140 T.C. No. 9
UNITED STATES TAX COURT
CAROL DIANE GRAY, Petitioner v.
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent*
Docket No. 27849-09L. Filed April 25, 2013.
P moved for interlocutory appeal pursuant to I.R.C. sec.
7482(a)(2)(A) of an order dismissing for lack of jurisdiction, on
account of an untimely petition, that portion of the case seeking
review under I.R.C. sec. 6330(d)(1) of R’s determination to proceed
with collection actions.
1. Held: P’s contention that the period in which to file a
petition for review of a collection action determination under I.R.C.
sec. 6330 affecting the underlying tax liability is the 90-day period
provided in I.R.C. sec. 6213 rather than the 30-day period provided in
I.R.C. sec. 6330(d)(1) does not demonstrate a substantial ground for
difference of opinion within the meaning of I.R.C. sec. 7482(a)(2)(A).
*
This Opinion supplements our previously filed Opinion, Gray v.
Commissioner, 138 T.C. 295 (2012).
2
2. Held, further, P has failed to show that an immediate appeal
from the order may materially advance the ultimate termination of
this litigation within the meaning of I.R.C. sec. 7482(a)(2)(A).
Consequently P’s motion will be denied.
Jonathan P. Decatorsmith, for petitioner.
John Spencer Hitt, for respondent.
SUPPLEMENTAL OPINION
GALE, Judge: In an Opinion previously issued in this case, Gray v.
Commissioner, 138 T.C. 295 (2012), we held that we lacked jurisdiction to review
respondent’s determination to proceed with certain collection actions set forth in a
notice of determination issued to petitioner (notice of determination) because the
petition was untimely, not having been filed within 30 days of the notice of
determination as required by section1 6330(d)(1).2 The notice of determination
1
All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 in effect at
all relevant times, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice
and Procedure.
2
In addition, we held that the petition was timely for purposes of our
jurisdiction to review respondent’s failure to abate interest under sec. 6404(h) and
that further proceedings were necessary to determine whether we had jurisdiction
(continued...)
3
had determined that respondent could proceed with a lien and a levy to collect
unpaid income tax reported as due by petitioner on untimely joint returns filed for
1992, 1993, 1994 and 1995 and assessed by respondent pursuant to section
6201(a)(1). Petitioner had challenged the underlying tax liabilities at her hearing
provided pursuant to section 6330, and the notice of determination abated a
portion of the income tax assessment for each of 1992 and 1993. The notice also
abated the section 6651(a) additions to tax that had been assessed pursuant to
section 6665(b) for each taxable year at issue. In accordance with our Opinion, we
issued an order (dismissal order) dismissing this case for lack of jurisdiction
insofar as it concerned review of the determination to proceed with the collection
actions challenged in the petition. Petitioner now seeks an interlocutory appeal of
the dismissal order. Pending before the Court is petitioner’s motion for
certification of question for appeal, wherein she seeks an amendment to the
dismissal order to include a statement allowing an interlocutory appeal.
Petitioner asserts in her motion that the adjustments made in the notice of
determination to her Federal income tax liabilities for the years at issue constitute
“deficiency determinations” that entitle her to a 90-day period for filing a petition
2
(...continued)
under sec. 6015(e)(1)(A) to determine the appropriate relief available to petitioner
under sec. 6015.
4
with this Court for review of a deficiency determination, see sec. 6213(a), rather
than the 30-day period for filing a petition for review of a collection action
determination under section 6330, see sec. 6330(d)(1). Petitioner asks us to certify
for immediate appeal the issue whether “deficiency procedures instituted during a
* * * [section 6330] hearing have a 30 day or 90 day period for timely filing
petitions to the Tax Court for review.” Respondent filed an objection to
petitioner’s motion.
I. Section 7482(a)(2)(A) in General
Section 7482(a)(2)(A) provides that a U.S. Court of Appeals, upon a timely
request by a party to litigation in this Court, may permit an immediate appeal of an
interlocutory order of this Court when it contains a statement that “a controlling
question of law is involved with respect to which there is a substantial ground for
difference of opinion and that an immediate appeal from that order may materially
advance the ultimate termination of the litigation”. See also Rule 193(a).
Accordingly, this Court may certify an interlocutory order for immediate appeal if
we conclude that (1) a controlling question of law is involved, (2) substantial
grounds for a difference of opinion are present as to that question of law, and (3)
an immediate appeal may materially advance the ultimate termination of the
litigation. See sec. 7482(a)(2)(A); Kovens v. Commissioner, 91 T.C. 74, 77
5
(1988); New York Football Giants, Inc. v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2003-28.
Each of these requirements must be met before we certify an interlocutory order
for immediate appeal. See Kovens v. Commissioner, 91 T.C. at 77.
The proper application of section 7482(a)(2) requires balancing of the
policies favoring interlocutory appeals--i.e., avoidance of wasted trial and harm to
litigants--against the policies underlying the so-called final judgment rule; that is,
avoidance of piecemeal litigation and dilatory and harassing appeals. Kovens v.
Commissioner, 91 T.C. at 78. Our certification of an interlocutory order for an
immediate appeal is an exceptional measure that we employ sparingly. See Gen.
Signal Corp. & Subs. v. Commissioner, 104 T.C. 248 (1995), aff’d on other
grounds, 142 F.3d 546 (2d Cir. 1998); Kovens v. Commissioner, 91 T.C. at 78; see
also Coopers & Lybrand v. Livesay, 437 U.S. 463, 475 (1978). As we stated in
Kovens, “interlocutory orders should be granted only in exceptional cases.”
Kovens v. Commissioner, 91 T.C. at 78 (citing 1958 U.S.C.C.A.N. 5255, 5259,
5260-5261). Such an approach reflects a strong policy in favor of avoiding
piecemeal review. See id.
We decline to certify the dismissal order for interlocutory appeal. We are
not persuaded that there are substantial grounds for a difference of opinion
regarding the applicable petitioning period or that the interlocutory appeal will
6
materially advance the ultimate termination of the litigation. We explain our
reasoning below.
II. Whether Substantial Grounds for a Difference of Opinion Are Present as to
the Question of Law
Petitioner contends that there is a substantial basis for a difference of
opinion on the issue of the period for filing a petition with this Court for review of
a determination under section 6330 when it affects a taxpayer’s underlying tax
liability. Petitioner contends that section 6330 “does not explicitly state” whether
a determination concerning the taxpayer’s underlying tax liability must be
appealed to the Tax Court within the 30-day period provided in that section. In
petitioner’s view, different periods for filing a petition for Tax Court review apply,
depending on the issues raised in the section 6330 hearing, such as interest
abatement, see Gray v. Commissioner, 138 T.C. at 305, spousal relief, see
Raymond v. Commissioner, 119 T.C. 191, 194 (2002), or, as in this case, the
underlying tax liability. Petitioner asserts that allowing only 30 days to file a
petition when the underlying tax liability is properly at issue frustrates
congressional intent to allow taxpayers sufficient time to evaluate their position
concerning the underlying tax liability. We disagree.
7
Generally, the “substantial ground for difference of opinion” test is
interpreted by the courts to involve questions that present serious and unsettled
legal issues. Kovens v. Commissioner, 91 T.C. at 80 (citing Cohen v. Beneficial
Indus. Loan Corp., 337 U.S. 541, 547 (1949)). The law concerning the period for
filing a petition under section 6330 involving review of the underlying tax liability
is not unsettled. For a taxpayer seeking review of a determination under section
6320 or 6330, section 6330(d)(1) provides that the petition must be filed with the
Tax Court within 30 days of the determination regardless of whether the
underlying tax liability is at issue. As we stated in Gray v. Commissioner, 138
T.C. at 300:
The statutory scheme of section 6330 clearly contemplates that the
underlying tax liability may be challenged in designated
circumstances in a section 6330 proceeding and requires the
determination to consider such a challenge when properly made. See
sec. 6330(c)(2)(B), (3)(B). However, the statute does not distinguish
between determinations where the underlying tax liability is properly
at issue and those where it is not. The same 30-day period to appeal
the determination applies across the board. See sec. 6330(d).
Some of the arguments petitioner advances in her motion warrant further
discussion. Petitioner contends that “Congress is silent as to whether or not
underlying liability issues discussed and ultimately determined during the course
of a CDP hearing are governed by the 90-day filing period applicable to deficiency
8
determinations under 26 U.S.C. § 6213(a).” We disagree; there is no gap in the
statute concerning the period for filing a petition for review of a section 6330
determination concerning an underlying tax liability. Under section 6330, if a
taxpayer has timely requested a hearing, he may raise at the hearing “any relevant
issue relating to the unpaid tax” including, in designated circumstances,
“challenges to the existence or amount of the underlying tax liability”. Sec.
6330(c)(2). If the taxpayer challenges the “underlying tax liability” as permitted
under section 6330(c)(2), “[t]he determination by an appeals officer under this
subsection shall take into consideration * * * the issues raised under * * *
[section 6330(c)](2)” (which include any challenge to the “underlying tax
liability” raised by the taxpayer). Sec. 6330(c)(3). The foregoing “determination”
is then subject to judicial review as provided in section 6330(d)(1): “The person
may, within 30 days of a determination under this section, appeal such
determination to the Tax Court (and the Tax Court shall have jurisdiction with
respect to such matter).” (Emphasis added.) The statute leaves no room for an
alternate petitioning period as petitioner suggests.
Citing the fact that petitioning periods greater than 30 days are triggered
when a taxpayer raises a claim in a section 6330 proceeding for spousal relief (90
days) or interest abatement (180 days), petitioner suggests that a similar principle
9
should apply in the case of a challenge to the underlying tax liability and trigger
the 90-day petitioning period applicable to deficiency determinations, since
adjustments to the underlying tax liability, in petitioner’s view, “constitute”
deficiency determinations.
Petitioner’s comparison of underlying tax liability determinations in a
section 6330 proceeding to those covering spousal relief or interest abatement is
misplaced, however. When a taxpayer raises in a section 6330 proceeding a claim
for spousal relief under section 6015 or interest abatement under section 6404, the
Internal Revenue Code provides separate and independent bases (besides section
6330(d)(1)) for Tax Court jurisdiction to review the Commissioner’s
determinations concerning relief; namely, section 6015(e) and section 6404(h),
respectively. The statutory petitioning periods provided for those independent
grants of Tax Court jurisdiction accordingly apply. See Gray v. Commissioner,
138 T.C. at 305 (interest abatement); Raymond v. Commissioner, 119 T.C. at 193-
194 (spousal relief). By contrast, both the taxpayer’s entitlement to dispute the
“underlying tax liability”--which, in a section 6330 collection proceeding, is
necessarily an already assessed tax (or penalty)--and the Tax Court’s jurisdiction
to review the Commissioner’s determination concerning the “underlying tax
liability”, are derived entirely from section 6330. But for that section, a taxpayer
10
liable for an assessed income tax generally could dispute it only by paying it and
instituting suit for a refund. See generally sec. 7422; 28 U.S.C. sec. 1346(a)(1)
(2006). The 30-day petitioning period provided in section 6330(d)(1) is thus the
exclusive, statutorily prescribed petitioning period for Tax Court review of a
“determination” concerning an “underlying tax liability” as those terms are
employed in section 6330.
Moreover, petitioner’s contention that the adjustments made in the notice of
determination to the income tax liabilities for 1992 and 1993 and to the additions
to tax for all years “constitute deficiency determinations” is in clear conflict with
the statutory definition of a “deficiency”. A “deficiency” is a fundamental term of
art in tax procedure. It is defined in section 6211(a) for all Internal Revenue Code
purposes as follows:
SEC. 6211. DEFINITION OF A DEFICIENCY.
(a) * * * For purposes of this title in the case of income * * *
taxes imposed by subtitle[] A * * * , the term “deficiency” means the
amount by which the tax imposed by subtitle A * * * exceeds the
excess of--
(1) the sum of
(A) the amount shown as the tax by
the taxpayer upon his return, if a return was
made by the taxpayer and an amount was
11
shown as the tax by the taxpayer thereon,
plus
(B) the amounts previously assessed
(or collected without assessment) as a
deficiency, over--
(2) the amount of rebates, as defined in subsection
(b)(2), made.
Simply put, a “deficiency” in income tax generally exists where the amount of tax
imposed by subtitle A of the Code exceeds the amount of tax shown by the
taxpayer on his return. When the Secretary (or his delegate, the Commissioner)
“determines” that a “deficiency” exists, he is authorized to send a “notice of such
deficiency” to the taxpayer, sec. 6212(a), and the taxpayer is entitled, generally
within 90 days thereafter,3 to petition the Tax Court for a “redetermination” of that
“deficiency”, sec. 6213(a).
For the years at issue in this case, no “deficiency” was ever determined by
respondent; that is, respondent has at no point ever asserted that the amounts of
tax imposed by subtitle A for these years are greater than those petitioner reported
on her returns. Instead, respondent assessed the income tax at issue for these years
in the amounts reported as due by petitioner and her former spouse on late-filed
3
The period is 150 days where the notice is addressed to a person outside the
United States. Sec. 6213(a).
12
joint returns, without resort to the deficiency procedures of sections 6212 and
6213. See sec. 6201(a)(1). Likewise, the additions to tax under section 6651(a)(1)
and (2) were also summarily assessed by respondent without resort to the
deficiency procedures, as he is authorized to do pursuant to section 6665(b).4 In
short, these additions to tax did not give rise to a “deficiency” as defined for
Internal Revenue Code purposes.5
The assessed but unpaid income tax and additions to tax for the years at
issue constitute an “underlying tax liability” for each year as that term is used in
section 6330(c)(2)(B) because they are “amounts * * * owe[d] pursuant to the tax
laws that are the subject of the Commissioner’s collection activities.” See
Callahan v. Commissioner, 130 T.C. 44, 49 (2008). But they are not
“deficiencies” for Internal Revenue Code purposes, and the section 6330 notice of
determination action to reduce or eliminate them in no way constitutes a
4
The notice of determination abated all of the sec. 6651(a) additions to tax at
issue. We find it unnecessary to consider whether, in the event petitioner’s
petition had been timely with respect to respondent’s collection action
determinations under sec. 6330, there would have been a justiciable issue to
review concerning the additions to tax. See Greene-Thapedi v. Commissioner,
126 T.C. 1 (2006).
5
As no deficiencies were ever determined with respect to the years at issue,
the additions to tax at issue would not have been eligible for deficiency procedures
by virtue of sec. 6214(a). See Downing v. Commissioner, 118 T.C. 22, 26-27
(2002).
13
“deficiency determination”. These liabilities and the notice of determination
action with respect to them simply cannot be fitted within the parameters of
sections 6212 and 6213. Consequently, the 90-day petitioning period provided in
section 6213 has no application to them; any claim to the contrary ignores the
definition of a “deficiency”.
Presumably, the more circumscribed 30-day petitioning period for Tax
Court review of section 6330 determinations concerning “underlying tax
liabilities” reflects congressional recognition that “underlying tax liabilities”
represent assessed taxes whereas “deficiencies” do not. As assessed taxes, the
liabilities making up the “underlying tax liability” have already been accorded the
various preassessment procedural safeguards that Congress deemed appropriate
(including the 90-day petitioning period for Tax Court review in the case of taxes
eligible for “deficiency” procedures).6 In any event, the statutorily prescribed
6
In the case of income tax and other taxes eligible for “deficiency”
procedures, they may be assessed--and therefore become part of an “underlying
tax liability”--only after the Commissioner has mailed a notice of deficiency to the
taxpayer’s last known address extending to him a 90-day (or 150-day) period for
petitioning the Tax Court for review. Secs. 6212-6215. Further, in these
circumstances, the taxpayer may challenge “underlying tax liabilities” that have
been the subject of a properly addressed notice of deficiency only if the taxpayer
can show that he did not receive the notice of deficiency. Sec. 6330(c)(2)(B); see
Kuykendall v. Commissioner, 129 T.C. 77, 80 (2007); Tatum v. Commissioner,
T.C. Memo. 2003-115.
14
review provided for “deficiency” determinations and for determinations under
section 6330 of challenged underlying tax liabilities are not equivalent. Cf. Freije
v. Commissioner, 125 T.C. 14, 35-36 (2005) (Tax Court review of underlying tax
liability in section 6330 proceeding does not satisfy taxpayer’s right to a
deficiency proceeding to establish the liability). Petitioner’s suggestion that they
be treated as equivalent is contrary to the statute.
The fault in petitioner’s reasoning is perhaps best illustrated by the
anomalous results it produces. The “underlying tax liabilities” that were adjusted
in this case consist of income tax reported as due on returns that respondent
assessed pursuant to section 6201(a)(1)--i.e., without deficiency procedures--and
additions to tax under section 6651(a) that respondent likewise was entitled to
assess under section 6665(b) without resort to deficiency procedures.7 That is to
say, in both instances Congress concluded that deficiency procedures were not
warranted to establish these liabilities. Yet petitioner would have us interpret
section 6330 so that we extend the 90-day petitioning period for deficiency
7
Our jurisdiction to review the Commissioner’s determination to proceed
with collection of these two categories of tax liabilities as “underlying tax
liabilities” in a sec. 6330 proceeding is well established. See Montgomery v.
Commissioner, 122 T.C. 1 (2004) (taxpayer-reported tax assessed pursuant to sec.
6201(a)(1)); Downing v. Commissioner, 118 T.C. at 27-28 (sec. 6651(a) additions
to tax assessed pursuant to sec. 6665(b)).
15
determinations to two categories of tax liabilities that Congress expressly decided
did not warrant deficiency procedures. And the problem does not stop there. The
phrase “underlying tax liability” encompasses other taxes that are not eligible for
deficiency procedures, such as, for example, employment taxes imposed by
subtitle C of the Internal Revenue Code, see Salazar v. Commissioner, T.C.
Memo. 2008-38, aff’d, 338 Fed. Appx. 75 (2d Cir. 2009), and section 6702
frivolous return penalties, see Callahan v. Commissioner, 130 T.C. at 49. Yet
under petitioner’s theory, adjustments to these taxes in a section 6330 proceeding
would likewise entitle the taxpayer to the 90-day petitioning period intended for
deficiency determinations.
In summary, we conclude petitioner has not shown that there are any
substantial grounds for a difference of opinion concerning the petitioning period
applicable to determinations under section 6330 affecting the underlying tax
liability.
III. Whether an Immediate Appeal Would Materially Advance the Ultimate
Termination of the Litigation
We also conclude that an immediate appeal would not materially advance
the ultimate termination of the litigation within the meaning of section
7482(a)(2)(A). Petitioner contends that in the interest of judicial economy, this
16
Court should hear all justiciable issues at the same time, after the U.S. Court of
Appeals for the Seventh Circuit remands the case to the Tax Court for further
proceedings. However, an immediate appeal would produce two litigation tracks
for substantively intertwined issues. In addition, petitioner already has two cases
raising the identical issue pending before the Court of Appeals. See Gray v.
Commissioner, docket No. 27850-09L (Mar. 28, 2012), appeal filed (7th Cir. June
29, 2012); Gray v. Commissioner, docket No. 3260-08L (Mar. 28, 2012), appeal
filed (7th Cir. June 29, 2012).
Accordingly, our holding concerning the untimeliness of the petition in this
case for purposes of review pursuant to section 6330(d)(1) does not fall within the
exceptional category of cases contemplated by Congress when enacting section
7482(a)(2), and we conclude that the requirements for an interlocutory appeal have
not been met.
To reflect the foregoing,
An order denying petitioner’s motion
will be issued.