DocketNumber: Docket No. 19606-11
Citation Numbers: 105 T.C.M. 1228, 2013 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 35, 2013 T.C. Memo. 33
Judges: MARVEL
Filed Date: 2/4/2013
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 4/17/2021
An order will be issued denying respondent's motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction.
MARVEL,
Petitioners resided in Georgia when they filed their petition.
On May 11, 2011, respondent issued a notice of deficiency to petitioners and sent it by certified mail to petitioners' last known address. Accordingly, August 9, 2011, was the last date on which petitioners could file a petition with this Court with respect to the notice of deficiency.
Petitioners retained Attorney Julie M.T. Walker to file their petition. Ms. Walker received her bachelor of arts degree from Hampshire College in 1977, her juris doctor degree from Howard *36 University School of Law in 1980, and her master of laws degree in taxation from Emory University School of Law in 1984. From October 6, 1980, through May 4, 1998, Ms. Walker was employed as an attorney by respondent's Office of District Counsel in Atlanta, Georgia. From May 5, 1998, through December 31, 2005, Ms. Walker served as a full-time judge on the City Court of Atlanta. In April 2006 Ms. Walker started a solo law practice.
*35 Ms. Walker prepared the petition and various associated documents on August 6, 2011 (collectively, petition). At the same time, Ms. Walker also prepared a duplicate petition for the Court to return "filed stamped" to her at her business address. Ms. Walker prepared two envelopes. On one envelope Ms. Walker placed a destination address label addressed to the Clerk of this Court and a return address label addressed to her business address (petition envelope). On the other envelope Ms. Walker placed destination and return address labels addressed to her business address (self-addressed envelope).
On August 9, 2011, Ms. Walker took the petition envelope, which contained the petition, and the self-addressed envelope, which contained the duplicate petition, to the *37 Atlanta Civic Center Station Post Office (Civic Center Post Office). Ms. Walker placed a mailing label addressed to this Court on the receipt portion (sender's receipt) of a PS Form 3800, Certified Mail (certified mail form), a mailing label addressed to this Court and the article number from the certified mail form onto the front of a PS Form 3811, Domestic Return Receipt (return receipt), and a mailing label addressed to her business address on the reverse side of the return receipt.
*36 Ms. Walker then entered into a mailing transaction with Serge Gregoire, a U.S. Postal Service employee. *38 Ms. Walker handed Mr. Gregoire the two envelopes, the certified mail form, and the return receipt and instructed him to (1) calculate the proper postage for the self-addressed envelope, (2) place the self-addressed envelope inside the petition envelope, (3) calculate the proper postage for mailing the petition envelope using certified mail and return receipt, and (4) mail the petition envelope using certified mail with return receipt.
Contrary to Ms. Walker's instructions, Mr. Gregoire (1) placed postage of $1.68 on the petition envelope, (2) placed postage of $8.03 on the self-addressed envelope, (3) placed the petition envelope inside the self-addressed envelope, (4) attached the certified mail sticker and return receipt to the front of the self-addressed envelope, and (5) postmarked the sender's receipt. Ms. Walker did not inspect the envelopes to see whether Mr. Gregoire had accurately followed her instructions.
*37 Because the petition envelope was erroneously inserted into the self-addressed envelope, the petition envelope was not initially delivered to the Court. On August 20, 2011, Ms. Walker signed for and retrieved the self-addressed envelope from the Central City Post Office. She quickly discovered that an error had occurred, and on August 22, 2011, she mailed the following items to this Court: (1) the *39 petition, (2) the duplicate petition, (3) the petition envelope, (4) the self-addressed envelope, (5) the return receipt, and (6) a letter dated August 22, 2011, addressed to the Clerk of the Court, setting forth her recollection of the events that occurred at the Civic Center Post Office on August 9, 2011.
The Tax Court is a court of limited jurisdiction, and we may exercise our jurisdiction only to the extent authorized by Congress.
Pursuant *40 to
Extrinsic evidence of the mailing date is admissible if a U.S. Postal Service postmark date is either illegible or missing.
Alternatively, Registered or certified mail. If the document or payment is sent by U.S. registered mail, the date of registration of the document or payment is treated as the postmark date. If the document or payment is sent by U.S. certified mail and the sender's receipt *42 is postmarked by the postal employee to whom the document or payment is presented, the date of the U.S. postmark on the receipt is treated as the postmark date of the document or payment. Accordingly, the risk that the document or payment will not be postmarked on the day that it is deposited in the mail may be eliminated by the use of registered or certified mail.
Respondent contends that
Respondent contends that the petition was not timely mailed because it was not properly addressed to this Court. However, Ms. Walker handed Mr. Gregoire two envelopes, the petition envelope and the self-addressed envelope, and instructed him to mail the petition envelope using certified mail. The petition envelope was properly addressed to this Court,
We have previously held that extrinsic evidence of the mailing date is admissible if, because of postal error, a U.S. Postal Service postmark date is either illegible or missing.
Additionally, *45 the petition envelope will have been timely mailed if the certified mail exception,
We addressed a similar question in
By contrast, petitioners have shown a link between the sender's receipt and the petition envelope. The sender's receipt and the return receipt state *47 that the mailing address of the certified mailing was the mailing address of this Court. The lack of sufficient postage for certified mail and return receipt on the petition *44 envelope is explained by the fact that Mr. Gregoire erroneously attached the certified mail sticker, the return receipt, and sufficient postage for the same on the self-addressed envelope instead of on the petition envelope. Moreover, the parties have stipulated that the petition envelope does not have a postmark because it was placed inside of the self-addressed envelope. We find that Ms. Walker sent the petition envelope by certified mail when she handed it and the completed certified mail form to Mr. Gregoire, and we, therefore, conclude that the certified mail exception applies in this case.
We have found that, but for Mr. Gregoire's errors, the petition envelope would have had a postmark date of August 9, 2011, and that, in any event, the certified mail exception applies in this case. Accordingly, we find that the petition in this case was timely mailed within the meaning of
Respondent contends that the petition *48 in this case was not delivered to this Court because it was delivered to Ms. Walker's business address. Although the petition was first delivered to Ms. Walker's business address, Ms. Walker subsequently mailed the petition to this Court on August 22, 2011, and it has been received by and filed with this Court.
*45 We have previously held that
We have found that the petition was timely mailed and was delivered. It was, thus, timely filed.
To reflect the foregoing,
1. Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to the Internal Revenue Code in effect at the time the petition was filed, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.↩
2. The parties stipulated and Ms. Walker credibly testified that Mr. Gregoire was the U.S. Postal Service employee who handled the mailing transaction. However, at trial Mr. Gregoire did not recall the transaction, and the sales receipt from the transaction indicates that a different postal employee, Bridget Jackson, was logged into the register that handled the transaction. Consistent with the parties' stipulation, we find that Mr. Gregoire handled the transaction at issue.
3. The sender's receipt is part of a certified mail form.
4. In his pretrial memorandum respondent contends that petitioner has not shown that the self-addressed envelope was mailed with sufficient postage. As we do not reach the issue of whether the self-addressed envelope was timely mailed, we are not concerned with whether the self-addressed envelope was mailed with sufficient postage, but we are concerned with whether the petition envelope was mailed with sufficient postage. The petition and the petition envelope are in the legal file for this case. We find that Mr. Gregoire properly weighed them in the first instance and affixed sufficient postage.
5.