Court Opinion

ID: 4336887
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2018-11-14 03:04:00.035547+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:47:44.764490
License: Public Domain

129 T.C. No. 19

                UNITED STATES TAX COURT

  PETER P. BALTIC AND KAREN R. BALTIC, Petitioners v.
      COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent

Docket No 2826-06L.               Filed December 27, 2007.

      Bs received a notice of deficiency but filed no
petition in this Court. R assessed the tax reported and
then sent Bs CDP Notices that he had filed notices of
federal tax lien and intended to collect the unpaid tax
by levy. Bs requested a CDP hearing, at which they
presented an offer-in-compromise based on doubt as to
liability. R’s officer who conducted the hearing issued
a notice of determination sustaining the filing of the
lien and postponing the levy but refused to consider
Bs’ proposed offer herself.

     Held: R committed no abuse of discretion in
issuing the notice of determination, because section
6330(c) bars taxpayers who’ve received a notice of
determination from challenging their underlying tax
liability, and an offer-in-compromise based only on
doubt as to liability is a challenge to that underlying
liability.
                                - 2 -

     Joe Alfred Izen, Jr., for petitioners.

     Wesley J. Wong, for respondent.

                               OPINION

     HOLMES, Judge: The Code encourages taxpayers to settle their

differences with the IRS by compromise rather than litigation.

One type of compromise is a compromise based on doubt as to

liability, and that’s the kind that Peter and Karen Baltic

offered to the IRS.   But they made their offer just as the IRS

was poised to begin seizing their property--and after they had

had a chance to contest their liability in our court.    Section

63301 says that taxpayers like the Baltics can’t challenge their

“underlying tax liability.”    The main question in this case--

which we’ve apparently never quite squarely answered--is whether

their making an offer-in-compromise based on doubt as to

liability (an OIC-DATL) is a challenge to the “underlying tax

liability.”

                              Background

     In February 2003, the Commissioner sent the Baltics a notice

of deficiency saying they owed over $100,000 in income tax and

penalties for 1999.   The Baltics don’t dispute that they received

     1
       Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to
the Internal Revenue Code, and all Rule references are to the Tax
Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.
                               - 3 -

the notice, and don’t dispute that they never filed a petition in

this Court to challenge it.   Since the Baltics didn’t challenge

the deficiency, the Commissioner assessed it.   The Baltics didn’t

pay and so, in June 2004, the Commissioner sent them a notice

under section 6320 that he had filed a federal tax lien against

their property, and a notice under section 6330 that he intended

to levy their property to collect the unpaid tax.   The Baltics

promptly requested a collection due process (CDP) hearing.   Their

request stated that “We disagree with the determination of taxes

and additions owed, and the calculations of the amounts, if any.”

Before the hearing was scheduled, they submitted an OIC-DATL that

covered not just 1999, but all tax years from 1997 through 2003,

offering $18,699 to compromise their entire income tax liability

for all those years.   They also submitted amended tax returns for

1997-19992 and 2003, and original tax returns for the years 2000-

2002.3

     2
       As with the Baltics’ 1999 tax year, the Commissioner had
already assessed deficiencies for the Baltics’ 1997 and 1998 tax
years after they failed to respond to a notice of deficiency for
those years.
     3
       The Baltics enclosed a cashier’s check for the proposed
settlement amount with their OIC-DATL, noting on it that cashing
the check meant acceptance of the OIC. This is not how the IRS
does business. An OIC is accepted only when the taxpayer is
notified in writing. Sec. 301.7122-1(e)(1), Proced. & Admin.
Regs. Cashing a check does not mean that the IRS has accepted
the offer. Colebank v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1977-46; Howard
v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1956-219. The Commissioner took the
check and applied it to the 1998 tax debt that the Baltics owed
                                                   (continued...)
                               - 4 -

     The settlement officer who held the CDP hearing told the

Baltics that they couldn’t challenge the amount or existence of

their tax liability for 1999 because they had had a chance to

challenge the liability when they received a notice of deficiency

and hadn’t done so.   She also explained to them that, even though

she herself couldn’t consider the OIC-DATL as part of the CDP

hearing, an Appeals officer within another part of the IRS would

consider it and a revenue officer in yet a third part of the IRS

would examine the Baltics’ amended 1999 return in what is called

an “audit reconsideration.”   The settlement officer then ended

the CDP hearing, and sent the Baltics a notice in which she

determined that collection by levy would be postponed until the

IRS both decided whether to accept the OIC-DATL and finished its

“audit reconsideration,” but that the lien would be sustained.

     3
      (...continued)
and then sent them a letter explaining that partial payment
doesn’t defeat a tax lien. His reason for doing so is
unclear--section 301.7122-1(h), Proced. & Admin. Regs., says the
Commissioner should treat such checks as deposits, not payments;
implying the Baltics should ultimately get the money refunded if
their offer is rejected. (Section 7122(c)(1) was recently
amended, Tax Increase Prevention and Reconciliation Act of 2005,
Pub. L. 109-222, sec. 509, 120 Stat. 362, to require partial
payment to be submitted with an OIC, but the amendment doesn't
affect the Baltics, because they submitted their OIC before the
amendment's effective date.)
                               - 5 -

(Sustaining the lien protects the government’s priority over

other creditors.)   The Baltics offered no other collection

alternatives.

     The Baltics now argue that the settlement officer’s refusal

to consider the OIC-DATL herself,4 or at least to wait before

issuing the notice of determination until the other parts of the

IRS finished looking at the OIC-DATL and amended return, was an

abuse of discretion.   The Commissioner moved for summary

judgment, and the motion was argued during a trial session in Las

Vegas.5

                            Discussion

     Summary judgment is appropriate where it is shown that

“there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that a

decision may be rendered as a matter of law.”   Rule 121(b); Fla.

Peach Corp. v. Commissioner, 90 T.C. 678, 681 (1988).   Summary

judgment is proper here since the parties don’t dispute the facts

at all, but disagree only about the law:   Did the settlement

     4
       Sec. 6133(k)(1) generally blocks the IRS from collecting
taxes by levy (though not by lien) while an OIC is pending. The
Baltics’ very narrow challenge is not to the IRS’s decision to
collect by levy--any levy to collect taxes owed for any of the
years covered by their OIC is postponed by sec. 6331(k)(1)--but
to the settlement officer’s decision that she herself would not
consider their OIC-DATL as a collection alternative during the
CDP process.
     5
       The Baltics were residents of Ohio when they filed their
petition, though they chose Las Vegas as their place of trial.
Unless the parties stipulate to the contrary, any appeal will go
to the Sixth Circuit. Sec. 7482(b)(1)(A) and (2).
                                 - 6 -

officer abuse her discretion by issuing the notice of

determination without considering the Baltics’ pending OIC-DATL

or amended 1999 return?

        Section 6330(c)(2)(B) allows a taxpayer to challenge the

existence or amount of his underlying tax liability if he neither

received a notice of deficiency nor otherwise had an opportunity

to dispute it.     The Baltics’ first line of attack is that they

should have been allowed to challenge their underlying liability

because section 6330(c)(2)(B)--though it allows challenges to

“the underlying tax liability for any tax period if the person

did not receive any statutory notice of deficiency”--doesn’t say

that it allows such challenges “only if the person did not

receive any statutory notice of deficiency.”

     This parsing has no support in any caselaw, as the Baltics’

counsel admitted at oral argument.       And we won’t be creating any

here:    Congress used section 6330(c)--and only section 6330(c)--

to describe how a CDP hearing would work.      We find no authority

elsewhere in the Code to read that section’s command that the IRS

allow challenges to liability in some situations to mean that the

IRS must allow challenges to liability in all situations.

     The Baltics’ next sally looks more effective.      They claim

that making an OIC-DATL is not a challenge to their underlying

liability.    If it’s not, then it should have been considered at

the CDP hearing, because section 6330(c)(2)(A)(iii) lists OICs as
                                - 7 -

a collection alternative that a taxpayer may raise at the

hearing.    We have, however, already come very close to holding

that OIC-DATLs are a prohibited challenge to the underlying tax

liability.    In Hajiyani v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2005-198, we

wrote in a footnote that an OIC-DATL “would address the merits of

the underlying liability.    Since petitioner is precluded from

questioning the underlying liabilities, his offer would not

provide him any relief....”    But the Baltics are right in noting

that Hajiyani--in the text--held that the Commissioner was

justified in not considering an OIC-DATL because the taxpayers

hadn’t even submitted one before the notice of determination came

out.    The same is true of the taxpayers in Jones v. Commissioner,

T.C. Memo. 2007-142, and in Kindred v. Commissioner, 454 F.3d
688, 696 (7th Cir. 2006) (affirming an unpublished order granting

the Commissioner summary judgment).

       We’ve also held that the Commissioner didn’t abuse his

discretion in rejecting an OIC-DATL where the underlying tax

liability was previously stipulated in a Tax Court decision,

because a stipulated tax liability can’t validly be considered a

“doubtful liability” under the applicable regulation.    Sec.

301.7122-1(b)(1), Proced. & Admin. Regs.; Oyer v. Commissioner,

T.C. Memo. 2003-178, affd. 97 Fed. Appx. 68 (8th Cir. 2004).

       We recognize that the Baltics’ case is a bit different.

They plausibly distinguished their situation from cases like
                               - 8 -

Hajiyani by having made sure that the IRS employee conducting

their CDP hearing had an OIC-DATL sitting in front of her.       And,

though they didn’t discuss Oyer, the Baltics could likewise

distinguish that case from theirs by saying that they never

signed a stipulated decision, but simply chose not to start a Tax

Court case when they had a chance.

     The Baltics also have one case, Siquieros v. United States,

94 AFTR 2d 2004-5518, 2005-1 USTC par. 50,244 (W.D. Tex. 2004),

affd. 124 Fed. Appx. 279 (5th Cir. 2005), that they argue

supports them.   Or at least one sentence in that case that

supports them:   “Her [i.e., Siquieros’s] offer based on doubt as

to liability is not synonymous with a challenge to the underlying

liability.”   Id. at 2004-5524, 2005-1 USTC par. 50,244, at

87,570.

     The quote is accurate, but Siquieros remains the thinnest of

supports for any general proposition that an OIC-DATL is not a

challenge to an “underlying tax liability.”6    It is, for one

thing, a responsible-party, trust-fund case.7    And Siquieros was

     6
       The court held that the IRS did not abuse its discretion
in refusing to accept Siquieros’s OIC. Siquieros, 94 AFTR 2d at
2004-5518, 2005-1 USTC at 87,570-87,571. It’s in the court’s
discussion of why the rejection wasn’t an abuse of discretion
that it noted that an OIC-DATL wasn’t synonymous with a challenge
to the underlying liability. Neither side had actually disputed
the point. Id.
     7
       Taxes that employers withhold from their employees’ wages
are known as “trust fund taxes” because they are deemed a special
                                                   (continued...)
                              - 9 -

challenging underlying liability only in the sense that she was

contesting her own responsibility for the tax, not in the sense

of challenging the amount of that tax.   Siquieros had not had an

opportunity before her CDP hearing to challenge her

responsibility for the unpaid tax; the Baltics did.    And we

conclude that that is an important--indeed decisive--difference.

The word “liability” in section 6330(c)(2)(B) and section

301.7122-1(b)(1), Proced. & Admin. Regs., refers not just to an

amount of tax owed for a particular period but also the amount

owed by a particular person for a particular period.    Section

6203, defining a tax assessment, states that an assessment is the

formal recording of a taxpayer’s tax liability, and the

accompanying regulation requires the summary record of assessment

to "provide identification of the taxpayer, the character of the

liability assessed, the taxable period, if applicable, and the

     7
      (...continued)
fund in trust for the United States under section 7501(a).
Slodov v. United States, 436 U.S. 238, 243 (1978). One remedy
that the Commissioner has against a business that fails to pay
these withheld taxes is to collect them from a “responsible
person” within the company; i.e., someone who was required to pay
over the tax. Sec. 6672. A section 6672 penalty is payable on
notice and demand, without issuance of a notice of deficiency.
See sec. 6212(a). Our court therefore has no jurisdiction to
review the penalty, Moore v. Commissioner, 114 T.C. 171, 175
(2000), and a taxpayer must usually pay and sue for a refund to
get judicial review. Sec. 6672(c)(2); Steele v. United States,
280 F.2d 89 (8th Cir. 1960). A key issue in such cases is often
whether the person suing for a refund is a “responsible person”
within the meaning of section 6672(a). See, e.g., McGlothin v.
United States, 720 F.2d 6 (6th Cir. 1983).
                               - 10 -

amount of the assessment."   Sec. 301.6203-1, Proced. & Admin.

Regs.    Siquieros was arguing only that she herself shouldn’t be

liable for her employer’s failure to pay over the taxes because

she was only a secretary.

     The Baltics are not arguing that the IRS is going after the

wrong person.    Neither Baltic, for example, is claiming innocent-

spouse relief; they dispute only the amount of tax due.     Which

is, of course, exactly what they could have challenged by filing

a petition when they got their notice of deficiency.   We

therefore unequivocally hold that a challenge to the amount of

the tax liability made in the form of an OIC-DATL by a taxpayer

who has received a notice of deficiency is a challenge to the

underlying tax liability.    Because the Baltics already had their

chance to challenge that liability, section 6330(c)(2)(B) bars

them from challenging it again.8

     That leaves only the settlement officer's refusal to wait

until the IRS reviewed the OIC-DATL and completed its audit

     8
       The Baltics also argue that section 301.6330-1(e)(3), Q&A-
E9, Proced. & Admin. Regs., grants discretion to IRS employees to
consider challenges to liability despite section 6330(c)(2)(B)
and ask us to review for abuse of discretion the decision by the
settlement officer not to review their liability. We've already
held that the Code itself limits the power of both the
Commissioner and our Court to reconsider liability issues.
Nichols v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2007-5. Here, the
determination did not address the precluded issue of liability,
and the Baltics’ challenge amounts to nothing more than a
roundabout effort to challenge what they’re prevented from
challenging on appeal.
                                - 11 -

reconsideration (which, we should note, no one doubts is a form

of challenge to their underlying tax liability).      The Baltics

contend that the Commissioner’s refusal was itself an abuse of

discretion.    We have already rejected this argument when a

taxpayer urged waiting for an audit reconsideration.       Jones v.

Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2007-142.       Adding a desire to wait for

consideration of an OIC-DATL as well adds nothing to the

argument:     The settlement officer here was just heeding the

exhortation of the applicable regulation to issue a notice of

determination as expeditiously as possible.      Sec. 301.6330-

1(e)(3), Q&A-E9, Proced. & Admin. Regs.

     The purpose of a CDP hearing is to balance the government’s

requirement for effective tax administration with the taxpayer’s

concern that collection be minimally intrusive.      By deciding to

hold off on collection by levy but preserve the government’s lien

priority while other employees of the IRS considered the Baltic’s

OIC-DATL and various late-filed returns, the Commissioner

exercised discretion in a completely reasonable way, and so

                                      An order and decision in favor

                                 of respondent will be entered.