DocketNumber: Docket No. 13926-10W.
Judges: KROUPA
Filed Date: 4/25/2011
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/20/2020
KROUPA,
The following information is stated for purposes of resolving the pending motion. Petitioner resided in New York City, New York at the time he filed the petition.
Petitioner, a CPA, submitted a Form 211, Application for Award for Original Information (whistleblower claim), to respondent's Whistleblower Office *89 (Whistleblower Office) in September 2009 concerning alleged violations of the Internal Revenue Code. He alleged that Lawjoy Realty Corporation (Lawjoy) and 601 West 149th Street, Inc. (West 149th), both C corporations, failed to pay millions in Federal corporate income taxes by impermissibly treating real property sales as stock sales in a corporate liquidation. He asserts that the structure of the sales was a sham and solely motivated to evade income taxes. Petitioner appears to have been a shareholder of both Lawjoy and West 149th.
The Whistleblower Office denied petitioner's whistleblower claim in a letter issued November 13, 2009 (the first letter). The first letter explained that the Whistleblower Office had reviewed and evaluated petitioner's whistleblower claim before making its decision. It stated that Federal disclosure and other prevailing laws prevented the Whistleblower Office from explaining why it was denying his claim. Moreover, the first letter gave general explanations for disallowing rewards. It explained that claims are denied if the claimant provided insufficient information. Similarly, the first letter explained that claims are denied if the Internal Revenue Service *90 already had the information or the information provided did not cause an investigation or result in the recovery of taxes, penalties or fines.
Petitioner was unsure why his claim was denied so he called the Whistleblower Office to discuss the denial. He also gratuitously sent additional information to the Whistleblower Office concerning the transaction. The Whistleblower Office subsequently mailed three additional letters to petitioner. One letter referenced the phone conversation with petitioner. This letter told petitioner that to challenge the Whistleblower Office's decision he could "write to the US Court of Claim (sic) in Washington DC (sic)." The two other letters from the Whistleblower Office were duplicates confirming that petitioner's additional information had been received and considered but stating that the "determination remains the same despite the information contained in * * * [petitioner's] latest letter."
Petitioner thereafter filed a complaint in the United States Court of Federal Claims (Claims Court) as directed. He challenged the Whistleblower Office's decision. The Claims Court dismissed petitioner's complaint for lack of jurisdiction on May 26, 2010.
Petitioner *91 then filed a petition in this Court challenging respondent's denial of the whistleblower claim. He did not file the petition until June 18, 2010, which was 217 days after he received the first letter. As mentioned previously, respondent filed a motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction. He argues principally that no determination notice had been issued to petitioner to confer on us jurisdiction. Respondent argues, alternatively, that if a determination notice was issued, petitioner failed to file a petition with the Court within the required 30-day period.
We are asked to decide whether respondent's letter denying petitioner's whistleblower claim constitutes a "determination" within the meaning of
We begin with the Tax Court's jurisdiction. The Tax Court is a court of limited jurisdiction and may exercise its jurisdiction only to the extent authorized by Congress.
The Court's jurisdiction under
We recently decided the issue of whether a letter from the Whistleblower Office to a taxpayer was a "determination" under
Here, petitioner received four letters from the Whistleblower Office. The first letter denied petitioner's whistleblower claim. The subsequent three letters merely reaffirmed the initial determination in the first letter. Moreover, the Whistleblower Office stated in a letter to petitioner that he would have to appeal the determination through the court system, not the Whistleblower Office. Accordingly, we find that respondent's first letter to petitioner constituted a determination within the meaning of
We next consider whether petitioner timely filed the petition. To invoke the Court's jurisdiction, an individual must appeal the amount or denial of an award determination to this Court within 30 days of such a determination by the Whistleblower Office.
We recognize that petitioner may have relied on the erroneous advice of the Whistleblower Office in filing his initial appeal with the Claims Court. We, however, are limited in the relief we can provide. This Court's jurisdiction is strictly statutory, and estoppel cannot create jurisdiction where none exists. See
For the foregoing reasons, we shall grant respondent's motion to dismiss.
1. All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure, unless otherwise indicated.↩