DocketNumber: Docket No. 11950-81.
Filed Date: 10/20/1981
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/20/2020
MEMORANDUM OPINION
DAWSON,
CANTREL,
This compulsary (sic) petitioning is unconstitutional and I do not want any part of it.
The Internal Revenue Service has a remedy at law where they have the burden of proof on them and I am not going to have that set aside because of your tyrannical methods.
I strongly demand that you dismiss this action for lack of jurisdiction.
The day after respondent filed his motion, the Court, on July 16, 1981, issued an order which was served on petitioner together with a copy of respondent's motion to July 21, 1981. That order states in part, as follows --
Upon due consideration, it is
ORDERED that petitioner may on or before August 17, 1981, file a proper amended petition pursuant to Rule 34, or an objection to respondent's above referenced motion. The Court will thereupon, take such action as it deems appropriate, which if it determines that a proper petition or amended petition has not been filed, may include granting respondent's motion and entering a decision against petitioner in the full amount of*134 the deficiency as set forth in respondent's notice of deficiency upon which this case is based.
Petitioner did not file a proper amended petition but rather chose to file an "Answer to motion to dismiss and to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction" on August 19, 1981.
Rule 34(b) provides in pertinent part that the petition in a deficiency action shall contain "Clear and concise assignments of each and every error which the petitioner alleges to have been committed by the Commissioner in the determination of the deficiency or liability"
We first address petitioner's jurisdictional motion. Section 6212 *136 Court and he did so timely on June 1, 1981. In such posture, this Court does have jurisdiction to decide this case on its merits. Section 6214.
Moreover, the Tax Court, as established under the Tax Reform Act of 1969, sections 951-962, Pub. L. 91-172, 83 Stat. 487, 730-736, is a court of record established under
On the basis of this record, we have jurisdiction of this case without question, hence, petitioner's motion will be denied.
It is clear beyond*137 doubt that petitioner's constitutional arguments are frivolous. Each of his contentions has been fully considered and discussed (adversely to petitioner's contentions) in numerous prior opinions of this and other Courts.
Finally, while*138 it may be somewhat repetitious, the following recent forewarning in
It may be appropriate to note further that this Court has been flooded with a large number of so-called tax protester cases in which thoroughly meritless issues have been raised in, at best, misguided reliance upon lofty principles. Such cases tend to disrupt the orderly conduct of serious litigation in this Court, and the issues raised therein are of the type that have been consistently decided against such protesters and their contentions often characterized as frivolous. The time has arrived when the Court should deal summarily and decisively with such cases without engaging in scholarly discussion of the issues or attempting to soothe the feelings of the petitioners by referring to the supposed "sincerity" of their wildly espoused positions. *139 The document filed as a petition is not in conformance with this Court's Rules of Practice and Procedure and does not state a claim upon which we can grant any relief. The absence in the petition of specific justiciable allegations of error and of supporting facts permits this Court to grant respondent's motion. Rule 123(b); cf.,
On this record we are compelled to sustain respondent's determination and his motion will be granted.
1. Since we have before us pre-trial motions and there is no genuine issue of material fact, the Court has concluded that the post-trial procedures of
2. All rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.↩
3. Dorinda J. Smart is not a party to this case.↩
4. In that document petitioner agrees that his petition is not in conformance with Rule 34.↩
5. All section references herein are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as amended.↩
6. We observe that petitioner, after receipt of his deficiency notice, had the election to pay the 1978 income tax deficiency and file a claim for refund of those taxes with the Internal Revenue Service. If that claim was disallowed he could then have filed a suit for refund of that tax either in a U.S. District Court (where he could have opted for a jury trial) or the U.S. Court of Claims at Washington, D.C. See section 7422.↩
7. A taxpayer is not entitled to a jury trial in the U.S. Tax Court. Section 7453.
8. In this respect, see also