DocketNumber: No. 219-02L
Citation Numbers: 122 T.C. 396, 2004 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 23, 122 T.C. No. 23
Judges: "Thornton, Michael B."
Filed Date: 6/14/2004
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
*23 Decision was entered for respondent.
Before the effective date of
continuing wage levy on P's employer. After the effective date
of
continuing wage levy.
Held : P's severance pay constitutes "salary or
wages" within the meaning of
the continuing wage levy was initiated before the effective date
of
R's levy of P's severance pay.
*396 OPINION
THORNTON, Judge: Pursuant to
Background
The parties submitted this case fully stipulated pursuant to
Petitioner's 1988-94 Tax Liabilities
Petitioner failed to pay Federal income taxes that he owed for taxable years 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, and 1994. Respondent filed various Notices of Federal Tax Lien with respect to these unpaid taxes. *397 1997, respondent served a continuing wage levy (the continuing wage levy) on petitioner's employer, the City of Oswego. Pursuant to the continuing*25 wage levy, petitioner's employer regularly remitted payments to respondent. These remittances were applied against petitioner's 1988, 1989, 1991, 1992, and 1993 income tax liabilities. At all times, petitioner was aware of the continuing wage levy.
In December 2000, shortly before laying petitioner off, his employer offered him $ 17,116 of severance pay, based on his years of service, current wages, merit, and a waiver of any discrimination claim that he might have had against his employer. Pursuant to the continuing wage levy, petitioner's employer remitted $ 10,068 of the severance pay to respondent. *26 withholdings and paid petitioner the $ 4,000 balance. *27 apparently on the basis of amounts shown as tax on petitioner's late-filed returns. On December 8, 2000, respondent sent petitioner a Notice of Federal Tax Lien Filing and Your Right to a Hearing Under
*398 Notice of Determination
On November 27, 2001, after a hearing, respondent's Appeals Office issued petitioner a notice of determination sustaining the notice of Federal tax lien filing for petitioner's 1996, 1997, and 1999 income tax liabilities but determining that petitioner's 1996, 1997, and 1999 income tax liabilities were not currently collectible through a levy. *28 to the continuing wage levy was "not relevant to the collection of the tax shown on the due process hearing notice to the taxpayer [i. e., petitioner's 1996, 1997, and 1999 income tax liabilities] and may not be considered in this due process hearing."
Discussion
The primary issue is whether the Appeals Office erred in failing to consider petitioner's challenge to the levy of his severance pay that was made in or about December 2000, pursuant to a continuing wage levy that was served on petitioner's employer before the effective date of
Under
The applicable regulation indicates that if a continuing wage levy is served on the taxpayer's employer before the effective date of
Prior to January 19, 1999, the IRS issues a continuous levy
on a taxpayer's wages and a levy on that taxpayer's fixed right
to future payments. The IRS is not required to release either
levy on or after January 19, 1999, until the requirements of
section 6343(a)(1) are met. The taxpayer is not entitled to a
CDP [Collection Due Process] Notice or a CDP hearing under
section 6330 with respect to either levy because both levy
actions were initiated prior to January 19, 1999. *31 Petitioner does not dispute the validity of the above- quoted regulation. Petitioner suggests, however, that the severance pay in issue constituted neither "wages" nor a "fixed right to *400 future payments" within the meaning of the regulation. Rather, petitioner contends, the severance pay "should be considered a separate asset, like a bank account, and subject to a separate levy and thus a separate Collection Due Process Hearing." *32 As explained below, we conclude that petitioner's severance pay constituted "wages" within the meaning of the above-quoted regulation. Accordingly, because the continuing levy on petitioner's wages predated the effective date of
Whether Severance Pay Is Subject to a Continuing Wage Levy
Generally, a levy extends only to property possessed and obligations existing at the time levy is made.
First, severance pay is itself a form of compensation. It is paid by the taxpayer's employer as compensation for termination of the employer-employee relationship.
Second, severance pay is computed generally by reference to the employee's base salary and the employee's length of *402 service or tenure. See Webster's Tenth Collegiate Dictionary 1073 (1997) (defining severance pay as "an allowance usually based on length of service that is payable to an employee on termination of employment").
Third, for Federal income*36 tax and withholding purposes, severance pay is treated in the same manner as salary and wages. Under
Fourth, the term "salary or wages" in
We recognize that the right to severance pay accrues, if at all, upon the occurrence of the one-time event of an individual's termination from employment. Consequently, *38 it is arguable whether severance pay, if paid in a lump sum, raises the same types of administrative problems as are associated with the types of recurring payments (e.g., salary, wages, and commissions) that the Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit identified in
An order and decision will be entered.
1. Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to the Internal Revenue Code as amended, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.↩
2. In 1991, respondent filed a Notice of Federal Tax Lien for petitioner's 1988 and 1989 income tax liabilities. In 1994, respondent filed a second Notice of Federal Tax Lien for petitioner's 1990, 1991, 1992, and 1993 income tax liabilities. In 1995, respondent filed a third Notice of Federal Tax Lien for petitioner's 1994 income tax liability.↩
3. As far as the record reveals, it would appear that this amount was applied to petitioner's 1988, 1989, 1991, 1992, or 1993 income tax liabilities, which were the subject of the continuing wage levy.↩
4. Petitioner administratively protested the levy of his severance pay with the Taxpayer Advocate's Office. On or about Mar. 7, 2001, petitioner filed Form 911, Application for Taxpayer Assistance Order to Relieve Hardship, wherein he requested that respondent's levy be released and that the $ 10,068 be returned. On Mar. 29, 2001, the Taxpayer Advocate's Office denied petitioner's request for relief on the ground that petitioner had failed to establish that the levy had caused a hardship.↩
5. The notice of determination also concluded that petitioner's 1998 income tax liability was not currently collectible through a levy.↩
6. In the notice of determination, the Appeals officer determined that petitioner's 1996, 1997, and 1999 income tax liabilities were not currently collectible and that no levy action will take place to collect these income tax liabilities so long as petitioner's financial condition makes it impossible for him to pay these taxes voluntarily. On the basis of this determination, the parties agree that there is no collection issue regarding respondent's proposed levy of petitioner's 1996, 1997, and 1999 income tax liabilities. The parties also agree that there is no collection issue regarding petitioner's 1998 income tax liability.
In the Appeals Office hearing, petitioner contended that the filing of the notice of Federal tax lien for his 1996, 1997, and 1999 income tax liabilities caused him hardship by impairing his credit. Petitioner raised no issues in his petition or on brief relating to this contention. We deem petitioner to have conceded this issue. See, e.g.,
7. The final regulations were issued on Jan. 17, 2002, and are effective for any levy that occurs on or after Jan. 19, 1999.
8. Petitioner's argument seems to be premised on
9. Generally, this Court's jurisdiction under
10. Whenever any property or right to property upon which levy has been made is insufficient to satisfy the claim for which levy is made, the Commissioner may, thereafter, and as often as may be necessary, proceed to levy in like manner upon any other property subject to levy of the person against whom such claim exists, until the amount due from him, together with all expenses, is fully paid.
11.
12.
13. The legislative history provides little illumination as to whether severance pay should be considered "salary or wages" for this purpose. Before 1976, a levy extended only to obligations that existed at the time of levy. S. Rept. 94-938, at 388 (1976),
14. The Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit has defined "severance pay" as:
"a form of compensation for the termination of the
employment relation, for reasons other than the displaced
employees' misconduct, primarily to alleviate the consequent
need for economic readjustment but also to recompense him for
certain losses attributable to the dismissal."
[
(2d Cir. 1967) (quoting
15. We point out that bonuses, which typically are paid as lump sums, are treated as salary or wages for purposes of continuing levies under
16. Petitioner makes no allegation that his severance package was in the nature of a settlement agreement for personal physical injuries. See
United States v. Long Island Drug Co. , 115 F.2d 983 ( 1940 )
in-the-matter-of-straus-duparquet-inc-debtor-straus-duparquet-inc-v , 386 F.2d 649 ( 1967 )
Driscoll v. Exxon Corporation , 366 F. Supp. 992 ( 1973 )
bankr-l-rep-p-67325-bankr-l-rep-p-67342-in-re-w-t-grant-company , 620 F.2d 319 ( 1980 )
United States v. Jefferson-Pilot Life Insurance Company , 49 F.3d 1020 ( 1995 )