On July 12, 1990, L & H Corporation (“L & H”) filеd this action in federal court in order to obtain a tax refund. The Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”) had previously denied L & H’s administrative claim for a rеfund and had notified it of the disallowance on June 11, 1987. Under the applicable statute of limitations, no suit for a tax refund may be filed “after the expiration of 2 years from the date of mailing by certified mail or registered mail by the Secretary to the taxpayer of a notice of the disallowance of the part of the claim to which the suit or proceeding relates.” 26 U.S.C. § 6532(a)(1). However, L & H urges that its federal complaint was timely filed under Section 6532(a)(1) of the Internal Revenue Code because the statute of limitations ran not from the first notice of disallowance L & H rеceived, but from the second such notice. Magistrate Judge Weisberg disagreed with L & H and concluded that its claim was time-barred,
I.
L & H’s 1983 corporate income tax return was due on March 15, 1984. It filed that tax return on September 10, 1984. L & H claims that on March 5, 1984, it mailed a Form 7004 to obtain an automatic six-month extension of time in which to file its federal tax rеturn. L & H has no certified mail receipt or other record that it sent the form, and the IRS claims not to have received it. In May 1987, L & H filed a Form 1120X seeking a refund of $115,000 of income tax for 1980 as a result of a carry-back of its net operating loss and unused investment tax credit for the 1983 tax year. On June 11, 1987, the IRS sent L & H by certified mail a disallowance notice which stated that L & H’s refund request had been denied because the claimed credit was filed morе than three years after the due date for the applicable return. Under 26 U.S.C. § 6511(d)(2)(A), a taxpayer must file a refund request within three years of the due date for the applicable return. The refund request would have been considered timely filed only if a Form 7004 request for an extension of time in which tо file its 1983 tax returns had been timely filed by L & H.
The June 1987 disallowance notice to L & H stated that it had “2 years from the mailing date of this letter” in which to file suit for the recovery of taxes covered by thе disallowance notice. The notice also
II.
L & H’s suit would be timely filed within the two-year limitations period, 26 U.S.C. § 6532(a)(1), only if that period ran from the IRS’s second notice of disallowance to L & H rather than from its first. L & H advances two theories in support of its argument that the second notice of disal-lowance, sent on July 13, 1988, extended the aрplicable limitations period. First, L & H contends that its June 1987 resubmission of Form 1120X with an attached copy of its 1984 extension request constituted a new clаim. Second, it asserts that even if its second request was not a new claim, the applicable limitations period should be extended becаuse the IRS reconsidered the claim.
A. New Claim
In June 1987, L & H refiled a claim identical to its original claim with the exception that the second claim also attached a copy of its earlier Form 7004 request for an extension of time for filing a corporate tax return. But as the magistrate judge aptly noted, “[r]esubmitting a rejected claim does not give a taxpayer a new limitations period in which to file suit” (App. 8). A taxpayer cannot enlarge Section 6532’s two-year statute of limitations by refiling what is essentially the same claim that was rejected by the IRS. See
Stratmore v. United States,
A submission of a second claim may expand the limitations period where the second claim alleges grounds or theories for recovery which are different from those set forth in the first claim. See,
e.g., Charlson Realty Co. v. United States,
B. Reconsideration by the IRS
L & H also contends that even if its second claim was merely a resubmission of its first, subsequent consideration and rejection by the IRS should enlarge the statute of limitations. However, the plain language of Section 6532(a)(4) of the Tax Code
Some courts have suggested that the IRS may be equitably estopped from asserting the statute of limitations where the taxpayer has relied on representations by the IRS that the applicable limitations period was being extended in the taxpayer’s case.
Haber v. United States,
C. Conclusion
Because L & H’s suit was not a new сlaim and because IRS reconsideration of the issue did not extend the filing period, the limitations period ran from the first disallowance. Since L & H filed suit in federal court more than two years after it received that disallowance, its suit is time-barred under 26 U.S.C. § 6532(a)(1).
In his opinion, the magistrate judge included а thoughtful discussion of whether Section 7502 of the Tax Code, 26 U.S.C. § 7502, supersedes the common law “mailbox rule” such that taxpayers who send their returns by ordinary mail now bear all risk that either the IRS will not receive the returns, or that it will receive and lose them. Because the suit is time-barred we need not resolve the merits of this question.
The judgment of the magistrate judge is affirmed.
