HOWARD D. McKIBBEN, District Judge.
COMES now Plaintiff Pamela O'Keefe, as Trustee of the Jordan Grace Reeder Irrevocable Trust, dated April 15, 1993 ("JGR Trust") and Defendant, United States of America ("United States"), by and through their undersigned counsel, and submit a Joint Motion to vacate the Pre-Trial Date and to order counsel to submit a Joint Status Report to this Court on or before December 23, 2016 to apprise Court of the pendency of a related proceeding.
Counsel for the parties have continued to work cooperatively to complete discovery. Fact discovery has been completed. The depositions taken in this matter were:
Expert discovery has been completed. The United States disclosed its expert, John B. Mulligan, Esq., on or about April 1, 2016. Plaintiff disclosed its rebuttal expert, Philip S. Magaram, Esq., on or about June 16, 2016. Plaintiff declined to depose Mr. Mulligan. The United States deposed Mr. Magaram on July 18, 2016.
This is a quiet title action (28 U.S.C. § 2410) commenced by Pamela O'Keefe, as Trustee for the JGR Trust. The lawsuit was prompted by the IRS's filing of Notices of Federal Tax Liens which are encumbering Nevada real property titled in the name of the JGR Trust. The IRS has asserted that the JGR Trust is the nominee, alter ego or transferee of Michael Reeder. The IRS had assessed excise taxes on wagering activity against Michael Reeder. The current balance of Mr. Reeder's liability is in excess of $5 million. In the instant quiet title suit, the parties have engaged in extensive discovery pertaining to Michael Reeder's connection and relationship with the JGR Trust and its property. In a quiet title action, the alleged nominee or alter ego lacks standing to challenge the amount of the underlying tax assessments.
Not until after the close of discovery did either party believe that Michael Reeder, not a party to the instant action, intended to challenge the amount of the underlying tax liability which had previously been determined at an IRS Appeals Office conference. On September 16, 2016, Michael Reeder paid a portion of the excise tax liability and filed a Claim for Refund with the IRS. Michael Reeder, through his counsel, has expressed his intent to file a refund action in this Court as soon as his claim for refund has been denied by the IRS. The parties are hopeful that the IRS will deny the claim for refund before the end of the year which would provide this district court with jurisdiction over a refund suit by Michael Reeder.
Although the United States believes that the tax assessments made against Michael Reeder are entirely proper and that he should be estopped from denying the amount of the liability, neither party believes it would be appropriate or judicially efficient for this Court to try an expensive and time-consuming fact-oriented quiet title action until the amount of the underlying liability has been adjudicated or determined. Any refund suit filed by Michael Reeder on his excise tax liability would certainly constitute a related action and is likely to be consolidated with the quiet title action for purposes of trial.
The parties are optimistic that by the end of this year, the IRS will have acted on Michael Reeder's Claim for Refund. The parties request that the court vacate the Joint Pretrial Order date of November 1, 2016 and Order the parties to file a Joint Status Report by December 23, 2016 apprising the Court on the status of Michael Reeder's claim for refund and Refund Suit.
IT IS SO ORDERED.