Mаurice S. VAUGHN, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. UNITED STATES of America, Defendant-Appellee.
No. 14-3858.
United States Court of Appeals, Sixth Circuit.
Dec. 15, 2015.
635 F. App‘x 216
BEFORE: COLE, Chief Judge; MERRITT and BATCHELDER, Circuit Judges.
Maurice Vaughn is a former major league baseball player who is facing tax penalties under
I.
The facts of this case are straightfоrward and undisputed. Maurice “Mo” Vaughn was a major league baseball player from 1991 to 2003. [R. 23 at Pg. ID # 180.] In May 2004, he hired Ra Shonda Kay Marshall and her company, RKM Business Services, Inc., to manage his financial affairs, invest his money, pay his taxes, pay his bills, and allocate funds for
Vaughn had two bank accounts—one personal account and one business account for Mo Vaughn Investments, LLC. [Id. at 181-82.] Vaughn deposited his income in these accounts, and Marshall was the sole signatory on both accounts. [Id.] As such, Marshall was responsible for paying all of Vaughn’s bills, giving him a monthly budget, and paying his taxes. [Id.] In 2004, 2005, and 2006, Marshall properly filed Vaughn’s tax returns, but only the 2004 and 2005 taxes were properly paid. [Id. at 181-83.] In 2007, Marshall neither filed nor paid Vaughn’s taxes. [Id.]
Sometime late in 2008, Vaughn decided to manage his financial affairs on his own, and he terminated his arrangements with both Marshall and Krebs. [Id. at 182.] In the course of reviewing his bank statements, Vaughn discovered that Marshall had been cheating him for years and embezzling large sums of money from his accounts. Rather than investing Vaughn’s money, growing his portfolio, and paying his taxes, Marshall was stealing his money, draining his portfolio, and failing to pay his taxes. [Id. at 182-84.] In fact, at the time Vaughn’s 2007 taxes were due, his bank accounts were so depleted that he did not even have enough money to cover his tax liability. [Id. at 183-84.] Vaughn sued Marshall and RKM Business Services, [Id. at 184-85] and currently has outstanding judgments against them for $1.5 million and $3.5 million, respectively. [R. 24-3 at Pg. ID # 232-34; R. 24-4 at Pg. ID # 235-36.]
Vaughn filed the instant casе in an effort to recover the late penalties assessed against him by the IRS under
II.
“This court reviews the grant of summary judgment de novo using the same legal standard employed by the district court. Consequently, summary judgment is proper when there is no genuine issue of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Valen Mfg. Co. v. United States, 90 F.3d 1190, 1191 (6th Cir.1996) (citations omitted). The facts of this case are undisputed. At issue here is whether Vaughn falls within the “reasonable cause” exception to the tax penalties that have been assessed against him under
III.
According to
In United States v. Boyle, the Supreme Court specifically addressed the issue of penalties assessed against a taxpayer for his agent‘s failure to file and pay his taxes. 469 U.S. 241, 105 S.Ct. 687, 83 L.Ed.2d 622 (1985). In explaining the “reasonable cause” exception, thе Court noted that the Treasury Regulations require a taxpayer to “show that he exercised ordinary business care and prudence and was nevertheless unable to file the return within the prescribed time.” Id. (emphases added) (internal quotation marks omitted); see
Congress has placed the burden of prompt filing on the executor, not on some agent or employee of the executor. The duty is fixed and clear; Congress intended to plaсe upon the taxpayer an obligation to ascertain the statutory deadline and then to meet that deadline, except in a very narrow range of situations. Engaging an attorney to assist in the probate proceedings is plainly an exercise of the “ordinary business care and рrudence” prescribed by the regulations, but that does not provide an answer to the question we face here. To say that it was “reasonable” for the executor to assume that the attorney would comply with the statute may resolve the matter as between them, but not with respect to the еxecutor’s obligations under the statute. Congress has charged the executor with an unambiguous, precisely defined duty to file the return within nine months; extensions are granted fairly routinely. That the attorney, as the executor’s agent, was expected to attend to the matter does not relieve the principal of his duty to comply with the statute.
....
It requires no special training or effort to ascertain a deadline and make sure that it is met. The failure to make a timely filing of a tax return is not excused by the taxpayer’s reliance on an agent, and such reliance is not “reasonable cause” for a late filing under
§ 6651(a)(1) .
Id. at 249-50, 252, 105 S.Ct. 687.
Boyle’s bright-line rule easily disposes of Vaughn’s first argument. As Boyle makes clear, Vaughn’s using ordinary business care and prudence in selecting and dealing with his financial agents does not absolve him from his statutory duty to make sure that his taxes were properly filed and paid. Nor does it matter that his agents violated his specific instructions and disregarded their fiduciary duties. These facts are pertinent with respect to Vaughn’s relationship to Marshall, RKM, and Krebs, but not with respect to his relationship to the Internal Revenue Service (“IRS“).
It is also helpful to note that the Boyle Court distinguished between relying on an attorney or accоuntant for advice regarding one’s taxes and relying on an attorney or accountant for the actual filing of one’s taxes:
When an accountant or attorney advises a taxpayer on a matter of tax law ... it
is reasonable for the taxpayer to rely on that advice. Most taxpayers are not competent to discern error in the substantive advice of an accountant or attornеy.... By contrast, one does not have to be a tax expert to know that tax returns have fixed filing dates and that taxes must be paid when they are due. In short, tax returns imply deadlines. Reliance by a lay person on a lawyer is of course common; but that reliance cannot function as a substitute for compliance with an unambiguous statute.
Id. at 251, 105 S.Ct. 687. Taxpayers are not required to be experts on the tax code, but they are expected to know that they must file a return and pay their taxes. Vaughn is not facing penalties from the IRS because he relied on the advice of his agents; rather, he is fаcing penalties because he relied on them to complete and file his tax returns.
This leads to Vaughn’s next line of argument regarding his ability to file and pay his taxes. Vaughn asserts that the nature of his agreement with his agents and the nature of their malfeasance rendered him unable to file and pаy his tax returns properly. In support of this argument, he cites Matter of American Biomaterials Corp., 954 F.2d 919 (3rd Cir.1992). In Biomaterials, two corporate officers were discovered defrauding their corporation, failing to file and pay its taxes, and embezzling corporate funds. Id. at 920-21. These officers were the CEO/Chairman of the Board and CFO/Treasurer of the cоrporation—“the only officers ... with the responsibility to file tax returns and ensure payment.” Id. at 922. The court held that the corporation itself was not vicariously liable for the failures of its officers or for the penalties resulting from those failures. Id. at 927. A corporation can act only through its agents аnd employees. Id. at 923. So, when the very corporate officers responsible for filing and paying the corporation’s taxes engaged in fraud and embezzlement instead, the corporation was suddenly devoid of an agent or employee through which it might act to file and pay its taxes. Id. at 927. In this wаy and to this extent, the corporate officers’ criminal actions left the corporation unable to pay its taxes, and the corporation was not held liable for penalties. Id.
Vaughn argues that, as was the case in Biomaterials, the malfeasance of his agents rendered him unable to pay his taxes in spite of his ordinary business care and prudence, and thus the penalties should be excused. But Vaughn’s interpretation of Biomaterials is flawed. The court in Biomaterials did not create a blanket rule absolving corporations from liability when they are disabled by derelict officers. Id. Notwithstanding the actions of its officers, a corporation is not entitled to the “rеasonable cause” exception to
And the factual dissimilarities between Vaughn and the corporation in Biomaterials serve to buttress this point. Whereas there were no other officers in that corporation who would have had legitimate power and authority to oversee and ensure the filing and payment of the company’s taxes, Vaughn had both the power and the authority to oversee аnd ensure the filing and payment of his own taxes. That dif
More importantly, Vaughn’s reading of Biomaterials is inconsistent with Boyle and other precedent. As noted by the Ninth Circuit, “the [Boyle] Court expressly distinguished the question of the taxpayer’s misplaced reliance on an agent to perform a known duty from the question of the taxpayer’s disability.” Conklin Bros. of Santa Rosa, Inc. v. United States, 986 F.2d 315, 318 (9th Cir.1993) (internal quotation marks omitted). More specifically, Boyle states:
The administrative regulations and practices exempt late filings from the penalty whеn the tardiness results from postal delays, illness, and other factors largely beyond the taxpayer’s control.... This principle might well cover a filing default by a taxpayer who relied on an attorney or accountant because the taxpayer was, for some reason, incapаble by objective standards of meeting the criteria of “ordinary business care and prudence.” In that situation, however, the disability alone could well be an acceptable excuse for a late filing.
Boyle, 469 U.S. at 248 n. 6, 105 S.Ct. 687. This court has previously interpreted this footnote to mean that “such disability must result from сircumstances beyond the taxpayer’s control ... not simply the taxpayer’s reliance on an agent employed by the taxpayer.” Valen Mfg. Co., 90 F.3d at 1193 (internal quotation marks omitted). This directly defeats Vaughn’s argument that Marshall’s embezzlement disabled him because he did not retain sufficient funds to pay his taxes at the time that they were due. [Appellant’s Br. at 19, 22.] There is nothing in Boyle that indicates that reliance on an agent suddenly becomes “reasonable cause” when that reliance leads to insufficient funds to pay one’s taxes, and indeed, this argument misses the entire point of Boyle. Vaughn is attempting to conflate his disability with his reliance on Marshall and Krebs—which is the very thing that Boyle “expressly distinguished.” Conklin Bros., 986 F.2d at 318 (internal quotation marks omitted). The same oversight that would have enabled him to know that his agents were not filing and paying his taxes would also have enabled him to stop them from emptying his coffers.
Again, according to Boyle, a disability is something that is beyond the taxpayer’s possible control and oversight, not something that occurs under his authorization and subject to his control. Boyle, 469 U.S. at 248 n. 6, 105 S.Ct. 687. Hence, the proper question is whether Vaughn had an intrinsic objective inability to meet his tax liabilities or whether he brought that inability on himself by failing to exercise any oversight and ensure that his taxes wеre filed and paid. When the issue is framed this way, Conklin Bros. is directly analogous:
In Biomaterials, the criminal conduct committed by corporate officers and the Chairman of the Board of Directors was beyond the corporation’s control because they were the control people in the corporate structure. Supervision over such people was not possible. In this instance, Conklin had control over Stornetta. She was a manager/controller whose actions were subject to being supervised by Bowers, Conklin’s president and majority shareholder, and by Conklin’s outside accountants.
Conklin Bros., 986 F.2d at 318. Since oversight was possible and feasible here, this case is much closer to Conklin Bros. than Biomaterials.
This perspective is reinforced by our rationale in Valen Mfg. Co. In that case, we specifically noted that there are two reasons why a disability should be narrowly construed as something beyond the tax
insisting thаt any disability forced upon a taxpayer result from a force beyond the taxpayer’s control ... encourage[s] compliance with our nation’s self-reporting tax system. Forgiveness of penalty assessments levied against taxpayers who could exert greater controls and exercise greater levels of personal responsibility would only encourage late filings and payments to the IRS.
Id. at 1194. Here, the circumstances were not beyond Vaughn’s control because he retained the absolute right to revoke Marshall’s powers at any time and for any reason. [R. at 24-1 at Pg. ID # 192.] He knew that he owed taxes. He knew that there was a deadline for such taxes to be filed and paid. But he failed to ensure that these responsibilities were fulfilled by his financial agents. This is not a penalty for something beyond his control; it is a penalty for his own immediate failure.
IV.
For these reasons, Vaughn does not satisfy the requirements of the “reasonable cause” exception in
