States,
The defendant next argues that, even were the plaintiff to use the Notice procedure, he would still lack standing because the procedure is “simply an offer to taxpayers of an alternate means of obtaining [a] refund[ ].” Def.’s Mot. at 8. According to the defendant, the conditions of the procedure do not impinge upon taxpayer rights because (1) the IRS’s power to com *45 promise (settle) a refund claim is discretionary and (2) Congress has already provided the legal remedy of a refund suit to those who make a request and are denied or ignored by the IRS. Id. Therefore, as “taxpayers cannot possibly have a legally protected interest to receive duplicative refunds, so they cannot possibly have a legally protected interest to request duplicative refunds.” Def.’s Reply at 3 (emphasis added).
But this objection misses the mark. At this stage of the proceedings, the plaintiff need not defend the merits of his claim but need only show that the procedural requirement he alleges the IRS violated is designed to protect a threatened, concrete interest.
City of Waukesha,
As a final sally, the defendant argues that even assuming that the plaintiff is injured by the claim-withdrawal condition of the Notice procedure, the standing that that injury bestows does not extend “carte blanche to attacking] totally unrelated requirements” such as the safe harbor levels, the length of the recovery period and the use of tax forms. Def.’s Reply at 3.
Factual and legal confusion both riddle this objection. As a factual matter, the defendant ignores the face of the plaintiffs second amended complaint, baldly identifying as arbitrary, unreasonable and unlawful
all
the restrictive conditions of the Notice procedure because they “limit the restitution effected by the government to a minor fraction of the total amount unlawfully exacted.” Am. Compl. ¶¶ 27, 29. As a legal matter, once standing is established on a particular injury caused by the defendant and redressable in court, standing is established for the entire applicable claim.
See Sierra Club v. Morton,
The two final elements of standing (causation and redressability) are not challenged and are readily apparent.
See Sugar Cane Growers,
E. The Refund Request Procedure is Not Committed to Agency Discretion
The defendant attempts to insulate the Notice procedure from judicial review by characterizing it as part and parcel of the IRS’s authority to compromise cases, for which it purportedly possesses unlimited discretion. Def.’s Mot. at 9. The defendant points to I.R.C. § 7122(a) as its authority for issuing the Notice procedure, Def.’s Reply at 4; the provision reads: “The Secretary may compromise any civil or criminal case arising under the internal revenue laws prior to reference to the Department of Justice for prosecution or defense.” I.R.C. § 7122(a). The defendant thus frames the Notice procedure as *46 “an offer by the IRS to compromise its potential liability for any potential ... overpayments.” Def.’s Reply at 5. In light of the absence of any “meaningful standard by which a court could review the exercise of [the agency’s] discretion,” Def.’s Mot. at 10, and Congress’s choice of precatory statutory language (“may compromise”), the court, supposedly, cannot review the defendant’s decision without intruding upon administrative prerogative.
A court may not review an agency action where “(1) statutes preclude judicial review; or (2) agency action is committed to agency discretion by law.” 5 U.S.C. § 701(a)(2);
Heckler v. Chaney,
“[A]n agency’s decision not to prosecute or enforce, whether through civil or criminal process, is a decision generally committed to an agency’s absolute discretion.”
Chaney,
often involves a complicated balancing of a number of factors which are peculiarly within its expertise ... including whether a violation has occurred, ... whether agency resources are best spent on this violation or another, whether the agency is likely to succeed if it acts, whether the particular enforcement action requested best fits the agency’s overall policies, and, indeed, whether the agency has enough resources to undertake the action at all.
Id.; accord Nat’l Wildlife Fed’n v. Envtl. Prot. Agency,
(1) where the substantive statute has provided guidelines for the agency to follow in exercising its enforcement powers; (2) where the agency refuses to institute proceedings based solely on the belief that it lacks jurisdiction; and (3) where the agency has conspicuously and expressly adopted a general policy that is so extreme as to amount to an abdication of its statutory responsibilities. 5
Balt. Gas & Elec.,
*47
That the Notice procedure is not a compromise power committed entirely to the discretion of the IRS is a fact evident from the well-trod path of case law establishing that the courts do review the refund conditions established by the Treasury Secretary. Treasury Regulations, such as the Notice procedure, are calculated “to avoid dilatory, careless, and wasteful fiscal administration by barring incomplete or confusing claims.”
Angelus Milling Co. v. Comm’r of Internal Reve
nue,
Congress has given the Treasury this rule-making power for self-protection and not for self-imprisonment. If the Commissioner chooses not to stand on his own formal or detailed requirements, it would be making an empty abstraction, and not a practical safeguard, of a regulation to allow the Commissioner to invoke technical objections after he has investigated the merits of a claim and taken action upon it. Even tax administration does not as a matter of principle preclude considerations of fairness.
Id.
at 297,
One such example of fairness appears in the court-developed doctrine of “substantial variance.” Under that doctrine, courts routinely ignore the pronouncement that “a claim which does not comply with [treasury regulations] will not be considered for any purpose as a claim for refund or credit.” C.F.R. § 301.6402-2(b)(1);
see Computervision,
Even were the above insufficiently persuasive, the observation remains that the Notice procedure resembles a procedure-bound rule more than it does a discretionary enforcement decision. In contradistinction to an act of prosecutorial discretion, an agency-promulgated rule is renewable. 5 U.S.C. § 701-706;
Nat'l Ass’n of Home Builders v. Army Corps of Eng’rs,
Because the subject of review is a rule rather than a prosecutorial decision, the protections afforded the defendant in the latter are not available. Prosecutorial discretion represents a balanced judgment on the existence of a violation, allocation of agency resources, likelihood of success and fit with overall policy.
Chaney,
*48
In a collateral consequence of Notice 2006-50, the IRS has unmistakably cab-ined (limited) its discretion. An agency decision that narrowly cabins administrative discretion rises to the level of a substantive, legislative rule.
Comty. Nutrition Inst. v. Young,
With the question of agency discretion resolved in the plaintiffs favor, the court can consider whether the Notice procedure constitutes final agency action for which there is no other adequate legal remedy.
F. The Notice Procedure Is Final Agency Action for Which There Is No Other Adequate Legal Remedy
The defendant argues that the Notice procedure is not final agency action because it does not determine rights or obligations from which legal consequences will flow. Def.’s Mot. at 16. The procedure, the defendant maintains, does not alter federal tax law but merely offers a relatively simple process by which to obtain a refund for a particular type of tax. Id. (claiming that “[tjaxpayers are under no obligation to use the Notice procedure, and the procedure does not affect their existing rights to obtain legal relief’).
Generally, for a court to have jurisdiction over claims seeking judicial review of an agency action under the APA, it must determine that the action is final.
Cobell v. Norton,
The defendant’s own representations belie his argument. It eludes the court’s comprehension how the Notice procedure could have no effect on the law, as the defendant insists, and yet, also as the defendant insists, be the mandatory format for administrative refund claims. See No *49 tice Procedure 2006-50 § 5(a)(2) (declaring that tax refund requests must follow the Notice procedure or they will not be processed). Neither party disputes that the Notice procedure purports to set the rights and obligations attendant to submitting a refund claim. The legal consequences flowing therefrom are substantial: no less than the loss of the right to file a refund suit in court should a claimant fail to abide by the Notice procedure. See I.R.C. § 7422(a) (precluding a refund suit where taxpayer has not filed a prior refund claim with the IRS consistent with IRS regulations).
As a back-up argument, the defendant proposes that “an adequate remedy already exists under the time-honored, tax-refund-suit procedure.” Def.’s Mot. at 15. The cases cited for this proposition are inapposite because they discuss the Anti-Injunction Act rather than the APA.
See South Carolina v. Regan,
Apposite law indicates that “Congress did not intend the general grant of review in the APA to duplicate existing procedures for review of agency action”; thus, § 704 “does not provide additional judicial remedies in situations where the Congress has provided special and adequate review procedures.”
Bowen v. Massachusetts,
Here, however, there is no legal method to review the Notice procedure other than an APA action. Admittedly, the plaintiff could file a refund claim and, if his full refund were denied, file a refund suit — but this would merely enable him to challenge the IRS’s final determination regarding his monetary claim, not the procedure itself.
See Jackson Square Assocs. v. Dep’t of Hous. & Urban Dev.,
Moreover, it is unclear what procedure governs refund claims not filed on 2006 tax returns; i.e., the IRS offers no guidance to taxpayers whose excise tax claims are not yet time barred by the three-year limitations period but who did not file their refund claims on 2006 tax returns. If it is the IRS’s position that it will not consider any newly-filed claims to be refund requests, then such taxpayers could not satisfy the jurisdictional prerequisites for a refund suit. They would, thus, lack an adequate legal remedy. I.R.C. § 7422(a); C.F.R. § 301.6402-2(b)(l) (warning that “[a] claim which does not comply with [Treasury Regulations] will not be considered for any purpose as a claim for refund”).
In sum, the defendant has failed to show that an otherwise adequate legal remedy exists barring the plaintiffs APA claim. With § 704 now addressed, the court’s review progresses to and ends at § 702, the APA provision governing waiver of sovereign immunity.
G. The IRS Does Not Enjoy Sovereign Immunity
The defendant contends that because the plaintiff did not seek a refund under *50 the Notice procedure he did not exhaust his administrative remedies; therefore, waiver is inappropriate. Def.’s Mot. at 14. The defendant also argues (referring to its argument in its pending motion to dismiss the plaintiffs refund claim) that, if the court has no jurisdiction over the plaintiffs refund claim because he did not wait for a decision within six months before filing suit, then there has been no waiver of sovereign immunity. Def.’s Mot. at 14 (referring to Def.’s Req. for Dismissal of PL’s Refund Claim for Lack of Jurisdiction at 4-5).
Under the doctrine of sovereign immunity, the United States government is immune from suit, except when it consents to be sued.
Honda v. Clark,
The waiver of sovereign immunity under the APA provides that “[a]n action in a court of the United States seeking relief other than money damages and stating a claim that an agency or an officer or employee thereof acted or failed to act in an official capacity ... shall not be dismissed nor relief therein be denied on the ground that it is against the United States.” 5 U.S.C. § 702. Section 702 cautions, however, that “[n]othing herein ... confers authority to grant relief if any other statute that grants consent to suit expressly or impliedly forbids the relief which is sought.”
Id.
Thus, “[t]he APA excludes from its waiver of sovereign immunity ... claims for which an adequate remedy is available elsewhere.”
Transohio Sav. Bank v. Dir., Office of Thrift Supervision,
The defendant’s first sovereign immunity argument raises the same issues (standing and adequate remedy at law) that the court disposed of above. Without repeating itself, the court rejects the defendant’s arguments again. As for the defendant’s second argument, the court stays its hand from disposing of the motion to dismiss the refund claim just yet, but it may observe that, even if the defendant is correct that the refund claim is precluded, that has no bearing on the viability of the APA claim. The question of the propriety of waiver vis-a-vis the APA claim is orthogonal to waiver vis-a-vis the refund claim.
See Transohio,
IV. CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated herein, the court denies the defendant’s motion to dismiss. An order consistent with this memorandum opinion is separately and contemporaneously issued this 10th day of August 2007.
Notes
. Originally established in the Eastern District of Wisconsin, venue in this matter shifted to the District Court for the District of Columbia pursuant to an order from the Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation consolidating this and three other cases. Transfer Order (Dec. 28, 2006); accord 28 U.S.C. § 1407.
. Whether or not the IRS formally denied the plaintiff's refund request or merely deferred its decision is the question lying at the heart of another motion to dismiss, targeted on the plaintiff's refund claim rather than his APA claim. Def.’s Req. for Dismissal of PL's Refund Claim for Lack of Jurisdiction, at 7. The court need not address this question to resolve the instant motion.
. Because the absence of final agency action implicates the court’s subject-matter jurisdiction, the movant should allege this deficiency in a 12(b)(1) motion, not a 12(b)(6).
See Arbaugh v. Y & H Corp.,
. As standing goes to the fundamental justici-ability of the case under Article III of the U.S. Constitution, the court resolves it as a threshold matter before resolving other jurisdictional questions.
Arizonans for Official English v. Arizona,
. In
Chaney,
the Court endorsed only the first of these three exceptions but noted the possibility of the other two, "expressing] no opinion on whether such decisions would be unreviewable” but "not[ing] that in those situations the statute conferring authority on the agency might indicate that such decisions were not committed to agency discretion.”
Bait. Gas & Elec. Co. v. Fed. Energy Regulatory Comm’n,
