DocketNumber: Docket Nos. 2945-09L, 3164-09
Judges: WHERRY
Filed Date: 4/23/2012
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/21/2020
Decisions will be entered for respondent.
R denied P's request for interest abatement and sustained collection actions related to P's income tax deficiencies arising from P's participation in some of the Hoyt partnership tax shelters.
Held: R's determinations are sustained.
WHERRY,
These cases stem from petitioner's participation in two partnership tax shelters for the 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1994, 1995, and 1996 tax years. Background These cases were submitted fully stipulated pursuant to The underlying deficiencies in these cases arose out of petitioner's investment in two partnerships, Shorthorn Genetic Engineering 1990-2 JV (SGE) and Florin Farms No. 5 (FF). The liabilities are assessments under the Tax Equity and Fiscal Responsibility Act of 1982 (TEFRA), On January 12, 1999, respondent mailed to petitioner a letter and an attached Form 4549A-CG, Income Tax Examination Changes, and Form 886-A, Explanation of Items, explaining how the adjustments made during the examination of SGE and FF affected his individual income tax return for tax years 1989 through 1993. The cover letter explained that because the examination of Hoyt & Sons Ranch Properties partnerships "affects the partnership/s corporation * * * in which you are an investor, your individual return has been adjusted accordingly." Form 4549A-CG broke down the adjustments by tax year and computed the interest on the deficiencies to date. The Form 866-A stated that "Additional interest will be charged at the current rate compounded daily. Interest is charged from the original due date of the return to a date 30 days after an agreement to the additional tax is signed, or to the date of payment, if earlier." On April 12, 1999, respondent mailed to petitioner an NBAP *119 for FF for the 1996 tax year. On May 17, 1999, respondent mailed to petitioner an NBAP and an FPAA for SGE for the 1995 tax year. On September 27, 1999, respondent mailed petitioner an NBAP and an FPAA for SGE for the 1996 tax year. Also, on September 27, 1999, respondent mailed petitioner an FPAA for FF for the 1996 tax year. On April 24, 2000, respondent mailed petitioner a second Form 4549A-CG. The cover letter to this Form 4549A-CG explained that This report is a modification of an earlier report that adjusted the distribution income coming into your partnership for Hoyt and Sons Ranch Property * * * for the year ending December 31, 1992. This adjustment decreases some of the tax previously assessed. The final determination on most of the audit issues on the investor partnerships are not yet complete and are not reflected in this report. On May 3, 2006, as a result of a petition filed on July 26, 1999, at docket No. 12964-99, in response to the FPAA for FF's 1995 taxable year, the Court entered a decision in FF's partnership-level TEFRA proceeding. Also on May 3, 2006, as a result of a petition filed on October 26, 1999, at docket No. 16587-99, in response to the FPAA for FF's 1996 *120 taxable year, the Court entered a decision in FF's partnership-level TEFRA proceeding. On May 5, 2006, as a result of a petition filed on September 14, 1998, at docket No. 15262-98, in response to the FPAA for FF's 1994 taxable year, the Court entered a decision in FF's partnership-level TEFRA proceeding. On May 17, 2006, as a result of a petition filed on May 15, 1997, at docket No. 9852-97, in response to the FPAA for SGE's 1992 taxable year, the Court entered a decision in SGE's partnership- level TEFRA proceeding. On July 12, 2007, respondent mailed petitioner another Form 4549A-CG setting forth the computational adjustments under On January 2, 2008, respondent sent petitioner a Final Notice of Intent to Levy and Notice of Your Right to a Hearing for tax years 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1994, 1995, and 1996. Included was an account summary showing: Respondent received petitioner's Form 12153, Request for a Collection Due Process or Equivalent Hearing, dated January 29, 2008, on February 20, 2008. On Form 12153 petitioner had checked the box for withdrawal of the tax lien as well as the boxes for installment agreement and offer-in-compromise. In an attachment to Form 12153 petitioner's attorney stated that the tax which *122 was assessed had been miscalculated and requested a re-audit. He also stated that petitioner was entitled to interest abatement "due to unreasonable errors and delays by the Internal Revenue Service in making the subject assessments of interest against taxpayer Michael Coleman pursuant to On August 21, 2008, Settlement Officer Nathan August sent petitioner a letter acknowledging receipt of his request for a collection due process (CDP) hearing and scheduling a face-to-face CDP hearing with his attorney on October 14, 2008. On December 11, 2008, respondent and petitioner's attorney had a face-to-face hearing. Petitioner's attorney continued to assert that the interest should be abated under stated that it was "ridiculous that seven years expired" from the date of [sic] the Tax Court opinion was issued until the tax assessments were made against TP. * * * [The attorney] said there is "no reason why something wasn't done much earlier in this matter" and that there is "no justifiable excuse" for the IRS to take seven years to make the assessments against TP. Officer August's notes also state that petitioner's attorney argued that "it was incumbent upon the IRS to have filed a motion in the Tax Court trial to have the Tax Matters Partner Walter Jay Hoyt removed from representing the Hoyt Partnership investors once the Tax Court deemed Mr. Hoyt to have acted fraudulently * * * argu[ing] that if the IRS had done so the Tax Court case would have reached a 'conclusion' earlier." On December 31, 2008, respondent sent petitioner a Notice of Determination Concerning Collection Action(s) Under On February 9, 2009, petitioner timely filed a petition with this Court at docket No. 2945-09L. Petitioner argued, inter alia: Respondent erred in unreasonably delaying the making of the underlying assessments against *124 Petitioner for the subject tax years 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1994, 1995, and 1996, to the substantial prejudice of Petitioner, including but not limited to, the assessment of excessive interest against Petitioner for each of said aforementioned income tax years, as Respondent's delay in making said assessment until approximately July 31, 2007, was the product of Respondent's careless, reckless, and unreasonable conduct through the unreasonable errors and/or delays by an officer or employee of the Internal Revenue Service. On February 10, 2009, petitioner filed with this Court a petition for review of failure to abate interest under code These cases were called from the calendar on September 13, 2010, in Los Angeles, California. The parties asked the Court to be allowed to submit the cases under Interest on a Federal income tax deficiency generally accrues at the rate specified by Even when there has been an error or delay with respect to a ministerial act, the Secretary has discretion to decide whether to abate interest. Petitioner essentially argues that he should have been notified "as a simple ministerial act by Respondent of the initial indictment [of Mr. Hoyt] on November 24, 1998" and that the lack of this simple notification "inviting Petitioner to take the opportunity to settle the case and avoid further interest" was an error or delay by the IRS in performing a ministerial act. *129 Petitioner urges this Court to find that respondent abused his discretion in refusing to abate interest from the date of Mr. Hoyt's initial indictment on November 24, 1998, until the amounts were assessed on July 31, 2007. The petitions in the original partnership-level cases were filed in 1999, and the final decisions by this Court were not entered until May 2006. We note: "The mere passage of time in the litigation phase of a tax dispute does not establish error or delay by the Commissioner in performing a ministerial act. * * * Respondent's decision on how to proceed in the litigation phase of the case necessarily required the exercise of judgment and thus cannot be a ministerial act." Under Petitioner has not shown that respondent abused his discretion in waiting to assess the deficiencies until the decisions of the Court were final, and we do not find that it was an abuse of discretion that respondent did not notify petitioner that Mr. Hoyt had been indicted and invite petitioner to settle. Respondent was required to exercise judgment or discretion in determining whether to notify petitioner about Mr. Hoyt's indictment and/or inviting petitioner to settle and therefore it was not a ministerial act under The Court has considered all of petitioner's contentions, arguments, requests, and statements. To the extent not discussed herein, the Court concludes that they are meritless, moot, or irrelevant. To reflect the foregoing,1989 $24,497.87 $985.99 $315.49 $25,799.35 1990 21,326.61 4,535.20 541.94 26,403.75 1991 28,304.92 1,255.73 627.13 30,187.78 1992 9,558.99 384.72 150.7 10,094.41 1994 1,850.24 74.47 31.65 1,956.36 1995 5,882.71 236.76 117.67 6,237.14 1996 1,800.04 50.06 23.4 1,873.50 Total 93,221.38 7,522.93 1,807.98 102,552.29
1. The tax years 1989, 1990, and 1991 are at issue because of net operating loss (NOL) carrybacks to those years.↩
2. Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended. The Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.↩
3. The Hoyt partnerships have been "found to be illegal tax shelters. [Mr.] Hoyt is currently serving a federal prison sentence of 235 months for conspir[ing] to commit fraud, bankruptcy fraud, and money laundering."
4. All of these decisions were entered pursuant to stipulated decisions entered by the parties.↩
5. Docket Nos. 2945-09L and 3164-09 were consolidated for trial, briefing, and opinion by order of this Court on April 16, 2009.
6. On brief respondent objected to these stipulations and exhibits on the grounds of relevancy, arguing that they all pertain to the criminal proceedings against Mr. Hoyt and are irrelevant to petitioner's case. The Court finds that these stipulations and exhibits are relevant to the case at hand; accordingly we overrule respondent's objections.
7.
8. Petitioner apparently abandons the argument that it was an error for the Commissioner to fail to remove Mr. Hoyt as the tax matters partner. This was a wise decision given that the Court has previously found that it was not an abuse of discretion for the Commissioner to refuse to abate interest on deficiencies arising from the Hoyt tax shelters when the Commissioner did not remove Mr. Hoyt as the tax matters partner and did not notify Mr. Hoyt that he was under criminal investigation.
9. These cases exemplify shortcomings in TEFRA's procedure provisions which, in some instances, turn the control and management of TEFRA cases over to unscrupulous promoters who do not represent the investors' best interests.