Vacated and remanded by published opinion. Judge DUNCAN wrote the opinion, in which Chief Judge WILLIAMS and Senior Judge ELLIS concurred.
OPINION
Morton Sarubin filed personal income-tax returns in 1995 and 1996 showing a cumulative tax debt of nearly two million dollars, which he never paid. After a decade of unsuccessful collection efforts, the Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”) sued to collect over four million dollars, an amount representing the original debt and penalties plus statutory interest. The government moved for summary judgment, which the district court granted in part and denied in part. The court allowed recovery on the original debt. However, the court held that the government was estopped from collecting some two million dollars in interest that was not included in the indebtedness balance listed in the Certificates of Assessment attached to the motion for summary judgment. Because the government is statutorily entitled to recover interest on unpaid taxes accruing to the date of payment, regardless of whether
I.
Sarubin timely filed his 1994 tax return, reporting taxable income totaling $2,625,038 and a tax obligation of $1,136,877. He failed to pay this amount. As a result, the IRS “assessed” 1 a tax liability of $1,136,877, a failure-to-pay penalty of approximately $11,000, and interest on both in an amount nearing $16,000. 2
History repeated itself in connection with Sarubin’s tax return for 1995. His October 17, 1996 filing 3 reported taxable income totaling $2,170,260 with $619,808 consequently due to the IRS. Again, he failed to satisfy this obligation, and on November 18, 1996, the IRS assessed against him a tax liability of $619,808, penalties of over $58,000 and interest nearing $33,000. 4
The IRS issued subsequent notices 5 and demands for payment to Sarubin, who nevertheless made only token payments towards his obligations. The government ultimately filed a civil collection suit on the debts in June 2005. The complaint alleged that the IRS had assessed taxes, penalties, and interest in connection with Sarubin’s 1994 and 1995 tax returns, but that the assessed amounts had remained unpaid. The complaint also noted that “[s]tatutory additions for penalties and interest have accrued and will continue to accrue” on the unpaid amounts. J.A. 4, 5. The government sought judgment in the amount of $4,092,983, plus “statutory additions for interest” accruing “after May 13, 2005, to the date of entry of judgment,” and continuing “until the judgment is fully paid.” J.A. 5.
The government soon moved for summary judgment, offering as proof of the amount of Sarubin’s tax liability a “Certificate of Assessments, Payments and Other Specified Matters” (a “Certificate of Assessments” or “Certificate”), also known as a Form 4340, for each of the 1994 and 1995 tax years. Generally, a Certificate of Assessments provides an itemized list of a given taxpayer’s assessed tax liability, as modified by subsequent assessments of debits and credits. The Certificates here were prepared on September 2, 2005, and listed the assessments of tax, interest, and penalties for 1994 and 1995 that had been made on June 5, 1995, and November 18, 1996, respectively. The Certificates did not itemize any further assessments of penalties or interest, but did record the occasional sending of notices of indebtedness and the sporadic receipt of small payments. The final page of each Certificate bears a line-item marked “balance,” repre
Sarubin opposed the motion for summary judgment, raising, inter alia, two objections relating to the Certificates. First, Sarubin argued that the Certificates were insufficient as an evidentiary matter to substantiate the amount of damages the government sought to recover. Second, Sarubin argued that the government should be limited to recovering the “balances” listed on the Certificates, totaling $1,867,376.70.
The district court agreed on both counts, finding that the Certificates only supported recovery of the “balances” listed and that Sarubin would have been justified to read the “balances” as pay-off amounts that would have fully satisfied the debt. 7 It was “simply untenable,” the court held, for “the [gjovernment [to] send such a notice representing a fixed figure as of a certain date and then seek additional funds not previously stated.” J.A. 35. The district court therefore ordered payment of the underlying debts and the statutory interest that accrued after the issuance of the Certificates. The district court es-topped the government, however, from collecting the unitemized and unassessed statutory interest — over $1.5 million in connection with the 1994 tax year that had accrued from April 15, 1995 to September 2, 2005, and over $700,000 in connection with the 1995 tax year that had accrued from April 15, 1996 to September 2, 2005. The government now appeals, seeking reversal of the district court only with respect to its denial of recovery of full interest on the debts.
II.
We review de novo the district court’s partial denial of the government’s motion for summary judgment.
Shaw v. Stroud,
Like the imposition of tax obligations themselves, the accrual of interest on tax obligations is governed by the Internal Revenue Code (the “Code”). “If any amount of tax imposed by this title ... is not paid on or before the last date prescribed for payment, interest on such amount at the underpayment rate established under section 6621
shall
be paid for the period from such last date to the date paid.” 26 U.S.C. § 6601(a) (emphasis added).
8
Because accrued interest is treated under the Code in the same manner as the underlying tax obligation, § 6601(e)(1), the “amount of tax” that accrues further inter
When a taxpayer fails to satisfy an obligation, the government may proceed in two ways. First, it may opt to institute summary collection procedures. The ability to pursue such procedures springs from the government’s power to attach a federal tax lien on all property of a delinquent taxpayer. § 6321. Before the government can exercise such power, it must first provide notice of its intent to do so, § 6303(a), for the protection of the taxpayer.
United States v. Berman,
Alternatively, the government may seek to collect unpaid obligations via its common-law right to sue on a debt.
Milwaukee County v. M.E. White Co.,
The proceedings here are the result of a common-law collection action, not a summary collection effort. Under
In re Davis,
then, the government was required to do nothing more than file suit to initiate collection of Sarubin’s full obligation — -including taxes, penalties, and interest accruing from the date the taxes were due by operation of law under § 6601(a).
See
First, the holding below misconstrues the role that Certificates of Assessment play in collection proceedings. Certificates of Assessment serve a limited evidentiary purpose; they are commonly used to prove the amount of the underlying tax liability. Because the IRS’s determination that a tax is owed is presumed correct,
United States v. Hardy,
Second, Sarubin has no legitimate claim to the equitable principles of estoppel. The mere attachment of the Certificates of Assessment to the government’s motion for summary judgment could not justify reliance on the “balance” listed as a payoff amount. We find a comparison to a remarkably similar case decided by the Court of Federal Claims to be instructive.
See Ghandour v. United States,
Sarubin is an even less-likely candidate for the relief of estoppel than was the taxpayer in
Ghandour.
The Certificates here are, by their own terms, certified transcripts only of “assessments, abate-ments, credits, refunds, and advance or unidentified payments, and the
assessed
balance relating thereto.” J.A. 19, 23 (emphasis added). Sarubin could not justifiably rely on the Certificates to include
unassessed
interest when the Certificates do not include unassessed debts of any kind. Furthermore, and in contrast to the certification in
Ghandour,
the Certificates here do not purport to include “interest” at all. In any event, it is unclear how Saru-bin might have relied on the balances since the Certificates were not presented to him
The Code leaves no room for a taxpayer to evade his responsibility to pay the taxes he owes. When a taxpayer, for whatever reason, does not meet his obligation in a timely manner, the debt automatically begins accruing interest by operation of statute. Sarubin’s case presents no exception. The government adequately proved Sarubin’s liability for the underlying taxes, and Sarubin is thus obligated to pay his tax burden along with the interest that it has accrued in the twelve years since he first failed to pay.
III.
Because we find that there is no issue of material fact and that the government is entitled to judgment as a matter of law, we vacate and remand with instructions for the district court to enter judgment in favor of the government for the full amount sought, including the interest that started accruing in 1995 and the interest that continues to accrue until the obligation is fully satisfied.
VACATED AND REMANDED
Notes
. In this context, an "assessment is the official recording of liability that triggers levy and collection efforts.”
Hibbs v. Winn,
. The additional obligation to pay interest is intended to compensate the government for the loss of use of its property during the time it takes for the taxpayer to satisfy his arrears.
United States v. Childs,
. Though returns for a given tax year are typically due the following year on the 15 th of April, §§ 6012, 6072, Sarubin obtained extensions of time in which to file his 1995 return, see § 6072.
. For each set of assessments, the amount of interest assessed represented the amount that had accrued since the April 15 standard return due-date, regardless of when the return was actually filed. § 6601(b).
. There is a factual dispute as. to the precise content of the notices. The exact amounts listed in the notices, however, are not relevant to our analysis here.
.Each Certificate concludes with a signed certification statement. The statements read, in full:
I certify that the foregoing transcript of the taxpayer named above in respect to the taxes specified is a true and complete transcript for the period stated, and all assessments, abatements, credits, refunds, and advance or unidentified payments, and the assessed balance relating thereto, as disclosed by the records of this office as of the account status date are shown therein. I further certify that the other specified matters set forth in this transcript appear in the official records of the Internal Revenue Service.
LA. 19, 23.
. We note that Sarubin never attempted to pay off the debts in reliance on the Certificates' alleged representation of a pay-off amount.
. Other sections of the Code unpack the statutory terms used in § 6601(a). For taxpayers like Sarubin, the "last date prescribed for payment” falls on April 15 of the calendar year following the underlying tax year. See §§ 6072, 6151, 6601(b). The "underpayment rate” is a percentage set by the Secretary of the IRS on a quarterly basis, § 6621, though the interest itself compounds daily, § 6622.
. That is, the taxpayer is liable not only for interest on the initial tax obligation, but for interest on that interest as well.
. Such an assessment is merely the administrative recording of an existing liability.
See
§ 6203;
Hibbs,
.To the extent that Sarubin complains of a lack of notice of the amount he now owes, he cannot maintain that he is unfairly surprised. Section 6601(a) mandates the accrual of such interest, and the government’s complaint facially demanded over two million dollars of "[statutory ... interest [that]
ha[d] accrued
and will continue to accrue,” J.A. 4, 5 (emphasis added). Sarubin may be surprised as a matter of mathematics that the interest he
