DocketNumber: Docket No. 7209-83.
Filed Date: 2/29/1984
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/21/2020
MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION
FEATHERSTON,
For the years 1978 through 1982, all of petitioner's income tax returns were timely filed with the Internal Revenue Service Center, Fresno, California, and all of his returns for those years bore the 57 Linda Isle Drive address. Petitioner's returns for those years were also prepared by the firm of Gerald F. Simonis Accountants, Inc., or its successor firms.
On June 13, 1979, respondent mailed to petitioner at the 57 Linda Isle Drive address (with a copy to Gerald F. Simonis as holder of a power of attorney) a communication commonly known as a "30-day letter" setting forth proposed adjustments to petitioner's income tax for 1977 and 1974. On the same date, respondent mailed to petitioner at the 57 Linda Isle address (with a copy to Mr. Simonis as holder of a power of attorney) a "30-day letter" setting forth proposed adjustments to petitioner's income tax for 1976. Petitioner received both of these "30-day*578 letters" in the ordinary course of the mail.
On July 25, 1979, respondent mailed to petitioner at the 57 Linda Isle Drive address (with a copy to Mr. Simonis as a holder of a power of attorney) a waiver form (Form 870) relating to the 1976 income tax adjustments proposed by respondent in the "30-day letter" for that year. Petitioner executed a copy of this Form 870 on August 17, 1979, and mailed it to respondent, who received it in the ordinary course of the mail. On this Form 870, petitioner gave 57 Linda Isle Drive as his address.
On February 20, 1980, respondent mailed to petitioner at the 57 Linda Isle Drive address a letter requesting that petitioners agree to extend the limitation period for assessing additional income tax for 1976. On December 31, 1980, respondent sent petitioner a similar letter, again to the 57 Linda Isle Drive address, requesting that petitioner agree to extend the limitation period for assessing additional income tax for 1977. No extension, however, was ever executed for 1977.
On April 15, 1981, respondent sent petitioner and his former wife, Frances Mulvania, a notice of deficiency for 1974. Respondent sent this notice by certified mail to the*579 57 Linda Isle Drive address and petitioner received it on April 18, 1981, in the ordinary course of the mail. When petitioner received this notice of deficiency, he called his accountant, Mr. Simonis, and told him that he would send it to his office.
On April 15, 1981, respondent mailed to petitioner a notice of deficiency for 1977. Respondent also sent this notice by certified mail; however, the notice was addressed to petitioner at "St. Linda Isle Drive, Newport Beach, CA 92663." The United States Postal Service returned this notice to the Internal Revenue Service on April 21, 1981, marked "Not deliverable as addressed." Respondent placed the undelivered notice in petitioner's administrative file and made no attempt to remail the notice to petitioner.
On April 15, 1981, respondent also sent, by ordinary mail, a copy of petitioner's 1977 notice of deficiency to Mr. Simonis, petitioner's accountant, as holder of a power of attorney. The parties did not introduce either the original or a copy of the power of attorney which petitioner gave to Mr. Simonis. The parties agreed, however, that the power of attorney given to Mr. Simonis was a standard printed form from the Internal*580 Revenue Service. The parties further agreed that the power of attorney did not direct that the originals of any correspondence from respondent to petitioner be sent to Mr. Simonis; it directed that only copies of such correspondence be sent to Mr. Simonis.
Mr. Simonis received the copy of petitioner's 1977 notice of deficiency on or about April 17, 1981 in the ordinary course of the mail. He placed the copy of the notice in petitioner's file and made a note to remind himself to follow up on it. Because it was petitioner's practice to call Mr. Simonis when he had received notices of deficiency for other years, Mr. Simonis expected a telephone call from petitioner when petitioner received the original of the notice but received no such call.
Mr. Simonis contacted petitioner on or about June 1, 1981, and asked petitioner to send him the original notice of deficiency for 1977 so that some action could be taken in response. Petitioner informed Mr. Simonis that he had not received any such notice. At some time after June 15, 1981, petitioner made the decision, based on his accountant's advice that he had not received a valid notice of the deficiency for 1977, not to file a petition*581 in the Tax Court at that time.
On April 1, 1983, petitioner filed a petition with this Court requesting a redetermination of respondent's determination of a deficiency in income tax for 1977.
OPINION
It is undisputed by the parties that on April 15, 1981, the final day before the expiration of the 3-year statute of limitations and, thus, the final day on which respondent could have mailed a notice of deficiency which would have suspended the running of the statute of limitations, respondent mailed the erroneously addressed notice. The notice was returned to respondent marked "Not deliverable as addressed", placed in petitioner's administrative file, and never remailed to petitioner. As a result, petitioner never received the notice of deficiency.
It is true that a notice of deficiency actually received by a taxpayer is valid under
There remains the issue as to whether mailing the copy of the notice to petitioner's accountant on April 15, 1981, of which petitioner did not learn until about June 1, 1981, constitutes valid notice under
We are fully aware that the courts have upheld the validity of notices mailed to attorneys or accountants authorized by the taxpayer in broad powers of attorney to receive "all correspondence" relating to a particular year. In
In the instant case, however, the accountant was clothed with authority to receive only copies of documents mailed to petitioner. The principal-agent reasoning of
In
Even if we treat the incomplete general power of attorney as valid, it was not sufficient to change the last-known*587 address of petitioner to his attorney's address or to any other address. The power of attorney does not indicate a change of address for petitioner. * * * Nor does it purport to authorize the mailing of the notice of deficiency to his attorney. One paragraph in the power of attorney states that
Similarly, in
Respondent urges, however, that, because petitioner's accountant in fact verbally informed petitioner of his receipt of the copy of a notice of deficiency in sufficient time to permit petitioner to file a timely Tax Court petition, the copy of the notice satisfies the notice requirement of
In
In summary, we find that the respondent had reason for mailing the notice of deficiency to the petitioners in the manner chosen by him, and that the purposes of
*590 This summary sharply focuses the facts which distinguish those in
Nothing in
It is a
Particularly troublesome about respondent's argument are the consequences of a conclusion that the accountant's June 1, 1981, conversation with petitioner constituted actual notice to petitioner of the IRS intention to assess a deficiency. Had the accountant cautiously and warily asked petitioner whether he had received a deficiency notice for 1977 and terminated the conversation upon receiving a negative response, there would be no ground for respondent's actual notice argument. Only because the accountant disclosed in that conversation his own receipt of a copy of a notice does the argument have any possible factual basis. Had the accountant been a lawyer, his advice and the communications leading to that advice would have been protected by the attorney-client privilege. 8 Wigmore, Evidence, sec. 2292 (McNaughton rev. 1961);
We add that we do not intend to approve a taxpayer's spending time on research of the adequacy of "actual notice" while the
To reflect the foregoing,
1. All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as amended, unless otherwise indicated. ↩
2. See
3. Actual notice from the IRS to a taxpayer, whether transmitted by certified mail, ordinary mail, or hand delivery will suffice.
4. In
5. Conversely, the courts have held that the Commissioner's failure to send a copy of a notice of deficiency to a taxpayer's representative who was authorized to receive only copies of all correspondence with the taxpayer does not invalidate a notice of deficiency timely mailed to the taxpayer himself at his last known address.
6. See
7. The court of appeals recognized, of course, that mailing of a notice by ordinary mail,
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