DYK, Circuit Judge.
In these consolidated tax refund cases, Cencast Services, L.P. et al. are entities that, inter alia, remit payroll and employment taxes on behalf of motion picture and television production companies. For convenience we refer to these entities in the singular as "Cencast." Cencast appeals from a final judgment of the United States Court of Federal Claims ("Claims Court") rejecting its claims for tax refunds. We hold that the scope of Cencast's liability for employment taxes under the Federal Unemployment Tax Act ("FUTA") and the Federal Insurance Contribution Act ("FICA") is determined by reference to the employees' "employment" relationships with the common law employers for which Cencast remits taxes (i.e., the production companies), and that the common law employers cannot decrease their liability by retaining entities such as Cencast to actually make the wage payments to the employees. We also hold that Cencast is barred from raising its theory that it overpaid the FUTA and FICA taxes because some of the individuals classified as employees were independent contractors. We affirm.
The evolution of the motion picture and television industries over the past century has resulted in this tax case concerning FUTA and FICA tax liability. In the early part of the twentieth century, motion picture productions were primarily controlled by large, major motion picture and television studios, and production workers enjoyed long-term, continuous employment relationships with those studios. These studios paid wages to these employees, and, as the common law employers of these workers, were liable for employment taxes on those wages, and remitted those taxes directly to the Internal Revenue Service ("IRS").
Since the late 1970s, however, many smaller production companies have emerged and have created movies and television programs independently from the large studios. As a result of this trend, many production workers are now employed by several different production companies during the course of a year, rather than by a single large production studio. Thus, in any given year, a given production worker might earn wages from several production companies, all of whom (being common law employers) would be individually liable for employment taxes on those wages. The complex web of production companies and production workers that evolved made administration of payroll, benefits, collective bargaining agreements, and taxes increasingly difficult.
Entities like Cencast, which are also known as payroll service companies ("Service Companies"), emerged to address these problems. Over the last twenty-five years, virtually all independent production companies have contracted with Service Companies for payroll and related services. Cencast and other Service Companies compute and pay compensation to production workers, report and pay compensation to multi-employer pension and benefit funds, provide post-production financial reporting, and pay employment taxes to the IRS.
Around the time that Service Companies such as Cencast began to emerge, the Supreme Court decided Otte v. United States, 419 U.S. 43, 95 S.Ct. 247, 42 L.Ed.2d 212 (1974), which involved the question of whether entities who are not the common law employers (but nonetheless pay wages to the employees) are required, inter alia, to withhold the employees' portion of the FICA tax. See id. at 49-51, 95 S.Ct. 247. That question arose in the context of the payment of wages by a bankruptcy trustee on behalf of a bankrupt common law employer. See id. at 45-46, 95 S.Ct. 247. The Court held that persons who formally pay the wages of employees (called "statutory employers") are liable for the withholding of FICA taxes under I.R.C. § 3102(a), even where those persons were never in a common law employment relationship with those employees. See id. at 50-51, 95 S.Ct. 247. While Otte dealt only with the employee's portion of FICA, it is accepted that Otte applies equally to the employer's FUTA and FICA tax obligations. See Winstead v. United States, 109 F.3d 989, 991 (4th Cir.1997) (applying Otte to FUTA); In re Armadillo Corp., 561 F.2d 1382, 1386 (10th Cir.1977) (applying Otte to FUTA and to the employer's portion of FICA).
Under Otte, because Cencast and the other Service Companies pay the production workers, they are required to remit taxes imposed on employers and employees under FUTA and FICA. Only the employer's FUTA and FICA tax obligations are at issue here.
Between 1991 and 1996, Cencast paid over $7 billion in wages, on behalf of production companies, to hundreds of thousands of workers who worked on numerous different productions. Cencast also filed tax returns and remitted FUTA and FICA taxes to the federal government with respect to these employees. For the six tax years in question, Cencast remitted approximately $465 million in FUTA and FICA taxes as the employer contribution for the production worker employees.
When Cencast filed its FUTA and FICA employment tax returns, it treated each employee as being in an "employment" relationship with Cencast rather than with the production companies. This reduced the overall tax payments because of statutory caps on both FUTA and FICA taxes. Though both FUTA and FICA tax "all remuneration for employment," see I.R.C. § 3306(b) (FUTA); I.R.C. § 3121(a) (FICA), they both place caps on the wages subject to the tax. Under FUTA, each employer is only liable to pay taxes on the first $7,000 of wages paid "with respect to employment," see I.R.C. § 3306(b)(1), and under FICA, each employer is only liable to pay taxes on wages paid "with respect to employment" up to a specified FICA wage base, see I.R.C. § 3121(a)(1) (excluding from FICA's definition of wages remuneration above "the [FICA] contribution and benefit base (as determined under section 230 of the Social Security Act)"). The FICA wage base varies by year. The relevant FICA wage base for 1996, for
In 1994, the IRS began investigating Cencast's FUTA and FICA tax calculation practices. Eventually, the IRS issued Technical Advice Memorandum ("TAM") 119980-97. See IRS Tech. Adv. Mem. 119980-97, available at http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs_wd/9918056.pdf. In the TAM, the IRS explained that FUTA and FICA taxes should be calculated as though each employee were in an employment relationship with each individual production company, rather than with Cencast. Thus, the TAM concluded that Cencast could not treat itself as being in an "employment" relationship with production workers (i.e., apply a single wage cap) in calculating its tax liability for FUTA and FICA purposes. Instead, Cencast was required to apply a separate wage cap with respect to each production company that had an employment relationship with the production worker during that year. In 2001, the IRS assessed Cencast FUTA and FICA tax deficiencies for the 1991-1996 tax years totaling approximately $43.7 million for FUTA taxes and $15.6 million for FICA taxes.
In November 2001, Cencast paid divisible portions of the IRS assessments totaling $637,000, representing additional tax owed with respect to some (but not all) Cencast employees for each of the 1991-1996 tax years. These payments entitled Cencast to file a claim for refund. See Flora v. United States, 362 U.S. 145, 175 n. 38, 80 S.Ct. 630, 4 L.Ed.2d 623 (1960). Cencast then filed refund claims with the IRS in April 2002 alleging, inter alia, that Cencast should be treated as the "employer" for FUTA and FICA tax purposes, and that taxes should be calculated accordingly. After Cencast requested and received a notice of claim disallowance from the IRS in May 2002, Cencast filed suit in the Claims Court, where it raised claims that largely paralleled those raised in the administrative refund claim. Because Cencast had only made a partial payment of tax, the government raised counterclaims for the remaining, unpaid balances of the IRS's assessments with respect to the employees not covered by Cencast's original refund claim. Cencast, in its answers to these counterclaims, defended on the same grounds asserted in the initial refund claim.
In December 2003, the parties first filed motions for partial summary judgment on the issue of how to compute the statutory caps for FUTA and FICA. In September 2004, the Claims Court granted the government's summary judgment motion on this issue. See Cencast Servs., L.P. v. United States ("Cencast I"), 62 Fed.Cl. 159 (2004). It agreed with the government that "the Production Companies are to be considered the [production workers'] employers for purposes of calculating FICA and FUTA taxable wage bases." Id. at 165, 184.
After this ruling, the parties discussed settlement and discovery. Then, in an August
Meanwhile, in December 2008, the IRS issued a notice of levy and seized an additional $4.3 million from a Cencast affiliate (beyond the $637,000 Cencast had already paid to the IRS). Cencast filed administrative claims for refund of this $4.3 million. Cencast then moved to amend its complaint in the Claims Court in April 2010 to include allegations regarding both Cencast's purported independent contractor overpayments, as well as allegations pertinent to its claim for refund with respect to the additionally seized funds. See Cencast II, 94 Fed.Cl. at 437-38. In January 2010, the government filed a motion in limine to exclude the independent contractor theory from the case.
In September 2010, the Claims Court ruled on both the government's motion in limine and Cencast's motion for leave to amend. See Cencast II, 94 Fed.Cl. 425. As to the government's motion in limine on Cencast's independent contractor theory, the Claims Court considered the variance doctrine, which bars taxpayers from raising new issues relating to its tax claims unless "the [new] issue raised in court `is derived from or is integral to the ground timely raised in the [initial] refund claim.'" Id. at 440 (quoting Ottawa Silica Co. v. United States, 699 F.2d 1124, 1139 n. 6 (Fed.Cir.1983)). The Claims Court held that "[t]he independent contractor theory [could not] be said to be `fairly contained within the refund claim' [originally filed in 2001] and [wa]s [therefore] barred by the variance doctrine." Cencast II, 94 Fed.Cl. at 441 (citing Blakley v. United States, 593 F.3d 1337, 1342 (Fed.Cir.2010)). The Claims Court considered and rejected Cencast's arguments that various exceptions to the variance doctrine applied, see id. at 441-47, and also held that, even if the variance doctrine had not barred the independent contractor theory, "the [c]ourt would nonetheless [have] preclude[d] [Cencast] from injecting [the theory] into the litigation at th[at] point because it simply c[ame] too late," id. at 448-49. The Claims Court denied Cencast's motion to amend its complaint "to the extent that it s[ought] to add a claim for refund ... based on the independent contractor theory," but allowed the motion in other respects. Id. at 450-53. The Claims Court entered an agreed-upon final judgment on September 4, 2012.
Cencast timely appealed. We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1295(a)(3). The relevant facts are undisputed. "We review the Claims Court's legal determinations de novo." Haddon Housing Assocs., Ltd. P'ship v. United States, 711 F.3d 1330, 1337 (Fed.Cir.2013).
We first consider whether the Claims Court erroneously held that, for
We begin with FUTA. Section 3301 of the Internal Revenue Code imposes a tax "on every employer (as defined in section 3306(a)) ... equal to [a percentage] of the total wages (as defined in section 3306(b)) paid by him during the calendar year (or portion of the calendar year) with respect to employment (as defined in section 3306(c))." I.R.C. § 3301. It is established that both the common law employer and the statutory employer (Service Company) are employers within the meaning of Section 3301. See I.R.C. § 3306(a).
The definition of taxable "wages" for FUTA purposes in § 3306(b)(1), referring to the wage cap, excludes:
Id. § 3306(b)(1) (emphasis added). In other words, the wage cap is "equal to $7,000 [paid] with respect to employment." Id. It is therefore "employment," not "employer," that is the relevant term for the wage cap amount.
There can also be no doubt that "employment" under § 3306(b)(1) must refer to the common law employment relationship. The statute defines "employment"
Moreover, as the Ninth Circuit noted in Blue Lake Rancheria v. United States, 653 F.3d 1112, 1118 (9th Cir.2011), "it is the common-law employment relationship that triggers the FUTA tax." Blue Lake reiterated that Otte and its progeny "merely hold that a statutory employer has responsibility for reporting and remitting [FUTA and FICA] taxes; these cases do not change the fact that FUTA liability arises out of the common-law employment relationship." Id.
Under Cencast's theory, moreover, the statutory employer's tax liability is less than the aggregate liability of the production companies if they had paid the employees directly. Nothing in § 3306(b)(1) suggests that Congress intended that common law employers be given the option to choose a different wage cap (and effectively reduce the amount of their tax liability) depending on whether they chose to administer payroll themselves or to delegate that responsibility to another entity. Rather, Congress intended the wage cap calculation amount to be the same whether the Service Company or the production company paid the wages to the employees. Neither Otte nor the Court of Appeals cases following Otte in any way suggest that common law employers could reduce their tax liability by contracting with Service Companies to pay wages and remit taxes. Accordingly, the FUTA wage cap provision, when referring to the relevant "employments" for purposes of calculating the wage cap, must refer to common law employment relationships.
A similar issue arises with respect to FICA. FICA imposes taxes "on every employer... with respect to having individuals in his employ[ ] equal to [a] percentage[ ] of the wages (as defined in section 3121(a)) paid by him with respect to employment (as defined in section 3121(b))." I.R.C. § 3111(a). Moreover, the wage cap provision of FICA, defining the "wages" to be taxed under FICA, has an identical structure to the corresponding FUTA provision. It excludes from the wages taxed under FICA
I.R.C. § 3121(a)(1) (emphasis added). As with FUTA, Cencast argues that the "employer" used in calculating the FICA wage base should be the employer that pays the wages (here, the statutory employer), and the government argues that the common law employer should be treated as the employer. But again, even assuming that Cencast is the "employer" that has paid the "wages" or "remuneration," the computation of the wage cap is made with respect to common law "employment."
Again, the relevant term is "employment." The emphasis in FICA, as in FUTA, is on capping taxable wages paid "with respect to employment." Id. (emphasis added). Employment, as in FUTA, is defined in FICA as "any service, of whatever nature, performed ... by an employee for the person employing him," id. § 3121(b) (emphasis added), again suggesting a common law relationship. As in FUTA, FICA defines "employee" as "any individual who, under the usual common law rules applicable in determining the employer-employee relationship, has the status of an employee." Id. § 3121(d)(2) (emphasis added). Therefore, it is clear that the FICA statute refers to common law employment when it refers to the "employment" with respect to which FICA wages are capped. As with FUTA, it would not make sense to have a wage cap definition that varies depending on the entity that paid the wages to the employees,
Cencast argues that we cannot interpret the FUTA and FICA provisions such that "employer" has different meanings under the liability (§§ 3301 and 3111) and wage cap (§§ 3306(b)(1) and 3121(a)(1)) provisions. However, because calculation of the wage cap amount rests on the definition of "employment," rather than on the definition of "employer," we do not adopt inconsistent interpretations of the term "employer." For purposes of this case, we assume that both the liability and wage cap provisions refer to the "employer" who is responsible for withholding, calculating, and reporting taxes. But the cap is not calculated by treating the "employee" as having "employment" with the statutory employer but instead as having employment with the various entities that have entered into common law employment relationships with them.
Finally, Cencast appears to argue that the FUTA and FICA provisions should be given the same construction as the income tax withholding provisions of § 3401 of the Internal Revenue Code at issue in Otte, and that those provisions apply only to the statutory employer. Section 3401(d)(1) defines "employer" as the entity "having control of the payment of ... wages" (here Cencast). I.R.C. § 3401(d)(1). But this definition does not apply "for purposes of subsection [3401](a)," which defines the "wages" subject to withholding. See id. Section 3401(d) makes clear that the wage computation of § 3401(a) — the equivalent of the wage caps here — does not refer to the wages paid by the entity that "control[s]... the payment of ... wages," see § 3401(d), but rather to wages earned "for services performed by an employee for his employer," (i.e., common law employment). Id. § 3401(a). If § 3401(a) is viewed as similar to the wage cap provisions in FUTA and FICA, it supports our interpretation of those provisions.
Ultimately, as discussed above, the wage cap provisions under FUTA and FICA would make no sense if the wage caps were applied to the statutorily defined employment relationships, and not the common law employment relationships, because that would allow common law employers to reduce their tax liabilities by retaining entities like Cencast. This is a result Congress could not have intended.
The second issue on appeal is the independent contractor issue, namely, whether Cencast can include in its refund suit a claim for taxes erroneously paid with respect to independent contractors. This claim was neither submitted to the IRS with Cencast's original refund claim nor originally asserted in the refund suit in 2003 nor asserted in Cencast's response to the government's counterclaims.
Cencast argues that it erroneously designated some production workers as "employees," (rather than as independent contractors) and that this resulted in an overpayment of tax. Cencast seeks to amend its pleadings to claim a tax refund on this theory. The government argues that Cencast's attempt to amend its pleadings to include the independent contractor theory in 2010 is barred. We agree with the Claims Court that Cencast's independent contractor theory is barred. See Cencast II, 94 Fed.Cl. at 438-49. We address Cencast's several arguments in turn.
Cencast argues that, under Court of Federal Claims Rule 15(a),
Though Rule 15(a), like the corresponding Federal Rule of Civil Procedure, is construed liberally to allow amended pleadings, and leave is to be "freely give[n]... when justice so requires," such amendments are not allowed where they result in undue delay or prejudice. See Ct. Fed. Cl. R. 15(a); Zenith Radio Corp. v. Hazeltine Research, Inc., 401 U.S. 321, 330-31, 91 S.Ct. 795, 28 L.Ed.2d 77 (1971) ("[I]n deciding whether to permit ... an amendment, the trial court [i]s required to take into account any prejudice that [the nonmovant] would have suffered as a result...."); Foman v. Davis, 371 U.S. 178, 182, 83 S.Ct. 227, 9 L.Ed.2d 222 (1962) (citing "undue delay" and "undue prejudice to the opposing party" as reasons to deny leave to amend). Here, the Claims Court found that both undue delay and prejudice would result from Cencast's proposed amendments relating to the independent contractor theory.
Not only did Cencast's original complaint not reference the independent contractor issue, the government and Cencast had entered into a stipulation meant to define and narrow the relevant issues in the case as late as 2008. This stipulation did not mention the independent contractor theory. We agree that the amended pleading, coming two years later, would have been prejudicial to the government.
Cencast's unreasonable delay after it became aware of the independent contractor issue — also emphasized by the Claims Court — only underscores the evident prejudice here. See Cencast II, 94 Fed.Cl. at 449 (noting that Cencast's attempt to amend to include the independent contractor theory "simply c[ame] too late"). Cencast was aware of its independent contractor theory as early as 1994. Nonetheless Cencast, without explanation, failed to raise the issue in a refund claim or pleading for over fifteen years. Here, Cencast could have sought leave to file its amended pleading at any point before February 23, 2007, the deadline the parties agreed to — and the court imposed — for adding new legal theories and affirmative defenses to the pleadings. This opportunity existed for nearly five years after the government brought its initial counterclaim on the entire tax assessment in 2003. Cencast's "failure to seek such leave, much less do so in a timely fashion, renders its purported [supplemental pleading] improper." Rates Tech. Inc. v. Nortel Networks Corp., 399 F.3d 1302, 1309-10 (Fed.Cir.2005). And "[d]elay alone, even without a demonstration of prejudice, has thus been sufficient grounds to deny amendment of pleadings." Te-Moak Bands of W. Shoshone Indians of Nev. v. United States, 948 F.2d 1258,
We conclude that the Claims Court did not abuse its discretion in denying Cencast's motion to amend its complaint as to the independent contractor theory. See Tamerlane, Ltd. v. United States, 550 F.3d 1135, 1147 (Fed.Cir.2008) ("`The decision to grant or deny a motion for leave to amend ... lies within the sound discretion of the trial court.'" (quoting Insituform Techs., Inc. v. CAT Contracting, Inc., 385 F.3d 1360, 1372 (Fed.Cir.2004))).
Cencast next argues that its 2009 administrative refund claim (relating to the $4.3 million levy in 2008 which resulted in the seized funds) permitted supplementation of Cencast's pleading to include the independent contractor issue. There is no dispute that Cencast raised the independent contractor theory in the 2009 administrative claim that preceded its proposed amended complaint.
Cencast's argument seems to be that, because the IRS seized the additional $4.3 million in funds in 2008, leading to a new refund claim, Cencast was entitled to file a supplemental pleading raising the independent contractor theory. Cencast relies in part on Court of Federal Claims Rule 15(d), which gives the Claims Court discretion to, "on just terms, permit a party to serve a supplemental pleading setting out any transaction, occurrence, or event that happened after the date of the pleading to be supplemented." See Ct. Fed. Cl. R. 15(d). Rule 15(d) further allows the court to "permit supplementation even though the original pleading is defective in stating a claim or defense." Id. As with Rule 15(a), the Court of Appeals "review[s] the denial of leave to supplement a complaint under [Rule 15(d)] for abuse of discretion." See Schwarz v. City of Treasure Island, 544 F.3d 1201, 1211 (11th Cir.2008) (addressing Rule 15(d) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure).
Here, following Rule 15(d), the Claims Court allowed Cencast to supplement its complaint to (1) plead factual allegations surrounding the 2008 levy of funds; (2) plead an illegal exaction claim "assert[ing] a right to ... return" of the seized funds; and (3) include the $4.3 million seized by the IRS in the relief it sought in its original refund claim (based on the legal theories originally raised). See Cencast II, 94 Fed Cl. at 451-52. These legal claims and facts resulted from the 2008 levy, and the Claims Court allowed these amendments because "[s]upplementation of pleadings should be allowed where post-commencement events are material to the action." Id. at 449 (emphasis added) (internal quotation marks omitted). However, the Claims Court did not allow Cencast to supplement its complaint to include new allegations relating to the independent contractor theory. Id. at 449-50. This ruling was entirely appropriate. In 2008, no new facts material to Cencast's independent contractor theory arose. The pertinent facts relate to the production workers' employment relationships with the production companies between 1991-1996, which remained unchanged as a result of the 2008 levy.
Moreover, Cencast's liability for the $4.3 million seized as a result of the levy had already been placed at issue in this case as a result of the government's counterclaims and as a result of Cencast's election to pay a divisible portion of the
Moreover, Congress has recognized the representative nature of a divisible refund suit, foreclosing IRS levies "with respect to any unpaid divisible tax during the pendency of any [previously-filed refund] proceeding brought ... in a proper Federal trial court" where "the decision in [a] [previously-filed] proceeding would be res judicata with respect to such unpaid tax" for the amounts not formally part of the refund suit. See id. § 6331(i)(1)(A).
Cencast finally argues that its original 2002 refund claim was sufficient to preserve the independent contractor theory. The Claims Court rejected this argument, concluding that it lacked jurisdiction over the independent contractor theory based on the so-called "substantial variance" rule. See Cencast II, 94 Fed.Cl. at 441-42. We described this rule in Computervision Corp. v. United States, 445 F.3d 1355 (Fed.Cir.2006). As we explained in Computervision, "[t]he Secretary by regulation requires that claims for refund `set forth in detail each ground upon which a credit or refund is claimed and facts sufficient to apprise the Commissioner of the
The question here, as in other cases, is "whether there [wa]s a substantial variance from a timely filed claim." See Computervision, 445 F.3d at 1364 n. 8 (citing Lockheed, 210 F.3d at 1371). There is no dispute that the independent contractor theory was not raised in Cencast's 2002 administrative refund claim. There is also no doubt that the independent contractor theory substantially varies from Cencast's original theory of the case (which was based on the wage cap issue discussed in Part I). However, Cencast argues that exceptions to the variance rule apply here.
Cencast first argues that the equitable recoupment doctrine is an exception to the variance rule that permits it to use its independent contractor theory to offset any recovery the government may receive on its counterclaims. However, where the government files a counterclaim that places the entire balance of assessed tax in issue, we agree with the Claims Court that Cencast's right to assert a setoff with respect to the government's counterclaim recovery "exists only when the Government raises a new issue that the plaintiff could not have anticipated and, therefore, could not have ... asserted as grounds for its [original] refund [claim]." Cencast II, 94 Fed.Cl. at 441. The principle underlying equitable recoupment, as articulated by the Ninth Circuit in a related context, is that "[i]t would be unfair to allow the Government to assert a new defense to a taxpayer's claim at pretrial and simultaneously to prevent the taxpayer from making appropriate responses to it, because the taxpayer had not previously anticipated the defense." Brown v. United States, 427 F.2d 57, 62 (9th Cir.1970). However, where "the government does not raise a[] [new] offset issue ..., a taxpayer could not raise any setoff." Union Pac. R.R. Co. v. United States, 389 F.2d 437, 447 (Ct.Cl. 1968).
This principle — that equitable recoupment only applies when the government raises a new taxation theory in its counterclaims — is compelled by Supreme Court cases emphasizing that the doctrine applies where the government raises new and inconsistent theories of taxation. See United States v. Dalm, 494 U.S. 596, 605 n. 5, 110 S.Ct. 1361, 108 L.Ed.2d 548 (1990) ("[W]e have emphasized that a claim of equitable recoupment will lie only where the Government has taxed a single transaction, item, or taxable event under two inconsistent theories." (emphases added)); Rothensies v. Electric Storage Battery Co., 329 U.S. 296, 300, 67 S.Ct. 271, 91 L.Ed.
Cencast next argues that the waiver doctrine saves its independent contractor theory. Under this doctrine, where "the taxpayer files a timely formal claim but fails to include the specific claim for relief [i.e., the independent contractor theory], th[at] claim may nonetheless be considered timely if the IRS considers that specific claim within the limitations period." Computervision, 445 F.3d at 1365. Under some circumstances, the IRS's consideration is viewed as resulting in a waiver. See id.; see also Goulding v. United States, 929 F.2d 329, 332 (7th Cir.1991) (noting that waiver may occur "if the IRS has sufficient knowledge of the claim and makes a determination on the merits"). "The central purpose of the waiver doctrine is to prevent IRS agents from lulling taxpayers into missing the [limitations] deadline...." Computervision, 445 F.3d at 1366 (alterations in the original) (quotation marks omitted). However, "the IRS cannot waive the requirements of its regulations by conduct outside of the limitations period." Id. at 1367.
Here, with respect to Cencast's 2002 administrative claim, the relevant limitations period expired in 2004. See I.R.C. § 6511(a) (noting that the statute of limitations for a refund claim expires at the later of two years from the date the tax is paid or three years from the date the return is filed). Thus, the IRS's consideration must have occurred no later than 2004 for this exception to apply. Cencast argues that the IRS considered the independent contractor issue during the investigative proceedings that preceded its 2001 assessment, but this argument is without merit. While Cencast, during the administrative investigation, alerted the IRS that there were questions as to the independent contractor status and possibility of refund claims with respect to those employees, Cencast did not suggest that the independent contractor theory was a current issue, but merely that it was an issue that could be raised in the future. Cencast's submissions to the IRS during its investigation specifically stated that "the issue in the case at hand is not whether the workers are employees or independent contractors. [The taxpayer] has always treated the [production workers] as employees." J.A. 5488 (emphasis added). At the conclusion of the investigation, the IRS merely "accepted the determination that was made by the production companies and [Cencast]" that the production workers were common law employees. J.A. 10,775.
Here, it is clear that, before the expiration of the limitations period, the IRS neither "consider[ed]" nor made a "determination of the merits" as to the scope or nature of any independent contractor overpayment. See Computervision, 445 F.3d at 1365; Goulding, 929 F.2d at 332.
It is also clear that the IRS's actions here did not prevent Cencast from raising a timely administrative claim or lull it into missing a limitations deadline. See Computervision,
We agree with the Claims Court that, "[b]ecause [Cencast] did not assert the independent contractor status of [the] workers as a basis of [its] claim for refund and the answer to that question was not implicitly included in the agency's audit investigation,"
There is no exception to the substantial variance doctrine here that would permit Cencast to raise its independent contractor theory at this late date.
Because we conclude that Cencast has not shown its entitlement to a tax refund, we affirm the judgment of the Claims Court.
Costs to the United States.
See Field Collecting Procedures, Third-Party Payer Arrangements for Employment Taxes, IRM 5.1.24.3.2.2 (Aug. 15, 2012), available at http://www.irs.gov/irm/part5/irm_05-001-024r.html.