This case arises out of a dispute between the Internal Revenue Service and the appellants, Raymond and Laura McMillen, over the McMillens’ tax liability for the years 1978, 1979 and 1980. The McMillens seek millions of dollars in damages from the United States, and from a number of individual federal employees who they claim have acted in a “uniformly unresponsive ... arbitrary [and] capricious fashion” during the course of the tax dispute. They also seek an order directing the IRS, among other things, to release the liens it has placed on the McMillens’ property.
The district court dismissed the McMil-lens’ complaint on the grounds that the McMillens had failed to make proper service of process on the defendants, and that the district court lacked subject-matter jurisdiction over the сlaims stated therein. This appeal followed. We affirm, on the latter ground alone. 1
I
We start with the basic proposition that sovereign immunity bars lawsuits against the United States unless the United States has waived that immunity.
See United States v. Testan,
There are, of course, several statutes that do waive sovereign immunity for causes of action that concern taxation. None of them, however, provided the district court with jurisdiction over the McMil-lens’ claim against the government. 28 U.S.C. § 1346(a)(1) and 26 U.S.C. § 7422 together authorize a taxpayer who believes that the IRS has incorrectly assessed a tax liability against him to sue for a refund. Suits under 28 U.S.C. § 1346(a)(1) and 26 U.S.C. § 7422, however, are subject to two important limitations. First, they must be
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preceded by an administrative claim for a refund. 26 U.S.C. § 7422(a). Second, the taxpayer may not go to court until he has actually paid the assessment.
See Magnone v. United States,
The McMillens’ failure to comply with the refund prоcedure precludes them from maintaining a claim against the government under the guise of a non-refund action. This is because the “pay first and litigate later” rule,
see Falik v. United States,
Where, on the other hand, the taxpayer attempts to use Section 2410 to challenge the underlying tax liability — that is, where he seeks tо have the lien released on the ground that he does not owe what the IRS says he owes — the suit cannot proceed.
See Elias v. Connett,
The McMillens have not alleged the existence of any procedural defect in the liens on their property. Rather, the heart of their claim is the substantive contention that they do not now owe, and have never owed, any money to the IRS for the years in question. For all that the complaint reveals, moreover, the McMillens’ tax liability remains the subject of a live disputé with the IRS. 3 As long as that is so, any attack on the liens will necessarily involve a determination of the accuracy of the underlying assessment, a determination that *190 a district court cannot make until the jurisdictional prerequisites for a refund action have been fulfilled.
The McMillens have also cited 26 U.S.C. § 7432 as a basis for jurisdiction in this case. Section 7432, enacted in 1988 as part of a “Taxpayer Bill of Rights,” authorizes suits against the United States for damages arising out оf the IRS’ deliberate or negligent failure to release a lien on the taxpayer’s property as required “under section 6325.” 26 U.S.C. § 6325 says that the Secretary of the Treasury must release a tax lien within thirty days after the Secretary finds that the amount assessed “has been fully satisfied or has become legally unenforceable.”
Nothing in the record suggests that the assessment here has been “fully satisfied.” Nor can we assume for jurisdictional purposes that the assessment is “legally unenforceable” by virtue of the McMillens’ allegation that they do not owe the IRS any money. Section 7432 does not expressly incorporate the “pay first and litigate later” rule; but, as is the case with Section 2410, the new statute must be read and applied in light of that rule if it is to square with the tax collection аnd refund procedures already established by Congress. An interpretation that ignored the “pay first and litigate later” principle would invite taxpayers to circumvent the refund action proсess by litigating the merits of the assessments against them in the collateral setting of a suit for damages allegedly caused by the IRS’ refusal to release the liens on their property. We will not, in the absеnce of an explicit statement of Congress’ intention, read the relatively general language of Section 7432 to override a practice that is so well-settled and integral to the tax collection process.
Cf. Falik v. United States,
II
The McMillens also asserted claims against a number of IRS employees, and argue that they were entitled to recover damages from those officials under the doctrine stated in
Bivens v. Six Unknown Named Agents of Federal Bureau of Narcotics,
Even if the behavior described in the complaint did constitute some sort of constitutional violation, moreover, we doubt that the creation of a
Bivens
rеmedy would be an appropriate response. “Congress has given taxpayers all sorts of rights against an overzealous officialdom”.
Cameron v. Internal Revenue Service,.
The remedies Congress has created may not be perfectly comprehensive, but they
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do supply “meaningful safeguards or remedies for the rights of persons situated” as the McMillens were,
Schweiker v. Chilicky,
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Notes
. By affirming solely on subject-matter jurisdiction grounds, we do not imply that the district court erred in deciding that the appellants had not made proper service; rather, we simply do not reach the issue.
. The McMillens rely on 28 U.S.C. § 1361 rather than Section 2410 as the jurisdictional basis of their request for an order directing the IRS to release the liens on their property. We need not determine here whеther a "quiet title” action under Section 2410, or a mandamus action under Section 1361, is a more appropriate mechanism for obtaining such an order, since in either case the principles expressed in the text below would bar the McMillens’ claim.
Cf. Kurio v. United States,
