Lubetzky v. United States

          United States Court of Appeals
                       For the First Circuit
No. 01-2357

                           ITAMAR LUBETZKY,

                       Plaintiff, Appellant,

                                  v.

                     UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

                       Defendant, Appellee.


          APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
                FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

              [Hon. Rya W. Zobel, U.S. District Judge]


                                Before

                        Boudin, Chief Judge,

                       Lynch, Circuit Judge,

               and Schwarzer,* Senior District Judge.


     Timothy J. Burke for appellant.
     Gretchen M. Wolfinger, Tax Division, Department of Justice,
with whom Eileen J. O'Connor, Assistant Attorney General, Michael
J. Sullivan, United States Attorney, and Bruce R. Ellisen, Tax
Division, Department of Justice, were on brief for appellee.



                           December 29, 2004




    *
      Of the    Northern    District     of   California,   sitting   by
designation.
               BOUDIN, Chief Judge. Itamar Lubetzky appeals from a jury

verdict holding him personally liable for the federal withholding

taxes of MediaForum, Inc. for the six quarters of July 1, 1996

through December 31, 1997.         Lubetzky's central challenge is to the

sufficiency of the evidence, but his appeal also invites attention

to the murky standards for imposing liability.              We begin with a

brief summary of the statute, the background events and the legal

proceedings that followed.

               Employers are required to deduct from employee wages--and

turn    over    to   the   Internal    Revenue   Service--social    security,

Medicare and federal income taxes.            Although the primary liability

for failing to do so is the employer's, a penalty for such a

failure equal to the unpaid tax can be collected from "[a]ny

person" who was "required" but "willfully" failed to pay over the

withheld taxes. I.R.C. § 6672 (2000); Slodov v. United States, 436

U.S. 238, 250 (1978).        Such persons are described in the case law

as "responsible persons" and a body of decisions has refined the

concept, albeit imperfectly.            See Mertens, Law of Federal Income

Taxation §§ 55:107-:113 (1997 & 2004 Supp.).

               In this case the evidence--taken most favorably to the

verdict, see PH Group Ltd. v. Birch, 985 F.2d 649, 653 (1st Cir.

1993)--showed the following.           In the fall of 1995, MediaForum, an

American subsidiary of the British company UCM, Ltd., was engaged

in     producing     interactive      software   and   multimedia   products.


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MediaForum's president was Peter Ponton, but UCM president Alan

Saunders also took an active role in managing MediaForum.                       In

September   1995,    MediaForum     hired    Lubetzky       as    an   independent

consultant to design a financial management system for the company.

            In January 1996, Lubetzky's consultancy was extended and

he began to prepare financial reports, including lists of "aging"

debts and    receivables.      Ponton      (or   in   his    absence     Saunders)

reviewed these lists weekly and told Lubetzky which bills to pay;

Lubetzky would then print up the checks and give them to Ponton or

Saunders to sign.

            In June 1996, Lubetzky joined MediaForum as an employee.

He was appointed treasurer, thereby making him (under the by-laws)

chief financial officer as well. Apparently he held himself out as

an "executive vice president" when dealing with customers (and the

IRS).   At trial he described himself as a glorified bookkeeper,

saying that he was unaware of his treasurer designation.                      From

other evidence the jury could have disbelieved this disclaimer.

            Even    before   June   1996     Lubetzky       had    check-signing

authority, along with Saunders, Ponton and two other employees.

Over the 14-month period from January 1996 through February 1997,

Lubetzky signed over $200,000 in payroll checks as well as checks

to suppliers, subcontractors and others.              Although formally two

signatures were required, the government at trial offered checks

dating back to July 4, 1996, showing Lubetzky as the sole signer.


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From June 1996 onward, Lubetzky also began to prepare and sign

MediaForum's federal employment tax returns.

             Lubetzky's filings after he assumed office began with the

company's March 1996 return which, he discovered, had not been

previously filed.         When he informed Saunders and Ponton of this

fact--and the fact that the company’s taxes had not been paid--

Saunders said that the taxes would be paid when money was available

but that suppliers had to be paid now so the company could remain

in business. Lubetzky again reminded his seniors of the problem in

December 1996. Lubetzky filed three of MediaForum’s 1996 quarterly

returns, but paid none of the taxes.

           In early 1997 UCM sold MediaForum's main assets, and by

February 1997 Saunders had removed Ponton and the company’s vice

president.        Lubetzky told Saunders that someone needed to take

charge of the remaining operations--the company continued to do

some   work--and     in   April    1997    Lubetzky   was    appointed   company

president, saying that he proposed only to be a "caretaker" and

wanted no corporate authority.            Nevertheless, he continued to have

check-writing authority and regularly filed employment tax returns-

-but without making payment (except for April and May 1997).

             In    September      1997,     MediaForum      ceased   operations.

Lubetzky asserted at trial that he then thought his role had come

to an end; but, at the behest of the IRS, in January 1998 he filed

returns for the company for July-December 1997.               In the last three


                                          -4-
months of 1997 the company received customer payments amounting to

over $190,000, and it continued to hold some assets in a bank

account through the close of the year.

            In   September   1999,    the    IRS   assessed     a    penalty    of

$78,239.45    against   Lubetzky     for    willful   failure       to   pay   over

MediaForum's federal withholding taxes for 1997 and part of 1996.

Lubetzky paid the small amount due for the final quarter of 1997

and brought suit in the federal district court in Massachusetts,

seeking a refund and an abatement of the balance claimed by the

IRS.   The IRS counterclaimed for the balance and a three-day trial

was held.

             The jury found for the government both on the refund

claim and the counterclaim, concluding in a special verdict that

Lubetzky had become a responsible person on July 4, 1996, and that

he had willfully failed to pay taxes due during all six quarters at

issue (the last two in 1996 and all four in 1997).                  The district

court entered judgment for the government--with interest the amount

due was now over $90,000--and denied Lubetzky's motion for judgment

as a matter of law or, in the alternative, for a new trial.                    This

appeal followed.

             With one exception (discussed below), all of Lubetzky's

claims on appeal rest on the same contention: that the evidence was

insufficient to allow a reasonable jury to find him liable.                      On

this central claim, our review is independent of the district judge


                                     -5-
but deferential to the jury unless the law was misstated or

demonstrably misunderstood.   See Heinrich v. Sweet, 308 F.3d 48,

59-60 (1st Cir. 2002), cert. denied, 539 U.S. 914 (2003); cf.

Vinick v. United States (“Vinick II”), 205 F.3d 1, 6-7 (1st Cir.

2000).    Inferences are drawn, and credibility issues generally

resolved, in favor of the verdict.    United States v. Sepulveda, 15

F.3d 1161, 1173 (1st Cir. 1993), cert. denied, 512 U.S. 1223

(1994).

           The statute, quoted in pertinent part above, imposes the

penalty on a party who "willfully" fails to pay over the taxes due

when required to do so.     Although in some contexts willfulness

requires a wicked intent or consciousness of wrongdoing, see Screws

v. United States, 325 U.S. 91, 101-03 (1945), here it is enough if

a defendant knows that the taxes are due from the company and yet

disburses funds for other purposes or knowingly fails to pay the

required sum to the government.   See Stuart v. United States, 337

F.3d 31, 36 (1st Cir. 2003) (citing cases); Caterino v. United

States, 794 F.2d 1, 6 (1st Cir. 1986) (same), cert. denied, 480

U.S. 905 (1987).

           At trial Lubetzky admitted that in the course of his

warnings to others that the taxes were due, he was warned in turn

by the company's legal adviser that he might himself be held liable

for non-payment and said, "Well, that's horrible."        When this

occurred is not entirely clear but, in any event, on this appeal


                                -6-
Lubetzky      does    not     contest     the    jury's     finding     that    he      acted

willfully.

              As to the "responsible person" issue, the statute--which

does not use this term--speaks of persons "required" to collect,

account and pay over ("and" is to be read as "or," Slodov, 436 U.S.

at    250).     There       are    also   a    few    general     principles      of     some

relevance: there can be more than one person so required, Stuart,

337 F.3d at 36; the statute has generally been read broadly to

protect the government's interest in getting its money, see Vinick

v. Commissioner ("Vinick I"), 110 F.3d 168, 172 (1st Cir. 1997),

and, in       the    present      procedural        context,     the   burden     was   upon

Lubetzky to prove at trial that he was not a responsible person,

Stuart, 337 F.3d at 36.

              Nevertheless, there is a surprising gap at the center of

the   statute:       it     nowhere   says      who    is   so   required    or    whether

"required" refers to some statutory concept, common law doctrine,

company by-laws or actual practice, or some mixture of all these.

In response, the case law has spawned a laundry list of criteria

that is well developed but moored only to some vague concept of

power or control.           See, e.g., Vinick II, 205 F.3d at 7-8.

              The     IRS    definition        is     equally     bland,    saying       that

"[r]esponsibility is a matter of status, duty, and authority."

Internal Revenue Manual § 1.2.1.5.14(3) (2004). More helpfully, it

says that "[i]n general, non-owner employees of the business


                                              -7-
entity, who act solely under the dominion and control of others,

and who are not in a position to make independent decisions on

behalf of the business entity" will not be liable.   Id.   This might

at first blush seem helpful to Lubetzky, but its application to

corporate officers is left obscure.

          So, we are back to the case law criteria to provide a

framework. These indicia are said to include whether the defendant

is a member of the board or an officer, has a stake in the company,

is active in management and personnel decisions, makes decisions as

to payment of bills, controls bank accounts, and has check-signing

authority.   Vinick II, 205 F.3d at 7-8.   Vinick II also said of

this list that corporate title is not decisive, id. at 8, and that

the last three criteria are particularly important.   Id. at 9.   So

far we are dealing with "the law."

          When it comes to applying the law to the case at hand,

the factfinder gets much greater deference. As to raw facts (e.g.,

what happened, who said what, past company practice), the standard

of review at a jury trial is whether a rational jury could make

such a finding.   See Gillespie v. Sears, Roebuck & Co., 386 F.3d

21, 25 (1st Cir. 2004).   Further, the weighing of the factors and

their application to the facts is treated in legal jargon as a

mixed question--law application is a more accurate label--and

reviewed with varying degrees of deference.    See Vinick II, 250




                                -8-
F.3d at 6; In re Extradition of Howard, 996 F.2d 1320, 1328 (1st

Cir. 1993).

          Turning now to the facts of this case, we think the jury

could have found from the evidence that Lubetzky from the start of

the critical six quarters was more than a bookkeeper; that he held

the formal position of treasurer and chief financial officer; that

in practice he had special responsibility for preparing lists of

debts to be paid and for filing the withholding tax returns; that

he had authority to sign checks; and that he was, according to a

number of the relevant criteria, a "responsible" person--with one

major qualification.

          The qualification is that during the period before he

became president in April 1997, Lubetzky reasonably understood that

he was expected by Saunders and Ponton to pay only the bills that

one of them approved, and that Saunders wanted the tax payments

delayed. Lubetzky so testified, adding that he would have regarded

himself as "stealing" if he had paid out checks over management's

objection.    He was supported by another witness.            No directly

contradictory evidence is noted by the government.            There is no

obvious basis   on   which   the   jury   could   have   disbelieved   this

testimony.

          It would be easy, and perhaps conventional, to resolve

this case by saying that the jury took everything into account and

then reasonably, although not inevitably, "found" Lubetzky was a


                                   -9-
responsible party.          Reserving some flexibility for the jury in

weighing circumstances, as well as finding raw facts, makes sense

in cases like this one--as it does in accident cases where the jury

decides whether the known facts add up to negligence.                       Often, the

jury's legal calculus is buried because one cannot know just what

facts it found.

             Nevertheless, here Lubetzky is entitled to claim that

regardless    of     the    jury's   view,    a    court    ought     not    hold   him

responsible where, as he has established, he could not have paid

out substantial sums for the taxes without ignoring the directions

of the company's highest officials and quite possibly losing his

job.   The     IRS    regulation     quoted       above    concedes    that    a    mere

bookkeeper who only wrote checks would not be liable in such a case

even though he knew that taxes were unpaid.

             So, unless we avert our eyes, the jury verdict in this

case depends on the legal proposition that someone in Lubetzky's

position had to confront top management and quite possibly resign

from his position if he wanted to avoid the risk of liability for

the period before he became president (liability afterwards is even

harder to avoid).          This is a harsh dilemma with which to confront

someone, and we have found little case law that deals with the

issue in such stark terms.           Perhaps this is not surprising, given

the unusual starkness of the choice in this case.




                                       -10-
           However, what case law exists at the circuit level is

mostly favorable to the government.      Thus, in Brounstein v. United

States, 979 F.2d 952 (3d Cir. 1992), a former salesman who was the

(perhaps   nominal)   president   and    (clearly   actual)    assistant

treasurer and check-writer was held liable even though the Third

Circuit assumed arguendo that Brounstein's effective superior might

have told him not to pay--and might have fired Brounstein had he

done otherwise.   "Instructions from a superior not to pay taxes do

not," said the court, "take a person otherwise responsible under

[the statute] out of that category."      Id. at 955.

           Similar in effect is Roth v. United States, 779 F.2d 1567

(11th Cir. 1986), where the Eleventh Circuit said:

           In our view, no instruction by the president
           or the majority owner of [the corporation]
           could effectively bar an otherwise responsible
           officer from paying these funds in accordance
           with the law.

Id. at 1572; accord Howard v. United States, 711 F.2d 729, 734 (5th

Cir. 1983) ("The fact that Jennings might well have fired Howard

had he disobeyed Jennings' instructions and paid the taxes does not

make Howard any less responsible for their payment.").

           Our own decision in Vinick II is perhaps the best case in

Lubetzky's favor, but it is easily distinguishable.           Vinick was

formally the treasurer of a small company in which he was an

investor; but--unlike Lubetzky--he was neither paid by the company

nor engaged in day-to-day business affairs, had no office at the


                                  -11-
company, and did not sign checks in the relevant time frame.

Throughout the period in question, Vinick was a CPA with his own

private practice elsewhere.         205 F.3d at 4.

             We   have   not    separately    addressed   the   period    after

Lubetzky became president because, if anything, his responsibility

was   then    enhanced--although       perhaps   not   greatly,    given    his

company's dominance by its U.K. parent and by Saunders.                Nor, in

light of our disposition, is it necessary to consider whether

Lubetzky's authority in this later period independently obliged him

to make payments for the earlier three quarters if the cash had

been on hand.      Compare Slodov, 436 U.S. at 259-260.

             We also need not address in detail Lubetzky's challenge

to the jury's finding that he became a responsible person on July

4, 1996.     Lubetzky became an officer shortly before July 1996, and

at trial the earliest check on which Lubetzky was the sole signer

was dated July 4, 1996; the jury was entitled to find that this was

the first day that Lubetzky had the requisite degree of control

over MediaForum's financial affairs to render him a responsible

person.

             Obviously,    on   this   record,   the   party    most   directly

responsible in this case for the failure to pay was Saunders, who

gave the fatal instruction to Lubetzky. This is certainly true for

the first three quarters, and most likely for a significant portion

of the $90,000 plus interest now due.            There is some possibility


                                       -12-
that Saunders--and perhaps Ponton--may be liable to Lubetzky, see

I.R.C. § 6672(d), but that issue is not before us.

          Lubetzky has also sought review of the district court's

denial of his alternative motion for a new trial.     The district

judge can order a new trial where the verdict is against the weight

of the evidence--Lubetzky's main claim here.    But such decisions

are reviewed only with great deference, Stuart, 337 F.3d at 37, and

in this instance the denial was not an abuse of discretion.

          Affirmed.




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