DocketNumber: Docket 27849-09L
Judges: Gale
Filed Date: 3/28/2012
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
An appropriate order will be issued.
R issued and mailed to P a notice of determination concerning collection actions under
Although P had requested relief under
The notice of determination also stated that, with respect to P's request for interest abatement, it had been determined that P was not eligible under
P's petition seeking review of the notice of determination was received and filed by the Court on Nov. 23, 2009. The envelope containing the petition bore a legible U.S. postmark of Nov. 17, 2009. R moved to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction on the ground that the petition was untimely.
1.
2.
3.
*296 GALE,
Respondent has moved to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction on the ground that the petition was untimely. We must decide whether the petition was timely with respect to our review of a collection action pursuant to
We hold that the petition was untimely with respect to our review pursuant to
The following has been stipulated or is not in dispute. Petitioner resided in Illinois when she filed her petition.
On October 16, 2009, Appeals issued and sent to petitioner by certified mail a Notice of Determination Concerning Collection Action(s) Under
On the basis of substantiation of certain business expenses petitioner submitted, the notice *18 of determination abated a portion of the tax for 1992 and 1993. In addition, in the description of issues petitioner raised, the notice of determination acknowledged that petitioner had submitted a request for interest and "penalty" abatement as part of her CDP hearing: "While your case was pending in Appeals, you also submitted a request for abatement of interest and penalties." After summarizing the grounds she had advanced for interest and "penalty" abatement, the notice of determination concluded that petitioner had shown reasonable cause and that the additions to tax for all years would be abated.
Petitioner filed a petition in this Court in *19 which she checked the box indicating that she was disputing a "Notice of Determination Concerning Collection Action" and attached the notice of determination. The envelope that contained the petition bore a USPS postmark of November 17, 2009. The petition was received and filed by the Court on November 23, 2009. The petition disputed the notice of determination and, among the reasons for the dispute, cited an Internal Revenue *298 Service (IRS) employee's erroneous representation to petitioner that she owed no income tax for her 1992-95 taxable years.
Respondent subsequently filed a motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction on the ground that the petition was not filed within the 30-day period prescribed by
The Tax Court is a court of limited jurisdiction,
All claims in a petition should be broadly construed so as to do substantial justice, and a petition filed by a pro se litigant should be liberally construed.
It is a straightforward proposition that the petition sought to invoke our jurisdiction under
Our jurisdiction to review a collection action determination under
Petitioner contends that she had 90 days to appeal the notice of determination because it included determinations modifying the underlying tax liabilities for 1992-95. In petitioner's view, because her underlying tax liabilities *23 were *300 addressed in the notice of determination, she is entitled to the same 90-day period to appeal the determination as is generally allowed for the filing of a petition for redetermination of a deficiency pursuant to
Petitioner is mistaken. The statutory scheme of
Petitioner also argues that, because the notice determined that the additions to tax for 1992-95 should be abated and the settlement officer issued a separate letter notifying her of the abatement on October 22, 2009, she has 30 days from the date of the separate letter to appeal the notice of determination.
Petitioner's contention is meritless. In contrast to the case of interest abatement determinations, Petitioner also contends that she requested spousal relief under In Respondent's motion to dismiss does not address the fact that petitioner raised a spousal defense at her Because we lack jurisdiction under We consider first respondent's preliminary argument that there was "no determination as to abatement of interest *304 * * * made within the CDP hearing or without it" and that "Petitioner was never issued a Notice of Determination or Notice of Disallowance in connection with an interest abatement proceeding." We disagree. The notice of determination issued to petitioner in connection with her To the extent respondent may be suggesting that there was no determination denying interest abatement because it did not occur in connection with a stand-alone request for interest abatement under Here, the notice *33 of determination was written and embodied a determination that petitioner was not entitled to any interest abatement under Because petitioner requested an abatement of interest in connection with her We shall grant respondent's motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction *35 insofar as review of the collection actions in the notice of determination is concerned. Accordingly, the collection actions at issue may proceed. We shall deny respondent's motion insofar as the petition seeks our determination of the appropriate relief available under
1. This case was previously consolidated for purposes of disposition with the cases at docket Nos. 3260-08L and 27850-09L, concerning review of collection actions with respect to certain other taxable years of petitioner. Pursuant to orders entered on the date of this opinion, the consolidation is eliminated and the cases at docket Nos. 3260-08L and 27850-09L are dismissed for lack of jurisdiction.↩
2. Unless otherwise noted, all section references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.↩
3. On October 22, 2009, the settlement officer who conducted petitioner's
4. The October 22, 2009, letter would appear to have been issued in compliance with the Internal Revenue Manual's directive that Appeals issue a closing letter to the taxpayer when a "penalty" abatement request has been granted in full.
5. Even if the "penalty" letter were somehow construed as a determination concerning a collection action, we would lack jurisdiction due to mootness as the taxes (i.e., the additions to tax) that are the subject of the letter were abated and respondent is not seeking to collect them.
6. We note that the Secretary adheres to the same position in the regulations.
7. The petition alleges that errors in the returns filed for the years in issue were attributable to "incorrect information given to the accountant by my ex-spouse." We construe the petition, filed by a pro se litigant, broadly.
8. As no deficiency had been asserted against her, but instead the tax for each year in issue was reported as due but not paid, petitioner was eligible to request equitable relief under
9. Respondent's motion addresses the timeliness of the petition and has not challenged petitioner's satisfaction of the so-called net worth requirements of
McCune v. Commissioner ( 2000 )
Estate of Edward Kunze, Deceased, Carol Ann Hause v. ... ( 2000 )
American Airlines, Inc. v. Commissioner ( 2015 )
Nutrition Formulators, Inc. v. Comm'r ( 2016 )
Eric Lamart Sanders v. Commissioner ( 2014 )
Willard J. Belton & Martha-Alexander Belton ( 2023 )
A-Valey Eng'rs, Inc. v. Comm'r ( 2012 )
Phyllis Shaw v. Commissioner ( 2014 )
SECC Corporation v. Commissioner ( 2014 )
Carol Diane Gray v. Commissioner ( 2013 )