USCA11 Case: 20-12061 Date Filed: 01/25/2022 Page: 1 of 23
[PUBLISH]
In the
United States Court of Appeals
For the Eleventh Circuit
____________________
No. 20-12061
____________________
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Defendant-Appellee,
versus
ISAC SCHWARZBAUM,
Plaintiff-Appellant.
____________________
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Southern District of Florida
D.C. Docket No. 9:18-cv-81147-BB
____________________
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2 Opinion of the Court 20-12061
Before BRANCH, GRANT, and BRASHER, Circuit Judges.
BRANCH, Circuit Judge:
Every year, U.S. citizens with over $10,000 in foreign bank
accounts must disclose information about those accounts to the
IRS on a Report of Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts or “FBAR”
form. For several years in the early 2000s, Isac Schwarzbaum did
not. After the IRS discovered Schwarzbaum’s omissions, and de-
termined that he had acted willfully, it imposed several million dol-
lars in civil penalties, and the government sued to collect.
In response, Schwarzbaum conceded that he failed to report
his foreign bank accounts to the IRS, but contested the IRS’s deter-
mination that his violations were willful and argued for vacatur of
his civil penalties. After a bench trial, the district court held that
Schwarzbaum’s violations were reckless, and therefore willful, in
most of the tax years at issue. But the district court also held that
the IRS had miscalculated Schwarzbaum’s civil penalties and set
them aside under the Administrative Procedure Act (APA), Pub. L.
No. 79–404, 60 Stat. 237, 5 U.S.C. § 551 et seq. The district court
then sua sponte calculated and imposed a fresh set of penalties. On
appeal, Schwarzbaum argues that the district court applied the
wrong legal standard in evaluating whether he willfully violated
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20-12061 Opinion of the Court 3
the FBAR reporting requirements, and that the new penalties the
district court imposed were unlawful under the APA. 1
Starting with Schwarzbaum’s first argument, we conclude
that the district court applied the correct legal standard in analyzing
whether Schwarzbaum willfully violated the FBAR reporting re-
quirements. Willful conduct in the FBAR context includes know-
ing and reckless conduct. Reckless conduct is action that objec-
tively entails a high risk of harm, which is the standard the district
court applied.
However, turning to Schwarzbaum’s second argument, we
nevertheless conclude that the civil penalties assessed by the IRS
were unlawful under the APA and must be recalculated. As the
district court found, the IRS erred by using the wrong foreign bank
account balances to calculate Schwarzbaum’s penalties, contraven-
ing the relevant statute and regulations. At trial, the district court
further erred by calculating and imposing new penalties instead of
remanding to the agency, as required by the APA. Even though
the district court ultimately arrived at the same total penalty
amount the IRS did originally, the IRS’s original errors were not
harmless, and, therefore, a remand for recalculation is necessary.
1Schwarzbaum also argues that his civil penalties were excessive fines under
the Eighth Amendment. Because we direct a remand for recalculation of
Schwarzbaum’s penalties, we need not reach this issue.
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4 Opinion of the Court 20-12061
After careful review and with the benefit of oral argument,
we vacate the district court’s decision and remand with instructions
to remand Schwarzbaum’s case to the IRS.
I. Background
A. The FBAR’s Statutory and Regulatory Framework
In the Bank Secrecy Act of 1970, Pub. L. No. 91–508, 84 Stat.
1114, Congress directed the Secretary of the Treasury to promul-
gate regulations requiring U.S. citizens and others to report their
“transaction[s]” and “relationship[s]” with “foreign financial
agenc[ies]” to the IRS. Bank Secrecy Act §§ 241–42, 84 Stat. at 1124
(codified as amended at 31 U.S.C. § 5314). In response, the Secre-
tary of the Treasury created the Report of Foreign Bank and Finan-
cial Accounts form, known as the FBAR. See 31 C.F.R.
§ 1010.350(a). Treasury regulations provide that each U.S. citizen
with interests in or authority over foreign bank accounts with bal-
ances exceeding $10,000 must file an annual FBAR identifying and
describing those accounts. See id. §§ 1010.306(c), 1010.350(a).
The IRS may impose civil penalties on persons who fail to
report their foreign bank accounts as provided by the FBAR statute
and its implementing regulations. See 31 U.S.C. § 5321(a)(5)(A)
(providing that “[t]he Secretary of the Treasury may impose a civil
money penalty on any person who violates . . . any provision of
section 5314”); 31 C.F.R. § 1010.810(g) (delegating to the Commis-
sioner of Internal Revenue “the authority to: assess and collect civil
penalties under 31 U.S.C. [§] 5321”). The IRS “may assess a civil
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20-12061 Opinion of the Court 5
[FBAR] penalty . . . at any time before the end of the 6-year period
beginning on the date of the transaction with respect to which the
penalty is assessed.” 31 U.S.C. § 5321(b)(1). The maximum civil
penalty for a non-willful violation of the FBAR reporting require-
ments is $10,000. Id. § 5321(a)(5)(B)(i). The maximum civil penalty
for a willful violation is
the greater of . . . $100,000, or . . . in the case of a vio-
lation involving a failure to report the existence of an
account or any identifying information required to be
provided with respect to an account, [50% of] the bal-
ance in the account at the time of the violation.
Id. § 5321(a)(5)(C)(i), (D)(ii).2 For each tax year, covered individu-
als must file their FBAR forms by June 30 of the following year. See
31 C.F.R. § 1010.306(c).
B. Facts and Procedural History
Isac Schwarzbaum is a wealthy, naturalized U.S. citizen who
was born in Germany and has lived intermittently in the United
States since the 1990s. Beginning in the early 2000s, Schwarzbaum
held interests in foreign bank accounts in Switzerland and Costa
Rica. Between 2006 and 2009, Schwarzbaum held interests in
eleven Swiss accounts and two Costa Rican accounts. As a U.S.
citizen, Schwarzbaum was, and is, subject to the FBAR reporting
requirements for foreign bank accounts. See 31 U.S.C. § 5314(a).
2The IRS may also impose criminal penalties for violations of the FBAR stat-
ute and its implementing regulations. See 31 U.S.C. § 5322.
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6 Opinion of the Court 20-12061
Schwarzbaum uses certified public accountants (CPAs) to
prepare his U.S. tax returns. In the past, some of Schwarzbaum’s
CPAs advised him that he did not need to report his foreign assets
to the IRS unless those assets had a “U.S. connection.” This was
bad advice. The FBAR regulations require U.S. citizens to report
their foreign accounts with balances exceeding $10,000 to the IRS
every year, whether or not the accounts have any connection to
the United States. See 31 C.F.R. §§ 1010.306(c), 1010.350. None-
theless, in 2006, Schwarzbaum’s CPA prepared and filed an FBAR
on his behalf listing only a single Costa Rican bank account.
In 2007, Schwarzbaum self-prepared and filed his own
FBAR, which again listed only a single Costa Rican bank account.
When self-preparing his 2007 FBAR, Schwarzbaum reviewed the
instructions that accompany the FBAR form, which stated:
Each United States person, who has a financial inter-
est in or signature authority, or other authority over
any financial accounts, including bank, securities, or
other types of financial accounts in a foreign country,
if the aggregate value of these financial accounts ex-
ceeds $10,000 at any time during the calendar year,
must report that relationship each calendar year by
filing [an FBAR] with the Department of the Treasury
on or before June 30, of the succeeding year.
In 2008, Schwarzbaum did not file an FBAR, and in 2009, he again
self-prepared and filed his own FBAR, listing only one of his Swiss
accounts and his two Costa Rican accounts.
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20-12061 Opinion of the Court 7
Some time after, Schwarzbaum consulted with U.S. tax
counsel, who advised him that he had violated the FBAR reporting
requirements in previous tax years by failing to report many of his
foreign accounts. In 2011, Schwarzbaum then voluntarily disclosed
to the IRS the existence and balances of the foreign accounts he had
previously failed to report. In 2013 and 2014, the IRS investigated
and proposed civil penalties totaling $13,729,591 against Schwarz-
baum for willful violations of the FBAR reporting requirements for
the 2006–2009 tax years.
In calculating Schwarzbaum’s FBAR penalties, the IRS
started with the highest annual balances for the foreign accounts
Schwarzbaum had failed to report to the IRS during the relevant
tax years. 3 For accounts with balances exceeding $1 million, the
IRS then divided the balances in half, arriving at the statutory max-
imum penalties. See 31 U.S.C. § 5321(a)(5)(C)(i), (D)(ii) (providing
that the maximum penalty for willful FBAR violations is the greater
of $100,000 or 50% of “the balance in the account at the time of the
violation”). For accounts with balances of $1 million or less, the
IRS calculated a mitigated set of penalties using a computational
formula set out in the IRS’s internal guidelines, the Internal Reve-
nue Manual (IRM). The IRS then added up the statutory maximum
penalties for the $1 million-plus accounts and the mitigated penal-
ties for the $1 million-or-less accounts, for a total potential penalty
3Schwarzbaum had previously provided these balances when he voluntarily
disclosed his foreign accounts to the IRS in 2011.
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8 Opinion of the Court 20-12061
of $35,416,667. Deciding that a $35 million-plus penalty would be
excessive, the IRS then further mitigated Schwarzbaum’s penalties
by dropping his 2006, 2007, and 2009 penalties to $0 and dividing
his 2008 penalties—which totaled $13,729,591—across all four tax
years, assigning $1,173,778 to tax year 2006 and $4,185,271 each to
tax years 2007, 2008, and 2009. Schwarzbaum appealed the IRS’s
proposed penalties to the IRS Appeals Office, which sustained the
penalties in September 2016. 4
Schwarzbaum did not pay his FBAR penalties, and in August
2018, the government filed suit to collect them. In March 2020,
after conducting a five-day bench trial, the district court issued an
opinion in which it held that Schwarzbaum willfully violated the
FBAR reporting requirements in 2007, 2008, and 2009, but not in
2006. 5 The district court stated that, in the FBAR civil penalty con-
text, “willful” conduct includes both knowing and reckless viola-
tions of the reporting requirements, and defined recklessness as
“conduct violating an objective standard: action entailing an unjus-
tifiably high risk of harm that is either known or so obvious that it
4 By statute, the IRS’s assessment of Schwarzbaum’s FBAR penalties was sub-
ject to a six-year statute of limitations. See 31 U.S.C. § 5321(b)(1). In 2015,
however, the parties executed a tolling agreement that extended the time pe-
riod for the IRS to assess Schwarzbaum’s penalties through December 2016.
5 At trial, Schwarzbaum did not contest that he violated the FBAR reporting
requirements for each tax year from 2006 to 2009. He argued only that his
violations for those years were non-willful and should be subject to the FBAR
civil penalty statute’s $10,000 maximum penalty for non-willful violations. See
31 U.S.C. § 5321(a)(5)(B)(i).
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20-12061 Opinion of the Court 9
should be known.” The district court found that Schwarzbaum did
not knowingly violate the FBAR requirements in any year. How-
ever, it found that Schwarzbaum recklessly violated the FBAR re-
quirements in 2007, 2008, and 2009, because, after he read the
FBAR instructions and self-prepared his own FBAR in 2007,
Schwarzbaum “was aware, or should have been aware, of a high
probability of tax liability with respect to his unreported accounts.”
The district court also concluded that the IRS miscalculated
Schwarzbaum’s FBAR penalties under the relevant statute and reg-
ulations, and that the penalties were therefore unlawful under the
APA. The district court noted that the IRS calculated Schwarz-
baum’s penalties using the highest annual balances in his foreign
accounts for each tax year; that the statutory maximum penalty for
willful FBAR violations is the greater of $100,000 or 50% of “the
balance in the account at the time of the violation,” 31 U.S.C.
§ 5321(a)(5)(C)(i), (D)(ii); and that the annual deadline to file an
FBAR—i.e., the “time of” an FBAR violation—is June 30. Because
the IRS did not calculate Schwarzbaum’s FBAR penalties using
June 30 balances, the district court held that it had “used the incor-
rect base amounts to calculate [Schwarzbaum’s] FBAR penalties”
and that the penalties must therefore be set aside under the APA.
See 5 U.S.C. § 706(2) (requiring courts to “hold unlawful and set
aside agency action found to be . . . not in accordance with law”).
At the end of its opinion, the district court directed the par-
ties “to submit supplemental briefing with respect to the new pro-
posed amount of penalties to be assessed against Schwarzbaum for
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10 Opinion of the Court 20-12061
a non-willful FBAR violation in tax year 2006, and willful FBAR
penalties for tax years 2007, 2008, and 2009.” 6 After receiving the
parties’ supplemental briefs, the district court then calculated and
imposed new FBAR penalties against Schwarzbaum of $4,498,486
for 2007; $4,212,871 for 2008; and $4,196,595 for 2009, for a total
penalty of $12,907,952. 7 In preparing the new penalties, the district
court used the June 30 balances for Schwarzbaum’s foreign ac-
counts from each tax year whenever possible and relied on the
IRM’s mitigation guidelines for FBAR penalties. The district court
entered judgment and Schwarzbaum filed a timely notice of ap-
peal.
In a motion to alter or amend the judgment, the govern-
ment then requested that the district court reduce Schwarzbaum’s
FBAR penalties to $12,555,813, equal to the penalty amount the
IRS had originally imposed against Schwarzbaum for tax years
2007–2009. The government stated that “the Court’s calculation
exceeded the amounts that the [IRS] assessed for those years” and
that it “d[id] not seek a judgment for more than the amount of the
[originally] assessed 2007–2009 FBAR penalties.”
6 The government subsequently informed the district court that it would no
longer seek penalties against Schwarzbaum for tax year 2006, given the court’s
determination that Schwarzbaum’s FBAR violations for that year were non-
willful.
7In response to an argument Schwarzbaum had asserted at trial, the district
court also held that the new penalties it had imposed were not excessive fines
under the Eighth Amendment.
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20-12061 Opinion of the Court 11
The district court granted the government’s motion and re-
duced Schwarzbaum’s penalties to $4,185,271 for each year from
2007 to 2009, for a total penalty of $12,555,813, before interest and
late-payment penalties. The district court noted that it had mistak-
enly thought the new penalties it had calculated and imposed
against Schwarzbaum for the 2007–2009 tax years were lower than
the IRS’s original penalties for those years. In fact, once the IRS’s
penalties for the 2006 tax year were subtracted from the original
set, the district court’s penalties were higher. The district court
stated that, by reducing Schwarzbaum’s FBAR penalties, it was not
reinstating the IRS’s original penalties, which it said would be a
“misinterpretation” of its order. The district court explained that
it was reducing Schwarzbaum’s penalties only because the govern-
ment had made clear that it was not seeking more than the amount
the IRS had originally assessed.
The district court entered an amended judgment and
Schwarzbaum again filed a timely amended notice of appeal.
II. Discussion
Schwarzbaum makes three arguments on appeal. First, that
the district court applied an incorrect legal standard in determining
that his FBAR violations were willful. Second, that his FBAR pen-
alties were miscalculated and, therefore, unlawful under the APA.
Third, that his FBAR penalties were excessive fines under the
Eighth Amendment. Schwarzbaum is wrong on the first point but
right on the second, and, as a result, we do not reach the third.
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12 Opinion of the Court 20-12061
A. Willful FBAR Violations
Schwarzbaum argues that the district court applied an incor-
rect legal standard in determining that his FBAR violations were
willful. We review this issue of law de novo. See U.S. S.E.C. v. Big
Apple Consulting USA, Inc., 783 F.3d 786, 795 (11th Cir. 2015).
When the parties filed their briefs, we had not yet decided
the legal standard for determining willful FBAR violations. After
the parties filed their briefs, we squarely addressed this issue in a
different case, United States v. Rum, 995 F.3d 882 (11th Cir. 2021).
In Rum, we held that “willful” conduct, in the FBAR civil penalty
context, includes knowing or reckless conduct. See id. at 888–89.
Relying on the Supreme Court’s decision in Safeco Insurance Com-
pany of America v. Burr, 551 U.S. 47 (2007), we defined “reckless-
ness . . . ‘as conduct violating an objective standard: action entail-
ing an unjustifiably high risk of harm that is either known or so
obvious that it should be known.’” Id. at 889 (quoting Safeco, 551
U.S. at 68); see also Safeco, 551 U.S. at 57, 69 (explaining that civil
liability statutes usually “cover not only knowing violations of a
standard, but reckless ones as well,” and that a “high risk of harm,
objectively assessed,” was “the essence of recklessness at common
law”).
At Schwarzbaum’s trial, the district court applied the exact
standard for willful conduct we later adopted in Rum. It recog-
nized that willful conduct in the FBAR context includes reckless
conduct, and, quoting Safeco, used the recklessness standard we
later adopted in Rum: “conduct violating an objective standard:
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20-12061 Opinion of the Court 13
action entailing an unjustifiably high risk of harm that is either
known or so obvious that it should be known.” Applying this
standard, the district court held that, although Schwarzbaum did
not knowingly violate the FBAR reporting requirements, he acted
recklessly when he reviewed the FBAR instructions in 2007 and
then, for the next three years, failed to report the foreign assets
those instructions directed him to report. 8 Accordingly, the district
court found that Schwarzbaum “was aware, or should have been
aware, of a high probability of tax liability with respect to his unre-
ported accounts,” and that, therefore, his “FBAR violations for tax
years 2007, 2008, and 2009 were willful.”
Schwarzbaum asserts that the district court applied a “de
facto strict liability standard” for willful conduct. It did not. In-
stead, the district court found that Schwarzbaum violated the
FBAR requirements recklessly, and as we held in Rum, recklessness
8 Schwarzbaum argues that the district court’s finding that he recklessly vio-
lated the FBAR reporting requirements, even though his CPAs had advised
him in previous years that he need not report accounts lacking a U.S. connec-
tion, conflicts with United States v. Boyle, 469 U.S. 241 (1985), in which the
Supreme Court said: “When an accountant or attorney advises a taxpayer on
a matter of tax law, such as whether a liability exists, it is reasonable for the
taxpayer to rely on that advice.” Id. at 251 (emphasis omitted).
Boyle concerned a different tax statute and did not provide the legal standard
for willfulness in the FBAR context. Moreover, the Supreme Court’s state-
ment in Boyle is readily distinguishable. While it may be generally reasonable
for a taxpayer to rely on professional advice, it is no longer reasonable once
the taxpayer has realized—as Schwarzbaum should have, once he read the
FBAR instructions—that he has been receiving bad advice.
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14 Opinion of the Court 20-12061
suffices for a willful FBAR violation. 9 See Rum, 995 F.3d at 888–
89. Schwarzbaum’s emphasis on the district court’s finding that he
lacked knowledge of his violations misses the point. See Safeco,
551 U.S. at 59 (noting that, when “‘willfully’ covers both knowing
and reckless disregard of the law, knowing violations are sensibly
understood as a more serious subcategory of willful ones”). Thus,
the district court applied the correct legal standard in determining
that Schwarzbaum’s FBAR violations were willful.
B. Unlawful FBAR Penalties
Schwarzbaum also argues that his FBAR penalties were un-
lawful under the APA. When a party challenges agency action un-
der the APA, we review the district court’s decision de novo and
the underlying agency action under the standards set out in the
APA. See Cigar Assoc. of Am. v. U.S. Food & Drug Admin., 964
F.3d 56, 61 (D.C. Cir. 2020). Under the APA, a “reviewing court
9 We note that, at argument, Schwarzbaum’s counsel conceded that “the dis-
trict court already applied the Rum standard” for willful FBAR violations.
Schwarzbaum’s counsel suggested that the district court may have erred in
holding that Schwarzbaum’s FBAR violations were willful under that stand-
ard. But in his briefs, Schwarzbaum argued only that the district court used
the wrong legal standard for willfulness, disclaiming any challenge to the dis-
trict court’s “factual findings.” Applying an incorrect standard and applying a
standard incorrectly are distinct types of error. Schwarzbaum briefed only the
former issue, so we do not consider the latter. See APA Excelsior III L.P. v.
Premier Techs., Inc., 476 F.3d 1261, 1269 (11th Cir. 2007) (“[W]e do not con-
sider claims not raised in a party’s initial brief and made for the first time at
oral argument.”).
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20-12061 Opinion of the Court 15
shall . . . hold unlawful and set aside agency action” that is “arbi-
trary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accord-
ance with law.” 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A). In this case, Schwarzbaum
has asserted that the IRS miscalculated his FBAR penalties under
the relevant statute and regulations. Accordingly, we review
whether Schwarzbaum’s FBAR penalties are “not in accordance
with law.” Id.
Before considering the legality of the FBAR penalties as-
sessed by the IRS, due to the district court’s intervening orders, we
must answer a threshold question: what exactly did the district
court do below? The parties dispute the legal effect of the order
and judgment in which the district court imposed FBAR penalties
against Schwarzbaum amounting to $12,555,813. Schwarzbaum
asserts that the district court set aside the IRS’s penalties and im-
posed its own. The government asserts that the district court up-
held the IRS’s original penalties. In one sense, the parties draw dis-
tinctions without a difference. Either way, Schwarzbaum’s penal-
ties are $12,555,813. But how the district court got there matters,
so we walk through our understanding of what the district court
did.
Starting with the agency’s action, the IRS originally sus-
tained FBAR penalties against Schwarzbaum of $4,185,271 each for
2007, 2008, and 2009, plus a $1 million-plus penalty for 2006, for a
total penalty of $13,729,591. At trial, the district court found that
Schwarzbaum’s FBAR violations were willful in the 2007–2009 tax
years, but also found that the IRS had not calculated
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16 Opinion of the Court 20-12061
Schwarzbaum’s penalties lawfully. Consulting the record afresh,
the district court calculated and imposed new FBAR penalties
against Schwarzbaum totaling $12,907,952. Then, on the govern-
ment’s motion, the district court reduced Schwarzbaum’s penalties
to $4,185,271 for each year from 2007 to 2009—identical to the pen-
alties the IRS had originally imposed for those years—for a total
penalty of $12,555,813.
The government argues that, when the district court re-
duced the new penalties it had imposed against Schwarzbaum, it
thereby reimposed and upheld the IRS’s original penalties. But in
its orders below, the district court described its own actions differ-
ently. The district court explained that it was reducing the penal-
ties the district court had imposed, and only “because the USA
[was] seeking a smaller penalty than the Court assessed.” It ex-
pressly rejected the characterization that it was “reinstat[ing] the
IRS’s original penalty assessment,” which it said was a “misinter-
pretation” of its actions. We take the district court at its word. And
when it calculated and imposed new FBAR penalties against
Schwarzbaum, the district court undoubtedly overstepped its role.
When a party challenges agency action under the APA, “the
district court does not perform its normal role but instead sits as an
appellate tribunal.” Cnty. of L.A. v. Shalala, 192 F.3d 1005, 1011
(D.C. Cir. 1999) (quotation omitted). And when an agency action
is unlawful, the APA directs a reviewing court to “hold [it] unlawful
and set [it] aside.” 5 U.S.C. § 706(2). The APA does not, however,
direct the court to do the agency’s job for it. The court “must judge
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20-12061 Opinion of the Court 17
the propriety of [the agency’s] action solely by the grounds invoked
by the agency. If those grounds are inadequate or improper, the
court is powerless to affirm the administrative action by substitut-
ing what it considers to be a more adequate or proper basis.” SEC
v. Chenery Corp. (II), 332 U.S. 194, 196 (1947); see also Citizens to
Preserve Overton Park, Inc. v. Volpe, 401 U.S. 402, 416 (1971)
(“The court is not empowered to substitute its judgment for that
of the agency.”).
The district court lacked the power to recalculate Schwarz-
baum’s FBAR penalties. Nonetheless, finding that the IRS had mis-
calculated, the district court prepared new penalties from scratch,
substituting its judgment for the agency’s. Courts do not have
“original calculation” jurisdiction over FBAR penalties. That
power belongs to the IRS. See 31 C.F.R. § 1010.810(g) (delegating
to the Commissioner of Internal Revenue “the authority to: assess
and collect civil penalties under 31 U.S.C. [§] 5321”); see also Vi-
diksis v. EPA, 612 F.3d 1150, 1154 (11th Cir. 2010) (“Regarding a
penalty assessment, an agency’s determination is considered to be
particularly within the agency’s competence.”). By replacing the
IRS’s penalty calculations with its own, the district court invaded
the agency’s turf. See SEC v. Chenery Corp. (I), 318 U.S. 80, 88
(1943) (“An appellate court cannot intrude upon the domain which
Congress has exclusively entrusted to an administrative agency.”).
Given the agency’s error, the district court should have re-
manded Schwarzbaum’s FBAR penalties to the IRS for recalcula-
tion. “Remand is the appropriate remedy when an administrative
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18 Opinion of the Court 20-12061
agency makes an error of law, for it affords the agency an oppor-
tunity to receive and examine the evidence in light of the correct
legal principle.” Zhou Hua Zhu v. U.S. Att’y Gen., 703 F.3d 1303,
1315 (11th Cir. 2013) (quotation omitted). And, as the district court
correctly found, the IRS’s original penalties were not in accordance
with law. The statutory maximum penalty for a willful FBAR vio-
lation is the greater of $100,000 or 50% of “the balance in the ac-
count at the time of the violation.” 31 U.S.C. § 5321(a)(5)(C)(i),
(D)(ii). The “time of [an FBAR] violation” is June 30, the annual
FBAR filing deadline. See 31 C.F.R. § 1010.306(c). Indeed, the gov-
ernment concedes that the IRS mistakenly calculated Schwarz-
baum’s statutory maximum penalties using his foreign accounts’
highest annual balances rather than their June 30 balances. Because
the IRS miscalculated Schwarzbaum’s penalties, a remand is in or-
der to allow the IRS to fix the mistake. 10 See Fla. Dep’t of Lab. and
10The government asserts that Schwarzbaum did not timely argue for a re-
mand to the IRS in the district court and thereby forfeited the issue. It appears
Schwarzbaum first raised the agency remand issue quite late in the district
court proceedings, in a post-trial brief. The district court declined to consider
the issue “at th[at] late stage.”
“It is well-settled that we will generally refuse to consider arguments raised
for the first time on appeal.” Ramirez v. Sec’y, U.S. Dep’t of Transp., 686 F.3d
1239, 1249 (11th Cir. 2012). But “[t]his principle is . . . merely a rule of prac-
tice,” and the decision whether to consider an issue that was forfeited below
is “left primarily to [our] discretion.” Dean Witter Reynolds, Inc. v. Fernan-
dez, 741 F.2d 355, 360 (11th Cir. 1984) (quotation omitted). We need not de-
cide whether Schwarzbaum forfeited the agency remand issue below. Even if
he did, we would exercise our ample discretion to consider the issue, because
remand to the IRS is obviously the right outcome. See id. at 361 (“[A] federal
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20-12061 Opinion of the Court 19
Emp. Sec. v. U.S. Dep’t of Lab., 893 F.2d 1319, 1322 (11th Cir. 1990)
(“If the agency has misapplied the law, its order cannot stand . . . .
Instead, the case must be remanded to the agency to make a new
determination.”).
The government argues that remand is unnecessary because
the IRS’s original calculation errors were harmless and the district
court ultimately imposed penalties identical to the agency’s. In re-
viewing agency action under the APA, we take “due account . . . of
the rule of prejudicial error.” 5 U.S.C. § 706; see also Nat’l Ass’n of
Home Builders v. Defs. of Wildlife, 551 U.S. 644, 659–60 (2007) (de-
scribing this as an “administrative law . . . harmless error rule”
(quotation omitted)). “An agency decision is harmless ‘when a mis-
take of the administrative body is one that clearly had no bearing
on the procedure used or the substance of decision reached.’” An-
imal Legal Def. Fund v. U.S. Dep’t of Agric., 789 F.3d 1206, 1224
n.13 (11th Cir. 2015) (quoting U.S. Steel Corp. v. EPA, 595 F.2d 207,
215 (5th Cir. 1979)). “Absence of . . . prejudice [to the citizen] must
appellate court is justified in resolving an issue not passed on below where the
proper resolution is beyond any doubt.” (quotation omitted and alteration
adopted)); Blue Martini Kendall, LLC v. Miami Dade Cnty., 816 F.3d 1343,
1350 (11th Cir. 2016) (exercising discretion to consider an issue not raised in
the district court where “the proper resolution of th[e] matter [was] as clear as
a bell to us”).
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20 Opinion of the Court 20-12061
be clear for harmless error to be applicable.” U.S. Steel, 595 F.2d at
215. 11
To understand whether the IRS’s error was harmless, we
must understand precisely how the IRS erred. The IRS calculated
Schwarzbaum’s FBAR penalties in three steps. First, it collected
the highest annual balances for the foreign accounts Schwarzbaum
had failed to report. Then, using a formula set out in the IRS’s in-
ternal guidelines manual, it calculated the statutory maximum pen-
alties for the accounts with balances greater than $1 million—by
dividing the balances in half—and calculated a mitigated set of pen-
alties for the lower-balance accounts. Finally, it further mitigated
Schwarzbaum’s penalties by dropping his 2006, 2007, and 2009 pen-
alties altogether and dividing his 2008 penalties across all years.
In calculating Schwarzbaum’s FBAR penalties, the IRS took
a wrong fork in the road by starting with the wrong numbers. Re-
call that, for each tax year and for each account, the statutory max-
imum penalty for a willful FBAR violation is the greater of $100,000
or 50% of the account’s June 30 balance. See 31 U.S.C.
§ 5321(a)(5)(C)(i), (D)(ii); 31 C.F.R. § 1010.306(c). By using the
wrong account balances, the IRS calculated the wrong statutory
maximums for Schwarzbaum’s penalties, and from there,
11 In Bonner v. City
of Prichard, 661 F.2d 1206, 1207 (11th Cir. 1981) (en banc),
we adopted as binding precedent all decisions of the former Fifth Circuit
handed down prior to October 1, 1981.
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20-12061 Opinion of the Court 21
mitigated the penalties across the board. The IRS’s error, it ap-
pears, flowed through its calculations from beginning to end.
Thus, we cannot say that the IRS’s error was harmless. On
remand, if the IRS calculates Schwarzbaum’s penalties using his ac-
counts’ June 30 balances rather than their highest annual balances,
the statutory maximum penalties could very well be lower. If the
IRS chooses to mitigate Schwarzbaum’s penalties, as it did origi-
nally, the mitigated penalties could be lower too. 12 That is not to
say the penalties will be lower. We do not presume to guess what
the IRS will do. But the fact that the IRS may reach a different
result when it recalculates Schwarzbaum’s penalties in accordance
with the FBAR civil penalty statute and regulations is enough to
justify remand. See U.S. Steel, 595 F.2d at 215 (declining to find
that agency error was harmless where “the Agency’s error plainly
affected the procedure used, and we [could not] assume that there
was no prejudice to petitioners”). Schwarzbaum has met his bur-
den to show that the IRS’s error in calculating his civil penalties was
not harmless.
Finally, Schwarzbaum argues that remand to the IRS is un-
necessary—and that we should instead direct a judgment in his fa-
vor—because the IRS would be time-barred on remand from recal-
culating his FBAR penalties. Ordinarily, “[i]f [an] agency has
12Tellingly, the government’s counsel conceded as much at argument, taking
the view that the IRS “could do anything [from] $0 to the statutory maximum
on a remand.”
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22 Opinion of the Court 20-12061
misapplied the law . . . the case must be remanded to the agency to
make a new determination.” Fla. Dep’t of Lab., 893 F.2d at 1322
(citing Chenery I, 318 U.S. at 94). But “the rule in Chenery does
not require courts to remand in futility.” Ridgewood Health Care
Ctr., Inc. v. NLRB, 8 F.4th 1263, 1276 (11th Cir. 2021) (quotation
omitted and alterations adopted). “Remand is futile when only one
conclusion would be supportable.” Id. (quotation omitted and al-
teration adopted).
Schwarzbaum has not established that remand for the IRS’s
recalculation of his penalties would be futile. He cites the FBAR
civil penalty statute’s six-year statute of limitations for assessing
penalties. See 31 U.S.C. § 5321(b)(1) (providing that “[t]he Secre-
tary of the Treasury may assess a civil [FBAR] penalty . . . at any
time before the end of the 6-year period beginning on the date of
the transaction with respect to which the penalty is assessed”). But
he cites no authority standing for the proposition that, on remand
from judicial review under the APA, an agency could be time-
barred from re-evaluating its original actions. We are aware of
none. There is no dispute that the IRS timely assessed Schwarz-
baum’s original FBAR penalties. 13 The remand we now direct is
13By contrast, in Brafman v. United States, 384 F.2d 863 (5th Cir. 1967)—the
principal case Schwarzbaum relies on in support of his time-bar argument—
the former Fifth Circuit held that a tax collection action must be dismissed
because, in its initial assessment of an estate tax, the IRS failed to assess the tax
within the statutory time period. See id. at 864–68. Brafman did not address
when, if ever, an agency would be time-barred on remand from re-evaluating
agency action that was timely in the first instance.
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20-12061 Opinion of the Court 23
not for the IRS to issue new penalties, but for it to recalculate the
penalties it has already assessed.
III. Conclusion
We VACATE the district court’s amended judgment and
REMAND with instructions to remand to the IRS for recalculation
of Schwarzbaum’s FBAR penalties.