T.C. Memo. 2017-215
UNITED STATES TAX COURT
CARLOS ALAMO, Petitioner v.
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
Docket No. 24174-13L. Filed October 31, 2017.
P did not file his 2009 income tax return. R prepared a return and
assessed the tax and additions to tax computed by him to be due from
P. To collect, R filed a Federal tax lien. P requested a CDP hearing,
at the conclusion of which R issued a notice of determination. P
petitioned this Court for review. The case was remanded to R for
further consideration. R conducted a supplemental CDP hearing and
issued a supplemental notice of determination.
Held: R mailed a notice of deficiency to P.
Held, further, P did not properly raise the issue of his underlying
tax liability during the CDP hearing.
Held, further, R did not abuse his discretion in sustaining the filing
of the Federal tax lien for the 2009 taxable year.
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[*2] Carlos Alamo, pro se.
David Baudilio Mora, Paul Cooperman Feinberg, and Gordon P. Sanz, for
respondent.
MEMORANDUM OPINION
LARO, Judge: In this collection due process (CDP) case, petitioner seeks
review, under sections 6320(c) and 6330(d)(1),1 of respondent’s determination
sustaining a Letter 3172, Notice of Federal Tax Lien Filing and Your Right to a
Hearing Under IRC 6320 (NFTL), with respect to his Federal income tax liability
for the 2009 taxable year. The case was submitted fully stipulated under Rule 122.
We must decide three issues in this case. The first is whether respondent
properly issued a notice of deficiency to petitioner; we hold that he did. The
second is whether petitioner properly raised the issue of his underlying tax liability
during the CDP hearing; we find that he did not. The third is whether the Internal
Revenue Service (IRS) Office of Appeals settlement officer (SO) who conducted
petitioner’s initial and supplemental CDP hearings abused her discretion in
1
Unless otherwise indicated, section references are to the Internal Revenue
Code (Code) in effect at all relevant times. Rule references are to the Tax Court
Rules of Practice and Procedure.
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[*3] sustaining the filing of the Federal tax lien for the 2009 taxable year; we find
that she did not.
Background
I. Overview
The parties submitted this case fully stipulated under Rule 122. The
stipulations of fact and the facts drawn from stipulated exhibits are incorporated
herein. Petitioner is a resident of Texas. This case is appealable to the Court of
Appeals for the Fifth Circuit absent stipulation of the parties to the contrary.
II. Petitioner’s Tax Compliance for the 2009 Taxable Year
With respect to petitioner’s 2009 taxable year, respondent received a Form
1099-DIV, Dividends and Distributions, and Forms 1099-B, Proceeds From
Broker and Barter Exchange Transactions, from TD Ameritrade Clearing, Inc.
Respondent also received a Form 1099-INT, Interest Income, from Zone 3
Collision Center, LLC, and Forms 1099-MISC, Miscellaneous Income, from PCS
Acquisition Sub, LLC, and Gilbarco, Inc.
Petitioner for the 2009 taxable year made two estimated tax payments of
$4,100 each, on April 17 and June 22, 2009. Respondent’s account transcript for
petitioner for that year shows that pursuant to an extension of time to file, his
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[*4] income tax return was due on October 15, 2010. He never filed a return.
Indeed, petitioner has not filed a tax return for any of the taxable years 2006
through 2011.
III. Respondent’s Determination and Assessment of Petitioner’s Tax Liability
Using the information provided in the Forms 1099, respondent on June 27,
2011, prepared a substitute for return for petitioner’s 2009 taxable year.
Respondent generated a Letter 2566, Proposed Individual Income Tax
Assessment, dated that same day, computing net tax due of $86,651 ($94,851
minus $8,200 for estimated tax payments made), total interest of $5,322.81, a
failure-to-file addition to tax of $19,496.47, a failure-to-pay addition to tax of
$6,498.82, and a $2,052.59 addition to tax for failure to pay estimated income tax.2
The Letter 2566 advised petitioner that if he did not file his 2009 tax return within
30 days, respondent would assess the amounts shown. The record does not
indicate whether the Letter 2566 was mailed to petitioner. The only relevant entry
in respondent’s account transcript for petitioner’s 2009 taxable year indicates that
respondent prepared the substitute for return on July 11, 2011. The discrepancy in
the dates remains unexplained.
2
Respondent’s Automated Substitute for Return (ASFR) taxpayer
delinquency investigation (TDI) record for petitioner shows that the letter package
was created on June 14, 2011.
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[*5] According to respondent’s ASFR TDI record for petitioner and the account
transcript for petitioner’s 2009 taxable year, a statutory notice of deficiency was
issued on September 20, 2011. There is no photocopy of the actual notice of
deficiency purportedly sent to petitioner. In the record before this Court, there are
two reprints of the notice, one reprinted on February 12, 2015, and the other on
August 14, 2015. The reprints are identical in almost all respects. They are dated
October 3, 2011, and show a deficiency of $94,851, along with a section
6651(a)(1) failure-to-file addition to tax of $19,496.47, a section 6651(a)(2)
failure-to-pay addition to tax of $6,498.82, and a section 6654(a) addition to tax of
$2,052.59 for failure to pay estimated income tax. The reprints show petitioner’s
present address and a tracking number at the top of the first page, which reads:
0071 6176 1836 3379 1592. The tracking number on the August 14, 2015, reprint
has been underlined by hand, and the following tracking number is handwritten
above it: 7161 7618 3633 7915 92. Respondent has provided a U.S. Postal
Service (USPS) Form 3877 indicating that a document was sent to petitioner by
certified mail from the IRS’ Detroit, Michigan, computing center with a tracking
number of 7161 7618 3633 7915 9245 and postage of $2.85. The form bears a
Detroit, Michigan, USPS postmark dated October 3, 2011. There is no USPS
tracking information available for any of these numbers. Respondent’s ASFR TDI
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[*6] record shows that the notice of deficiency was returned to respondent on
November 4, 2011, as unclaimed or refused.
Petitioner did not petition this Court for redetermination of any amounts
indicated in the notice of deficiency. On February 7, 2012, respondent closed the
tax determination. On February 27, 2012, respondent assessed tax due of $94,851,
a failure-to-file addition to tax of $19,496.47, a failure-to-pay addition to tax of
$9,964.86, an addition to tax of $2,052.59 for failure to pay estimated income tax,
and interest of $7,083.93 and, according to the account transcript for petitioner’s
2009 taxable year, issued a corresponding notice to petitioner.
IV. Respondent’s Efforts To Collect the Tax Assessed
A. Final Notice of Intent To Levy
Petitioner did not pay the assessed liability. On November 1, 2012,
respondent issued a Letter 1058, Final Notice: Notice of Intent to Levy and
Notice of Your Right to a Hearing (FNIL). The FNIL showed that petitioner owed
$133,124.72 and informed him of his right to request a CDP hearing with the IRS
Office of Appeals within 30 days of the FNIL’s date. The FNIL was mailed in an
envelope addressed to petitioner at his present address (the same address as that
indicated on the reprinted notices of deficiency), was postmarked November 6,
2012, and bore the tracking number 7011 0470 0003 0295 5961. The envelope
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[*7] was returned to respondent unclaimed on December 4, 2012. Petitioner has
not contested the FNIL in this case, and we need address it no further.
B. Notice of Federal Tax Lien Filing
On November 9, 2012, a lien was placed on petitioner’s assets because of
the balance owed on his account. On November 13, 2012, respondent issued the
NFTL to petitioner. The NFTL indicated that the amount of the lien was
$125,248.85 and informed petitioner of his right to request a CDP hearing by
December 21, 2012, to appeal the collection action and discuss payment method
options. The NFTL was addressed to petitioner at his current address and was sent
by certified mail.
Petitioner timely submitted a Form 12153, Request for a Collection Due
Process or Equivalent Hearing, signed and dated by him on December 19, 2012;
respondent received the form on January 3, 2013. Petitioner checked the box on
the form indicating that he was challenging the NFTL and requested withdrawal of
the lien. He also requested a face-to-face CDP hearing, the audio of which he
would record. Petitioner proposed to discuss at the hearing: (1) whether
respondent followed proper procedures; (2) his belief that he is not liable for the
assessed tax; (3) his belief that he should not be held liable for any penalties; (4) a
challenge to the underlying liability, which he claimed he did not have the chance
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[*8] to contest earlier; and (5) collection alternatives. The return address on the
envelope in which the Form 12153 arrived was petitioner’s current address.
C. Collection Due Process Hearing
Petitioner’s case was assigned to IRS Office of Appeals SO Liana A. White
in Houston, Texas. In her initial review on March 28, 2013, SO White surveyed
the matter and determined that petitioner did not qualify for a face-to-face hearing
because he was not current with his Federal tax return filings.
On April 3, 2013, SO White sent a letter to petitioner scheduling a
telephone conference call with him for May 1, 2013, to discuss his case. The letter
informed petitioner that the IRS Office of Appeals could consider the underlying
tax liability, but only if he did not otherwise have an opportunity to dispute it with
the Office of Appeals or did not receive a statutory notice of deficiency. The letter
further notified him that for SO White to consider alternative collection methods,
petitioner should submit before the conference a Form 433-A, Collection
Information Statement for Wage Earners and Self-Employed Individuals, and
certain supporting documentation, along with signed tax returns for the 2006,
2007, 2008, 2010, and 2011 taxable years and proof of estimated tax payments for
the 2012 taxable year and the first quarter of 2013. The letter also explained that
SO White did not recall having any prior involvement with petitioner’s tax periods
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[*9] at issue and that the CDP hearing would determine whether respondent met
all the requirements of any applicable law or administrative procedure.
Petitioner responded to SO White by letter dated April 29, 2013, reiterating
his request for a face-to-face hearing and noting that the scheduled May 1, 2013,
telephone call was not convenient for him. He also stated that he did not receive a
deficiency notice for the 2009 taxable year and did not have a previous
opportunity to challenge the tax liability. Petitioner went on: “Although I am
challenging the liability of the tax, if I do owe the alleged tax and you can provide
substantial proof that I do, I would be more than happy to discuss collection
alternatives such as installment payments and/or offer and compromise.”
Petitioner declined to provide the information requested by SO White because he
believed each tax year to be separate from the others and wanted to concentrate on
2009 alone.
Petitioner did not call SO White at the scheduled time. By letter dated May
2, 2013, SO White explained that petitioner was not entitled to a face-to-face
hearing because he was not in compliance with his filing obligations. SO White
reiterated her request that petitioner provide the Form 433-A and supporting
documentation as well as any delinquent or corrected tax returns by May 15, 2013.
SO White received petitioner’s April 29, 2013, letter on May 3, 2013.
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[*10] By letter dated May 31, 2013, petitioner repeated his request for a face-to-
face hearing. He also requested a copy of the documents that respondent used to
arrive at the numbers on which the tax assessment was based.
In a letter dated June 19, 2013, SO White informed petitioner that that letter
was his final opportunity to challenge his liability for the 2009 taxable year. She
again requested that he provide the delinquent tax returns and informed him that it
was his last opportunity to request a collection alternative. SO White reiterated
that because of petitioner’s nonfiling and failure to submit financial information,
she could not grant him a face-to-face hearing. She also noted that she was
available by phone to discuss petitioner’s case. She offered to process a corrected
2009 individual income tax return if petitioner disagreed with the amount owed.
SO White then included the following text in bold type:
Please send the delinquent Individual Income tax returns for 2006,
2007, 2008, 2009, 2010 and 2011. If you do not agree with the
figures for 2009 please submit a corrected return. I have ordered the
tax return for 2009 to verify that a Notice of Deficiency was issued to
you at your current address. I show this is a good address for you in
2011 when the Notice of deficiency was sent to you per the Services
records. Please provide the Form 433-A with all supporting
documentation by 7/1/2013. The compliance function followed all
legal and procedural requirements regarding the filing of the Notice
of Federal Tax lien therefore if I do not receive the requested
information by 7/1/2013 I will have no other choice but to issue you a
Determination letter sustaining the lien filing.
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[*11] SO White concluded by stating that respondent had computed petitioner’s
2009 tax owed from amounts reported to respondent on Forms 1099-B and 1099-
MISC.
By letter dated July 18, 2013, petitioner restated his request for a face-to-
face hearing. He also noted that he did not receive a statutory notice of deficiency
for the 2009 taxable year and did not have an opportunity to challenge the tax
liability. Petitioner again requested that SO White provide him with substantial
proof of his underlying tax liability.
On July 26, 2013, SO White noted in respondent’s case activity record that
petitioner had failed to submit financial information and delinquent or corrected
tax returns. Although she could not obtain a copy of the notice of deficiency, she
observed that transcripts showed that it was sent. She added that petitioner was
given the opportunity to provide corrected returns and failed to do so and that it
appeared to her that he “picks and chooses what he will accept since the L 1058
[the FNIL] went unclaimed to his address of record but received the 3172 [the
NFTL] and filed a 12153 [request for a CDP hearing].”
V. Notice of Determination
On August 30, 2013, respondent issued a Notice of Determination
Concerning Collection Action(s) Under Section 6320 and/or 6330, sustaining the
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[*12] lien filing. Respondent determined that all legal and procedural
requirements had been met regarding the NFTL. Respondent also determined that
SO White had had no prior involvement with the tax period involved. Respondent
noted that petitioner had challenged his underlying tax liability for the 2009
taxable year by stating that he had not received the notice of deficiency.
Respondent observed that petitioner’s address of record for 2011 was the same as
his current address, at which he had received mail from respondent, although some
mail had been returned unclaimed from there. Respondent’s impression was that
petitioner was selective about which pieces of mail he wished to receive from
respondent. Respondent added that petitioner was shown in the IRS records to
have been at the same address since 2006 and that the account transcript for
petitioner’s 2009 taxable year shows that the notice of deficiency was issued on
September 20, 2011. Although petitioner raised the issue of abatement of
additions to tax, because he did not submit the information requested by SO
White, respondent stated, SO White could not address the issue. Respondent
concluded that petitioner did not qualify to have the lien withdrawn or released
and that no other challenges were made to the underlying tax liability. Respondent
determined that petitioner was not eligible for collection alternatives because of
his failure to comply with filing requirements and to submit financial information.
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[*13] Finally, respondent determined that the lien filing balanced the need for
efficient collection of taxes with petitioner’s legitimate concern that the collection
action be no more intrusive than necessary.
Petitioner had 30 days to file a petition contesting respondent’s
determination. See sec. 6330(d)(1). The Court received petitioner’s petition on
September 30, 2013. Because the envelope in which it was mailed bore a USPS
postmark dated September 25, 2013, the petition is treated as timely filed. See
sec. 7502(a); sec. 301.7502-1(c)(1), Proced. & Admin. Regs.
VI. Remand to the IRS Office of Appeals
On August 19, 2015, respondent moved to remand this case to the Office of
Appeals to allow the SO to supplement the administrative file to verify that the
notice of deficiency was issued properly by respondent and to allow petitioner an
additional opportunity to submit an amended return for the 2009 taxable year or a
statement of his position on the amount of his income tax liability for that year.
On August 26, 2015, this Court granted respondent’s unopposed motion and
remanded the case to the Office of Appeals to allow it to further consider and
verify the underlying liability and the mailing of notices.
By letter dated September 30, 2015, SO White informed petitioner that the
Office of Appeals had scheduled a face-to-face supplemental CDP hearing on
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[*14] November 12, 2015. The letter notified petitioner that records showed that
he had been provided with a copy of the deficiency notice and supporting
documentation and that he should be prepared at the face-to-face hearing to
provide documentation to support any income and expenses in dispute or not
previously considered. SO White requested that petitioner provide these
documents to the Office of Appeals by November 2, 2015. SO White encouraged
petitioner to prepare an income tax return and applicable schedules for the 2009
taxable year. She indicated that the discussion of collection alternatives would be
predicated upon petitioner’s compliance with income tax return filing
requirements, including submitting tax returns for the 2006 through 2014 taxable
years.
When petitioner did not respond to SO White’s letter, she performed an
internet search and found a telephone number for him. She called him on
November 11, 2015, to advise him about the scheduled face-to-face hearing.
During the telephone call petitioner told SO White that he was not aware of the
hearing and had been hospitalized for 10 days. Petitioner informed SO White that
he would not commit to a rescheduled hearing date and requested a letter with a
date and time. Accordingly, by letter dated November 13, 2015, SO White
rescheduled the hearing for December 2, 2015, and reiterated that petitioner
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[*15] should be prepared to provide documentation to support any income and
expenses in dispute or not previously considered.
By letter dated November 30, 2015, and sent to the Office of Appeals by
facsimile on the following day, petitioner explained his delay in responding to SO
White was by reason of his own hospitalization, followed by family medical
emergencies and bereavement. He requested that SO White continue investigating
the IRS records and mail him the results of the investigation. Petitioner expressed
his belief that a face-to-face hearing would not be productive until he received
proof that the IRS had created the notice of deficiency and mailed it to him.
Petitioner did not appear for the scheduled supplemental CDP hearing on
December 2, 2015. By letter dated December 3, 2015, SO White informed him
that the 2009 deficiency notice was provided to him by respondent’s counsel but
that she was sending another copy of the documents he had requested. SO White
rescheduled the face-to-face supplemental CDP hearing to January 7, 2016, and
requested that petitioner provide by December 29, 2015, documentation
supporting any income and expenses in dispute and not previously considered.
By letter dated December 30, 2015, petitioner refused to appear for the
rescheduled hearing, stating that when he received the copy of the deficiency
notice that SO White mailed with her previous letter, it was the first time he had
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[*16] seen the document. Petitioner reiterated his belief that the IRS had never
created the notice or mailed it to him. He further asserted that the copies of the
notice that SO White provided to him were incomplete and had been saved on the
Government’s computers and never actually printed. He noted that the USPS did
not show any tracking information for the tracking number indicated on the
reprinted notice of deficiency.3 Accordingly, because of his belief that the IRS
never created or sent him a deficiency notice for the 2009 taxable year, petitioner
requested abatement of tax and additions to tax without a face-to-face hearing.
On February 5, 2016, respondent issued a Supplemental Notice of
Determination Concerning Collection Action(s) Under Section 6320 and/or 6330,
sustaining the lien filing. Respondent determined that all legal and procedural
requirements had been met regarding the NFTL. Respondent noted that the Office
of Appeals believed it had satisfactorily supplemented the administrative file with
verification that a statutory notice of deficiency was properly issued by the IRS.
Respondent also observed that the Office of Appeals afforded petitioner three
separate opportunities to submit documentation concerning the underlying tax
liability but that petitioner declined to participate or provide any information that
3
Deborah L. Ross, an IRS Office of Appeals team manager, contacted the
USPS on January 22, 2016, and was informed that tracking numbers are active for
60 days, archived for up to two years, and then recycled.
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[*17] could facilitate correcting or adjusting his tax liability. Because petitioner
declined to provide the Office of Appeals with any information to dispute his
underlying tax liability during both the initial and the supplemental hearing,
respondent concluded that the liability was correct and the assessment too was
correct and valid.
Discussion
I. Overview
A. Collection of Unpaid Tax Liabilities
The Secretary has collection authority over taxes imposed by the Code. Sec.
6301. One of the tools in the Government’s purview, if a taxpayer liable for a tax
neglects or refuses to pay it, is a lien in favor of the United States upon all
property and rights to property belonging to that taxpayer. Sec. 6321. The lien
continues until the liability is satisfied or the lien becomes unenforceable by
reason of lapse of time. Sec. 6322. The lien is not valid against any purchaser,
security interest holder, mechanic’s lienor, or judgment lien creditor until notice of
the lien has been properly filed. Sec. 6323(a).
A taxpayer must be notified in writing of the filing of a notice of lien under
section 6323. Sec. 6320(a)(1). Section 6320(a) elaborates on those notice
requirements, and section 6320(b) gives a taxpayer the right to a fair CDP hearing
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[*18] before an impartial officer of the IRS Office of Appeals who has had no
prior involvement with respect to the unpaid tax. Subsections (c), (d) (other than
paragraph (3)(B) thereof), (e), and (g) of section 6330 govern the conduct of this
hearing and any subsequent review. Sec. 6320(c). Thus, the Appeals officer
conducting the hearing must verify that the requirements of any applicable law or
administrative procedure have been met. Sec. 6330(c)(1). The taxpayer may raise
at the hearing any relevant issue relating to the unpaid tax, including (1)
appropriate spousal defenses, (2) challenges to the appropriateness of collection
actions, and (3) offers of collection alternatives. Sec. 6330(c)(2)(A). The
taxpayer, however, may not challenge the existence or amount of the underlying
tax liability unless he did not receive a statutory notice of deficiency for that
liability or did not otherwise have an opportunity to dispute the liability. Sec.
6330(c)(2)(B). The Appeals officer’s determination must take into account all of
the above, as well as whether any proposed collection action balances the need for
the efficient collection of taxes with the taxpayer’s legitimate concern that any
collection action be no more intrusive than necessary. Sec. 6330(c)(3).
B. Review of Collection Actions
Within 30 days of a CDP determination by the IRS Office of Appeals, a
taxpayer may petition this Court for review of that determination. Sec. 6330(d)(1).
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[*19] We review the determination de novo only where the validity of the
underlying tax liability was properly at issue at the hearing. Goza v.
Commissioner, 114 T.C. 176, 181-182 (2000). Otherwise, where the taxpayer’s
underlying liability is not properly at issue, we review the Government’s decision
for abuse of discretion only. Id. Abuse of discretion exists when a determination
is arbitrary, capricious, or without sound basis in fact or law. See, e.g., Woodral v.
Commissioner, 112 T.C. 19, 23 (1999); Venhuizen v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo.
2012-270, at *12.
II. Whether Respondent Properly Mailed a Notice of Deficiency to Petitioner
The threshold question in this case is one over which the parties’ dispute is
the most vociferous: whether respondent created and mailed to petitioner the
notice of deficiency upon which respondent’s tax assessments and proposed
collection action are based.
A. Legal Background
Section 6212 provides that a notice of deficiency must be sent by certified
or registered mail to the taxpayer at his last known address. It is sufficient that the
Commissioner have mailed the notice; it is not necessary that the taxpayer have
received it. See Keado v. United States, 853 F.2d 1209, 1211-1212 (5th Cir.
1988). If the Commissioner’s assessment of a taxpayer’s income tax liability is
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[*20] not preceded by a deficiency notice as required by section 6213(a), then the
assessment is invalid, as is any lien based thereon. Hoyle v. Commissioner, 131
T.C. 197, 205 (2008). Moreover, in such an instance, the taxpayer’s opportunity
in a CDP hearing to dispute the underlying tax liability does not cure the invalid
assessment. Freije v. Commissioner, 125 T.C. 14, 36 (2005).
The Commissioner bears the burden of proving by competent and
persuasive evidence that he properly mailed the notice of deficiency. Coleman v.
Commissioner, 94 T.C. 82, 90 (1990); August v. Commissioner, 54 T.C. 1535,
1536-1537 (1970). A Form 3877 reflecting USPS receipt represents direct
documentary evidence of the date and the fact of mailing. Coleman v.
Commissioner, 94 T.C. at 90. It also can reflect the Commissioner’s compliance
with established IRS procedures for mailing deficiency notices. Id. A failure to
comply with the Form 3877 mailing procedures is not fatal if the evidence
adduced is otherwise sufficient to prove mailing. Id. at 91; see also Kaebel v.
Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2017-37, at *14 (“While not sufficient to create a
presumption of official regularity, the incomplete Form 3877 serves as evidence
that the notice of deficiency was mailed to * * * [the taxpayer].”).
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[*21] B. The Parties’ Arguments
Petitioner argues that before the Commissioner can assess or collect a tax
deficiency, he must send a notice of deficiency to the taxpayer by certified or
registered mail. See sec. 6212(a); see also Keado, 853 F.2d at 1211-1212.
Petitioner further argues that the burden of establishing the existence of a notice of
deficiency and the date of its mailing is upon the Commissioner. See Pietanza v.
Commissioner, 92 T.C. 729, 736-737 (1989), aff’d, 935 F.2d 1282 (3d Cir. 1991).
Petitioner’s position is that there are multiple inconsistencies and omissions in the
evidence surrounding the deficiency notice’s mailing and that respondent cannot
meet his burden of proof on that point. Petitioner points to several such purported
inconsistencies: (1) there is a mismatch between the tracking numbers indicated
on the reprinted notice of deficiency and the Form 3877; (2) the fact that the notice
was purportedly created at the IRS office in Holtsville, New York, but mailed out
of the Detroit, Michigan, office; (3) the reprinted notice was incomplete because it
did not include a summary of the deficiency’s computation or explanation of the
adjustments; (4) the Form 3877 does not indicate what particular item had been
mailed or the tax year to which it related; (5) the reprinted notice of deficiency
does not include petitioner’s name, and even if the notice had been delivered to
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[*22] petitioner’s address, petitioner could not have identified that it was directed
to him and it would have been illegal for him to open it.
Citing Massie v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1995-173, 1995 WL 225549,
at *3, aff’d, 82 F.3d 423 (9th Cir. 1996), respondent maintains that petitioner’s
claim that he did not receive the notice of deficiency is insufficient to disprove
that the notice was mailed. Respondent admits that the Form 3877 that has been
entered into the record of this case lacks all the features necessary for it to be
considered properly prepared for purposes of establishing a presumption of
official regularity, see Hoyle v. Commissioner, 131 T.C. at 203, because it was not
signed by the USPS official who received the document and was not signed by the
person who issued the notice of deficiency, cf. Meyer v. Commissioner, T.C.
Memo. 2013-268, at *22-*25. However, respondent argues, the Forms 3877 may
be used along with other evidence to establish the deficiency notice’s timely
mailing. See Coleman v. Commissioner, 94 T.C. at 91. Thus, respondent points
to the reprinted notice of deficiency and the account transcript for petitioner’s
2009 taxable year, which show the assessment of petitioner’s outstanding income
tax liability after the date the deficiency notice was issued. Cf., e.g., Portwine v.
Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2015-29, aff’d without published opinion, 668 F.
App’x 838 (10th Cir. 2016); Jordan v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2011-243.
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[*23] Respondent also disputes the discrepancies claimed by petitioner. First,
respondent argues that the notice of deficiency in the case record is a reprint of the
original and the mismatch between the numbers is due to the reprinting; he
emphasizes that the numbers match except for their first two and last two digits.
Second, respondent argues that because the IRS occasionally prepares documents
in one location and for efficiency mails them from another, the mismatch in cities
is not significant. Moreover, respondent points out, the amount of time between
the creation of the substitute for return and the deficiency notice’s date suggests
that the notice could have been mailed from a location different from where it was
created. Third, respondent contends that the reprinted notice of deficiency
includes an attachment showing how petitioner’s deficiency and additions to tax
for the 2009 taxable year were calculated. Fourth, respondent maintains that,
while the Form 3877 was not properly prepared, in conjunction with the other
evidence in the record it is sufficient to show the mailing of the deficiency notice.
Fifth, respondent argues that petitioner’s argument about the absence of his name
from the address line of the reprinted notice of deficiency is conjecture, because
petitioner did not establish that the original deficiency notice lacked his name, nor
is there any evidence that respondent used a windowed envelope in mailing the
notice such that the address lines on the notice would have been visible.
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[*24] C. Mailing of the Notice of Deficiency
Notwithstanding respondent’s disorganized recordkeeping as to the tax
account for petitioner for 2009, we find that respondent has carried his burden of
proving that he mailed a deficiency notice to petitioner.
The account transcript for petitioner’s 2009 taxable year and respondent’s
ASFR TDI record both show that a statutory notice of deficiency was generated on
September 20, 2011. Respondent has also provided two reprints of the deficiency
notice, each dated October 3, 2011. These reprints show petitioner’s address,
which was his last known address at that time and is the address he uses presently.
Respondent further has provided a Form 3877 showing that an item was mailed to
petitioner on October 3, 2011, which is the date shown on the reprinted notice of
deficiency, and bearing a Detroit, Michigan, USPS postmark dated that same day.
The situation with the tracking numbers, of which there are three as noted in
the background summary above, admittedly is peculiar. However, the similarity of
the numbers suggests that the differences are the result of carelessness or a
computer error rather than a bumbling coverup on respondent’s part, as petitioner
seems to suggest. The three tracking numbers are as follows, with the identical
digits aligned vertically:
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[*25] Source Number
Reprinted deficiency notices 00 7161 7618 3633 7915 92
Handwritten on one of the reprints 7161 7618 3633 7915 92
Form 3877 7161 7618 3633 7915 9245
We agree with respondent that the similarity among these numbers is not
coincidental. The confluence of the date of record entries and the reprinted notice
of deficiency, the close similarity of the tracking numbers, and the lack of any
other correspondence around the same time from respondent to petitioner suggest
that the document that was mailed on October 3, 2011, as evidenced by the Form
3877, was indeed the notice of deficiency.
But there is more evidence persuading us that respondent did mail the notice
of deficiency. Respondent closed the tax determination on February 7, 2012, and
assessed the tax due and additions to tax on February 27, 2012. The last date
indicated on the reprinted deficiency notice for petitioner to file a petition with
this Court was January 3, 2012. The timing of respondent’s assessment of tax
against petitioner coincides with the expiration of the 90-day window to petition
this Court for redetermination of the determination in the notice of deficiency. See
sec. 6213(a), (c). But what is perhaps most indicative of the deficiency notice’s
mailing is respondent’s ASFR TDI record showing that the notice was returned to
respondent on November 4, 2011, as unclaimed or refused. Logic dictates that an
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[*26] item cannot be returned as unclaimed unless it was first mailed. Moreover,
as the case record shows, petitioner’s acceptance of mail from respondent
historically has been spotty. For instance, the FNIL was returned to respondent
unclaimed, but the NFTL on which this case is based was delivered successfully to
petitioner. While there is no evidence to establish any deliberate refusal of
delivery of the notice of deficiency on petitioner’s part, cf. Sego v. Commissioner,
114 T.C. 604, 611 (2000) (“[T]axpayers cannot defeat actual notice by deliberately
refusing delivery of statutory notices of deficiency.”), he cannot use the fact that
the notice of deficiency went unclaimed to later assert that the notice was never
mailed to him, see Massie v. Commissioner, 1995 WL 225549, at *3.
We do not think the purported inconsistencies pointed out by petitioner to
be relevant or significant. We have already addressed the mismatch among the
tracking numbers on the reprinted deficiency notice and the Form 3877. It is not
significant that the deficiency notice listed a Holtsville, New York, address at its
top but was mailed from Detroit, Michigan; IRS operations are national in scope,
and documents can be prepared in one location and printed in another or mailed
between locations before being sent to the taxpayer. Petitioner’s argument about
whether the notice included a statement showing how the deficiency was
computed is not relevant because it has no bearing on whether the notice was
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[*27] mailed. As to the Form 3877, respondent admitted that it was not complete,
but taken together with all the other evidence it is sufficient to show that the notice
of deficiency was mailed. Finally, petitioner’s contention that the absence of his
name from the reprinted notice means that it could not have been delivered to him
is inapposite; there is no evidence on whether the original notice included his
name and whether it was mailed in an opaque envelope or one with a window.
Considering all the evidence before us, we conclude that respondent mailed
a notice of deficiency to petitioner. See Coleman v. Commissioner, 94 T.C. at 91.
III. Whether Petitioner Properly Raised the Issue of His Tax Liability
We have found that respondent mailed a notice of deficiency to petitioner,
and so the assessment of income tax and additions to tax against him is valid. Cf.
Hoyle v. Commissioner, 131 T.C. at 205. However, while it is sufficient for the
Commissioner to have mailed the notice of deficiency for the assessment to be
valid, section 6330(c)(2)(B) provides an additional right to the taxpayer. See
Freije v. Commissioner, 125 T.C. at 36 (characterizing section 6330 as “a measure
intended to expand taxpayers’ rights in collection actions”). That statute allows a
taxpayer to challenge the underlying liability if he “did not receive any statutory
notice of deficiency for such tax liability”. Sec. 6330(c)(2)(B) (emphasis added);
see also sec. 301.6330-1(e)(3), Q&A-E2, Proced. & Admin. Regs. (“Receipt of a
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[*28] statutory notice of deficiency for this purpose means receipt in time to
petition the Tax Court for a redetermination of the deficiency determined in the
notice of deficiency.”). Thus, under section 6330(c)(2)(B) the receipt of the
deficiency notice, not its mailing, is the relevant event. See, e.g., Campbell v.
Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2012-82, 2012 WL 967660, at *2. Respondent does
not dispute that petitioner did not receive the deficiency notice, nor does he
dispute that petitioner was entitled to raise the issue of his underlying tax liability
at his CDP hearing. Therefore, respondent is deemed to have conceded these
points, see Thiessen v. Commissioner, 146 T.C. 100, 106 (2016) (“[I]ssues and
arguments not advanced on brief are considered to be abandoned.”), and we turn
to whether petitioner properly raised the issue of his tax liability in the CDP
proceedings.
A. The Parties’ Arguments
Respondent admits that petitioner stated in his request for a CDP hearing
that he does not believe that he owes the underlying tax liability. However,
respondent argues that petitioner is precluded from disputing the underlying tax
liability because he failed to raise properly the merits of that liability as an issue
during the CDP hearing. See Giamelli v. Commissioner, 129 T.C. 107, 112-115
(2007).
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[*29] Petitioner contends that he repeatedly raised the merits of the underlying tax
liability during the CDP proceedings. He emphasizes that he notified SO White
several times that he never received a notice of deficiency. Petitioner’s position is
that his assertion to SO White that he did not receive the notice is itself a
challenge to the merits of the underlying liability and represents an issue at the
core of the assessment’s validity. Petitioner further argues that it is not material
whether he provided a completed 2009 return, or other statement concerning his
income tax liability for that taxable year, to SO White. Petitioner reiterates that he
believes the key issue before this Court is whether respondent created and
properly mailed to him a notice of deficiency.
B. Challenge to the Underlying Tax Liability
We have already determined that respondent did mail a notice of deficiency
to petitioner. But it is also true that because petitioner did not receive the notice,
he was entitled to raise the issue of the underlying liability at his CDP hearing.
See sec. 6330(c)(2)(B). Petitioner errs, however, by contending that he was not
required to provide a completed 2009 income tax return or any other
documentation to the IRS Office of Appeals to contest his income tax liability.
It is insufficient for a taxpayer simply to state to the Office of Appeals that
he is challenging the underlying tax liability in a CDP hearing. He must also
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[*30] present some evidence with respect to that issue. Section 301.6320-1(f)(2),
Q&A-F3, Proced. & Admin. Regs., provides:
In seeking Tax Court review of a Notice of Determination, the
taxpayer can only ask the court to consider an issue, including a
challenge to the underlying tax liability, that was properly raised in
the taxpayer’s CDP hearing. An issue is not properly raised if the
taxpayer fails to request consideration of the issue by Appeals, or if
consideration is requested but the taxpayer fails to present to Appeals
any evidence with respect to that issue after being given a reasonable
opportunity to present such evidence.
See also sec. 301.6330-1(f)(2), Q&A-F3, Proced. & Admin. Regs. The record in
this case shows that petitioner was given multiple opportunities to provide
evidence of what he believed to be his correct tax liability and refused. In the
original CDP proceedings SO White made several written requests to petitioner
for a Form 433-A, financial documentation, and a corrected 2009 income tax
return, all to no avail. In the supplemental CDP proceedings SO White requested
thrice that petitioner submit documentation concerning his underlying tax liability,
again to no avail. And in both CDP proceedings SO White scheduled and
rescheduled multiple telephone conference calls and face-to-face meetings with
petitioner, in all of which the latter refused to participate.
SO White afforded petitioner a more than reasonable opportunity to present
evidence relating to his underlying tax liability. A taxpayer may not claim to
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[*31] challenge the underlying tax liability in a CDP hearing and then refuse to
cooperate with the Office of Appeals in attempting to establish that liability. In
previous cases, we have found against taxpayers where they stated that they were
challenging the underlying tax liability in a CDP hearing but failed to provide to
the Office of Appeals any evidence on that issue. See, e.g., Snodgrass v.
Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2016-235; Stevenson v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo.
2013-284. In short, intransigence has no reward. We agree with respondent that
petitioner did not properly raise the issue of his underlying tax liability for the
2009 taxable year during either his original or his supplemental CDP hearing.
IV. Whether the SO Abused Her Discretion
Because petitioner’s underlying tax liability is not properly at issue, we
review respondent’s decision for abuse of discretion only. See Goza v.
Commissioner, 114 T.C. at 181-182. Abuse of discretion exists when a
determination is arbitrary, capricious, or without sound basis in fact or law. See,
e.g., Woodral v. Commissioner, 112 T.C. at 23; Venhuizen v. Commissioner, at
*12. In a CDP hearing the SO must (1) properly verify that the requirements of
any applicable law or administrative procedure were met, (2) consider all relevant
issues raised by the taxpayer, and (3) consider whether the proposed collection
action balanced the need for efficient collection of taxes with the taxpayer’s
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[*32] legitimate concern that the action be no more intrusive than necessary. Sec.
6330(c)(3). We find that SO White did all of these things and thus did not abuse
her discretion in sustaining the Federal tax lien filing for the 2009 taxable year.
A. The Parties’ Arguments
Petitioner asserts that SO White’s determination that the requirements of
any applicable law or administrative procedure had been met in his case rested on
erroneous findings of fact. Petitioner argues that the copy of the deficiency notice
provided by the Government does not include his name and is incomplete because
it does not show how the deficiency was computed, nor does it include an
explanation of the adjustments. Petitioner also points out the discrepancy among
the tracking numbers in respondent’s records. Thus, petitioner would have us hold
that SO White abused her discretion in neglecting to verify the valid issuance of a
notice of deficiency and its proper mailing. Petitioner maintains that SO White
should not have concluded that a valid deficiency notice was sent to him and thus
should have determined not to proceed with the collection action.
Respondent maintains that SO White did not abuse her discretion. First,
respondent argues that SO White verified that a valid notice of deficiency was sent
to petitioner at his last known address, see Hoyle v. Commissioner, 131 T.C. at
200-203, by reviewing the notice of deficiency, the account transcript for
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[*33] petitioner’s 2009 taxable year, and the copy of the Form 3877. Second,
respondent asserts that SO White’s denial of a face-to-face hearing during the
original CDP proceedings was not an abuse of discretion because petitioner
refused to provide any requested information. Respondent adds that SO White did
offer a face-to-face hearing during the supplemental CDP proceedings.
Ultimately, respondent contends, it was not an abuse of discretion for SO White to
uphold the proposed collection action because petitioner did not participate in the
CDP hearing and did not provide any requested financial information.
B. Abuse of Discretion
We agree with respondent that there was no abuse of discretion in
sustaining the Federal tax lien filing for the 2009 taxable year. Respondent’s case
activity record shows that SO White documented her review of petitioner’s case
and her correspondence and conversation with petitioner. The evidence and the
notice of determination itself demonstrate that SO White (1) properly verified that
the requirements of any applicable law or administrative procedure were met, (2)
considered all relevant issues raised by petitioner, and (3) considered whether the
proposed collection action balanced the need for efficient collection of taxes with
petitioner’s legitimate concern that the action be no more intrusive than necessary.
See sec. 6330(c)(3).
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[*34] While SO White’s review of the deficiency notice during the initial CDP
hearing may have been deficient, any possible defect was remediated upon remand
from this Court during the supplemental CDP hearing. SO White relied on
multiple items of evidence in respondent’s records to establish that the notice of
deficiency was mailed. She reviewed the same evidence as we did when we found
that respondent mailed the deficiency notice.
We also are not persuaded by petitioner’s arguments that the absence of his
name from the reprinted notice of deficiency makes it invalid, as does the absence
of computations of the deficiency and an explanation of the adjustments. The
reprinted notice of deficiency is a computer-generated copy, not a photocopy of
the original notice. At any rate, the Form 3877, the tracking number on which, we
have found, correlates with that on the notice of deficiency, does include
petitioner’s correct name and address. Further, we cannot accept petitioner’s
argument that the notice of deficiency was mailed in an envelope with a window
for the address as opposed to a fully opaque envelope. There is no evidence in the
record about the types of envelope in which respondent mails notices. And surely
petitioner could not claim to have specific knowledge that the notice of deficiency
for the 2009 taxable year was placed in a windowed envelope, because that would
discredit his position that he never received the notice.
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[*35] As far as the absence of deficiency computations and an explanation of
adjustments made, the reprinted deficiency notice indeed does not include these,
although we note that it includes the following line: “The enclosed statement
shows how we figured the deficiency.” The record before us includes a copy of
the proposed individual income tax assessment dated June 27, 2011, which does
explain respondent’s computations of petitioner’s income tax deficiency and
additions to tax. The record does not show whether this document was mailed to
petitioner; however, because it was entered into the record in this case before it
was remanded, petitioner did have actual notice at the supplemental CDP hearing
of respondent’s computation of his tax liability.
Even if the notice of deficiency had been mailed without an explanation of
respondent’s computation of petitioner’s deficiency and additions to tax, this does
not invalidate it. Section 7522(a) requires that a deficiency notice “describe the
basis for, and identify the amounts (if any) of, the tax due, interest, additional
amounts, additions to tax, and assessable penalties included in such notice.”
However, “[a]n inadequate description * * * shall not invalidate such notice.”
Sec. 7522(a). This Court has held that a deficiency notice is valid if it objectively
places a reasonable taxpayer on notice that the Government has determined a
deficiency in tax for a particular year and amount. Dees v. Commissioner, 148
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[*36] T.C. ___, ___ (slip op. at 8-9) (Feb. 2, 2017). The reprinted notice of
deficiency clearly does this, and thus the potential absence of explanatory
computations does not invalidate it.
Furthermore, there generally is no abuse of discretion in an SO’s refusal to
grant a face-to-face hearing during CDP proceedings where the taxpayer fails to
provide requested financial information and delinquent tax returns. See, e.g.,
Klingenberg v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2012-292, at *17, aff’d without
published opinion, 670 F. App’x 510 (9th Cir. 2016). Because CDP hearings are
informal administrative proceedings, they have no particular format and may be
face-to-face or conducted by written or oral communication between an Appeals
officer and the taxpayer. Sec. 301.6330-1(d)(2), Q&A-D6, Proced. & Admin.
Regs. Regardless, because SO White did offer petitioner several opportunities for
a face-to-face hearing in the supplemental CDP proceedings, there is no colorable
claim that she abused her discretion in this respect.
There also was no abuse of discretion in respondent’s determination that
petitioner is not entitled to a collection alternative, because petitioner did not
provide a completed Form 433-A or supporting financial information, nor was he
in compliance with Federal tax laws, having not filed income tax returns for the
2006 through 2014 taxable years. See, e.g., Coleman v. Commissioner, T.C.
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[*37] Memo. 2010-51, 2010 WL 985291, at *4 (“This Court has consistently held,
as have other courts, that a determination that a taxpayer is not entitled to a
collection alternative does not constitute an abuse of discretion if the taxpayer did
not provide financial information during the administrative hearing and was not
currently in compliance with Federal tax laws, i.e., had not filed all required tax
returns.”), aff’d, 420 F. App’x 663 (8th Cir. 2011); see also sec. 301.6330-1(d)(2),
Q&A-D8, Proced. & Admin. Regs. (“[T]he IRS does not consider offers to
compromise from taxpayers who have not filed required returns or have not made
certain required deposits of tax[.]”).
On the basis of the record in this case, we can find no defect in respondent’s
determination to sustain the filing of the Federal tax lien. SO White and the IRS
Office of Appeals did not act arbitrarily, capriciously, or without sound basis in
fact or law. See Woodral v. Commissioner, 112 T.C. at 23. Petitioner refused to
cooperate with SO White, who offered him multiple opportunities to provide the
requested information and have a face-to-face hearing. A taxpayer may not refuse
to deal with the IRS Office of Appeals in a CDP proceeding and then argue that it
abused its discretion in issuing an unfavorable determination. Accordingly, we
conclude that respondent did not abuse his discretion in upholding the lien filing.
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[*38] V. Conclusion
We have determined that respondent properly mailed a notice of deficiency
to petitioner. We also found that petitioner failed to properly raise the issue of his
underlying tax liability during the CDP hearing. And, finally, we concluded that
the IRS Office of Appeals did not abuse its discretion in sustaining the filing of
the Federal tax lien for the 2009 taxable year.
If petitioner believes that he does not owe the tax assessed by respondent
and is able and willing to provide competent evidence to that effect, he may pay
the full amount assessed and submit a claim for refund or credit. Secs. 6402(a),
6511; Flora v. United States, 357 U.S. 63, 75 (1958). If the claim is denied, then
petitioner may sue for refund, secs. 7422(a), 6532(a)(1), in Federal District Court
or the U.S. Court of Federal Claims, 28 U.S.C. secs. 1346(a)(1), 1491(a)(1)
(2012).
We have considered all of the parties’ arguments, and to the extent not
discussed above, conclude that those arguments are irrelevant, moot, or without
merit.
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[*39] To reflect the foregoing,
Decision will be entered for
respondent.