Judges: MORRISON
Attorneys: Enoch Lee, Pro se. John D. Davis , for respondent.
Filed: May 25, 2011
Latest Update: Nov. 21, 2020
Summary: T.C. Memo. 2011-112 UNITED STATES TAX COURT ENOCH LEE, Petitioner v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent Docket No. 11951-08L. Filed May 25, 2011, Enoch Lee, pro se. John D. Davis, for respondent. MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION MORRISON, Judge: This case is an appeal by petitioner Enoch Lee, pursuant to sections 6320(c) and 6330(d)(1),1 of a determination of the IRS Office of Appeals. The determination concerned the attempt by the IRS to collect, through a levy and 1 All sectio
Summary: T.C. Memo. 2011-112 UNITED STATES TAX COURT ENOCH LEE, Petitioner v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent Docket No. 11951-08L. Filed May 25, 2011, Enoch Lee, pro se. John D. Davis, for respondent. MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION MORRISON, Judge: This case is an appeal by petitioner Enoch Lee, pursuant to sections 6320(c) and 6330(d)(1),1 of a determination of the IRS Office of Appeals. The determination concerned the attempt by the IRS to collect, through a levy and 1 All section..
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T.C. Memo. 2011-112
UNITED STATES TAX COURT
ENOCH LEE, Petitioner v.
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
Docket No. 11951-08L. Filed May 25, 2011,
Enoch Lee, pro se.
John D. Davis, for respondent.
MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION
MORRISON, Judge: This case is an appeal by petitioner Enoch
Lee, pursuant to sections 6320(c) and 6330(d)(1),1 of a
determination of the IRS Office of Appeals. The determination
concerned the attempt by the IRS to collect, through a levy and
1
All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code, as
amended.
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the filing of a notice of lien, Mr. Lee’s income-tax liabilities
for the taxable years 2001, 2002, and 2003. For the reasons
explained below, we sustain the determination.
FINDINGS OF FACT
On September 5, 2006, the IRS issued two statutory notices
of deficiency to Lee. The first notice determined a deficiency
in income tax for the 2002 taxable year. The second notice
determined deficiencies in income tax for the 2001 and 2003
taxable years. For all three years, the statutory notices of
deficiency determined that Lee owed additions to tax and
penalties. Although Lee received the statutory notices of
deficiency, he did not file a Tax Court petition in response.2
Nor did Lee pay the amounts determined in the statutory notices
of deficiency. The IRS assessed the unpaid amounts. Within 60
days of the assessment, the IRS demanded payment of the assessed
amounts.
On October 24, 2007, the IRS mailed Lee a notice that it
intended to levy to collect his income-tax liabilities for the
tax years 2001, 2002, and 2003. On November 6, 2007, the IRS
2
Sec. 6213(a) provides that once a statutory notice of
deficiency has been issued, the taxpayer may file a Tax Court
petition to challenge the determinations in the notice. Lee
testified that he did not file a petition with the Tax Court
because he was ignorant of his rights under the Internal Revenue
Code. We infer from this testimony that he received the notices
of deficiency.
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filed a notice of tax lien on Lee’s property to collect his
income-tax liabilities for the tax years 2001, 2002, and 2003.3
Lee requested an administrative hearing regarding both the
proposed levy and the filing of the notice of lien. As part of
the hearing, the IRS Office of Appeals exchanged correspondence
with Lee.4 The Office of Appeals also scheduled a telephone
conference with Lee to take place on March 6, 2008, but it is
unclear whether the telephone conference actually took place.
The Office of Appeals issued a notice of determination on April
28, 2008. The Office of Appeals determined that the levy should
be made and that the notice of lien should remain filed. The
notice of determination stated that the levy and lien actions
were in accordance with legal and procedural requirements. The
notice listed nine specific requirements that had been met. As
part of this list, the notice stated: “Assessment was made on
the applicable CDP notice periods per IRC § 6201”. The notice of
determination did not specifically state that a notice of
deficiency had been issued. The notice of determination stated
3
Also on this date, the IRS mailed a notice to Lee that it
had filed the notice of tax lien.
4
Letters between the taxpayer and the Office of Appeals can
form part of the hearing. See sec. 301.6330-1(d)(2), A-D6,
Proced. & Admin. Regs. (“A CDP hearing may, but is not required
to, consist of a face-to-face meeting, one or more written or
oral communications between an Appeals officer or employee and
the taxpayer or the taxpayer’s representative, or some
combination thereof.”).
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that during the hearing Lee had failed to raise any specific
challenges to the existence or amounts of his underlying tax
liabilities.5
Lee filed a petition with the Tax Court to challenge the
notice of determination. On January 30, 2009, the respondent
(whom we refer to as the IRS) filed a motion to remand the case.
The motion stated that during the collection-review hearing the
Office of Appeals had “determined that petitioner was not
entitled to challenge the underlying liabilities for tax years
2001, 2002, and 2003 in the CDP proceeding, because he had a
previous opportunity to contest these liabilities and had failed
to do so.”6 The motion continued: “Upon further analysis,
counsel for respondent has determined that there is insufficient
evidence contained in the administrative file for denying the
petitioner an opportunity to challenge the underlying tax
liabilities for the taxable years 2001, 2002, and 2003.” The
motion stated therefore that “The petitioner should be permitted
a conference with the Office of Appeals, with respect to which
5
The notice of determination said: “The taxpayer mentioned
in his correspondence that a person may also raise at the hearing
challenges to the existence or amount of the underlying tax
liability but he did not provide a specific request concerning
his liability.”
6
As noted earlier, the notice of determination said that Lee
had failed to specifically challenge the underlying liabilities
at the hearing. The notice did not say whether Lee had had a
previous opportunity to challenge the underlying liabilities.
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the Office of Appeals will give additional consideration to
petitioner’s challenges of his tax liabilities.” On February 2,
2009, the Tax Court granted the IRS motion for remand and ordered
that “this case is remanded to respondent’s Office of Appeals for
the purpose of conducting a face-to-face hearing to give
petitioner an opportunity to challenge his underlying tax
liabilities for 2001, 2002, and 2003.” It further ordered that
the “hearing shall take place at a reasonable and mutually agreed
upon date and time, but no later than May 4, 2009.”
After the Court issued the remand order, the Office of
Appeals assigned Lee’s collection-review case to Joseph Session
of the Sacramento Office of Appeals. It fell to Session to hold
the face-to-face hearing the Court’s remand order required. From
March 3 through May 20, 2009, Session and Lee exchanged at least
ten letters. The letters covered three basic topics.
The first topic was Session’s proposal that Lee meet with
the IRS “Compliance Division” before the face-to-face meeting
with the Office of Appeals. A meeting with the Compliance
Division was necessary, Session claimed, for the following
reason: “Appeals is not an examination function, so in order to
address the liability issue you raised in your request the
examination issues need to be developed.” Lee wrote back that he
declined to meet with the Compliance Division.
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The second topic of the correspondence was Session’s request
that Lee identify the issues he wished to raise at the hearing.
In response to this request, Lee stated that he would raise all
issues that a taxpayer could raise under section 6330. However,
Lee stated that he would not raise these issues until the face-
to-face meeting.
The third topic of the correspondence was Session’s request
for documents in advance of the face-to-face meeting. Sessions
requested that Lee fill out financial statements and file overdue
tax returns. The Office of Appeals generally requires these
documents in order to consider alternatives to collection. See,
e.g., sec. 301.6330-1(e)(1), Proced. & Admin. Regs. (“Taxpayers
will be expected to provide all relevant information requested by
Appeals, including financial statements, for its consideration of
the facts and issues involved in the hearing.”); Giamelli v.
Commissioner,
129 T.C. 107, 111-112 (2007) (“Internal Revenue
Service guidelines require a taxpayer to be current with filing
and payment requirements to qualify for an installment
agreement.”). Session also requested documents relevant to the
calculation of Lee’s tax liabilities, including those that would
substantiate deductions. Lee promised he would bring all of the
requested documents with him to the face-to-face meeting.
Lee and Session finally arranged to meet in person on May
22, 2009. When Lee arrived at the meeting, he found that Session
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was accompanied by another IRS employee that Session introduced
as a “compliance officer”.7 Lee told Session that he would not
meet with the compliance officer. They argued about this for a
while. Finally Session asked the compliance officer to leave the
room. After the compliance officer left, Lee discussed some
administrative errors that he contended the IRS had committed in
the handling of his case. Lee refused to discuss any other
issues because, he said, he was not satisfied that no
administrative errors had occurred. Then the meeting concluded.
On May 28, 2009, the Office of Appeals issued a
determination that was supplemental to the April 28, 2008
determination. In the supplemental determination the Office of
Appeals stated that the arguments that Lee had presented were
mainly procedural and legal challenges to the liabilities; that
Lee did not present any evidence to challenge the liabilities;
that Lee did not present any acceptable collection alternatives;
and that the levy and lien actions struck the proper balance
between the need for efficient tax collection and Lee’s concern
that the collection actions be no more intrusive than necessary.
The Office of Appeals concluded that the levy and lien actions
were in accordance with legal and procedural requirements. The
7
The “compliance officer” was likely a revenue agent--an IRS
employee who examines tax returns. There is no evidence in the
record that the “compliance officer” who attended the meeting was
the same revenue agent who had conducted the audit of Lee that
had resulted in the statutory notices of deficiency being issued
for 2001, 2002, and 2003.
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Office of Appeals did not list any specific requirements that had
been met. The Office of Appeals stated that Lee’s liabilities
had already been established by statutory notices of deficiency
and that Lee had received these notices. The levy and lien
actions were sustained in full.
OPINION
The Court generally reviews determinations of the Office of
Appeals for abuse of discretion. Goza v. Commissioner,
114 T.C.
176, 181-182 (2000). An abuse of discretion has occurred if the
determination is “arbitrary, capricious, or without sound basis
in fact or law.” Giamelli v. Commissioner,
129 T.C. 107, 111
(2007).
1. The Sufficiency of the Hearing on Remand
Lee argues that his meeting with the IRS Office of Appeals
after the remand failed to qualify as a hearing within the
meaning of section 6330 of the Internal Revenue Code, and that it
also failed to qualify as the “face-to-face” hearing required by
the Tax Court’s remand order. Lee cites two alleged defects in
the meeting. First, he argues that Session erred in attempting
to insist that Lee meet with a compliance officer on May 22,
2009. Second, he argues that Session did not allow him to raise
issues of concern.
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a. The Temporary Presence of the Compliance Officer
We first address Lee’s argument that the presence of the
compliance officer prevented him from receiving the hearing
required by the Internal Revenue Code and by the Court’s remand
order. Section 6330(a)(1) provides that the IRS may not make a
levy on the property of a taxpayer until it notifies the taxpayer
of a right to a “hearing under this section [i.e., section 6330]
before such levy is made”. If the taxpayer requests the hearing,
the “hearing shall be held by the Internal Revenue Service Office
of Appeals.” Sec. 6330(b)(1). Section 6330(b)(3) requires the
hearing to “be conducted by an officer or employee who has had no
prior involvement with respect to the unpaid tax”. Section
6330(c)(2)(A) requires that the taxpayer be allowed to “raise at
the hearing any relevant issue relating to the unpaid tax or the
proposed levy”. A similar hearing must be offered after the IRS
files a notice of lien. Sec. 6320(a)(1); (a)(3)(B); (b)(1);
(b)(3); (c). Lee contends that the presence of the “compliance
officer” in his meeting with Appeals Officer Session meant that
he did not receive a hearing with the Office of Appeals. Even
assuming that the presence of the compliance officer prevented
the meeting from qualifying as a hearing “held” and “conducted”
by the Office of Appeals, this disqualification evaporated once
Lee was left alone with Session.
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Similarly the presence of the compliance officer at the
meeting did not contravene our remand order of February 2, 2009.
In our order, we directed that “this case be remanded to
respondent’s Office of Appeals for the purpose of conducting a
face-to-face hearing”. Session met with Lee after the compliance
officer left the room. Thus Lee had a “face-to-face hearing”
with the Office of Appeals, as we directed.
b. Whether Lee Was Allowed To Raise Issues
We find that Session gave Lee ample opportunity to raise any
issues about the unpaid tax, the proposed levy, and the filing of
the lien notice. Even before the face-to-face meeting, Session
encouraged Lee to identify the issues that Lee wanted to raise.
Lee refused to describe any issues in written correspondence. He
stated that he would discuss all the issues he wanted to raise at
the face-to-face meeting. But at the face-to-face meeting Lee
refused to discuss anything other than administrative errors that
he alleged had occurred in the handling of his case. Session
then concluded the meeting. We do not believe Session erred in
his handling of the meeting or the hearing as a whole. Lee
argues that Session should have verified that no agency errors
had occurred and, once having done that, allowed Lee to raise
issues other than agency errors. The statute governing
collection-review hearings does not require such a two-stage
procedure. The statute requires the Office of Appeals to verify
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that the requirements of applicable law or administrative
procedure have been met “at the hearing”. Sec. 6330(c)(1).
Similarly, the statute provides that the taxpayer must be given
an opportunity to raise issues “at the hearing”. Sec.
6330(c)(2)(A). But the statute does not require that
verification precede the opportunity for the taxpayer to raise
issues. Because Lee raised no additional issues after being
given an opportunity to do so, Session was not wrong in
sustaining the collection actions. See Hathaway v. Commissioner,
T.C. Memo. 2004-15, slip. op. at 8 (taxpayer failed to raise
issues regarding tax liability).
2. The Determination With Respect to the Required Verifications
During a collection-review hearing, the Office of Appeals
must obtain verification from the IRS that the requirements of
any applicable law or administrative procedure have been met.
See sec. 6330(c)(1). In both its initial notice of determination
and its supplemental notice of determination on remand, the
Office of Appeals concluded that the requirements of applicable
law and administrative procedure had been met.8 In his petition,
8
In its motion to remand, the IRS stated that the
administrative record was insufficient to establish that Lee
should have been denied an opportunity to contest his tax
liabilities. We do not take this as an admission that the
administrative record did not establish that Lee had received a
notice of deficiency. See sec. 6330(c)(2)(B) (generally only
taxpayers who do not receive notices of deficiency may raise the
issue of tax liability at a collection-review hearing). Even if
the administrative record did not show that Lee had received a
(continued...)
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Lee did not identify any errors allegedly made by the Office of
Appeals in verifying that applicable legal and procedural
requirements had been met. He has therefore waived any challenge
based on such errors. See Tax Court Rule of Practice and
Procedure 331(b)(4). And although he raised agency errors with
the Office of Appeals during his hearing on remand, his posttrial
briefs did not allege any particular errors made by the Office of
Appeals in obtaining verification from the IRS that the
requirements of any applicable law or administrative procedure
had been met. See sec. 6330(c)(1). We limit our review of the
determinations of the Office of Appeals to those errors the
taxpayer identified in this Court. We therefore find that Lee
has waived any verification-related challenge he may have to the
supplemental determination of the Office of Appeals. See Med.
Practice Solutions, LLC v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2010-98,
slip. op. at 23 (taxpayer failed to renew argument that Office of
Appeals erred in failing to enter into installment agreement).
3. The Determination With Respect to Lee’s Underlying Tax
Liabilities
At collection-review hearings, the taxpayer is allowed to
challenge the amount and existence of the underlying tax
liability, but only if the taxpayer “did not receive any
8
(...continued)
notice or notices of deficiency, it still could have shown that
notices of deficiency had been issued. Thus, the IRS’s motion to
remand does not signify that the Office of Appeals failed to
verify that notices of deficiency had been issued.
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statutory notice of deficiency for such tax liability or did not
otherwise have an opportunity to dispute such tax liability.”
Sec. 6330(c)(2)(B). In its determination the Office of Appeals
must consider the underlying tax liability if the taxpayer
properly challenged it. Sec. 6330(c)(3)(B). Even though Lee
received the notices of deficiency, and even though section
6330(c)(2)(B) precludes a taxpayer who has received a notice of
deficiency from challenging the amount of tax liability at a
collection-review hearing at the Office of Appeals, the IRS moved
to remand the case to the Office of Appeals to permit Lee to
challenge his underlying tax liabilities. In the hearing
conducted after the remand, Lee did not present evidence or
argument on why he was not liable for income taxes, additions to
tax, or penalties. He therefore did not properly raise the issue
of tax liability at the hearing on remand. Section 301.6330-
1(f)(2), A-F3, Proced. & Admin. Regs., provides:
In seeking Tax Court review of a Notice of
Determination, the taxpayer can only ask the court to
consider an issue, including a challenge to the
underlying tax liability, that was properly raised in
the taxpayer’s CDP hearing. An issue is not properly
raised if the taxpayer fails to request consideration
of the issue by Appeals, or if consideration is
requested but the taxpayer fails to present to Appeals
any evidence with respect to that issue after being
given a reasonable opportunity to present such
evidence.
We are barred from reaching the issue of tax liability.9
9
We need not reach the IRS’s additional argument that
(continued...)
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All arguments not addressed here are redundant, irrelevant,
or meritless.
To reflect the foregoing,
Decision will be entered
for respondent.
9
(...continued)
because Lee had received the notices of deficiency he was barred
from challenging the tax liabilities.