United States Court of Appeals,
Fifth Circuit.
No. 95-20785.
In the Matter of Stephen Edward BUGGE, Debtor,
Stephen Edward BUGGE, Appellant,
v.
UNITED STATES of America, Appellee.
Nov. 15, 1996.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern
District of Texas.
Before POLITZ, Chief Judge, and JOLLY and BARKSDALE, Circuit
Judges.
E. GRADY JOLLY, Circuit Judge:
Stephen Edward Bugge, a debtor in Chapter 7 bankruptcy
proceedings and the former president of Coastal Crude Trucking,
Inc. ("Coastal"), appeals from the district court's affirmance of
the bankruptcy court's posttrial ruling that Bugge is liable for a
$327,379.82 windfall profit tax penalty. He argues that the
erroneous abatement of the IRS assessment—the assessment that is
the basis for this tax penalty—should not have been reinstated
because the statute of limitations had expired. Bugge also
challenges the denial of his request for attorneys' fees. We
affirm.
I
Because of severe corporate cash flow problems in the summer
of 1983, Bugge, who had authority to approve all payments made from
any Coastal corporate account, decided that Coastal would not pay
1
its windfall profit1 taxes for the first and second quarters of
1983. He also chose not to pay certain payroll withholding taxes.
In an affidavit, Bugge admitted that he had instructed Coastal's
vice president of office administration, La Verne Glosson, to write
checks to cover Coastal's most pressing debts and to wait until
July 1983 to pay the outstanding taxes. When Glosson printed a
check in mid-July for Coastal's tax liability, Bugge voided the
check and falsely told her that the taxes had been paid by
Coastal's Houston office.
In March 1985, within the applicable statute of limitations
period for penalty assessments and pursuant to its authority under
I.R.C. § 6672, the IRS assessed a 100% penalty totaling $327,379.82
against Bugge for Coastal's failure to pay its windfall profit
taxes. An IRS employee manually documented the assessment on a
"unit ledger card." Because section 6672 penalty assessments could
not be fully entered into the "master file" as it was then
configured on the IRS computer system, unit ledger cards were used
to document such accounts by hand. Nonetheless, some limited
information was recorded in the computerized master file, such as
the amount of the assessment and the dates of the relevant tax
periods. Pursuant to IRS procedure, Bugge's assessments for the
two quarters were totaled and recorded as a single assessment of
$327,379.82 under the second quarter of 1983. This second quarter
assessment was noted on both the unit ledger card and in the
1
At that time, the tax laws required the first purchaser of
crude oil to withhold a windfall profit tax and remit the amounts
withheld to the IRS. I.R.C. §§ 4995(a)(1), 4995(b)(2)(A)(I).
2
computer's master file. Thereafter, an IRS employee inexplicably
crossed out the second quarter assessment on the unit ledger card
and wrote in its place "8303," a code that refers to the first
quarter of 1983. No change was made to the computer records.
In the course of preparing the account for collection, another
IRS officer compared the information on the unit ledger card with
the information in the computer's master file. The IRS collections
officer discovered that Bugge's penalty assessment on the unit
ledger card was recorded under the first quarter of 1983 but that
the computer indicated an identical assessment for the second
quarter of 1983. Believing the first quarter assessment to be an
erroneous duplicate of the second quarter assessment, the
collections officer submitted a request for adjustment of the first
quarter assessment. The request form expressly stated: "Please
abate the following [assessment], dated 03-12-85 in the amount of
$327,379.82, since this is a duplicate assessment that has already
been done using the correct [master file tax] and tax period." The
collections manager approved the request for adjustment, which was
sent to the regional service center for processing. Failing to
realize that there was in fact no duplicate assessment for the
first quarter, the regional service center adjusted Bugge's account
by abating the only assessment that appeared in the computer's
master file, which was the $327,379.82 assessment for the second
quarter of 1983. Instead of eliminating a duplicate assessment in
accordance with the written instructions in the request form,
Bugge's account was reduced to zero and erroneously cleared of all
3
penalty assessments.
In addition to the section 6672 penalty assessed against
Bugge, the IRS made similar assessments against Glosson and
Coastal's co-owner, Benjamin Clifton. Glosson paid a portion of
the penalty and filed a refund action in the United States District
Court for the Southern District of Texas. At Glosson's request,
Bugge executed an affidavit in an effort to assist Glosson in the
refund litigation. In his affidavit, Bugge stated that he was
responsible for the approval of all payments made from any Coastal
corporate account and confirmed that Glosson had no authority to
make tax payments. Bugge also admitted that he had lied to Glosson
regarding the payment of Coastal's taxes. Bugge now says that he
executed the affidavit under the assumption that there was no valid
tax assessment pending against him and that, in any event, the
statute of limitations for assessing such a penalty had expired.
In its litigation of Glosson's refund action, the government
filed third-party claims against Bugge and Clifton for the
previously assessed section 6672 tax penalties. While preparing
for the Glosson trial, the government discovered that the IRS had
erroneously abated the windfall profit tax assessment against
Bugge. Although the statute of limitations for the assessment of
such penalties had expired almost three and one-half years earlier,
the IRS reinstated the tax assessment against Bugge.
A jury trial in Glosson's refund action was set for September
1991. Prior to the trial, Bugge filed a Chapter 7 bankruptcy
petition in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Southern
4
District of Texas. Because the automatic stay of the Bankruptcy
Code threatened to prevent Glosson's trial from proceeding, the
government and Bugge entered into a pretrial stipulation. Among
other things, the parties agreed that Bugge's statute of
limitations defense to the tax penalty would be tried before the
bankruptcy court. In addition, Bugge stipulated to "all issues
against him involving liability in the District Court case, and ...
that he was a "responsible person' and that he acted "willfully'
within the meaning of Section 6672 of the Internal Revenue Code, as
to the issues involved in the District Court case." The district
court dismissed Bugge without prejudice as a party in the refund
litigation.
In the bankruptcy proceedings, Bugge moved for a determination
of his tax liability. He argued that the windfall profit tax
penalty was invalid because the IRS had reassessed the penalty
after the statute of limitations had expired. Following a trial,
the bankruptcy court ruled that Bugge was liable for windfall
profit and payroll withholding tax assessments in the respective
amounts of $327,379.82 and $6808.35.2 Adopting the reasoning of
the district court in Crompton-Richmond Co. v. United States, 311
F.Supp. 1184 (S.D.N.Y.1970),3 the bankruptcy court held that the
2
Bugge has conceded liability for the payroll withholding
taxes and does not challenge that assessment on appeal.
3
In Crompton-Richmond, the IRS assessed a section 6672 penalty
against Crompton-Richmond Co., Inc. ("Crompton") for a corporate
debtor's failure to pay income and employment withholding taxes.
Crompton paid the penalty and sued the IRS for a refund. In
defending against Crompton's refund action, the IRS filed various
third-party claims, including one against Vincent De Sousa. While
5
assessment was properly reinstated under a judicially created
exception to the statute of limitations. According to the
bankruptcy court, this exception was applicable in Bugge's case
because (i) the abatement resulted from a clerical error, and not
from a substantive reevaluation of Bugge's tax liability; and (ii)
Bugge was not prejudiced by the reinstatement in view of the fact
that his tax liability for the windfall profit taxes remained the
same as it had been in 1985. The district court affirmed without
opinion. Bugge has timely appealed.
II
A bankruptcy court's findings of fact are subject to the
clearly erroneous standard of review. Matter of Sadkin, 36 F.3d
473, 475 (5th Cir.1994); Chiasson v. Bingler (In re Oxford
Crompton's lawsuit was pending, an IRS district director requested
an adjustment to abate the assessment against De Sousa. The IRS's
regional service center rejected the director's initial request
because it was against IRS policy to grant an abatement while a
refund suit was pending. Before the district director received
notification of the initial rejection, he filed a second request to
abate De Sousa's penalty. This second request, which was
authorized by the district director, mistakenly was granted. When
the IRS discovered the error, it immediately reversed its decision
to abate and reinstated the assessment against De Sousa. The
reinstatement occurred, however, after the statute of limitations
had expired.
In ruling upon De Sousa's motion for summary judgment,
the district court in Crompton-Richmond found that the
abatement of De Sousa's assessment represented "plain ordinary
clerical or bookkeeping errors arising out of the failure of
some IRS office personnel to appreciate that there was a
pending refund suit." Crompton-Richmond, 311 F.Supp. at 1185-
1186. The district court concluded that " "[w]henever an
abatement is issued because of a mistake of fact or
bookkeeping error, the assessment can be reinstated, at least
so long as this does not prejudice the taxpayer.' " Id. at
1187 (quoting Kroyer v. United States, 73 Ct.Cl. 591, 55 F.2d
495, 499 (1932)).
6
Management Inc.), 4 F.3d 1329, 1333 (5th Cir.1993). When the
district court has affirmed the bankruptcy court's findings, as in
this appeal, we apply the standard strictly and will reverse only
when there is a firm conviction that error has been committed. Id.
Conclusions of law are reviewed de novo. Id.
III
We begin our consideration of this appeal with a review of the
relevant tax provisions in the Internal Revenue Code ("I.R.C." or
the "Code"). The IRS initially assessed the tax penalties against
Bugge in March 1985 pursuant to I.R.C. § 6672, which provides in
pertinent part:
Any person required to collect, truthfully account for, and
pay over any tax imposed by [the Code] who willfully fails to
collect such tax, or truthfully account for and pay over such
tax, or willfully attempts in any manner to evade or defeat
any such tax or the payment thereof, shall, in addition to
other penalties provided by law, be liable to penalty equal to
the total amount of the tax evaded, or not collected, or not
accounted for and paid over.
I.R.C. § 6672 (West Supp.1996).
We previously have examined section 6672 and explained that
under this section the IRS has a duty to collect and retain from
certain corporate officers and employees those funds that their
corporation has unlawfully failed to turn over to the government.
USLIFE Title Ins. Co. Of Dallas on Behalf of Mathews v. Harbison,
784 F.2d 1238, 1239-40 (5th Cir.1986). In accordance with the
statute, the IRS will assess up to 100% of the penalty against each
of the persons that it determines to be responsible for the
corporation's delinquency. Id. To be held liable under section
6672, a person must be deemed "responsible" within the meaning of
7
the statute, and must "willfully" fail to remit the amounts due to
the government. Id.
Also relevant to our consideration is section 6404 of the
Code, which empowers the IRS to abate the unpaid portion of an
assessment that is (1) excessive in amount; (2) assessed after the
expiration of the applicable period of limitations; or (3)
erroneously or illegally assessed. I.R.C. § 6404(a).4 We
interpret the language of section 6404(a) to be permissive, not
mandatory. Poretto v. Usry, 295 F.2d 499, 501 (5th Cir.1961). In
other words, the statute provides the IRS with an option, but not
a duty, to abate an assessment. Id. As a general rule, an
abatement will "wipe out the assessment." Carney Coal Co. v.
Commissioner, 10 B.T.A. 1397, 1403, 1928 WL 1341 (1928). If the
IRS decides to reimpose a validly abated assessment, it should make
the new assessment within the relevant statutory limitations
period. Id.; see also Crompton-Richmond, 311 F.Supp. at 1186 n.
2.
With respect to Bugge's assessment, the relevant limitations
4
Section 6404(a) provides:
(a) General rule.—The Secretary is authorized to abate
the unpaid portion of the assessment of any tax or any
liability in respect thereof, which—
(1) is excessive in amount, or
(2) is assessed after the expiration of the period
of limitations properly applicable thereto, or
(3) is erroneously or illegally assessed.
I.R.C. § 6404(a) (West 1989).
8
period is set forth in Code section 6501(a).5 As our court has
explained before, "[t]he plain language of section 6501 establishes
a three-year period of limitations "for assessing any tax imposed
under the Code.' " Green v. C.I.R., 963 F.2d 783, 787 (5th
Cir.1992). In essence, section 6501(a) requires the IRS to assess
taxes no later than three years after the last day prescribed by
law for filing the subject tax return. Should the IRS fail to
assess a tax timely, section 6501(a) prohibits the IRS from
pursuing court enforcement proceedings after the three-year statute
of limitations has expired.
Despite the Code's recognition of certain exceptions to the
three-year statute of limitations, see I.R.C. § 6501(c), none of
these is applicable in Bugge's case. Nonetheless, the government
argues, and the bankruptcy court agreed, that the judicially
created exception articulated in Crompton-Richmond, 311 F.Supp. at
1186-87, permits the reinstatement of Bugge's abated assessment
after the three-year statute of limitations had expired.
IV
We decline judicially to engraft further exceptions to the
statute of limitations beyond those provided by Congress. Instead,
5
I.R.C. § 6501(a) provides in pertinent part:
(a) General rule.—Except as otherwise provided in this
section, the amount of any tax imposed by this title
shall be assessed within 3 years after the return was
filed (whether or not such return was filed on or after
the date prescribed), ... and no proceeding in court
without assessment for the collection of such tax shall
be begun after the expiration of such period.
I.R.C. § 6501(a) (West Supp.1996).
9
we hold, that on the facts of this case, no effective tax abatement
under the Secretary's statutory authority in I.R.C. § 6404(a)(1)
ever occurred.
The collections manager in this case never intended or
approved an abatement of Bugge's entire tax liability. Instead,
the manager only approved an abatement of what appeared to be a
duplicate assessment in the amount of $327,379.82. The record,
including relevant portions of the trial testimony, shows that the
IRS collections officer in charge of Bugge's account was merely
attempting to clarify what he perceived as an inconsistency between
IRS handwritten records and the computerized master file. In
requesting the abatement, the collections officer intended, and
received approval from his manager for, a reduction of Bugge's tax
liability from two assessments of $327,379.82 each (i.e., a total
liability of $654,759.64) to a single assessment of $327,379.82.
This request was in accord with the IRS's discretionary authority
under section 6404(a)(1) to abate an assessment that is "excessive
in amount." See supra note 4 for full text of statute. However,
when the regional service center processed the request and
inadvertently eliminated Bugge's entire tax liability, it failed to
act within the scope of the request that had been approved by the
collections manager. In addition, by abating Bugge's actual and
correct tax liability, it failed to act within the IRS's statutory
authority to abate an excessive assessment. I.R.C. § 6404(a)(1).
The only adjustment that the regional service center was authorized
to make was the elimination of an apparent double-assessment in
10
certain IRS records. Because of a purely accidental and unintended
processing error,6 the regional service center executed an
unintended abatement lacking any authorization.
Because the regional service center accidentally processed an
unapproved abatement, it follows that the abatement of Bugge's tax
assessment of $327,379.82 was never effective. Simply put, an
unauthorized and accidental abatement of an entire assessment in
contravention of section 6404(a)(1) is not effective. On the facts
of this case, it is our view that what Bugge characterizes as a
"reassessment after the period of limitations has expired" is more
accurately analyzed as the correction of an inadvertent error.7
We therefore must conclude on this record that (1) Bugge's
section 6672 tax liability for windfall profits in the amount of
$327,379.82 was timely assessed within the limitations prescribed
by I.R.C. § 6501(a); (2) Bugge's total windfall profit tax
6
Bugge argues on appeal that the IRS errors in abating his
assessment in its entirety were not clerical in nature but resulted
from conscious decisions made by IRS personnel to abate his taxes.
"Clerical errors are by their nature not errors in judgment but
merely inadvertencies." NTN Bearing Corp. v. United States, 74
F.3d 1204, 1208 (Fed.Cir.1995). The erroneous abatement of Bugge's
entire tax liability resulted not from an error in judgment, but
from an accidental act that was perhaps attributable to a computer
system in transition. In any event, the record shows that IRS
personnel never made conscious decisions to execute a 100%
abatement of Bugge's windfall profit tax liability.
7
A number of courts, including the United States Supreme
Court, have recognized the authority of a government agency to
correct inadvertent, ministerial errors (see, e.g., American
Trucking Ass'ns. v. Frisco Transportation Co., 358 U.S. 133, 144-
46, 79 S.Ct. 170, 177, 3 L.Ed.2d 172 (1958); Zenith Electronics
Corp. v. United States, 884 F.2d 556, 560 (Fed.Cir.1989)). In no
way should this opinion, however, be interpreted as granting the
IRS a special shield from responsibility for its errors,
inadvertent or otherwise, that prejudice the taxpayer.
11
liability of $327,379.82 was never abated or extinguished pursuant
to I.R.C. § 6404(a); and (3) Bugge remains liable for the
$327,379.82 assessment, plus statutory and accrued interest from
the date assessed. Having affirmed on liability, we also AFFIRM
the denial of Bugge's request for attorneys' fees.
Accordingly, the district court's judgment affirming the
bankruptcy court is
AFFIRMED.
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