DocketNumber: Docket No. 21200-10.
Citation Numbers: 101 T.C.M. 1634, 2011 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 126, 2011 T.C. Memo. 129
Judges: JACOBS
Filed Date: 6/9/2011
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/21/2020
An order of dismissal will be entered granting respondent's motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction.
JACOBS, Some of the facts have been stipulated and are so found. The stipulation of facts and the attached exhibits are incorporated herein by this reference. Petitioner resided in New York when her petition was filed. Respondent determined a deficiency in income tax of $27,604, an addition to tax pursuant to Petitioner regularly checked her mailbox at the 56th Street location. "On and off" she had a receptionist at her office who would sign for packages and certified mail. Petitioner maintains that she never received notification of an attempted delivery of Notice 1. As stated Petitioner previously had an office suite on the second floor of the 46th Street location. In May 2010 that office was occupied by an unrelated party and petitioner's mother lived on the fourth floor and ran a business from the third floor. Petitioner's mail was often delivered to her mother. Petitioner's mother would bundle the mail and, at 2011 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 126">*129 irregular intervals, forward it to petitioner. In an affidavit of petitioner's mother attached to petitioner's objection to respondent's motion to dismiss, petitioner's mother asserts that she received Notice 2 from the unrelated party who was a tenant of the second floor of the 46th Street location. Petitioner's mother is elderly, is not fluent in English, does not sort her own mail, and frequently is away from her residence at the 46th Street location, working in upstate New York. Petitioner received Notice 2 from her mother at the "end of August, sometime in late August." Petitioner attached Notice 2 to her petition, which was untimely filed on September 17, 2010. The last date to file a timely petition was August 18, 2010. Respondent concedes that the New Jersey address to which Notice 3 was mailed was not petitioner's last known address when that notice was mailed. Petitioner maintains that respondent's notice of deficiency was not "properly served" and "consequently * * * [she] did not receive the notice via any mailing." Petitioner asserts that respondent's assumption that petitioner's mother sees petitioner frequently and therefore was able to deliver Notice 2 to petitioner timely 2011 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 126">*130 is erroneous. This Court's jurisdiction to redetermine tax deficiencies exists only when the Commissioner issues a notice of deficiency and the taxpayer 2011 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 126">*131 files a timely petition to redetermine that deficiency. Petitioner asserts that the notice of deficiency is invalid because respondent used an incorrect ZIP Code in mailing Notice 1 to her. If we conclude that the notice of deficiency is invalid, we must dismiss this case on that basis and not for lack of a timely filed petition. This Court has long held that an inconsequential error in the address used in mailing a notice of deficiency does not render the notice invalid. See This 2011 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 126">*132 is not the first time we have had to decide the validity of a notice of deficiency addressed with an incorrect ZIP Code. In Although petitioners' names, street number and name, city and state were all correct, the zip code was for petitioners' former California address. Petitioners did not establish that the U.S. Postal Service failed to comply with postal regulations or that a zip code is an element essential to delivery of the notice in question. 2011 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 126">*133 Failure of petitioners to actually receive the notice does not vitiate it. Respondent addressed Notice 1 with petitioner's correct name, street number and name, floor number, city, and State. Moreover, the record demonstrates that the post office discovered the mistaken ZIP Code and corrected it. The post office tracking database shows that Notice 1 was delivered to the proper ZIP Code and that it was eventually declared unclaimed. Petitioner did not present any evidence that the post office failed to comply with postal regulations. And it is well recognized that "Once the notice of deficiency is mailed to the taxpayer's last known address, nothing in the Code requires respondent to take additional steps to effectuate delivery." This is not a case where the Commissioner failed to exercise 2011 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 126">*134 reasonable diligence in ascertaining the taxpayer's last known address following the return of the notice of deficiency. See In sum, we find that Notice 1 is a valid notice of deficiency. Hence, we need not address the validity of Notice 2. To reflect the foregoing,
1. All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.↩
2. Petitioner is a family primary care doctor. Since 2007 she has leased the entire second floor of the 56th Street location for her medical practice. During 2010 she also used the 56th Street location as her residence.↩
3. A post office customer service supervisor testified that standard post office procedures provide that when there is an initial failure to deliver a certified mail item, two additional deliveries are to be attempted.↩
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Eve C.W. Wallin v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue , 744 F.2d 674 ( 1984 )
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John P. Pomeroy v. United States of America, John P. ... , 864 F.2d 1191 ( 1989 )
Gerald D. Ward and Joan Ward (Deceased) v. Commissioner of ... , 907 F.2d 517 ( 1990 )