DocketNumber: Docket No. 21837-15L.
Judges: LAUBER
Filed Date: 10/17/2017
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/21/2020
An appropriate order and decision will be entered for respondent.
LAUBER,
The following facts are based on the parties' pleadings and motion papers, including the attached affidavits and exhibits.
Petitioners did not file a timely Federal income tax return for any year from 2007 onward. On December 12, 2013, the IRS prepared and sent to petitioners for their 2011 taxable year a substitute for return that met the requirements of
Petitioners did not enclose payment for the tax shown as due on those returns. The IRS immediately assessed the tax liabilities shown as due, together *206 with additions to tax under
In an effort to collect petitioners' unpaid liabilities for 2009, 2011, 2012, and 2013, the IRS sent them, on various dates before August 20, 2014, a Notice of Intent to Levy and Your Right to a Hearing for each of the four years, and a Notice of Federal Tax Lien Filing and Your Right to a Hearing Under
On May 13, 2015, the SO received from petitioners a revised Form 433-A, Collection Information Statement for Wage Earners and Self-Employed Individuals, and a Form 1040X for 2013. Petitioners proposed an installment agreement under which they would make a $225,000 down-payment and pay off "the remaining tax balance" in monthly $1,000 installments. After reviewing petitioners' revised Form 433-A and determining their allowable monthly expenses under prevailing local standards, the SO determined that they could make monthly payments of at least $5,227 toward their tax liabilities. In making this determination the SO allowed all expenses petitioners claimed except for their children's*207 college and private secondary school tuition and contributions to petitioner husband's In a May 4, 2015, letter to the SO, petitioner wife urged that monthly tuition expenses of $4,457 should be counted as allowable expenses in determining their ability to pay. Two of petitioners' children, aged 15 and 17, attended private religious secondary schools, for which petitioners paid aggregate tuition of $2,807 per month. Petitioners' adult children attended the University of Mississippi and Mississippi State University, respectively, for which petitioners paid aggregate tuition of $1,650 per month. Petitioners asserted that removing their teenage children from religious schools would be "extremely detrimental" to their family's well-being. Apart from the May 4, 2015 letter, petitioners submitted during the CDP proceeding no*208 argument or information to show that they met the limited exception set forth in the Internal Revenue Manual (IRM) for including such tuition expenses as allowable monthly living expenses for purposes of determining their ability to pay. Petitioners indicated that they were seeking a home equity loan to fund the proposed $225,000 down-payment but asserted that the NFTL had caused their bank to refuse to lend to them. On May 28, 2015, the SO informed petitioners that the IRS could subordinate its lien but only if they submitted (and the IRS approved) an application for lien subordination. The SO gave petitioners two weeks to submit such an application, but they submitted nothing by that deadline. On June 26, 2015, petitioners informed the SO that their bank would not cooperate with an application for lien subordination. Petitioners accordingly rejected the SO's proposed installment agreement and instead*209 offered an installment agreement with a $50,000 down-payment (to be funded by a retirement plan loan) and monthly payments of $2,000. Under this proposal, petitioners would pay over a six-year period a total of $194,000, roughly half of their $376,340 outstanding balance due. In that same communication petitioners also requested, for the first time, abatement of the additions to tax for late filing and late payment. The SO expressed willingness to consider their abatement request. She gave them a deadline of *210 July 10, 2015, to submit a written abatement request signed by them both, together with specified financial information. Petitioners submitted nothing by that deadline or during the ensuing week. On July 17, 2015, the SO determined that the case should be closed because petitioners had declined the proposed installment agreement for which they qualified and had failed to submit anything to support their requests for lien subordination or abatement of the additions to tax. On July 30, 2015, the IRS sent petitioners a notice of determination sustaining the collection action for 2009, 2011, 2012, and 2013. They timely petitioned this Court. The*210 purpose of summary judgment is to expedite litigation and avoid costly, time-consuming, and unnecessary trials. In their response to the IRS motion for summary judgment petitioners did not identify any material fact in genuine dispute. Indeed, they themselves filed a cross-motion for summary judgment. We conclude that this case is appropriate for summary adjudication. Neither A taxpayer may challenge the existence or amount of his underlying tax liability in a CDP proceeding only "if the person did not receive any statutory notice of deficiency for such liability or did not otherwise have an opportunity to dispute * * * [it]." However, "[a] taxpayer is precluded from disputing the underlying liability [in this Court] if it was not properly raised in the CDP hearing." Petitioners filed an amended return (which the IRS accepted) for only one of the years in issue, namely 2013, and that return reported a liability $23,811 higher than that shown on their original return. Given these facts, petitioners did not raise a proper challenge to the tax liabilities reported on their returns. And because they did not properly challenge these liabilities during the CDP administrative *213 proceeding, they are barred from challenging them here. Petitioners' underlying tax liabilities also include the late-filing and late-payment additions to tax that the IRS determined and assessed under Where the taxpayers' underlying liability is not before us, we review the IRS decision for abuse of discretion only. In deciding whether the SO abused her discretion in sustaining the collection action, we consider whether she: (1) properly verified that the requirements of any applicable law or administrative procedure had been met; (2) considered any relevant issues petitioners raised; and (3) determined whether "any proposed collection action balance[d] the need for the efficient collection of taxes with the legitimate concern of * * * [petitioners] that any collection action be no more intrusive than necessary." The SO determined that petitioners qualified for a full-pay installment agreement under which they would pay off their $376,340 outstanding balance over a six-year period. Petitioners rejected that proposal and offered an installment agreement with a $50,000 down-payment and monthly payments of $2,000. Their offer,*215 under which they would pay only $194,000 over six years, was premised on their assertion that monthly tuition expenses of $4,457 for their children should be counted as allowable expenses in determining their ability to pay. After consulting applicable IRM provisions, the SO determined that the college and private secondary school tuition expenses incurred for petitioners' children were not allowable expenses in determining their entitlement to a collection alternative. The SO did not abuse her discretion in making this determination. Under the IRM, secondary school and college tuition is a "conditional" expense that may in some circumstances be allowed in evaluating a collection alternative. But for such expenses to be allowable, the taxpayer must establish that he will discharge his entire unpaid tax liability within six years. At one point during the CDP proceeding, petitioners requested lien subordination to facilitate their securing a home equity loan from their bank. However, petitioners never submitted the required application for lien subordination. Indeed, they effectively withdrew that request by informing the SO that their bank would not cooperate in an application for lien subordination. Finding no abuse of discretion in this or any other respect, we will grant respondent's motion for summary judgment, deny petitioners' cross-motion, and sustain the collection action. To reflect the foregoing,
1. All statutory references are to the Internal Revenue Code in effect at all relevant times, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure. We round all monetary amounts to the nearest dollar.↩
2. After petitioners submitted their hearing request, they received a Notice of Federal Tax Lien Filing and Your Right to a Hearing Under
3. Petitioners' representative had previously submitted a Form 433-A to the IRS Appeals Office, evidently in connection with collection action for tax years not involved in the CDP administrative proceeding we review here.↩
4. Petitioners contend that the SO set an unreasonably tight deadline for their submission of documentation to support their request for abatement of the additions to tax. But petitioners did not raise this issue until the very end of the CDP proceeding, which had been underway for 10 months. Under these circumstances the SO did not act unreasonably in setting a short deadline. In any event the IRS waited three weeks after that deadline had passed before issuing the notice of determination. Petitioners were free to request an extension of time but failed to do so.↩
5.
Eichler v. Commissioner ( 2014 )
Alessio Azzari, Inc. v. Commissioner ( 2011 )
Murphy v. Commissioner of IRS ( 2006 )
Keller v. Commissioner ( 2009 )
Sundstrand Corporation v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue ( 1994 )
Florida Peach Corp. v. Commissioner ( 1988 )
Fifty Below Sales & Marketing, Inc. v. United States ( 2007 )
Thompson v. Commissioner ( 2013 )