150 T.C. No. 2
UNITED STATES TAX COURT
KENNETH WILLIAM KASPER, Petitioner v.
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
Docket No. 22242-11W. Filed January 9, 2018.
R rejected P’s claim for a whistleblower award under I.R.C.
section 7623(b), stating that the information P provided about
corporate taxpayer T “did not meet our criteria for an award.” P
argues his information was used by R to keep “held open” R’s
bankruptcy claim against T, which eventually led to a settlement
payment. The Court granted P’s motion to compel the discovery of
information about R’s involvement in T’s bankruptcy proceedings
over R’s objection that the information was outside of R’s
administrative record.
Held: When reviewing R’s determinations under I.R.C. section
7623(b) we will limit the scope of our review to the administrative
record.
Held, further, the administrative record may be supplemented if it
is incomplete.
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Held, further, the applicable standard of review for determinations
under I.R.C. section 7623(b) is abuse of discretion.
Held, further, R did not abuse his discretion in rejecting P’s claim
for a whistleblower award.
Kenneth William Kasper, pro se.
Rachel G. Borden, John T. Arthur, and Patricia P. Davis, for respondent.
HOLMES, Judge: In this case a whistleblower seeks an award of over $11
million. Kenneth Kasper informed the IRS that his former employer failed to pay
overtime wages to its employees and that it therefore didn’t withhold or remit the
taxes associated with the unpaid wages. The IRS determined that Kasper’s tip
wasn’t related to a federal tax issue and denied his award application. Kasper then
petitioned this Court to challenge that determination. He claims that the IRS used
his information to keep “held open” a bankruptcy claim against his former
employer that eventually led to a $37.5 million payment to the United States
Treasury. He wants a share.
FINDINGS OF FACT
While working for his former corporate employer (target), Kasper detected
what he thought was a long-term pattern of forced and uncompensated overtime.
-3-
At first he complained internally about this “no overtime policy,” but he then
decided to ask the IRS to investigate his allegations. He filed a Form 211,
Application for Award for Original Information, in January 2009. On this form he
claimed that the target owed its employees millions of dollars in overtime pay and
told the IRS that if the target were required to pay the overdue wages, the IRS
would benefit because it would receive the payroll taxes withheld on that
compensation. What happened to the Form 211 for nearly a month is unclear, but
it was eventually received by the IRS’s Whistleblower Office (WBO) in late
February 2009. Because the Form 211 identified both the target and its chief
executive officer (CEO) in the alleged violation, the WBO assigned Kasper’s
information two claim numbers--one for the target (target claim) and one for the
CEO (CEO claim). The next day the WBO forwarded the Form 211 to the IRS’s
Information Claims Examination (ICE) Unit in Ogden, Utah, where it was decided
that Kasper’s claims should be evaluated by the Large Business and International
(LB&I) Unit.
The Form 211 ended up on the desk of LB&I Classifier Brett Roskelley in
May 2009. Roskelley is one of three classifiers in the LB&I Unit. His job is that
of a gatekeeper--he looks at information as it comes in and decides if it should be
forwarded to other parts of the unit for investigation. When Kasper’s information
-4-
came in, Roskelley thought about it and decided that Kasper had identified a
Department of Labor issue, not an IRS issue. He therefore did not pass the Form
211 on for investigation but recommended sending letters to Kasper rejecting his
claims.
In June 2009 the IRS followed Roskelley’s suggestion and drafted letters to
deny both of Kasper’s claims. Kasper, however, says he never received them. He
claims he learned about the denial of the CEO claim only in May 2010 when he
wrote to ask about the status of his award claims and the WBO stapled the letter
denying his CEO claim--but not a copy of the letter that denied his target claim--to
its response. This led to Kasper v. Commissioner (Kasper I), 137 T.C. 37 (2011),
where we decided that the Commissioner had failed to prove that the denial letters
were properly mailed and that Kasper had indeed timely filed a petition with
respect to the CEO claim. In January 2012 we entered an order and decision
disposing of the CEO claim because Kasper submitted neither any evidence that
the IRS had begun judicial or administrative proceedings against the CEO nor any
evidence that the IRS had collected any federal tax from the CEO as a result of his
information. Kasper I, docket No. 13399-10W (Jan. 10, 2012) (order and
decision). The only claim at issue in this case is therefore the target claim.
-5-
In Kasper I we stated: “With respect to the denial letter on the [target]
claim, there is no direct evidence of mailing and, therefore, the time has yet to
begin in which petitioner may file a petition as to that claim.” Kasper I, 137 T.C.
at 45 n.7. After we released the opinion in Kasper I, Kasper wrote the IRS to ask
for “sufficient notice” of a determination on the target claim. In September 2011
the IRS obliged by mailing him a copy of its June 2009 denial letter for the target
claim. This letter told Kasper that “the information [he] furnished did not meet
[the IRS’s] criteria for an award,” but that the IRS couldn’t give him specific
reasons for rejecting his claim because of “Federal disclosure and privacy laws.”
The letter instead recited a boilerplate list of common reasons for not allowing an
award:
• Your information was insufficient to begin an investigation.
• Your information did not cause an investigation or result in the
recovery of taxes, penalties, or fines.
• The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) already had the
information you provided, or the information was available in
accessible public records.
• The taxes recovered were too small to warrant a reward. Our
policy states we do not pay rewards less than $100.
-6-
In response to the letter, Kasper timely filed a petition with this Court.1
Kasper began to raise new theories and arguments that focused on the
target’s bankruptcy proceedings, which had begun in January 2009, just about the
same time that Kasper had first sent his Form 211 to the IRS. He pointed out that
in February 2009 the IRS had filed a proof of claim asserting that the target owed
over $15 million in income tax, FUTA, and FICA withholding, plus unpaid excise
taxes.2 In May 2009 the IRS amended its proof of claim to reduce the amount
1
Kasper was a resident of Arizona at the time he filed his petition. Absent a
stipulation by the parties, however, this case appears to be appealable to the D.C.
Circuit. See sec. 7482(b)(1) (flush language) (stating that the D.C. Circuit is the
proper appellate venue for review of Tax Court decisions in cases where no other
venue rule applies); see also Ware v. Commissioner, 499 F. App’x 957, 959 n.1
(11th Cir. 2012) (“Although the venue for most appeals from the Tax Court is
geographically tied to a petitioner’s legal residence, the normal route for a
whistleblower claim is an appeal to the Court of Appeals for the District of
Columbia.”), aff’g T.C. Memo. 2011-254; IRS Chief Counsel Notice CC-2015-
006 (June 30, 2015) (noting that it is IRS’s position that venue lies in the D.C.
Circuit for whistleblower cases). (All section references are to the Internal
Revenue Code unless we say otherwise.)
2
FICA generally refers to taxes imposed on employers and employees under
the Federal Insurance Contributions Act. See secs. 3101, 3111. It is a 15.3% tax
on wages--up to an annual limit--that comprises a 12.4% Social Security tax and a
2.9% Medicare tax. Secs. 3101, 3111. Wages over the annual limit are subject
only to the 2.9% Medicare tax. Secs. 3101, 3111, 3121(a)(1). Employers and
employees each pay half of the FICA taxes, and the employer is required to
withhold the employee’s portion. Secs. 3101, 3102(a), 3111. FUTA generally
refers to taxes imposed on employers under the Federal Unemployment Tax Act.
See sec. 3301. It is a 6.0% tax on the first $7,000 in wages paid to each employee.
(continued...)
-7-
claimed to about $170,000--all for unpaid corporate income tax, interest, and
penalties. Three months after that, the IRS filed a second amended claim, which
wildly increased the debt the IRS said the target owed to more than $3 billion,
again all for unpaid corporate income tax, interest, and penalties.3 This second
amended claim specifically showed $0 for “unassessed, unliquidated and
contingent U.S. federal FICA withholding tax” because the target had not yet filed
a return or provided the information the IRS would need to calculate the amount of
FICA owed. This paper bombardment had its intended effect, and the IRS and the
target negotiated a closing agreement in February 2010. The target agreed to pay
the IRS $37.5 million in full satisfaction of its tax liabilities for the years in
2
(...continued)
Secs. 3301, 3306(b). FICA and FUTA taxes are also referred to as employment
taxes or payroll taxes. See Bascos v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2008-294, 2008
WL 5535404, at *1 n.2.
3
The record in this case contains the IRS’s original proof of claim, but not
the two amended claims. A court, however, may take judicial notice of another
court’s records, so we will do so here. See St. Louis Baptist Temple, Inc. v. FDIC,
605 F.2d 1169, 1172 (10th Cir. 1979) (stating that federal courts may take notice
of proceedings in other courts “if those proceedings have a direct relation to
matters at issue”); Perry Funeral Home, Inc. v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2003-
340, 2003 WL 22953114, at *3; see also Fed. R. Evid. 201.
-8-
dispute and agreed that those liabilities related to “withholding tax, pursuant to
Section 1441 of the Internal Revenue Code.”4
Kasper admits the WBO didn’t independently act upon his Form 211, but he
claims that he submitted the same information to the IRS’s Fresno office on a
Form 3949-A, Information Referral, dated January 26, 2009.5 He believes the IRS
noted this information and as a result “held open” its proof of claim--and he points
to an email chain discussing the IRS’s bankruptcy claim against the target on
which Roskelley was cc’ed. This tangle of correspondence both from Kasper and
within the IRS is the subject of much dispute, but everyone admits that the
bankruptcy proceeding did eventually lead to the collection of $37.5 million.
Kasper wants a share. During the discovery phase of this case, he moved to
compel the Commissioner to produce the IRS’s files on its bankruptcy claim
against the target. We found that the information sought was discoverable and
granted Kasper’s motion over the Commissioner’s objection. We tried the case to
4
Section 1441 governs the withholding of tax on nonresident aliens.
5
The Commissioner questions the authenticity of Kasper’s Form 3949-A
and insists that he has no record of it. This is understandable--the IRS destroys all
information referrals after 90 days unless it takes action. Internal Revenue Manual
(IRM) pt. 1.15.29, Exhibit 1.15.29-1(47)(2) (July 1, 2005). Kasper kept a copy,
though, as a text file (.txt) that he saved electronically before mailing the printed
copy.
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establish the contents of the administrative record and ordered the parties to brief
the issues of the scope and standard of review in whistleblower cases to help us
figure out both what we can look at and how to look at the IRS’s work in
whistleblower cases.
OPINION
As a preliminary matter, we note that section 7623(b)(4) gives us
jurisdiction over the appeal of any determination regarding whistleblower awards,
but only if the appeal is filed within 30 days of the determination. In Kasper I,
137 T.C. at 45 n.7, we held that the IRS failed to prove that it had ever mailed its
June 2009 letter denying the target claim, which meant Kasper’s 30-day window
to petition this Court had not begun. The IRS then mailed--or perhaps remailed6--
the denial letter on September 1, 2011. Kasper filed his petition with the Court on
September 11, 2011, which was well within the 30-day window. We therefore
have jurisdiction over this case.
The rest of this case will be decided on causation--did the IRS “proceed[]
with any administrative or judicial action * * * based on information brought to
the [IRS’s] attention” by Kasper that resulted in the collection of proceeds? See
6
Even if the determination was actually remailed, we have held that we
have jurisdiction over any timely petitioned whistleblower determination, not just
the first in time. Comparini v. Commissioner, 143 T.C. 274, 281-83 (2014).
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sec. 7623(b)(1). Since the enactment of section 7623(b) in 2006, few--if any--
whistleblower cases have reached this Court on their merits, so to answer this
question we must analyze the proper scope and standard of review to apply in
whistleblower cases as well as the applicability of general principles of
administrative law. We will begin with the scope of review--what evidence we
look at. We will then discuss the standard of review--what evidence we look for.7
We end with an analysis of the merits of Kasper’s award claim based on the record
as we define it.
I. Scope of Review
A. General Rules
The Commissioner argues that we should limit our review to the
administrative record--in other words, that we should apply the record rule.8 We
7
As the Tenth Circuit put it, “[t]he scope of judicial review refers merely to
the evidence the reviewing court will examine in reviewing an agency decision.
The standard of judicial review refers to how the reviewing court will examine
that evidence.” Franklin Sav. Ass’n v. Office of Thrift Supervision, 934 F.2d
1127, 1136 (10th Cir. 1991) (emphasis added).
8
“The record rule refers to the general rule of administrative law that a court
can engage in judicial review of an agency action based only on consideration of
the record amassed by the agency (the administrative record).” Ewing v.
Commissioner, 122 T.C. 32, 58 (2004) (Halpern and Holmes, JJ., dissenting)
(citing 2 Pierce, Administrative Law Treatise, sec. 11.6, at 822 (4th ed. 2002)),
vacated, 439 F.3d 1009 (9th Cir. 2006).
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have no whistleblower cases on point, and we will begin by searching for the right
default rules. We’ll start with the Supreme Court, which has held that “in cases
where Congress has simply provided for review, without setting forth the
standards to be used or the procedures to be followed, * * * consideration is to be
confined to the administrative record and * * * no de novo proceeding may be
held.” United States v. Carlo Bianchi & Co., 373 U.S. 709, 715 (1963). The
general rule under the Administrative Procedure Act (APA)9 is that “review of an
9
Administrative Procedure Act (APA), 5 U.S.C. secs. 551-559, 701-706
(2006). The APA supplies the default rules for judicial review of agency action
and may be superseded or modified by a subsequent statute only if the statute does
so expressly. Id. sec. 559; see also Ninilchik Traditional Council v. United States,
227 F.3d 1186, 1194 (9th Cir. 2000) (reading Dickinson v. Zurko, 527 U.S. 150
(1999), to mean that APA section 706 “functions as a default judicial review
standard”); Dickson v. Sec’y of Defense, 68 F.3d 1396, 1404 n.12 (D.C. Cir.
1995) (“[T]he APA provides a default standard of judicial review—arbitrary and
capricious—precisely for situations * * * where a statute does not otherwise
provide a standard of judicial review”). The Supreme Court has recognized “the
importance of maintaining a uniform approach to judicial review of administrative
action” and held that it would not “carve out an approach to administrative review
good for tax law only.” Mayo Found. for Med. Educ. & Research v. United
States, 562 U.S. 44, 55 (2011) (quoting Dickinson, 527 U.S. at 154); see also
Antioco v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2013-35, at *24; Amandeep S. Grewal,
“Taking Administrative Law to Tax”, 63 Duke L.J. 1625, 1626 (2014); Kristin E.
Hickman, “Goodbye Tax Exceptionalism”, Engage: J. Federalist Soc’y Practice
Grps. 4, 5 (Nov. 2011) (“The D.C. Circuit’s recent en banc decision in Cohen v.
United States is less immediately consequential but, consistent with the Supreme
Court’s policy of administrative law uniformity, represents a further shift in favor
of bringing tax administration back in line with administrative law norms”) (citing
Cohen v. United States, 650 F.3d 717 (D.C. Cir. 2011) (en banc)).
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agency decision is limited to the administrative record.” Wilson v. Commissioner,
705 F.3d 980, 991 (9th Cir. 2013) (citing Camp v. Pitts, 411 U.S. 138, 142
(1973)), aff’g T.C. Memo. 2010-134. But this is a default rule, and the APA’s
general provisions do not supersede specific statutory provisions. See Porter v.
Commissioner, 130 T.C. 115, 118 (2008) (citing Ewing v. Commissioner, 122
T.C. 32, 50 (2004) (Thornton, J., concurring), vacated, 439 F.3d 1009 (9th Cir.
2006)); see also Wilson, 705 F.3d at 990. One conspicuous exception to the
default “record rule” is our deficiency jurisdiction under section 6213(a)--a
“special statutory review proceeding,” 5 U.S.C. sec. 703, that was enacted long
before the APA. Section 6213(a) authorizes us to “redetermin[e]” a tax
deficiency, and our scope of review has historically been de novo. See Ax v.
Commissioner, 146 T.C. 153, 161-63 (2016); see also QinetiQ US Holdings, Inc.
& Subs. v. Commissioner, 845 F.3d 555, 560 (4th Cir. 2017) (“Some
agency-specific statutes, however, provide materially different procedures for
judicial review that predate the APA's enactment. One such example is the
Internal Revenue Code (the Code), which authorizes de novo review in the tax
court of a Notice of Deficiency”), aff’g T.C. Memo. 2015-123.
This case now calls on us to look at the whistleblower statute--section 7623,
a relatively recent addition to our nondeficiency jurisdiction--to see whether
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anything there trumps the default rules. Section 7623 authorizes the IRS to pay
awards to individuals--whistleblowers--who provide actionable information about
others who underpay their taxes. Before December 2006 such awards were
completely discretionary and not subject to judicial review. See sec. 7623(a);
Kasper I, 137 T.C. at 43 (citing Internal Revenue Manual (IRM) pt. 25.2.2.13
(Dec. 30, 2008)); Wolf v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2007-133, 2007 WL
1556090, at *2. With the enactment of the Tax Relief and Health Care Act of
2006, Pub. L. No. 109-432, div. A, sec. 406, 120 Stat. at 2958, however, Congress
made some whistleblower awards nondiscretionary and gave us jurisdiction to
hear the appeals of whistleblowers disgruntled by the Commissioner’s refusal to
give them what they thought they deserved. See sec. 7623(b); Whistleblower
10949-13W v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2014-106, at *8. Section 7623(b)(4)
states “[a]ny determination regarding an award under [section 7623(b)] may,
within 30 days of such determination, be appealed to the Tax Court (and the Tax
Court shall have jurisdiction with respect to such matter).”
That is all the direction Congress offered. The keen-eyed observer may
squint but will find nothing in this language that establishes any rules about
judicial review. Under Carlo Bianchi this lack of congressional guidance suggests
that we should limit our scope of review in whistleblower cases to the
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administrative record. See 373 U.S. at 715. The default provisions of the APA
likewise call for review confined to the administrative record since section
7623(b) was promulgated after the APA and fails to expressly provide for a
different review process. See 5 U.S.C. secs. 559, 706.
That would make our analysis brief. But any hope of brevity here is forlorn
--though we have no precedents on the scope of review in whistleblower cases, we
have proven able to tease out implied scopes of review in our other areas of
nondeficiency jurisdiction. We will survey the same sources we did in those cases
to make sure none was implied in section 7623(b). The first such source is
legislative history, but it sheds no light on this darkness. Can we find some
illumination in other parts of the Code?
1. Section 6015
Looking first at innocent-spouse relief, section 6015 provides that an
individual “may petition the Tax Court * * * to determine the appropriate relief
available to the individual.” Sec. 6015(e)(1)(A). In determining what type of
judicial review to apply in innocent-spouse cases, we compared section 6015 to
deficiency cases arising under sections 6213 and 6214. See Porter, 130 T.C. at
118; Ewing, 122 T.C. at 37-38. We reasoned that there was no material difference
between Congress’s use of the word “determine” to grant us jurisdiction under
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section 6015 and its use of “redetermine” for the same purpose under sections
6213 and 6214. Porter, 130 T.C. at 119; Ewing, 122 T.C. at 38. Even though
section 6015 postdated the APA, we found that it was “part and parcel” of the
Code’s longstanding specific framework for reviewing deficiency determinations
under a de novo scope of review. Porter, 130 T.C. at 118. We therefore concluded
that the default provisions of the APA were inapplicable and that Congress
intended that we apply a de novo scope of review in innocent spouse cases.
Porter, 130 T.C. at 119, 121-22; Ewing, 122 T.C. at 37-39.
The same cannot be said for whistleblower cases. Section 7623(b)(4) says
that a whistleblower-award determination “may, within 30 days of such
determination, be appealed to the Tax Court.” (Emphasis added.) If Congress’s
use of “determine” was as important as our caselaw tells us it was, then the use of
“appeal” in a jurisdictional grant is telling. In Porter, for example, we found that
the Eighth Circuit’s application of the record rule in cases brought under section
6330(d)--which allowed a taxpayer to “appeal [a collection due process]
determination to the Tax Court,” but see infra note 12--had no bearing on the
scope of review for section 6015 cases where we “determine” whether a taxpayer
is entitled to relief, Porter, 130 T.C. at 120 (emphasis added) (citing Robinette v.
Commissioner, 439 F.3d 455 (8th Cir. 2006), rev’g 123 T.C. 85 (2004)).
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Similarly, the Ninth Circuit found that giving a taxpayer the right to “appeal”
implies that we may be confined to considering only the administrative record, but
that the use of “determine” in a jurisdictional grant suggests a de novo review.
Wilson, 705 F.3d at 988; see also Commissioner v. Neal, 557 F.3d 1262, 1276
(11th Cir. 2009) (“This ‘appeal’ language in § 6330 is materially different from
§ 6015(e), which does not use the word ‘appeal’ but instead authorizes the Tax
Court to ‘determine’ the appropriate relief. This shows that Congress knows how
to use the term ‘appeal’ and that Congress meant something different when it
authorized the Tax Court in § 6015(e) ‘to determine the appropriate relief
available’ to a taxpayer.”), aff’g T.C. Memo. 2005-201. For this reason alone we
hold that section 7623 falls outside of our normal de novo “statutory framework”
and therefore we must revert back to the default scope of review provided by the
APA--review limited to the administrative record.
We also note that the normal rationales for applying a de novo scope of
review are not present in whistleblower cases. In Ewing we declined to apply the
record rule to innocent-spouse cases in part because we were concerned about
consistency. 122 T.C. at 42. We explained that a request for innocent spouse
relief could be raised as an affirmative defense in a deficiency proceeding, as a
stand-alone request after the Commissioner had issued a final determination
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denying relief, or as a stand-alone request when the Commissioner had failed to
act within six months of the taxpayer’s request. Id. Since we apply a de novo
scope of review in deficiency proceedings, we reasoned we should do the same for
other section 6015(f) cases. Id. at 42-43.
There are no such consistency concerns here. There’s only one door
whistleblowers can enter--the one unlocked by a determination from the IRS and
opened by a timely petition with this Court. Sec. 7623(b)(4); see also Jacobson v.
Commissioner, 148 T.C. __, __ (slip op. at 5) (Feb. 8, 2017); Whistleblower
11332-13W v. Commissioner, 142 T.C. 396, 403 (2014); DaCosta v. United
States, 82 Fed. Cl. 549, 555 (2008).
Section 6015(e)(4) expressly allows for intervention in innocent-spouse
cases. This, too, might be an important difference, as we noted in Ewing, where
we observed that an intervenor likely needs the opportunity to provide evidence
that is not already a part of the administrative record. 122 T.C. at 43; see also
Wilson, 705 F.3d at 989. But there is nothing like that here--section 7623 doesn’t
expressly provide any right of intervention.10
10
The Ninth Circuit also suggested, along similar lines, that the APA’s
default rules didn’t apply to innocent-spouse cases because the innocent spouse
might need our Court’s discovery powers to get records from a nonrequesting
spouse. See Wilson, 705 F.3d at 990. While whistleblower cases have a similar
(continued...)
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The Ninth Circuit made much of these distinctions in Wilson. It noted that
de novo review is appropriate in innocent-spouse cases because they are
sometimes heard when no administrative record exists. Wilson, 705 F.3d at 989.
But a whistleblower claim will always have at least a small administrative record:
the whistleblower’s Form 211 and accompanying information. See sec.
7623(b)(6)(C) (requiring the submission of information under penalty of perjury);
see also sec. 301.7623-3(e), Proced. & Admin. Regs. (describing the materials that
will be included in the administrative record for a whistleblower claim).11
2. Section 6330
We can also look at section 6330(d), which governs our review of
nondeficiency collection due process (CDP) cases. Before December 2015,
section 6330(d)(1) stated that a “person may, within 30 days of a determination
10
(...continued)
administrative structure--screening by a centralized office, no review by an
administrative law judge, no right to subpoena witnesses, etc.--the IRS is the party
with all of the necessary records; and if the administrative record is incomplete,
the whistleblower may move to have it supplemented.
11
The Secretary promulgated regulations with respect to section 7623(b)
that are applicable to whistleblower information submitted on or after August 12,
2014, and to claims for awards under section 7623(b) that are open as of August
12, 2014. Secs. 301.7623-1(f), 301.7623-2(f), 301.7623-3(f), 301.7623-4(e),
Proced. & Admin. Regs. The WBO denied Kasper’s target claim no later than
September 2011, so the regulations do not apply in this case, but they can provide
helpful insight.
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under this section, appeal such determination to the Tax Court * * *.” (Emphasis
added.)12 We interpret this language--admittedly similar to that in section
7623(b)--to require a de novo scope of review. See Robinette v. Commissioner,
123 T.C. at 97-98.13
12
Section 6330(d)(1) was amended in December 2015 and now reads “[t]he
person may, within 30 days of a determination under this section, petition the Tax
Court for review of such determination * * *.” Consolidated Appropriations Act,
2016, Pub. L. No. 114-113, div. Q, sec. 424(b), 129 Stat. at 3124 (2015) (emphasis
added). “Appeal” remains unamended, however, in section 6330(e)(1).
13
The Eighth Circuit reversed us in Robinette itself and discussed at some
length why review under section 6330 should be limited to the administrative
record. See Robinette, 439 F.3d at 459-62. The Ninth Circuit then agreed with
the Eighth Circuit, and held that “our review is confined to the record at the time
the Commissioner’s decision was rendered.” Keller v. Commissioner, 568 F.3d
710, 718 (9th Cir. 2009), aff’g in part T.C. Memo. 2006-166. The First Circuit
held simply that “the administrative record rule also applies to a taxpayer’s CDP
hearing appeal to the Tax Court.” Murphy v. Commissioner, 469 F.3d 27, 31 (1st
Cir. 2006), aff’g 125 T.C. 301 (2005). Two other circuits--the Seventh and
Third--have specifically declined to decide the issue. See Gyorgy v.
Commissioner, 779 F.3d 466, 473 n.5 (7th Cir. 2015); Tuka v. Commissioner, 324
F. App’x 193, 195 n.2 (3d Cir. 2009). We now apply the record rule in CDP cases
that are appealable to the First, Eighth, and Ninth Circuits, see Golsen v.
Commissioner, 54 T.C. 742, 757 (1970), aff’d, 445 F.2d 985 (10th Cir. 1971), but
a de novo scope of review in all others, see, e.g., Jewell v. Commissioner, T.C.
Memo. 2016-239, at *12-*13, though we have also held that evidence outside the
administrative record may be irrelevant to the question of whether there has been
an abuse of discretion, see Murphy v. Commissioner, 125 T.C. 301, 313-16
(2005), aff’d, 469 F.3d 27 (1st Cir. 2006). Perhaps sections 6320 and 6330 are
another example of a “special statutory review proceeding,” 5 U.S.C. sec. 703,
with its own scope and standard of review; but this is not the right case to revisit
the record rule’s application in CDP cases.
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Whistleblower cases are just different. Unlike most petitioners coming
before the Tax Court, a whistleblower isn’t the taxpayer--he isn’t seeking relief
from his own liabilities or those of his spouse; he is instead requesting an award
from the government. The question before us is also whether the IRS collected
proceeds as the result of an administrative or judicial action using the
whistleblower’s information, not whether it could have or should have. See
Cooper v. Commissioner, 136 T.C. 597, 600-01 (2011).
We will therefore will limit the scope of our review to the administrative
record.
B. Exceptions
The record rule doesn’t always tell us to stop with the record. There are
exceptions. The D.C. Circuit has summarized them:
• when agency action is not adequately explained in the record;
• when the agency failed to consider relevant factors;
• when the agency considered evidence which it failed to include in the
record;
• when a case is so complex that a court needs more evidence to enable
it to understand the issues clearly;
• where there is evidence that arose after the agency action showing
whether the decision was correct or not; and
- 21 -
• where the agency’s failure to take action is under review.14
Esch v. Yeutter, 876 F.2d 976, 991 (D.C. Cir. 1989); see also Wilson, 705 F.3d at
991 (acknowledging that a “reviewing court may require supplementation of the
administrative record if it is incomplete” (quoting Lands Council v. Powell, 395
F.3d 1019, 1030 (9th Cir. 2005))); Giamelli v. Commissioner, 129 T.C. 107, 117
(2007) (Wherry, J., concurring) (stating that it is up to the Court to determine the
accuracy and completeness of the administrative record, which may require an
evidentiary hearing). The gist of these cases is that an agency can’t all by itself
determine what constitutes the administrative record. And the same is true for
whistleblower cases--trial remains available when the parties disagree about the
contents of the record because the Commissioner “cannot unilaterally decide what
constitutes an administrative record.” Whistleblower One 10683-13W v.
Commissioner, 145 T.C. 204, 206 (2015) (citing Thompson v. DOL, 885 F.2d 551,
555 (9th Cir. 1989), and Tenneco Oil Co. v. DOE, 475 F. Supp. 199, 317 (D. Del.
1979)). We will allow the record to be supplemented in a whistleblower case if
one of the exceptions to the record rule applies.
14
There are least two others--cases that arise under the National
Environmental Policy Act and cases where relief is at issue, especially at the
preliminary-injunction stage--that we will never see in our Court. See Esch v.
Yeutter, 876 F.2d 976, 991 (D.C. Cir. 1989).
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II. Standard of Review
Now that we have decided what evidence to look at, we turn to what
evidence we look for. Since section 7623(b) gives no guidance and we have no
caselaw on point, we will again look to the default rules. The APA tells a
reviewing court to reverse agency action that it finds “arbitrary, capricious, an
abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law,” or that it finds
“unwarranted by the facts to the extent that the facts are subject to trial de novo by
the reviewing court.” 5 U.S.C. sec. 706(2)(A), (F).15 We have already held that
the scope of review in whistleblower cases should not be de novo, so APA section
706(2)(F) doesn’t apply either. We are left with APA section 706(2)(A) and its
abuse-of-discretion standard of review.
This is the same result that we’ve reached in other nondeficiency bits of our
jurisdiction. In innocent-spouse cases under section 6015(f) we originally held
that review for abuse of discretion was proper. See Porter, 130 T.C. at 122;
15
Paragraphs (B) through (D) of APA section 706(2) relate to agency action
that is unconstitutional, outside the agency’s scope of authority, or procedurally
defective. Paragraph (E) relates to “formal” agency action (i.e., action that is
statutorily required to be determined on the record after opportunity for an agency
hearing) that is not supported by substantial evidence. 5 U.S.C. sec. 706(2); see
also id. sec. 554(a). None of these is relevant here.
- 23 -
Ewing, 122 T.C. at 36-37; Cheshire v. Commissioner, 115 T.C. 183, 198 (2000),
aff’d, 282 F.3d 326 (5th Cir. 2002).16
In CDP cases we have also interpreted section 6330 to require a de novo
standard of review if the validity of the underlying tax liability is at issue, but an
abuse-of-discretion standard if it is not. Sego v. Commissioner, 114 T.C. 604, 610
(2000); Goza v. Commissioner, 114 T.C. 176, 181-82 (2000); see also Ryskamp v.
Commissioner, 797 F.3d 1142, 1147 (D.C. Cir. 2015). While this distinction is
based on the particular legislative history of section 6330, the same reasoning can
be applied to the text here. In section 7623(b) cases the underlying tax liability--
on which the whistleblower’s claim is based--is never at issue because we have
jurisdiction only to review the Commissioner’s determination to grant or deny an
award. See Cooper, 136 T.C. at 600. We can neither redetermine the target’s tax
liability nor direct the Commissioner to proceed with an administrative or judicial
action. Id. We will therefore review for abuse of discretion.
16
Section 6015(e)(1) was amended in 2006 to confirm our jurisdiction to
determine whether innocent-spouse relief was appropriate under section 6015(f).
Tax Relief and Health Care Act of 2006, Pub. L. No. 109-432, div. C, sec. 408(a),
120 Stat. at 3061. In Porter v. Commissioner, 132 T.C. 203, 206-10 (2009), this
amendment prompted us to reverse course and hold that de novo review was called
for. The Ninth Circuit agreed in Wilson. 705 F.3d at 992.
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What does this mean? Review for abuse of discretion means that we will
not substitute our judgment for the WBO’s but will decide whether the agency’s
decision was “based on an erroneous view of the law or a clearly erroneous
assessment of the facts.” Fargo v. Commissioner, 447 F.3d 706, 709 (9th Cir.
2006) (quoting United States v. Morales, 108 F.3d 1031, 1035 (9th Cir. 1977) (en
banc)), aff’g T.C. Memo. 2004-13.
III. Merits
We’re not quite done with our brief survey of general principles of
administrative law as they affect our whistleblower cases. There is another major
doctrine that colors our review: Under the Chenery doctrine we can uphold the
WBO’s determination only on the grounds it actually relied on when making its
determination. See Salahuddin v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2012-141, 2012
WL 1758628, at *7 (citing SEC v. Chenery Corp. (Chenery I), 318 U.S. 80, 93-95
(1943)); see also Antioco v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2013-35, at *24-*25;
Jones v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2012-274, at *22.17 The Chenery doctrine is
17
We apply Chenery in CDP cases but not in deficiency cases. Compare
Antioco v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2013-35, and Jones v. Commissioner, T.C.
Memo. 2012-274, and Salahuddin v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2012-141, with
Ax v. Commissioner, 146 T.C. 153, 159-60 (2016) (declining to apply Chenery to
a deficiency case). In Ax we reasoned that Congress had authorized us to make
our own determinations in deficiency cases, so Chenery must not apply. Ax, 146
(continued...)
- 25 -
an administrative-law principle that says “a reviewing court, in dealing with a
determination or judgment which an administrative agency alone is authorized to
make, must judge the propriety of such action solely by the grounds invoked by
the agency.” SEC v. Chenery Corp. (Chenery II), 332 U.S. 194, 196 (1947)
(describing its holding in Chenery I). This means that the WBO must clearly set
forth the grounds on which it made its determination, so that we don’t have to
guess. See id. We cannot uphold the WBO’s determination “simply because
findings might have been made and considerations might be disclosed which might
justify his ultimate conclusion.” Antioco, at *25 (citing Chenery I, 318 U.S. at 93-
94).
We’ll begin with the WBO’s letter to Kasper. Kasper argues that the
Chenery doctrine applies and that the copy of the June 2009 denial letter for the
17
(...continued)
T.C. at 159-60. The same cannot be said for whistleblower cases. As previously
discussed, Congress granted us the authority to review only the WBO’s
determinations, which we will do only for abuse of discretion. See supra pp. 22-
24. And for the application of the Chenery doctrine, a determination in a
whistleblower case is much more analogous to a notice of determination in a CDP
case than to a notice of deficiency in a deficiency case. See Comparini, 143 T.C.
at 296 (Goeke and Kerrigan, JJ., concurring) (“Congress has not instructed us to
treat whistleblower award determinations like notices of deficiency”).
- 26 -
target claim that he received in September 2011 was insufficient.18 Explaining the
grounds for the WBO’s determination to reject Kasper’s award claim, the letter
stated that “the information you furnished did not meet our criteria for an award.”
It also explained that
Federal disclosure and privacy laws prohibit us from telling you the
specific reason(s) we rejected your claim. However, we can tell you
the most common reasons for not allowing a reward are:
• Your information was insufficient to begin an investigation.
• Your information did not cause an investigation or result in the
recovery of taxes, penalties, or fines.
• The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) already had the
information you provided, or the information was available in
accessible public records.
• The taxes recovered were too small to warrant a reward. Our
policy states we do not pay rewards less than $100.
This alone is a completely inadequate explanation--it has no reasoning specific to
Kasper’s claim, recites only boilerplate, and then states a conclusion. See Tourus
Records, Inc. v. DEA, 259 F.3d 731, 737 (D.C. Cir. 2001). It therefore fails to
“articulate a satisfactory explanation” for the WBO’s action because it doesn’t
explain why the WBO decided that Kasper’s claim was not eligible for a
18
We note that while we haven’t ruled on the issue, a Chenery argument
might be waived if it isn’t raised. See Catholic Health Initiatives Iowa Corp. v.
Sebelius, 718 F.3d 914, 922 n.6 (D.C. Cir. 2013). But Kasper raised it here, so we
will leave that puzzle for another day.
- 27 -
whistleblower award. See id. (citing Motor Vehicle Mfrs. Ass’n of the U.S., Inc.
v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 463 U.S. 29, 43 (1983)).
But that’s not the end of the analysis. Administrative law tells a court to
“uphold a decision of less than ideal clarity if the agency’s path may reasonably be
discerned.” Bowman Transp., Inc. v. Arkansas-Best Freight Sys., Inc., 419 U.S.
281, 286 (1974); see also Altera Corp. v. Commissioner, 145 T.C. 91, 114 (2015).
Although we may not accept any post hoc rationalizations for agency action
provided by the Commissioner’s counsel, we may consider any “contemporaneous
explanation of the agency decision” contained in the record. Tourus Records, 259
F.3d at 738-40 (deciding not to remand a case involving a letter with an
insufficient explanation of an agency’s action because the record contained
contemporaneous explanations of the agency’s decisionmaking rationale). Here,
the WBO’s records--which were stipulated into evidence--show that Kasper’s
award claim was denied because his tip was about unpaid wages, which Roskelley
correctly determined was a Department of Labor issue, not an IRS issue because
no tax is owed on unpaid wages. This rationale was neither arbitrary nor
capricious nor an abuse of discretion. It was based on all of the information
provided by Kasper in his Form 211, and we find no error in the rejection of a
whistleblower award application that failed to assert an underpayment of tax. The
- 28 -
WBO therefore--as we view the administrative record--did not abuse its discretion
in denying Kasper’s claim.
We need to be sensitive, however, to a scenario where the WBO receives a
Form 211, sends out the information it contains to other parts of the IRS, doesn’t
follow up on if or how the information is used, and then denies the claim on the
assumption that the whistleblower’s tip wasn’t acted upon. Limiting our review in
such a case to only the administrative record produced by the Commissioner
would subvert the whistleblowing statute and undermine the record rule. See
Mathia v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2009-120, 2009 WL 1471716, at *16 (“If
we were to uphold the Commissioner’s determination * * * where the
Commissioner has not clearly explained the basis for the exercise of that
discretion, we would be condoning a review framework that would encourage the
Commissioner to provide as little information as possible about the handling of
cases during the period of the * * * request and about the inquiry in response to
the request.” (quoting Jacobs v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2000-123, 2000 WL
380216, at *8)), aff’d, 669 F.3d 1080 (10th Cir. 2012).
An agency’s failure to consider relevant factors is one of the recognized
exceptions to the record rule. See supra p. 20. Here, Kasper’s Form 3949-A and
the IRS’s files on the target’s bankruptcy were not part of the administrative
- 29 -
record that the Commissioner compiled. Kasper insisted that they should have
been. The WBO is charged with determining whether the IRS proceeded with an
action using the whistleblower’s information and whether that action (or any
related actions) led to the collection of proceeds (including settlements). Sec.
7623(b)(1). Kasper’s position is that the WBO--in investigating his claim--should
have reviewed his Form 3949-A because he referenced it in his Form 211. He
likewise argues that both forms “alerted the IRS that a company in bankruptcy was
failing to withhold the proper tax for its employees.” This means, he says, that the
WBO should have reviewed the IRS’s file on the bankruptcy of the target when it
reviewed his claim.
We agree and find that both the Form 3949-A and the IRS’s bankruptcy file
were relevant factors that the WBO failed to consider. See, e.g., Whistleblower
One 10683-13W, 145 T.C. at 206-07 (“How could evidence related to whether
there was a collection of proceeds and whether that collection was attributable to
the whistleblower’s information not be part of any purported administrative
record?”); Antioco, at *15 (supplementing the record with information that should
have been included but wasn’t). Both pieces of evidence are central to Kasper’s
argument for how the information that he gave to the IRS led to collection of more
- 30 -
tax from the target. This makes them relevant and admissible as supplements to
the administrative record.
But relevance gets them admitted; it doesn’t mean Kasper wins. Remember
that his theory is that the information he provided on his Form 3949-A was used to
keep the IRS’s proof of claim in the target’s bankruptcy proceedings “held open”
to give the IRS more time to “find something else” on which to base its claim
against the target. He claims that he mailed his Form 3949-A--with substantially
the same information as his Form 211--to the IRS’s Fresno office in January 2009.
He then argues that the Fresno office must have contacted someone in the IRS’s
solvency group and reported his information because the Form 3949-A listed Epiq
Bankruptcy Solutions, LLC, as a financial institution used by the target. And with
the bar date--the deadline for filing a proof of claim--looming, Kasper believes the
IRS used his information as the basis for its original proof of claim. The
Commissioner, on the other hand, argues that Kasper’s information was never
used and that the IRS merely followed its normal course of business in dealing
with the target’s bankruptcy.
The bankruptcy files show that the target filed for chapter 11 relief in
January 2009 and that the IRS responded by filing its original proof of claim in
February 2009, followed by two amendments--one in May and the other in August
- 31 -
2009. This is, in and of itself, fairly common. The bankruptcy courts provide the
IRS with notice of all chapter 11 bankruptcy cases regardless of whether the IRS is
listed as a creditor. IRM pt. 5.9.8.3 (May 13, 2008). The case is then assigned to
an IRS insolvency specialist who must take “primary case actions” within 10 days
of being assigned to the case. Id. pt. 5.9.8.4. This may include filing an estimated
proof of claim before the bar date to protect the government’s interest and provide
more time to determine the exact liability. IRM pt. 5.9.13.18.1 (May 20, 2008).
This “unassessed” claim is then followed as soon as possible by an amended or
supplemental proof of claim with the correct tax liability. Id.; see also IRM pt.
5.9.13.8 (Mar. 1, 2007).
We understand Kasper’s suspicion. Roskelley--the classifier who reviewed
Kasper’s Form 211 when it came through the WBO--was cc’ed on an email about
the need for numbers for an amended proof of claim. And the original proof of
claim did list employment taxes as a potential outstanding liability. The email
chain, however, also shows that the reason for Roskelley’s involvement was that
he--in his role as an LB&I classifier--had the target’s 2007 tax return and wanted
to know where to send it.19 The employment-tax claims in the proof of claim are
19
Once a proof of claim has been filed by the IRS, the taxpayer’s returns get
flagged and are held until the insolvency department determines what should be
(continued...)
- 32 -
also the result of standard IRS procedure. The target filed for bankruptcy, the IRS
was notified, an original proof of claim was filed by the insolvency department
including “unassessed” claims for FICA, FUTA, and excise taxes, and an amended
proof of claim was later filed that corrected these claims to zero. None of the
information provided by Kasper in his Form 3949-A would have changed this.
The IRS could not have asserted a claim for employment taxes on the allegedly
unpaid wages because unpaid wages aren’t taxed. Even though we think it was an
error for the WBO not to consider this evidence, we think the error was harmless
because the rest of the record shows that the IRS did not proceed with any action
resulting in the collection of proceeds using Kasper’s information.
19
(...continued)
done with them. See IRM pt. 4.1.5.1.20.2 (Oct. 24, 2006).
- 33 -
We therefore hold that the WBO did not abuse its discretion in rejecting Kasper’s
whistleblower award claim.
Decision will be entered for
respondent.
Reviewed by the Court.
MARVEL, FOLEY, VASQUEZ, GALE, THORNTON, GOEKE,
GUSTAFSON, MORRISON, KERRIGAN, BUCH, LAUBER, NEGA, PUGH and
ASHFORD, JJ., agree with this opinion of the Court.
PARIS, J., did not participate in the consideration of this opinion.