ORDER
Pending are the plaintiffs motion for summary judgment and the defendant’s cross-motion for summary judgment (doc. 13).
I. BACKGROUND
This is an action brought by the plaintiff for a refund of Federal Insurance Contribution Act (“FICA”) taxes paid to the Internal Revenue Service. Except where noted, the following facts are not in dispute.
Plaintiff Quietwater Entertainment, Inc., owns and operates a restaurant on Pensacola Beach, Florida, known as Jubilee/Captain Fun Restaurant. The plaintiff receives and records employee tip reports and withholds employee taxеs and the employer share of FICA taxes on the basis of reported tips.
By letters dated May 5, 1993, the Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”) mailed notice of an assessment and demand for payment of the employer share of FICA taxes allegedly due on tips unreported by the plaintiffs employees for the years 1990 and 1991. The IRS determined that the plaintiff owed additional unpaid FICA taxes on unreported tips in the amount of $7,880 for tips received in 1990, and $12,220 for tips received in 1991. The IRS requested that the amount due be included on the plaintiffs Form 941 tax return fоr the second quarter of 1993, which was due on July 31, 1993.
The notice and demand did not identify the tip earnings of individual employees, but was made on an aggregate basis using the gross earnings of the plaintiffs restaurant as reported by the plaintiff on its Annual Information Return of Tip Income and Allocated Tips [Form 8027]. The IRS computed taxes owed using a modification of the so-called “McQuatters formula.” 1 The plaintiff paid the full amount of the taxes assessed on the Form 941 due on July 31, 1993. The IRS subsequently refunded the full amount, but informed the plaintiff that the amount was refunded in error.
On February 28, 1995, the plaintiff filed an amended Form 941, a corresponding Form 941(c) and a Form 843 containing a claim for a refund of the taxes paid and abatement of the taxes assessed. The IRS filed a lien and levy for the balance of the taxes due, and the plaintiff paid the amount in full during the summer of 1995. The IRS notified the plaintiff on May 3, 1996, that the refund claim was disallowed.
In the plaintiffs restaurant, employees who receive tips share or “tip out” a portion of their tips to the support staff. Employees who might receive such indirect tips include bartenders, barbacks, bread persons, bus persons, and dessert tenders. The management encourages directly tipped employees to share a portion of their tips, and although the portion shared is left to the discretion of the employee, the management gives suggested guidelines: (1) 1.5 percent of sales to bus persons; (2) 1 percent of sales to bartenders; and (3) 1.5 percent of sales to dessert tenders, (doc. 11, Guerra aff.)
The plaintiff contends that the IRS erroneously assessed the employer-only portion of FICA taxes against the plaintiff, and that the IRS should be ordered to refund $21,108 to the plaintiff for the years 1990 and 1991. The plaintiff filed the present action on May 1, 1998, seeking the refund of taxes paid and the abatement of taxes assessed.
*1325 II. ANALYSIS
A. Summary Judgment Standard
A motion for summary judgment should be granted when “the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue of material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Rule 56(c), Fed.R.Civ.P. As the Supreme Court of the United States has instructed, “the plain language of Rule 56(c) mandates the entry of summary judgment, after adequate time for discovery and upon motion, against a party who fails to make a showing sufficient to establish the existence of an element essential to that party’s case, and on which that party will bear the burden of proof at trial.”
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
However, summary judgment is improper “[i]f a reasonable fact finder could draw more than one inference from the facts, and that inference creates a genuine issue of material fact.”
Cornelius v. Highland Lake,
On summary judgment motion, the record and all inferences that can be drawn from it must be viewed in the light most favorable to the non-moving party.
See Souran v. Travelers Ins. Co.,
B. Discussion
The plaintiff contends that the IRS improperly estimated the amount of unreported tips, and that the IRS cannot assess its FICA tax liabilities without also auditing each employee of the restaurant for the tax years at issue, and then determining the specific amount of any credit for the employees’ Social Security accounts in those years. The IRS responds that it has the authority to assess the plaintiffs share of FICA tax on the unreported tips of employees on an aggregate basis, and is not required to first determine underre-porting by individual employees.
In a tax refund suit, the Commissioner’s deficiency determinations are presumed correct, and the burden of proof is on the taxpayer to show that the Commissioner’s findings were erroneous.
Helvering v. Taylor,
Under Section 3111 of the Internal Revenue Code, FICA tax is imposed on every employer for Medicare and Social Security with respect to employees, and is computed as a percentage of wages paid by the employer. 26 U.S.C. § 3111. Tips are considered part of an employee’s wages for рurposes of the FICA tax. 26 U.S.C. § 3121(a), (q). So that the amount of tips can be determined, employees are required to report the amount of tips received to their employer. 26 U.S.C. § 6053(a); 26 C.F.R. § 31.6053-1. Under Section 3121(q), the IRS is authorized to issue a notice of assessment and demand for payment of employee FICA tax where the employee statement of tips is inaccurate or incomplete, or where employees fail to report their tips to the employer in a monthly statement.
When determining and assessing the amount of FICA tax imposed by Section 3111, the IRS can make adjustments using an indirect method, rather than by auditing both the employer and its employees. 26 U.S.C. § 6201. The IRS has used the
McQuatters
formula, with certain modifications, for determining aggregate unreported income subject to employer FICA tax.
McQuatters v. Commissioner,
(1) the total sales of the employer are reduced by a percentage to account for sharing tips and for customers who leave little or no tip; (2) the resulting amount is divided by the total number of hours worked by all servers during the year to determine a sales-per-hour average; (3) that average is multiplied by the number of hours worked by each server to determine the server’s yearly sales; and (4) the yearly sales of each server are multiplied by an average tip rate to determine the yearly tip income of each server.... The formula uses the charged tip rate (i.e., the tip rate computed on bills charged by customers to credit cards) as a reference point for the average tip rate.
Bubble Room, Inc. v. United States,
According to the government, it has the authority to assess the employer’s share of FICA tax on the unrеported tips of its employees on an aggregate basis, and it is not required to determine underreporting by individual employees or credit those employees’ Social Security wage history accounts. The government relies on
Morrison Restaurants, Inc. v. United States,
In
Morrison Restaurants,
the IRS assessed the plaintiff an additional $10,124 in employer FICA taxes on the basis of unreported tips, with the amount of the assessment calculated using a modified
McQuatters
formula.
Morrison Restaurants,
*1327
A divided panel in the Federal Circuit reached a similar conclusion in
Bubble Room, Inc. v. United States,
The plaintiff admits that under the law of this circuit in Morrison Restaurants, it is liаble for payment of FICA tax on unreported tips of its directly tipped employees, whether determined as to individual employees or on an aggregate basis. However, the plaintiff contends that the Eleventh Circuit did not consider the issue of shared tips, and that because the McQuatters formula cannot be applied to shared tips, Morrison Restaurants is not controlling. The plaintiff contends that the IRS is not authorized to impose FICA tax on the plaintiff based on shared tips unreported by indirectly tipped employees.
The
McQuatters
formula was originally developed and approved as an indirect method of computation to determine the amount of tips received by an individual
employee.
In
McQuatters v. Commissioner,
We ... believe that petitioners have justified an additional two percent reduction in the rate to be applied. We are convinced that petitioners gave 10 to 15 percent of their tips to the captains and that to account for this and other factors *1328 respondent’s formula should be applied with a 10 percent rather than a 12 percent rate of tipping.
Id.
Had the judge in
McQuatters
not reduced the tip percentage rate, the individual employees would have been penalized, in that they would have paid taxes on all tips they received, even though part of the tips were shared with other employees. Under the
McQuatters
formula, as modified by the IRS to apply to the aggregate tip income of all tipped employees in a restaurant, a cash tip rate is computed by determining the charged tip rate, and adjusting that rate to take into account non-tipping customers and the fees retained by credit card companies.
See, e.g., Bubble Room, Inc. v. United States,
As the plaintiff notes, in Morrison Restaurants, the Eleventh Circuit did not consider the issue of shared tips, because the restaurant owner in that case stipulated that the IRS aggregate estimate of unreported tips was reasonable. Nor did the Morrison Restaurants panel consider the effect of Section 6053(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, as discussed, infra.
If Morrison Restaurants is not controlling on the issue in this case, then I would reach a different conclusion, because the applicable statutes and regulations indicates that the IRS is not authorized to assess the employer’s share of FICA tax on the unreported tips of employees on аn aggregate basis.
It is undisputed that there is no statute or controlling regulation that specifically authorizes the IRS to estimate unreported tips of employees on an aggregate basis when calculating an employer’s FICA tax in the manner the IRS has done here. The court in
Morrison Restaurants
relies on Section 3121 (q) of the Internal Revenue Code as suggesting “[t]hat the employer can be assessed its share of FICA taxes even when the individual employees’s share is not determined.”
Although the Eleventh Circuit in
Morrison Restaurants
finds support in Section 3121(q) for its holding, it also relies on assumptions drawn from an analysis of the FICA tax system itself. The Eleventh Circuit notes that in the Internal Revenue Code, Congress imposed the employee’s share of FICA taxes in a provision separate from the provision imposing the employer’s share. According to the Eleventh Circuit, “[t]he separation of the provisions into different, parallel subchapters suggests that Congress contemplated that employees’ and employer’s shares cоuld be imposed separately,” and thus supports
*1329
the conclusion that determination of individual employees’ underreporting need not be linked to the assessment of the employer’s FICA taxes.
Morrison Restaurants,
The Eleventh Circuit also decided that the “structure and purpose of the Social Security Act is not inconsistent with a payment of an employer’s share of FICA taxes on unreported tips in the aggregate,” and noted that under the Social Security Act, assistance is not for the purpose of providing benefits equivalent to FICA taxes paid by the individual and his employer, and FICA taxes are not held in trust for the same individual.
Morrison Restaurants,
The structure and purpose of the Social Security Act is inconsistent with an assessment of an employer’s share of FICA taxes on an aggregate estimate of unreported tips. Congress has viewed the taxes raised under FICA to be related directly to the costs and benefits of the Social Security system.
See Weinberger v. Wiesenfeld,
Congress has gradually changed how tip income is treated under FICA. Emрloyers were not subject to any contribution based on tip income until 1977, when the employer was made hable for FICA taxes only on *1330 that portion of the employee’s tips approximating the federal minimum wage. Social Security Amendments of 1977, Pub.L. No. 95-216, Title III, § 315(a), 91 Stat. 1509, 1536-37 (1977). As noted previously, in 1987 employers were required to contribute an amount equal to the amounts paid by and credited to employees for tips. 26 U.S.C. § 3121(q). In making these changes, Congress has given no indication that it intended to alter the direct correspondence between еmployee and employer FICA contributions and the individualized employee Social Security benefits. Under the IRS’s interpretation, the determination of underreported cash tips will be made without attempting to determine whether any of the employer’s workers actually underreported or failed to report their cash tips, and employees’ FICA benefits will not be credited from any increased tax paid by the employer. In light of the symmetrical scheme established by Congress as to FICA benefits, it does not appear that Congrеss ever intended that FICA taxes be assessed against an employer in excess of the amount contributed by its individual employees when such taxes will never be credited to the individual employees’ accounts.
The IRS’s adaptation of the
McQuatters
formula to the estimation of aggregate unreported tips is also problematic. The IRS originally developed the formula to make a FICA tax assessment against an individual employee based on an estimate of how much that employee received in unreported tips.
McQuatters v. Commissioner,
Thus, assuming that the IRS has accurately estimated the aggregate unreported tips, it would be reasonable to assume that a significant percentage of those tips were earned by employees who recеived less than $20.00 per month for several months of the year. Students and part-time employees may only work a few hours per week, and there are several off-season months at Pensacola Beach when the business is slow and tips low. The IRS has not accounted for that. Even more serious, the sharing of tips by the waiters with the busboys, bread and dessert tenders, etc., results in even more likelihood of many of them receiving less than $20.00 per month in shared tips. Similarly, at the other end of the spectrum, there may be a few waiters who earn total income (either as a waiter or from other sources or jobs) in excess of the FICA annual base. Undoubtedly, some waiters do have incomes of $75,000 per year or more.
The major deficiency of the Eleventh Circuit’s Morrison Restaurants decision, however, is that it completely ignores the statutory methodology set out by law for ascertaining unreported tip income in Section 6053(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code. Simply stated, the law sets out that restaurant employers are to determine if the total amount of its employees-reported tip income is less than eight percent of thе restaurant’s gross receipts, and if so, to allocate an amount of tip income necessary to equal that eight percent among the employees customarily receiving tip income. The allocation may be made under three alternative ways: (1) based on *1331 hours-worked; (2) based on gross receipts; or (3) based on good faith agreement. These allocations must be reported to the IRS each year on IRS Form 8027.
In this case, the record reflects that the plaintiff did the allocation as required by law and аllocated an additional $83,109.80 in tips for 1991 (among 63 employees) and an additional $22,652.36 in 1990 (among 79 employees). The eight percent tip rate, therefore, is what the law requires and is the result of an extensive study made by Congress of the restaurant industry. Instead of being silent on the matter of unreported tip income, Congress has clearly directed how the IRS and the restaurants are to determine and allocate it.
The IRS has apparently chosen to disregard the law and go beyond what the law specifies. In this ease, for example, thе IRS has mandated a 12% tip rate for cash tips (and 16% for credit card tips), far in excess of the 8% set out by law. Some of the total differential may be found in the tip sharing arrangement as utilized by the plaintiff and in the exempt “bands.”
Since the Morrison Restaurants decision of this circuit failed to even consider Section 6053(c)(3), which appears to be the controlling law regarding the allocation of unreported tip income, and the effect of shared tips, ! do not believe Morrison Restaurants is controlling precedent as the law of this circuit on this matter. Therefore, I concludе that the IRS has improperly estimated and allocated the amount of unreported tips.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the plaintiffs motion for summary judgment is GRANTED (doc. 11), and the defendant’s cross-motion for summary judgment is DENIED. (doc. 13) Judgment shall be entered in favor of the plaintiff, and a refund of $21,108 is ordered, together with interest at the legal rate and taxable costs.
Notes
. This is a procedure for estimating restaurant waiter’s tip income approved by the United States Tax Court in
McQuatters v. Commissioner,
. The IRS used the modified
McQuatters
formula to calculate the employer FICA tax liability on the aggregate estimated tip income.
Bubble Room, Inc. v. United States,
