DocketNumber: Docket No. 3194-82.
Filed Date: 1/13/1983
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/20/2020
MEMORANDUM OPINION
WILES,
Regulations have been promulgated pursuant to section 7502(b) to govern cases involving privately metered mail. Section 301.7502-1(c)(1)(iii)(b), Proced. & Admin. Regs., contains the following language relevant to the instant case.
(b) If the postmark on the envelope or wrapper is made other than by the United States Post Office, (1) the postmark so made must bear a date on or before the last date, or the last day of the period, prescribed for filing the document, and (2) the document must be received by the agency, officer, or*767 office with which it is required to be filed not later than the time when a document contained in an envelope or other appropriate wrapper which is properly addressed and mailed and sent by the same class of mail would ordinarily be received if it were postmarked at the same point of origin by the United States Post Office on the last date, or the last day of the period, prescribed for filing the document.
Thus, section 7502 applies to privately metered mail if the postmark bears a timely date and delivery occurs within the time that it ordinarily takes for delivery of an envelope, bearing a postmark of the United States Post Office, properly mailed on the last day prescribed for filing.
Petitioners argue that their petition was timely mailed from Corpus Christi, Texas, on February 8, 1982, the ninetieth day prescribed for its filing and that the petition was actually received by the Tax Court within the time ordinarily*768 required for the delivery of a document properly mailed from the same point of origin and postmarked on February 8, 1982. Respondent, on the other hand, maintains that mail from Corpus Christi, Texas, to Washington, D.C., takes no longer than 3 days to deliver and, consequently, petitioners have failed to establish that their petition was received at the Tax Court within the time ordinarily required for the delivery of a document properly mailed from Corpus Christi, Texas, on February 8, 1982.
Respondent's witness, Erwin Hill (hereinafter Hill) was employed by the United States Postal Service as a quality control officer from 1978 through May 1982.Part of Hill's duties as a quality control officer included the random sampling of mail to determine the delivery time to various cities. Hill testified that the delivery time for metered mail as compared to stamped mail is "basically the same" and that the majority of mail sent from Corpus Christi, Texas, to Washington, D.C., is delivered in 3 days. While respondent provided the Court with statistical samplings which generally supported a 3-day delivery period, Hill further testified that it would not be unusual for the delivery of*769 mail between those two cities to take 4 days. One of petitioners' witnesses, Mike Flores (hereinafter Flores), a mail supervisor for the United States Postal Service, also testified that it would not be unusual for a letter which was mailed from Corpus Christi, Texas, to Washington, D.C., to take 4 days to deliver. Moreover, while both Hill and Flores testified that the Postal Service had goals to deliver 95 percent of the mail in less than 4 days, neither one of them testified that 95 percent of the mail was
The petitioners also presented 4 affidavits from individuals associated with Matthews & Branscomb, the Texas law firm which prepared and mailed the petition in the instant case. *770 out.
Whether the petition was received at the Tax Court in the ordinary course of the mail is a purely factual question.
*771 To reflect the foregoing,
1. The notice of deficiency was issued after petitioners had paid the amounts upon which the fraud additions to tax are based. ↩
2. All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as amended.↩
3. See also
4. All of these affidavits were received in evidence. Respondent did not object to their admissibility.↩