Lawrence Keasler and Keasler Body Company were assessed excise taxes on truck hoist units they had assembled. They prevailed in an action for a refund and after the government’s appeal was dismissed, they obtained an award of attorney’s fees under the Equal Access to Justice Act, 28 U.S.C. § 2412(d) (1982). The government challenges the award on the grounds that the fee application filed after dismissal of the appeal was untimely, and that its position was substantially justified, even though the only appellate decision in point, one from another circuit, was contrary to its position. We affirm the award of attorney’s fees.
Keasler Body was in the business of fitting hydraulic hoists and truck bodies on truck chassis. For the period January 1974 to September 1975, the Internal Revenue Service assessed an excise tax on all the truck-hoist units that Keasler had assembled. The IRS contended that the assembly process constituted taxable manufacturing under I.R.C. § 4061(a)(1). This had been the IRS position since at least 1969.
See
Rev.Rul. 69-195,
Keasler paid the assessment and sought a refund from the IRS. Although the IRS acknowledged that Keasler’s position was supported by
Jacobs,
it declined to follow the case and refused the requested refund.
1
In 1979, Keasler sued for a refund and the case was submitted on stipulated facts. The district court
2
granted summary judgment for Keasler on October 2, 1981. The government filed a timely notice of appeal, but later dismissed the appeal on the advice of the Solicitor General. Nine days later (but more than seven months after the grant of summary judgment), Keasler moved the district court for an award of attorneys’ fees under section 2412(d)
3
for
*1229
work before the district court and on the government’s short-lived appeal. The government contested the motion on two grounds. First, it argued that Keasler’s application was untimely because it was not filed within thirty days of a “final judgment,” allegedly the summary judgment granted by the district court. Second, it contended that its position before the district court and on appeal was substantially justified. Keasler was awarded fees for the district court and appellate litigation.
Keasler v. United States,
I.
The threshold question is whether Keasler filed a timely application for attorneys’ fees incurred during proceedings before the district court. Section 2412(d)(1)(B) requires that an application be submitted to the court “within thirty days of final judgment in the action.” 4 The circuit courts have interpreted this phrase in a variety of contexts and several conflicting meanings have emerged.
The most persuasive view originated in
McDonald v. Schweiker,
On October 11, 1984, Congress passed a bill amending and extending section 2412(d). It added a definition to the EAJA providing that “ ‘final judgment’ means a judgment that is final and not appealable.” H.R. 5479, 98th Cong., 2d Sess. § 2(b)(3)(G), 130 Cong.Rec. H11479 (daily ed. Oct. 4, 1984). S.Rep. No. 919, 98th Cong., 2d Sess. 16 (1984), expressly approved the Seventh Circuit’s opinion in
McDonald.
The President refused to sign H.R. 5479 and it did not become law.
See Premachandra v. Mitts,
*1230
Subsequently, the District of Columbia Circuit adopted the reasoning and holding in
McDonald.
In
Massachusetts Union of Public Housing Tenants, Inc. v. Pierce,
Most recently, the Sixth Circuit approved
McDonald. Feldpausch v. Heckler,
Two circuits have taken a different path. In
McQuiston v. Marsh,
In
Gold Kist, Inc. v. USDA,
The reasoning in
McQuiston
and the dictum in
Goldkist
are too abbreviated to be persuasive. We believe
McDonald
was rightly decided and its acceptance by the other circuit underscores its strength. We also find significant the context in which section 2412(d) appears. Chapter 161, part 6 of the Judicial Code, in addition to containing section 2412, regulates the payment of judgments and compromise settlements by the government. 28 U.S.C. § 2414 (1982) provides that “[wjhenever the Attorney General determines that no appeal shall be taken from a judgment or that no further review will be sought from a decision affirming the same, he shall so certify and the judgment shall be deemed final.” Because of its proximity to the statute in question, section 2414 provides one of the best indications of what constitutes a final judgment against the government. Under this definition, the government’s dismissal
*1231
of the Keasler appeal is a “final judgment.” Considering our preference for relying on the context in which a statute appears in determining its meaning,
see Premachandra,
II.
The second issue is whether the district court erred in awarding fees against the government for proceedings at the trial level. First, the government bears the burden of showing that its “position” was substantially justified.
8
Foley Construction Co. v. United States Army Corps of Engineers,
In determining the reasonableness of the government’s position, the legislative history of section 2412(d) is helpful. The House Judiciary Committee stated that the “reasonableness” standard “should not be read to raise a presumption that the Government position was not substantially justified, simply because it lost the case. Nor, in fact, does the standard require the Government to establish that its decision to litigate was based on a substantial probability of prevailing.” H.R.Rep. No. 1418 at 11, reprinted in 1980 U.S.Code Cong. & Ad.News at 4990. More specifically, however, the Committee noted that “[cjertain types of case dispositions may indicate that the government action was not substantially justified. A court should look closely at cases, for example, where there has been a judgment on the pleadings or where there is a directed verdict * * *. Such cases clearly raise the possibility that the Government was unreasonable in pursuing the litigation.” Id., 1980 U.S.Code Cong. & Ad.News at 4889-90. The district court, granted summary judgment for Keasler on the substantive issues in this suit, and this judgment is quite similar to a directed verdict or judgment on the pleadings. See 10 C. Wright, A. Miller, & M. Kane, Federal Practice and Procedure § 2713, at 593-95, § 2713.1, at 614-16 (1983). Thus, this case is plainly one that Congress envisioned may justify fees.
A.
We now explore the substantive justification offered by the government. During the tax periods in question, section 4061(a)(1) imposed an excise tax on manufacturers of truck bodies and chassis. The accompanying Treasury regulation defined “manufacturer” as “any person who produces a taxable article * * * from new or raw material, by processing, manipulating, or changing the form of an article, or by combining or assembling two or more articles.” Treas.Reg. § 346.4(a) (1954). In
*1232
1969, the IRS determined that combining a hoist with a truck body or chassis constituted manufacturing under the Code. Rev. Rui. 69-195, 1969-
. The government urges that it was justified in pressing this litigation because: (1) the legislative history and case law of section 4061(a)(1) indicate that the term “manufacturer” should be given a broad construction; (2) Rev.Rul. 69-195 was valid during the years in question and entitled to judicial deference; (3) the taxpayer was independently liable on the theory that it changed the “transportation function” of the vehicle it sold; (4) the legislative history of section 4063(d) indicates post-facto congressional approval of the IRS position.
All of these arguments were either expressly or implicitly rejected by the Tenth Circuit in
Jacobs Equipment Co. v. United States,
Thus, the IRS knew that the basis for its lawsuit against Keasler had been undercut by the
Jacobs
decision.
11
It now
*1233
urges that its decision to proceed below was reasonable nonetheless. The question here does not involve pressing for a de novo evaluation of the propriety of Rev. Rui. 69-195. Nor is there any dispute that
Jacobs
would have been binding precedent had this case been brought in the Tenth Circuit or that
Jacobs
is not strictly controlling in this court. Rather, the issue is whether the IRS could have reasonably believed that this court would not follow
Jacobs.
We conclude that it could not. “This court has long taken the position that uniformity of decision among the circuits is vitally important on issues concerning the administration of the tax laws.”
North American Life & Casualty Co. v. Commissioner,
In ruling on the merits, the district court accepted none of the IRS’s contentions and adopted the reasoning and result in
Jacobs.
The court rejected the validity of Rev.Rul. 69-195, interpreting the addition of section 4063(d) as proof that Congress felt the ruling was an erroneous interpretation of section 4061(a)(1). The court also distinguished cases that the government relied upon in urging a broad interpretation of “manufacturing.”
Keasler v. United States,
No. J-C-79-175, slip op. at 2-4 (E.D.Ark. Sept. 30, 1981). The district court reconsidered the merits of the government’s position when ruling on the attorneys’ fees motion. It found that Rev. Rui. 69-195 did not substantially justify the government’s position. The court reasoned that revenue regulations deserve little deference, especially following their rejection by a circuit court of appeals.
*1234
We conclude that the government was unreasonable in pressing this litigation with the hope that
Jacobs
would be disregarded.
15
Although it argued before the district court that
Jacobs
was erroneously-decided, its arguments show only a disagreement with the Tenth Circuit rather than that the court’s rationales were demonstrably erroneous.
16
That a case presents an issue of first impression in the forum does not ipso facto make the government’s position in the litigation reasonable.
See Devine v. Sutermeister,
B.
The government urges that its decision to challenge
Jacobs
here was substantially justified as part of the IRS enforcement scheme. This system was succinctly described in
Divine v. Commissioner,
In federal tax cases disputed questions of law are satisfactorily resolved only by U.S. Supreme Court decisions, for the Commissioner has on many occasions taken the position, as he has in this litigation, that a Court of Appeals decision with which he disagrees has no binding effect on the Service’s policies in other circuits. 17
The Supreme Court will generally grant certiorari in tax cases only when two or *1235 more circuits have adopted conflicting positions. See 9 J. Mertens, Law of Federal Income Taxation § 51.20 (1982); S.Ct.R. 17. Thus, the government contends that it was justified in seeking to establish precedent here to conflict with the Jacobs decision.
The government supports this argument with the Supreme Court’s recent decision in
United States v. Mendoza,
A rule allowing nonmutual collateral estoppel against the government * * * would substantially thwart the development of important questions of law by freezing the first final decision rendered on a particular legal issue. Allowing only one final adjudication would deprive this Court of the benefit it receives from permitting several courts of appeals to explore a difficult question before this Court grants certiorari. * * * Indeed, if nonmutual collateral estoppel were routinely applied against the government, this Court would have to revise its practice of waiting for a conflict to develop before granting the government’s petitions for certiorari.
Id.
Mendozo
does not settle the issue here. Prohibiting the government from relitigat-ing an issue is considerably different than penalizing an unsuccessful subsequent effort with attorneys’ fees liability. As the court noted in
Trujillo v. Heckler,
Under the law governing tax cases filed after February 1983, a taxpayer may recover attorneys’ fees from the government upon showing, among other things, that “the position of the United States in the civil proceeding was unreasonable.” I.R.C. § 7430(c)(2)(A)(i) (West Supp.1985). The government relies on the legislative history of the current statute to validate its position under the EAJA. The Senate Finance Committee has indicated that: “Generally, the pursuit of litigation by the government to establish a conflict among the United States Circuit Courts of Appeals would not be unreasonable.” Technical Explanation of Committee Amendment, 127 Cong.Rec. S15577, S15594 (daily ed. Dec. 16, 1981); see also Contini v. United States, 1984-2 U.S.Tax.Cas. (CCH) 9969 (N.D.Cal.1984) (“The fact that the IRS explored a legal theory, however obscure, which did not ultimately help the government to win, is not, alone, sufficient to establish unreasonableness [under section 7430].”).
*1236
The committee’s statement does not require that the government prevail here. First, the intent expressed by a Congress subsequent to the enactment of the statute in issue is not probative, much less controlling.
See Premachandra v. Mitts,
The appellate review process in tax cases has been significantly criticized.
See
Commission on Revision of the Federal Court Appellate System,
Structure and Internal Procedures: Recommendations for Change,
The purpose of the EAJA was to diminish the deterrent effect that attorneys’ fees may have on challenges to unreasonable government action. Pub.L. No. 96-481, § 202, 94 Stat. 2321, 2325 (1980). Congress was concerned that “[i]n far too many cases, a party will knuckle under to a Federal order he knows to be wrong because he cannot afford the cost of taking the matter to court.” 125 Cong.Rec. 21441 (1979) (statement of Sen. Thurmond). The IRS’s unwillingness to defer to decisions from other circuits may victimize a class of persons intended to benefit from the EAJA:
So long as the Internal Revenue Service does not feel bound in [a] circuit with the results of cases in one or more other circuits, a small taxpayer * * * will be told * * * that he owed X dollars for some particular item of income. These dollars of course are very small and not significant enough to be contested. This taxpayer normally pays the tax although the government full well knows that it has lost the case in another circuit and in all probability may lose it in every circuit in which it is tried.
Hruska Report,
[W]hen the Commissioner has one full and fair opportunity to press his claim, and loses, the importance of conserving judicial time assumes great weight in subsequent cases raising the same issue. Forcing taxpayers to relitigate leads to a “significant waste of time, expenses, and manpower.” Furthermore, inconsistent treatment of identically situated taxpayers reflects adversely on the stability and rationality of the tax system.
Note,
Collateral Estoppel: Loosening the Mutuality Rule in Tax Litigation,
73 Mich.L.Rev. 604, 619 (1975) (footnotes omitted). We conclude that the government was not substantially justified in bringing the suit against Keasler.
22
Cf. Spencer v.
*1238
NLRB,
Our holding does not limit or discourage efforts to achieve inter circuit conflicts. We simply feel that if the government chooses to embark on such an escapade in a case like this, it should be prepared to pay the piper. 23
III.
The final issue is whether the government was substantially justified in appealing the judgment on the merits. Summary judgment was entered for Keasler on October 2, 1981. Pending a review of the case by the Solicitor General, the government filed a notice of appeal on November 30. On December 21, the government dismissed the appeal following the Solicitor General’s decision not to pursue it. The district court found that the government’s actions on appeal were not substantially justified: “Just because the Justice Department’s internal processes are slow does not exculpate the United States from the consequences of filing frivolous appeals.”
The government’s arguments are not convincing. First, if the trial position of the government was unreasonable, an appeal based on that position is a fortiori not substantially justified. Second, as noted above, the government has conceded on this appeal that a court of appeals decision on the merits in this case would have served “little point.” The government contends, however, that “it was not the intent of the [drafters of the] EAJA to penalize the Government by making it pay attorney’s fees where it terminates an otherwise meritorious lawsuit for legitimate reasons.” Appellant’s Reply Brief at 13-14. This statement is a mischaracterization of the issue. The government is not being penalized for terminating the appeal, but for filing it. Moreover, the suit was not “otherwise meritorious,” because the government’s position in the district court and pre-trial was not reasonable. Finally, we recognize the channels in which admin *1239 istrative decisions in the Department of Justice must flow. Nevertheless, the government has already received special dispensation in this regard through the federal rules. Fed.R.App.P. 4(a)(1) gives the government twice as long as the private litigant to file notice of appeal. If the government cannot make its strategic decisions within this time and a protective notice must be filed and later dismissed, there is no reason that the private litigant should be forced to pay attorneys’ fees for a meaningless appeal. We conclude, therefore, that the government’s appeal was not substantially justified.
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
A true copy.
Notes
. At the time he was audited, Keasler called
Jacobs
to the attention of an Internal Revenue agent. The agent conceded that
Jacobs
"appears to include the same facts” as Keasler’s case, yet insisted that Rev.Rul. 69-195 must still be followed.
Keasler v. United States,
. The Honorable Garnett Thomas Eisele, Chief United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Arkansas.
. Section 2412(d) expired on October 1, 1984. See Pub.L. No. 96-481, § 204(c), 94 Stat. 2321, 2325. Moreover, the award of attorneys’ fees in tax cases commenced after April 30, 1983 is governed by Pub.L. No. 97-248, § 292(a), 96 Stat. 324, 572 (codified at I.R.C. § 7430(c)(2)(A)(i) (West Supp.1985)). Because this case was commenced prior to 1983, how *1229 ever, neither of these changes in the law affects the result here. See generally Note, Attorney's Fees in Tax Cases After the Tax Equity and Fiscal Responsibility Act of 1982, 36 Tax Law. 123 (1982) (chronology of statutory development governing fee awards in tax cases); Note, Award of Attorney Fees in Tax Litigation, 19 Val.U.L.Rev. 153 (1984) (same).
. Keasler’s complaint included a prayer for attorneys’ fees, but it cannot be seriously contended that this request fulfills the requirement of section 2412(d). First, the prayer does not specifically allege that the position of the United States was not substantially justified.
See Premachandra v. Mitts,
. This court has rejected the idea that the subsequent proposed amendments and legislative history of the EAJA provide persuasive evidence of
*1230
the meaning of the original section 2412.
Pre-machandra,
. The Second and Tenth Circuits have not confronted the issue. The Fifth Circuit's position is unclear.
Compare Clifton v. Heckler,
. This reasoning was adopted by the Fourth Circuit in holding that a remand order in a social security case is not a final judgment under section 2412.
Guthrie v. Schweiker,
. Section 2412(d)(1)(A) frees the government from the obligation to pay attorneys’ fees if “special circumstances make an award unjust.” The legislative history indicates that this provision is a " ‘safety valve’ [which] helps to insure that the Government is not deterred from advancing in good faith the novel but credible extensions and interpretations of the law that often underlie vigorous enforcement efforts.” H.R.Rep. No. 1418,
supra
note 4, at 11, 1980 U.S.Code Cong. & Ad.News at 4990. The district court found no special circumstances that would make an award to Keasler unjust.
. The courts are not bound by Congress’s interpretation of prior law.
Edward B. Marks Music Corp. v. Colorado Magnetics, Inc.,
the most important of them involves the application of the rule of "further manufacture.” Under this rule, the distributor who buys a body from one supplier and equipment, such as a hoist, from another supplier is considered to be the manufacturer of a new taxable item when he combines and sells them. ******
I feel that this is not the purpose of the statute * * *.
122 Cong.Rec. 19420 (1976) (statement of Senator Hansen). This statement implies that Rev. Rui. 69-195 was not a correct statement of the law under section 4061(a)(1).
. The IRS declined to seek certiorari in Jacobs because section 4063(d) legislatively resolved the issue for the period following October 4, 1976 and because the Tenth Circuit's decision did not create a conflict between the circuits. Action on Decision Memorandum (June 23, 1978).
.
Jacobs
was followed in an unreported decision,
Western Truck Equip. Co. v. United States,
No. 77-501-PHX-WPC (D.Ariz. Nov. 6, 1978). No appeal was taken from this decision because the enactment of section 4063(d) mooted the issue for sales after October 4, 1976 and because the IRS concluded that "the issue for prior periods has minimal importance.” Action on Decision Memorandum (June 12, 1979).
Western Truck
also raises concerns that the government's position is not substantially justified.
See Underwood v. Pierce,
. This rule is not always scrupulously followed. Nevertheless, at least two factors suggest that the government should have expected this circuit would apply the rule to Jacobs: the repeated deference paid here to sister circuits in tax cases and the nearly identical facts in Jacobs.
. The court’s commitment to avoiding intercircuit conflicts in tax cases was reinforced by
United States v. National Bank of Commerce,
. The position of the IRS is that the test for determining "further manufacture" does not depend on the complexity of the assembly process utilized by the taxpayer. Rather, it contends that the question is whether a "different article” is produced. It is argued that combining hoists, chassis, and bodies produces a different article because the transportation function of the underlying truck is changed. The government concedes that the "transportation function” the *1234 ory was argued in Jacobs and that the decision implies that the Tenth Circuit rejected it. Similarly, the district court appears to have refuted this argument in concluding that the process did not change the “essential character" of the trucks. Slip op. at 4.
On appeal, the government urges that
Vinal v. Peterson Mortuary,
. This case is distinguishable from
Midwest Research Inst. v. United States,
. The wisdom of deferring to prior decisions does not suppose that previous adjudications will have been flawless. Rather, the justification is that if an issue is close, a decision that will produce uniformity is preferred so that similarly situated taxpayers are given equal treatment.
See Burnet v. Coronado Oil & Gas Co.,
. The court held in
Divine
that a decision in one circuit does not collaterally estop the IRS from relitigating a question of law in another circuit. The primary reason for the decision was that such estoppel would foreclose inter-circuit conflicts and thus preclude Supreme Court review of tax issues. The court weighed the “absence of substantial justification for permitting relitigation of either patent validity or is
*1235
sues not ‘subject to varying appraisals’ ” against the "formidable policy justifications for sanctioning the Commissioner’s relitigation in different circuits of legally identical tax issues, factually differentiable only in the identity of the taxpayer involved.”
. This reasoning does not conflict with this circuit’s use of a “reasonableness” test under section 2412(d). "Reasonable” under section 2412(d), according to the legislative history, may mean something different than under section 7430.
See
S.Rep. No. 586, 98th Cong., 2d Sess. 12-13 (1984);
Reauthorization of Equal Access to Justice Act, Hearing Before the Sub-comm. on Administrative Practice and Procedure of the Senate Comm, on the Judiciary,
98th Cong., 1st Sess. 17 (1983) (statement of Sen. DeConcini);
id.
at 25-26 (statement of Ass’t Attorney General McGrath);
cf. McDonald v. Schweiker,
. The government concedes that it "could conceivably be liable for fees for litigating unreasonably an issue in the face of an unbroken string of appellate losses.” Appellant's Brief at . 36;
see Ashburn v. United States,
. On December 15, 1981, counsel for the IRS recommended that the district court judgment here not be appealed. He stated that the “question of further manufacturing in the factual context of this case is no longer continuing. We would prefer to litigate the further manufacturing issue in a factual context having continuing importance to avoid another Jacobs Equipment Co. decision holding that further manufacturing turns on the complexity and time involved in the process.” Action on Decision Memorandum (Dec. 15, 1981).
. Keasler spent more than $3,200 in attorneys' fees for proceedings before the district court to recover less than $10,000 in overpaid taxes.
. The "substantially justified” standard is inherently discretionary and thus can be applied only on a case by case basis.
Broad Ave. Laundry & Tailoring v. United States,
. Our holding is not in conflict with
Cornelia v. Schweiker,
At least three reasons suggest that
Cornelia II
is not controlling here. First, in light of this circuit’s strong policy of avoiding conflicts with other circuits in tax cases, it cannot fairly be said that the IRS had “no guidance” as to whether this court would follow
Jacobs.
Second, the IRS was not simply defending its success in a judgment below, as in
Cornelia II,
but pursuing Keasler in an attempt to “resurrect its own discredited version of the law.”
. The government does not contend that the application for fees in the appellate proceedings was untimely.
