David J. and Jo Dena Johnson v. Commissioner ( 2001 )


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    117 T.C. No. 18
    UNITED STATES TAX COURT
    DAVID J. AND JO DENA JOHNSON, Petitioners v.
    COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
    Docket No.   12616-00L.                Filed November 30, 2001.
    Ps filed returns for 1994, 1995, and 1996, in
    which they reported their wages as income. Ps later
    filed amended returns for those years in which they
    reported no income and contended that wages are not
    taxable. R assessed the frivolous return penalty
    imposed by sec. 6702, I.R.C., for those years. After
    offering Ps an opportunity to attend a prelevy hearing,
    R issued a notice of determination under secs. 6320
    and/or 6330, I.R.C.
    Ps contend that R’s determination is invalid
    because R failed to comply with the hearing requirement
    provided by sec. 6330(b)(1), I.R.C. R contends that we
    lack jurisdiction under sec. 6330(d)(1)(A), I.R.C., to
    review the determination because it relates to the
    frivolous return penalty.
    Held: We lack jurisdiction to review R’s lien and
    levy determination to proceed with collection of the
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    frivolous return penalty.     Van Es v. Commissioner, 
    115 T.C. 324
    , 328-329 (2000).
    Held, further, in a case in which we lack
    jurisdiction to review a lien and levy determination,
    we will no longer decide whether the hearing
    requirement was met. We will no longer follow Meyer v.
    Commissioner, 
    115 T.C. 417
     (2000), to the extent it
    holds to the contrary.
    David J. and Jo Dena Johnson, pro se.
    Horace Crump, for respondent.
    OPINION
    COLVIN, Judge:     On November 2, 2000, respondent sent
    petitioners a Notice of Determination Concerning Collection
    Action(s) Under Sections 6320 and/or 63301 (the lien or levy
    determination), in which respondent determined to proceed with
    collection from petitioners of the frivolous return penalty for
    1994, 1995, and 1996.    In this opinion we decide:
    1.   Whether we have jurisdiction under section 6330(d)(1)(A)
    to review respondent’s determination under sections 6320 and/or
    6330 to proceed with a collection action following respondent’s
    assessment of the frivolous return penalty under section 6702 for
    1994, 1995, and 1996.    We hold that we do not.   Van Es v.
    1
    Unless otherwise stated, references to secs. 6320 and
    6330 are to the Internal Revenue Code in effect in 2000, and
    other section references are to the Internal Revenue Code in
    effect for the years in issue.
    - 3 -
    Commissioner, 
    115 T.C. 324
    , 328-329 (2000).     Thus, we will
    dismiss this case for lack of jurisdiction.
    2.   Whether we will decide if the hearing requirement under
    section 6330(b) has been met.   We hold that we will not.    We will
    no longer follow Meyer v. Commissioner, 
    115 T.C. 417
     (2000), to
    the extent that it holds to the contrary.
    References to petitioner are to David J. Johnson.
    Background
    Petitioners lived in Milton, Florida, when they filed the
    petition in this case.
    A.   Petitioners’ Tax Returns
    Petitioners filed returns for 1994, 1995, and 1996, in which
    they reported their wages as income.     They later filed amended
    returns for those years in which they did not report any income,
    and contended that wages and salary reported as income on their
    original returns are not taxable.   In attachments to each of
    those amended returns, petitioners stated:
    1.    No section in the Internal Revenue Code makes
    petitioners liable for the income taxes at issue.
    2.    Income is not defined in the Internal Revenue Code.
    3.    The Supreme Court defines income as corporate profit.
    4.    Wages are not corporate profit; thus, petitioners have
    no income.
    5.    Section 61 is invalid because it defines “gross income”
    by using the word “income”.
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    6.      Section 6702(b) states that the penalty imposed by
    subsection (a) shall be in addition to some other
    penalty being imposed, thus it cannot be imposed alone.
    B.   The Lien and Levy Proceeding
    Petitioners received a “Final Notice - Notice of Intent to
    Levy & Your Notice of a Right to a Hearing” and filed a Request
    for a Collection Due Process Hearing (Form 12153), dated June 19,
    2000.     In their request for a hearing, petitioners asked that the
    Appeals officer have at the hearing: (1) The name of respondent’s
    employee who imposed the frivolous return penalty and his or her
    Federal ID number; (2) the delegation of authority from the
    Secretary authorizing persons to impose the frivolous return
    penalty; (3) official job descriptions of respondent’s employees
    who imposed the frivolous return penalty; (4) copies of the
    regulations that allow Internal Revenue Service (IRS) employees
    to impose the frivolous return penalty; and (5) copies of the
    Code section that makes petitioners liable for income tax.
    By letter dated July 7, 2000, respondent’s Appeals officer,
    Gayla L. Owens (Owens), told petitioners that their case had been
    assigned to her.    She asked them whether they wanted a face-to-
    face conference in Mobile, Alabama, which is respondent’s Appeals
    Office closest to their residence, or whether they preferred to
    handle the matter by telephone or correspondence.
    By letter dated July 19, 2000, petitioner asked that the
    hearing not be scheduled before September 15, 2000, in part
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    because he said he was obtaining documents under the Freedom of
    Information Act that he said he might need in the hearing.
    Petitioner also asked for copies of the Code section and
    implementing legislative regulations that establish his
    liability.
    By letter dated July 26, 2000, Owens scheduled a hearing for
    September 15, 2000, and again asked petitioner whether he
    preferred a face-to-face conference or to handle it by telephone.
    By letter dated August 18, 2000, petitioner told Owens that he
    would not attend a hearing for which he was not allowed to
    prepare, and that Owens had not responded to points he raised in
    earlier letters to her.   In that same letter, petitioner stated,
    among other things, his views that:    (1) The frivolous return
    penalties are illegal; (2) respondent’s employees are subject to
    punishment under section 7214(a) for violating the Internal
    Revenue Service Restructuring and Reform Act of 1998, Pub. L.
    105-206, 
    112 Stat. 685
    ; (3) the IRS is required to sue him for
    payment of the penalty; and (4) the IRS was harassing him.
    Petitioner also asked for a statement acknowledging that he did
    not question the constitutionality of the income tax when he
    filed his amended returns for the years in issue.    He wrote in
    part:
    Therefore, I am requesting that you comply with IRS
    Code Section 6065 and send me a statement which “is
    verified by a written declaration that is made under
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    the penalties of perjury”.    Your statement should
    include the following:
    Acknowledgment that you have the following documents in
    your possession so that I can review them at the
    hearing:
    a. Verification from the Secretary of the
    Treasury that the requirements of any applicable
    law or administrative procedure have been met.
    6330(c)(1), 6703(a)
    b. The Treasury Regulation which allows IRS
    employees to impose the “frivolous” penalty, and
    the Treasury Regulation which requires me to pay
    it. 6703(a)
    c. The specific code section that makes me liable
    for the tax. 6330(c)(2)(B) (I am questioning the
    underlying liability.)
    *      *      *        *      *      *      *
    By letter dated September 6, 2000, Owens told petitioners
    that their claim that wages are not taxable income has been
    rejected by courts and is frivolous, and, thus, a return based on
    that theory is subject to the frivolous return penalty.    Owens
    also told petitioners she would consider other items such as
    arranging for the payment of the penalty and asked petitioners to
    provide those items to her by September 21, 2000.
    By letter dated September 22, 2000, petitioner said, among
    other things, that section 6330(c)(3) requires verification from
    the Secretary that requirements of applicable law and procedure
    have been met, and that he would not attend a hearing unless (1)
    Owens told petitioner in writing before the hearing, under
    penalty of perjury, that Owens had all of the documents
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    petitioner had requested, and (2) Owens arranged for the
    attendance at the hearing by the person who declared petitioners’
    Forms 1040X, Amended U.S. Individual Income Tax Return, to be
    frivolous and by the person who made the decision to levy
    petitioners’ property without a court order.
    C.   Respondent’s Notice of Determination
    On November 2, 2000, respondent sent petitioners a notice of
    determination concerning collection actions in which respondent
    determined to proceed with collection from petitioners of the
    frivolous return penalty for 1994, 1995, and 1996, and told
    petitioners that they have 30 days to file a complaint in the
    appropriate U.S. District Court for a redetermination.   The
    notice of determination appeared valid on its face.    Petitioners
    timely filed in this Court an appeal of respondent’s
    determination.   On January 2, 2001, petitioners filed with the
    Court an amended petition for lien or levy action under section
    6320(c) or section 6330(d).
    Discussion
    A.   Whether the Tax Court Has Jurisdiction To Review
    Respondent’s Determination Under Sections 6320 and 6330
    We have previously held that we lack jurisdiction under
    section 6330(d)(1)(A) to review the Commissioner’s determination
    to collect by levy the frivolous return penalty under section
    6702.   Van Es v. Commissioner, 
    115 T.C. at 328-329
    .   That case
    - 8 -
    controls this issue, and thus we will dismiss this case for lack
    of jurisdiction.
    B.   Whether We Will Decide If Respondent Failed To Hold a
    Hearing as Required by Section 6330(b) in a Case in Which We
    Lack Jurisdiction To Review the Lien and Levy Determination
    Petitioners contend that respondent’s determination is
    invalid because, according to petitioners, respondent failed to
    comply with the hearing requirement provided by section
    6330(b)(1).
    In Meyer v. Commissioner, 
    115 T.C. 417
     (2000), as here, the
    taxpayers contended that we lacked jurisdiction to review the
    lien and levy determination on the ground that the section
    6330(b) hearing requirement was not met.     The Commissioner moved
    to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction on the grounds that we lacked
    jurisdiction over the underlying tax liability (frivolous return
    penalty), see Van Es v. Commissioner, 
    supra,
     and that the
    petitions were not filed within the 30-day period prescribed by
    section 6330(d)(1)(A).   We held in Meyer that we lacked
    jurisdiction on the ground that the determination letters were
    invalid because the Appeals Office did not provide the taxpayers
    with an opportunity for a hearing.      Meyer v. Commissioner, 
    supra at 422-423
    ; see sec. 6330(b).
    Here, we lack jurisdiction to review respondent’s lien and
    levy determination to proceed with collection of the frivolous
    return penalty.    Van Es v. Commissioner, 
    supra at 328-329
    .
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    Because we lack jurisdiction to review respondent’s lien and levy
    determination to proceed with collection of the frivolous return
    penalty, we will not decide whether the hearing requirement under
    section 6330(b) was met.   This is consistent with the principle
    that we need not decide whether a valid notice of deficiency was
    issued where we lack subject matter jurisdiction.2   See Yuen v.
    Commissioner, 
    112 T.C. 123
    , 130 (1999) (we need not decide
    whether a document sent by the Commissioner is a final
    determination where we lack jurisdiction over a claim for
    interest abatement).   We will no longer follow Meyer v.
    Commissioner, supra, to the extent it holds to the contrary.
    The doctrine of stare decisis is important to this and other
    Federal courts.   Hesselink v. Commissioner, 
    97 T.C. 94
    , 99-100
    (1991).   When we decided Meyer v. Commissioner, supra, lien and
    levy cases under section 6330 were new to this Court.    After an
    additional year of experience with section 6330, we no longer
    believe it is appropriate for us to decide whether the hearing
    requirement was met in a case over which we lack subject matter
    2
    Although it is not necessary for the holding herein, we
    note that in Lunsford v. Commissioner, 117 T.C.    (2001), we
    held that we have jurisdiction under sec. 6330(d)(1)(A) when we
    have a facially correct notice of determination and a timely
    filed petition.
    - 10 -
    jurisdiction.   We conclude that stare decisis does not prevent us
    from reconsidering Meyer v. Commissioner, supra.
    Accordingly,
    An order will be entered
    granting respondent’s
    motion to dismiss for lack of
    jurisdiction.
    Reviewed by the Court.
    WELLS, COHEN, SWIFT, GERBER, RUWE, WHALEN, LARO, GALE, and
    THORNTON, JJ., agree with this majority opinion.
    CHIECHI, FOLEY, and MARVEL, JJ., concur in result only.
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    VASQUEZ, J., concurring:    While I agree with the majority’s
    conclusion that we lack jurisdiction under section 6330(d) to
    review the Commissioner’s determination in this case, see Van Es
    v. Commissioner, 
    115 T.C. 324
    , 328-329 (2000), I write separately
    because I disagree with the majority’s discussion of Meyer v.
    Commissioner, 
    115 T.C. 417
     (2000).
    In Lunsford v. Commissioner, 117 T.C. ___ (2001) (Lunsford
    I), which also was released today, the majority undermined the
    clear language of section 6330 and the will of Congress by
    overruling the Court’s holding in Meyer that a taxpayer is
    entitled to a section 6330 hearing prior to there being a
    determination upon which this Court’s jurisdiction is predicated.
    In doing so, the majority in Lunsford I concluded that the
    hearing statutorily mandated by section 6330(b)(1) is not
    required prior to our obtaining jurisdiction.   Contrary to the
    majority’s opinion in the instant case, Majority op. p. 9, after
    Lunsford I, there is nothing left in Meyer for the Court to
    follow.   Therefore, the majority’s discussion of Meyer and stare
    decisis is unnecessary.
    Additionally, I disagree with Judge Beghe’s dissent that we
    should no longer follow our jurisprudence in Moore v.
    Commissioner, 
    114 T.C. 171
     (2000), and Van Es v. Commissioner,
    
    115 T.C. 324
     (2000).
    I.   Interpreting Section 6330(d)
    First, Judge Beghe suggests that section 6330(d) is
    susceptible to the interpretation--indeed, one that he claims is
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    preferable--that the Tax Court has jurisdiction pursuant to
    section 6330(d)(1)(A) in all collection cases.     I disagree.
    Section 6330(d) provides:
    (1) JUDICIAL REVIEW OF DETERMINATION.--The person
    may, within 30 days of a determination under this
    section, appeal such determination--
    (A) to the Tax Court (and the Tax Court shall
    have jurisdiction with respect to such matter); or
    (B) if the Tax Court does not have
    jurisdiction of the underlying tax liability, to a
    district court of the United States.
    If a court determines that the appeal was to an
    incorrect court, a person shall have 30 days after the
    court determination to file such appeal with the
    correct court.
    Judge Beghe fails to explain how his interpretation is an
    acceptable, let alone preferred, reading of the statute.
    A.   Section 6330(d)(1) Must Be Read as a Whole
    A cardinal rule of statutory construction is that a statute
    is to be read as a whole because the meaning of language depends
    on its context.   See King v. St. Vincent’s Hosp., 
    502 U.S. 215
    ,
    221 (1991).   The flush language contained at the end of the
    section states:   “If a court determines that the appeal was to an
    incorrect court, a person shall have 30 days after the court
    determination to file such appeal with the correct court.”       Sec.
    6330(d)(1) (emphasis added).     Thus, the district court can
    determine that appeal should have been to this Court, and we can
    determine that appeal should have been to the district court.
    - 13 -
    B.     Congress Knows How To Grant Unlimited Jurisdiction to
    One Court and Limited Jurisdiction to Another
    With regard to jeopardy assessments, section 7429(b)(2)
    provides:
    (A) IN GENERAL.--Except as provided in
    subparagraph (B), the district courts of the United
    States shall have exclusive jurisdiction over any civil
    action for a determination under this subsection.
    (B) TAX COURT.--If a petition for redetermination
    of a deficiency under section 6213(a) has been timely
    filed with the Tax Court before the making of an
    assessment or levy that is subject to the review
    procedures of this section, and 1 or more of the taxes
    and taxable periods before the Tax Court because of
    such petition is also included in the written statement
    that is provided to the taxpayer under subsection (a),
    then the Tax Court also shall have jurisdiction over
    any civil action for a determination under this
    subsection with respect to all the taxes and taxable
    periods included in such written statement. [Emphasis
    added.]
    As the above shows, Congress knows how to give unlimited
    jurisdiction to one court and limited jurisdiction to another.
    Section 7429(e)(2) further provides:
    If a civil action is filed under subsection (b) with
    the Tax Court and such court finds that there is want
    of jurisdiction because of the jurisdiction provisions
    of subsection (b)(2), then the Tax Court shall, if such
    court determines it is in the interest of justice,
    transfer the civil action to the district court in
    which the action could have been brought at the time
    such action was filed. * * *
    In stating which court is an incorrect court, in section
    7429(e)(2) Congress used the proper noun “Tax Court” whereas in
    the flush language of section 6330(d)(1) Congress instead chose
    - 14 -
    to precede the noun “court” with the indefinite article “a”.        The
    use of the indefinite article, which does not fix the identity of
    the noun modified, supports the conclusion that the flush
    language of section 6330(d)(1) applies to both the Tax Court and
    the district courts.     See Webster’s II New Riverside University
    Dictionary 621 (1994).
    C.    Section 6330(d)(1) Must Be Read in the Context of the
    Statute
    The section 6330(d)(1)(A) parenthetical language must be
    read in the context of the statute.       See Norfolk S. Corp. v.
    Commissioner, 
    104 T.C. 13
    , 41 (1995).       Section 6015(e)(1)
    contains the same parenthetical language as section
    6330(d)(1)(A); however, this same parenthetical language does not
    provide the Court with unlimited jurisdiction over section 6015
    cases.      Our jurisdiction to review section 6015 cases is not
    unlimited--in some cases the district court or United States
    Court of Federal Claims has jurisdiction and the Tax Court does
    not.    Sec. 6015(e)(3)(C).    Similarly, the language of section
    6330(d)(1)(B) and the flush language limit and explain the
    parenthetical language contained in section 6330(d)(1)(A).
    D.     District Courts Agree With Van Es and Moore
    Several district courts have explicitly agreed with our
    holdings in Moore and Van Es that our jurisdiction in lien and
    levy cases is not unlimited.      The United States District Court
    for the Southern District of Texas held:       “Courts have
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    interpreted these provisions [6330(d)(1)] to mean that district
    courts have jurisdiction under section 6330 only if the Tax Court
    lacks jurisdiction.”    Lewis v. IRS, 86 AFTR2d 2000-6839, 2000-2
    USTC par. 50,837 (S.D. Tex. 2000) (emphasis added).   The United
    States District Court for the Northern District of Texas held:
    “a district court has jurisdiction to hear this type of suit [a
    claim under 6330] only if the Tax Court lacks jurisdiction. * * *
    District Courts have jurisdiction under section 6330 only if the
    Tax Court lacks jurisdiction.”    McCune v. United States, 85
    AFTR2d 2000-1240, 2000-1 USTC par. 50,279 (N.D. Tex. 2000)
    (emphasis added).   The United States District Court for the
    Eastern District of Pennsylvania held that section 6330(d)(1)
    “provides for review to the Tax Court, unless the Tax Court does
    not have jurisdiction, in which case the appeal goes to a
    district court”.    Hart v. IRS, 87 AFTR2d 2001-1531, 2001-1 USTC
    par. 50,328 (E.D. Pa. 2001) (emphasis added).
    II.   “Opening the Backdoor”
    Historically, the Tax Court has been a court of limited
    jurisdiction, and we may exercise our jurisdiction only to the
    extent authorized by Congress.   See sec. 7442; Naftel v.
    Commissioner, 
    85 T.C. 527
    , 529 (1985).   The grant of jurisdiction
    to review deficiencies determined by the Commissioner does not
    provide us with jurisdiction to review taxes imposed under
    subtitle C, subtitle D (with the exception of excise taxes
    - 16 -
    imposed by chapters 41, 42, 43, and 44), subtitle E, and various
    additions to tax and penalties.    See secs. 6211(a), 6214;
    Medeiros v. Commissioner, 
    77 T.C. 1255
    , 1259-1260 (1981) (section
    6672 addition to tax); Judd v. Commissioner, 
    74 T.C. 651
     (1980)
    (section 6652(c) addition to tax); Chatterji v. Commissioner, 
    54 T.C. 1402
     (1970) (overpayment of FICA taxes); see also Fischer v.
    Commissioner, 
    T.C. Memo. 1994-586
     n.3 (section 6682 penalty);
    Hintz v. Commissioner, 
    T.C. Memo. 1981-425
     (overpayment of
    Railroad Retirement taxes), affd. 
    712 F.2d 281
     (7th Cir. 1983).
    Concluding that we had jurisdiction in this case would have
    allowed the Court to reach the merits of whether petitioners are
    liable for the frivolous return penalty pursuant to section 6702.
    Petitioners, however, could not have directly petitioned the
    Court to review whether they were liable for this penalty.     Sec.
    6703(b), (c)(2).     Judge Beghe’s interpretation would provide a
    backdoor through which taxpayers could slip through by waiting
    until collection to litigate liability for taxes, additions to
    tax, and penalties that they are prevented from petitioning this
    Court to review via our deficiency jurisdiction.
    III. Stare Decisis
    Principles of stare decisis weigh against overruling
    Moore and Van Es.     With regard to stare decisis, the Supreme
    Court has stated as follows:
    the important doctrine of stare decisis [is] the means
    by which we ensure that the law will not merely change
    - 17 -
    erratically, but will develop in a principled and
    intelligible fashion. * * * While stare decisis is not
    an inexorable command, the careful observer will
    discern that any detours from the straight path of
    stare decisis in our past have occurred for articulable
    reasons, and only when the Court has felt obliged “to
    bring its opinions into agreement with experience and
    with facts newly ascertained.” * * * every successful
    proponent of overruling precedent has borne the heavy
    burden of persuading the Court that changes in society
    or in the law dictate that the values served by stare
    decisis yield in favor of a greater objective. * * *
    [Vasquez v. Hillery, 
    474 U.S. 254
    , 265-266 (1986);
    citation omitted.]
    Stare decisis is the preferred course because it promotes the
    evenhanded, predictable, and consistent development of legal
    principals, fosters reliance on judicial decisions, and
    contributes to the actual and perceived integrity of the judicial
    process.   Hesselink v. Commissioner, 
    97 T.C. 94
    , 99 (1991).
    A.    Test for Overruling Prior Opinions
    The U.S. Supreme Court has set forth the following four part
    test for use in determining whether to overrule a prior decision:
    (1) Whether the rule has proven to be intolerable simply in
    defying practical workability, (2) whether the rule is subject to
    a kind of reliance that would lend a special hardship to the
    consequences of overruling and add inequity to the cost of
    repudiation, (3) whether related principles of law have so far
    developed as to have left the old rule no more than a remnant of
    abandoned doctrine, and (4) whether facts have so changed, or
    come to be seen so differently, as to have robbed the old rule of
    - 18 -
    significant application or justification.   Planned Parenthood v.
    Casey, 
    505 U.S. 833
    , 854-855 (1992).
    The rules set forth in Moore and Van Es and followed by
    several opinions1 and orders have not proven to be unworkable.
    Furthermore, in the months that have passed since the release
    of these opinions and orders, principles of law have not changed
    so much as to leave those cases as no more than a remnant of
    abandoned doctrine.   Additionally, facts have not so changed as
    to have robbed Moore and Van Es of significant application or
    justification.   Thus, the factors set forth by the Supreme Court
    in Planned Parenthood do not support Judge Beghe’s suggestion
    that there are exceptional circumstances such that Moore and Van
    Es should be overruled.
    B.   Stare Decisis and Statutory Construction
    Stare decisis assumes increased importance when the
    antecedent cases involved the construction of a statute.
    Brewster v. Commissioner, 
    607 F.2d 1369
    , 1373-1374 (D.C. Cir.
    1979), affg. 
    67 T.C. 352
     (1976).   In such cases, Congress can
    cure any error made by the Court, and until it does the bar and
    1
    See Landry v. Commissioner, 
    116 T.C. 60
    , 62 (2001); Meyer
    v. Commissioner, 
    115 T.C. 417
    , 421 (2000); Katz v. Commissioner,
    
    115 T.C. 329
    , 338 (2000); Offiler v. Commissioner, 
    114 T.C. 492
    ,
    498 n.6 (2000); Goza v. Commissioner, 
    114 T.C. 176
    , 181 (2000);
    Merriweather v. Commissioner, 
    T.C. Memo. 2001-88
    ; Boone Trust v.
    Commissioner, 
    T.C. Memo. 2000-350
    ; Loadholt Trust v.
    Commissioner, 
    T.C. Memo. 2000-349
    ; MacElvain v. Commissioner,
    
    T.C. Memo. 2000-320
    ; Howard v. Commissioner, 
    T.C. Memo. 2000-319
    ;
    Anderson v. Commissioner, 
    T.C. Memo. 2000-311
    .
    - 19 -
    the public are justified in expecting the Court, except in the
    most egregious cases, not to depart from the previous
    interpretation.   Hesselink v. Commissioner, supra at 100; Burnet
    v. Coronado Oil & Gas Co., 
    285 U.S. 393
    , 406-408 (1932)
    (Brandeis, J., dissenting).
    On December 21, 2000, in the Community Renewal Tax Relief
    Act of 2000 (CRTRA), Pub. L. 106-554, sec. 314(f), 114 Stat.
    2763A-643, Congress legislatively overruled Henry Randolph
    Consulting v. Commissioner, 
    112 T.C. 1
     (1999).   In CRTRA,
    Congress also amended section 6330(d)(1) and chose to let the
    holdings in Moore and Van Es stand.2   CRTRA sec. 313(d).    The
    fact that Congress amended section 6330(d)(1) and chose not to
    overrule Moore and Van Es weighs heavily against overruling them.
    See, e.g., Hesselink v. Commissioner, supra at 100 (Congress can
    cure any error made by the Court).
    IV.   Petitioners’ “Delay Tactics”
    I am not convinced that petitioners are delay seekers whose
    sole purpose in bringing this case was to gum up the works by
    unreasonably and vexatiously multiplying the proceedings.
    I agree that the notice of determination instructed
    petitioners to bring their case in the district court.
    2
    The only change Congress made to sec. 6330(d)(1) was to
    alter the language in the subsection (1)(A) parenthetical from
    “and the Tax Court shall have jurisdiction to hear such matter”
    to “and the Tax Court shall have jurisdiction with respect
    to such matter”. CRTRA sec. 313(d), 114 Stat. 2763A-643
    (emphasis added).
    - 20 -
    Petitioners, however, decided to petition the Tax Court based on
    our decision in Meyer v. Commissioner, 
    115 T.C. 417
     (2000).    In
    both their petition and amended petition, petitioners state that
    in a similar case (Meyer) this Court assumed jurisdiction.    Their
    argument is not that we have jurisdiction to review a
    determination regarding a section 6702 penalty but that they were
    not provided a hearing.   Further, petitioners contend that in a
    similar case involving a section 6702 penalty (Meyer) the Court
    held that we had jurisdiction to review whether the taxpayer was
    provided a hearing.
    The following colloquies took place at the hearing on the
    motion:
    THE COURT:     That’s right. I’ve seen the file. Do you want to
    say anything this morning on behalf of the motion
    or in opposition to the motion?
    PETITIONER:    Judge, I’ve sent in an objection to the motion
    that technically the Court does not have
    jurisdiction regarding frivolous penalties, but it
    does have jurisdiction based on the Meyer case,
    which I cited in my objection, that this is a
    matter of not receiving a due-process hearing * *
    * We did ask for the hearing within the 30 days
    and did not get the hearing when a determination
    was made.
    * * *
    THE COURT:     Mr. Johnson is not speaking this morning to the
    merit of the position he’s taking. He’s saying
    that, regardless of the merit of the position,
    he’s entitled to a hearing. Is that correct Mr.
    Johnson?
    - 21 -
    PETITIONER:   That’s correct sir.    Yes, sir.
    * * *
    THE COURT:    Okay. Now, what else--Mr. Johnson, do you want to
    say anything else in opposition to the
    Government’s motion?
    PETITIONER:   Judge, my position is strictly that this whole
    case has to do with whether or not the Tax Court
    has jurisdiction to rule on a violation of Section
    6330 of the Internal Revenue Code, and it is not
    addressing the frivolous penalty as such, even
    though that is the underlying part of this case.
    This motion to dismiss is based upon frivolous
    penalty; my objection has to do with Section 6330
    of the Code, that I’ve not had a due-process
    hearing and that the Government has admitted that
    I’ve not had a due-process hearing.
    * * *
    THE COURT:    Mr. Crump, do you think that the Tax Court has
    jurisdiction to decide the Johnsons’ claim
    relating to the hearing?
    RESPONDENT:   Based on my reading of Meyer, I would--I think so.
    * * *
    THE COURT:    All right. Now, Mr. Johnson, * * * if the hearing
    requirement was not met, what do you think the
    Court should do here?
    PETITIONER:   As requested in my petition, I believe that the
    determination should be vacated and that it should
    go back to due-process hearing. * * * If I could
    have a due-process hearing * * * [and a
    determination is made against me] then I will
    appeal to district court, which then it would be
    the proper place, but I think that I do have to
    have that hearing in order to fulfill the
    requirements here in Code Section 6330.
    THE COURT:    All right. * * * If the hearing requirement was
    met--if I decide the hearing requirement was met,
    what action do you think the Court should take
    here?
    - 22 -
    PETITIONER:    Well, then I would suppose that the only action
    you could take would be to honor the request to
    dismiss for lack of jurisdiction * * * and then I
    would have to appeal to district court.
    On this record, I am not convinced petitioners petitioned
    this Court in an attempt to delay the proceedings.    If a taxpayer
    instituted the proceedings for delay, the proper action is to
    sanction the taxpayer pursuant to section 6673(a) as we warned in
    Pierson v. Commissioner, 
    115 T.C. 576
    , 581 (2000).    See also
    Davis v. Commissioner, 
    T.C. Memo. 2001-87
     (imposing a $4,000
    penalty pursuant to section 6673(a) for frivolous and groundless
    arguments).
    LARO, J., agrees with this concurring opinion.
    - 23 -
    BEGHE, J., dissenting:    I respectfully dissent from the
    granting of respondent’s motion to dismiss for lack of
    jurisdiction.   The Court’s action perpetuates needless
    inefficiency in judicial administration of the new collection
    provisions and plays into the hands of tax protesters.
    Petitioners have gummed up the works, created delay in the
    collection of relatively small amounts obviously due, and
    multiplied the proceedings with respect to frivolous return
    penalties whose assessment properly bypassed the deficiency
    procedures of the Tax Court.
    The Court should have denied the motion and taken
    jurisdiction, overruled Van Es v. Commissioner, 
    115 T.C. 324
    (2000), and put an end to the matter by holding that the hearing
    requirement was satisfied and that respondent’s determination to
    collect the assessments should be upheld.   By electing to
    petition the Tax Court, rather than the appropriate district
    court, petitioners should have been held to have waived their
    right to appeal the Appeals officer’s determination that they
    were liable for the frivolous return penalties.1
    1
    Applying the doctrine of waiver would have been especially
    appropriate in the case at hand, where the arguments made in the
    attachments to petitioners’ amended returns are patently
    frivolous and have been repeatedly rejected in our published
    opinions. Petitioners argued that no section of the Internal
    Revenue Code makes them liable for income taxes on their wages.
    See United States v. Connor, 
    898 F.2d 942
    , 943-944 (3d Cir. 1990)
    (“Every court which has ever considered the issue has
    unequivocally rejected the argument that wages are not income”);
    see also Reading v. Commissioner, 
    70 T.C. 730
     (1978), affd. 614
    (continued...)
    - 24 -
    Section 6330 is susceptible to the interpretation--indeed,
    in my view, it’s the preferred reading--that the Tax Court has
    jurisdiction under section 6330(d)(1)(A) in all collection cases,
    with a district court having concurrent jurisdiction under
    section 6330(d)(1)(B) in cases in which the Tax Court lacks
    jurisdiction of the underlying tax liability.   The delays
    encountered in judicial administration of the new collection
    1
    (...continued)
    F.2d 159 (8th Cir. 1980) (entire amount received for services
    constitutes income); United States v. Richards, 
    723 F.2d 646
    , 648
    (8th Cir. 1983) (argument that wages and salaries are not income
    is “totally lacking in merit”). Petitioners argued they owe no
    taxes because “income” is not separately defined in the Internal
    Revenue Code, or because the definition of “gross income” in sec.
    61 uses the word “income.” Commissioner v. Glenshaw Glass Co.,
    
    348 U.S. 426
    , 429-430 (1955) made clear that the language of sec.
    61 is entirely appropriate for “Congress to exert in this field
    ‘the full measure of its taxing power.’” In Liddane v.
    Commissioner, 
    T.C. Memo. 1998-259
    , affd. without published
    opinion 
    208 F.3d 206
     (3d Cir. 2000), and Fox v. Commissioner,
    
    T.C. Memo. 1993-277
    , affd. without published opinion 
    69 F.3d 543
    (9th Cir. 1995), we found these arguments to be frivolous and
    imposed a penalty on the taxpayer under sec. 6673(a)(1) for
    making them. Petitioners’ syllogism that the Supreme Court
    defines income as corporate profit, and that since wages are not
    corporate profit he did not have any income, was rejected as
    frivolous in Ghalardi Income Tax Educ. Found. v. Commissioner,
    
    T.C. Memo. 1998-460
    . Petitioners’ final argument that a penalty
    under sec. 6702(b) cannot be imposed independently of another
    penalty because the statute says that “the penalty imposed by
    subsection (a) shall be in addition to any other penalty provided
    by law” is textually absurd. These frivolous arguments, combined
    with the petition to this Court for a redetermination of assessed
    frivolous return penalties after written notice from the
    Commissioner that the appeal is properly filed in an appropriate
    district court, evidence intent to cause unnecessary delay and
    expense. In these circumstances, the election to file a petition
    in this Court should have been held a waiver of the right of
    access to remedies the majority holds we are unable to provide.
    - 25 -
    provisions, delays we take notice of in the companion case of
    Lunsford v. Commissioner, 117 T.C.       (2001) (jurisdictional
    opinion) (slip op. at 10), satisfy the exceptional circumstances
    conditions set forth in Planned Parenthood v. Casey, 
    505 U.S. 833
    , 854-855 (1992), for reconsideration and repudiation of
    recent precedent.
    Against this background of judicial abstention, what next?
    At the risk of presumptuousness in drawing additional attention
    to ambiguities in the statute, I hope that this case will lead to
    congressional reconsideration and enactment of a more explicit
    grant of jurisdiction to this Court to provide one-stop shopping
    in all cases under sections 6320 and 6330.   In the aftermath of
    September 11, 2001, the reminder that “taxes are the life-blood
    of government, and their prompt and certain availability an
    imperious need”,2 should trump self-imposed Alphonse and Gaston
    jurisdictional niceties.
    Finally, let me lay to rest any concerns that this
    dissenting opinion publicizes ambiguities other tax protesters
    will exploit to create unjustified delays in collection of
    assessments.   From now on until the ambiguities are cured, any
    taxpayer who files a petition with the Tax Court in a collection
    case in which the Tax Court does not have jurisdiction of the
    2
    Bull v. United States, 
    295 U.S. 247
    , 259 (1935); see also
    Tyler v. United States, 
    281 U.S. 497
    , 503 (1930).
    - 26 -
    underlying tax liability may be found to have done so “primarily
    for delay” and hit with a penalty of up to $25,000 under section
    6673(a)(1)(A).   Anyone admitted to practice in this Court who
    files such a petition may be found to have “multiplied the
    proceedings * * * unreasonably and vexatiously” under section
    6673(a)(2) and required to “pay personally the excess costs,
    expenses, and attorneys’ fees reasonably incurred because of such
    conduct”.3
    It’s beyond cavil that courts of limited jurisdiction,
    including the Tax Court, have inherent power to protect their
    processes from abuse by awarding sanctions and costs even though
    they lack jurisdiction over the underlying dispute.   Willy v.
    Coastal Corp., 
    503 U.S. 131
     (1992) (sanctions under Fed. R. Civ.
    P. 11, allowed even though case dismissed for want of subject
    matter jurisdiction); Cooter & Gell v. Hartmarx Corp., 
    496 U.S. 384
     (1990) (same where complaint voluntarily dismissed before
    3
    Taxpayers in frivolous return penalty and employment tax
    penalty cases who wish to dispute the Commissioner’s collection
    determination are already being put on notice that they should
    file a complaint with the appropriate district court. Following
    our opinion in Van Es v. Commissioner, 
    115 T.C. 324
     (2000), the
    Commissioner apparently changed the form of notice of
    determination in frivolous return penalty collection cases to
    tell the taxpayer to file a complaint in the appropriate district
    court. The notice of determination in the case at hand so
    stated, but petitioners disregarded the notice and filed a
    petition with the Tax Court. Similarly, the taxpayer in Moore v.
    Commissioner, 
    114 T.C. 171
     (2000), an employment tax penalty
    collection case, disregarded the instruction in the notice of
    determination to file a complaint in the appropriate district
    court.
    - 27 -
    answer filed); Sponza v. Commissioner, 
    844 F.2d 689
     (9th Cir.
    1988)(approving award of section 7430 litigation costs after
    determination that Tax Court lacked jurisdiction); Weiss v.
    Commissioner, 
    88 T.C. 1036
     (1987), affd. sub silentio 
    850 F.2d 111
     (2d Cir. 1988) (same); see also Dang v. Commissioner, 
    259 F.3d 204
     (4th Cir. 2001).
    HALPERN, J., agrees with this dissenting opinion.