This is the third appeal to consider the baffling ramifications of Raymond Wright’s failure to file tax returns in 1987 and 1989.
See Wright v. Comm’r,
BACKGROUND
The facts are set out at length in our 2004 opinion. The (highly compressed) facts bearing on this current appeal are as follows.
Wright did not file returns for the years 1987 and 1989. The IRS began sending him delinquency notices as early as 1989. In 1992, Wright asked the IRS to file “substitute returns” on his behalf for 1987 and 1989, and it did so in October 1993. In November 1993 the IRS audited Wright and charged him with deficiencies of $3,777.00 (plus interest and late penalties) for 1987 and $6,500.00 (plus interest and late penalties) for 1989. In May 1994, Wright filed a tax return for the year 1993 and requested a refund. When the IRS reminded Wright that he still owed taxes for 1987 and 1989, Wright directed the IRS by letter to apply his refund of $1,046.90 (representing an overpayment of $971.78 and interest of $75.12) to the deficiencies found for 1987 and 1989. The IRS did not accede to that request. Instead, the IRS withheld his refund without applying it to the 1987 and 1989 deficiencies (which continued to accrue penalties and interest on the books of the IRS), and without advising Wright what it was doing.
On June 21, 1994, Wright paid the IRS $6,681.22, which was applied pro rata to Wright’s outstanding tax liabilities for 1987 and 1989.
Wright v. Comm’r,
After receiving a notice of deficiency in May 1995, Wright initiated a series of proceedings in which he asserted a variety of procedural and constitutional claims.
Wright v. Comm’r,
75 T.C.M.(CCH) 2536, 2536 (1998). All of Wright’s claims were held to be without merit, and a panel of this Court affirmed in an unpublished order.
Wright,
By May 2000, the books of the IRS reflected a total unpaid balance for 1987 and 1989 so big and so long delinquent that the IRS sent Wright a Notice of Intent to Levy for unpaid taxes.
Wright,
In April 2001 the IRS informed Wright that it would proceed with a levy action against him. Wright appealed the levy action pro se in Tax Court, “petitioning for an abatement of interest on grounds of IRS error and delay.” Wright’s appeal expressed (understandable) confusion as to the amounts levied against him by the IRS for the years 1987 and 1989, and claimed that he was entitled to additional interest abatement by reason of cascading errors he alleged the IRS had made — including its handling of his 1993 refund and its alleged failure to credit his withholding credits from 1987 and 1989.
The Tax Court rejected all of Wright’s arguments, finding that Wright’s 1993 refund had in fact been mailed to him, and concluding therefore that Wright’s “1993 refund could not be applied against his outstanding liabilities for 1987 and 1989” and did not entitle him to additional interest abatement.
Wright,
We vacated that ruling on appeal, seeing no evidence that the IRS had sent Wright his 1993 refund, and observing that Wright’s tax liability for 1987 and 1989 may have been completely satisfied by the refund along with Wright’s other payments and credits.
Wright,
(i) whether Wright’s 1993 tax refund was sent to him by the IRS in 1994, (ii) if not, whether Wright received timely notice from the IRS that his refund had not been applied to his 1987 and 1989 tax deficiencies, (in) if not, whether his current tax liability should be consequently adjusted by, inter alia, an abatement of interest pursuant to 26 U.S.C. § 6404(e), and (iv) in any case, whether the current interest abatement that Wright has already received was correct in light of (a) the IRS’s failure to give Wright appropriate withholding credits for 1987 and 1989, and (b) Wright’s June 21, 1994 payment of $6,681.22.
Id. at 46.
During the pendency of that appeal, Wright made a payment of $15,550 to the IRS. On remand, the Tax Court determined that the agency had applied $3,625 of the $15,000 payment to Wright’s 1987 tax liability, thereby satisfying the 1987 liability.
Wright v. Comm’r,
The Tax Court then proceeded to trial on the issues we had identified.
See id.
at 527-28. Citing “numerous misstatements and errors made by [the IRS] through the handling of [Wright’s] 1987 and 1989” taxes,
id.
at 528, the Tax Court found that (i) Wright’s 1993 tax refund was
not
sent to him by the IRS in 1994; (ii) the IRS failed to notify Wright that his refund was never applied to his 1987 and 1989 tax deficiencies; (iii) Wright’s tax liability should be adjusted by an abatement of interest pursuant to Internal Revenue Code § 6404(e); and (iv) the interest abatement that Wright had previously received was incorrect.
Id.
at *6. On the basis of these findings, the Tax Court ruled that the IRS “may not proceed with the collection activities for 1989.”
Wright v. Comm’r,
No. 6240-01L (U.S. Tax Ct. Dec. 26, 2008)
*219
(Order and Decision);
see Wright,
Wright timely appealed the Tax Court’s decision.
DISCUSSION
“We review the legal conclusions of the tax court de
novo
and its factual findings under the clearly erroneous standard. Mixed questions of law and fact, entailing the application of a legal standard to a given factual pattern, are [also] reviewed under the clearly erroneous standard.”
Merrill Lynch & Co. v. Comm’r,
“This court construes appellate briefs submitted by
pro
se litigants liberally and reads such submissions to raise the strongest possible arguments they suggest.”
Ortiz v. McBride,
I
“[T]he Tax Court is a court of limited jurisdiction that possesses only those powers expressly conferred upon it by Congress; it may exercise jurisdiction only pursuant to specific legislative enactments.”
Maier v. Comm’r,
In this case, the Tax Court determined under Internal Revenue Code (“I.R.C.”) § 6330 that Wright’s $15,500 payment fully satisfied his 1987 tax liability (including interest, and penalties) and satisfied all the tax due on his 1989 tax liability (though not all of the outstanding interest).
Wright,
The I.R.C. vests the Tax Court with jurisdiction “to determine whether the Secretary’s failure to abate interest ... was an abuse of discretion, and [to] order an abatement, if such action is brought within 180 days after the date of the mailing of the Secretary’s final determination not to abate such interest.” I.R.C. § 6404(h)(1). The Code further empowers the Tax Court to determine an overpayment and order a refund in the same circumstances. I.R.C. § 6404(h)(2)(B)(in-corporating I.R.C. § 6512(b)).
Thé Court declined to exercise that grant of jurisdiction on the ground that Wright’s action challenged a “Notice of Determination Concerning Collection Action(s) Under Section 6320 and/or 6330,”
*220
and was therefore brought pursuant to § 6330 and not pursuant to § 6404.
Wright,
Wright adequately raised the issue of abatement of interest during the § 6330 ■hearing at the agency.
See Wright,
Insofar as the Tax Court based its jurisdictional decision on Wright’s failure to style his petition an action under § 6404, this too was error. “All pleadings shall be so construed as to do substantial justice.” Tax Court Rule 31(d). “While petitioners in [the Tax] Court are expected to follow the letter of [the] Court’s Rules, it is within the Court’s discretion to construe pleadings (particularly in the case of a petitioner filing a petition
pro
se) so as to do substantial justice.”
Swope v. Comm’r,
T.C. Memo.1990-82,
II
Wright moved for the recusal of the Tax Court judge, and the Tax Court denied the motion. Wright argues that recusal was required under 28 U.S.C. § 455 because the judge had denied various pre-trial motions, and because the same judge was assigned to the case following remand.
There is some question as to whether the judges of the Tax Court are subject to the mandatory recusal provisions in 28 U.S.C. § 455.
See Nobles v. Comm’r,
CONCLUSION
The judgment of the Tax Court is vacated insofar as it [i] held that Wright’s challenge to the assessment of his 1987 taxes was moot and [ii] declined to exercise jurisdiction under I.R.C. § 6404(h), and this case is remanded to the Tax Court to determine Wright’s entitlement to an abatement and any resulting overpayment and refund.
