Court Opinion

ID: 4341723
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2018-11-15 15:00:55.953586+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:48:55.897789
License: Public Domain

17-3622-cv
Diebold Found. v. Comm’r

                            UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                                FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT

                                       SUMMARY ORDER
RULINGS BY SUMMARY ORDER DO NOT HAVE PRECEDENTIAL EFFECT. CITATION TO A
SUMMARY ORDER FILED ON OR AFTER JANUARY 1, 2007, IS PERMITTED AND IS GOVERNED BY
FEDERAL RULE OF APPELLATE PROCEDURE 32.1 AND THIS COURT’S LOCAL RULE 32.1.1. WHEN
CITING A SUMMARY ORDER IN A DOCUMENT FILED WITH THIS COURT, A PARTY MUST CITE
EITHER THE FEDERAL APPENDIX OR AN ELECTRONIC DATABASE (WITH THE NOTATION
“SUMMARY ORDER”). A PARTY CITING A SUMMARY ORDER MUST SERVE A COPY OF IT ON
ANY PARTY NOT REPRESENTED BY COUNSEL.

    At a stated term of the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, held at
the Thurgood Marshall United States Courthouse, at 40 Foley Square, in the City of New
York, on the 15th day of November, two thousand eighteen.

PRESENT: REENA RAGGI,
         GERARD E. LYNCH,
         CHRISTOPHER F. DRONEY,
                  Circuit Judges.
________________________________________________

DIEBOLD FOUNDATION, INC., TRANSFEREE,

                           Petitioner-Appellant,

                   v.                                               No. 17-3622-cv

COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE,

                           Respondent-Appellee,
________________________________________________

FOR PETITIONER-APPELLANT:                      A. DUANE WEBBER (Phillip J. Taylor, Mireille R.
                                               Oldak, on the brief), Baker & McKenzie LLP,
                                               Washington, DC.

FOR RESPONDENT-APPELLEE:                       CLINT A. CARPENTER (Gilbert S. Rothenberg,
                                               Arthur T. Catterall, on the brief), for Richard E.
                                               Zuckerman, Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney
                                               General, Tax Division, United States
                                               Department of Justice, Washington, DC.
        Appeal from a decision of the United States Tax Court (Goeke, J.).

    UPON DUE CONSIDERATION, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED, ADJUDGED,
AND DECREED that the order of the Tax Court is AFFIRMED.

       This is the second appeal to us arising from Petitioner-Appellant Diebold
Foundation, Inc.’s (“Diebold”) challenge to a tax assessment by Respondent-Appellee
Commissioner of Internal Revenue (“IRS”). Diebold now appeals from an August 4, 2017,
decision of the United States Tax Court in favor of the IRS, holding that Diebold was liable
for unpaid income tax for the tax year July 1 through July 2, 1999, in the amount of
$33,542,496.29, plus interest.

       In our previous decision in this case, we described the complex “Midco” transaction
through which a personal holding company, Double-D Ranch (“Double-D”), sold
approximately $300 million of its assets, comprising publicly traded securities, real
property, and cash. Diebold Found., Inc. v. Comm’r, 736 F.3d 172, 175–83 (2d Cir. 2013).
The value of the non-cash assets had appreciated significantly during the period Double-D
held them, such that an asset sale would have triggered a tax liability for built-in gains of
approximately $81 million. Id. at 176. A “Midco” transaction was executed to arrange for
Double-D and the recipients of the liquidated assets to substantially avoid this tax liability.
Id. Diebold was one of three foundations which each eventually received—from
intermediary “Midco” entities—over $33 million from the sale. Id. at 181. Because the
remaining facts regarding the Midco transaction are not pertinent for purposes of this
appeal, we will otherwise assume the parties’ familiarity with those underlying facts in this
case.

        On March 10, 2006, the IRS sent Double-D a notice of deficiency in the amount of
$97,344,076.80 for its declared tax year July 1 through July 2, 1999.1 “[T]he IRS was
unable to find any Double D assets from which to collect the liability.” Diebold, 736 F.3d
at 181. “Deciding that any additional efforts to collect from Double D would be futile,”
the IRS attempted to collect from Diebold and the other foundations as transferees of
transferees of a taxpayer which owed that income tax. Id. Accordingly, on July 11, 2008,
the IRS sent Diebold a notice of transferee liability for $33,542,496.29—one third of
Double-D’s liability—for the same short tax year. Diebold and the other foundations filed
a petition in the Tax Court challenging the assessment. Initially, “[t]he Tax Court found in
favor of the petitioners, holding . . . that Diebold and the other . . . Foundations were not
liable as transferees of a transferee.” Id. at 182. We vacated that decision and remanded
the case to the Tax Court. Id. at 190.

1
  Prior to the transaction at issue here, Double-D’s tax year was set to end on June 30, 2000. After it
completed the transaction, however, Double-D filed a corporate tax return for a short taxable year, ending
July 2, 1999.

                                                    2
       On remand, the Tax Court concluded, in an August 15, 2016, memorandum opinion,
“that Double-D Ranch was liable for unpaid tax for the short tax year ending July [2,] 1999,
the notices of liability were timely issued [and] petitioners [including Diebold] are liable
as transferees of a transferee of Double D Ranch.” App’x at 6–26. On October 4, 2016,—
seven years after filing its petition with the Tax Court—Diebold filed a motion to dismiss
for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, contending that the notice of deficiency issued to
Double-D and the notice of transferee liability issued to Diebold stated the incorrect tax
year. Id. at 27. The Tax Court denied the motion on June 6, 2017, and it entered a final
decision in the IRS’s favor on August 4, 2017. Diebold timely appealed.

       On appeal, Diebold argues that the Tax Court lacked subject matter jurisdiction
because the IRS’s notice to Diebold of transferee liability stated an incorrect end date for
the July 1, 1999, taxable year (attributed to Diebold as Double-D’s transferee). Rather than
ending July 2, 1999—as Double-D had itself claimed based on purported stock transfers—
Diebold contends the tax year ended June 30, 2000, based on the Commissioner’s
recharacterization of those transactions as assets transfers.

        “We review de novo the Tax Court’s legal conclusions and for clear error its factual
findings.” Chai v. Comm’r, 851 F.3d 190, 204 (2d Cir. 2017). “In particular, we owe no
deference to the Tax Court’s statutory interpretations, its relationship to us being that of a
district court to a court of appeals, not that of an administrative agency to a court of
appeals.” Id. (internal citations, alterations, and quotation marks omitted).

        26 U.S.C. § 6212(a) “authorizes the Secretary of the Treasury or [the Secretary’s]
delegate to send a taxpayer a notice of deficiency if the Secretary ‘determines that there is
a deficiency in respect of any tax imposed.’” Andrew Crispo Gallery, Inc. v. Comm’r, 16
F.3d 1336, 1340 (2d Cir. 1994) (quoting § 6212(a)). “Section 6213(a) provides in part that
‘the taxpayer may file a petition with the Tax Court for a redetermination of the deficiency’
and ‘[t]he Tax Court shall have no jurisdiction to enjoin any action or proceeding under
this subsection unless a timely petition for a redetermination of the deficiency has been
filed.’” Id. (quoting 26 U.S.C. § 6213(a)) (alteration in original).

        The essential requirements for a valid notice of transferee liability are the same as
for a notice of deficiency (together, “notice”). See 26 U.S.C. § 6901(a) (stating that, subject
to delineated exceptions, transferee liabilities “shall . . . be . . . collected in the same manner
and subject to the same provisions and limitations as in the case of the taxes . . . to which
the liabilities were incurred”). A notice must, “at a minimum[,] . . . identify the taxpayer,
indicate that the Commissioner has made a determination of deficiency [or liability], and
specify the taxable year and amount” owed.2 O’Rourke v. United States, 587 F.3d 537,
2
  As the IRS observes, our decisions, and those of our sister circuits, which have stated that the notice must
include the taxable year, appear to have either pre-dated or not explicitly reconciled that requirement with
26 U.S.C. § 7522(a), which was enacted in 1988. See Estate of Yaeger v. Comm’r, 889 F.2d 29, 35 (2d Cir.
1989) (stating the taxable-year requirement and collecting decisions from sister circuits). Section 7522(a)

                                                      3
541 (2d Cir. 2009) (quoting Andrew Crispo Gallery, 16 F.3d at 1340). “The notice is only
to advise the person who is to pay . . . that the Commissioner means to assess him; anything
that does this unequivocally is good enough . . . .” Id. (quoting Olsen v. Helvering, 88 F.2d
650, 651 (2d Cir. 1937)) (internal quotation marks and alteration omitted). And so, we
have rejected, for example, the argument that the amount of the deficiency or liability stated
in the notice must match the final assessment. See O’Rourke, 587 F.3d at 541 (citing Olsen,
88 F.2d at 651).

        The Fifth Circuit has explained the reasoning behind this standard. In Stevens v.
Comm’r, 709 F.2d 12, 13 (5th Cir. 1983), that court rejected the argument that the Tax
Court’s merits determination that no deficiency existed meant that the notice was
insufficient to confer jurisdiction upon the Tax Court. According to the Fifth Circuit, “[i]t
is not the existence of a deficiency but the Commissioner’s determination of a deficiency
that provides a predicate for Tax Court jurisdiction.” Id. (internal quotation marks and
citation omitted) (emphasis in original). “That seems obvious,” the Fifth Circuit stated,
because “the very purpose of the Tax Court is to adjudicate contests to deficiency notices.
If the existence of an error in the determination giving rise to the notice deprived the [Tax]
Court of jurisdiction, [it] would lack power to perform its function.” Id. We agree, and
we are aware of no other circuit that has come to a different conclusion.

       Here, Diebold contends that, pursuant to the Tax Code and certain Treasury
Regulations, the IRS issued a notice with the incorrect taxable year and that this rendered
the notice invalid. It is undisputed, however, that prior to sending Diebold a notice, the
IRS determined that Double-D had a deficiency for its declared short tax year of July 1,
1999, to July 2, 1999,3 for which Diebold had transferee liability, that the notice identified
Diebold as the taxpayer, and that it stated an amount and taxable year. See O’Rourke, 587
F.3d at 541.

        There is also no dispute that Diebold understood that the IRS sought to assess it for
taxes owed by Double-D for its claimed taxable year beginning July 1, 1999 and ending on
July 2, 1999. The rationale for noticing a tax deficiency—Double-D’s mischaracterization
of an assets transfer as a stock transfer—may have raised questions as to whether Double-
D had also mischaracterized its July 1, 1999, tax year as a short year ending July 2, 1999,
rather than a normal year ending twelve months later on June 30, 2000. As with the
substantive correctness of the amount stated on a notice, however, we see no reason why,

states that a notice must identify, inter alia, the amount of tax due, interest, and penalties. Id. It does not
state that the notice must include the taxable year underlying the determination. Id. However, some other
provisions, such as 26 U.S.C. § 6214(b), arguably appear to contemplate that the notice state a taxable year.
Estate of Yaeger, 889 F.2d at 35, also suggested that due process may require stating the taxable year. Id.
(citing Planned Invs., Inc. v. United States, 881 F.2d 340, 344 (6th Cir. 1989)). We need not decide this
issue because the IRS has not argued that a notice need not include the taxable year.
3
    As mentioned above, Double-D itself had filed a tax return for a short tax year ending July 2, 1999.

                                                       4
in these circumstances, where Diebold was not misled as to the basis for the noticed
deficiency, the taxable year stated on a notice must be completely correct in order to give
the Tax Court jurisdiction.4 We are here satisfied that the notice issued to Diebold was
sufficient to “unequivocally” notify Diebold that “the Commissioner mean[t] to assess” it
for a portion of the Double-D deficiency for its claimed tax year beginning July 1, 1999.
Olsen, 88 F.2d at 651. And so, the notice was sufficient to confer subject matter jurisdiction
upon the Tax Court in this case.

       Diebold’s reliance on certain Tax Court cases is misplaced. Diebold relies primarily
on Century Data Systems, Inc. v. Comm’r, 80 T.C. 529 (1983). In Century Data Systems,
the Tax Court dismissed for lack of subject matter jurisdiction a taxpayer’s challenge to a
tax assessment because the IRS stated the substantively incorrect tax year on the deficiency
notice. Id. at 535–37. The Tax Court stated that “under [26 U.S.C.] section 6214(b) . . . ,
the Tax Court simply has no jurisdiction to determine a deficiency for any taxable year
other than a taxpayer’s correct taxable year.” Id. at 535.

       The Tax Court’s reading of section 6214(b) in that decision appears to be incorrect.
That provision provides as follows:

                  The Tax Court in redetermining a deficiency of income tax for
                  any taxable year . . . shall consider such facts with relation to
                  the taxes for other years . . . as may be necessary correctly to
                  redetermine the amount of such deficiency, but in so doing
                  shall have no jurisdiction to determine whether or not the tax
                  for any other year . . . has been overpaid or underpaid.

§ 6214(b). Read together with section 6213(a), section 6214(b) provides that the Tax Court
has jurisdiction over only the IRS’s particular determination that forms the basis for a
notice. And so, based on only the notice for the taxable year July 1 to July 2, 1999, in this
case, the Tax Court could not have reached a judgment as to (for example) Diebold’s 2008–
09 taxable year. But the Tax Court in Century Data Systems, 80 T.C. at 535, had no basis
to read into section 6214(b) a “correctness” requirement for the taxable year stated in a
notice.5 Here, the IRS determined and gave notice of a liability of approximately $33
million for the tax year ended July 2, 1999, and that is the only year for which the Tax

4
 Indeed, the Tax Court also recently held that even an ambiguous deficiency notice did not defeat the Tax
Court’s jurisdiction because it was sufficient that the Commissioner actually made a deficiency
determination and “the taxpayer was not misled by the . . . notice.” United States v. Dees, 148 T.C. 1, 6
(2017); see also id. at 15, 19 (Ashford, J., concurring) (stating that “jurisdiction depends on the issuance of
a notice . . . , it does not depending on the notice’s content,” and explaining that “nothing in either section
6212 or 6214 . . . specifically requires a notice of deficiency to include the amount or correct taxable year
of a deficiency”).
5
    We give no deference to the Tax Court’s statutory interpretations. Chai, 851 F.3d at 204.

                                                      5
Court redetermined whether tax had been overpaid or underpaid. This was sufficient to
comply with section 6214(b).

        Diebold also cites the Tax Court’s decision in Columbia River Orchards, Inc. v.
Comm’r, 15 T.C. 253, 260–61 (1950). But rather than support Diebold’s position,
Columbia River Orchards is consistent with the correct reading of section 6214(b). There,
the taxpayer challenged an IRS determination for the taxable year January 1 through July
17, 1943. Id. at 258. The Tax Court found that the taxable transaction at issue took place
after July 17, 1943. Id. at 261. Thus, “there [was] no deficiency for the period over which
[the Tax Court had] jurisdiction” and “no deficiency notice for the period [after July 17,
1943] during which the income involved was realized.” Id. The IRS attempted to
constructively extend (with an amended answer) the period covered by the notice. Id. The
Tax Court rejected the IRS’s view that amending its pleading could grant the Tax Court
jurisdiction for a tax year extending past July 17, 1943, because only the deficiency notice
itself prescribed the Tax Court’s jurisdiction. Id. The Tax Court accordingly entered
judgment on the merits in the taxpayer’s favor.6 As such, Columbia River Orchards is not
helpful to Diebold’s argument.

       In its reply brief, Diebold changes course and argues for the first time that the Tax
Court was wrong to conclude, on the merits, that Diebold’s July 1, 1999, tax year ended
July 2, 1999.7 As such, Diebold argues, the Tax Court’s decision should be vacated and
remanded with instructions to enter a merits decision in its favor. The parties agree that
Diebold raised this issue in the Tax Court, but Diebold did not make the argument in its
(56-page) opening brief on appeal. As we have previously explained, “[w]e think it
reasonable to . . . oblige[] a lawyer to include his [or her] most cogent arguments in [the]
opening brief, upon pain of otherwise finding them waived. Thus, arguments not raised in
an appellant’s opening brief, but only in his reply brief, are not properly before an appellate
court even when the same arguments were raised in the trial court.” McCarthy v. S.E.C.,
406 F.3d 179, 186 (2d Cir. 2005).

6
  Diebold contends that the Tax Court in Columbia River Orchards dismissed the case for lack of
jurisdiction. However, the decision addressed two consolidated cases, Nos. 20501 and 20502. Columbia
River Orchards, 15 T.C. at 259. The Tax Court dismissed No. 20501 for lack of jurisdiction because the
petitioner taxpayer improperly brought that action in the name of a dissolved corporation. Id. By contrast,
a decision was entered in the taxpayer’s favor in No. 20502 for the reasons discussed above. Id. at 261.

Diebold also relies on the Tax Court’s decision in Pittsburgh Realty Inv. Trust v. Comm’r, 67 T.C. 260,
281–82 (1976). In Pittsburgh, the Tax Court found that the taxable year stated on a notice was substantively
incorrect, and it dismissed the action for lack of jurisdiction. Id. The Tax Court cited Columbia River
Orchards to support its decision. But, as we have seen, Columbia River Orchards does not support the Tax
Court’s application of it in Pittsburgh. And so, Pittsburgh is unpersuasive.
7
  In fact, Diebold all but abandons its jurisdictional arguments in its reply, and only cursorily responds to
the IRS’s arguments in this regard.

                                                     6
        Diebold argues that it was entitled to raise the merits issue for the first time in its
reply brief because the IRS raised the issue in its response. That premise is incorrect. The
IRS’s response was a direct rebuttal to Diebold’s argument: Diebold contended that a
substantively incorrect tax year on the notice deprived the Tax Court of subject matter
jurisdiction, and the IRS showed why it does not.8 It so happened, as the IRS explained,
that this was instead a merits issue.9 That the IRS pointed this out did not open the door
for Diebold to belatedly make this argument in its reply.10

       Moreover, although we have the discretion to overlook a party’s failure to properly
raise an issue on appeal if “necessary to avoid manifest injustice,” Baker v. Dorfman, 239
F.3d 415, 420 (2d Cir. 2000) (internal quotation marks omitted); see McCarthy, 406 F.3d
at 186, no such injustice would result here. Diebold is “represented by sophisticated
counsel,” was aware enough of the argument to make it in the Tax Court, and “had ample
opportunity . . . to pursue the argument” on appeal, yet, “[f]or [its] own reasons . . . opted
not to do so.” See Motorola Credit Corp. v. Uzan, 509 F.3d 74, 88 (2d Cir. 2007) (finding
no manifest injustice in considering appellants’ argument waived). What is more, to
consider the argument would prejudice the IRS, which was justified in focusing its
response on the arguments Diebold chose to make on appeal. Accordingly, the argument
is deemed waived.

      The Tax Court therefore properly granted judgment in favor of the IRS. We have
considered Diebold’s remaining arguments and conclude they are without merit.
Accordingly, the order of the Tax Court is AFFIRMED.

                                                   FOR THE COURT:
                                                   Catherine O=Hagan Wolfe, Clerk of Court

8
  Diebold also contends that the IRS waived this argument by not making it in its (successful) defense of
Diebold’s motion to dismiss in the Tax Court. But Diebold does not provide any authority for the
proposition that an appellee is limited to making the same responses to the opposing party’s arguments as
it made in the trial court. Rather, Diebold cites only to a decision applying the familiar principle that an
appellant may waive arguments by failing to timely raise them. See Mhany Mgmt., Inc. v. Cty. of Nassau,
819 F.3d 581, 615 (2d Cir. 2016).
9
  The IRS also devoted a short portion of its response brief to argue, in the alternative, that the taxable year
in the notice was substantively correct and so the Tax Court had subject matter jurisdiction even if the
notice was required to state the correct year.
10
  To the extent Diebold might argue that a merits argument was subsumed within its jurisdiction argument,
and even assuming, arguendo, that this contention has some basis, we have stated that “it is not our
obligation”—nor that of an appellee—“to ferret out” arguments “hidden between the lines of [a] brief.”
McCarthy, 406 F.3d at 186. “That, after all, is the purpose of briefing.” Id.

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