DocketNumber: Docket No. 16058-90
Judges: WOLFE
Filed Date: 10/4/1994
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/20/2020
*492 An appropriate order denying petitioner's motion will be issued.
MEMORANDUM OPINION
WOLFE,
Some of the facts have been stipulated and are so found. The stipulated facts and attached exhibits are incorporated by this reference. Petitioner resided in Tortola, British Virgin Islands, when his petition was filed.
This case is part of a litigation project regarding the Plastics Recycling group of cases. In 1981, petitioner acquired a 1.546-percent limited partnership interest in the Clearwater Group, a partnership which is part of the Plastics Recycling group. See
On December 6, 1985, respondent sent petitioner a Form 4549, Income Tax Examination Changes. Thereafter, petitioner protested respondent's proposed changes. In a letter dated April 23, 1987, Dan Mazaroli (Mazaroli), an Appeals officer for respondent, informed petitioner's counsel that petitioner's case was in appeal suspense pending the settlement recommendations of the project attorney, Robert J. Foley (Foley). The letter expressly stated: "Our office is bound by the projects [sic] attorney's determination." At that time petitioner's counsel understood that Mazaroli was not authorized to offer a settlement.
At the evidentiary hearing on the pending motion, petitioner's counsel testified that in a telephone conversation on December 28, 1987, Mazaroli conveyed to*495 petitioner's counsel a settlement offer allegedly based upon Foley's settlement position.
On January 26, 1988, Mazaroli requested tentative computations from the Appeals Audit staff of the Internal Revenue Service based on the terms included in the letter drafted by petitioner's counsel on December 27, 1987. No agreements were prepared by respondent at that time.
Upon learning of litigation pending in this Court regarding the Plastics Recycling group, petitioner filed an amended return, Form 1040X, which was labeled by petitioner as a "Protective Claim" on July 19, 1988. On this document petitioner claimed all of his deductions and credits related to his investment in the Clearwater Group. In addition, petitioner requested a refund of his $ 48,000*497 payment in the event that the pending Plastics Recycling litigation was decided against the government stating: Three cases involving the same or similar issues are set for hearing in U.S. Tax Court in New York City September 26, 1988. If these cases are resolved in favor of the taxpayers, then the service should make refund based on the findings of the Court.
On August 10, 1988, the Settlement Initiative Package for the Plastics Recycling group was approved by the National Office of the Internal Revenue Service. Prior to that date, settlement of nondocketed Plastics Recycling cases was not authorized by respondent.
In a letter dated February 15, 1990, Karen Ruckriegle (Ruckriegle), an Appeals officer for respondent, extended the Plastics Recycling Project settlement offer to petitioner. A formal closing agreement was enclosed with the letter. *498 of a closing agreement until after issuance of the Tax Court's decision in
On March 26, 1990, respondent mailed to petitioner a statutory notice of deficiency with respect to the year 1981 that disallowed all of the claimed losses and tax credits related to petitioner's investment in the Clearwater Group and imposed additions to tax under sections 6651(a), 6653(a), 6659, and increased interest under
Petitioner's counsel again wrote to respondent on June 22, 1990. In this letter, petitioner's counsel indicated that he would be willing to piggyback petitioner's case to the
On June 22, 1990, respondent denied petitioner's request for rescission of the statutory notice because petitioner and respondent had executed a Form 872-A, Special Consent to Extend the Time to Assess Tax, prior to the issuance of the statutory notice.
Thereafter, on July 6, 1990, petitioner filed his petition with this Court. In the pleading, petitioner contends that he is entitled to the deductions and credits related to his investment in the Clearwater Group claimed on his 1981 return and that he is not liable for any of the additions to tax determined in respondent's notice of deficiency. The petition further states: Petitioner further prays that no action be taken in this case pending the final determination of Harold M. Provizer and Joan Provizer v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, Docket No. 27141-86, a case tried on substantially the same issues raised herein and identified by the Internal Revenue Service as a key or test case. Petitioner desires to 'piggy back' [sic] on the Provizer case *501 as ultimately determined.
Pursuant to discussions with petitioner's counsel and petitioner's request to piggyback to the
On March 25, 1992, this Court's opinion in the
An assessment was made against petitioner and a Notice of Tax Due was sent to petitioner on August 11, 1992, pursuant to the terms of the piggyback agreement and the results of
By letter dated March 19, 1993, respondent clearly stated that a review of petitioner's case file indicated that no settlement had been reached in 1987. This letter includes a summary of the history of the case and also a computation of the interest which would have been due if the tax liability had been assessed according to the terms of the alleged settlement.
On April 4, 1993, petitioner made a designated*503 payment of interest for taxable year 1981 in the amount of $ 17,916. Petitioner contends that this is the total amount of his liability to respondent for taxable year 1981.
Petitioner claims that he is entitled to enforce an alleged settlement agreement executed in December of 1987. He contends that respondent should be estopped to deny the settlement agreement. Petitioner also contends that the statutory notice issued in 1986 should be rescinded and that the piggyback agreement should be declared null and void. Petitioner concedes that he is not entitled to a refund based upon his protective claim.
Respondent argues that no settlement agreement existed in 1987 and that the piggyback agreement should control disposition of this case. We agree with respondent and hold that the piggyback agreement executed by petitioner's counsel and respondent evidences the agreement of the parties with respect to disposition of petitioner's case.
A settlement stipulation is a contract.
Respondent's determinations as to petitioner's tax liability are presumed correct, and petitioner has the burden of proving otherwise.
The evidence negates petitioner's assertion that an agreement to settle petitioner's case was executed in December of 1987. Petitioner introduced no documentary evidence of such an agreement, and we find petitioner's counsel's testimony concerning the existence of an oral agreement unpersuasive. The payment of tax liabilities and additions to tax, without more, does not establish the existence of a valid settlement agreement. In addition, petitioner did not introduce the testimony of either Mazaroli or Foley concerning the purported 1987 settlement. Accordingly, we infer that the testimony of these individuals would not be helpful to petitioner.
Petitioner's counsel's actions from 1988, when he first learned of the Plastics Recycling litigation then pending with this Court, until 1992 when
Only after this Court's decision in favor of respondent in
Moreover, petitioner concedes that Mazaroli did not have the authority to settle his case in December of 1987. In 1987, approval by the National Office of the Internal Revenue*507 Service was required before settlement offers in nondocketed tax shelter cases could be extended. The Plastics Recycling group was designated as a tax shelter project in October of 1986. Mazaroli, as an Appeals officer, was not an official with appropriate settlement authority and, thus, lacked the authority to enter into a binding settlement agreement with petitioner in the instant case. This Court has repeatedly declined to enforce a settlement agreement where the person entering into the agreement on behalf of the Commissioner lacked the authority to bind the Commissioner.
Petitioner contends that the doctrine of equitable estoppel should apply to bar respondent from denying the existence of the alleged 1987 settlement agreement. Respondent contends that the record does not support a finding of equitable estoppel. We agree with respondent.
"The doctrine of equitable estoppel*508 is applied against the Government 'with the utmost caution and restraint.'"
Petitioner contends that Mazaroli's lack of authority to settle the case was, somehow, a false representation by respondent and that respondent's failure to offer petitioner a settlement in 1988, when the settlement initiative package for Plastics Recycling first*509 was approved, was "wrongful or misleading silence". In addition, petitioner asserts that he detrimentally relied upon the purported settlement by paying respondent $ 48,000 in 1987.
The facts negate any false representation or misleading silence by respondent and show that petitioner relied only on his counsel. If petitioner had believed that an agreement to settle his case existed in 1987, it seems only reasonable that he would have communicated that belief to respondent or this Court when another settlement was proposed, when respondent issued a statutory notice of deficiency, and/or when petitioner executed the piggyback agreement.
We find no misrepresentation by respondent here, no misleading silence, and no justifiable or reasonable reliance by petitioner. The factors required for application of the doctrine of equitable estoppel simply are not present in this case. See
The evidence presented with respect to petitioner's motion establishes that petitioner did not enter into a settlement in 1987 or at any time*510 prior to executing the piggyback agreement. Petitioner and respondent executed a piggyback agreement in 1991 and the terms of that agreement, entitled "Stipulation of Settlement for Tax Shelter Adjustment" explicitly provide that the only issue in this case, and any additions to tax "shall be resolved as if the petitioner(s) in this case was/were the same as the taxpayer(s) in * * * [
1. All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code in effect for the year at issue, unless otherwise indicated. All Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.↩
2. In his motion, petitioner asserts that Foley offered the alleged 1987 settlement to petitioner. At the hearing on this motion, however, petitioner's counsel admitted that he had never received any written communications from Foley and could not even recall if he had ever spoken with Foley.↩
3. Ruckriegle may not have been authorized to offer petitioner the settlement in Feb. of 1990 because the settlement initiative package had expired in 1989 following the trial of
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