DocketNumber: Docket No. 18048-09.
Citation Numbers: 105 T.C.M. 1538, 2013 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 89, 2013 T.C. Memo. 87
Judges: THORNTON
Filed Date: 4/1/2013
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 4/17/2021
An appropriate order and decision will be entered.
THORNTON,
Petitioner and her former husband, Kurt Hans Knudsen (intervenor), filed joint Federal income tax returns for 1998, 1999, 2000, and 2001 (subject years). On December 23, 2008, respondent received from petitioner a Form 8857, *90 Request for Innocent Spouse Relief, seeking equitable relief under
On July 28, 2009, petitioner petitioned the Court to review respondent's denial of her claim. She resided in Oregon at that time. Respondent answered the petition and then returned the claim to the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) Cincinnati Centralized Innocent Spouse Operation (CCISO) to consider the claim on its merits. *91 claim on its merits but sustained its previous denial of the claim.
Intervenor intervened in this case on October 14, 2009. Approximately six months later, on April 21, 2010, petitioner (through her counsel) submitted a "Qualified Offer" to respondent stating that she would pay $50 as to each subject *90 year (a total of $200) to settle her total tax liability for those years. *92 The offer stated that the $200 "reflects the fact that our client earned no income, had no obligation to file a return, and had no personal tax liability during those [subject] years." Respondent did not respond to petitioner's offer.
Generally from April 29, 2010, through January 31, 2011, the parties conducted discovery as to the merits of petitioner's claim. On or about February 23, 2011, respondent notified petitioner that she qualified for her requested relief but for the fact that she did not file her claim before the two-year deadline expired.
This case was called for trial on March 14, 2011, and petitioner and respondent each submitted a pretrial memorandum. Intervenor, an attorney, neither appeared for the calling of the case nor submitted a pretrial memorandum. *91 On March 15, 2011, the case was recalled and the parties lodged a stipulation of settled issues, a stipulation of facts, and a joint motion for leave to submit to the Court pursuant to
On July 25, 2011, the IRS announced as a policy directive that the Department of the Treasury would expand the two-year deadline "in the interest of tax administration and * * * not reflective of any doubt concerning the authority of the Service to impose the two-year deadline" and that the two-year deadline would no longer be enforced in cases docketed in this Court.
On August 29, 2011, the Court held a previously scheduled telephone conference with petitioner and respondent. Intervenor was notified that the conference would be *95 held at the scheduled time and, according to respondent's counsel, had discussed the matter with respondent's counsel and expressed his intention to participate in the conference. Intervenor ultimately failed to *93 participate in the conference or to communicate with the Court about his failure to participate in the conference. During the conference respondent's counsel indicated that respondent was conceding that petitioner's claim was timely on the basis of
No supplemental stipulation of settled issues was ever filed. In a status report filed September 29, 2011, respondent indicated that petitioner and respondent had attempted to execute a supplemental stipulation of settled issues but were unable to do so. Respondent also reiterated that petitioner is entitled to her requested relief and maintained that intervenor "tentatively agrees" with that treatment as well. The report also referenced petitioner's motion for litigation fees and costs, which was filed one day before. On October *96 5, 2011, the Court ordered respondent and intervenor to each file a response to that motion. Respondent later filed such a response, but intervenor did not. Nor did intervenor ever file a response that the Court subsequently ordered him to file to petitioner's reply to respondent's response.
On May 8, 2012, the Court ordered the parties to show cause why petitioner should not be granted her requested relief. Petitioner filed a document stating that *94 no cause exists to deny her her requested relief because respondent has conceded all issues in the case. Respondent filed a document stating essentially the same. Intervenor made no response to the show cause order.
Respondent objects to petitioner's motion on the grounds that (1) she was not the prevailing party within the meaning of the statute and (2) her claimed costs *95 are unreasonable.
Respondent and petitioner disagree as to whether the judgment in this case will be "issued pursuant to a settlement". Petitioner argues that the judgment will not be issued pursuant to a settlement. Respondent argues to the contrary. *99 it, this case was not settled because the parties never mutually agreed to end the case; instead respondent unilaterally declared that he was conceding the case in full. Petitioner adds that the parties did not discuss or negotiate respondent's concession before it was made and that she offered to settle the case for $200 whereas respondent unilaterally went one step further by conceding (without any input from petitioner) that her liability was zero.
*97 Petitioner relies in part *100 upon
Later, the Court held that the Commissioner's concession in
We believe that the concession here is similar to the concession in
Petitioner also argues that respondent's concession cannot be a settlement because, she states, the concession was not a contract in that the concession was a unilateral action that lacked an offer and an acceptance and, hence, mutual assent. To that end, petitioner asserts, the parties neither discussed nor negotiated the terms of the concession; instead respondent thrust the concession upon her without affording her the opportunity to reject it. Petitioner asserts further that the qualified offer rule contemplates that she would be liable for the amount that she *100 offered and she never offered to settle the case for no liability, which is what respondent ultimately conceded. In short, petitioner suggests, a concession can never be a settlement when the concession is made voluntarily without bargaining between the parties or without their express mutual assent.
We disagree that respondent's concession was not eventually memorialized *104 in a contract between petitioner and respondent. "A settlement is a contract and, consequently, general principles of contract law determine whether a settlement has been reached."
We have little difficulty concluding from the record that respondent's concession was an offer to petitioner to settle this case by granting her requested relief and that she accepted (or in other words, assented to) this offer on the basis *101 of the tendered terms. *105 relief does not mean, as she concludes, that she had to accept the concession as tendered. While it does not happen often, a taxpayer such as petitioner could easily reject the Commissioner's full concession of a case and ask the Court to exercise our discretion to decide the case on its merits.
Our reading of the regulations underlying the qualified offer rule also supports our position. The regulations draw no distinction between a settlement and a concession and treat a taxpayer's settlement the same as the taxpayer's concession. The proposed regulations provided that a prevailing party may not recover fees under the qualified offer rule for any issue that is settled. Recovery is limited to issues that are actually determined by a court. One commentator recommended that the final regulations permit the recovery of fees attributable to adjustments that are settled. The final regulations do not adopt this comment. * * *
Petitioner also argues that a finding that respondent's concession was a settlement would defeat the intent of the qualified offer rule. We disagree. The qualified offer rule was included in the Internal Revenue Service Restructuring and Reform Act of 1998,
We will deny petitioner's motion for fees and costs. We have considered all arguments the parties made for contrary holdings and, to the extent not discussed, we have rejected those arguments as without merit. To reflect the foregoing,
1. Unless otherwise indicated, section references are to the applicable versions of the Internal Revenue Code, Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure, and dollar amounts are rounded.↩
2. After this Court invalidated the two-year deadline in
3. While the record does not establish petitioner's total tax liability as of the time of this offer, she asserts that her unpaid tax liabilities with respect to the subject years were as follows as of January 10, 2011:1998 $49,076 1999 38,031 2000 44,708 2001 Total 155,937
4. We also note
5. Intervenor has not filed any response to petitioner's motion, despite the Court's order that he do so.↩
6. Although petitioner fails to argue that respondent's position was not substantially justified, we note in passing that the record supports a conclusion that respondent's position was substantially justified in that it had a reasonable basis in both fact and law.
7. Respondent does not address, nor do we decide, whether petitioner's $200 offer was meaningful enough to be considered a "qualified offer" for purposes of
8. Petitioner asserts that a settlement must relate to the merits of the case and cannot result from a change in the applicable law. We disagree for the reasons just stated. Petitioner also asserts (in her reply to respondent's response) that she was advancing in this proceeding an equitable tolling issue as to the two-year deadline in the event the deadline were held valid. Petitioner's pretrial memorandum, however, makes no mention of such an issue, asserting solely that the two-year deadline is inapplicable because it is invalid. Nor does the parties' motion for leave to submit this case to the Court pursuant to
9. We also conclude that intervenor, an attorney, agreed with the concession given that he opted not to participate in our telephone conference as to the matter, reportedly after discussing the matter with respondent's counsel, and that in connection with our show cause order he later chose not to inform the Court of any disagreement he had with the concession.↩
10. Black's Law Dictionary also draws no material distinction between the terms.
Minahan v. Commissioner , 88 T.C. 492 ( 1987 )
Dorchester Indus. v. Comm'r , 108 T.C. 320 ( 1997 )
Rosemary AUGUST, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. DELTA AIR LINES, ... , 600 F.2d 699 ( 1979 )
clair-s-huffman-estate-of-patricia-c-huffman-deceased-clair-s-huffman , 978 F.2d 1139 ( 1992 )
Delta Air Lines, Inc. v. August , 101 S. Ct. 1146 ( 1981 )
McGowan v. Commissioner , 67 T.C. 599 ( 1976 )
Pullins v. Commissioner , 136 T.C. 432 ( 2011 )
Lantz v. Commissioner , 607 F.3d 479 ( 2010 )
Thomas E. Johnston, and Thomas E. Johnston, Successor in ... , 461 F.3d 1162 ( 2006 )
robert-e-ahern-v-central-pacific-freight-lines-v-roy-gaussoin-central , 846 F.2d 47 ( 1988 )