James A. Schultz (“Schultz”) appeals that part of the United States Claims Court judgment awarding the government costs as the “prevailing party” under United States Claims Court Rule 54(d) in a suit brought by Schultz for refund of a tax penalty partial payment. The Claims Court
*165
based its decision on the amount of the penalty ultimately held due the government from Schultz, compared to the amount originally assessed.
Schultz v. United States,
BACKGROUND
From September through December 1983, Schultz was one of four partners in Chrisandrea, Inc., a now dissolved Florida corporation, created to manage the food and beverage operations of a St. Peters-burg hotel. During Chrisandrea’s entire period of existence, none of the corporation’s four partners collected or paid over to the government employee federal income taxes or Social Security taxes (together “employment taxes”), as required by Section 6672(a) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 (26 U.S.C. § 6672(a) (1988)). Although employment taxes were withheld from employees’ gross wages, they were never paid over to the government, but were used to satisfy other corporate liabilities.
After Chrisandrea’s dissolution, the Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”) assessed, jointly and severally, 100-percent penalties under section 6672(a) 1 against at least three of the four partners for Chrisan-drea’s entire tax liability. One partner, Steven Havrilla, paid the IRS $5,289.56, and the other, Fred Wlenklinski, paid $5,776.88. The fourth partner, Manuel Van Vures, has paid nothing.
Schultz paid the IRS $100 toward the $20,691.38 penalty assessed against him and then filed suit in the Claims Court seeking its refund on the ground that section 6672(a) was not applicable to him. The government counterclaimed for $21,697.07 —the original assessment plus accrued interest.
In the complaint, Schultz alleged that, because he never was under any duty to “collect, truthfully account for, and pay over any tax” such that failure to do so would trigger section 6672(a) liability, the government could not assess a penalty against him arising from Chrisandrea’s operations.
The Claims Court found that Schultz was a “responsible person” for the collection of employment taxes during Chrisandrea’s entire period of existence and, as such, had willfully failed to collect, account for and pay over the withheld taxes due. As a result, the court held Schultz liable for the entire assessment less $5,776.88 and interest paid by Wlenklinski. The government later accepted $9,624.94 plus accrued interest in complete satisfaction of Schultz’s penalty to reflect Havrilla’s payment. Accordingly, the court refused any refund.
The Claims Court also awarded costs to the government as the prevailing party, overruling Schultz’s Objection to Bill of Costs. Schultz had argued that since the government counterclaimed for $21,697.07 and ultimately accepted $9,624.94 plus interest in complete satisfaction of the penalty, under Rule 54(d) it could not be deemed to have prevailed. The Claims Court rejected Schultz’s argument, reasoning that “[a] party will be considered the prevailing party and is entitled to costs even if it does not recover its entire claim.” Schultz v. United States, No. 68-87T, slip op. at 2 (Cl.Ct. April 19, 1990).
DISCUSSION
I.
Rule 54(d) of the United States Claims Court provides that “costs shall be allowed as of course to the prevailing party unless the court otherwise directs.” A “prevailing party” “ ‘typical[ly] ... succeed[s] on any significant issue in litigation which achieves some of the benefits the part[y] sought in bringing suit.’ ”
Austin v. De
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partment of Commerce,
Schultz argues that the government could not have prevailed in the Claims Court because the amount it ultimately collected from him, $9,624.94 plus accrued interest, was far less than IRS’s original assessment and its counterclaim, both of which exceeded $20,000.00. In advancing this argument, Schultz asked the Claims Court, as he now asks us, to focus attention on the amount of the government’s counterclaim, rather than the issue of liability raised by his complaint. However, as we explain below, the proper analysis should center on the relief sought in the complaint — a judgment that he was owed a complete refund of his partial payment— and whether, in this context, Schultz was the prevailing party, because, as Schultz suggests, if the government did not prevail completely, or even substantially, he, in some way, must have.
Before this court, Schultz attempts to portray the Claims Court proceeding as simply an action contesting the
amount
of the penalty assessed, rather than his liability for
any
penalty under section 6672(a). However, the allegations in the complaint as well as the position Schultz took before the Claims Court belie his characterization. Schultz’s representations were clearly designed to convince the Claims Court that he was not responsible for
any
failure to collect or pay over employment taxes under section 6672(a)
3
and that the
entire
penalty assessed against him was in error, not, as he now argues here, that some penalty may have been appropriate, but not one for $20,-691.38.
See generally Hensley,
Consequently, viewing Schultz’s suit from the correct vantage point, it is clear *167 that the government prevailed for purposes of Rule 54(d) costs. The government proved that Schultz was a “responsible person” under section 6672(a), that he “willfully” failed to collect and pay over the employment taxes, and that he was jointly and severally liable for Chrisandrea’s employment tax liability. Schultz prevailed on none of these controlling issues, and therefore was not entitled to the complete refund he sought of the $100 partial payment he had made.
II.
Assuming, arguendo, Schultz’s contentions were correct and our focus properly should be on the government’s counterclaim for the entire penalty (plus interest) and not on the claim for refund and issue of liability raised in his complaint, our result would not differ.
The IRS was entitled to assess the section 6672(a) penalty jointly and severally against each of the four Chrisandrea partners.
Brown v. United States,
The government was, however, obligated to credit
pro tanto
toward the judgment against Schultz any payments received by the other partners, provided that no refund actions were pending or still fileable against the funds. To do otherwise would be beyond the discretion of the IRS and contrary to established law.
Gens v. United States,
CONCLUSION
Because the proper analysis should have concentrated on Schultz’s requested relief and dispositive issues relating to liability and because the penalty was joint and several in nature, the Claims Court need not have based its decision on whether the amount ultimately collected from Schultz was proportionately large enough in comparison to that assessed to justify awarding the government costs as the “prevailing party.” Since we uphold the award of *168 costs based on its determination of liability, we reach no conclusion on the Claims Court’s proportionality ruling. Nevertheless, for the reasons stated above, the judgment of the Claims Court awarding costs is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. To assure collection when a corporate employer does not pay its employment taxes, section 6672(a) imposes personal liability on persons responsible for seeing that the taxes were paid:
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 ... 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) (1988).
. Although both
Devine
and
Austin
defined "prevailing party” under the Equal Access to Justice Act (EAJA), 28 U.S.C. § 2412(d)(1)(A) (1988), the same reasoning applies to costs under Rule 54(d). The EAJA contains no definition of "prevailing party.” Instead, per the legislative history, courts are to consult "prior judicial interpretations of the term 'prevailing party'" to determine EAJA awards,
Devine,
. It is clear, both from the complaint and the Claims Court's detailed opinion, that Schultz vigorously contested the IRS’s contentions that he was a "responsible person” for the collection and payment of employment taxes to the government and that he "willfully" failed to collect and pay over any withheld taxes. In fact, it was only during the trial that Schultz stipulated that he was a "responsible person," and then only from November 23, 1983, the midpoint of Chrisandrea's existence, until the business wound down on December 23, 1983. He did not, however, concede that he willfully failed to withhold and pay over the taxes during any period.
At oral argument, Schultz's counsel apparently abandoned the argument, also advanced in his brief to this court, that Schultz was not a "responsible person" and that he did not “willfully'’ violate section 6672(a). Therefore, we do not address these issues, no matter how meritorious they may, or may not, be, except insofar as they bear on whether or not Schultz was the prevailing party.
