The issue in this case is whether the lack of Office of Management and Budget control numbers required by the Paperwork Reduction Act on the relevant federal tax regulations and instructions prevented the district court from convicting 1 the appellants for their failure to file income tax returns for the years 1981 through 1983. Because we agree with the district court that such numbers are not required for these documents, we affirm. 2
The appellants, Donald W. Dawes and his wife, Phyllis C. Dawes, entered guilty pleas to three counts of willful failure to file income tax returns in violation of 26 U.S.C. § 7203. In entering their pleas, the Dawes preserved the issue now before the court.
*1191
The Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA or the Act) was enacted by Congress in response to growing criticism from citizens regarding what they perceived to be an ever-increasing and onerous burden of federal paperwork.
Dole v. United Steelworkers,
a written report form, application form, schedule, questionnaire, reporting or recordkeeping requirement, collection of information requirement, or other similar method calling for the collection of information.
44 U.S.C. § 3502(11). If OMB approves an information collection request as submitted by an agency, it is assigned a control number. 44 U.S.C. § 3504.
The PRA contains a public protection provision:
Notwithstanding any other provision of law, no person shall be subject to any penalty for failing to maintain or provide information to any agency if the information collection request involved was made after December 31, 1981, and does not display a current control number assigned by the Director [of OMB], or fails to state that such request is not subject to this chapter.
Id. at § 3512. Relying on this provision, the appellants argue that, because the tax regulations and instructions to which they would have referred had they filed tax returns did not contain OMB numbers, they cannot be penalized for their failure to file.
This argument, or some permutation thereof, has been raised recently in federal district courts around the country. The response from the courts has been diverse, but no court has excused the failure to file a return on these grounds.
See United States v. Stiner,
Two circuit courts have already addressed the issue before us. In
United States v. Wunder,
the regulations do not need a number because the requirement to file a tax return is mandated by statute, not by regulation. Defendant was not convicted of violating a regulation but of violating a statute which required him to file an income tax return. See 26 U.S.C. §§ 6012 and 7203.
Id.
Following similar reasoning, the Ninth Circuit began by noting that the purpose of the PRA as a whole was to reign in agency activity.
United States v. Hicks,
We would be inclined to follow the general analysis of Wunder and Hicks and hold that the operation of the PRA in these circumstances did not repeal the criminal sanctions for failing to file an income tax return because the obligation to file is a statutory one. However, we are not compelled to rest our opinion on the statutory origin theory because we find the analysis of other courts which have considered the issue to be persuasive.
As noted above, section 3502(11) of the PRA defines an “information collection request” as a “written report form, application form, schedule, questionnaire, reporting or recordkeeping requirement, collection of information requirement, or other similar method calling for the collection of information.” 44 U.S.C. § 3502(11) (1991). While we acknowledge that tax forms are information collection requests,
Dole,
The Supreme Court in
Dole
has noted that most items in the statutory definition are “forms for communicating information to the party requesting that information” and that the “ ‘reporting and recordkeeping requirement’ category is limited to ‘only rules requiring information to be sent or made available to a federal agency, [and] not disclosure rules.' ”
Dole,
*1193 We do not believe that Congress could have intended that the PRA repeal the statutory criminal penalty for failing to file an income tax return because tax regulations and instructions lack OMB numbers. As noted above, the 1040 form has the necessary numbers and expiration date for any necessary compliance with the Act. The regulations and instructions, meaningless without a 1040 form to file, are regulations and instructions aimed at a purpose: the proper completion of the 1040 form. As long as the 1040 form complies with the Act, nothing more is required. We agree with the Ninth Circuit that
[i]f in enacting the PRA, Congress had intended to repeal 26 U.S.C. § 7203 [which predates the PRA by over twenty-five years] it could have done so explicitly. Repeals by implication are not favored. Morton v. Mancari,417 U.S. 535 , 549 [94 S.Ct. 2474 , 2482,41 L.Ed.2d 290 ] (1974). Congress enacted the PRA to keep agencies, including the IRS, from deluging the public with needless paperwork. It did not do so to create a loophole in the tax code.
Hicks,
Finally, the appellants argue that because the instructions explicitly require them to maintain tax and business records, see Instructions for Preparing Form 1040 (1983 ed.) at 18, the instructions are “recordkeeping requirements” and thus are information collection requests subject to the PRA. We disagree. We would discern two subsets to the recordkeeping side of the “reporting and recordkeeping” category. Any recordkeeping that would require the taxpayer to further manipulate, analyze or rearrange the information in the documents he or she has already amassed in order to complete the 1040 form might arguably be an additional paperwork step that would be subject to the PRA — a point we need not decide. In contrast, a requirement simply to maintain or store the documents already assembled, or which logically ought to be assembled, for completion of the 1040 does not impose any extra paperwork burden on the taxpayer within the meaning of the Act and should escape the force of the PRA. Thus, neither the instructions nor the regulations are information collection requests or reporting and recordkeeping requirements requiring OMB control numbers pursuant to the PRA. The public protection provision of the Act, therefore, will not shield appellants from the penalty for failing to file their tax returns.
The judgment of the United States District Court for the District of Kansas is therefore AFFIRMED.
Notes
. After their original convictions were affirmed by this court,
United States v. Dawes,
. In response to a question from the court during oral argument, counsel for the government indicated that the government did not have a unified federal position regarding this issue. Given the fact that the issue is one of national scope which affects the tax revenues of the United States, we find this posture regrettable.
. Appellants argue that it is only in the instructions that they are required “to state specifically the items of gross income and any deductions and credits to which s/he was entitled” and that they were specifically convicted of their failure to so state. We do not agree, however, that the failure of the 1040 form to repeat all of the phraseology in the regulations and instructions transforms these regulations and instructions into independent information collection requests. It would be nonsensical and extremely inefficient to require a tax return to contain all of the information found in the regulations and instructions.
Appellants further argue that because the above requirement is not contained in an officially promulgated regulation, criminal penalties for failing to file a return cannot be enforced. Appellants’ Opening Brief at 8. The obligation to comply with the applicable provisions of the Internal Revenue Code, however, is not extended by the requirement to report "specifically the items of gross income and any deductions and credits to which s/he was entitled.” The provisions of the Internal Revenue Code which require the filing of a tax return, 26 U.S.C. §§ 6011-12, are published, widely known requirements. These are not the unpublished, unknown rules imposing "substantive regulations beyond those created by the statute itself’ at issue in
United States
v.
Reinis,
. The Internal Revenue Service, as an arm of the Treasury Department and in response to final regulations published by OMB in 1983, has published control numbers for many agency regulations, see 26 C.F.R. Part 601.101, implying that the agency itself considers the regulations to be subject to the Act. However, we find it highly unlikely that Congress intended that OMB, in the guise of regulating paperwork, could dictate substantive policy to the Department of the Treasury.
See Dole,
