TOM S. LEE, District Judge.
Plaintiff Nicholas Acoustics & Specialty Company, Inc. (Nicholas) has brought this action against the United States pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1346(a) and 26 U.S.C. § 7422 seeking a refund of overpaid federal employment taxes and abatement of assessed interest and penalties, totaling $263,108.60. The United States has answered, denying that Nicholas has overpaid its federal employment tax liabilities for the tax periods at issue, and contending, further, that the penalties associated with these liabilities are proper and not subject to abatement. This cause is presently before the court on cross-motions for summary judgment by Nicholas and the United States. Each has responded to the other's motion and the court, having considered the memoranda of authorities, together with attachments, submitted by the parties, concludes that the United States' motion is well taken and should be granted, and that Nicholas' motion should be denied.
Under the Federal Tax Employment System, employers are required to withhold federal income taxes, FICA (i.e., social security) taxes and Medicare taxes from the wages of its employees, and to remit those taxes, along with the employer's share of the FICA taxes, to the IRS, on a semi-weekly or monthly basis (unless the accumulated tax liability exceeds $100,000, in which case the deposit must be made the "first banking day after any day" in which $100,000 of liability has accrued). See 26 U.S.C. §§ 3101, 3102(a), (b), 3402, and 3403. The taxes are accounted for by the IRS through the use of Form 941 tax
In this case, it is undisputed that for each of the taxable quarters beginning with the third quarter of 1999 and continuing through the fourth quarter of 2003, Nicholas regularly remitted employment and income taxes to the IRS through the EFTPS. However, Nicholas did not file its 941 tax returns for any of these eighteen tax periods until March 11, 2004, after being directed to do so by IRS auditor Howard Adams, who had begun an audit of Nicholas in 2003. Upon examination of these delinquent returns, the IRS determined that Nicholas' returns accurately reflected the company's 941 tax liability for each of the quarters covered, as stated in a "no change" letter issued by auditor Adams in October 2004. However, in April 2006, the IRS notified Nicholas that the existing tax deposits credited to its account were insufficient to cover Nicholas' 941 tax liabilities, and that Nicholas owed an additional $106,004.19 in taxes for the fourth quarter of 1999, the second quarter of 2003, the third and fourth quarters of 2004, and the first and second quarters of 2005, together with $157,104.44 in penalties and interest, for a total of $263,108.60. On October 6, 2006, the IRS filed a Notice of Tax Lien against Nicholas for this amount. In order to get the lien released, Nicholas tendered $ 263,108.60 to the U.S. Treasury on February 8, 2007. Then, on April 17, 2007, Nicholas submitted to the IRS seven refund request forms (Forms 843) covering the referenced quarters (the "refund quarters"), purporting to seek a refund of all taxes included in its $263,108.60 payment and an abatement of the penalties and interest included in that figure.
By letter of December 31, 2007, the IRS denied the refund claims, including the claim for abatement of penalties and interest. Following the denial, Nicholas promptly filed this suit, seeking to recover the $263,108.60 it paid to the United States on February 8, 2007 to release the lien, taking the position that "based on the excess money it deposited with the Defendant during the applicable time period," there was no deficiency, and therefore, such part of the $263,108.60 paid to satisfy its alleged tax liability was an overpayment, which it is entitled to recover in full, and asserting that it is entitled, as well, to an abatement of the penalties and interest assessed against it.
The foundation of Nicholas' refund claim in this case is its position that because in many tax quarters, beginning in the third quarter of 1999, it deposited more than was due to satisfy its 941 liabilities, it consistently maintained a surplus, or credit, that should have been rolled forward to subsequent periods, so that it should never have had a deficit in any tax period. Yet, according to Nicholas, the problem arose because IRS failed to properly credit all Nicholas' remittances to its account. Specifically, Nicholas has identified thirteen remittances that it made in or for certain tax quarters which it contends the IRS failed to properly credit to its account, which, in turn, led to the IRS's concluding that Nicholas had shortfalls in other tax quarters. As to three of the remittances, Nicholas alleges that the IRS failed to
Nicholas has brought this action under the authority of 28 U.S.C. § 1346(a)(1), which grants the district courts original jurisdiction of suits against the United States to recover "any internal-revenue tax alleged to have been erroneously or illegally assessed or collected, or any penalty claimed to have been collected without authority or any sum alleged to have been excessive or in any manner wrongfully collected under the internal-revenue laws," 28 U.S.C. § 1346(a)(1); and under 26 U.S.C. § 7422(a), which qualifies the taxpayer's right to bring a refund suit, providing that before any such suit may be brought, the taxpayer must first have duly filed a claim for refund or credit with the IRS, "according to the provisions of law in that regard." 26 U.S.C. § 7422(a).
The provisions of law and regulations setting forth the requirements for a "duly filed" claim for refund include the limitations
In this action, the United States does not dispute that Nicholas filed timely claims for refunds in accordance with the requirements of § 6511(a). It contends, however, that by the time Nicholas filed refund claims, which occurred, at the earliest, when Nicholas filed its returns in May 2004, the overpayments which Nicholas had made prior to May 2001 were outside the three-year look-back period of § 6511(b)(2)(A), and hence those overpayments could not be refunded or credited to Nicholas and were therefore properly transferred to the Services' excess collections account. Consequently, contrary to Nicholas' urging, Nicholas did not maintain a credit balance to cover underpayments in other quarters. Thus, according to defendant, the IRS correctly determined that additional tax payments were due from Nicholas to satisfy its outstanding 941 tax liabilities, and that Nicholas was liable, as well, for interest, and for failure to file, failure to pay and failure to deposit penalties. It submits, moreover, that it has amply demonstrated that these liabilities existed, and that Nicholas' payment of the full $263,108.60 in April 2007 was required to satisfy these liabilities, so that no part of that $263,108.60 was an overpayment which could be refunded to Nicholas.
As is clear from the foregoing, a critical issue in this case is whether the IRS acted properly in transferring a total of $137,137.43 in deposits from Nicholas tax account to the Service's excess collections file.
The importance of the distinction between a "deposit" and a "payment" of taxes is if the remittance is determined to be a "deposit," then the taxpayer is entitled to recover it, whereas if it is a "payment," then the taxpayer can recover it only if it files a timely claim for refund. Miller v. United States, No. 99-737 T, 2000 WL 1868947, at *3 (Fed.Cl. Nov. 9, 2000) (citation omitted).
While most lower courts interpreted Rosenman as creating a facts and circumstances test for distinguishing between deposits and payments, in which the courts undertook to determine, based on all of the relevant facts and circumstances, whether the remitter intended the remittance to satisfy what he or she regarded as an existing tax liability, see Deaton, 440 F.3d at 228 (citing cases), the Fifth Circuit interpreted Rosenman as establishing a generally applicable rule that a remittance in respect of a tax cannot become a "payment" of that tax for purposes of § 6511 until the IRS assesses the tax in question.
Baral was a § 6511 case involving income tax withholding and a remittance of estimated tax under 26 U.S.C. § 6513(b)(1) and (2), which state:
The Court in Baral held that §§ 6513(b)(1) and (2) "settled the question" of whether the remittances at issue were payments for purposes of the look-back provision of § 6511(b)(2)(A), explaining as follows:
Baral, 528 U.S. at 436, 120 S.Ct. at 1009 (emphasis added). The Court continued, stating:
Id. at 436-37, 120 S.Ct. at 1009.
A number of courts, applying Baral's specific holding in the context of the "deemed paid" provisions of § 6513(b)(1) and (2), have applied § 6511 to bar refund claims for remittances deemed paid under these provisions. See, e.g., Freeman v. United States, No. Civ. A. H-05-1204, 2005 WL 3132185, at *4 (S.D.Tex. Nov. 22, 2005) (§ 6511(b)(2) barred plaintiff's claim for recovery of overpaid income taxes which § 6513(b)(2) "deemed paid" before look-back period). However, the reasoning of Baral applies with equal force to the case at bar. Indeed, it is clear from the Baral Court's opinion that the Court's holding extends beyond the specific context in which the case was decided. That is, while Baral did not purport to determine the proper treatment under § 6511 of remittances that are not governed by a "deemed paid" provision, the Court clearly held that "remittances which are governed by a `deemed paid' provision akin to § 6513" are "payments" subject to § 6511. Id. at 439 n. 2, 120 S.Ct. at 1011 n. 2 ("We need not address the proper treatment under § 6511 of remittances that, unlike withholding and estimated income tax, are not governed by a `deemed paid' provision akin to § 6513(b).").
In the case at bar, Nicholas argues that facts and circumstances attending its 941 remittances clearly show that it intended these remittances as deposits, not payments, and that the IRS, in fact, understood these were deposits, not payments,
Under the plain language of § 6513(c)(2), Nicholas' "federal tax deposits" of FICA and withheld income tax were subject to this "deemed paid" provision and hence under Baral were "payments" as a matter of law for purposes of the limitations provisions of § 6511. See Williams-Russell v. United States, No. Civ. A. 1:02-CV-10-GET, 2003 WL 22073187, *2 (N.D.Ga. July 21, 2003) (denying claim for refund of employment taxes "deemed paid" on April 15, 1992 since by the time the plaintiff filed the claim for refund on January 27, 2000, the statute of limitations in § 6511(a) had expired on all the claims); see also Sugro, Inc. v. U.S., 57 F.3d 1081, 1995 WL 365666, at *2 (10th Cir.1005) (unpublished table decision)(pre-Baral case holding that "[f]or statute of limitations purposes, an amount withheld and remitted is deemed paid on April 15 of the year following the close of the tax year[,] 26 U.S.C. 6513(c)(2)," so that, as a matter of law, a claim for refund of remittance of withheld employment taxes more than three years after date such taxes were "deemed paid" was untimely, regardless of the taxpayer's claimed intent that such remittance be treated only as a deposit); In re Dunhill Medical, Inc., Bankr.No. 92-37700, 1996 WL 354696, at *7, and n. 4 (Bkrtcy.D.N.J. Mar. 27, 1996) (pre-Baral case applying provisions of § 6511(b) to determine whether refund claim was timely after noting that under § 6513(c), a return or a payment of social security taxes and income tax withholding filed or paid before April 15 of the succeeding calendar year, is considered filed or paid on April 15 of such succeeding calendar year).
Nicholas argues, alternatively, that even if the court concludes its 941 remittances were tax "payments," so that the limitations periods of § 6511 apply, § 6511 still does not operate as a bar to its recovery in this case since the refund it seeks is of the
Webb v. U.S., 66 F.3d 691, 704-705 (4th Cir.1995). See also Lorusso v. United States, Civ. A. No. 94-11713-NG, 1996 WL
Because Nicholas did file a return in May 2004, the look-back period under § 6511(b)(2)(A) was three years. However, the taxes remitted in taxable quarters of 1999 and 2000 were paid, or "deemed paid," on and before. April 15, 2000 and April 15, 2001, respectively, both of which dates are more than three years before the returns were filed. Accordingly, by the time the returns were filed, the statute of limitations for recovery of payments for those quarters had already run, and any claim for refund of those payments was barred by the limitations period in § 6511(b)(2)(A). See Alternative Entertainment Enters., Inc. v. United States, No. 06-2596, 277 Fed.Appx. 590, 593-94 (6th Cir.2008) (rejecting refund claim where return and refund claim were filed in April 2004, since estimated taxes allegedly overpaid were deemed paid September 15, 1999 and September 15, 2000, respectively, and hence did not fall within the look-back period, so that "the `ceiling' on AEE's refund for each year [was] zero"); Heichel v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, Nos. 13504-05L, 13505-05L, 13534-05L, 2008 WL 5330808, at *1 (U.S.Tax Ct. Dec. 22, 2008) (since overpayments were received by IRS before May 1, 2001, then at the time plaintiff taxpayers filed their tax returns on May 17, 2004, refunds were already barred by the period of limitations under § 6511(b)(2)); cf. Huskins v. United States, 75 Fed.Cl. 659 (Fed. C1.2007) (explaining that if Estate's remittance on May 5, 2000 was a "payment," then latest possible date Estate could have filed a claim and received a refund for overpayment was May 5, 2003, so that Estate would not be able to recover overpayment based on return and claim filed November 12, 2004); Ciccotelli v. United States, Civ. A. No. 08-1886, 2009 WL 929106 (E.D.Pa. Apr. 2, 2009) (explaining that "[i]f plaintiffs' $50,000 remittance (on January 17, 2001) is considered a `payment,' they must forfeit the funds because their tax return for 2000 was filed on August 1, 2005-nine months after the statute of limitations expired on October 15, 2004 (three years plus six-month extension after date taxes "deemed paid"))."
However, Nicholas argues that the overpayment it is seeking to recover is the $263,108.60 it paid in April 2007 for alleged outstanding liabilities, penalties and interest for the fourth quarter of 1999, the second quarter of 2003, the third and fourth quarters of 2004, and the first and second quarters of 2005. Obviously, Nicholas' refund claim for this payment, filed in April 2007, was timely under both § 6511(a) and 6511(b), since it was filed within three years of the date of its returns and within three years of the date of Nicholas' $263,108.60 payment. However, the United States has not denied that Nicholas' claims for refund of this payment
As a matter of law, overpayments which are made, or deemed made, outside the limitations period of § 6511 cannot be refunded or credited to the taxpayer. See 26 U.S.C. § 6402(a) ("In the case of any overpayment, the Secretary, within the applicable period of limitations, may credit the amount of such overpayment, including any interest allowed thereon, against any liability in respect of an internal revenue tax on the part of the person who made the overpayment and shall, subject to subsections (c), (d), (e), and (f), refund any balance to such person.") (emphasis added); 26 U.S.C. § 6514(a)(1) ("A refund of any portion of an internal revenue tax shall be considered erroneous and a credit of any such portion shall be considered void . . . [i]f made after the expiration of the period of limitation for filing claim therefor, unless within such period claim was filed."). Payments which cannot be refunded or credited to the taxpayer because they were made outside the limitations period are routinely transferred to an "excess collections" file or account. See, e.g., Heichel, 2008 WL 5330808, at *1 (observing that overpayments for which refund or credit was not allowable under § 6511 period of limitations were transferred to an excess collections account); Ciccotelli, 2009 WL 929106, at *2 (observing that IRS transferred funds to excess collections account to which "funds are transferred if the Service no longer credits those funds to a certain tax year"); Lorusso, 1996 WL 512319 (excess taxes paid more than four years prior to filing of return which were therefore barred by § 6511(b)(2) statute of limitations were not recoverable by taxpayer and thus posted to "excesscollections account"). That is precisely what occurred here. Specifically, as explained by IRS Lead Examiner Annie McDonald, after receiving Nicholas' eighteen Forms 941 in May 2004, it was determined that while Nicholas' payments in a number of quarters covered by the returns exceeded its liabilities, as shown on its Forms 941, the overpayments for some of those quarters were beyond the applicable look-back period under § 6511(b)(2)(A), and specifically, overpayments in the fourth quarter of 1999, and the second, third and fourth quarters of 2000. The IRS thus transferred the excess remittances to its excess collections file. After transferring funds to the excess collections file amounts which could not be refunded or credited to Nicholas, the IRS, consistent with its procedures, transferred other overpayments in some of the other eighteen quarters in which the applicable lookback periods remained open as of May 11, 2004, to prior or subsequent periods, thereby satisfying in part Nicholas' other tax liabilities. Once this was done, it was determined that Nicholas' existing tax deposits were insufficient to satisfy its outstanding tax liabilities, as reflected on its Forms 941.
Nicholas argues, though, that even if it might otherwise be precluded on the basis of the United States' limitation-based arguments from obtaining a refund, the court should hold the United States is precluded from challenging the company's claim for refund in light of the fact that the IRS's own agent, auditor Howard Adams, sent Nicholas a "no change" letter in October 2004, in which he reported that the examination of Nicholas' tax returns from the third quarter 1999 through the fourth quarter of 2003 had been completed, and that he had made "no changes in the tax you reported on these returns." Nicholas suggests that since its 941 returns reported not only the amount of its tax liability for the respective tax periods covered but also the amount of deposits remitted for each of these periods, then Adams' "no change" letter strongly tends to indicate that he believed that Nicholas had satisfied its filing and deposit/payment obligations for the tax periods covered by the returns. In effect, Nicholas contends that the United States should be estopped from relying on the statute of limitations in defending Nicholas' refund claim. In the court's opinion, there is no arguable merit to Nicholas' position on this issue.
In response to Nicholas' argument, the United States notes, first, that Adams was a revenue agent in the Examination Division who was only responsible for determining the amounts of the liabilities Nicholas reported on its Forms 941 were accurate; he was not responsible for determining whether those liabilities had been satisfied. Indeed, the "no change" letter prepared by Adams, in which he indicated that the IRS had not found any inaccuracies in the amounts of the Form 941 liabilities reported on Nicholas' returns, did not address whether unpaid balances for these liabilities remained due and owing from Nicholas. The United States further argues that Nicholas cannot prove the essential elements of estoppel in any event.
A plaintiff seeking to prove estoppel against the IRS must prove affirmative misconduct by the government as well
Nicholas has contended, in the further alternative, that the court should abate $62,838.35 in penalties on the basis that reasonable cause exists for Bonnie McMillan's failure to timely file Nicholas' 941 returns from the third quarter of 1999 through the fourth quarter of 2003. The law is clear that failure to file a timely income tax return results in interest charges and additional penalties "unless it is shown that such failure is due to reasonable cause and not due to willful neglect." 26 U.S.C. § 6651(a)(1). As the Supreme Court has stated, "[t]o escape the penalty, the taxpayer bears the heavy burden of proving both (1) that the failure did not result from `willful neglect,' and (2) that the failure was `due to reasonable cause.'" United States v. Boyle, 469 U.S. 241, 245, 105 S.Ct. 687, 83 L.Ed.2d 622 (1985). According to Nicholas, during the periods in question, McMillan suffered through an unspecified personal crisis which caused her to lose focus and which substantially affected her ability to properly perform her many tasks as an employee of Nicholas, including filing the Forms 941, until May 11, 2004. In the court's opinion, Nicholas has failed to sustain its heavy burden to establish reasonable cause.
The fact that Nicholas' in-house bookkeeper experienced a personal crisis clearly does not constitute reasonable cause for Nicholas' failure to timely file its tax returns. As the United States points out, the responsibility for insuring that a tax return is timely filed and the tax is timely paid is that of the taxpayer, and the taxpayer's reliance on others to fulfill these responsibilities will not establish reasonable cause to avoid penalties based upon the taxpayer's failure to meet its responsibilities. Thus, Nicholas' reasonable cause defense fails as a matter of law. See United States v. Boyle, 469 U.S. 241, 251-52, 105 S.Ct. 687, 693, 83 L.Ed.2d 622 (1985) (stating, "[O]ne does not have to be a tax expert to know that tax returns have fixed filing dates and that taxes must be paid when they are due . . . It requires no special training or effort to ascertain a deadline and make sure that it is met. The failure to make a timely filing of a tax return is not excused by the taxpayer's reliance on an agent, and such reliance is not `reasonable cause' for a late filing. . .").
A separate judgment will be entered in accordance with Rule 58 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
4th quarter 1999 $ 61,475.62 2nd quarter 2003 $ 1,881.20 3rd quarter 2003 $ 4,294.46 3rd quarter 2004 $ 52,914.95 4th quarter 2004 $ 70,636.86 5th quarter 2005 $ 9,067.16 Total tax refund claimed: $200,270.25 Penalties/interest claimed: $ 62,838.35
However, defendant states that these specific amounts claimed by Nicholas for the respective quarters do not accurately reflect how the $263,108.60 was actually applied by the IRS to Nicholas' Form 941 liabilities for the refund quarters. Defendant has submitted the declaration of IRS Technical Services Advisor Katherine F. Young, explaining that, consistent with normal IRS practices, Nicholas' $263,108.60 payment was applied to each of the subject quarters, as follows:
Total: Tax: Interest Penalties: Other: 4th quarter 1999 $ 36,409.04 $15,257.58 $21,151.46 2nd quarter 2003 $ 1,306.39 $ 759.71 $ 249.30 $297.38 3rd quarter 2003 $ 5,442.91 $ 2,758.03 $ 2,684.52 $ .36 3rd quarter 2004 $ 61,105.77 $17,531.68 $ 9,952.90 $33,621.19 4th quarter 2004 $ 84,415.22 $45,988.39 $ 9,724.45 $27,894.90 $807.48 1st quarter 2005 $ 10,000.37 $ 933.21 $ 9,067.16 2nd quarter 2005 $ 64,428.90 $24,468.51 $ 5,053.68 $34,906.71 Total $263,108.60
The United States disputes each of the facts cited in Nicholas' facts and circumstances argument, primarily on the basis that the record simply does not support Nicholas' assertions. However, the court need not address the parties' disputes as to the result a facts and circumstances analysis would yield, as the court concludes that this analysis is plainly inapplicable in this case.
See also 26 U.S.C. § 302(c)(granting Treasury Secretary authority to authorize use or government depositories "to receive any tax imposed under the internal revenue laws, in such manner, at such times, and under such conditions, as he may prescribe" and to prescribe "the manner, times, and conditions under which the receipt of such tax by such banks, trust companies, domestic building and loan associations, and credit unions is to be treated as payment of such tax to the Secretary."); 26 U.S.C. § 6656(a) (providing for penalty as percentage of the amount of "underpayment" that results from the failure to timely deposit). It is clear from the regulations that Nicholas' employment "tax deposits" are "payments" for purposes of § 6511.
In response, the United States argues that, contrary to Nicholas' position, it had the discretionary authority to treat the 941 returns as refund requests, pursuant to 26 C.F.R. § 301.6402-4, which provides that the IRS "may make credit or refund of such overpayment without awaiting examination of the completed return and without awaiting filing of a claim for refund." Because the ultimate result in this case is the same, regardless of whether Nicholas' refund claims are considered to have been filed with the IRS in May 2004 or instead, in April 2007, the court need not resolve this issue. The court would note, however, that in the circumstances of this case, Nicholas has suffered no prejudice, and indeed, has benefitted from the IRS's having treated its delinquent 941 returns as requests for refund or credit, since by its doing so, Nicholas received credits for overpayments in certain quarters in 2001, 2002 and 2003, which were within the look-back period when the returns were filed in May 2004 but which were outside the look-back period (and hence unrefundable) when Nicholas filed its refund requests in April 2007.
The United States maintains that it applied these two disputed payments to the third quarter of 1999 in accordance with Nicholas' express instructions, as evidenced by the IRS transcript for this period. The only evidence Nicholas has offered as suggesting that the payments were misapplied to the wrong quarter are its bank statements; but these are not probative evidence on the issue, since they show only the dates of the withdrawals, and do not tend to show the quarters to which Nicholas directed these payments be applied. In short, Nicholas has failed to create a triable issue of whether the IRS misapplied these payments were misapplied.
As to two other payments which Nicholas contends were misapplied—$23,642.02 and $22,180.64, which Nicholas contends it directed be applied to the fourth quarter of 2004—the evidence of record fully supports the United States' position that these payments were applied, in accordance with Nicholas' instructions—to the fourth quarter of 2003. And the evidence also confirms that a payment of $1,070.38, for which Nicholas contends it never received credit, was in fact applied to Nicholas' 941 liabilities for the second quarter of 2000, as instructed by Nicholas.