DocketNumber: Docket No. 7537-14L.
Judges: GUSTAFSON
Filed Date: 6/4/2015
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/20/2020
An appropriate order and decision will be entered.
P was the president, sole shareholder, and treasurer of Company (C). In 2002 C filed for bankruptcy and P was removed and replaced by a bankruptcy trustee. C failed to pay over to R employment withholding taxes for its employees for two quarters in 2002. R sent P a Letter 1153 proposing to assess
R filed a notice of Federal tax lien (NFTL) and P timely requested a collection due process (CDP) hearing in September 2013. At the CDP hearing, P attempted to dispute his underlying liability for the penalties. R's settlement officer rejected P's challenge after determining that P had had a prior opportunity to challenge the liability at the November 2006 Appeals conference. R's settlement officer and P discussed collection alternatives; and after P verified his limited income, Appeals issued a notice of determination sustaining the filing of the NFTL but placing P's account in currently not collectible status.
P timely filed a petition in this Court for review of Appeals' determination. R filed a motion for summary judgment, and P filed an opposition.
GUSTAFSON,
For purposes of the Commissioner's motion, we assume correct the facts asserted by Mr. Bishay that are supported by his filings, as well as the facts demonstrated by the Commissioner that Mr. Bishay did not dispute.
Mr. Bishay was the president and sole shareholder of Commonwealth. He also served as an officer and the treasurer of Commonwealth. In 2002 Commonwealth filed in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Massachusetts a petition under the Bankruptcy Code,
In addition, Mr. Bishay argued to Appeals that the IRS was barred from proceeding against him for the trust fund recovery penalties because the IRS had failed to file a proof of claim for the trust fund taxes in Commonwealth's bankruptcy case.2015 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 114">*118 On February 5, 2007, the IRS rejected Mr. Bishay's appeal, determined that he was a responsible person for Commonwealth, and assessed
At a subsequent telephone conference on January 6, 2014, the SO again explained to Mr. Bishay that since he had already had an opportunity to dispute the liability, they could discuss only collection alternatives during the CDP hearing. Mr. Bishay stated that he did not have any earned income, that he received only Social Security benefits, and that he relied on financial assistance from his family. Additionally, Mr. Bishay stated that he was in litigation over funds that a court-appointed receiver had embezzled. At the SO's request, Mr. Bishay provided her with documents verifying this information.
Thereafter, on March 18, 2014, Appeals issued Mr. Bishay a Notice of Determination concerning Collection Action(s) Under 6320 and/or 6330. The notice of determination explained Appeals' conclusions as communicated during the January 6, 2014, telephone CDP hearing--i.e., that Mr. Bishay was precluded from challenging2015 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 114">*120 his underlying liability because he had had a prior opportunity to *112 do so at the November 2006 Appeals conference; and that the IRS had filed a proof of claim in Commonwealth's bankruptcy proceeding. The SO also noted that Mr. Bishay had not offered any collection alternatives. As a result, Appeals determined to sustain the NFTL filing but also determined to place Mr. Bishay's accounts in currently not collectible status.
Mr. Bishay timely filed his petition in this Court arguing that he is not liable for the trust fund recovery penalties because of the bankruptcy court's appointment of a trustee in June 2002, and that collection should not proceed against him because the IRS failed to pursue the trust fund taxes from Commonwealth's bankruptcy estate.2015 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 114">*121 Mr. Bishay resided in Massachusetts at the time he filed his petition.
Under
An employer (here, Commonwealth) is required to withhold from an employee's wages and then pay over to the IRS both income tax,
Before the IRS may assess a
If a taxpayer fails to pay any Federal tax liability after notice and demand,
At the agency-level CDP hearing, the Appeals officer must determine whether the proposed collection action may proceed. In the case of a notice of intent to levy, the procedures for the agency-level CDP hearing before Appeals are set forth in
Second, the taxpayer may "raise at the hearing any relevant issue relating to the unpaid tax or the * * * [collection2015 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 114">*126 action], including" challenges to the appropriateness of the collection action and offers of collection alternatives.
Additionally, the taxpayer may contest the existence and amount of the underlying tax liability, but only if he did not receive a notice of deficiency or *118 otherwise have an opportunity to dispute the tax liability.
Finally, the Appeals officer must determine "whether any proposed collection action balances the need for the efficient collection of taxes with the legitimate concern of the person that any collection action be no more intrusive than necessary."
When Appeals issues its determination, the taxpayer may "appeal such determination to the Tax Court", pursuant to
Mr. Bishay makes two related but distinct arguments that Appeals' determination was erroneous. The two arguments involve different legal theories that require separate analyses under
In addition to two liability arguments that he made before Appeals but has since abandoned,
In the specific context of CDP cases involving trust fund recovery penalties, this Court has held that a taxpayer has an "opportunity" to dispute his liability for a trust fund recovery penalty when he receives a Letter 1153.
As we previously discussed, Mr. Bishay received a Letter 1153 and unsuccessfully raised an underlying liability challenge at the November 2006 Appeals conference. At that conference Mr. Bishay made the same liability argument that he now attempts to make, i.e., that after the bankruptcy filing he was not responsible for Commonwealth's financial affairs. Mr. Bishay's receipt of Letter 1153 and his subsequent Appeals conference was, for purposes of Second, Mr. Bishay argues that the Commissioner should not be allowed to collect the Preliminarily, we note that the record developed before Appeals contradicts Mr. Bishay's contention that the Commissioner failed to follow bankruptcy procedure for filing a proof of claim. Before and during the CDP hearing, Mr. Bishay contended that the Commissioner failed to file a proof of claim in Commonwealth's bankruptcy case. He repeated that contention in the petition he filed in this Court; and in his opposition to the Commissioner's motion for summary judgment, he "disputed", without elaboration or corroboration, the IRS's filing of a proof of claim. However, Mr. Bishay's own submissions to Appeals show that the IRS did file a proof of claim in the bankruptcy case2015 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 114">*132 on September 26, 2002 (reflected on Commonwealth's claims register as Claim number 7). This belies Mr. Bishay's implicit contention that the Commissioner was dilatory in pursuing collection of the trust fund taxes in the bankruptcy case. But even if we assume, for purposes of the Commissioner's motion, that more aggressive efforts by the IRS in the bankruptcy proceeding could have led to a substantial collection, that fact would not undermine the IRS's right to collect the *124 The IRS has no obligation to first collect employment taxes from the employer before assessing and collecting the corresponding trust fund recovery penalty from a responsible person under Similarly,2015 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 114">*133 the IRS is not obligated to collect taxes from an employer's corporate assets or from its bankruptcy estate before collecting a trust fund recovery penalty from the responsible person. Mr. Bishay's argument that the IRS had to collect the unpaid trust fund taxes from Commonwealth's bankruptcy estate was properly rejected in the CDP hearing. Appeals did not abuse its discretion by rejecting Mr. Bishay's challenge to the appropriateness of the IRS's collection method of filing an NFTL to protect the interests of the public fisc.2015 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 114">*134 As we have discussed, the IRS is not obligated to act as a responsible person's collection agent and is not required to first collect the employment taxes from the employer, or the employer's bankruptcy estate, before collecting a trust fund recovery penalty from a responsible person. It will always be true that the IRS's collection of the trust funds from the employer, from a bankrupt estate, from another responsible person, or from some other source will be much less intrusive for the complaining responsible person--but he could not avoid collection merely by affirming this truism in2015 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 114">*135 a CDP hearing. Mr. Bishay does not point to any specific collection prospect that the IRS could easily pursue to recover the trust funds. He simply prefers that the IRS pursue hypothetical prospects before pursuing him. This does not amount to a showing of any failure by Appeals to "balance the need for the efficient collection of taxes with" Mr. Bishay's concerns about intrusiveness. Moreover, the action sustained by Appeals' determination--i.e., the filing of an NFTL, rather than issuing a notice of intent to levy--was among the less intrusive collection methods available to the IRS. By filing the NFTL and also *127 placing Mr. Bishay's account in currently not collectible status--meaning that further collection efforts by the IRS would cease unless and until Mr. Bishay's circumstances changed--the IRS was only preserving its place in Mr. Bishay's line of creditors. The IRS chose the least intrusive collection method and certainly did not abuse its discretion in doing so. In short, Appeals' determination to sustain the NFTL filing was not an abuse of discretion. We will therefore grant the Commissioner's motion for summary judgment, and to that end--
1. Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to the Internal Revenue Code ("the Code") and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure. All amounts are rounded to the nearest dollar.↩
2. Mr. Bishay's opposition also included a cross-motion for summary judgment. The Court denied that cross-motion by an order dated October 29, 2014.↩
3. The case was filed under chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code but was converted to a chapter 7 bankruptcy on June 3, 2002.↩
4. Mr. Bishay contends that the Commissioner failed to file a proof of claim in Commonwealth's bankruptcy proceeding. This contention is contradicted by the administrative record developed before Appeals. The request for a CDP hearing that Mr. Bishay submitted to Appeals appears in our record as Exhibit C; and attached to that request (as Exhibit L thereto) is the claims register showing the filing of the IRS's proof of claim in the total amount of $115,302.↩
5. Before Appeals and in his petition in this Court, Mr. Bishay also argued that the IRS had failed to file a notice of claim in the receivership proceeding styled
6. The IRS assessed $22,119 for the tax period ending March 31 and $19,493 for the tax period ending June 30, 2002.↩
7. The petition also appears to argue that the liability is owed not by Mr. Bishay but by Commonwealth. Mr. Bishay does not repeat this contention in his opposition, and we assume he has abandoned it--and for good reason: It is true that Commonwealth (and not Mr. Bishay) owes the trust fund taxes in the first instance as the withholding employer; but what Mr. Bishay owes, as a "responsible person", is the related but distinct liability for the
8. A Letter 1153 constitutes the notice of proposed assessment of a
9. The lack of opportunity for judicial review after the Letter 1153 proceeding does not severely prejudice the taxpayer because, as we have previously noted, "the
10. The merits of this argument, which we do not reach, are problematic, since the tax periods at issue are the quarters that ended March 31 and June 30, 2002, and Mr. Bishay was not removed until June 2002, the last month of the second of those quarters.
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