The IRS examined P's returns for 6 tax years and, in July 2006, issued a Form 886A as to P's liability for those years. Without submitting to the IRS a request for administrative costs and without receiving any IRS decision as to costs, P filed a Tax Court petition for administrative costs for those years in March 2008 in docket No. 5622-08, under
MEMORANDUM 2009 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 146">*148 OPINION
GUSTAFSON,
Some of the facts alleged in respondent's motion are disputed, and many of Mr. Bent's allegations are unsubstantiated. However, we assume Mr. Bent's allegations to be true, for purposes of respondent's motion, and we therefore assume (but do not find) the following facts:
Mr. Bent alleges that the IRS examined his tax returns for the 6 tax years 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, and 2003, and that he incurred costs in that process. He claims that in the audit for 1999, the IRS determined that no changes were necessary to Mr. Bent's tax as reported. 3 He states that thereafter, on July 14, 2006, the IRS concluded the audits for the other 5 years by issuing a Form 886A, Explanation of Items, that likewise made no change in the liabilities as reported for those years. 42009 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 146">*150
On March 5, 2008 (i.e., more than a year and a half after the IRS allegedly issued the Form 886A), Mr. Bent attempted to obtain an award of these costs by filing a petition for costs in this Court. A four-page attachment to Mr. Bent's petition in docket No. 5622-08 contained at least some of the information required by
In that prior case respondent moved to dismiss the petition for lack of jurisdiction. 2009 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 146">*152 The Court granted that motion by its order entered August 18, 2008. The order held that Mr. Bent had failed to show that the IRS ever issued a decision denying administrative costs, as required by
Interpreting his submissions in the manner most favorable to him, we infer that on August 22, 2008, Mr. Bent asked the IRS to treat his petition in docket No. 5622-08 as a written request for administrative costs. 7 He does not attach a copy of, nor even allege, a written request to this effect, so we assume it was oral. The IRS never responded to this request. Mr. Bent filed his petition in this case on November 25, 2008. Respondent moved to dismiss this case for the same reasons that the prior case was dismissed -- i.e., that Mr. Bent failed to submit to the IRS a written request for administrative costs, as required by
I.
The Tax Court is a court of limited jurisdiction. We may exercise jurisdiction only to the extent expressly provided by statute.
A.
In (1) reasonable administrative costs incurred in connection with such administrative proceeding within the Internal Revenue Service * * *. (4) Period for applying to IRS for administrative costs. -- An award may be made under subsection (a) by the Internal Revenue 2009 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 146">*155 Service for reasonable administrative costs only if the prevailing party files an application with the Internal Revenue Service for such costs before the 91st day after the date on which the final decision of the Internal Revenue Service as to the determination of the tax, interest, or penalty is mailed to such party. the document which resolves the tax liability of the taxpayer with regard to all tax, additions to tax and penalties at issue in the administrative proceeding (such as a Form 870 or closing agreement), or a notice of assessment for that liability (such as the notice and demand under
B.
A taxpayer dissatisfied with the IRS's action on a request for administrative costs may petition this Court for relief pursuant to A decision granting or denying (in whole or in part) an award for reasonable administrative costs under subsection (a) by the Internal Revenue Service shall be subject to the filing of a petition for review 2009 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 146">*157 with the Tax Court * * *. If the Secretary sends by certified or registered mail a notice of such decision to the taxpayer, no proceeding may be initiated under this paragraph unless a petition is filed before the 91st day after the date of such mailing. The Internal Revenue Service is authorized, but not required, to notify the taxpayer of its decision to grant or deny (in whole or in part) an award for reasonable administrative costs under
C.
As we have already noted, an IRS "decision" conferring jurisdiction on this Court may be either a notice sent by certified or registered mail (which starts the running of a 90-day deadline for the taxpayer to file a petition, under
II.
A.
Mr. Bent contends that his prior Tax Court petition that he filed in docket No. 5622-08 itself constitutes his written request to the IRS for costs, pursuant to
However, under (2)
It is true that the IRS is 2009 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 146">*161 served with a copy of all petitions by the Clerk of the Court, pursuant to
Moreover, no IRS attorney receiving the petition could have supposed that the attachment to the petition in docket No. 5622-08 was intended to serve as an administrative application for costs. The attachment did not 2009 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 146">*162 claim to be an application, but instead was identified as a submission to the Tax Court under Tax Court Rules. And whether or not Mr. Bent understood it, the petition to which it was attached presupposed the prior submission of an application and thus implicitly contradicted the notion that an attachment to that petition could somehow constitute the application on which the petition must be based.
A taxpayer who wants to claim administrative costs must first file an application with the IRS and then file a petition with the Tax Court, and he may not instead treat the lawsuit as an indirect mechanism for filing his application with the agency.
B.
Mr. Bent's petition in docket No. 5622-08 was dismissed in August 2008. If thereafter Mr. Bent orally requested that his petition be treated as an application, then that oral request did not constitute a proper application for costs under
C.
In the absence of a request "filed" (as required by
III.
If we did have jurisdiction to proceed to the merits of Mr. Bent's petition for costs, we would have to hold that he has failed to state a claim as to which relief could be granted. Under
Mr. Bent did not file with the IRS 2009 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 146">*167 any written request for administrative costs other than his Tax Court petition in docket No. 5622-08. Considered as a request for costs, that petition was untimely under
Because there is no IRS decision that denies a request for the administrative costs that Mr. Bent's petition seeks -- neither an actual decision, nor a constructive decision deemed to have been made under
To reflect the foregoing,
1. Unless otherwise indicated, all section citations refer to the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (26 U.S.C.), as amended. All Rule citations refer to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.↩
2. Mr. Bent submitted a motion for summary judgment, but since
3. In his objection to respondent's motion, Mr. Bent alleges that the audit of the other 5 tax years "followed" a "1999 audit which determined there were no reporting nor tax changes necessary", so that any 1999 audit determination must have predated July 2006.↩
4. The petition cites (but does not submit) an "IRS Form 886A dated 7/14/06", and suggests that this form was issued in conjunction with the conclusion of "closed, resolved audits for T[ax]Y[ears] 1997, 1998, 2000, 2001 and 2003 [that] have resulted in no reporting nor tax changes in any petitioner filed personal or business returns".
5. Cf.
6. We take judicial notice of the record in docket No. 5622-08, pursuant to
7. See petitioner's second supplement to objection, filed March 3, 2009.↩
8. Under
9. Mr. Bent puts forth the Form 886A as the final decision for 5 of the tax years, and says that it "followed" the agency's resolution of his 1999 year. Thus, the "final decision" for 1999 must have been even earlier than July 2006. See
10. Cf.
11. Cf.
12. If, contrary to our holding in part II.B, the attachment to Mr. Bent's prior petition did become an application in August 2008 when he made an oral request that it be so treated, then the 6-month period of
13. For example, Mr. Bent alleges in his supplement filed March 27, 2009: that "an examination report [for unidentified years was] closed 10/8/02"; a "6/9/03 determination by the 2002 examination that no taxes were owed"; that "the 1998 return had been examined by Holtsville and closed with no changes as entered on my Transcript 10/08/02"; that "Ogden Tax Technician Brown's Form 4549 and 886A [was] dated 11/13/03"; that a "Notice of Deficiency for 1998 [was issued] on 3/31/04"; and that "T[ax]Y[ear] 2001 was accepted as filed 3/19/04 and 3/15/05". All these alleged acts took place more than 90 days before Mr. Bent's petition in docket No. 5622-08 was served in March 2008. Neither his petition nor his motion papers allege any agency event as having occurred in the period beginning December 18, 2007, and ending March 18, 2008.↩
14. We cannot tell whether Mr. Bent actually incurred any "reasonable administrative costs" within the meaning of