Source: https://taishofflaw.com/2013/07/
Timestamp: 2019-04-19 12:14:33+00:00

Document:
Jimmy Van Heusen and Sammy Cahn (to say nothing of Ol’ Blue Eyes) to the contrary notwithstanding (as the expensive lawyers say), you can have one without the other, when one spouse is out of the country, even if the other is right here. That is, you can have the 150-day extended window for filing a petition.
You may remember my blogpost “Inside, Outside”, 2/28/13, when Deb Smith got the extender from Judge Foley, even though the whereabouts of her (presumptive) spouse were unknown. And apparently Deb’s spouse wasn’t named in the SNOD.
STJ Daniel A. (“Yuda”) Guy, Jr., has one where both spouses are named in the SNOD, and gives us a designated hitter on a day when not much else is doing around 400 Second Street, NW, in the District.
The order is Hichem Tounsi & Rita Tounsi, Docket No. 28674-12S, filed 7/31/13.
Hichem might or might not have been around (STJ Guy isn’t sure), but no doubt the petition arrived on Day 105, too late for the 90-day cutoff but timely for the 150.
STJ Guy: “Mrs. Tounsi was outside the United States in Costa Rica at the time the notice of deficiency was mailed, and she experienced a delay in receipt of the notice. Although we are uncertain as to Mr. Tounsi’s whereabouts at the time the notice of deficiency was mailed, where a joint notice of deficiency is sent to a husband and wife, and either of them is outside the United States, the 150-day rule applies to both.” Order, at p. 1 (Citations omitted, but STJ Guy earlier cited Judge Foley’s opinion in Deb Smith’s case).
They might go together like a horse and carriage, but either one can trigger the 150-day extender.
It’s an old family joke that dates back to a high school choral presentation, wherein one of my nearest and dearest performed a song of that name, but I’ll spare the participants any further elaboration. As there were no Tax Court opinions or designated orders today, July 31, I decided to blog David Franklin & Ronda Ching Day, Docket No. 1770-12L, filed 7/30/13, at which the old memories came flooding back.
Getting to the order, when Dave agrees to move the trial of his CDP from Honolulu, so as to “have petitioners’ case tried in any west coast city”, Judge Gale relents and doesn’t toss Dave and Ronda for failure to prosecute.
Apparently, Dave and Ronda actually live in Hawaii. Dave claims he skipped his trial date (even though he knew about it six months in advance), because he had to teach an MBA course, given by the University of Hawaii, in Vietnam, and couldn’t get any substitute professor in time.
When I was scheduled to go to Vietnam I couldn’t find a substitute either. But my trip was under rather different circumstances. And there weren’t a lot of MBA students around at the time.
Dave sought a continuance (that’s an adjournment) by fax, but he sent the fax on the eve of his departure to the fax number reserved for Final Status Reports. Dave claimed IRS counsel told him to use that number, even though the Pre-Trial Order expressly stated that any other faxes would be tossed unread. Judge Gale said it wasn’t IRS counsel’s job to teach Dave what to do. And of course the time difference between Honolulu and 400 Second Street, NW, in Our Nation’s Capital, means his fax was too late anyway.
Moreover, Dave never participated in the pre-trial stipulation process nor did he file a pre-trial memorandum. Dave was a trifle nonchalant in his litigation techniques.
Judge Gale has little patience for Dave’s tactics, and is about to deny his motion to vacate the order dismissing his petition for want of prosecution, when Dave agrees to move the place of trial to any West Coast city.
Judge Gale: “Nevertheless, dismissal of a case is a harsh sanction and trial courts should consider less drastic sanctions than dismissal when they are available. See eg, Edelson v. Commissioner, 829 F.2d 828, 831 (9th Cir. 1987); Henderson v. Duncan, 779 F.2d 1421, 1434 (9th Cir. 1986); Nevijel v. North Coast Life Ins. Co., 651 F.2d 671, 674 (9th Cir. 1981). While petitioner’s conduct of this litigation thus far is not flawless, we are now satisfied that his (and his co-petitioner’s) failure to appear for trial on June 10 did not evidence a disregard of their obligations to pursue their claims. We are also satisfied that an alternative to dismissal exists. Petitioner–recognizing that his failure to appear at the trial set for June 10 could postpone a trial in this case for an additional year if the trial were to be held in Honolulu–offered in his June 7, 2013 letter, and reiterates in his Motion to Vacate Decision, a willingness to have petitioners’ case tried in any west coast city. As this is a collection case where prompt resolution is especially important, petitioner’s suggestion of an alternate place of trial offers a means to minimize the delays that would otherwise arise from his untimely disclosure of his commitments conflicting with the original trial date. In these circumstances, the Court will vacate its decision of dismissal and, as a less drastic alternative to dismissal, set this case for trial at the Court’s trial session in Los Angeles, California….” Order, at p. 3.
Interestingly, on this same date we have another order in a case set for trial in Honolulu, Adina & Haim Shechter, Docket No. 23677-12, filed 7/30/13. But trial didn’t take place when the case was called. The parties had reached a stipulated decision, said IRS counsel, and had exchanged a copy by fax, but needed more time to get a signed original, because petitioners live in Israel.
Sound familiar? See my blogpost “Delay of the Game”, 7/12/13. Petitioners were going to try the case in Honolulu, presumably bringing themselves, counsel, witnesses, physical and documentary evidence from Israel or wherever to Hawaii, but couldn’t overnight a stipulated decision?
As Judge Gale noted above, petitioner’s failure to appear in Honolulu could result in a year’s delay of the trial.
If by choosing a place for trial as far distant from one’s own location as possible, not showing up and providing some lame excuse based on one’s own actions, one can get a year’s delay, why not delay the game, as there’s no appreciable sanction?
How about requiring that the taxpayer-petitioner show minimal nexus between the place of trial and the location of petitioner, counsel, witnesses or evidence, before giving petitioner a one-year free adjournment?
I want to thank Mr. Patrick Temple-West of Thomson-Reuters for an interesting discussion of the politics surrounding Tax Court. As this is a strictly non-political blog, I’ll eschew any “summarization”, to use STJ Lew Carluzzo’s neologism (see my blogpost “Incomprehensible?”, 6/4/13), or commentary.
Our conversation was enlightening. The professors who have written on the subject (including but without in any way limiting the generality of the foregoing, as the high-priced lawyers say) Prof. Cords of Albany Law School, seem to think that all, or at least many, Tax Court cases are decided otherwise than on the law.
I think at best the conclusion is the old Scots’ verdict, “not proven.” But our telephone talk was a good excuse to delay going to the gym on a Sunday afternoon.
I pointed out in a previous blogpost that Constitutional arguments in Tax Court get a slightly polite version of the tramp’s toss; see my blogpost “Losing My Religion”, 1/17/13, where I noted that such arguments are usually found in protester cases and usually get blown away.
And I pointed out in a more recent blogpost how partners and tax matterers are supposed to tell the IRS where they are, when they change addresses or otherwise move around and about. See my blogpost “Wait Just A Minute, Mr Postma”, 7/23/13.
Now if this were just an ordinary mailing address case, I wouldn’t blog it, but it’s a twofer from Judge Thornton, with a recap of partnership-level due process notice and how it’s supposed to be done.
So let’s take a brief look at Estate of Albert Simon, Deceased, Ellen S. Simon, Personal Representative And Ellen S. Simon, 2013 T. C. Memo. 174, filed 7/29/13.
The facts are the usual; the Late Al, before he was late, got himself and Ellen into a son-of-BOSS, a Section 752 mix-and-match of unrecognized gains and recognized losses in a pair of digital option trades. For some quick background, see my blogpost “Woodshedding Your Experts – Stobie Creek Part Deux”, 1/10/11.
Except for a 1% partner, who is nameless and apparently blameless, all the players are alter egos of the Late Al. But when IRS goes hunting for someone to nail with the NBAP, Al isn’t listed as tax matterer (nobody is), so there follows a series of letters, some from Al but most from IRS.
Ellen claims IRS knew about the Late Al, and should have sent the NBAP and FPAA to him. She claims she wasn’t given proper notice.
Ellen says she got a packet of stuff from IRS during the pre-trial show-and-tell that shows IRS knew right well where she and the Late Al were.
So what, says Judge Thornton. You never sent in the magic paper with the Big Five required points.
“Due process requires that notice be ‘reasonably calculated, under all circumstances, to apprise interested parties of the pendency of the action and afford them an opportunity to present their objections.’ Mullane v. Cent. Hanover Bank & Trust Co., 339 U.S. 306, 314 (1950); see also Byrd Invs. v. Commissioner, 89 T.C. 1, 6-7 (1987), aff’d without published opinion, 853 F.2d 928 (11th Cir. 1988). The Secretary, in part through specific congressionally delegated authority, has provided a reasonable regulatory procedure to meet that requirement.” 2013 T. C. Memo. 174, at p. 21.
Most important, Ellen never explained why she and the Late Al never sent in the magic statement, or why the Late Al put the old, invalid address on the tax return for the year at issue, when he filed it long after he, Ellen and the partnership had moved away.
The case has an interesting discussion of how penalties are to be dealt with in TEFRA partnership-level adjustments, but those are not often met with by the in-the-trenches preparer, for whom this blog is written. If you do encounter such a situation, where the Section 6662(h) 40% hammer and the Section 6651(a) negligence hammer are about to descend upon your partner-client, read Judge Thornton’s explanation.
The Judge Who Writes Like A Human Being, a/k/a The Great Dissenter, His Honor Mark V. Holmes, has written an Order that should be entitled “Summary Judgment Made Simple”. Though perhaps too simple for the in-the-trenches preparer, it might serve as a handout to clients to explain what to do when they get a Rule 121, and what will happen if they don’t do it.
The Order is Daniel Joseph Vanhook (sic), Docket No. 13284-12SL, filed 7/26/13, although Dan’s surname more properly should be set forth as “Van Hook”, as Judge Holmes does.
Judge Holmes remanded Dan’s NFTL case to Appeals, and when our story opens, Appeals revised its earlier disposition. Here’s the whole story, and I can do no better than quote Judge Holmes in extenso.
“After considering the case again, the IRS was willing to reduce, but not eliminate, Mr. Van Hook’s tax bill and decided that it would keep a lien on Mr. Van Hook’s property until he paid.
“The next step in this process is for the Court to review the IRS’s work, which it does through summary-judgment motions. The IRS will file papers in which the IRS lawyer will argue that no trial is necessary in this case, because (the IRS says) no relevant facts are in dispute — everything is in the record that the IRS Appeals Officer already looked at (and which is called the ‘administrative record’). That motion will argue that, on the basis of these undisputed facts, the Court has to rule in the IRS’s favor.
“The Court will also want to hear from Mr. Van Hook. He will have to file a response to the IRS’s motion. If he disagrees with the facts set out in the IRS’s motion — e.g., there’s something in the record that shouldn’t be there, or something that is missing from the record that should be there — then his response should point out the specific facts in dispute. If he disagrees with the IRS’s argument as to the law, then his response should also set out his position on the disputed legal issues.
“He should label this response ‘Petitioner’s Cross-Motion for Summary Judgment and Response to Respondent’s Motion for Summary Judgment’ on the first page so that it gets filed as soon as the Court receives it.” Order, at pp. 1-2.
Judge Holmes refers Dan to the FAQs found on the taxpayer information link on the Tax Court website.
But Judge Holmes warns Dan that if he doesn’t respond, then, “if appropriate”, he will lose.
Can’t be clearer than that.
Not the Rick Astley 1988 hit, but rather a reiteration of the essential elements of a scenic easement, as Judge Haines deals with a Rule 161 reargument in Kayln M. Carpenter, et al., 2013 T.C. Memo. 172, filed 7/25/13.
This is a supplemental memo, as Kayln already lost in 2012 T. C. Memo. 1. But now Kayln claims Tax Court didn’t apply the learning in Gordo and Lorna Kaufman’s case. See my blogposts “A Joy Forever”, 4/4/11, and “‘A Joy Forever’–Maybe Not”, 7/20/12.
But Gordo’s and Lorna’s case had to do with termination of a scenic easement by reason of a mortgagee’s reservation of casualty insurance or condemnation proceeds, which aren’t in play here. And Gordo’s and Lorna’s deal “…stated that nothing in the conservation easement deed of trust shall be construed to limit the donee’s right to give its consent to changes in the conservation easement deed or to abandon some or all of its rights thereunder.” 2013 T. C. Memo. 172, at p. 17.
And the issue for a Rule 161 is whether there has been an intervening change in relevant law.
Kayln’s problem is the language in the grant of the easement in her deal: “Extinguishment–If circumstances arise in the future such that render the purpose of this Conservation Easement impossible to accomplish, this Conservation Easement can be terminated or extinguished, whether in whole or in part, by judicial proceedings, or by mutual written agreement of both parties, provided no other parties will be impacted and no laws or regulations are violated by such termination. * * * [Emphasis added.]”. 2013 T. C. Memo 172, at p. 4.
Nothing in Kayln’s language limits the discretion of the parties to abrogate the easement. Gordo’s and Lorna’s deal with their donee limited the donee’s right to change the deal to changes in circumstances. Kayln and her donee could call off the deal at any time for whatever reason, change or no change in circumstances.
No good, says Judge Haines. Together forever is the deal.
In an earlier blogpost, I advised taxpayers seeking like-kind treatment of real property leases to “Go Long”, 6/24/13.
Now come Charles E. & Patti H. Bass, Docket No. 13025-12S, filed 7/25/13, who want to go small. Tax Court small claims procedure per Section 7463, that is.
But there’s a statutory $50K maximum for small-claimers, inclusive of amount of deficiency, additions to tax, penalties and any additional amounts permitted by law.
Chas and Patti have a $190K adjustment in the SNOD, with tax above $50K. So IRS moves to remove the magic letter “S” from the docket number, and it looks like a slam dunk.
But Chas and Patti answer IRS’ motion by saying they’re willing to concede $70K of that adjustment. Thus, only $43K of deficiency remains in dispute.
Good enough for Chief Judge Colvin to let Chas and Patti go small.
Takeaway–Tactically, it might be well to concede your way into a small-claimer.
OH DEBT, WHERE IS THY STING?
June Shaw gets stung when her bad debt turns out to be neither a debt, nor bad when she claimed it was, in the eponymous 2013 T. C. Memo. 170, filed 7/24/13.
That learned jurist Judge Lauber, the star of my blogpost, “Acceuillons, Let’s Welcome, Judge Albert B. Lauber”, 2/5/13, is the decider. And he wastes not his judicial learning on the desert air here.
June is bookkeeper and CFO of her family’s real estate business, but in her spare time she sold an apartment building she herself owned, taking away a seven-figure capital gain just before the real estate market cratered in 2008, and reporting on the installment method. Big taxable payment comes in in 2009.
Coincidentally, Brother Ken needs money for a development venture the family business is undertaking, because his money lady walked away as the real estate market headed south.
June steps in and takes a note from the business, interest and principal accruing until the due date of the note in 2011. The note is unsecured, and evidences an open line of credit.
June funds about $900K, but claims the loan is a business bad debt and became worthless in 2009.
No, says IRS. No, says Judge Lauber. On both counts.
Interfamilial loans get close scrutiny. Even if the paper formalities are observed, what the parties did is the real test.
No arms’-length lender would have made the deal June did, and no arms’-length lender would have forborne to demand payment, give notice of default, or sue.
Moreover, the note wasn’t due until 2011, so what evidence was there in 2009 that June wouldn’t have been repaid? Merely that a business loses money, and its prospects are none too bright, doesn’t mean it couldn’t recover. June had the books and records as CFO; if she had evidence that the viability of the family business as a going concern was going down the drain, she never introduced the records, so Judge Lauber invokes our old chum Wichita Terminal Elevator Co. v. Commissioner, 6 T.C. 1158, 1165 (1946), aff’d, 162 F.2d 513 (10th Cir. 1947). If June had evidence of worthlessness, she’d introduce it. If she doesn’t, then she loses.
The deal is more like a gift or capital contribution. It doesn’t resemble a commercial loan as to economic substance, June didn’t act like a creditor, and she never established that she had no chance of recovering her money by 2011.
No debt, but plenty of sting. Big deficiency, late payment addition, and substantial understatement of tax.
But if you don’t come back to us, game over. That obliging jurist, Judge David Gustafson, once again shows his obliging ways to Sean Richards, in 2013 T. C. Memo. 171, filed 7/24/13. But Sean does not respond to Judge Gustafson’s generosity.
Sean, like John Carter, the star of my blogpost “We’ll Come To You”, 9/18/12, is in the Stony Lonesome, the duration of his stay therein being indefinite.
Sean got a distribution from a qualified retirement plan, but wasn’t yet past the magic 59-1/2 year milestone, so he’s looking at the 10% excise tax. And he has no back-up for his claimed lifetime learning credit. And he claims he never got his refund (but that went for child support).
Well, IRS wanted to toss Sean for non-prosecution when he didn’t reply to their Branerton show-and-tell letter. But Judge Gustafson refused, saying that Sean’s situation as a prisoner makes it hard to participate in a show-and-tell, but likewise IRS needn’t wait until Sean rejoins the Land of the Free.
Maybe this case is ripe for a Rule 121 summary judgment. Maybe there are no disputed facts. So Judge Gustafson suggested IRS move for summary judgment, and instructed Sean on summary judgment and where to look on the Tax Court website to find out what to do.
Still, Sean as non-movant gets every reasonable doubt and benefit of every inference. “However, the non-moving party may not sit on his hands. He is required by Rule 121(d) to ‘set forth specific facts showing that there is a genuine dispute for trial. If the adverse party does not so respond, then a decision, if appropriate, may be entered against such party.’ Despite having this requirement called to his attention, Mr. Richards failed to make any response to the IRS’s motion for summary judgment.
“As a general rule, a petitioner like Mr. Richards bears the burden of proof at his trial in a deficiency case. See Rule 142(a)(1). The Supreme Court has held that where the party who does not have the burden of proof (the Commissioner) has attempted discovery, but the party with the burden of proof (Mr. Richards) has not responded with evidence sufficient to carry his burden of proof, summary judgment may be granted in favor of the party who shows that discovery yielded no evidence. Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 323-324 (1986).” 2013 T. C. Memo. 171, at p. 8.
So Sean is out on the 10% hit, and out on the lifetime learning credit (although give Judge Gustafson credit, he taught Sean plenty).
As for the refund Sean didn’t get, “(F)irst, section 6402(c) provides that ‘[t]he amount of any overpayment to be refunded * * * shall be reduced by the amount of any past-due support’ (emphasis added), see also 42 U.S.C. sec. 664(a)(1) (2006); and section 6402(g) provides that ‘[n]o court of the United States shall have jurisdiction to hear any action, whether legal or equitable, brought to restrain or review a reduction authorized by subsection (c)’. This bars us from reviewing the reduction of Mr. Richards’s 2009 overpayment to pay his child-support debt.” 2013 T. C. Memo. 171, at p. 10.
In fact, the Supremes have held that to get a refund one must sue in USDC or CFC, as Congress didn’t let Tax Court go there. See United States v. Clintwood Elkhorn Min. Co., 553 U.S. 1, 11 (2008).
Takeaway–If an obliging Tax Court Judge offers to come to you, be prepared to come back. And if you want tax money back, don’t waste time in Tax Court.
The Judge With a Heart, Special Trial Judge Robert N. Armen, Jr., has a rescue in hand today for Peter Dand Prescott & Rita Da Silva Vint, Docket No. 6648-13S, filed 7/23/13, a small-claimer with only about $2K in tax on the line.
The problem started when the Defense Finance and Accounting Service sent Pete a W-2 for wages; Pete said he got neither wages nor a W-2, because he was retired.
You remember that DFAS wasn’t the swiftest off the mark; see my blogpost “Sunk By The Navy?”, 9/28/11, starring Farmer Monica Kleber and her paper chase with DFAS.
So Pete claims IRS has the burden of proof, hasn’t borne it (even though there’s been no Branerton show-and-tell or anything else), and moves to dismiss.
Now it’s true that where an information return (like a W-2, 1098, or any of the 1099 progeny) is prepared by a third party, the taxpayer can challenge and the IRS has the burden of proof. See Section 6201(d).
But it’s early times yet.
STJ Armen: “Petitioners’ motion, however, suggests a possible misunderstanding of the nature and implications of a dismissal in Tax Court practice. The dismissal of a Tax Court case is not the equivalent of ‘dismissal’ of the underlying notice of deficiency or the determined deficiency in tax.” Order, at p. 1.
In fact, a dismissal of a Tax Court petition, otherwise than for want of jurisdiction, requires entry of decision in favor of IRS. Pete was timely, so if he dismisses, he’s lost.
See my blogpost “Dismissed!”, 5/8/12, in which I discuss the Settles case, which case STJ Armen quotes at length. Section 7459(d) “generally” (don’t you just love “generally”, the ultimate tax weasel-word?) requires that IRS wins when a petition is dismissed if Tax Court had jurisdiction.
So, says STJ Armen: “Here, the early stage of the litigation means that the record at present consists of little more the pleadings and the motion and response now before the Court. As a consequence, petitioners have not yet had an opportunity to appear at trial or otherwise to submit evidence that all prerequisites for a shift of burden under either section 7491(a) or 6201(d), I.R.C., have been met.” Order, at p. 1.
And as Pete didn’t bring a petition in order to lose his case on his own motion, the motion is denied.

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