LG KENDRICK, LLC, Petitioner v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
Docket No. 10241-12L.
UNITED STATES TAX COURT
Filed January 21, 2016.
146 T.C. No. 2
MARVEL, Judge
P is a single-member LLC that operates a franchise business. The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) determined that P had employees and had unpaid Federal employment taxes, i.e., unpaid withholding and Federal Insurance Contributions Act tax liabilities with respect to its Forms 941, Employer‘s Quarterly Federal Tax Return, for the last three quarters of 2009 and all four quarters of 2010 and unpaid Federal Unemployment Tax Act tax liabilities with respect to its
After processing substitutes for returns and assessing the employment taxes for the periods at issue, the IRS mailed to P a notice of the filing of a notice of Federal tax lien (NFTL) and a levy notice with respect to the periods at issue. P timely requested and received a sec. 6320/6330 hearing with the IRS Appeals Office. The Appeals Office subsequently issued two notices of determination sustaining the NFTL filing and the proposed levy for the periods at issue except the NFTL filing for P‘s December 31, 2010, Form 941 liability, which the notices did not address. P filed a petition disputing the Appeals Office‘s determinations. We remanded this case on R‘s motion, and the Appeals Office issued a supplemental notice of determination. The supplemental notice sustained the NFTL filing and the proposed levy for the periods at issue including the NFTL filing for P‘s December 31, 2010, Form 941 liability.
Held: The original notices of determination did not embody a determination to sustain, and therefore were invalid with respect to, the NFTL filing for P‘s December 31, 2010, Form 941 liability.
Held, further, a supplemental notice of determination that sustains a collection action for a taxable period cannot form the basis for the Court‘s jurisdiction when the original notice of determination was invalid with respect to the collection action for that taxable period.
Held, further, the Court does not have jurisdiction to review the NFTL filing for P‘s December 31, 2010, Form 941 liability.
Held, further, P is not entitled to challenge the underlying liabilities for the periods at issue over which the Court has jurisdiction.
Held, further, the Appeals Office‘s determinations are sustained for the periods at issue over which the Court has jurisdiction.
Michael E. Lunnon (member), for petitioner.
Luke D. Ortner, for respondent.
OPINION
MARVEL, Judge: Pursuant to
The issues for decision are whether: (1) we have jurisdiction to review the NFTL filing for petitioner‘s December 31, 2010, Form 941 liability; (2) petitioner may challenge its underlying liabilities (and if so, the correct amounts of the underlying liabilities); and (3) the Appeals Office abused its discretion in sustaining the NFTL filing and the proposed levy action. We hold that we do not have jurisdiction to review the NFTL filing for petitioner‘s December 31, 2010, Form 941 liability, that petitioner cannot challenge the underlying liabilities for the periods over which we have jurisdiction, and that the Appeals Office did not abuse its discretion. We sustain the IRS’ determinations for the periods over which we have jurisdiction.
Background
The parties submitted this case fully stipulated under Rule 122. The stipulated facts and facts drawn from stipulated exhibits are incorporated herein by this reference.5 Petitioner‘s
Petitioner is a single-member LLC formed in 2009 that operates as a franchise of the business The UPS Store. Its manager and sole member is Michael E. Lunnon.6 From 1995 until petitioner‘s formation in 2009, Mr. Lunnon operated the franchise business as a sole proprietorship, originally under the name Mail Boxes Etc. Mr. Lunnon reported wages and paid employment taxes with respect to employees of the franchise to the State of New Mexico until 2002. He also filed Forms 941 with the IRS for the December 31, 2001, quarter through the March 31, 2003, quarter. During the periods at issue petitioner paid an average of five individuals approximately twice per month. Mr. Lunnon has maintained a workers’ compensation and employer‘s liability insurance policy since at least 2003.7 A 2006 insurance policy application that Mr. Lunnon signed and submitted for his business shows an estimated annual payroll of $75,000. The policy was renewed every year until at least 2011. However, petitioner did not file Forms 941 or Forms 940 or pay any employment tax for the periods at issue.
After the IRS had summoned and reviewed bank records associated with petitioner‘s business and made a field call to the business, the IRS concluded that petitioner had paid employees approximately $7,440 per month8 and therefore had employment tax liabilities for the periods at issue. Although the IRS requested that Mr. Lunnon file on behalf of petitioner employment tax returns for the delinquent periods, Mr. Lunnon refused, and Revenue Officer T.W.
The revenue officer sent petitioner a Letter 1085(DO), dated March 31, 2011, by certified mail to the business address. One of the individuals who the IRS had determined was an employee, Cameron Curley, signed the certified mail receipt on April 4, 2011. The letter informed petitioner about the substitutes for returns and stated that petitioner had 30 days to prepare and mail employment tax returns, mail additional information petitioner wanted the IRS to consider, or request a conference with Revenue Officer Lyons. The letter further stated that the IRS would process the substitutes for returns and assess the tax reflected on the returns “plus any additional penalties and interest” if petitioner did not respond within 30 days. The letter explained that petitioner‘s representative could request a meeting or a telephone conference with the revenue officer‘s supervisor if petitioner did not agree “with any or all of the IRS findings given you“. If petitioner still did not agree with the findings after a conference with the supervisor, it would have the opportunity to “appeal * * * [its] case to the Area Director of General Appeals.”
Petitioner or its representative did not respond to the Letter 1085(DO) within 30 days. The IRS processed the substitutes for returns and assessed the tax. On August 2, 2011, the IRS mailed to petitioner a Letter 1058, Final Notice of Intent to Levy and Notice of Your Right to a Hearing (levy notice), with respect to the periods at issue. In the levy notice the IRS proposed for the first time additions to tax under
Because petitioner did not give Settlement Officer Mares any pertinent information, she sustained the proposed levy and the NFTL filing on the basis of the information in the administrative record. On March 27, 2012, the Appeals Office issued two documents titled Notice of Determination Concerning Collection Action(s) Under
One notice sustained the collection action for the liabilities at issue, except that it did not address the proposed levy or the NFTL filing for petitioner‘s December 31, 2010, Form 941 liability (first notice of determination). The first page of the first notice of determination had a list titled “Tax Period(s) Ended“, which listed the taxable periods to which the notice pertained and included the December 2010 taxable period.9
The other notice of determination sustained the proposed levy of petitioner‘s December 31, 2010, Form 941 liability (second notice of determination). The first page of the second notice of determination listed the relevant taxable period as December 2010. A table on the third page clarified that the notice pertained only to the proposed levy of petitioner‘s December 31, 2010, Form 941 liability.
Neither the first notice of determination nor the second notice of determination (together, original notices of determination) addressed the NFTL filing for petitioner‘s December 31, 2010, Form 941 liability or the proposed
Petitioner timely filed a petition in this Court disputing the original notices of determination. In preparation for trial the IRS subpoenaed additional bank records and documents related to the workers’ compensation insurance policy. Respondent subsequently filed a motion to remand petitioner‘s case to the Appeals Office because, during the section 6320/6330 hearing, the settlement officer did not fully explain to petitioner the basis for the employment tax assessments, did not make a determination about whether petitioner was entitled to challenge the underlying liabilities, and did not include the NFTL filing for petitioner‘s December 31, 2010, Form 941 liability on either notice of determination. We granted respondent‘s motion.
Instead of supplying the requested information, Mr. Lunnon sent a letter to Settlement Officer Mares challenging the documents that respondent had provided because at least some of them were not available when the IRS made its original determinations and because some of the documents referred to Mr. Lunnon rather than to petitioner. In response Settlement Officer Mares allowed petitioner until September 13, 2013, to prepare the requested returns using the documents that respondent had provided to it or any other additional information petitioner had. Mr. Lunnon did not cause
Because petitioner did not file the delinquent returns or provide information after multiple opportunities to do so, the Appeals Office issued to petitioner a Supplemental Notice of Determination Concerning Collection Action(s) Under
Discussion
I. Section 6320/6330 Hearing
The Secretary is authorized to collect tax by levy upon a taxpayer‘s property if any taxpayer liable to pay any tax neglects or refuses to pay such tax within 10 days after notice and demand for payment.
At a section 6320 or 6330 hearing a taxpayer may raise any relevant issue, including appropriate spousal defenses, challenges to the appropriateness of the collection action, and collection alternatives, such as an offer-in-compromise or an installment agreement.
Following a hearing, the Appeals Office must issue a notice of determination regarding the appropriateness of the collection action. The Appeals Office is required to take into consideration: (1) verification presented by the Secretary that the requirements of applicable law and administrative procedure have been met, (2) relevant issues that the taxpayer raised, and (3) whether the proposed collection action appropriately balances the need for efficient collection of taxes with the taxpayer‘s concerns regarding the intrusiveness of the proposed collection action.
Pursuant to
II. Jurisdiction To Review the NFTL Filing for Petitioner‘s December 31, 2010, Form 941 Liability
Questions of jurisdiction may be raised by either party or the Court at any stage of a proceeding. Moorhous v. Commissioner, 116 T.C. 263, 272 (2001) (citing Smith v. Commissioner, 96 T.C. 10, 13-14 (1991)). The Tax Court is a court of limited jurisdiction and may exercise jurisdiction only when Congress has expressly authorized it to do so. See
Although the IRS had sent petitioner a Letter 3172(DO), and petitioner had requested a section 6320 hearing, with respect to the NFTL filing for the December 31, 2010, Form 941 liability, the original notices of determination did not include the NFTL filing for that liability as a collection action for which the IRS had made a determination. However, the supplemental notice of determination stated that it “includes the period ending 12/31/2010 for both the levy and the lien as the taxpayer requested.” Respondent contends that the Court has jurisdiction to review the NFTL filing for the December 31, 2010, Form 941 liability because its omission from the original notices of determination was an inadvertent clerical error, petitioner “substantively received a hearing with respect to” the collection action, and the supplemental notice of determination “simply clarifies that the hearing and determination [with respect to the liability] were embedded in the original notices of determination and
In Lunsford v. Commissioner, 117 T.C. 159, 164 (2001), we held that the only statutory requirements for jurisdiction under
Normally a notice of determination includes these key pieces of information and our jurisdiction to review a collection action for a particular taxable period and liability is soundly established. When a notice of determination does not clearly set forth this information, we must determine whether the notice is valid. An invalid notice cannot form the basis for our jurisdiction, and the Commissioner may proceed with the collection action only if he subsequently issues a valid notice with attendant appeal rights. See
In certain circumstances we have held that a flaw in a jurisdictional notice is not fatal if the notice, along with any attachments, is sufficient to apprise the taxpayer of the Commissioner‘s determination and the taxpayer was not prejudiced
or misled by the flaw.15 See John C. Hom & Assocs., Inc. v. Commissioner, 140 T.C. 210, 213 (2013) (“Mistakes in a notice will not invalidate it if there is no prejudice to the taxpayer.” (citing Elings v. Commissioner, 324 F.3d 1110 (9th Cir. 2003))). For example, we have held that typographical errors in a jurisdictional notice as to the taxable period do not invalidate the notice where the notice gives the taxpayer sufficient information to determine the period to which the notice relates. See, e.g., Saint Paul Bottling Co. v. Commissioner, 34 T.C. 1137, 1138-1139 (1960) (finding a notice of deficiency valid when it erroneously referred to the wrong years and the taxpayers were not misled by the error); McCollin v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2010-93, slip op. at 2 n.2 (finding a notice of determination valid when an attachment to the notice referred to an incorrect year but the notice itself and other relevant documents contained the correct
the correct year; and the partnership did not exist until the end of August 2000); Call v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2005-289, slip op. at 17 n.3 (stating that a typographical error in the notice of determination erroneously referring to 1999 as 1990 did not affect the notice), aff‘d, 230 F. App‘x 758 (9th Cir. 2007); Anderten v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1993-2, 65 T.C.M. (CCH) 1697, 1698 (1993) (finding a notice of deficiency that incorrectly referred to 1987 when the Commissioner determined a deficiency for 1986 was valid when, taking the entire document into consideration, the taxpayer could not have been misled); Erickson v. Commissioner, 61 T.C.M. (CCH) 2073, 2076-2077 (1991) (finding that a taxpayer was not misled even though in some places the notice of deficiency referred to 1984 instead of the correct year 1982); Fernandez v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1979-476, 39 T.C.M. (CCH) 569, 571-572 (1979) (holding that a typographical error in a notice of deficiency did not invalidate the notice when “the facts clearly show that petitioners reasonably could not have been deceived as to the year covered by the notice of deficiency“); Smith v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1979-16, 38 T.C.M. (CCH) 51, 52-53 (1979) (finding a notice of deficiency valid when the taxpayers were not confused or misled by the typographical errors in the notice of deficiency referring to 1974-75 instead of 1972-73).
However, the instant case is distinguishable from cases where the jurisdictional notice contained a typographical or other minor error but still revealed on its face that the Commissioner had made a determination with respect to a particular period. The tables within the original notices of determination listed all periods and collection activities for which the Appeals Office had made determinations. They did not include the NFTL filing for petitioner‘s December 31, 2010, Form 941 liability. Nothing in the remainder of the notices hints that the Appeals Office made a determination with respect to the NFTL filing for that liability. The references to the taxable period December 2010 on the first pages of the original notices of determination do not provide
In short, the original notices of determination were devoid of any information from which a reasonable person could conclude that the Appeals Office had made a determination with respect to the NFTL filing for the December 31, 2010, Form 941 liability. The fundamental purpose of a notice of determination, i.e., to notify the taxpayer of the Appeals Office‘s determination to sustain a collection action for a particular taxable period, was not fulfilled. We also do not look behind the notice, as respondent urges us to do, to determine whether petitioner “substantively received a hearing with respect to” the December 31, 2010, Form 941 liability. It is the Appeals Office‘s written determination, not the fact that a section 6320/6330 hearing occurred, that is the basis for our jurisdiction. Cf. Lunsford v. Commissioner, 117 T.C. at 164-165 (holding that a notice valid on its face and a timely filed petition confer jurisdiction on this Court whether or not the taxpayer had a fair section 6320/6330 hearing). We therefore hold that the original notices of determination do not confer jurisdiction on this Court with respect to the NFTL filing for petitioner‘s December 31, 2010, Form 941 liability.
After petitioner filed its petition, we remanded this case to the Appeals Office, and the Appeals Office issued a supplemental notice of determination. The notice stated that “[t]his Supplemental Notice of Determination includes the period ending 12/31/2010 for both the levy and the lien as the taxpayer requested.” We must therefore determine whether a supplemental notice may form the basis for our jurisdiction under sections 6320/6330 when the original notices of determination did not include a determination to sustain a collection activity for a particular period or liability.
We considered whether a supplemental notice of determination can form the basis for our jurisdiction under sections 6320/6330 in Ginsberg v. Commissioner, 130 T.C. 88 (2008). In Ginsberg, the Commissioner issued a notice of determination sustaining a proposed levy of the taxpayer‘s trust fund recovery penalties. Id. at 89-90. The Court lacks jurisdiction over these penalties in deficiency cases, see
In holding that we lacked jurisdiction over the supplemental notice, we noted that a taxpayer is entitled to only one section 6320 and 6330 hearing with respect to a tax period, which in turn yields only one lien or levy determination for each period. See id. at 92. Although the initial determination may be supplemented following a remand, “[t]he supplemental determination notice is merely a supplement to the original determination notice and relates back to the original determination notice. It is not a new determination and does not provide the taxpayer any additional appeal rights.” Id. at 92-93 (fn. ref. omitted). Because we lacked jurisdiction over the original notice of determination, we similarly lacked jurisdiction over the determination as supplemented. See id. at 93.
Respondent contends that Ginsberg is distinguishable from this case because, “rather than attempting to confer additional jurisdiction on the Court that could not have been present in the original notice, the supplemental notice in this case simply clarifies that the original hearing and determination in this case substantively included the period ending December 31, 2010 for the lien notice“. We disagree with respondent that Ginsberg is distinguishable. As in Ginsberg, the original notices of determination did not confer jurisdiction
The original notices of determination were insufficient to confer jurisdiction to review the NFTL filing for petitioner‘s December 31, 2010, Form 941 liability. A supplemental notice of determination cannot cure this jurisdictional defect. Therefore, we do not have jurisdiction to review the NFTL filing for petitioner‘s December 31, 2010, Form 941 liability.
III. The Underlying Liabilities
We next review whether petitioner may challenge the underlying liabilities with respect to the taxable periods over which we have jurisdiction. Petitioner has continuously maintained that it does not owe the underlying employment taxes because (1) the IRS has the burden of proving that petitioner paid employees for the periods at issue and (2) the IRS did not meet this burden because it may not rely on documentary evidence obtained after the issuance of the original notices of determination to sustain the assessed taxes. Respondent contends that petitioner may not challenge the underlying liabilities because the Letter 1085(DO) constituted a prior opportunity to dispute the liabilities and because petitioner did not properly raise the issue with the Appeals Office. Because we find that petitioner did not properly raise the underlying liabilities with the Appeals Office after a reasonable opportunity to do so, we do not address whether the Letter 1085(DO) provided petitioner with a prior opportunity to challenge the liabilities. See Caudle v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2014-196, at *6-*7 n.2, aff‘d, 603 F. App‘x 220 (4th Cir. 2015).
In reviewing a determination under
On remand petitioner had ample opportunity to file its delinquent tax returns and present any other information that it wanted Settlement Officer Mares to consider with respect to the employment tax liabilities. In the letter dated August 22, 2013, Settlement Officer Mares stated that, because petitioner may not have been aware of the opportunity to submit its own returns upon receipt of the Letter 1085(DO), the IRS would process the delinquent returns for the periods at issue if petitioner submitted them by August 31, 2013. Even though petitioner responded to this request with generally unhelpful and irrelevant information, Settlement Officer Mares allowed petitioner an extension of time to file the returns until September 13, 2013. She told petitioner that it could use the documents that respondent had provided or any additional information to prepare the returns. Instead of filing returns or producing any relevant information, petitioner continued to assert that it was not liable for the underlying liabilities because respondent could not prove, using only information available during the original hearing, the existence of any employees.
Petitioner, rejecting the documentary evidence that respondent obtained during the trial as untimely and therefore irrelevant, quotes Gatlin v. Commissioner, 754 F.2d 921, 923 (11th Cir. 1985), aff‘g T.C. Memo. 1982-489, for the proposition that “a taxpayer should not bear the burden of proving a negative (no unreported income) if the Commissioner can present no substantive evidence to support his
On remand the Appeals Office provided petitioner with documentary evidence of petitioner‘s employees, including copies of checks, summaries of petitioner‘s own bank records, documents showing employment tax payments to the State of New Mexico, and bills and renewal notifications from the workers’ compensation insurance policy, and petitioner still did not produce its own evidence tending to refute the Appeals Office‘s determinations. Petitioner contends that the documentary evidence is insufficient because it includes references to taxable periods not at issue. Although the record contains references to taxable periods other than the ones at issue here, it also contains documentary evidence related to the periods at issue.
Petitioner also invokes the Chenery doctrine, although not by name, to discount respondent‘s evidence by contending that the determinations cannot be upheld on grounds other than those upon which the Appeals Office actually relied. See SEC v. Chenery Corp., 332 U.S. 194 (1947); SEC v. Chenery Corp. (Chenery I), 318 U.S. 80 (1943); Antioco v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2013-35, at *24-*25. Petitioner interprets this doctrine to mean that respondent may not consider documentary evidence during a remand section 6320/6330 hearing that was unavailable at the original hearing.
Petitioner is correct in stating that we uphold the Appeals Office‘s determination only on grounds upon which the Appeals Office actually relied in the notice of determination. See Chenery I, 318 U.S. at 93-95; Antioco v. Commissioner, at *24-*25; Jones v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2012-274, at *22-*23. However,
administrative determination. Wadleigh v. Commissioner, 134 T.C. at 299; Kelby v. Commissioner, 130 T.C. at 86. The Appeals Office on remand is not constrained by the original administrative record, as often the purpose of remand is to augment a deficient record. See Hoyle v. Commissioner, 136 T.C. 463, 468-469 (2011), supplementing 131 T.C. 197 (2008); see also Meyer v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2013-268, at *27-*30 (remanding a case to the Appeals Office to supplement the administrative record to show that a notice of deficiency was properly mailed). The Appeals Office makes a single determination with respect to an NFTL filing or a proposed levy for a taxable period. Kelby v. Commissioner, 130 T.C. at 86. When this Court remands a case and the Appeals Office issues a supplemental notice of determination, we review the determination as supplemented.18 Id.
On remand Settlement Officer Mares had access to and relied upon documentation unavailable during the original hearing. Respondent provided these documents, subpoenaed in preparation for trial, to petitioner upon receipt and incorporated them into the administrative record on remand. We remanded this case in part for the Appeals Office to clarify whether petitioner had had a prior opportunity to challenge the underlying liabilities and to explain to petitioner the basis of the underlying assessments. Settlement Officer Mares appropriately relied on the additional documents to carry out the Court‘s remand order and did not violate the Chenery doctrine in doing so. Petitioner may not distort the law to justify its continued refusal to cooperate with respondent or its abdication of the fundamental responsibilities of maintaining records and filing tax returns. See Hoyle v. Commissioner, 136 T.C. at 468; Jordan v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2011-243, slip op. at 8 (“When we remand a case to the Appeals Office to clarify the record * * *, the Appeals Office is not limited to what the Appeals Office considered during the first administrative hearing.” (citing Hoyle v. Commissioner, 136 T.C. at 468)), supplementing 134 T.C. 1 (2010); see also
(holding that the taxpayer did not properly challenge the underlying liabilities when he did not file amended income tax returns before the Appeals Office issued the notice of determination despite saying he would do so); Busche v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2011-285, slip op. at 32-33 (discussing the taxpayer‘s and the Commissioner‘s burdens and responsibilities during a section 6320/6330 hearing); see also
We also do not consider the validity of the
Pursuant to
IV. Conclusion
Because petitioner may not challenge the underlying liabilities, we review the Appeals Office‘s determinations for abuse of discretion. See Sego v. Commissioner, 114 T.C. at 610; Goza v. Commissioner, 114 T.C. at 182. The record supports a finding that the Appeals Office properly verified that the requirements of applicable law and administrative procedure had been met. See
We have considered the parties’ remaining arguments, and to the extent not discussed above, conclude those arguments are irrelevant, moot, or without merit.
To reflect the foregoing,
An appropriate order and
decision will be entered.
