DocketNumber: Docket No. 25013-06L
Judges: HOLMES
Filed Date: 11/25/2013
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/20/2020
HOLMES,
Meyer has a history of run-ins with the Commissioner owing to his reluctance to follow the Internal Revenue Code when it comes time to file his annual return.
This case may have wandered off the usual path right after the IRS prepared the SFR. What the IRS usually does next is draft a notice of deficiency for the unreported taxes and then mail that notice (which usually includes the SFR) to the *271 taxpayer. The Commissioner generally has to do this before he can begin trying to collect. And, in this case, that's what the Commissioner says he did—he claims that he sent Meyer a notice of deficiency, but Meyer never responded. That would have allowed the Commissioner to record the liability—"assessing the deficiency" to use tax jargon—and to begin to collect the unpaid bill from Meyer.
The Commissioner did send Meyer a final notice of his intent to levy. This notice told Meyer that he had the right to a hearing, which Meyer promptly demanded.
Even before that hearing, the Appeals officer requested *284 a Form 4340, Certificate of Assessments, Payments, and Other Specified Matters, to verify that the Commissioner had properly assessed the tax. The Form 4340 had an entry which indicated that a $465,390 tax had been "assessed by examination" and that there was an "audit deficiency per default of 90 day letter." Although that form apparently satisfied the Appeals Officer that a notice of deficiency existed, he was unable to find a copy of the notice before the CDP hearing.
During the CDP hearing, the Appeals officer asked Meyer to point out any irregularities in the making of the assessment for 2000. Meyer's primary *272 contention was that he had not received a notice of deficiency.*285 Meyer indicated that he had repeatedly asked the IRS for a copy of the notice of deficiency, even filing a request under the Freedom of Information Act, but all to no avail. Because the Appeals officer still had not found the notice at the time of the hearing, he allowed Meyer to dispute his underlying tax liability.*273 To obtain this verification, the Appeals officer requested a copy of the certified mailing list (U.S. Postal Service *286 Form 3877).
The Form 3877 in this case reads "statutory notices of deficiency for the year(s) indicated have been sent to the following taxpayers," and lists Meyer's name and address, followed by an article number and the phrase "postage fees paid by IRS 2000."*287 Additionally, although the Form 3877 indicates that the IRS was sending 12 pieces of certified mail, the space in which the USPS should have marked the number of pieces it received is blank.
*274 After reviewing the Form 3877, the Appeals officer was apparently confident that he now had verified that a notice of deficiency existed and had been properly sent to Meyer; he wrote in his case activity record that the form "show[ed] the * * * [statutory notice of deficiency] went out on 4/2/03 to correct last known address." Even after the hearing, however, the Appeals officer never received a copy of the notice of deficiency. So far as the record shows, nobody at the IRS has ever found it.
With the notice of deficiency issue seemingly resolved, the Appeals officer issued a notice of determination. He determined that "[t]he Secretary has provided sufficient verification that the requirements of all applicable laws and administrative procedures have been met." He noted that he "reviewed computer transcripts" to "verify[] the assessments." And he specifically determined that the "assessment for the tax period of 2000 [was] valid"—because he found that the IRS had properly issued the deficiency notice and sent it to Meyer, "as shown on the United States Postal Service *288 Form 3877, certified mail list, stamped by the United States Postal Service." Because the requirements of all applicable laws or administrative procedures had been met—and because of Meyer's lack of *275 cooperation Meyer, a resident of Nevada when he filed his petition, argues that this determination was an abuse of discretion, because the Appeals officer did not meet his obligation to verify that the IRS properly issued and mailed a notice of deficiency to him. We begin with some vocabulary: liability, deficiency, and assessment. A tax liability is the tax imposed by the Code for a tax year. *276 A deficiency is generally the difference between the amount of a taxpayer's liability and the amount shown on his return—and when the Commissioner determines a deficiency, it means that he thinks a taxpayer owes more than was reported on the return. An assessment is the recording of a tax liability in the Commissioner's books. Within 60 days after making an assessment, the Commissioner must send a "notice and demand" for payment of tax under As part of the CDP hearing, the Appeals officer must obtain verification that the requirements of any applicable law or administrative procedure have been met. Following a CDP hearing, the Appeals officer must determine whether to sustain the filing of the lien and whether proceeding with the proposed levy action is appropriate. In making that determination, the Appeals officer is required to consider three things: • the verification from the Commissioner that he met all of the requirements of applicable law and administrative procedure, • any relevant issues raised by the taxpayer, and • whether the proposed collection action balances the need for efficient collection of taxes with the taxpayer's legitimate concern regarding the intrusiveness of the proposed collection action. *280 An Appeals officer abuses his discretion if his determination was grounded on an error of law or rested on a clearly erroneous assessment of the facts, or if he applied the correct law to facts that weren't clearly erroneous but ruled in an irrational manner. As part of his obligation under *281 We turn to each of the two documents on which the Commissioner relies. We start with the Form 4340. A Form 4340 provides a "detailed explanation of the taxpayer's account." A Form 4340 constitutes presumptive *296 evidence that a tax has been validly assessed pursuant to *282 Here, however, Meyer plainly did identify an irregularity in the assessment procedure—he argued that he never received the notice of deficiency.*298 And the Appeals officer did begin to dig deeper when he requested the Form 3877 and reviewed it. The notice of determination indicates that the Appeals officer relied on that form alone to verify that the Commissioner had followed proper procedures in sending the notice of deficiency to Meyer. That finding formed the cornerstone of the Appeals officer's ultimate determination that the assessment was valid. *284 The Form 3877 is central to this case. Although the Appeals officer did not review any evidence concerning how the Commissioner's personnel prepared and mailed notices of deficiency in this case, our caselaw has explained the general procedures. IRS employees who mail notices of deficiency are supposed to prepare a postal service Form 3877 (a certified mailing list) that lists *300 all of the notices of deficiency mailed on a particular date. In this case, Meyer challenges the Form 3877 on both procedural and substantive grounds. First, he contends that we should exclude it from the record. But even if we don't, he argues that the Appeals officer abused his discretion by relying on that form alone to verify that the notice of deficiency was properly mailed to him because he alleges that, like the Form 4340, it too contains numerous irregularities. We look at each of those contentions. Before turning to Meyer's substantive challenge, we begin with his evidentiary objections. He asks us to exclude the Form 3877 because it is hearsay not falling within any exception and because it is not authenticated.*301 Hearsay is a statement, other than one made by the declarant while testifying at the trial or hearing, offered in evidence to prove the truth of the matter asserted. Even if admissible for that purpose, the Form 3877 still must be authenticated before we admit it into evidence. The fundamental problem underlying Meyer's evidentiary arguments is that he presumes each piece of the administrative record must be admissible at trial independent of its role as part of the administrative record; i.e., he seems to argue that *303 the Form 3877 must satisfy evidentiary rules in this case in the same way it would have to satisfy evidentiary rules in a deficiency case or any other federal *287 litigation, where it would be a stand-alone document to prove only that a notice of deficiency had been mailed. The Court of Federal Claims dispatched a similar argument in a challenge to more formal charitable-exemption-denial hearings, saying: Of course, if plaintiff is right, the IRS would be obliged to apply * * * evidence rules derivatively, lest this court strike materials that it relied upon in denying an exemption. * * * But, contrary to plaintiff's importunings, courts generally have refused to consider collateral attacks upon the materials in administrative records based upon the That brings us to the meat of Meyer's case—did the IRS properly mail the notice of deficiency before assessing his 2000 tax liability? If not, Meyer wins, because we have definitively held that the Commissioner may not use a CDP hearing to "cure" his failure to properly assess a tax. In deficiency cases, we have held the Commissioner has the initial burden of proving by competent and persuasive evidence that a notice of deficiency was properly mailed to a taxpayer. Although this is not a deficiency case, we have applied these same principles in a CDP setting. When the existence of a notice is not in dispute, an Appeals officer may rely on a properly completed Form 3877 to meet We're far from confident that the IRS properly completed the Form 3877 in this case. The first issue that jumps out at us—specifically on the bottom right-hand side of the form—is the rectangular stamp that reads "IRS OGDEN UT USPS 84201" which purportedly is an official USPS postmark, and includes an illegible signature. Although it is generally well known that a USPS hand-stamped postmark is round and doesn't have an IRS identification, Even assuming that this stamp is an official USPS postmark and includes a signature of the postal employee who received the notices, other red flags are fluttering. The Form 3877 also requires a signature of the person who issued the notices. Assuming the signature was that of the postal office employee who received the notices, no separate signature from the person who issued the notices was present here. Additionally, even though the Form 3877 indicated that the IRS was sending 12 pieces of certified mail, the space in which the USPS should have marked the number of pieces it received to confirm that fact *309 is blank. That's not necessarily the end of the story. In deficiency cases, we have acknowledged that a failure to precisely comply with the Form 3877 mailing procedures may not be fatal *310 if the Commissioner can come forward with other evidence that the mailing procedures were followed. That's not what happened here, though. The administrative record in this case does not show that the Appeals officer relied on anything else to verify proper mailing. After Meyer argued at the CDP hearing that he didn't receive a notice of deficiency—with the Appeals officer's acknowledging that "it is potentially possible that" the lack of a notice of deficiency would result in the abatement of the assessment—the Form 3877 is the only piece of evidence in the administrative record that the Appeals officer relied on to verify that the notice of deficiency was properly mailed.*312 The Appeals officer could've sought a declaration or *311 some other kind of verification from an IRS employee involved in preparing the Form *294 3877 (or, if there was one, the USPS employee signing off on that form), So, that leads us to the ultimate question: Should we determine that the Appeals officer abused his discretion or remand to the Appeals Office to allow the officer to clarify the evidence that he did rely on—or even supplement the administrative record to meet his verification obligation? In other words, should we hold that the Appeals officer's determination rested on a clearly erroneous finding of fact, or remand to the Appeals office to allow the officer to clarify the evidence that he did rely on—or *313 even supplement the administrative record to meet his verification obligation? *295 Generally speaking, we remand a case to the Appeals Office when a taxpayer did not receive a proper hearing and the new hearing is necessary or will be productive. Although a close call, we decide that the most productive course here would be to remand to the Appeals Office. We acknowledge that *314 the administrative record does not show that the Appeals officer pursued additional evidence to verify that the notice was properly mailed. We also must recognize, however, that—at the time of his decision—the Appeals officer here did not have the benefit of several decisions from this Court that could have affected his understanding of *296 the verification obligation. For instance, he may not have known that when a taxpayer challenges receipt of a notice of deficiency, that should also be construed as a challenge to a notice's existence, We have remanded cases where the law changed between the CDP hearing and the Tax Court trial if that may have affected presentation of a case. To reflect the foregoing,
1. Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to the Internal Revenue Code for the year at issue; all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.↩
2. Meyer also argued that the Commissioner violated his privacy under
3. He seems to have had in mind
4. Although the form is titled "Substitute USPS Form 3877" and is not a certified copy, we will refer to the document as the Form 3877.↩
5. In the Commissioner's briefs, he refers to this stamp as a "postmark". As we discuss later, we make no determination whether this was in fact an official USPS postmark.
6. The Appeals officer noted that Meyer refused to discuss collection alternatives that the Appeals officer had raised. And, somewhat redundantly, he also noted that Meyer wasn't eligible for any such alternatives because he hadn't filed his tax returns for later years.↩
7. In 1998, Congress enacted
8.
9. This rule has a few narrow exceptions "to identify and plug holes in the administrative record."
10. The Commissioner argues that Meyer disputed only his receipt of the notice of deficiency, and not its existence, during the CDP hearing. Thus, says the Commissioner, since the challenge to the existence of the notice is not part of the administrative record, it was never in dispute before the Appeals officer and we should not consider it. We think that's splitting hairs a bit too fine—especially in a
11. Because Meyer put the existence of the notice of deficiency at issue, the Appeals officer also had a duty to verify that there really was a notice. It's unclear whether the Appeals officer relied on the Form 4340 to do this. It's also unclear whether an Appeals officer can rely on a Form 4340 to verify a notice's existence without actually finding other corroborating evidence.
12. Meyer also asks us to exclude the Form 3877 because it is not complete and because it does not satisfy the Commissioner's burden of proof. These two objections, however, go to the credibility and sufficiency of the evidence, rather than its admissibility, and therefore are not grounds for exclusion.
13. Because the administrative record in
14. At trial, Meyer pointed out that the Appeals officer couldn't also rely on the Form 4340 to verify proper mailing because it contained no entry for the certified mailing date of the notice of deficiency. And it's true that his Form 4340 didn't contain such a date—as it should have.
15.
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