Talley, etc. v. United States ( 1993 )


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  • April 23, 1993    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    No. 92-1759
    JOHN C. TALLEY, ETC.,
    Plaintiff, Appellee,
    v.
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Defendant, Appellant.
    ERRATA SHEET
    The  opinion  of this  Court  issued April  14,  1993,  is amended  as
    follows:
    On  the  cover sheet:    after  Hon.  Juan  M. Perez-Gimenez,  add  an
    asterisk, and in the  corresponding footnote state:  "Of  the District
    of Puerto Rico, sitting by designation."
    On  the cover  sheet:   after Hon.  Juan M.  Perez-Gimenez, substitute
    "U.S. District Judge" for "U.S. District Court."
    On page 6, line 2:  substitute "his refund" for "its refund."
    On page 15, lines 7-8:  substitute "he offered" for "it offered."
    On page 15, line 13:  substitute "he has" for "it has."
    On page 15, line 14:  substitute "his refund" for "its refund."
    On page 16, line 1:  substitute "his refund" for "its refund."
    UNITED STATES COURT  APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    No. 92-1759
    JOHN C. TALLEY, ETC.,
    Plaintiff, Appellee,
    v.
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Defendant, Appellant.
    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MAINE
    [Hon. Juan M. Perez-Gimenez*, U.S. District Judge]
    Before
    Breyer, Chief Judge,
    Cyr and Boudin, Circuit Judges.
    D. Patrick Mullarkey,  Attorney, Department of Justice, with  whom
    Richard  S. Cohen,  United States  Attorney, James  A. Bruton,  Acting
    Assistant  Attorney General,  Gary R.  Allen, Attorney,  Department of
    Justice,  Kenneth  L. Greene,  Attorney,  Department  of Justice,  and
    Paula K. Speck,  Attorney, Department  of Justice, were  on brief  for
    appellant.
    Joseph J. Rodio  with whom Jeffrey M. Gibson, Charles D. Mills and
    Rodio & Ursillo, Ltd. were on brief for appellee.
    *   Of the District of Puerto Rico, sitting by designation.
    April 14, 1993
    BOUDIN, Circuit Judge.   This case started as  a dispute
    between John Talley ("Talley"),  co-executor of the estate of
    Percy Talley, and the United States over the tax liability of
    the  estate.  The tax issues have become snarled in confusion
    wrought  by  a  cryptic  notice  from  the  Internal  Revenue
    Service,  a loosely worded request to  admit filed by Talley,
    and  a set  of litigation  errors by  the government.   After
    trial, the district court entered judgment for  Talley on his
    tax refund  claim and  disallowed the government's  effort to
    assert a counterclaim.   We  reverse the  district court  and
    remand for further proceedings.
    I. THE FACTS
    In October  1984, Talley, acting as  co-executor for the
    estate, entered into a stipulation with the IRS regarding the
    amount  of taxes owed by the estate.  This stipulation, filed
    in the  Tax  Court,  provided that  the  estate's  total  tax
    liability was $345,103.21.  Of this, $222,000  had been paid,
    leaving   an  outstanding  liability  of  $125,103.21.    The
    stipulation also provided that  the estate could submit proof
    that it  had paid  certain state taxes,  which would  further
    reduce its outstanding liability.  The stipulation also noted
    that of  the $345,103.21 tax liability,  $288,836.97 had been
    "assessed"and $56,266.24was a"[d]eficiency (tobe assessed)."2
    2Assessment  is  the  formal   step  in  which  the  IRS
    determines that a specific amount of tax is currently due and
    owing  to  the  government  from  the  taxpayer,  making  the
    -2-
    In  November  1984, the  IRS  sent the  estate  a notice
    which, as it  is the  cause of half  the confusion,  requires
    description.   Under  the heading  "Statement of  Tax Due  On
    Federal  Tax Return,"  it showed  as the  first entry  in the
    "Assessment" column the figure $56,266.24,  designated "tax";
    under  this  was  the  figure  $1,478.80,  designated  "int,"
    presumably interest.   The  second column, under  the heading
    "Adjustment  or  Credit,"  contained  the  figure $57,767.39,
    apparently  designed  to  reflect credits  against  liability
    allowed  by the  IRS.   Finally,  in  a third  column  headed
    "Balance  Due"  there  appeared  the  figure  $977.65,  which
    reflected the difference between the first column figures and
    the second column figure.   In January 1985, the  estate paid
    this net amount, $977.65.
    Six months later, in May 1985, the IRS sent the estate a
    "Statement  of  Adjustment  to  Your Account,"    fixing  the
    estate's outstanding  tax liability at $294,046.   The stated
    liability,  much above the net amount due under the Tax Court
    stipulation, appears  to include  penalties and interest  not
    previously  assessed.  In  any event, the  estate declined to
    pay.   In response, the  IRS began to  levy on bank  accounts
    held  by  the   estate  and   its  distributees,   ultimately
    collecting approximately $94,000.  In the  government's view,
    taxpayer liable for that amount.  Rambo v. United States, 
    492 F.2d 1060
    , 1061 n.1  (6th Cir. 1974), cert. denied,  
    423 U.S. 1091
     (1976).
    -3-
    it was still owed at least $200,000, with interest continuing
    to  accrue.  Talley, by  contrast, took the  position that no
    taxes were owing and that the levies were therefore unlawful.
    After  exhausting administrative remedies, the estate in
    January 1989 filed a complaint  in the district court seeking
    a  refund  of  the  approximately  $94,000.    The  complaint
    contended  that the  estate's outstanding  tax liability  had
    been  wholly  eliminated  prior  to  the  levies.    Talley's
    complaint averred  that this happy situation  resulted from a
    combination  of state  tax  credits, allegedly  amounting  to
    $77,544, and  the November  1984 notice, which  (according to
    the complaint) "zeroed out"  any remaining obligations of the
    estate to  the IRS.   The  concept of "zeroing  out" was  not
    explained in the complaint, nor  has it been explained since.
    Although the government believed  that it was still owed
    $200,000 or more by the estate, it neglected in answering the
    complaint to file a timely counterclaim for the balance.  See
    Fed. R. Civ.  P. 13.   It then  failed to respond  at all  to
    Talley's request  for admissions served on  the government on
    October  11, 1989, pursuant to  Fed. R. Civ.  P. 36.  Request
    no. 12 asked the  government to admit that the  estate's $977
    disbursement   in  response  to   the  November  1984  notice
    "constituted full payment of the balance due on the estate of
    Percy Talley  as set forth  in that  notice."  Under  Fed. R.
    -4-
    Civ. P. 36(a), the failure to respond to a such  a request is
    deemed  a binding  admission, unless  the court  later grants
    leave under Fed. R. Civ. P. 36(b) to withdraw the admission.
    New  government counsel  took  over the  case in  spring
    1990,  and the case was set for trial  in July 1990.  In June
    1990  the government  sought  leave to  amend its  answer and
    assert  a counterclaim.    The government's  excuse for  this
    belated action was that  at the time of the  original answer,
    counsel had  lacked the Secretary of  the Treasury's approval
    to  assert a  counterclaim.   That motion  was denied  by the
    district  court on June 19, 1990, even though in the meantime
    the court  had (for other  reasons) deferred the  trial until
    October  1990.  The court's reasons for refusing to allow the
    counterclaim are discussed more fully below.
    Government counsel also  advised the  district court  in
    June 1990 that  the government would  promptly file a  motion
    seeking leave to withdraw its admission by default to request
    no.  12.   The government  never filed  such a  motion, later
    taking the view (in  a pretrial statement filed  on September
    10,  1990)  that the  admission  was  literally accurate  and
    harmless to the government's  position.  The government's new
    interpretation  was that  it had  properly admitted  that the
    $977  payment  constituted  full  payment  of   the  estate's
    liability  "as set forth in" the notice; but since the notice
    was  inaccurate, this  admission (the government  argued) did
    -5-
    not  establish  that the  payment  discharged  the taxpayer's
    actual liability.
    A trial  was held before  the district court  on October
    12,  1990.  At trial, Talley based his refund claim primarily
    upon  the government's  admission to  request no.  12.   Over
    Talley's  objection, the  court permitted  the government  to
    introduce evidence of Talley's tax liability according to the
    government's  calculations.    But  the  court  accepted  the
    evidence subject  to the court's reserved  ruling on Talley's
    claim  that  the government's  admission  of  request no.  12
    barred the evidence and resolved the case.  The court stated:
    Just so we are  clear, I'm allowing  [the
    government]  to   present  this  evidence
    because I  do not know what  I'm going to
    do and  I wouldn't  like to have  to come
    back  and get  some more  hearing or  get
    some  more testimony.  . . [i]f  I decide
    that you are stuck with  your admission .
    .  .,   it  would   mean  you  would   be
    precluded.
    The government also moved to  amend its pleadings to  conform
    to the evidence introduced.
    After  trial,  the  district court  issued  a memorandum
    opinion in which it  rejected the government's interpretation
    of request no. 12, and concluded that the request referred to
    the  estate's  actual liability.    The court  held  that the
    admission conclusively  established  that the  estate's  $977
    payment  satisfied its  total  tax liability,  and the  court
    therefore entered  judgment in  favor of  the estate for  the
    -6-
    approximately $94,000 seized from the estate's bank accounts.
    The government  then  appealed, arguing  that  its  admission
    pursuant to  request no.  12 had  been wrongly  construed and
    that its counterclaim should have been allowed.
    II. DISCUSSION
    Talley  has not  claimed in  this court  any prejudicial
    reliance on the original  November 1984 notice.  It  would be
    difficult  as a factual matter  to make any  such claim since
    about  six months later the IRS asserted that the estate owed
    over  $294,000,  and  there  is  no indication  that  in  the
    meantime  any  detrimental reliance  had  occurred.   Indeed,
    authorities do  not give  much comfort to  taxpayers invoking
    estoppel even when there has been reliance.  On the contrary,
    the  government has  even  prosecuted  taxpayers for  cashing
    refund checks issued in  error.  See, e.g., United  States v.
    McRee, 
    984 F.2d 1144
     (11th Cir. 1993).
    Talley's position  on appeal, however,  does not  depend
    directly on  the original  notice or upon  estoppel doctrine.
    Rather,  it is based upon request no. 12 which the government
    "admitted" by failing to answer.  The district court read the
    request, as  admitted, to  establish that the  estate's total
    tax  liability  in  November  1984  was  only  $977.66.    An
    admission under Fed. R. Civ. P. 36(a) is, by the terms of the
    rule, binding on the party making the admission and cannot be
    contradicted.  Thus, if the district court properly construed
    -7-
    request no. 12,  the government  was bound  by its  admission
    (unless  the  court  sua  sponte should  have  permitted  the
    government to withdraw the admission).
    Although the question  is a close  one, we believe  that
    both  the November 1984 notice  and request no.  12 have been
    misconstrued.  The construction of documents presents, in the
    absence of contested  background facts, a  pure issue of  law
    open to  de novo review.  See Trust Under the Will of Bingham
    v. Commissioner, 
    325 U.S. 365
    , 379-80 (1945).  The  district
    court's  effort  at  construction  was  complicated  by   the
    government's  own  changes   in  position  and   its  failure
    adequately to place the  documents in context.  Nevertheless,
    we conclude that  the original November  1984 notice did  not
    state that  the estate's total  tax liability was  only $977,
    and the admission by default to  request no. 12 did not do so
    either.
    The  November 1984 notice  is, of course,  an opaque and
    potentially misleading  document, but  in  these respects  it
    does not differ from many IRS notices apparently generated by
    computers.  No doubt  taken in isolation the notice  could be
    misunderstood by a lay reader to suggest that the estate owed
    only $977;  but it cannot be  taken in isolation and  that is
    not what it says.  Juxtaposed with the Tax Court stipulation,
    it is  clear that the  November 1984  notice merely  reflects
    three separate tax events: the original additional deficiency
    -8-
    assessment promised by  the stipulation ($56,266.24), plus  a
    small amount  of  accrued interest  ($1,478),  minus  credits
    ($57,767.39)  allowed  by  the  IRS to  reduce  the  estate's
    outstanding liability.
    The  net  effect  of  these  three  adjustments  was  to
    increase   the  estate's   assessed   liability  by   $977.65
    ($56,266.24  + $1,478 - $57,767.39).  That figure was, as the
    notice said, a "Balance  Due" but only as  the net result  of
    the  three  adjustments.   The notice  did  not say  that the
    balance-due figure captured the estate's total tax liability.
    One  who looked only at the notice might think otherwise, but
    any  lawyer  or  estate  executor  who  looked  also  at  the
    stipulation would  understand how these figures  fit together
    and recognize the limited role of the notice.  Indeed, only a
    month before  the estate had  stipulated to  a vastly  larger
    debt of  $123,103.21  ($66,836.97 assessed  but  unpaid  plus
    $56,266.24 not yet assessed  but conceded) and had apparently
    made no payments since then.3
    This brings us to  request no. 12.  This request was the
    last one in Talley's first  set of requests to admit, and  it
    followed 11  individual paragraphs  that asked only  that the
    3In  other words, as of October 29, 1984, the estate had
    agreed that it  owed $123,103.21.   The IRS  notice the  next
    month allowed  a credit  of only $57,767.39,  so--quite apart
    from any  accrued interest  or penalties--Talley  should have
    known that over $65,000 remained unpaid as of the date of the
    notice.
    -9-
    government admit that the  listed documents (in the  first 11
    request paragraphs) were "true copies" of what they purported
    to be.  No. 12 was worded somewhat differently:
    Request No. 12
    12.    Admit  that  the  payment  of  Nine  Hundred
    Seventy-seven  ($977.65)  Dollars  and  65/100  by  John
    Talley concerning  the Notice of Tax  Due dated November
    29, 1984  (Exhibit 1),  constituted full payment  of the
    balance due on the  estate of Percy Talley as  set forth
    in that notice.
    This last  request, whether  deliberately or not,  is an
    invitation to confusion.   First, it misstates by implication
    the  gist of  the  notice, leaving  the impression  (with the
    words  "full  payment")  that  total tax  liability  was  the
    subject of the notice when in fact the notice did not reflect
    the total balance  due from  the estate.   Second, by  ending
    with  the phrase "as set  forth in that  notice," the request
    allows one  reader to  think that an  admission would  merely
    concede  that the  estate had  in fact  paid the  amount "set
    forth  in the  notice" and  another reader  to think  that it
    would concede  that the notice correctly  stated the estate's
    tax liability.
    Of course, neither  reading makes much sense.  The first
    reading  of the request asks  the government to  admit a fact
    that no one would dispute; the second,  to admit a point that
    the government could not  ever intentionally concede, since--
    apart  from inaccuracy--it would  give away the  lawsuit.  If
    the government  had bothered to read  the request, presumably
    -10-
    it  would have said in  response that the  payment of $977.65
    did constitute  "full payment"  of the amount  stated in  the
    notice but  that the amount stated  at the end of  the notice
    did  not reflect--or  even purport  to reflect--the  full tax
    liability of  the estate.   Instead,  the government  let the
    request go unanswered.4
    In all  events,  we  think that  request  no.  12,  read
    against the  background of  the October 1984  stipulation and
    the  November 1984 notice, cannot fairly be read as a request
    by Talley that the government admit  that the $977.65 payment
    satisfied the actual total  liability of the estate.   To the
    extent that the request is ambiguous, that ambiguity is to be
    construed against Talley (whose  lawyer drafted the request).
    See  Dixon v.  Commissioner,  62 T.C.M.  (C.C.H.) 1440,  1511
    (1991).   And to the extent  that common sense is  a guide to
    construction,  a  reading  that  trivializes  the request  is
    preferred  to one that renders the request absurd.  In short,
    treating the  government as  bound by  its  admission of  the
    request,  we believe it has  admitted only what  it has never
    denied: that  the $977.65 payment corresponded  to the amount
    set forth in the notice.
    4When it got around to reading the request in June 1989,
    the government then compounded the confusion by first reading
    the request  as Talley  now urges  (and telling  the district
    court  that it would move to withdraw the admission) and then
    reading the request merely to admit that the amount stated in
    the request  had  been  paid  (making  a  withdrawal  of  the
    admission unnecessary).
    -11-
    Since  in  our  view  the  district  court  misconstrued
    request  no. 12, its judgment in favor of Talley--which rests
    solely  on the  government's  admission of  request no.  12--
    cannot stand.   The scope of  the remand is addressed  at the
    conclusion of this opinion.  We do not reach the government's
    alternative  argument  that,  if  the request  were  read  in
    Talley's  favor,   then  the  government  should   have  been
    permitted to withdraw its admission.  Such an argument itself
    raises  troublesome  questions  that  we  readily  leave  for
    another day.5
    The  other issue  presented  by the  government on  this
    appeal is whether the district court erred when it refused to
    permit the  government belatedly to file a  counterclaim.  It
    will be recalled  that Talley sued the  government to recover
    the levies against the estate bank account amounting to about
    $94,000.   From  the  government's standpoint,  not only  did
    Talley have no right to a refund but, in addition, the estate
    still  owed the  government for  unpaid taxes,  penalties and
    interest, which the levies had only  partially recovered.  It
    is undisputed that the government's claim for any balance due
    5For example, whether Talley's reliance on the admission
    was unreasonable; whether Talley would suffer any "prejudice"
    from a belated withdrawal in the technical sense specified by
    Rule 36(b);  and whether  the government's motion  to conform
    the  pleadings  to the  evidence  could  be  construed as  an
    implied, conditional request to withdraw the admission.
    -12-
    is a compulsory counterclaim  which, if not properly asserted
    in this case, is lost forever.  Fed. R. Civ. P. 13(a).
    Under the rules, the government should have asserted its
    counterclaim when answering Talley's complaint.  Fed. R. Civ.
    P.  13(a).  Instead, it waited for over  a year and a half to
    do so, explaining that  it had not asserted the claim  in its
    answer because it needed to await approval from the Secretary
    of the  Treasury.  At the time its motion to amend the answer
    was  filed in  June 1990,  the case  was then  on the  eve of
    trial.  The trial date was then postponed for several months,
    from  June to October,  when the government  proposed to call
    Talley's  counsel  as  a  witness,  but  the  district  court
    nevertheless ruled after the postponement that the motion for
    leave to file the counterclaim came too late.
    "It is incomprehensible," said the district court, "that
    it took the government well over one year to obtain authority
    from the Secretary of  the Treasury . . . ."   The court also
    said  that  allowing the  counterclaim  at  this point  would
    expose Talley "to significant prejudice at  this stage of the
    proceeding," as well as  "to substantial inconvenience."  The
    district court did not  explain the basis for any  finding of
    either  prejudice  or  inconvenience.    Talley's  memorandum
    opposing the  motion to  assert the  counterclaim did  make a
    claim of prejudice; in  somewhat veiled fashion, it suggested
    that,   if  the  estate  had   been  timely  advised  of  the
    -13-
    counterclaim, it  would have summoned witnesses  to show that
    oral  statements  of  an  IRS  representative  in  July  1988
    conceded  "that no  liability  remained with  regard to  this
    estate."
    How this issue--the district court's refusal to permit a
    belated counterclaim--should be resolved in the ordinary case
    is  open to debate.   On the  one hand, the  government's 18-
    month delay in advancing  its counterclaim is substantial and
    its excuse lame; perhaps  the Secretary had not approved  the
    counterclaim when the answer was due but that did not require
    the government to  wait for 18 months, until  after discovery
    was completed, to assert a counterclaim that was evident from
    the outset.   Trial judges, who  have considerable discretion
    in such  matters, are  understandably loath to  entertain new
    claims  in  June  when  trial  is  scheduled  for July,  when
    discovery  has been  completed, and  when the  government has
    little excuse for so long a delay in asserting its claim.
    The government,  on the  other  hand, reasonably  argues
    that its counterclaim motion was not resolved until after the
    trial  had   been   postponed  until   October,   alleviating
    inconvenience.   More important, virtually the  same evidence
    the government would be expected to offer to refute  Talley's
    refund  claim would,  if the  government's proof  were valid,
    also  establish  its  own  right  to  affirmative   recovery.
    Finally, the only "prejudice"  from a withdrawal described by
    -14-
    Talley is not very persuasive:  Talley's bare claim of an IRS
    oral  misstatement  in  1988   would  not,  even  if  proved,
    establish a  conventional estoppel, no  detriment of reliance
    having been described; and even a conventional estoppel might
    well  not  prevail against  the  government  in a  tax  case.
    Office of Personnel Management v. Richmond, 
    496 U.S. 414
    , 427
    (1990)  ("not a  single [Supreme  Court] case  has  upheld an
    estoppelclaim against thegovernment forthe paymentof money").
    We   have  concluded  that   in  the   somewhat  unusual
    circumstances of this  case, we need  not decide whether  the
    district  court   in  July  1990  should   have  allowed  the
    counterclaim to be pleaded.   Here, a reopening of  the trial
    record  is  warranted, in  the  interests  of justice,  based
    solely  upon our  decision  that the  district court  misread
    request  no. 12.  Strictly  speaking Talley could  be held to
    the  proof he offered at  trial, which was  little beyond the
    admission  to  request  no.  12.    But  we  think  that  the
    government   bears  much   of  the  responsibility   for  the
    imbroglio, first by not  responding to the request,  and then
    by  offering  inconsistent readings  of  it  to the  district
    court.    Thus,  our  remand will  permit  Talley  to  assert
    whatever  evidence he has or can develop in a reasonable time
    -15-
    to support his  refund claim  and to  contest the  government
    computations on a basis other than request no. 12.6
    By the same  token, we  think that in  the interests  of
    justice,  the government  should  be entitled  to assert  its
    counterclaim.  Whatever  the situation may have  been in July
    1990,  Talley now has ample time to adduce whatever facts may
    be relevant to  either the refund claim or the counterclaim--
    and they  are likely to be pretty much the same facts.  There
    is  no  surprise element  now and  the  trial record  must be
    reopened  in any event to permit Talley to support his refund
    claim.   Our  outcome--allowing Talley  to pursue  his refund
    claim and  the government to pursue its counterclaim--appears
    to us  to be  the most  equitable way to  shape the  required
    remand.
    The judgment  of the district  court is vacated  and the
    case remanded for further proceedings in accordance with this
    opinion.
    6There  is no  reason  why this  opportunity should  not
    include  reasonable additional  discovery if  Talley provides
    the district court with  a basis to think discovery  might be
    fruitful.
    -16-