Lead Opinion
Affirmed by published opinion. Judge DIANA GRIBBON MOTZ wrote the majority opinion, in which Judge FABER joined. Judge RUSSELL wrote a dissenting opinion.
OPINION
The sole question presented in this ease is whether certain provisions of the Internal Revenue Code governing tax refund claims are subject to equitable tolling. The district court held that they were not; we affirm, although on somewhat different grounds than those relied upon by the district court.
I.
Clinton Webb and Nationsbank of Virginia, N.A., f/k/a Sovran Bank, N.A. (“Nations-bank”), in their capacities as co-executors of the estate of Mary Morton Parsons, filed this action in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia seeking a refund of gift taxes, penalties, and interest that they assert were wrongfully paid on Parsons’ behalf in October, 1980. For purposes of this appeal, we take the facts and circumstances alleged in the complaint as true. Summit Health, Ltd. v. Pinhas,
Parsons was a long-time resident of Richmond, Virginia. Born in 1902, she was the only child of one of the founders of a local life insurance company and thus enjoyed considerable wealth. Having only a limited understanding of financial matters, however, Parsons relied on others to manage her affairs. After Parsons’ husband died, her sister-in-law, Lelia Parsons, moved into her residence in order to manage her personal affairs. Upon her sister-in-law’s death in 1972, Parsons retained the services of Dr. Alvin Q. Jarrett, a social acquaintance, as both her personal physician and to oversee her personal and financial affairs. Jarrett in turn retained B. Roland Freasier, Jr. to serve as Parsons’ personal legal counsel.
Through systematic physical and emotional abuse during the ensuing fourteen years, Jarrett and Freasier induced Parsons to relinquish to them total control over her day-to-day affairs. They persuaded her to move into virtual seclusion in Virginia Beach, Virginia, where they confined her to her bed under heavy sedation. They discharged most of Parsons’ household staff and prevented her from receiving mail or telephone calls and from seeing visitors. They also induced her to grant to each of them powers-of-attorney, thus enabling them to manipulate her financial affairs for their own benefit.
As a result of their fraudulent activities, Jarrett and Freasier were able to divert a substantial portion of Parsons’ assets to themselves and their families without Parsons’ knowledge or consent. One such transaction involved the unauthorized transfer to Jarrett and Freasier of 930,568 shares of Parsons’ stock. In connection with this transaction, Jarrett and Freasier filed a gift tax return on Parsons’ behalf with the Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”) on August 18, 1980, and in October, 1980 they paid to the IRS, out of Parsons’ own funds, a gift tax in the amount of $4,324,822.54, together with certain penalties and interest. After a subsequent audit by the IRS, Jarrett and Freas-ier paid in excess of $7,000,000.00 in additional gift taxes, penalties, and interest in 1986 and 1987, again out of Parsons’ own funds, bringing the total assessment against Parsons for these illicit stock transfers to $11,-362,876.88.
Parsons eventually discovered the fraudulent transfers in the summer of 1987 and filed an action in state court to recover her lost assets. Upon recovering substantially all of the stock transferred to Jarrett and Freasier, Parsons filed a claim with the IRS on April 5, 1988 seeking a refund of the gift
Webb and Nationsbank, as co-executors of Parsons’ estate, brought this action seeking to recover the disallowed portion of Parsons’ refund claim. Because the refund claim was eoncededly untimely under § 6511 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, 26 U.S.C. § 6511, the district court held that it lacked subject matter jurisdiction and so dismissed the action. The court determined that if § 6511 could be equitably tolled, the complaint set forth facts that “would have established the applicability of equitable tolling to this case,” but found equitable tolling was not permissible in tax cases.
II.
The United States, as sovereign, is immune from suit unless it waives that immunity. Library of Congress v. Shaw,
With respect to suits against it for tax refunds, of course, the United States has to some extent waived its sovereign immunity. Section 1346(a)(1) of Title 28 of the United States Code gives federal district courts jurisdiction over suits against the United States “for the recovery of any internal-revenue tax alleged to have been erroneously or illegally assessed or collected.” However, the general jurisdictional grant in § 1346(a)(1) must be read to incorporate the requirements of 26 U.S.C. §§ 7422(a) and 6511(a). United States v. Dalm,
Specifically, § 6511(a) sets forth the applicable statute of limitations for claims for credits or refunds under the Internal Revenue Code. It provides in pertinent part:
Claim for credit or refund of an overpayment of any tax imposed by this title in respect of which tax the taxpayer is required to file a return shall be filed by the taxpayer within 3 years from the time the return was filed or 2 years from the time the tax was paid, whichever of such periods expires the later, or if no return was filed by the taxpayer, within 2 years from the time the tax was paid.
[n]o credit or refund shall be allowed or made after the expiration of the period of limitation prescribed in subsection (a) for the filing of a claim for credit or refund, unless a claim for credit or refund is filed by the taxpayer within such period.
Finally, § 6511(b)(2) sets forth certain “[l]im-it[s] on amount of credit or refund” as follows:
(A) Limit where claim filed within 3-year period.
If the claim [for refund] was filed by the taxpayer during the 3-year period prescribed in subsection (a), the amount of the credit or refund shall not exceed the portion of the tax paid within the period, immediately preceding the filing of the claim, equal to 3 years plus the period of any extension of time for filing the return.
(B) Limit where claim not filed within 3-year period.
If the claim [for refund] was not filed within such 3-year period [prescribed in subsection (a) ], the amount of the credit or refund shall not exceed the portion of the tax paid during the 2 years immediately preceding the filing of the claim.
The parties here agree that the refund claim that was filed on April 5, 1988 was untimely under the plain language of § 6511 because it was filed more than three years after the date on which the gift tax return was filed (August 18, 1980), and more than two years after the date on which the relevant portion of the gift tax was paid (October, 1980). The sole issue presented in this case is whether § 6511 is subject to equitable tolling. The district court concluded that it was not and that Parsons’ refund claim was therefore time-barred, thus depriving the court of subject matter jurisdiction.
If this case had arisen prior to 1990, there would seemingly be no question that the district court’s holding was correct. Because a statute of limitations is a condition on the government’s waiver of sovereign immunity and thus must be “strictly observed,” Block,
Not only are equitable principles generally of limited application in tax eases, but statutes of limitations have long been considered of particular importance in such cases. As the Supreme Court explained almost fifty years ago:
It probably would be all but intolerable, at least Congress has regarded it as ill-advised, to have an income tax system under which there never would come a day of final settlement and which required both the taxpayer and the Government to stand ready forever and a day to produce vouchers, prove events, establish values and recall details of all that goes into an income tax contest. Hence, a statute of limitation is an almost indispensable element of fair*695 ness as well as of practical administration of an income tax policy.
Rothensies v. Electric Storage Battery Co.,
However, in 1990 the Supreme Court issued its opinion in Irwin v. Department of Veterans Affairs,
In the Supreme Court, as he had below, the employee in Irwin asserted that the 30-day filing period under Title VII was subject to equitable tolling. See Brief for Petitioner at 10-11. He noted that the time limits for Title VII suits against private employers were subject to equitable tolling, see Zipes v. Trans World Airlines, Inc.,
The Supreme Court in Irwin concluded that compliance with the limitations period at issue there was not an absolute jurisdictional predicate to filing a Title VII suit against the
Obviously, the Supreme Court could have confined its holding in Irwin to claims arising under Title VII, or to those arising under remedial statutes generally. The Court had previously applied the doctrine of equitable tolling in a limited number of eases involving remedial statutes, concluding that it was consistent with Congress’ intent in enacting statutes that were “humane and remedial,” see Burnett v. New York Central Railroad Co.,
Consistent with this broad language, Irwin’s “rebuttable presumption of equitable tolling” has since been applied in cases against the federal government other than those arising under Title VII. See, e.g., Fa-dem v. United States,
Courts are divided, however, as to whether the rebuttable presumption of equitable tolling applies in tax refund cases. See, e.g., Brockamp v. United States,
Crucial to the Supreme Court’s holding in Irwin, that equitable tolling applies in suits under Title VII against the United States, was the fact that “the statutory time limits applicable to lawsuits against private employers under Title VII are subject to equitable tolling.”
[o]nce Congress has made such a waiver [of sovereign immunity], we think that making the rule of equitable tolling applicable to suits against the Government, in the same way that it is applicable to private suits, amounts to little, if any, broadening of the congressional waiver. Such a principle is likely to be a realistic assessment of legislative intent as well as a practically useful principle of interpretation.
Id. at 95,
Thus, in Irwin the Supreme Court held that where equitable tolling applies in a particular action between private parties, it similarly applies in such an action against the government. This makes sense as a “realistic assessment of legislative intent,” for unless specified otherwise, there is no reason to assume that Congress would intend to make it inherently more difficult to bring suit against the government than against a private defendant.
Accordingly, when equitable tolling applies in a ease brought against a private litigant, it follows that equitable tolling should presumptively apply in a comparable ease against the United States. See also id. at 97,
Unlike tort actions or employment disputes, however, tax refund cases cannot be brought against private litigants, nor are they even comparable to suits that can be brought against private litigants. Taxation is neither a “penalty imposed on the taxpayer nor a liability which he assumes by contract.” Welch v. Henry,
By definition, then, tax refund suits are limited to cases where a taxpayer is suing the government for a refund. Because tax refund suits are always brought against the government, never against private parties, the presumption announced in Irwin does not apply to them. Since there can be no equitable tolling in such suits against private defendants, the rule in Irwin that “the same rebuttable presumption of equitable tolling applicable to suits against private defendants should also apply to suits against the United States” has no force here. Applying the doctrine of equitable tolling in a tax refund action, like this one, would neither serve as a “realistic assessment of legislative intent” nor as a “practically useful principle of interpretation,” and nothing counsels a departure here from the traditional judicial reluctance to introduce equitable principles into the tax laws.
Indeed, just nine months prior to Irwin the Supreme Court stressed the importance of strictly construing statutes of limitations in the tax context, noting:
The very purpose of statutes of limitations in the tax context is to bar the assertion of a refund claim after a certain period of time has passed, without regard to whether the claim would otherwise be meritorious. That a taxpayer does not learn until after the limitations period has run that a tax was paid in error, and that he or she has a ground upon which to claim a refund, does not operate to lift the statutory bar.
Dalm,
Accordingly, in view of the special nature of tax refund suits and given the well-established significance of statutes of limitations in
III.
Even if Irwin’s presumption of equitable tolling were applicable in tax refund suits, the taxpayers would still not prevail here because that presumption is, in all events, rebuttable and has effectively been rebutted here. In addition to holding that “the same rebuttable presumption of equitable tolling applicable to suits against private defendants should also apply to suits against the United States,” the Irwin Court emphasized that “Congress, of course, may provide otherwise if it wishes to do so.” Irwin,
While apparently concluding that Irwin’s general presumption as to equitable tolling was applicable in tax refund suits, the First Circuit found that this presumption had been rebutted by a statutory scheme that is inconsistent with equitable tolling. Id. at 31. The Oropallo court heavily relied on Lampf, Pleva, Lipkind, Prupis & Petigrow v. Gilbertson,
After comparing § 6511 of the Internal Revenue Code with § 9(e) of the Securities Exchange Act, the First Circuit in Oropallo held that, “[bjecause, together, section
[SJection 6511(a) serves simply to identify which taxpayers have properly positioned themselves to obtain a refund. Like the 1-year period in Lampf, however, it does not describe which of those potential claimants will actually succeed in pursuing their rights. That task is left to section 6511(b)(2)(A), which, significantly, the tax code characterizes not as a limitations period, but as a “limit on [the] amount of credit or refund”.... Unquestionably, then, th[e] date [mandated by § 6511(b)(2)(A)] serves as an absolute cut-off point. By imposing an “outside limit” or “cut-off’ on the amount of taxes which can be recovered, section 6511(b)(2)(A) operates like the three-year portion of the limitations period in Lampf, and thus is a “period of repose inconsistent with tolling.”
Id. (quoting Lampf,
Therefore, even if Irwin’s general presumption as to equitable tolling is applicable in tax refund cases, § 6511(b)(2) serves as a separate and independent “time barrier[ ]” to recovery, id. at 30, a period of repose which itself, standing alone, is “inconsistent with tolling.” Lampf,
Section 6511(b)(2)(A) works together with section 6511(a) and section 6513(b)(1) to bar recovery of any refund claims on late returns not filed with three years after the due date of the return, and thus it clearly operates like a statute of limitations. However, Congress’s characterization of section 6511(b)(2)(A) as a “limit on [the] amount of credit or refund” rather than as a limitations period indicates more clearly than a simple limitations period would that Congress intended to establish an outside limit on the recovery of refunds.
That § 6511(b)(2) is analogous to a statute of repose is significant given the well-recognized distinctions between statutes of limitations and statutes of repose. While the former is “a procedural device that operates as a defense to limit the remedy available from an existing cause of action,” a statute of repose, in contrast, “creates a substantive right in those protected to be free from
Statutes of limitations are motivated by considerations of fairness to defendants and are intended to encourage prompt resolution of disputes by providing a simple procedural mechanism to dispose of stale claims. Statutes of repose are based on considerations of the economic best interests of the public as a whole and are substantive grants of immunity based on a legislative balance of the respective rights of potential plaintiffs and defendants struck by determining a time limit beyond which liability no longer exists.
Id. (citations omitted); see also Goad v. Celotex Corp.
Thus, “as a general rule,” while a statute of limitations is “tolled by a defendant’s fraudulent concealment of a plaintiffs injury because it would be inequitable to allow a defendant to use a statute intended as a device of fairness to perpetrate a fraud,” a statute of repose is typically “an absolute time limit beyond which liability no longer exists and is not tolled for any reason because to do so would upset the economic balance struck by the legislative body.” United States Gypsum Co.,
“[T]he inclusion of the three-year period can have no significance in this context other than to impose an outside limit.” Because the purpose of the 3-year limitation is clearly to serve as a cutoff, we hold that tolling principles do not apply to that period.
Moreover, we note that although the Internal Revenue Code contains certain carefully delineated exceptions to the limitations periods set forth in § 6511, see, e.g., § 6511(e) (where time for assessment is extended by agreement); § 6511(d) (extending filing deadlines for certain classes of claims); §§ 1311-14 (providing mitigation from limitations periods for certain errors or adjustments in assessment), none of these exceptions pertain here. See Evans Trust v. United States,
Therefore, we conclude that even if Irwin ’s general presumption of equitable tolling were applicable in tax refund cases, that presumption has effectively been rebutted by a statutory scheme that is inconsistent with equitable tolling. This conclusion is in accord with those courts that have determined that Irwin’s presumption as to equitable tolling has been rebutted in other contexts. See, e.g., Central States Pension Fund v. Navco,
IV.
In sum, we hold that there is no presumption of equitable tolling applicable in tax refund cases, but that even if such a presumption were applicable in suits for tax refunds, that presumption has been rebutted by a statutory scheme inconsistent with equitable tolling.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. As the Court in Irwin confirmed, the reverse holds true as well:
Because the time limits imposed by Congress in a suit against the Government involve a waiver of sovereign immunity, it is evident that no more favorable tolling doctrine may be employed against the Government than is employed in suits between private litigants.
. Chief Judge Posner, in a recent case addressing the applicability of the doctrine of laches against the government, suggested the possibility of "draw[ing] a line between government suits in which the government is seeking to enforce either on its own behalf or that of private parties what are in the nature of private rights, and government suits to enforce sovereign rights,” and allowing equitable relief only in the former class of cases. United States v. Administrative Enterprises, Inc.,
. Recently, in Capital Tracing, Inc. v. United States,
. The only other circuit to consider the applicability of equitable tolling principles in a tax refund case, the Eleventh Circuit, concluded that “general principles of equity may not override statutory requirements for timely filing of tax refund claims." Vintilla v. United States,
. We disagree, however, with one of the analogies drawn by the First Circuit between § 6511(a) and the one-year period discussed in Lampf. Describing the Court's rationale in Lampf, the First Circuit observed that “once someone who has been defrauded knows the relevant facts, the 1-year period [under § 9(e)] gives that person ample time in which to sue and there is no need to toll the 1-year limitations period.”
[a] similar state of knowledge respecting the right to a refund can be attributed to individual calendar year taxpayers who file income tax returns. The return contains all the information necessary to verify that there has been an overpayment of taxes and that a refund is due. Accordingly, the three-year period in section 6511(a) gives the taxpayer ample time to file a refund claim, and there is no need to toll that period.
Id. The facts of the case at hand belie this observation. They do not, however, undermine the essential holding in Oropallo that § 6511(b)(2), like the three-year period in Lampf, imposes an absolute cut-off, similar to a statute of repose, which is inconsistent with equitable tolling.
. We note that in any event the grounds for equitable relief here do not seem to rise to the level of those situations in which the Supreme Court in Irwin observed it had previously allowed equitable tolling, i.e., "only sparingly ... where the claimant has actively pursued his judicial remedies by filing a defective pleading during the statutory period, or where the complainant has been induced or tricked by his adversary’s misconduct into allowing the filing deadline to pass.”
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
The circumstances in which this tax case arose are simply tragic. Mary Morton Parsons was a wealthy and elderly widow. After her close family died, she entrusted her personal and financial affairs to her physician and attorney, who cruelly abused and defrauded her. For years, they kept her drugged up and isolated her from friends and acquaintances. While she was thus incapacitated, they transferred substantial portions of her assets to themselves and their families. To cover their tracks, they filed a gift tax return on Parsons’ behalf and had Parsons pay gift taxes on the fraudulent transfers in the amount of $4,324,822.54.
If ever there were a tax case in which equitable tolling should apply, it is this one. Parsons was not a taxpayer who, because of her incapacity, simply neglected to claim a refund of overpaid taxes that the government rightfully collected or withheld from her. Instead, Parsons paid taxes she never would have paid had she not been rendered incompetent and defrauded by her physician and attorney. The government, although not a participant, was an unintentional beneficiary of the physician’s and attorney’s fraud. In denying the claim for refund filed on behalf
The government can certainly afford to do the honorable thing in this case. To the government, which deals with budgets of trillions of dollars, four million dollars is just a drop in the bucket. Requiring the government to return the money improperly collected from Parsons would not impose any burden on it. Such an unbudgeted loss of revenues would destroy many corporations, but the government would hardly be affected.
I would apply equitable tolling in this case and require the government to refund to Parsons’ estate the money wrongfully collected as gift taxes. Therefore, I respectfully dissent from the majority’s opinion.
I.
The majority argues that the rebuttable presumption of equitable tolling announced in Irwin does not apply in tax refund eases. The Supreme Court held in Irwin that “the same rebuttable presumption of equitable tolling applicable to suits against private defendants should also apply to suits against' the United States.” Supra at 698 (citing Irwin v. Department of Veterans Affairs,
I read the holding of Irwin more broadly. In Irunn, the Supreme Court announced a “general rule” that equitable tolling should apply in suits brought against the government. Irwin,
When the Supreme Court stated its holding that “the same rebuttable presumption of equitable tolling applicable to suits against private defendants should apply to suits against the United States,” id. at 95-96,
The Supreme Court did not consider how the Irwin rule should apply in a context like tax refund suits, where all suits are brought against the government and none against private defendants. The general thrust of the Irwin holding, however, was to expand the application of equitable tolling to suits brought against the government. The Supreme Court did not intend for equitable tolling to be categorically denied in actions that can be brought only against the government.
Mental incompetency is one of the fundamental equitable reasons for tolling a statute of limitations.
II.
As a backup argument, the majority argues that the presumption of equitable tolling has effectively been rebutted in the context of tax refund suits. Following the lead of the First Circuit in Oropallo v. United States,
[Sjeetion 6511(a) serves simply to identify which taxpayers have properly positioned themselves to obtain a refund_ [H]ow-ever, it does not describe which of those potential claimants will actually succeed in pursuing their rights. That task is left to section 6511(b)(2)(A), which, significantly, the tax code characterizes not as a limitations period, but as a “limit on [the] amount of credit or refund”_ Unquestionably, then, th[e] date [mandated by § 6511(b)(2)(A) ] serves as an absolute cutoff point.
Supra at 699 (quoting Oropallo,
I read § 6511(b)(2) simply as a statute of limitations. As the majority recognizes, the limitations periods in § 6511(b)(2) operates together with § 6511(a) as a statute of limitations. In fact, § 6511(a) is the more benign of the two limitations periods. Section 6511(a) merely requires the taxpayer to file his claim for refund either within three years of the filing of the tax return or within two years of the payment the taxes. The taxpayer can easily satisfy this requirement at any time by remembering to file a tax return before filing the claim for refund. Section 6511(b)(2) imposes the more significant limitation on the filing of claims for refund. It requires the taxpayer to file his claim for refund within either two or three years from the date on which the taxes were paid. The taxpayer receives the three-year limitations period as long as he has filed a tax return within the three years preceding the filing of the claim for refund. Otherwise, the taxpayer receives only the two-year limitation period. In effect, § 6511(b)(2) is the real statute of limitations; it identifies which taxpayers have properly positioned themselves to obtain a refund. Section 6511(a) merely determines whether the taxpayer receives the two-year or three-year limitations period under § 6511(b)(2).
The caption to § 6511(b)(2) does not magically turn that section into an absolute cut-off of refund claims. Whatever the caption, § 6511(b)(2) is simply a statute of limitations, requiring the taxpayer to file his claim for refund within either two or three years of the
The statutory scheme in Lampf, Pleva, Lipkind, Prupis & Petigrow v. Gilbertson,
The majority’s comparison of § 6511(b)(2) to the limitations period in Lampf is unavailing. The three-year limitations period in Lampf could operate only as a statute of repose. In light of the one-year limitations period for those who discover a securities fraud violation, Congress must have intended the three-year period to serve as an absolute cut-off of claims. The limitations period in § 6511(b)(2) simply requires a taxpayer to file his claim for refund within two or three years of the payment of taxes. Nothing about § 6511(a) suggests that Congress intended § 6511(b)(2) to operate as an absolute cut-off of refund claims. Therefore, I disagree with the majority’s conclusion that the presumption of equitable tolling has been rebutted in the context of tax refund suits.
III.
For the foregoing reasons, I respectfully dissent from the opinion of the majority. I would apply the doctrine of equitable tolling and allow Parsons’ estate to collect a refund of her wrongfully paid taxes.
Although there is a line of cases holding that mental incompetence does not toll a statute of limitations, e.g., Harris v. Ford Motor Co.,
