DocketNumber: No. 22101-04
Citation Numbers: 132 T.C. 279, 2009 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 12, 132 T.C. No. 13
Judges: Halpern
Filed Date: 5/4/2009
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
P corporation provided skilled and unskilled laborers for casual employment (temporary laborers) to more than 250 client companies. P gave temporary laborers the option of being paid by check or in cash. For those paid in cash, P failed to withhold Federal income taxes and pay either the employer or employee portions of FICA taxes (together, employment taxes) for all taxable quarters in 1995, 1996, 1997, and 1998. In 2002, P's president and sole shareholder, N, pleaded guilty to failing to withhold and pay the employment taxes and to conspiracy to defraud the United States. R determined P was liable for the employment taxes under
1.
2.
3.
4.
*280 HALPERN,
(3) Is petitioner liable for the employment taxes?
(4) Is petitioner liable for fraud penalties?
(5) Have the periods of limitations for assessing and collecting the employment taxes expired?
A table setting forth the employment taxes and fraud penalties respondent determined is attached to this report as an appendix.
Unless otherwise stated, all section references are to the Internal Revenue Code (the Code) in effect for the taxable quarters in issue, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.
FINDINGS OF FACT
Some facts are stipulated and are so found. The stipulation of facts, with accompanying exhibits, is incorporated herein by this reference. At the time the petition was filed, petitioner's principal place of business was in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Beginning in 1995 and extending through 1998, petitioner operated an employment service that provided skilled and unskilled laborers for casual employment (temporary laborers) to more than 250 client companies *15 (clients) for a fee. Clients paid petitioner by check for the services of temporary laborers, and petitioner offered temporary laborers the choice of being paid by check or of being paid in cash (temporary laborers paid by check and temporary laborers paid in cash, respectively). Petitioner included temporary laborers paid by check on its regular payroll and treated them as its employees for employment tax purposes. Petitioner disregarded temporary laborers paid in cash for employment tax purposes. To remain competitive in recruiting temporary laborers, petitioner honored temporary laborers' choices as to how to be paid. In placing temporary laborers with clients, petitioner did not distinguish between temporary laborers paid by check and temporary laborers paid in cash. During the taxable quarters here in issue, petitioner paid $ 14,845,019 to temporary laborers paid in cash.
During those periods, Luan Nguyen (Mr. Nguyen) was president of petitioner and its sole shareholder. As more fully explained
Petitioner's relationship with its clients was established by contract. A typical client contract (client contract) included the following provisions:
1. Hi-Q will provide to CLIENT the following classifications of temporary employees at the rates set forth.
SERVICE | RATE |
GENERAL LABOR | $ 9.00 per/hr |
* * * * * * *
2. The hourly rate of payment for services listed above shall be paid by CLIENT to Hi-Q, per hour, per employee. * * *
*282 3. Payment shall be made in full, to Hi-Q by check within 7 days from the date of the invoice rendered by Hi-Q. * * *
* * * * * * *
5. CLIENT agrees not to advance any money, goods or services to Hi-Q employees without Hi-Q's prior written consent. CLIENT agrees not to leave CLIENT'S premises with any cash, negotiable instrument, or other valuable items thereon * * * unattended in the presence of any Hi-Q employees or [to] entrust the same to the care, custody and control of any Hi-Q employees without Hi-Q's prior written consent.
6. CLIENT will not authorize Hi-Q employees to operate any vehicle without Hi-Q's prior written consent. * * *
7. In the unlikely event that the services of a Hi-Q employee prove unsatisfactory, *17 Hi-Q shall immediately provide a replacement. * * *
8. Hi-Q shall promptly pay all employees, and shall make all federal, state and local payroll tax deductions, deposits and payments as required by law.
* * * * * * *
10. Hi-Q shall provide worker's compensation insurance coverage for all employees and provide evidence of same to CLIENT.
11. Upon notification to Hi-Q by CLIENT and written consent of Hi-Q, CLIENT shall have the right to hire any Hi-Q employee who has worked for CLIENT for a period in excess of 520 consecutive hours or 13 consecutive weeks, at no fee or commission paid to Hi-Q. However, upon employing any Hi-Q employee prior to completion of 520 consecutive hours, CLIENT agrees to pay to Hi-Q a fee of ten (10%) percent of employee's annual salary, i.e. 2080 hours [at] employee's starting hourly rate paid by CLIENT to employee.
12. If without Hi-Q's prior written consent, any employee referred to CLIENT by Hi-Q is employed by CLIENT, or by another division, subsidiary or affiliate of CLIENT, within six (6) months from the last date said employee was on Hi-Q's payroll and working for CLIENT, CLIENT agrees to pay to Hi-Q a fee of ten (10%) percent of employee's annual salary, *18 i.e. 2080 hours at employee's starting hourly rate paid by CLIENT to employee.
Petitioner employed job counselors responsible for all aspects of recruiting temporary laborers. Job counselors recruited temporary laborers through newspaper advertisements and referrals. Job counselors interviewed each temporary laborer and performed background checks by calling the laborer's prior employer or listed reference. After recruiting a temporary laborer, job counselors matched the laborer with an appropriate position according to the laborer's qualifications and the job descriptions clients provided. *283 Before placing a temporary laborer with a client, petitioner required the laborer to complete a job application. Approximately 80 to 90 percent of the temporary laborers petitioner recruited chose to be temporary laborers paid in cash.
In its promotional material, petitioner made many promises to clients. It stated that, by hiring temporary laborers through petitioner, clients could avoid paying "Employee Tax" and "Social Security". It pledged to make "all federal, state and local payroll tax deductions, deposits and payments as required by law." It represented that it was responsible *19 for providing workers' compensation insurance for all temporary laborers. It claimed that it "[offered] training to our employees on computers, on job-specific work, languages, and specialized industrial machinery", and stated that, "if your location has no access to public transit, we will provide HI-Q employees with [free] transportation to your site." Petitioner also promised that clients could "easily" hire any temporary laborer, ensuring that clients hired only "the best of the best" to their "permanent staff."
As stated, petitioner treated temporary laborers paid by check as its employees for employment tax purposes. On its Forms 941, Employer's Quarterly Federal Tax Return, it reported as wages the amounts it paid those temporary laborers. For those temporary laborers, it withheld Federal income taxes under
To generate funds to pay temporary laborers paid in cash, petitioner cashed some client checks at check-cashing agencies. It did not record on its books the proceeds of those client checks as business income or the payments to temporary laborers paid in cash as payroll expenses. For the years in issue, petitioner failed to report $ 14,845,019 as cash wages paid.
Clients could refuse the services of any temporary laborer, and petitioner was contractually bound to provide a replacement *284 laborer on request. Nonetheless, petitioner retained the right at any time to reassign any temporary laborer from one client to another. Petitioner required temporary laborers unable to report to a client's premises for work to notify petitioner; petitioner, in turn, notified the client.
Clients completed timesheets for petitioner showing the hours temporary laborers worked. Petitioner billed clients for temporary laborers' services by means of invoices based on those timesheets. Often, however, petitioner paid temporary laborers before receiving payment from clients.
Mr. Nguyen was a defendant in the criminal case of
(CONSPIRACY TO DEFRAUD THE UNITED STATES)
THE GRAND JURY CHARGES THAT:
1. At all times relevant *22 to this Indictment, Hi-Q Personnel, Inc. ("Hi-Q Personnel") was a corporation doing business * * * as a temporary employment service that supplied casual laborers to clients for a fee.
2. At all times relevant to this Indictment, LUAN NGUYEN * * * was the president and sole shareholder of Hi-Q Personnel.
3. At all times relevant to this Indictment, PHUONG NGUYEN * * * was employed by Hi-Q Personnel and responsible for the day-to-day operation *285 of the business, including, but not limited to, the supervision of the preparation of the payroll[,] including the cash payroll; the supervision of the hiring of temporary laborers who were given the option of being paid in cash; and the cashing of checks used to pay the cash payroll.
4. At all times relevant to this Indictment, the casual laborers supplied * * * to client businesses were employees of Hi-Q Personnel. As part of its business of providing laborers to its clients, Hi-Q Personnel acknowledged and agreed in its contracts with its clients that Hi-Q Personnel, and not the client, was responsible for collecting, accounting for and paying over to the United States all employment taxes.
5. [F]rom 1995 through 1998, Hi-Q Personnel supplied temporary *23 laborers to approximately 259 client companies.
6. At all times relevant to this Indictment, LUAN NGUYEN, * * * as the President and sole shareholder of Hi-Q Personnel, was required by Title 26 of the United States Code, to collect, truthfully account for, and pay over to the United States, taxes imposed by Title 26, United States Code, namely Hi-Q Personnel's employees' federal income tax withholdings * * * [and FICA taxes,] (* * * collectively referred to as "employment taxes" * * *). In this regard, LUAN NGUYEN * * * and Hi-Q Personnel were required truthfully to account for and pay over the employment taxes each quarter by filing * * * [Form 941] by reporting therein the total wages paid to Hi-Q Personnel employees and the amount of employment taxes due and owing to the United States on those wages, and by paying employment taxes due on those wages at the time the Form 941 was filed * * *.
7. [From January 1, 1995, through January 31, 1999, the defendants LUAN NGUYEN and PHUONG NGUYEN] conspired and agreed together * * * to defraud the United States concerning its governmental functions and rights, by impeding, impairing, obstructing and defeating the lawful governmental *24 functions of the Internal Revenue Service [IRS] * * * in the ascertainment, computation, assessment and collection of revenue, that is, the employment taxes due and owing to the United States * * * from Hi-Q Personnel.
8. The object of the conspiracy was to prevent the IRS from discovering the actual wages paid to the employees of Hi-Q Personnel and from assessing and collecting employment taxes due thereon.
9. It was a part of the conspiracy that Hi-Q Personnel contracted with various businesses in the greater Philadelphia, Pennsylvania area to supply the businesses with casual laborers * * *.
*286 10. It was further a part of the conspiracy that Hi-Q Personnel acknowledged and agreed in its contracts with its clients that Hi-Q Personnel, and not the client, was responsible for collecting, accounting for and paying over to the United States all employment taxes due on wages earned by the laborers.
11. It was further a part of the conspiracy that defendants LUAN NGUYEN * * * and PHUONG NGUYEN * * * caused Hi-Q Personnel * * * to give the laborers * * * a choice to be paid either in cash, which they understood to mean that there would be no employment *25 taxes withheld from their wages, or by check in which case all appropriate payroll taxes would be collected, accounted for, and paid over to the United States.
(a) When laborers * * * opted to be paid in cash, they were not required to produce proper identification for income tax purposes or prepare the necessary documents for payroll tax deductions, and did not receive * * * [a Form W-2] from Hi-Q Personnel.
12. It was further a part of the conspiracy that defendants LUAN NGUYEN * * * and PHUONG NGUYEN * * * paid a substantial number of their employee laborers in cash to conceal the true number and identities of the employees, the amounts of cash wages paid to Hi-Q Personnel's employee laborers, and the fact that they did not collect or account for the employment taxes due on the cash wages paid.
13. It was further a part of the conspiracy that to generate the cash needed to meet and facilitate the concealment of its cash payroll, the defendants LUAN NGUYEN * * * and PHUONG NGUYEN * * * used check cashing agencies to cash checks obtained from their clients to pay for the labor provided by Hi-Q Personnel.
* * * * * * *
14. It was further a part of the conspiracy that to conceal the amount *26 of employment tax due to the United States, the defendants LUAN NGUYEN * * * and PHUONG NGUYEN * * * substantially understated and misrepresented the wages paid to the employees of Hi-Q Personnel on the * * * [Forms 941] filed on behalf of Hi-Q Personnel each quarter with the IRS during the conspiracy.
15. It was further a part of the conspiracy that * * * [from January 1, 1995, through January 31, 1999,] the defendants LUAN NGUYEN * * * and PHUONG NGUYEN * * * failed to account for, collect and pay over to the IRS employment taxes in the approximate amount of $ 3,326,054.48 on total unreported wages of approximately $ 14,845,019.24.
16. In furtherance of the conspiracy and to accomplish its object, the defendants committed the following overt acts * * *:
(a) [Between January 1, 1995, and December 31, 1998,] on different occasions, the defendants LUAN NGUYEN * * * and PHUONG NGUYEN, * * * together and separately, cashed corporate checks received from client companies at check cashing agencies located in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
*287 (b) [Between January 1, 1995, and December 31, 1998,] on different occasions, the defendants LUAN NGUYEN * * * and PHUONG NGUYEN * * * caused Hi-Q *27 Personnel to pay employees of Hi-Q Personnel in cash at the offices of Hi-Q Personnel.
(c) [T]he defendants LUAN NGUYEN * * * and PHUONG NGUYEN * * * filed with the IRS in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania a false Form 941 for * * * [each quarter, sixteen in total, in taxable years 1995 through 1998,] which substantially misrepresented the wages paid to Hi-Q Personnel employees, each filing constituting a separate overt act * * *[.]
* * * * * * *
All in violation of Title
* * * * * * *
(FAILURE TO COLLECT, ACCOUNT FOR AND PAY OVER EMPLOYMENT TAXES) THE GRAND JURY FURTHER CHARGES THAT: 1. Paragraphs 1 through 6 of Count One are incorporated herein as if fully set forth. 2. [For the taxable quarters beginning December 31, 1996, and through the taxable quarter ending December 31, 1998, defendant LUAN NGUYEN,] being a person required under Title 26, United States Code, to collect, account for and pay over taxes imposed by Title 26, United States Code, did willfully fail to collect and cause to be collected, truthfully account for and cause to truthfully be accounted for, and pay over and cause to be paid over to the United States, federal income *28 tax withholdings and * * * [FICA] taxes, of approximately * * * [$ 2,224,384.73] due and owing to the United States on taxable wages paid by Hi-Q Personnel * * * to its employee laborers of approximately * * * [$ 9,640,197.62]. All in violation of Title
On March 10, 2003, at the change of plea hearing, Mr. Nguyen accepted the guilty plea agreement (the plea agreement), thereby pleading guilty to all 10 counts in the indictment. On July 24, 2003, the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania sentenced Mr. Nguyen to 150 months in prison and $ 1,000 in special assessments, and, on October 10, 2003, the court entered a judgment of conviction against him in the criminal case.
The notice states the amounts of employment taxes respondent determined for the taxable quarters in issue along with the fraud penalties he determined. See appendix. Respondent determined a fraud penalty for each taxable quarter in issue.
The notice omits a list of the temporary laborers that respondent determined to be petitioner's employees during those taxable quarters. That omission is explained as follows: Please *29 Note: No individuals were listed * * * due to inadequate records. While the books and records provided by the Taxpayer did not identify each individual worker to be reclassified [as an employee], the administrative file contains sufficient evidence to support a class of workers identified as "Temporary Laborers".
OPINION
Petitioner operated an employment service providing temporary laborers to clients for a fee. Petitioner offered temporary laborers the option of being paid by check or in cash. Petitioner included temporary laborers paid by check on its regular payroll and treated them as its employees for employment tax purposes. Petitioner disregarded temporary laborers paid in cash for employment tax purposes.
Mr. Nguyen, petitioner's president and sole shareholder, was indicted on, and pleaded guilty to, various counts involving conspiracy to defraud the United States and failure to pay employment taxes with respect to the cash payments to temporary laborers paid in cash.
The present action involves respondent's attempts to collect the unpaid employment taxes (and fraud penalties) from petitioner.
We shall address the issues remaining for decision in the order stated. *30 Our authority to determine the employment classification question here in issue and the proper amount of employment tax is found in
Relying on the doctrine of issue preclusion, respondent argues that, as a result of the plea agreement, petitioner may not contest its responsibility to pay the employment taxes here in issue. Petitioner objects. We agree with respondent.
In The doctrine of issue preclusion, or collateral estoppel, provides that, once an issue of fact or law is "actually and necessarily determined by a court of competent jurisdiction, that determination is conclusive in subsequent suits based on a different cause of action involving a party to the prior litigation."
Under the doctrine of issue preclusion, or collateral estoppel, (1) the issue to be decided in the second case must be identical in all respects to the issue decided in the first case, (2) a court of competent jurisdiction must have rendered a *31 final judgment in the first case, (3) a party may invoke the doctrine only against parties to the first case or those in privity with them, (4) the parties must have actually litigated the issue and the resolution of the issue must have been essential to the prior decision, and (5) the controlling facts and legal principles must remain unchanged. See
Petitioner does not dispute the second or fifth conditions. Petitioner, however, contends the other three conditions are not satisfied, arguing that: (1) The fourth condition is not satisfied because Mr. Nguyen pleaded guilty, and so did not actually litigate any issue; (2) the first condition is not satisfied because the issue before us is not identical to any issue decided in the criminal case; and (3) the third condition *290 is not satisfied because petitioner is not in privity with Mr. Nguyen. We disagree with all three arguments.
A conviction based on a guilty plea is "nevertheless a judgment on the merits sufficient for purposes of collateral estoppel *32 to preclude relitigation of issues determination of which was essential to the conclusion reached."
Mr. Nguyen pleaded guilty to the charge of willfully failing to collect, truthfully account for, and pay employment taxes on taxable wages petitioner paid temporary laborers paid in cash. Specifically, Mr. Nguyen pleaded guilty to violating
The reason Mr. Nguyen -- and not petitioner -- was charged with the violation of
Petitioner argues, however, that Mr. Nguyen's guilty plea is consistent with the theory that the clients were the temporary laborers' employers. Petitioner relies on
Petitioner's argument is founded on the precept that a guilty plea admits only the minimum facts necessary to sustain the indictment's charges. See, e.g.,
"A sole or controlling stockholder can be in privity with his * * * closely held corporation."
It is uncontroverted that Mr. Nguyen was petitioner's president and sole shareholder. Mr. Nguyen committed tax fraud on behalf of petitioner (not, as petitioner contends, in his "
The conditions for issue preclusion apply. In the criminal case, Mr. Nguyen was convicted of failing in his duty to collect, account for, and pay the employment taxes imposed by law on petitioner as the employer of temporary laborers. Petitioner is therefore precluded from denying that temporary laborers paid in cash were its employees. As a corollary, petitioner is also precluded from denying its liability for the payment of employment taxes with respect to those temporary laborers, as set forth in the *39 notice.
While we have held that petitioner is precluded from denying its liability for the payment of employment taxes with respect to temporary laborers paid in cash, the parties, particularly respondent, devoted considerable argument to whether the evidence (apart from that supporting issue preclusion) shows that petitioner was the common law employer of the temporary laborers. Even if we agreed with petitioner that it was not the common law employer of the temporary laborers (which we do not *40 ), petitioner is nevertheless their statutory employer under
(1) if the person for whom the individual performs or performed the services does not have control of the payment of the wages for such services, the term "employer" * * * means the person having control of the payment of such wages * * *
Petitioner contends that the clients "determined how much they would ultimately pay for any particular * * * [temporary laborer]." If petitioner means that the clients determined how much they paid
For the reasons stated, petitioner is the statutory employer of the temporary laborers. Petitioner is thus liable for the employment taxes as set forth in the notice. See
In the petition, petitioner argues that the amount of employment taxes due and owing on the $ 14,845,019 of unreported cash wages should be offset by the earned income credits to which temporary laborers paid in cash would have been entitled under
Petitioner does, however, argue that respondent's determinations *44 of employment taxes should be disregarded because they are "arbitrary, capricious or without reasonable foundation." *45 for payroll tax deduction purposes. Given petitioner's failure to secure Forms W-4, Employee's Withholding Allowance Certificate, from the temporary laborers paid in cash, respondent argues that he could have proposed an income tax withholding rate of 28 percent. *46 Instead, for each taxable quarter in issue, respondent used the more favorable "actual" rate petitioner itself used for *297 income tax withholding purposes on its Forms 941. See appendix.
We shall sustain the employment taxes respondent determined.
We next address whether, for each taxable quarter in issue, petitioner is liable for the fraud penalty respondent determined.
"Fraud is defined as an intentional wrongdoing designed to evade tax believed to be owing."
In section IV. of this report we sustained the employment taxes respondent determined, and we here find that the entire underpayment is attributable to fraud. Given Mr. Nguyen's conviction for conspiracy to defraud the United States, we agree with respondent that petitioner is precluded from denying fraud. Notwithstanding issue preclusion, we also find fraud by clear and convincing evidence on the facts before us.
Mr. *48 Nguyen pleaded guilty to one count of defrauding the United States in connection with his willful failure as an officer of petitioner to collect, truthfully account for, and pay the employment taxes here in issue. Thus, fraudulent intent to evade the employment taxes was an element of the crimes of which Mr. Nguyen was charged, pleaded guilty, and was convicted.
Mr. Nguyen's fraudulent intent with respect to petitioner's employment tax obligations is imputed to petitioner. See
Petitioner's president and sole shareholder was convicted of conspiracy to defraud the United States by willfully failing to comply with petitioner's statutory obligation to collect, account for, and pay employment taxes. That conviction precludes petitioner from here denying its fraudulent intent.
Even if petitioner is not precluded from denying its fraudulent intent, the facts independently support a finding of fraud. Petitioner, acting through its agents, offered temporary laborers cash wages not reduced by employment taxes. Petitioner understood its employment tax obligations, as demonstrated by its proper payment of employment taxes for temporary laborers paid by check. To conceal its disparate *50 employment tax treatment of temporary laborers according to their method of payment, petitioner ignored temporary laborers paid in cash for
Petitioner did not determine who was to be paid in cash under any scenario." That may be true, but it is irrelevant; petitioner knowingly ignored its obligation to withhold and to pay employment taxes with respect to temporary laborers paid in cash. We find that petitioner intended to evade its employment tax obligations.
Because petitioner is liable for the underpayment of employment taxes and intended to prevent the collection of those taxes, petitioner is liable for the
Because petitioner filed false or fraudulent returns, i.e., the false and fraudulent Forms 941, the usual 3-year period of limitations of
We sustain respondent's determinations of deficiencies in and penalties with respect to petitioner's employment taxes for all taxable quarters in issue.
APPENDIX
Federal | Federal | |||
*2*Taxable | Unreported | withholding | withholding tax | |
*2*quarter | wages | tax raten.1 | liability | |
1995 | Q1 | $550,300.17 | 0.0565 | $31,091.96 |
Q2 | 578,706.40 | 0.0494 | 28,588.10 | |
Q3 | 855,895.25 | 0.0510 | 43,650.66 | |
Q4 | 734,370.85 | 0.0599 | 43,988.81 | |
1996 | Q1 | 669,742.84 | 0.0616 | 41,256.16 |
Q2 | 784,396.38 | 0.0643 | 50,436.69 | |
Q3 | 1,031,409.80 | 0.0643 | 66,319.65 | |
Q4 | 914,585.63 | 0.0746 | 68,228.09 | |
1997 | Q1 | 925,198.32 | 0.0818 | 75,681.22 |
Q2 | 982,099.62 | 0.0722 | 70,907.59 | |
Q3 | 1,083,568.56 | 0.0732 | 79,317.21 | |
Q4 | 1,003,822.37 | 0.0756 | 75,888.97 | |
1998 | Q1 | 1,202,354.30 | 0.0857 | 103,041.76 |
Q2 | 1,098,759.00 | 0.0791 | 86,911.84 | |
*301 | Q3 | 1,202,302.80 | 0.0758 | 91,134.55 |
Q4 | 1,227,506.95 | 0.0801 | 98,323.30 | |
*5*n.1 To calculate for each taxable quarterthe Federal withholding | ||||
*5*tax liability on the unreported wages petitionerpaid to temporary | ||||
*5*laborers paid in cash, respondent used the "actual"withholding | ||||
*5*rate petitioner calculated in its corresponding Forms 941,which | ||||
*5*reported the wages and withholdings of temporary laborers paidby | ||||
*5*check. |
*2*Taxable | FICA tax | ||
*2*quarter | liability n.2 | fraud penalties | |
1995 | Q1 | $ 84,195.93 | $ 86,465.91 |
Q2 | 88,542.08 | 87,847.63 | |
Q3 | 130,951.97 | 130,951.97 | |
Q4 | 112,358.74 | 117,260.66 | |
1996 | Q1 | 102,470.65 | 107,795.10 |
Q2 | 120,012.65 | 127,837.00 | |
Q3 | 157,805.70 | 168,094.01 | |
Q4 | 139,931.60 | 156,119.77 | |
1997 | Q1 | 141,555.34 | 162,927.42 |
Q2 | 150,261.24 | 165,876.62 | |
Q3 | 165,785.99 | 183,827.40 | |
Q4 | 153,584.82 | 172,105.34 | |
1998 | Q1 | 183,960.21 | 215,251.48 |
Q2 | 168,110.13 | 191,266.48 | |
Q3 | 183,952.33 | 206,315.16 | |
Q4 | 187,808.56 | 214,598.90 | |
*4*n.2 Secs. 3101 and 3111 each required petitioner | |||
*4*to pay 7.65 percent of total wages. Therefore | |||
*4*the FICA taxes in the notice represented 15.30 | |||
*4*percent of the unreported wages. |
1. Principally, petitioner concedes that it is not entitled to relief under
2. The taxable quarters in issue with respect to count 1 (the 16 quarters in 1995 through 1998) differ from the taxable quarters in issue with respect to counts 2 through 10 (the 8 quarters in 1997 through 1998). The reason is that the period of limitations for violations of
3. Petitioner relies on
4. Any person required under this title to collect, account for, and pay over any tax imposed by this title who willfully fails to collect or truthfully account for and pay over such tax shall, in addition to other penalties provided by law, be guilty of a felony * * *.
5. Tit. (a) Whoever commits an offense against the United States or aids, abets, counsels, commands, induces or procures its commission, is punishable as a principal. (b) Whoever willfully causes an act to be done which if directly performed by him or another would be an offense against the United States, is punishable as a principal.↩
6. Were it pertinent to our decision, we would find that, applying the factors courts generally use to determine whether an individual is the common law employee of the person for whom he performs services, e.g., degree of control, right to discharge, permanency of the relationship, and the relationship the parties intended to create, see
7. Indeed, petitioner often paid temporary laborers before receiving payment from clients.↩
8. Although some client contracts included an additional markup as a fee (generally a percentage of the hourly rate), petitioner failed to offer convincing evidence that it paid temporary laborers in accordance with the contract terms.
9. Respondent argues that petitioner is precluded from making that argument because it was not raised in the petition. We deem the petition amended and allow petitioner to make the argument. See
10. Although respondent did not cite the source of his authority to propose an income tax withholding rate of 28 percent, we assume he relies on the Internal Revenue Manual (IRM). 2 Audit, IRM (CCH) pts. 4.23.8.4, at 10,779-773-30 (Feb. 1, 2003) (Relief for Employer When Employees Have Paid Income Tax on Wages), and 4.23.8.8, at 10,779-773-39 (Feb. 1, 2003) (Computing Income Tax Withholding), direct respondent to compute withholding either under existing law and regulations or using
11. We assume that, as a result of understating its business income, petitioner evaded 80 to 90 percent of its corporate income tax. We believe that any corporate income tax fraud was part and parcel of an overall intent to defraud the Government. Petitioner had to avoid both the income taxes and the employment taxes due respondent to evade its responsibility to pay either. The reporting of one would almost certainly have led respondent to challenge the omission of the other.
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