FOR PUBLICATION
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
RICHARD HONGSERMEIER; FIORELLA
HONGSERMEIER,
Petitioners, No. 07-72828
v. Tax Ct. No.
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL 29643-86
REVENUE,
Respondent.
RICHARD B. ROGERS; DONNA G.
ROGERS,
Petitioners-Appellants, No. 07-73718
v. Tax Ct. No.
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL 17993-95
REVENUE,
Respondent-Appellee.
JOHN L. HUBER; TERRY E. HUBER,
Petitioners,
No. 07-73719
v.
Tax Ct. No.
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL 20119-84
REVENUE,
Respondent.
13183
13184 HONGSERMEIER v. CIR
STANLEY C. TITCOMB; SHARON A.
TITCOMB,
Petitioners-Appellants, No. 07-73818
v. Tax Ct. No.
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL 17992-95
REVENUE,
Respondent-Appellee.
NORMAN W. ADAIR; BARBARA L. No. 07-73822
ADAIR,
Tax Ct. Nos.
Petitioners-Appellants,
17642-83
v. 38965-84
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL 35608-86
REVENUE, 479-89
Respondent-Appellee.
8070-90
GLORIA K. OWENS; TERRY D.
OWENS,
Petitioners, No. 07-73823
v. Tax Ct. No.
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL 40159-84
REVENUE,
Respondent.
HONGSERMEIER v. CIR 13185
HOYT W. YOUNG; BARBARA D. No. 07-73825
YOUNG,
Petitioners-Appellants, Tax Ct. Nos.
v. 4201-84
22783-85
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL 30010-85
REVENUE,
OPINION
Respondent-Appellee.
Appeal from a Decision of the Tax Court
Argued and Submitted
November 4, 2009—Seattle, Washington
Filed September 1, 2010
Before: Ferdinand F. Fernandez, Andrew J. Kleinfeld and
Richard R. Clifton, Circuit Judges.
Opinion by Judge Clifton
13188 HONGSERMEIER v. CIR
COUNSEL
Michael Louis Minns, Houston, Texas, for petitioners Richard
and Fiorella Hongsermeier.
HONGSERMEIER v. CIR 13189
Joe Alfred Izen, Jr., Bellaire, Texas, for petitioners Norman
W. and Barbara L. Adair, Terry D. and Gloria K. Owens, and
Hoyt W. and Barbara D. Young.
Robert Patrick Sticht, Los Angeles, California, for petitioners
Richard B. and Donna G. Rogers, John L. and Terry E.
Huber, and Stanley C. and Sharon A. Titcomb.
Nathan J. Hochman, Richard Farber, and John A. Dudeck, Jr.
(argued), U.S. Department of Justice, Washington, D.C., for
the respondent.
OPINION
CLIFTON, Circuit Judge:
Petitioners are representatives of a group of taxpayers who
have previously been before our court. The taxpayers partici-
pated in a tax shelter that was challenged by the government
and became the subject of litigation before the Tax Court.
Misconduct by government attorneys tainted that litigation.
Specifically, a case was tried before the Tax Court involving
“test case” taxpayers selected by the larger group of taxpayers
and by the government. It was discovered after the Tax Court
announced its decision from the test case that government
attorneys had previously reached a settlement with one tax-
payer but withheld that information from the court and from
the other taxpayers so that evidence advantageous to the gov-
ernment could be elicited from the taxpayer during the Tax
Court trial. This Court held in Dixon v. CIR, 316 F.3d 1041,
1047-48 (9th Cir. 2003), that the misconduct constituted fraud
on the court, and we remanded the cases to the Tax Court for
entry of judgment on terms equivalent to those provided to the
taxpayer who was party to the secret settlement. We left it to
that court to determine what the precise terms should be. The
Tax Court rendered its decision, Dixon v. CIR, 91 T.C.M.
13190 HONGSERMEIER v. CIR
(CCH) 1086, 2006 WL 1157520, and it was again appealed
by the taxpayers. That is the appeal now before us. We affirm
the Tax Court’s determination of petitioners’ remaining fed-
eral income tax deficiencies and liability for underpayment of
interest.
I. Background
A. Prior Factual and Procedural History1
During the 1970s and 1980s, a group of individual taxpay-
ers participated in an investment program and tax shelter
designed and administered by Honolulu businessman Henry
Kersting (“Kersting”). The investments, which came to bear
Kersting’s name, consisted of a somewhat complicated pro-
gram in which participants purchased stock with loans from
Kersting-controlled entities financed by two layers of promis-
sory notes.2 Kersting marketed the product as a legitimate
investment which would enable participants to claim interest
deductions on their individual tax returns. When Kersting par-
ticipants claimed those deductions,3 the IRS issued notices of
deficiency, disallowing all interest deductions taken, and rea-
soning that the underlying transactions were shams, the inter-
est was not “paid or properly accrued,” and the notes did not
constitute a bona fide indebtedness.
1
This portion of the background narrative is taken from our prior deci-
sion in Dixon, 316 F.3d at 1043-46.
2
The Kersting investment consisted of the following: (i) corporate stock
or stock subscription rights or investment certificates purchased by a loan
from a Kersting company (a “Primary Note”); (ii) prepayment of interest
on the Primary Note financed by a secondary or “leverage” note from
another Kersting entity at a lower interest rate than the Primary Note; (iii)
principal on the Primary Note paid by surrender of the stock or other
underlying asset; and (iv) interest on the Primary Note paid by a distribu-
tion from the corporation whose stock was purchased with the Primary
Note. Dixon v. CIR, 62 T.C.M. (CCH) 1440, 1454-62 (1991) (original Tax
Court opinion).
3
Deductions were claimed pursuant to 26 U.S.C. § 163.
HONGSERMEIER v. CIR 13191
In a Tax Court action brought by Kersting on their behalf,
program participants sought a redetermination of the deficien-
cies. Recognizing that the sheer number of affected taxpayers
(approximately 1,800) made it impractical to try each case
individually, the parties agreed to employ a “test case”
approach to determine liability. To facilitate this process, the
bulk of affected taxpayers signed stipulations (“piggyback
agreements”) agreeing to be bound by the decision of a test
case trial involving representative taxpayers. The agreed-upon
process provided that two representatives would be chosen by
the taxpayers’ attorneys and five by IRS attorneys. Approxi-
mately 1,300 taxpayers, some 500 already having settled,
signed on to the piggyback agreements.
The test cases proceeded to a consolidated one-month trial
before the Tax Court sitting in Honolulu. The Tax Court ulti-
mately concluded that the taxpayers were liable for all
assessed deficiencies and would be required to pay additional
negligence and tax-motivated transaction penalties. Crucial to
this determination was the testimony of John R. Thompson
(“Thompson”), the only taxpayer who testified that he
believed the instruments creating the claimed interest would
not be enforced.
As it turns out, that which the Tax Court and other partici-
pants believed to be a legitimate, representative proceeding,
binding on the test case petitioners and all those waiting in the
wings, was anything but. Some time prior to the test case trial,
Kenneth W. McWade (“McWade”), the IRS attorney trying
the case, and William A. Sims (“Sims”), the IRS attorney
with supervisory authority over it, had entered into secret set-
tlement agreements with Thompson and another test case peti-
tioner, John R. Cravens (“Cravens”). Cravens was one of the
taxpayer-selected test case representatives, chosen by tax-
payer counsel because his payment of capital gains taxes upon
exiting the Kersting investment program made him a particu-
larly good representative.
13192 HONGSERMEIER v. CIR
A condition of their settlements required Thompson and
Cravens to remain test case petitioners. McWade also con-
vinced Cravens, who mistakenly believed his liability was
finalized by the settlement, to proceed pro se. With respect to
Thompson,4 McWade agreed to have Thompson’s tax defi-
ciencies reduced in proportion to his attorney’s fees, which
exceeded $60,000. At no point did McWade or Sims reveal to
the Tax Court or to any other taxpayer representative that two
of the test case petitioners’ cases had been settled, much less
reveal the conditions imposed on them.
The deception continued with a cover-up, which was care-
fully designed to prevent the Tax Court and other taxpayers
from learning of the secret settlement agreements. At Kerst-
ing’s deposition, which McWade attended, Kersting’s lawyer
objected to the presence of Thompson’s attorney because of
rumors that Thompson was attempting to settle. Knowing that
Thompson had, in fact, already settled, McWade remained
silent. McWade then misled the Tax Court by failing to dis-
close the settlement when he moved to set aside the Thomp-
son piggy-back agreement, a pre-trial motion necessary to
ensure Thompson’s status as a test case petitioner. Deceptive
silence matured into overt misconduct when, during the
course of the test case trial, it became apparent that Thompson
was going to testify about his settlement. McWade quickly
shifted his questions to unrelated matters.5
4
Thompson had an ongoing dispute with Kersting over the validity of
the investment certificates. Specifically, Kersting had threatened to initiate
collection proceedings against Thompson. Therefore, Thompson had an
interest in seeing that the certificates of investment were declared invalid
and unenforceable. DeCastro, Thompson’s attorney, used the test case pro-
ceeding to elicit testimony from Thompson regarding the sham nature of
the notes in order to bolster Thompson’s position in any subsequent litiga-
tion with Kersting.
5
In the Tax Court proceedings on remand, Judge Beghe pointed to the
following exchange as evidence of deception:
Mr. Thompson: The procedure went through a tax firm in Los
Angeles known as Loeb & Loeb, and I wound up with the
HONGSERMEIER v. CIR 13193
McWade and Sims also secured an agreement with tax-
payer Dennis Alexander6 (“Alexander”) whereby the IRS
would reduce Alexander’s tax deficiencies in exchange for
testimony and trial preparation assistance. In accordance with
this agreement, the IRS paid for Alexander’s expenses in
Hawaii for the length of the trial. McWade then filed a memo-
randum regarding the basis for the settlement of Alexander’s
tax liabilities which the Tax Court later found to be false.
During the test case trial, McWade also sat silently through
testimony by Alexander that he knew to be false.7
DeCastro Law Corporation by way of their direction, and made
several discoveries that were startling to me. And of course, I set-
tled. To be quite honest, I had to get out of this. I was not going
to spend my life—
Mr. McWade: Well, let me—
Mr. Thompson:—doing all this.
Mr. McWade: Let me stop you here for a moment.
Mr. Thompson: Okay, I’m sorry. I beg your pardon.
Mr. McWade: Mr. Thompson, can you tell me: have we been
successful in getting the lien removed from your house?
Thompson’s use of the word “settled” did not disclose the secret settle-
ment between Thompson and the IRS because, in the original proceeding,
Judge Goffe mistakenly interpreted the remark as referring to resolution
of the Thompsons’ tax liability for another year which was not at issue.
Dixon v. CIR, 77 T.C.M. (CCH) 1630, n.55. McWade did nothing to dis-
abuse the court of its interpretation.
6
Alexander was then embroiled in a legal battle with Kersting involving
more than $4 million. Alexander’s animus towards Kersting was made
clear in a letter to the IRS (“When the Nazi knows that 1400 of his clients
are going to be clobbered and that he will have the Criminal Investigative
Division of the IRS coming down on him, I think he will be inclined to
pay me my money.”).
7
When one of the attorneys for the taxpayers asked Alexander if
McWade had discussed a reduction of Alexander’s tax deficiency in
exchange for his testimony, Alexander responded, “Specifically, no.”
McWade failed to correct this patently false statement.
13194 HONGSERMEIER v. CIR
The Tax Court’s test case determination left the remaining
taxpayers—those who had signed on to the piggyback
agreements—subject to judgment on the same adverse terms.
This is when the McWade-Sims house of cards began to col-
lapse. Thompson and Cravens, who had sat silent while the
Tax Court entered judgment against them, pressured McWade
and Sims to live up to the terms of their secret settlement
agreements. It was now clear that the IRS would have to
move to set aside the Thompson and Cravens judgments;
McWade and Sims were forced to reveal the secret settle-
ments necessitating the Tax Court’s entry of “revised” judg-
ments in favor of Thompson and Cravens.
After being asked to approve the set aside motions, senior
IRS officials determined that McWade and Sims had engaged
in active misconduct and informed the Tax Court of the secret
settlements,8 asking for an evidentiary hearing to determine
the extent of the damage. The Tax Court refused to hold an
evidentiary hearing and proceeded to enforce the terms of the
Thompson and Cravens settlements. The taxpayers appealed
the refusal to this Court, which remanded with instructions to
hold an evidentiary hearing. Dufresne v. CIR, 26 F.3d 105
(9th Cir. 1994).
On remand, the Tax Court conducted the mandated eviden-
tiary hearing. Incredibly, McWade’s pattern of deception con-
tinued with his persistent denial that the Thompson settlement
was a vehicle for paying Thompson’s attorneys’ fees and his
testimony that the Thompson settlement was attributable to a
separate transaction. After making extensive findings con-
cerning the government’s misconduct, the Tax Court surpris-
ingly concluded that what had occurred was harmless error.
While the bulk of the decision from the original test case pro-
8
As the Tax Court proceeding on remand revealed, this disclosure was
anything but complete, excluding, for example, the arrangement to “pay”
(through a reduction in disallowed deductions) $60,000 to Thompson for
his attorney fees.
HONGSERMEIER v. CIR 13195
ceeding was reinstated, the Tax Court did relieve the taxpay-
ers of that portion of the original judgment which imposed
increased interest penalties for negligence and “tax motivated
transactions” and imposed costs and attorneys’ fees on the
IRS. From the Tax Court’s refusal to vacate the adverse judg-
ments against them, the taxpayers filed an appeal to this
Court, which resulted in our Dixon decision.
B. Our Decision in Dixon
In Dixon we held that the IRS counsel committed inten-
tional fraud on the Tax Court and the taxpayers:
There can be no question here but that the actions of
McWade and Sims amounted to a fraud on both the
taxpayers and the Tax Court. The Tax Court
believed it was hearing a legitimate adversarial dis-
pute when, in fact, the proceeding was a charade
fraught with concealed motives, hidden payments,
and false testimony. What did occur was clearly
designed to defile the court itself, and there is no
question that it was carried out by an officer of the
court.
Dixon, 316 F.3d at 1046-47. We further concluded that the
taxpayers were not required to demonstrate prejudice in order
to obtain relief. The Tax Court’s determination that the mis-
conduct had been harmless to other taxpayers was set aside as
an abuse of discretion.
We then set forth our conclusion as to the appropriate rem-
edy. Because the adherence of the Tax Court on remand to
our instructions is a major issue in the current appeal, we will
quote in full the “Remedy” portion of our decision in Dixon,
omitting citations and one of the two footnotes. The second
footnote, note 11, is critical to our decision in the current
appeal. It appears at the end of the quoted passage, and we
include it at the end:
13196 HONGSERMEIER v. CIR
We have the inherent power to vacate the judg-
ment of the Tax Court, fashion an appropriate rem-
edy and sanction a party or its lawyers for willful
abuse of the judicial process, particularly when the
party or its lawyers have intentionally practiced a
fraud upon the court. This power, however, is to be
“exercised with restraint and discretion.”
Here, it plainly would be unjust to remand for a
new, third trial. The IRS had an opportunity to pres-
ent its case fairly and properly. Instead its lawyers
intentionally defrauded the Tax Court. The Tax
Court had two opportunities to equitably resolve this
situation and failed. Enormous amounts of time and
judicial resources have been wasted. In addition, the
IRS has done little to punish the misconduct and
even less to dissuade future abuse. The taxpayers
should not be forced to endure another trial and the
IRS should be sanctioned for this extreme miscon-
duct.
Conversely, we will not enter judgment eradicat-
ing all tax liability of these taxpayers. Such an
extreme sanction, while within the court’s power, is
not warranted under these facts. Instead, we remand
to the trial court with directions to enter judgment in
favor of Appellants and all other taxpayers properly
before this Court on terms equivalent to those pro-
vided in the settlement agreement with Thompson
and the IRS. n.11
n.11. We leave to the Tax Court’s discre-
tion the fashioning of such judgments
which, to the extent possible and practica-
ble, should put these taxpayers in the same
position as provided for in the Thompson
settlement.
HONGSERMEIER v. CIR 13197
Id. at 1047.
C. The Tax Court’s Decision on Remand
The task our decision in Dixon assigned to the Tax Court
was not a purely mechanical one. All the affected taxpayers
participated in the Kersting tax shelters, but their tax returns
differed in other respects and some of those differences raised
separate issues. The Thompson tax returns were among those
that raised other issues, and the Thompson settlement
resolved more than Kersting tax shelter claims.
In order to put other taxpayers “in the same position as pro-
vided for in the Thompson settlement,” id. at 1047 n.11, the
Tax Court was required to translate the overall Thompson set-
tlement into the different contexts presented by the tax returns
of other taxpayers. It also had to decide how to treat the por-
tion of the Thompson settlement that reduced Thompson’s tax
liability by the amount of his attorney’s fees he paid for par-
ticipating in the charade of a trial, since that did not represent
an actual net savings by Thompson. With the discretionary
nature of the Tax Court’s decision in mind, the Commissioner
argued to the Tax Court that the affected taxpayers should
receive a 20 percent reduction in their tax deficiencies, while
the taxpayers argued for a 100 percent or near 100 percent
reduction in their deficiencies.
The Tax Court was also required to deal with the reality
that both the tax laws and interest rates have changed over the
years. The Tax Court noted in its order that “[t]he Thompson
settlement was embodied in a sequence of payments and
refunds that occurred more than 15 to 20 years ago, when per-
sonal interest was fully or partially deductible for income tax
purposes, in a different interest rate environment, and in tem-
poral relationships that are not now reproducible with respect
to any of the other petitioner participants in the Kersting proj-
ect.” Dixon, 91 T.C.M. (CCH) 1086, 2006 WL 1157520, at
*26.
13198 HONGSERMEIER v. CIR
The Tax Court’s effort was further complicated by the fact
that there was no comprehensive written agreement docu-
menting the terms of the Thompson settlement. There was a
written agreement at one point, but it was subsequently modi-
fied, culminating in an oral agreement between the IRS attor-
neys and the attorney for Thompson. That meant, among
other things, that it was not clear which resolutions were
reached concerning various non-Kersting issues over several
tax years, including years not otherwise connected with the
Kersting tax shelter, related to the Kersting shelter settlement
and which, if any, were independent of the settlement.
The Tax Court ultimately determined that the “Kersting-
related deficiencies” for each affected taxpayer should be
reduced by 63.37 percent, thereby requiring taxpayers to pay
36.63 percent of the income tax they allegedly otherwise
would have owed. Id. at 47. The Tax Court calculated this
percentage by constructing a fraction with a numerator repre-
senting the tax actually paid by Thompson and a denominator
reflecting Thompson’s alleged tax liability absent the settle-
ment. Specifically, the Tax Court used a numerator of
$30,000, representing the portion of the total deficiencies that
was actually paid by Thompson over the 1979-1981 period.9
The denominator was calculated by starting with $79,294, the
sum of the deficiencies initially asserted against Thompson by
the Commissioner for the tax years in question, 1979-1981.
To that amount was added two additional benefits received by
Thompson: (a) an adjustment of $980 representing a defi-
ciency in Thompson’s 1983 tax that the IRS did not assess
and Thompson did not pay, and (b) an adjustment of $1,624
representing a tax savings by Thompson attributable to the
Commissioner’s allowance of a 1987 personal interest deduc-
tion that was overstated by $5,814. Summing those figures
produced a total denominator of $81,898. Dividing $30,000
by $81,898 produced a fraction equivalent to 36.63 percent,
9
The Tax Court declined to include within the numerator the amounts
paid by Thompson for attorney’s fees.
HONGSERMEIER v. CIR 13199
representing the proportion of tax the Tax Court found had
been paid by Thompson. Id. That meant that the settlement
reduced what he was required to pay in taxes in connection
with the Kersting shelter by 63.37 percent.
The Tax Court also addressed a separate tax program, the
Bauspar program, through which Thompson and certain other
Kersting project participants “apparently deducted substantial
amounts as home mortgage interest on their 1983-85 returns,
on the basis of payments under the Bauspar program that may
not have met the requirements for deductible home mortgage
interest.” Id. at 40. Finding that the benefit Thompson derived
from overstated Bauspar interest deductions was not readily
ascertainable because the payees of claimed mortgage interest
are not identified in the returns and that the Commissioner
disallowed Bauspar deductions only sporadically for a small
number of taxpayers, the Tax Court determined that it was not
appropriate to deal with the Bauspar program as part of its
calculation of the percentage deduction that would apply to all
taxpayers. Id. Rather the court directed that “any disallowed
deductions relating to Bauspar are to be treated as valid
deductions with respect to those taxpayers who may have
claimed them” because “[t]hat’s the way Bauspar played out
for the Thompsons . . . .” Id. at 47.
The Tax Court also accorded other benefits to the taxpayers
under the Dixon mandate. Noting that many Kersting partici-
pants had remaining penalties and additions and “[i]t seems
especially incongruous to impose an addition for a few
months’ delay in filing a return at this time, when 25 years
have passed since that delay occurred,” the Tax Court con-
cluded that “[a]ll affected taxpayers are to be relieved of all
penalties and additions to tax that were determined in their
statutory notices of deficiency, not just Kersting-related items
such as negligence additions.” Id. The Tax Court also found
that approximately 100 Kersting taxpayers had non-Kersting-
related deficiencies, and, again noting the long delay in
resolving this matter, the court directed that “all non-
13200 HONGSERMEIER v. CIR
Kersting-related deficiencies determined in the notices of
deficiency for all affected taxpayers with taxable years still
before this Court be eliminated.” Id.
The Tax Court also noted areas of agreement where all par-
ties “establish[ed] some common ground regarding the relief
to which those beneficiaries are entitled.” Id. at 32. The court
accepted the parties’ stipulation that the Thompson settlement
involved a “burnout” element that effected a reduction in the
underpayment of interest that would otherwise arise under
I.R.C. § 6601.10 Id.
The government did not appeal the Tax Court’s judgment.
Taxpayers filed this timely appeal. We have jurisdiction pur-
suant to 26 U.S.C. § 7482.
Petitioners Richard and Fiorella Hongsermeier, Terry and
Gloria Owens, and Hoyt and Barbara Young served as test
case petitioners in the original litigation before the Tax Court,
while petitioners Norman and Barbara Adair, Richard and
Donna Rogers, John and Terry Huber, and Stanley and
Sharon Titcomb initially entered into “piggy-back” agree-
ments to be bound by the Tax Court’s determination in the
test cases. The Adairs, Owens, and Youngs consolidated their
cases on appeal to this Court, as did the Rogers, Hubers, and
Titcombs. We consolidated all cases for the purposes of oral
10
The Tax Court opinion explained the “burnout” element as follows:
(a) for taxpayers with 2-3 taxable years before the court, the first
year’s deficiencies are shifted forward and combined with the
deficiencies in the second year then reduced in accord with the
Ninth Circuit’s mandate; and
(b) for taxpayers with 4 or more taxable years before the court,
the first year’s deficiencies are shifted forward to the second year
and the second year’s deficiencies are shifted forward and com-
bined with the deficiencies in the third year, after which all defi-
ciencies are reduced in accord with the Ninth Circuit’s mandate.
Dixon, 91 T.C.M. (CCH) 1086, 2006 WL 1157520, at *32.
HONGSERMEIER v. CIR 13201
argument, and now resolve the appeals in all of the cases in
this opinion.
II. Discussion
We review the Tax Court’s conclusions of law de novo, its
factual findings for clear error, and its discretionary rulings
for abuse of discretion. Kelley v. CIR, 45 F.3d 348, 350 (9th
Cir. 1995). The Tax Court’s evidentiary rulings are reviewed
for abuse of discretion and will not be reversed absent a
showing of prejudice. Sparkman v. CIR, 509 F.3d 1149, 1156
(9th Cir. 2007).
A. The Tax Court’s Remedy
We conclude that the Tax Court’s findings are well sup-
ported in its comprehensive review of the record and do not
leave “the definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been
committed.” Sparkman, 509 F.3d at 1155 (quotation marks
omitted). The Tax Court’s determination of the percentage
deduction in the taxpayers’ deficiencies, plus other benefits,
accords with this Court’s mandate in Dixon and is not an
abuse of discretion. See Jim Turin & Sons v. CIR, 219 F.3d
1103, 1105 (9th Cir. 2000)(“[W]e independently review for
abuse of discretion, and our task is to determine whether [the
exercise of discretion] is clearly unlawful or plainly arbi-
trary.” (footnote omitted)).
Taxpayers argue that the Tax Court’s remedy fails to com-
ply with the Dixon mandate and challenge, in various ways,
the Tax Court’s calculation of the 63.37 percent figure.
B. Elimination of Taxpayers’ Deficiencies
The Hongsermeiers first argue that the taxpayers’ refunds
should be accepted as filed to allow a 100 percent reduction
in their tax deficiencies based on this Court’s finding in Dixon
of fraud on the court, continued fraud on the court on the part
13202 HONGSERMEIER v. CIR
of the Commissioner following Dixon, and a lack of complete
information concerning the Thompson settlement.
[1] This Court has the power to vacate or amend a judg-
ment of the Tax Court and to fashion an appropriate remedy
upon a finding of fraud on the court. See In re Levander, 180
F.3d 1114, 1119 (9th Cir. 1999). In Dixon, we did indeed find
that “the taxpayers . . . clearly and convincingly demonstrated
fraud on the court and are entitled to relief.” 316 F.3d at 1047.
We specifically chose, however, to “not enter judgment eradi-
cating all tax liability of these taxpayers.” Id. The option of
a 100 percent reduction in taxpayers’ deficiencies was already
rejected by this Court, which noted that “[s]uch an extreme
sanction, while within the court’s power, is not warranted
under these facts.” Id. We instead remanded the case to the
trial court, leaving to the Tax Court’s discretion the fashion-
ing of a settlement for the affected taxpayers equivalent to
that offered to Thompson. The Tax Court followed our man-
date by not eliminating all tax liability for the taxpayers, and
properly so. A trial court is prohibited from giving relief
beyond the scope of an appellate mandate. See Caldwell v.
Puget Sound Elec. Apprenticeship & Training Trust, 824 F.2d
765, 767 (9th Cir. 1987).
[2] The Hongsermeiers’ argument that further fraud on the
court following Dixon, or, in the alternative, unconscionable
bad faith, should prompt this Court to vacate the Tax Court’s
judgment and eliminate 100 percent of taxpayers’ deficiencies
is also flawed. The Hongsermeiers contend that the Commis-
sioner’s representation on remand that Thompson received
only a 20 percent reduction in his tax deficiencies was not
only false, but also contradicted two previous statements: the
first, by Sims in a 2003 state bar disciplinary proceeding stat-
ing that the Thompson settlement was a 50 percent reduction
in tax deficiencies, and the second, by the former Chief of the
Appellate Section of the Department of Justice’s Tax Divi-
sion, reporting in 1992 that Thompson received a 65 percent
reduction in deficiencies.
HONGSERMEIER v. CIR 13203
[3] While, as previously noted, we may vacate the Tax
Court’s judgment upon a finding of fraud on the court, there
is no evidence in the record that, following Dixon, the Com-
missioner acted in a manner at all amounting to “an uncon-
scionable plan or scheme which is designed to improperly
influence the court in its decision.” England v. Doyle, 281
F.2d 304, 309 (9th Cir. 1960) (defining fraud on the court).
The Commissioner simply argued on remand that the Thomp-
son settlement amounted to a 20 percent reduction in what
Thompson had to pay because the Commissioner explicitly
disregarded reductions Thompson used to pay his attorney’s
fees as not representing a net savings to Thompson. Attor-
ney’s fees of other taxpayers were paid for by Kersting, the
promoter of the tax shelter. While the Tax Court rejected that
argument, the Commissioner’s position did not constitute
fraud on the court or bad faith, nor was it related to the fraud
initially perpetrated by Sims and McWade.
C. Calculation of the Tax Court’s Remedy
[4] Taxpayers also argue that the Tax Court’s calculation
of the 63.37 percent figure did not take into account the full
benefits offered to Thompson. Specifically, the Hongserm-
eiers argue that the Court should order a 90.1 percent reduc-
tion of their deficiencies, and the Adairs, Owens, and Youngs
argue that the Court should order a 98 percent reduction of
their deficiencies.
The Hongsermeiers base their calculation of the terms of
the Thompson settlement on a letter from Sims to Thomp-
son’s attorney, dated May 29, 1992, estimating that the taxes
Thompson owed, plus statutory additions and interest, would
be “approximately $302,396.12.” The Hongsermeiers used
the numerator of $30,000, representing the total deficiencies
paid by Thompson over the 1979-1981 period, and divided
that number by a denominator of $302,396.12 to produce the
90.1 percent figure.
13204 HONGSERMEIER v. CIR
[5] It is undisputed that the total tax deficiencies asserted
against Thompson for the years 1979-1981 was $79,294, and
that Thompson’s final settlement reduced those deficiencies
to $30,000. The alternative denominator offered by the Hong-
sermeiers in this appeal is based on their vague contention
that various additions, interest, and penalties should be
included in the denominator of the Thompson settlement frac-
tion. As discussed above, the Tax Court did add two figures
to the denominator based on additional benefits received by
Thompson: (a) $980 to represent the unpaid deficiency in
Thompson’s 1983 tax, and (b) $1,624 to represent Thomp-
son’s tax savings due to the Commissioner’s allowance of an
overstated personal interest deduction for 1987. The Tax
Court therefore determined that the appropriate denominator
was $81,898.
[6] The $302,396.12 figure asserted by the Hongsermeiers
does not represent the reduction in Thompson’s actual liabil-
ity in comparison to the amount they were able to pay in set-
tlement because it does not take into account advance
payments that Thompson made in 1986 and 1987 of $121,770
in both tax and interest owed. Thompson did not “save”
amounts he actually paid. The Tax Court did not relieve the
taxpayers of interest liability because, as discussed below,
Thompson paid his interest in full. See infra Part II, E.
The Hongsermeiers also separately assert that the Tax
Court should have increased the denominator of the Thomp-
son settlement fraction by $4,934.32 to include the late filing
addition in Thompson’s statutory notice of deficiency for
1981, which Thompson would have been required to pay had
he not settled his tax liabilities. Rather than give a credit or
add this figure to the denominator of the Thompson settle-
ment fraction, the Tax Court instead chose to eliminate all
penalties related to non-Kersting additions for all affected tax-
payers. Noting that taxpayers’ “proposed application of non-
Kersting penalties and additions was specific to individual
taxpayers, unlike the Kersting-related deficiencies and addi-
HONGSERMEIER v. CIR 13205
tions for which all affected taxpayers are liable,” the Tax
Court found that it was appropriate to limit the benefit of
relief from non-Kersting additions to those affected taxpayers
who, like Thompson, were subject to non-Kersting additions.
Dixon, 91 T.C.M. (CCH) 1086, 2006 WL 1157520, at *36.
Certain taxpayers, including the Hongsermeiers, did not
have any additional non-Kersting-related penalties asserted
against them. The Tax Court’s decision to eliminate all non-
Kersting penalties was well within the Tax Court’s mandated
discretion, however, for the Tax Court was not required to
fashion individual remedies for taxpayers based on their lack
of non-Kersting-related additions. The Tax Court noted in its
decision that “memories have faded and records have been
lost or destroyed during the long delay in resolution of the
Kersting issues,” making it difficult to assess the status of
each taxpayers’ non-Kersting related issues and thus “inher-
ently unfair” to “impose upon those petitioners the burden of
proving those deficiencies to be erroneous.” Id. at 47. Further-
more, the court stated that “the non-Kersting issues are rela-
tively minor when compared to the Kersting-related
deductions that are at issue in all these cases.” Id. The court
therefore concluded that the appropriate remedy was to elimi-
nate all non-Kersting related penalties, additions, and defi-
ciencies for all affected taxpayers. That determination was not
an abuse of discretion.
The Adairs, Owens, and Youngs argue that the Tax Court
did not take into account tax benefits Thompson received in
tax years 1982 and 1983 in its determination of the denomina-
tor in the Thompson settlement fraction, which, by their cal-
culations, allowed Thompson to pay less than two percent of
his taxes. This argument is premised on the incorrect assump-
tion that the Commissioner’s treatment of Thompson’s 1982
tax return was part of the Thompson settlement agreement, as
well as on an incorrect calculation of Thompson’s savings for
tax year 1983.
13206 HONGSERMEIER v. CIR
The argument is based on an August 3, 1989 letter sent
from Thompson’s attorney, DeCastro, to McWade, which
states: “We have agreed that the total taxes due for all the
open years are $15,000 for 1980 and $15,000 for 1981.” The
Tax Court determined, however, that the statutory period of
limitations for 1982 had expired in 1986, and therefore
Thompson’s 1982 taxable year was not an “open year” to
which the letter could have applied. Thompson filed his 1982
tax return on May 6, 1983, and on this tax return he claimed
Kersting-related tax deductions which reduced his adjusted
gross income of $99,362 to $4,336 for tax purposes. No
action was taken concerning this tax return, and the statute of
limitations under I.R.C. § 6501 expired in May 1986. The set-
tlement which this court held to be a fraud on the court was
negotiated on behalf of Thompson by DeCastro, and Thomp-
son did not retain DeCastro as his attorney until November
1986. Therefore, the Tax Court reasonably determined that
the Commissioner’s failure to act on the 1982 tax return could
not have been part of the Thompson settlement agreement
between DeCastro and McWade.
The Adairs, Owens, and Youngs also assert that Thomp-
son’s 1982 tax year should be considered an “open year”
because fraud on the part of Thompson rendered the statute of
limitations inapplicable pursuant to I.R.C. § 6501(c)(1).
“Fraud implies bad faith, intentional wrongdoing and a sinis-
ter motive.” Powell v. Granquist, 252 F.2d 56, 60 (9th Cir.
1958) (quotation marks omitted). The Tax Court did not find,
based on its evaluation of the credibility of Thompson during
the evidentiary hearing mandated by DuFresne, that Thomp-
son specifically intended to evade a tax known to be owing.
There is no evidence that the Tax Court clearly erred in find-
ing that Thompson’s 1982 tax year was not an open year to
which DeCastro’s 1989 letter could have applied. Conse-
quently, the Tax Court’s determination that any benefits
Thompson received from that year should not be included in
the Thompson settlement fraction was not an abuse of the Tax
Court’s discretion.
HONGSERMEIER v. CIR 13207
The Adairs, Owens, and Youngs also argue that the Tax
Court erred in failing to include in its Thompson settlement
calculation savings in the amount of $19,717.99 as a benefit
for tax year 1983. The Tax Court agreed with the taxpayers
that the treatment of tax year 1983 should be included within
the benefits obtained by Thompson as part of the settlement.11
It found, however, that Thompson received a benefit from the
settlement of only $980 for tax year 1983. The argument that
Thompson received tax savings of $19,717.99 instead of $980
for tax year 1983 erroneously assumes that Thompson had
sufficient income for that year to make complete use of his
Kersting deductions. He did not. The tax deficiency which he
avoided based on the disallowance of $67,620 of Kersting
deductions totaled only $980. That is all he actually saved. It
was not an abuse of discretion for the Tax Court to use that
amount in calculating the benefit obtained by Thompson from
the settlement.
[7] The Adairs, Owens, and Youngs argue that the IRS
failed to preserve critical documents, including Thompson’s
1982 tax return and the administrative files for tax years 1982
and 1983, which would prove that the “IRS granted Thomp-
son audit forbearance for other open tax years not before the
Tax Court, allowed all of Thompson’s Kersting deductions,
and settled the validity of the Kersting deductions, in favor of
Thompson, for all open tax years as part of the Thompson set-
tlement.” Particularly at a time when tax filings were made on
paper rather than electronically, the IRS could not and did not
keep all records for all years. There is no evidence that the
IRS destroyed documents to cover up its attorneys’ miscon-
11
As with tax year 1982, the Commissioner allowed the statute of limi-
tations to expire without collecting the identified deficiency for tax year
1983. Unlike tax year 1982, however, the Tax Court determined that the
benefit obtained by Thompson should be taken into account as part of the
settlement and included as part of the denominator of its calculation
because McWade and the attorney for Thompson were actively involved
in discussions at the time the Thompson statutory notice of deficiency for
1983 was being prepared.
13208 HONGSERMEIER v. CIR
duct or to hinder the calculation of the benefits obtained by
Thompson. Nor have we been given any reason to believe that
the destroyed records would prove any of the taxpayers’
assertions. The Tax Court did not abuse its discretion in rely-
ing on the materials available to determine the Thompson set-
tlement fraction.
D. Discovery Requests
[8] The taxpayers also requested that the Tax Court order
the production of additional documents by the Commissioner,
arguing that these documents were necessary to determine
whether there was continuing fraudulent conduct on the part
of the Commissioner. The Hongsermeiers filed with the Tax
Court a motion for reconsideration of the Tax Court’s opinion
on remand, asserting that the Commissioner engaged in a con-
tinuing cover-up of the fraud and requesting that the Tax
Court reopen the record and impose additional sanctions on
the Commissioner. In a supplemental opinion responding to
the motion for reconsideration, the Tax Court held that the
law of the case and our mandate in Dixon “preclude[d] [the
Tax Court] in the cases at hand from conducting any further
inquiry into respondent’s misconduct and from imposing any
additional sanction . . . .” Dixon v. CIR, 92 T.C.M. (CCH)
245, 2006 WL 2577847, at *1. Under the law of the case doc-
trine, “one panel of an appellate court will not as a general
rule reconsider questions which another panel has decided on
a prior appeal in the same case.” Kimball v. Callahan, 590
F.2d 768, 771 (9th Cir. 1979). In Dixon, despite taxpayers’
claims of continuing fraud on the part of the Commissioner
and our awareness of the “persistence and concealment” of
the original misconduct, we did not order another evidentiary
hearing, as we had in DuFresne, but rather ordered the Tax
Court to fashion a remedy for the taxpayers equivalent to the
Thompson settlement. Dixon, 316 F.3d at 1043, 1047. Recog-
nizing that “[e]normous amounts of time and judicial
resources have been wasted” and “taxpayers should not be
forced to endure another trial,” we held in Dixon that the
HONGSERMEIER v. CIR 13209
proper solution was a financial remedy and not a further
inquiry into the alleged misconduct. Id. at 1047.
[9] Moreover, following Dixon, the Tax Court granted
almost all of the taxpayers’ discovery requests, amounting to
over 200 documents and items described in the IRS’s privi-
lege log, “for the limited purpose of ascertaining respondent’s
understanding of the origins and nature of the Thompson set-
tlement.” Dixon, 92 T.C.M. (CCH) 245, 2006 WL 2577847,
at *5. There was only one exception. Documents listed under
Item 123 of the IRS privilege log were reviewed by the Tax
Court in camera, and the court found they were not directly
relevant to its determination of the scope of the Thompson
settlement. The Tax Court thus sustained the Commissioner’s
invocation of the deliberative process privilege for these doc-
uments filed under Item 123, which include printed e-mail
and facsimile transmissions, memorandums, proposed plead-
ings and other correspondence created and maintained by the
Commissioner’s counsel, Henry E. O’Neill, beginning in mid-
1992 following the discovery and disclosure of the Thompson
settlement and during the course of litigation.
[10] Petitioners Rogers, Huber, and Titcomb appeal this
denial of disclosure, arguing that the documents filed under
Item 123 may contain further information regarding miscon-
duct on the part of the Commissioner. This discovery request
exceeds the mandate in Dixon, however, for the Court in
Dixon ordered a financial settlement for the taxpayers equiva-
lent to that offered to Thompson and not further exploration
into IRS misconduct or additional sanctions. Based on the Tax
Court’s mandated role to create a financial settlement for the
taxpayers, the denial of the discovery request for materials
listed under Item 123 was not an abuse of discretion.
[11] Furthermore, the deliberative process privilege per-
mits the government to withhold documents that “reflect[ ]
advisory opinions, recommendations and deliberations com-
prising part of a process by which governmental decisions and
13210 HONGSERMEIER v. CIR
polices are formulated.” NLRB v. Sears, Roebuck & Co., 421
U.S. 132, 150 (1975) (quotation marks omitted). Documents
must be both “predecisional” and “deliberative” to qualify for
this privilege; a document is predecisional if it was “ ‘pre-
pared in order to assist an agency decisionmaker in arriving
at his decision,’ ” and deliberative if its release would “ ‘ex-
pose an agency’s decisionmaking process in such a way as to
discourage candid discussion within the agency and thereby
undermine the agency’s ability to perform its functions.’ ”
Carter v. U.S. Dep’t of Commerce, 307 F.3d 1084, 1089 (9th
Cir. 2002) (quoting Assembly of Cal. v. U.S. Dep’t of Com-
merce, 968 F.2d 916, 920 (9th Cir. 1992). The documents
listed under Item 123 are both predecisional and deliberative,
for the privilege log describes them as materials created dur-
ing decision-making processes by the Office of Chief Counsel
of the IRS over the course of the Kersting project litigation.
The Tax Court therefore did not abuse its discretion in deter-
mining that the documents were protected by the deliberative
process privilege based on the need to protect uninhibited dia-
logue and deliberations by government agencies. See Lahr v.
Nat’l Transp. Safety Bd., 569 F.3d 964, 979 (9th Cir. 2009)
(The deliberative process privilege “shields certain intra-
agency communications from disclosure to allow agencies
freely to explore possibilities, engage in internal debates, or
play devil’s advocate without fear of public scrutiny.” (inter-
nal citation and quotation marks omitted)).
E. The Tax Court’s Imposition of Liability for Interest on
the Remaining Deficiencies
[12] Under I.R.C. § 6601, interest runs from the date a tax
is due to be paid until the date the tax is paid. The Tax Court’s
determination that taxpayers’ tax deficiencies should be
reduced by a factor of 63.37 percent thus eliminated their lia-
bility for interest with respect to the portion of the tax liability
that was eliminated. The Tax Court found, however, that tax-
payers remained liable for underpayment of interest on the tax
HONGSERMEIER v. CIR 13211
deficiencies for which they were liable after the application of
the Thompson settlement terms.
[13] The Commissioner voluntarily agreed to suspend the
running of interest on all Kersting taxpayers’ deficiencies
beginning in June 1992 and remaining suspended until 90
days after the Tax Court entered its judgment on remand.12
Taxpayers argue, however, that interest should have stopped
accruing on their tax deficiencies on December 31, 1986, the
date Thompson stopped accruing interest on his tax deficien-
cies, in order to adhere to the Dixon mandate. The question
on appeal is thus whether taxpayers remain liable for interest
accrued from December 31, 1986 to June 1992, as well as for
interest that has accrued to the present starting on September
13, 2007, the date that was 90 days after the Tax Court’s deci-
sions were entered in most of the consolidated group of cases
that were before the Tax Court on remand, including all peti-
tioners here.
Pursuant to I.R.C. § 6601(a), “[i]f any amount of tax
imposed by this title . . . is not paid on or before the last date
prescribed for payment, interest on such amount at the under-
payment rate established under section 6621 shall be paid for
the period from such last date to the date paid.” Although in
some circumstances a court may have discretion in determin-
ing whether prejudgment interest should be owed, in this con-
text the statute indicates that interest “shall” be paid. See
Grauvogel v. CIR, 768 F.2d 1087, 1090 (9th Cir. 1985) (“The
statute itself provides the means for a taxpayer to stop the
interest provision from operating.”).
12
The Commissioner’s agreement to suspend interest as of June 1992
does not affect the Tax Court’s determination of taxpayers’ interest due
prior to June 1992. This concession was a voluntary, self-imposed sanc-
tion, which the Tax Court noted was “an appropriately targeted response
to the consequences of [the Commissioner’s] former attorneys’ fraud on
the court, which caused substantial delay in the resolution of the Kersting
project cases.”
13212 HONGSERMEIER v. CIR
[14] The Tax Court found that Thompson paid full interest
on his tax deficiencies, as imposed by I.R.C. § 6601(a). While
Thompson did stop accruing interest in 1986, this occurred
because Thompson paid his interest liability in 1986, not
because he received an adjustment to his interest due. It is true
that Thompson did not pay the actual deficiencies themselves
until six months after he paid his interest liability, but the Tax
Court ruled under Perkins v. CIR, 92 T.C. 749, 760 (1989),
that Thompson’s payment of accrued interest was deductible
in the year paid even though the underlying tax had not been
paid. See I.R.C. § 163(a) (permitting deduction of interest
without requiring that the underlying obligation be paid);
I.R.C. § 461(f) (permitting deduction of interest in the year in
which it is paid, even though taxpayer’s liability for the
underlying debt is contested).
Taxpayers also point to a special feature of the Thompson
settlement which allowed a replacement check Thompson
paid in February 1987 to be credited as a payment on Decem-
ber 31, 1986. The Tax Court noted this in its opinion on
remand, building into the reduced tax deficiency figure for
taxpayers the tax benefit received by Thompson as a result of
crediting the payment in 1986. The court did not address
whether Thompson should have accrued an additional six
weeks’ worth of interest. Nonetheless, Thompson ultimately
received refunds for overpayments made in 1986 and 1987, so
it would be illogical to conclude that he had amounts still
owing after December 31, 1986.
[15] It is true that taxpayers were not offered the benefit of
the Thompson settlement terms in 1986. Taxpayers therefore
did not have the option to pay their tax deficiencies in 1986
based on the terms offered to Thompson and thus stop interest
from accruing on their deficiencies. Nonetheless, this Court’s
mandate in Dixon calling for a settlement that puts taxpayers
in the “same position” as Thompson does not require taxpay-
ers’ interest be extinguished past 1986, because the Thomp-
son settlement did not involve a cancellation or reduction in
HONGSERMEIER v. CIR 13213
the interest owed by Thompson on his tax deficiencies.
Indeed, some taxpayers involved in the Kersting tax shelter
and related litigation did make prepayments on their deficien-
cies to stop interest accruing on their accounts just as Thomp-
son did.
[16] The taxpayers who did not make prepayments contin-
ued to receive the economic benefits of their funds, while
Thompson lost the use of his funds by paying all tax deficien-
cies and interest in 1986 and 1987. As the Tax Court noted,
taxpayers therefore were granted “the equivalent of an
interest-free loan of the reduced deficiencies and interest they
will now have to pay.” Dixon, 91 T.C.M. (CCH) 1086, 2006
WL 1157520, at *28. “Section 6601(a) is not a penalty for
late payment but merely compensation for delayed payment
in the nature of interest on a loan.” Grauvogel, 768 F.2d at
1090; see also United States v. Childs, 266 U.S. 304, 309-10
(1924) (interest on income tax is “clearly intended to compen-
sate the delay in payment of the tax—the detriment of its non-
payment, to be continued during the time of its nonpayment—
compensation, not punishment.”). Cancelling taxpayers’ inter-
est payments beyond 1986 would accord taxpayers a benefit
well beyond that received by Thompson.
III. Conclusion
[17] The Tax Court did not abuse its discretion in fashion-
ing a remedy for petitioners. The adjustments set out in the
Tax Court decision fairly and reasonably complied with our
direction to “put these taxpayers in the same position as pro-
vided for in the Thompson settlement,” “to the extent possible
and practicable.” Dixon, 316 F.3d at 1047 n.11.
AFFIRMED.