DocketNumber: Docket No. 31176-12L.
Citation Numbers: 110 T.C.M. 416, 2015 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 219, 2015 T.C. Memo. 209
Judges: MORRISON
Filed Date: 10/27/2015
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 4/18/2021
Decision will be entered for respondent.
FINDINGS OF FACT | |
OPINION | |
1. Clues' argument that she is not liable for the trust-fund-recovery | |
penalties because Exclusive Temporaries did not have the financial | |
means to pay its trust-fund taxes | |
2. Clues' argument that she is not liable for the trust-fund-recovery | |
penalties because she did not personally benefit from the unpaid | |
trust-fund taxes | |
3. Clues' argument that she should not be liable for both the | |
trust-fund-recovery penalties and the $1,411,975.34 restitution | |
sentence | |
4. Clues' argument that she is entitled to an income-tax deduction | |
of $1.5 million | |
5. Clues' argument that Exclusive Temporaries paid its employment | |
taxes | |
6. Clues' argument that the IRS did not know the value of her | |
property when it filed the notices of lien and proposed the levy | |
in May and June 2012 |
MORRISON, Clues testified that in 2004 she made a $1.5 million payment on behalf of Exclusive Temporaries to a barrister in South Africa named Valikazi and that in exchange for the payment Valikazi agreed to make arrangements to recruit nurses from South Africa, train them, and transport*221 them to the United States. We do not *212 make a finding that the testimony is true. On February 1, 2010, Clues signed a plea agreement with an Assistant U.S. Attorney. As part of the plea agreement: *213 • Clues pleaded guilty to count 8 of the indictment that she willfully attempted to evade and defeat the payment of employment taxes owed by Exclusive Temporaries for the fourth quarter • The United States agreed that it would not prosecute Clues "any further on the information the United States presently has." • The United States agreed that "the total amount of restitution owed in this case" was $1,411,975.34. • Clues agreed to pay restitution to the IRS of $1,411,975.34. • Clues agreed to the District Court's ordering her as a condition of supervised release to pay restitution to the IRS of $1,411,975.34. • Clues agreed that any fine or restitution imposed by the District Court would be due*223 and payable immediately. • Clues agreed "not to file any claim for refund of taxes, interest, or penalties represented by the restitution paid in this case on her own behalf or on behalf of Exclusive Temporaries, Inc., even if the ultimate civil liability that defendant [Clues] owes turns out to be less than the amounts paid in restitution." She also agreed not to "file any *214 action in a U.S. district court, in the U.S. Tax Court, or in the U.S. Claims Court seeking a refund or other recovery of the amounts paid in restitution in this criminal case, even if the ultimate civil liability that defendant owes turns out to be less than the amount paid in restitution." • Clues agreed that if the case were to proceed to trial one of the "facts" that would be offered by the United States to establish her guilt would be: "The relevant conduct in this case and the restitution owed to the IRS in this case is $1,411,975.34, which is the total amount of employment taxes owed to the United States by ETI [Exclusive Temporaries] on all four quarters of 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, and 2004." • Clues agreed that if the case were to proceed to trial, among the "facts" that would be offered by the United States*224 to establish her guilt would be that for 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, and 2004 she failed to file quarterly Forms 941*215 any employment taxes for those quarters "except for a few partial payments made during 1999." On June 21, 2010, the District Court imposed a judgment on Clues. The judgment adjudicated that Clues was guilty of the offense described in count 8 of the indictment. The judgment dismissed the remaining counts of the indictment on motion of the United States. As part of the judgment the District Court imposed a sentence consisting of three elements: (1) imprisonment of 37 months, (2) supervised release of three years following release from imprisonment, and (3) criminal monetary penalties. The judgment stated that the "total criminal monetary penalties" consisted of the following: (1) a "special assessment" of $100, which the judgment "remitted" because the District Court found that it was unlikely that the assessment could be collected, (2) no fine, and (3) restitution*225 to the IRS of $1,411,975.34. In addition, the judgment stated that Clues was required to pay interest on restitution unless she paid the restitution before the 15th day after the date of judgment, pursuant to A ☒ Lump sum payment of $1,411,975.35 due immediately, balance due * * * in accordance with * * * ☒ D * * * below; * * * D ☒ Payment in equal monthly installments of $500 over a period of 35 months, to commence 30 days after release from imprisonment to a term of supervision; * * * On June 21, 2010, Clues was taken into custody to serve her sentence. She was incarcerated at*226 the federal prison camp in Bryan, Texas. On September 3, 2010, Clues made a $100 restitution payment to the District Court. This was the first of 13 payments that Clues made to the District Court. The parties have stipulated that the first four payments were "restitution payments". They did not make a similar stipulation as to the other nine payments. On April 6, 2011, the IRS credited $100 to Clues' account for her trust-fund-recovery penalty for the first quarter of 1999. The entry in the IRS's records states that the credit was a "penalty adjustment * * * Due to Payment by Related Business Entity." The trial record contains no other information about this $100 *217 credit. We assume, for the purpose of this opinion, that this $100 credit is unrelated to Clues' restitution payment of $100 made on September 3, 2010.*227 charge of collecting the trust-fund-recovery penalties from Clues had a telephone conversation with Clues to gather information about her assets. On February 16, 2012, the IRS revenue officer had another telephone conversation with Clues to gather information about her assets. Also on February 16, 2012, the IRS hand-delivered a Letter 1153, Trust Funds Recovery Penalty Letter, to Clues at the federal prison camp in Bryan. The Letter 1153 informed Clues that the IRS was proposing to assess trust-fund-recovery penalties for her failure to pay to the IRS the trust-fund taxes owed by Exclusive Temporaries. The Letter 1153 informed Clues that if she did not agree with the penalties, she could appeal the proposed assessment in writing within 60 days. The Letter 1153 gave Clues instructions on how to make such an appeal. *218 On March 30, 2012, Clues sent the IRS a Form 2751, Proposed Assessment of Trust Fund Recovery Penalty, consenting to the assessment and collection of the trust-fund recovery penalties for 1999-2002 and 2004. On April 6, 2012, the IRS received the Form 2751. On April 16, 2012, the IRS assessed the trust-fund-recovery penalties against Clues for 1999-2002 and 2004. On May 31, 2012,*228 the IRS sent Clues a notice that it intended to levy to collect the trust-fund-recovery penalties for 1999-2002 and 2004. The notice stated that Clues could request a collection-review hearing with the IRS's Appeals Office. On June 12, 2012, the IRS filed notices of lien against Clues' properties in Brazoria County, Texas, and Harris County, Texas, to collect the trust-fund-recovery penalties for 1999-2002 and 2004. Also on June 12, 2012, the IRS sent Clues notices that it had filed notices of lien against Clues' properties in Brazoria County and Harris County to collect the trust-fund-recovery penalties for 1999-2002 and 2004. These June 12, 2012 notices stated that Clues could request a collection-review hearing with the Appeals Office. *219 On June 25, 2012, Clues' account at the Federal Bureau of Prisons was charged $15.72 for a payment to the IRS. The IRS credited this payment to Clues' account for her trust-fund-recovery penalty for the first quarter of 1999. On June 29, 2012, Clues mailed the IRS a request for a collection-review hearing with respect to the proposed levy and the filed notices of lien. In her request, Clues stated that she could not pay the trust-fund-recovery penalties*229 because she was in prison, had little income, and was in bad health. In her request, Clues indicated that she had made a $15.72 payment to the IRS from her prison account. On August 9, 2012, Clues made a $7.56 payment to the IRS from her prison account. The IRS credited this payment to Clues' account for her trust-fund-recovery penalty for the first quarter of 1999. On August 30, 2012, Clues made a $7.80 payment to the IRS from her prison account. The IRS credited this payment to Clues' account for her trust-fund-recovery penalty for the first quarter of 1999. On September 4, 2012, the Appeals Office wrote Clues to inform her that it would not consider alternatives to collection action unless she sent a Form 433-A, Collection Information Statement for Wage Earners and Self-Employed Individuals, within 14 days. *220 On September 14, 2012, Clues sent the Appeals Office a collection-information statement giving information about the values of her assets. On September 27, 2012, Clues was transferred from the federal prison camp in Bryan, Texas, to the Leidel Residential Reentry Center, a halfway house in Houston, Texas. On October 2, 2012, the Appeals Office wrote a letter to Clues stating that*230 it had scheduled a meeting for October 16, 2012, at 10 a.m., in Houston and that this meeting would be her primary opportunity to discuss the reasons she disagreed with the collection actions and to discuss alternatives to collection actions. Clues was allowed to leave Leidel Residential Reentry Center temporarily to attend the meeting in Houston. On October 16, 2012, the Appeals Office had the scheduled meeting with Clues. At the meeting, Clues told the Appeals Office that she was in the process of looking for employment, that the date that she would be placed in home detention was November 4, 2012, and that if she could not find a job, she would enroll in the Culinary Institute and work on her computer skills. At the meeting, Clues questioned why she should have to pay $500 per month of restitution and also pay the trust-fund-recovery penalties. In response, the Appeals Office told her that she had to pay $500 monthly to the District Court, as required by the *221 criminal judgment, and that, in addition, the IRS could collect from her for the civil penalties. On November 5, 2012, Clues was permanently released from the Leidel Residential Reentry Center. On November 21, 2012, the Appeals*231 Office issued a notice of determination sustaining the proposed levy and the filing of the lien notices. The notice of determination stated that Clues' request to declare her account currently not collectible was denied because she owned various pieces of real property. Specifically, the notice of determination stated that Clues owned a homestead in Houston with equity of $5,000, a property in Alvin, Texas, with equity of $33,000, a property in Decatur, Georgia, another property in Houston valued at $100,000, and a lot in Brazoria County, Texas, that some of these properties were held by "alter ego" entities, and that the "revenue officer estimates the total value of the taxpayer's real property is less than $500,000." The notice of determination stated that the filing of the lien notices was necessary to protect the government's interest in Clues' real property. The notice of determination stated that the proposed levy was necessary to collect valid, unpaid liabilities. The notice of determination stated: "It was explained that she must pay the $500.00 for 35 months to the U.S. District Clerk as stated in the criminal judgment. In addition, the IRS may collect *222 from her and apply*232 the funds to the civil liabilities." The notice of determination stated that the Appeals Office had verified through "[a]ccount transcripts" that balances were due when the IRS had issued the notices of lien filings and the notice proposing a levy. On December 21, 2012, Clues filed the petition with the Tax Court. She was a resident of Texas when she filed the petition. On March 8, 2013, Clues made a $50 restitution payment to the District Court. This was the second of 13 payments that Clues made to the District Court. On April 12, 2013, Clues made a $50 restitution payment to the District Court. This was the third of 13 payments that Clues made to the District Court. On May 31, 2013, Clues made a $100 restitution payment to the District Court. This was the fourth of 13 payments that Clues made to the District Court. (To explain why she paid only $100, Clues testified that the District Court had reduced her monthly restitution amount from $500 to $100. She did not testify when this reduction occurred. Nor did she explain why the prior two payments were for $50.*233 ) *223 A record dated June 27, 2013, from the District Court shows that Clues had made four restitution payments as of that date: $100 on September 3, 2010, $50 on March 8, 2013, $50 on April 12, 2013, and $100 on May 31, 2013. The District Court's record also showed the following amounts in relation to Clues' only "debt", which was referred to in the record as "VICTIM RESTITUTION w/ Interest": Clues made the remaining 9 of 13 payments to the District Court as follows: On July 1, 2014, this case was tried in Houston, Texas. An employer is required to pay three types of federal employment taxes. First, an employer must pay the employer share of the FICA Clues argues that the Appeals Office made six errors in its determination. We discuss these six alleged errors below in parts 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6, respectively. We conclude that the Appeals Office did not err. Clues argues that she should not be liable for the trust-fund-recovery penalties because Exclusive Temporaries' alleged payment of $1.5 million to recruit South African nurses made it impossible for Exclusive Temporaries to pay the trust-fund taxes to the IRS. Clues contends that she did not know that Exclusive Temporaries had any unpaid employment-tax liabilities until the IRS *227 audit in 2004 and after it had made the alleged payment of $1.5 million and that by then it did not have the money to pay the liabilities. The IRS responds that a $1.5 million payment made in 2004 would not have impaired*237 Exclusive Temporaries' financial position during most of the periods at issue (1999-2002 and 2004). The IRS further contends that Clues cannot challenge her liability for the trust-fund-recovery penalties because first, she had a prior opportunity to make such a challenge when she received the Letter 1153, and second, she did not make such a challenge at the collection-review hearing. Clues responds that the Letter 1153 had not been personally delivered to her because she "had to get it through her counselor", meaning her prison counselor. She argues that even if the Letter 1153 was personally delivered to her, she did not have access to legal counsel in prison to help her respond to the Letter 1153. Clues also contends that she did not challenge her liability for the trust-fund-recovery penalties at the collection-review hearing because the Appeals Office failed to help her present her claim. The IRS contends that legal representation is not necessary to appeal the assessment of penalties in response to a Letter 1153 and that the Appeals Office was required only to consider issues raised by Clues at the collection-review hearing, not to help her present these issues. *228 In a collection-review*238 hearing regarding actions to collect the trust-fund-recovery penalty, the person allegedly liable for the penalty may be entitled to challenge the existence or amount of the penalty liability. Clues argues that she should not be liable for the trust-fund-recovery penalties because she did not personally benefit from the trust-fund taxes that Exclusive Temporaries failed to pay over to the IRS. Clues asserts that she received no salary as president of the company, that she put all the company's money back into its business, and that she did not receive the alleged $1.5 million payment. Clues' argument that she did not benefit from her failure to pay the trust-fund taxes appears to be an attempt to challenge the existence or amount of her liability for the trust-fund-recovery penalties. Because the Letter 1153 afforded her a prior opportunity to make such a challenge, we do not have jurisdiction to consider it. Clues argues that she should not be liable for both the trust-fund-recovery penalties and the $1,411,975.34 criminal-restitution*240 sentence.*241 The IRS responds *230 that there is no danger of double collection because of the way it will account for the restitution payments. It contends that by policy it will apply the restitution payments first to the non-trust-fund employment taxes of Exclusive Temporaries (i.e., the employer share of FICA), and that, once these taxes have been paid, any further restitution payments will be applied to the trust-fund taxes of Exclusive Temporaries and will reduce the trust-fund-recovery penalties that have been assessed against Clues.*231 Even if we assume (without deciding) that there is potential for double collection,See Clues argues that the alleged $1.5 million payment to recruit South African nurses was a deduction against Exclusive Temporaries'*243 income and that the deduction passed through to her as the S corporation's sole shareholder. The IRS responds that the corporation's income was not an issue before the Appeals Office. We agree with the IRS. What Clues seeks is a deduction against her own income tax liability. An S corporation such as Exclusive Temporaries is not subject to the income tax. The Tax Court in a collection-review case has jurisdiction to determine only the "underlying tax liability". Clues argues that Exclusive Temporaries filed quarterly employment tax returns for all quarters for which she was assessed the trust-fund-recovery penalties, and that it wrote a check each quarter that fully paid its employment-tax liabilities. The IRS contends that Clues did not raise this issue at the collection-review hearing. Furthermore, the IRS contends that Exclusive Temporaries failed to file the returns and pay its employment taxes. On cross-examination Clues admitted that Exclusive Temporaries did not pay its employment taxes for 1999-2002 and 2004. We assume (without deciding) that if Exclusive Temporaries had paid its employment taxes it would have been an error for the Appeals Office to sustain collection actions to collect the trust-fund-recovery penalties from Clues. However, we reject the factual predicate that Exclusive Temporaries paid its employment taxes. Although Clues testified that Exclusive Temporaries had paid its employment taxes, we find this testimony incredible because: (1) this testimony was later recanted by Clues, (2) the testimony is unsupported by any documentary evidence, and (3) the testimony is inconsistent with various facts in *234 the record*245 (for example, Clues' plea agreement to make restitution of Exclusive Temporaries' unpaid employment taxes). Clues argues that the IRS did not know the value of her property when it filed the notices of lien and proposed the levy in May and June of 2012. Clues points out that it was not until September 2012 that she gave the Appeals Office a collection-information statement estimating the value of her assets. The IRS argues that the value of the taxpayer's property has no bearing on whether the IRS is initially entitled to file a notice of lien on the property or propose a levy. A taxpayer (or in this case, someone liable for the trust-fund-recovery penalty) may request that a liability be designated currently not collectible where, on the basis of the taxpayer's assets, equity, income, and expenses, the taxpayer has no apparent ability to make payments on the outstanding liability. None of the six errors alleged by Clues has merit. To reflect the foregoing,Total Owed $1,411,975.34 Total Collected 300.00 Total Outstanding 1,411,675.34 Date Payment Amount June 28, 2013 5 of 13 $125 July 31, 2013 6 of 13 150 Aug. 30, 2013 7 of 13 100 Sept. 25, 2013 8 of 13 100 Oct. 24, 2013 9 of 13 100 Nov. 26, 2013 10 of 13 100 Dec. 30, 2013 11 of 13 100 Jan. 31, 2014 12 of 13 100 Feb. 27, 2014 13 of 13 100
1. All references to sections are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended and in effect at all relevant times.↩
2. All facts stipulated by the parties are found as facts by the Court, even if not repeated in this part of the opinion.↩
3. The testimony appears inconsistent with the plea agreement that Clues signed in 2010 to resolve criminal tax charges against her. As part of the plea agreement (other parts of which are described below) she agreed that if the case were to proceed to trial, among the "facts" that would be offered by the United States to establish Clues' guilt would be: "In 2004, during the IRS civil audit of employment taxes of ETI [Exclusive Temporaries], Clues wired-transferred approximately $1.3 million of ETI's funds out of the United States in order to evade the employment taxes owed by ETI for the years in the indictment [1999-2002 and 2004]."↩
4. Any person who willfully attempts in any manner to evade or defeat any tax imposed by this title [the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, which is title 26 of the U.S. Code] or the payment thereof shall, in addition to other penalties provided by law, be guilty of a felony and, upon conviction thereof, shall be fined not more than $100,000 ($500,000 in the case of a corporation), or imprisoned not more than 5 years, or both, together with the costs of prosecution.
5. Employment taxes are reported and paid quarterly.↩
6. Form 941, Employer's Quarterly Tax Return, is the quarterly form used by employers to report employment taxes to the IRS.↩
7. The judgment also stated: "All of the payment options on Sheet 6 may be subject to penalties for delinquency and default, pursuant to
8. The IRS represented to us that its policy is to credit Clues' initial restitution payments against unpaid non-trust-fund employment taxes, not against trust-fund-recovery penalties. Under this policy, the IRS would not have recorded the September 3, 2010 restitution payment as a credit against Clues' trust-fund-recovery penalties.↩
9. We need not determine whether the monthly payment was indeed reduced by the District Court because this statement, if true, would not affect our decision.
10. FICA refers to the Federal Insurance Contributions Act.
11. Although the judgment of the District Court seems to require Clues to pay $1,411,975.34
12. This policy may explain why the 13 payments that Clues made to the District Court, totaling $1,275, are not reflected in the IRS's records for Clues' trust-fund-recovery-penalty accounts. The parties have stipulated that the first four payments were restitution payments (although they have made no such stipulation about the nature of the remaining nine payments.) As restitution, the $1,275 in payments would have been applied by the IRS against Exclusive Temporaries' non-trust-fund employment taxes pursuant to the policy.↩
13. No double collection has yet occurred. As of the collection-review hearing, Clues had paid only $100 of the $1,411,975.34. This $100 payment, consistent with IRS policy, was applicable only to the non-trust-fund portion of Exclusive Temporaries' employment tax liability. It did not count against the trust-fund portion. Furthermore, the IRS had collected only $31.08 ($15.72 + $7.56 +$7.80) in trust-fund-recovery penalties.↩
14. Clues had made the $100 restitution payment on September 3, 2010. After the hearing, Clues made an additional $1,175 in payments.↩