Opinion for the Court filed by Senior Circuit Judge WILLIAMS.
Taxpayer Larry Tucker appeals a judgment of the Tax Court rejecting two contentions: first, a constitutional claim that
*1131
certain employees of the Internal Revenue Service’s Office of Appeals are “Officers of the United States,” so that their appointments must conform to the Constitution’s Appointments Clause, art. II, § 2, cl. 2, and second, an argument that the employees in question abused their discretion in rejecting his proposed compromise of the collection of his tax liability.
Tucker v. Commissioner,
Tucker underpaid his federal income taxes by a total of over $24,000 over the period 1999-2003. With interest and penalties, his liability grew to over $35,000 by 2004, when the IRS sent him a “Notice of Federal Tax Lien Filing and Your Right to a Hearing Under IRC 6320” for years 2000, 2001, and 2002. Joint Appendix (“J.A.”) 7. The hearing in question, called a collection due process or “CDP” hearing, is provided for in the IRS Restructuring and Reform Act of 1998. Pub.L. No. 105-206, § 3401, 112 Stat. 685, 746 (codified at 26 U.S.C. §§ 6320 (lien actions), 6330 (levy actions)). Such a hearing is an opportunity for a taxpayer to challenge the propriety of a pending tax lien or levy, to verify that a collection action against him is appropriate under the law, and to offer alternatives, one of which is a so-called offer-in-compromise or “OIC” (Tucker’s preferred outcome). Id. §§ 6320(c), 6330(c)(2)(A). Challenges to underlying tax liability can also be raised at a CDP hearing, but only if the taxpayer did not receive statutory notice of the liability or did not otherwise have an opportunity to dispute it. Id. §§ 6320(c), 6330(c)(2)(B).
The 1998 statute calls for CDP hearings to take place in the Office of Appeals.
Id.
§§ 6320(b)(1), 6330(b)(1). Although no statute
created
that office, its existence is now reflected in various provisions of the Internal Revenue Code, such as the ones governing CDP hearings. See
Tucker,
In Tucker’s case the IRS was represented by a “settlement officer” (one of two types of IRS workers who conduct CDP hearings, the other type being “appeals officers”). After the hearing, Tucker proposed an OIC instead of the partial installment plan offered by the settlement officer, but the latter rejected his proposal, and her decision was approved by her “team manager”—a position tasked with *1132 overseeing various Appeals functions, including CDP hearings.
Tucker appealed to the Tax Court. That court initially remanded the matter back to Appeals for a supplemental CDP hearing, in which a different settlement officer and team manager again rejected Tucker’s OIC. The case then resumed in the Tax Court, which rejected Tucker’s constitutional and abuse of discretion arguments.
The Appointments Clause provides that
[The President] ... shall nominate, and by and with the Advice and Consent of the Senate, shall appoint ... Officers of the United States, whose Appointments are not herein otherwise provided for, and which shall be established by Law: but the Congress may by Law vest the Appointment of such inferior Officers, as they think proper, in the President alone, in the Courts of Law, or in the Heads of Departments.
U.S. Const., art. II, §
2,
cl. 2. The clause plainly distinguishes between “principal” and “inferior” officers, and its requirements have no application to employees falling below the “officer” threshold. See
Freytag v. Commissioner,
The Supreme Court has often said that to be an “Officer of the United States” covered by Article II, a person must “exercis[e] significant authority pursuant to the laws of the United States.”
Buckley,
Before discussing how the authority of Appeals employees compares with that of persons found to be “Officers,” we first consider—and ultimately bypass—whether, in the words of the clause, their positions were “established by Law.”
Landry,
Nonetheless, it would seem anomalous if the Appointments Clause were inapplicable to positions extant in the bureaucratic hierarchy, and to which Congress assigned “significant authority,” merely because neither Congress nor the executive branch had formally created the positions. See Appellant’s Br. 35-36;
Tucker,
In any event, because we conclude below that Appeals employees do not exercise significant authority within the meaning of the Appointments Clause cases, we need not resolve whether their positions were “established by Law” for purposes of that clause. 1 We therefore turn to the authority they exercise.
Although the cases are not altogether clear, the main criteria for drawing the line between inferior Officers and employees not covered by the clause are (1) the significance of the matters resolved by the officials, (2) the discretion they exercise in reaching their decisions, and (3) the finality of those decisions. In light of
Freytag
we can assume here that the issue of a person’s tax liability is substantively significant enough to meet factor (1), in which case degrees of discretion and finality will ultimately be determinative. Thus the special trial judges (“STJs”) found to be inferior Officers in
Freytag
actually rendered the final decisions of the Tax Court in some matters (specified declaratory judgment and limited-amount tax cases),
The degree of discretion enjoyed by the officeholder is clearly an element in the mix. Thus in
Freytag
the Court was at pains to note that the STJs’ tasks were “more than ministerial.”
Appeals employees’ discretion is highly constrained. Before turning to the constraints, we note the characteristic of Appeals’s powers that seems most significant. The office is authorized to compromise disputed tax liability on the basis of its probabilistic estimates of the hazards of litigation. Thus, if Appeals estimates that the IRS’s chances of prevailing on a disputed point of law are 60%, it may agree to accept only 60% of the liability that turns on the point. See 26 C.F.R. § 601.106(f)(2); see generally 26 U.S.C. § 7122.
But in reaching such decisions (and indeed in all its decisions), Appeals is subject to consultation requirements, to guidelines, and to supervision. First, the office is instructed in the Internal Revenue Manual to “[rjequest legal advice from an Associate Chief Counsel office on novel or significant issues.” I.R.M. pt. 8.6.3.5 (Oct. 26, 2007). Second, the Manual tells Appeals to seek a “Technical Advice Memorandum” from the Chief Counsel’s Office “when a lack of uniformity exists on the disposition of the issue or the issue is unusual or complex enough to warrant consideration by the Office of Chief Counsel.” Id. pt. 8.6.35(3) (July 15, 2010); see also 26 C.F.R. § 601.106(f)(9). (The Chief Counsel is appointed by the President with the advice and consent of the Senate. 26 U.S.C. § 7803(b)(1).) Third, Appeals is required to follow any established technical or legal IRS position that is favorable to the taxpayer. I.R.M. pt. 8.6.3.5.2; 26 C.F.R. § 601.106(f)(9)(viii)(c). Fourth, various regulations and the Internal Revenue Manual impose detailed guidelines for what settlements Appeals may accept. See, e.g., 26 C.F.R. § 601.106(f); I.R.M. pt. 8.23.1; see also 26 U.S.C. § 7122(d)(1) (requiring the Secretary to prescribe such guidelines). Fifth, Appeals must obtain a favorable opinion from the General Counsel for the Treasury for any compromise in which the unpaid amount of tax is $50,000 or more, and its compromises of smaller amounts are subject to “continuing quality review by the Secretary.” 26 U.S.C. § 7122(b). The authority to provide a favorable opinion for compromises of $50,000 or more has been delegated to the Chief Counsel and redelegated to Division Counsel, see I.R.M. pt. 33.3.2.1(3) (Nov. 4, 2010), but such delegations could be revoked at the General Counsel’s discretion. Sixth, any “closing agreement” relieving a taxpayer of liability must be approved by the Secretary. 26 U.S.C. § 7121(b). As with the General Counsel approval, that authority has been delegated to the Commissioner, 26 C.F.R. § 601.202(a)(1), and redelegated to others including some Appeals employees, see Delegation Order 8-3, I.R.M. pt. 1.2.47.4 (Aug. 18, 1997) (formerly Delegation Order No. 97 (Rev.34)); I.R.M. pt. 8.13.1.1.6 (Nov. 9, 2007), but the Secretary remains free to revoke it if he *1135 finds defects in practice under the delegations.
We noted earlier that
Freytag
had relied in part on the STJs’ procedural powers, such as the authority to take testimony and to rule on admissibility of evidence. See
Accordingly, we find even Appeals employees’ authority over tax liability insufficient to rank them as inferior Officers.
This being so, it is plain that the authority they exercise in the pure collections aspects of CDP hearings is not enough. As to those functions, the government is simply a creditor, and accordingly Appeals employees must make decisions based largely on the same mundane and practical concerns that any creditor faces. They include, of course, a potential need to compromise even the amount to be collected, but Appeals acts in such matters under the general duties discussed above—to seek advice from the Office of Chief Counsel or an Associate Chief Counsel, and to obtain review from the General Counsel for any decisions involving monetary compromise, and of course is subject to Secretarial monitoring. Accordingly, the significance and discretion involved in the decisions seem well below the level necessary to require an “Officer.”
Tucker claims that even absent a constitutional deficiency, the Office of Appeals’s failure to accept his proposed OIC was an abuse of discretion. The Tax Court rejected this claim, see
Tucker,
Tucker’s primary argument is that the settlement officer in his supplemental CDP hearing wrongfully counted as “dissipated assets” some losses that he incurred in 2003 in day trading on the stock market. The concept of “dissipated assets” becomes relevant when Appeals considers a taxpayer’s OIC proposal because of doubt about the collectability of a taxpayer’s outstanding liability (the case here); Appeals is to accept the OIC only where it reflects the taxpayer’s “reasonable collection potential” (“RCP”). Rev. Proc. 2003-71, § 4.02(2), 2003-
Tucker does not dispute that at the time he placed the $44,000 in his day trading account (January through April 3, 2003), leading to $22,645 in stock losses (accumulated by April 21, 2003, the date he stopped trading), his accrued tax liability (for years 1999, 2000 and 2001) was $14,945. See
Tucker,
Regarding whether the amount of the dissipated assets exceeded Tucker’s tax liability, the settlement officer in Tucker’s supplemental CDP hearing concluded that “at the least, the money deposited [in Tucker’s E-Trade account, i.e. the $44,700] could be included in the reasonable collection potential of an offer as dissipated cash assets. The amounts deposited were sufficient to full [sic] pay the taxes.” Attachment to Supplemental Notice of Determination Concerning Collection Action(s) Under Section 6320 and/or 6330 (Sept. 12, 2006), J.A. 38. The Tax Court found that the settlement officer erred in treating the whole $44,700 as dissipated, because Tucker ultimately withdrew $22,000 from the account and maintained that he spent that amount on basic living expenses, making it excludable from RCP under I.R.M. pt. 5.8.5.4(4). See
Tucker,
Nonetheless, the Tax Court found no abuse of discretion. Given that Tucker’s $22,645 losses up to the date he stopped trading (April 21, 2003) exceeded his then accrued tax liability of $14,945, it found that the lost $22,000 was enough to pay his then due tax. 3 Accordingly, the court found the settlement officer’s erroneous reliance on the full deposit amount harmless. See id. at *12-13 & n. 16.
On appeal Tucker argues that the Tax Court improperly “rework[ed]” the settlement officer’s analysis in violation of the
Chenery
principle, which requires a court reviewing an agency action to “judge the propriety of such action solely by the grounds invoked by the agency. If those grounds are inadequate or improper, the court is powerless to affirm the administrative action by substituting what it considers to be a more adequate or proper basis.”
But the Tax Court
did
judge the propriety of the settlement officer’s consideration of dissipated assets solely on the grounds invoked: that the amount of such assets “[was] sufficient to full [sic] pay the
*1137
taxes.” Attachment to Supplemental Notice of Determination, J.A. 38; see also
id.,
J.A. 39 (“Appeals has determined that you could have full [sic] paid the balances already”). That the settlement officer incorrectly used the higher amount, Tucker’s initial placing of funds, rather than just the amount of losses, does not change its reasoning or conclusion that the amount dissipated exceeded his outstanding tax liability at the time. We therefore find no
Chenery
problem. See also
PDK Laboratories Inc. v. DEA,
Tucker’s second argument is that Appeals erred in including his day trading losses as dissipated assets because doing so in effect “requires all taxpayers to liquidate all assets upon initial assessment of taxes to avoid potentially ‘dissipating’ an asset via decline in asset value prior to payment. Under such a rule, a taxpayer would be required to sell her house immediately upon assessment of a tax liability for fear of a drop in its value.” Appellant’s Br. 54-55. But as the Commissioner points out, a mere drop in value of an existing asset would not count as dissipated because it would not have been “transferred” or “spent.” We also find no abuse of discretion in Appeals’s apparently finding Tucker’s day trading to be more speculative than, e.g., buying or refinancing a home, and therefore finding the former and not the latter to qualify as “disregard” for one’s tax liability.
Finally, because we find no abuse of discretion in the settlement officer’s reliance on dissipated assets, we need not consider Tucker’s attack on the Commissioner’s alternative defense of Appeals’s rejection of the OIC, namely that Appeals may reject an OIC simply because it will be able to collect more through a partial installment plan (under which the IRS can periodically update the required installment payments to reflect a taxpayer’s increase in income). We note, however that the OIC guidelines appear to allow rejection of an OIC “if it is believed that the liability can be paid in full.” I.R.M. pt. 8.23.1.1(6) (Sept. 13, 2011). This is essentially the position the settlement officer took here in rejecting the OIC and preserving the IRS’s advantages under the partial installment plan.
We conclude that Office of Appeals team managers, settlement officers, and appeals officers are not inferior Officers who must be appointed in conformity with the Appointments Clause, and that there was no abuse of discretion in the Office’s rejection of Tucker’s proposed offer-in-compromise. The judgment of the Tax Court is therefore
Affirmed.
Notes
. We read
Landry's
reference to the "established by Law” question as a “threshold trigger,”
. The current version of the Manual addresses the inclusion of dissipated assets in reasonable collection potential at I.R.M. pt. 5.8.5.16(7) (Oct. 22, 2010).
. The Tax Court slightly fudged the issue of the exact date by which his losses tipped over the $14,945 level, but it seems safe to say that they must have done so before his 2002 taxes fell due on April 15, 2003. In any event, Tucker makes no issue of this potential discrepancy.
