Petitioners awarded litigation costs.
*7 Petitioners are pro se litigants.
Held: Under
entitled to recover as litigation costs any amounts representing
the value of their research time.
Held, further, petitioners are entitled to recover
as litigation costs out-of-pocket postage and delivery costs and
their mileage costs and parking fees incurred to attend a court
hearing.
*80 OPINION
SWIFT, Judge: This case is before us under
Respondent agrees that his position in his notice of deficiency was not substantially justified and that petitioners are to be regarded herein as the prevailing party for purposes of the instant motion for litigation costs. Also, respondent has conceded that petitioners are entitled to recover $ 95.06 in litigation costs consisting of the $ 60*8 Court filing fee and $ 35.06 in postage and delivery costs.
The primary issues for decision are whether the pro se petitioners herein are entitled to recover as litigation costs: (1) Amounts representing the value of their research time and (2) additional out-of-pocket postage and delivery costs and out-of-pocket mileage costs and parking fees incurred by petitioner 1 to attend the Court hearing in this matter.
*81 Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to the Internal Revenue Code as amended, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.
Background
At the time the petition was filed, petitioners resided in Meridian, Idaho.
Petitioners timely filed their 2001 joint Federal income tax return. On June 16, 2003, respondent mailed to petitioners the notice of deficiency.
On June 21, 2003, petitioners mailed to the Court by certified mail a three-page letter, which was filed by the Court*9 as petitioners' petition (original petition). With the original petition, petitioners did not submit the $ 60 Court filing fee that was due.
On August 26, 2003, petitioners mailed to the Court by certified mail an amended petition, in proper form, and included the $ 60 filing fee.
On or about March 19, 2004, after various communications with petitioners, 2 respondent conceded the $ 728 tax deficiency determined against petitioners, and petitioners mailed to respondent's Portland office by certified mail a letter in which petitioners set forth their claim for litigation costs.
On April 19, 2004, at a cost of $ 15.95, petitioners delivered to the Court via Federal Express their motion for an award of litigation costs with an attached*10 expense report (original expense report). Therein, petitioners claimed costs of $ 60 for the Court filing fee, $ 66.29 for postage, delivery, and office supplies, $ 200 for lost wages, and $ 783 for the purported value of petitioners' research time. 3
Also in April of 2004, at a cost of $ 13.77, petitioners delivered to respondent via Federal Express additional documents relating to their motion for litigation costs.
*82 On May 4, 2004, a hearing on petitioners' motion for litigation costs was held in Boise, Idaho. To attend the hearing, petitioner drove his car the*11 30-mile round trip from petitioners' home in Meridian to the courthouse in Boise, 4 and petitioner incurred $ 3 to park his car while attending the Court hearing. Petitioner's wife did not accompany petitioner to the courthouse and apparently went to work.
On June 8, 2004, petitioners mailed to the Court by certified mail a revised five-page expense report which claimed $ 10.50 relating to the automobile mileage costs to travel to the May 4, 2004, Court hearing 5*12 and $ 3 relating to the parking fee. The revised expense report also reflected a reduction to $ 88.96 for petitioner's lost wages, 6 an increase to $ 158.64 for postage, delivery, and office supplies, and an increase to $ 1,248.90 relating to the purported value of petitioners' research time. 7
On September 28, 2004, petitioners also mailed to the Court by certified mail petitioners' reply to respondent's memorandum brief (petitioners' reply brief). The envelope in which petitioners' reply brief was mailed is in evidence, and a mailing cost of $ 4.42 is indicated thereon. We note that petitioners apparently did not serve upon respondent's counsel copies of any of the documents that petitioners submitted to the Court, and petitioners do not claim any postage or delivery costs relating to service copies.
Below is a schedule, by category, of petitioners' claimed litigation costs, reflecting the differing*13 amounts petitioners claim in their original and in their revised expense reports:
Original Revised
Type of Cost Expense Report Expense Report
____________ ______________ ______________
Court filing fee $ 60.00 $ 60.00
Research time 783.00 1,248.90
Lost wages 200.00 88.96
Postage, delivery, and
office supplies 66.29 158.64
Mileage -- 10.50
Parking -- 3.00
_________ _________
Total $ 1,109.29 $ 1,570.00
*83 D iscussion
A prevailing party may be awarded reasonable litigation costs incurred in connection with a case filed in this Court.
Respondent concedes that petitioners qualify*14 as prevailing parties under the requirements of
Value Relating to Research Time
Petitioners claim that they are entitled to recover as litigation costs under
Respondent argues that petitioners are not entitled to recover anything for the value relating to petitioners' research time.
The courts have consistently held that under
*84 Petitioners also argue that, at the least, they should be able to recover wages petitioner lost on May 4, 2004, the day of the Court hearing, a Monday on which petitioner would have worked had it not been necessary to attend the hearing. At the hearing, petitioner acknowledged that he had paid vacation leave available from his employer in order to attend the May 4, 2004, hearing, but that he was not planning to take such paid leave. The evidence does not indicate whether petitioner ultimately took paid leave, and we do not know whether petitioner actually lost any wages to attend the May 4, 2004, hearing. For lack of substantiation and without deciding the legal issue as to whether petitioner as a pro se litigant would have been entitled to recover as litigation costs an amount*16 reflecting lost wages, we do not award petitioners herein litigation costs with respect to claimed lost wages.
Postage & Delivery Costs
As indicated, respondent concedes that petitioners, under
Petitioners Respondent
Date Postage & Delivery Costs Claim Concedes
____ ________________________ ___________ __________
06/21/03 Postage for original petition $ 4.65 --
08/26/03 Postage for amended petition n.1 117.70 $ 2.67
03/19/04 Postage for letter to IRS 4.42 2.67
04/19/04 Federal Express motion to Court n.2 15.95 15.95
04/--/04 Federal Express*17 letter to IRS 13.77 13.77
04/--/04 Postage for unspecified mailing n.3 8.50 --
06/08/04 Postage for revised expense report to Court 9.60 --
09/28/04 Postage for reply brief to Court n.4 4.42 --
_______ ______
Total $ 179.01 $ 35.06
n.1 This $ 117.70 reflects postage cost and the purported
cost of office supplies. Petitioners do not separately identify the
costs of postage and office supplies relating to this Aug. 26, 2003,
mailing.
*85 n.2 This $ 15.95 was omitted from petitioners' revised
expense report, but such amount was included in the original expense
report and was conceded by respondent. We include the cost of this
Apr. 19, 2004, delivery as part of petitioners' motion for litigation
costs.
n.3 Petitioners claim that this $ 8.50 represents postage
and office supplies relating to an alleged April 2004 mailing, but no
evidence indicates that this mailing*18 occurred.
n.4 This $ 4.42 relates to the certified mailing of
petitioners' reply brief, which was submitted after petitioners'
revised expense report. We include the cost of this Sept. 28, 2004,
mailing as part of petitioners' motion for litigation costs.
With regard to the June 21, 2003, mailing to the Court, the envelope in which petitioners mailed the original petition verifies that petitioners incurred a cost of $ 4.65.
With regard to the August 26, 2003, mailing to the Court, respondent has conceded $ 2.67, but petitioners claim $ 117.70 for postage and related office supplies. The amended petition consists of the same number of pages as the original petition, and we conclude that petitioners likely incurred the same cost to mail the amended petition as they incurred to mail the original petition, or $ 4.65. The record does not contain any substantiation of additional office supplies purchased in connection with this mailing, and we do not award petitioners any amount with regard thereto.
With regard to the March 19, 2004, mailing to respondent, respondent has conceded $ 2.67, but petitioners claim $ 4.42. The March 19, 2004, letter is not contained in the record, but*19 respondent has conceded its existence, and in light of the established cost of petitioners' other mailings, we conclude that petitioners incurred a cost of $ 4.42 to mail the March 19, 2004, letter to respondent.
With regard to the two April 2004 Federal Express deliveries (one to respondent and one to the Court), respondent has conceded the full amounts claimed by petitioners.
With regard to an alleged April 2004 mailing, petitioners claim $ 8.50 for postage and office supplies. The record does not contain any substantiation of this purported mailing.
With regard to the June 8, 2004, mailing to the Court of the five-page revised expense report, petitioners claim to have incurred an estimated cost of $ 9.60. The evidence indicates that the cost to mail the revised expense report likely was at least as much as the cost to mail the original and amended petitions, which each were three pages. Petitioners have not substantiated a higher amount for the *86 cost of this mailing. We conclude that petitioners incurred a cost of $ 4.65 to mail the revised expense report.
The envelope in which petitioners' reply brief was mailed to the Court verifies that petitioners incurred a cost of $ 4.42*20 with regard thereto.
We award petitioners a total of $ 52.51 for postage and delivery costs, which includes the $ 35.06 respondent already has conceded, as summarized below:
Date Awarded Postage and Delivery Costs Amount
____ ___________________________________ ______
06/21/03 Postage for original petition to Court $ 4.65
08/26/03 Postage for amended petition to Court 4.65
03/19/04 Postage for letter to IRS 4.42
04/--/04 Federal Express letter to IRS 13.77
04/19/04 Federal Express motion to Court 15.95
06/08/04 Postage for revised expense report to Court 4.65
09/28/04 Postage for reply brief to Court 4.42
______
Total $ 52.51
Mileage & Parking
The amounts petitioners claim they are entitled to recover under
Date Type of Cost Amount
____ ____________ ______
05/04/04 Mileage $ 10.50
05/04/04 Parking 3.00
______
Total $ 13.50
The parties are in significant disagreement, as a matter of law, with regard to whether petitioners are entitled to recover under
*87 Set forth below is the relevant language of
(1) Reasonable litigation costs. The term "reasonable
litigation*22 costs" includes --
(A) reasonable court costs, and
(B) based upon prevailing market rates for the kind or
quality of services furnished --
(i) the reasonable expenses of expert witnesses * * *,
(ii) the reasonable cost of any study, analysis,
engineering report, test, or project * * *, and
(iii) reasonable fees paid or incurred for the
services of attorneys * * *.
It is respondent's position that mileage and parking costs are not recoverable under
None of these memorandum opinions that deal with pro se taxpayers, however, elaborates at any length on its rationale for excluding out-of-pocket costs for mileage and parking fees from the general definition of litigation costs under
We note that respondent's argument (that petitioners are not entitled to recover out-of-pocket costs such as mileage and parking fees because they are not enumerated under
*88 We also note that Federal courts interpreting other attorney's fee award statutes generally have allowed pro se litigants to recover out-of-pocket costs such as mileage and parking fees.
Under the*24 general language of the attorney's fee award statute of the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA),
*25 Under the attorney's fee award statute of the Equal Access to Justice Act (EAJA),
*26 In cases under the attorney's fee award provisions of EAJA, as in this case involving
The Courts of Appeals for the Tenth and the D.C. Circuit are the only two Courts of Appeals of which we are aware that have held that only costs specifically enumerated in the statute are recoverable under EAJA even when the out-of-pocket costs are incurred by a litigant's attorney. See, e.g.,
Under the Civil Rights Attorney's Fees Awards Act,
In cases involving
We perceive no material distinction between substantiated out- of-pocket costs recoverable by a taxpayer who is represented by an attorney and substantiated out-of-pocket costs *91 incurred by a taxpayer who is not represented by an attorney.
Also, with regard specifically to out-of-pocket costs incurred by pro se taxpayers, we perceive no distinction between those out-of-pocket costs conceded by respondent herein (such as postage and delivery costs) and those out-of-pocket costs that are disputed herein (such as mileage and parking fees). Neither type of out-of-pocket cost is specifically enumerated under
Further, it is helpful to consider how courts have interpreted the specific word "includes" in the context of a number of different statutory provisions. Generally, the word "includes" is interpreted by the courts as a word of enlargement, not of limitation. See, e.g.,
Of particular interest is the fact that the word "includes" as used in the Internal Revenue Code (or its predecessors) has been interpreted by the courts broadly. See, e.g.,
Significantly, courts interpreting statutory language that utilizes both the word "includes" and the word "means" in different parts of the same statutory provision have held that those two words, in the context of such a juxtaposition, have different interpretations.
Interpreting
The natural distinction would be that where "means" is
employed, the term [" means"] and * * * [the language
that follows] are to be interchangeable equivalents, and that
the verb "includes" imports a general class, some of
whose particular instances are those specified in the * * *
[language that follows the term "includes"]. [Id.
at 125, n.1.]
We note that the operative and relevant word used in
*34 In the context of other nontax Federal statutes, when both words "includes" and "means" are used within the same statutory provision, courts have held that the word "includes" is a term of enlargement and extension and that the word "means" is a term of enumeration and limitation.
*35 We believe that the out-of-pocket costs for mileage and parking fees incurred by petitioner in order to attend the Court hearing herein are covered by the term "litigation costs" under the language of
We summarize our analysis as follows: A majority of courts interpreting other Federal attorney's fee award statutes allow substantiated out-of-pocket costs for postage and delivery and for mileage and parking fees when incurred by pro se litigants;
*36 Petitioners are awarded an additional $ 11.25 for mileage and $ 3 for parking to attend the May 4, 2004, hearing.
Conclusion
In summary, based on respondent's concessions and our conclusions, petitioners are awarded litigation costs for the Court filing fee, various postage and delivery charges, mileage costs, 14 and parking fees relating to this litigation as outlined below:
Awarded Litigation Costs Amount
________________________ ______
Court filing fee $ 60.00
Postage and delivery 52.51
Mileage 11.25
Parking 3.00
_______
Total $ 126.76
*37 Other arguments made by petitioners, such as a claim for punitive damages, are without merit and are rejected.
For the reasons stated, we shall award petitioners litigation costs in the amount of $ 126.76. 15
An appropriate order and decision will be entered.
Footnotes
1. All references to petitioner in the singular are to petitioner John M. Dunaway.↩
2. The nature of these referenced communications is not reflected in the record, and petitioners claim no costs relating thereto.↩
3. Petitioners calculated the $ 200 in lost wages in anticipation that both petitioners would attend the scheduled Court hearing on May 4, 2004, and that each petitioner would lose $ 100 in wages to do so. The $ 783 for petitioners' research time was calculated at $ 5.25 per hour for 141 hours. Included in the research time are time estimates for making phone calls and emails, which time also apparently was calculated at the same $ 5.25 hourly rate.↩
4. Under
Fed. R. Evid. 201↩ , the Court takes judicial notice of the location of Meridian, Idaho, approximately 15 miles from Boise.5. Petitioners calculated the $ 10.50 mileage costs at $ 0.35 per mile for 30 miles.↩
6. The reduced $ 88.96 for lost wages was calculated at $ 11.12 per hour for 8 hours.↩
7. The increased $ 1,248.90 relating to petitioners' research time actually reflected a reduction from 141 hours in the original expense report to 128 hours in the revised expense report, but the increased $ 1,248.90 apparently included additional alleged costs of phone calls, copying, and office supplies. The record does not indicate the hourly rate petitioners used in their revised calculation.↩
8. With two exceptions, we treat as the costs at issue herein only those costs reflected in petitioners' revised expense report.↩
9. The Freedom of Information Act,
5 U.S.C. sec. 552(a)(4)(E) (2000) , provides:The court may assess against the United States reasonable
attorney fees and other litigation costs reasonably incurred in
any case under this section in which the complainant has
substantially prevailed.↩
10. The relevant language of the Equal Access to Justice Act,
28 U.S.C. sec. 2412(d)(2) (2000) , provides:(2). For the purposes of this subsection --
(A) "fees and other expenses" includes the
reasonable expenses of expert witnesses, the reasonable
cost of any study, analysis, engineering report, test, or
project which is found by the court to be necessary for the
preparation of the party's case, and reasonable attorney
fees * * *.↩
11. The relevant portion of
section 7430(c)(2) provides:SEC. 7430(c)(2) Reasonable administrative costs. The term"reasonable administrative costs" means --
(A) any administrative fees or similar charges imposed by
the Internal Revenue Service, and
(B) expenses, costs, and fees described in
[sec. 7430(c) ]paragraph (1)(B) * * *.↩
12. We acknowledge that, in certain contexts, the words "includes" and "including" have been interpreted as words of limitation and confinement. See, e.g.,
Blankenship v. W. Union Tel. Co., 161 F.2d 168">161 F.2d 168 , 169 (4th Cir. 1947) (" includes" as used in theFair Labor Standards Act provision that the word "employee" includes any individual employed by employer is "a term of limitation indicating what belongs to a genus, rather than a term of enlargement"), citingMontello Salt Co. v. Utah, 221 U.S. 452">221 U.S. 452 , 55 L. Ed. 810">55 L. Ed. 810, 31 S. Ct. 706">31 S. Ct. 706 (1911);Television Transmission, Inc. v. Pub. Utils. Commn., 47 Cal. 2d 82">47 Cal. 2d 82 , 301 P.2d 862">301 P.2d 862, 863↩ (Cal. 1956) (" Although 'includes' is ordinarily not a word of limitation, a legislative declaration that 'public utility' includes those performing certain enumerated services is not a declaration that those performing other services, not encompassed by the services enumerated, are public utilities" subject to control and regulation by the Public Utilities Commission [citations omitted]).13. We note that there are no Treasury regulations promulgated specifically under
sec. 7430(c)(1) (relating to litigation costs). There are Treasury regulations promulgated undersec. 7430(c)(2) (relating to administrative costs), and they provide (seesec. 301.7430-4(b)(1) , Proced. & Admin. Regs.) an enumeration comparable to the specific enumeration of the statutory language ofsec. 7430(c)(2) . After such enumeration, however, those regulations relating specifically to administrative costs also expressly provide that additional out-of-pocket costs, when billed separately by a litigant's attorney, may be recoverable as administrative costs, as follows:necessary costs incurred for travel; expedited mail delivery;
messenger service; expenses while on travel; long distance
telephone calls; and necessary copying fees imposed by the
Internal Revenue Service, any court, bank or other third
party * * * may be reasonable administrative costs. [Sec.
301.7430-4(c)(2) , Proced. & Admin. Regs.]Another noteworthy point is that the regulations promulgated under
sec. 7430(c)(2) (relating to administrative costs) contain a subparagraph which make reference to litigation costs as follows:Litigation costs include --
(i) Costs incurred in connection with the preparation and filing
of a petition with the United States Tax Court or in connection
with the commencement of any other court proceeding; and
(ii) Costs incurred after the filing of a petition with the
United States Tax Court or after the commencement of any other
court proceeding. [
Sec. 301.7430-4(c)(3) , Proced. & Admin.Regs.]
As will be noted, the above language in subdiv. (ii) of the regulation provides no list or enumeration comparable to the list set forth in the statutory language of
sec. 7430(c)(1)(A) through(B)(iii)↩ , and it broadly and simply refers, without any limitation, to "litigation costs" as those "costs" incurred relating to the handling of a case.14. As indicated, petitioners calculated their mileage costs at $ 0.35 per mile when the Government's actual allowable mileage reimbursement rate effective on May 4, 2004, was $ 0.375.
68 Fed. Reg. 69618↩ (Dec. 15, 2003) . Therefore, at the applicable rate, which we use, 30 miles traveled results in $ 11.25 in mileage costs.15. The amounts at issue and the amounts awarded herein are small. Issuance of this Opinion, however, is appropriate due to the repetitive nature of the costs involved and due to the need to clarify for pro se taxpayers (as well as for represented taxpayers) the available recovery under
sec. 7430↩ of out-of-pocket costs such as postage, mileage, and parking fees.