1968 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 192">*192 Postage meter stamp date accepted as postmark date. Petition timely filed. Respondent's motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction denied.
49 T.C. 353">*353 OPINION
The notices of deficiency in the above two related cases were mailed to petitioners at their respective addresses in Columbia, S.C., on March 10, 1967. Separate petitions for the taxpayers, both executed on June 8, 1967, were received by the Tax Court of the United States in Washington, D.C., in a single envelope a few minutes1968 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 192">*193 after 9 a.m., on Monday, June 12, 1967, and were filed by the Court on that date, which was 94 days after the date of the mailing of the notices of deficiency.
The envelope containing the two petitions bore the return address of a certified public accountant in Columbia, S.C., and it also had on it a private postage meter stamp bearing the date June 8, 1967, which was the 90th day after the date on the notices of deficiency. The postage meter stamp was not canceled by the U.S. Post Office and the envelope bore no postmark placed thereon by the U.S. Post Office.
Respondent moved to dismiss the petitions for lack of jurisdiction on the ground that the petitions were not timely filed, i.e., within 90 days after the date of mailing of the notices of deficiency. Inasmuch as the filing of a timely petition is necessary in order to confer jurisdiction on the Tax Court, an order was entered with respect to respondent's motion directing petitioners to show cause why respondent's 49 T.C. 353">*354 motion to dismiss should not be granted. The parties were given an opportunity to file documentary evidence and written arguments in support of their respective positions.
In response to the order to show1968 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 192">*194 cause petitioners filed a letter from the postmaster of the U.S. Post Office at Columbia, S.C., and an affidavit from Jack O. Wingate, an accountant in Columbia, S.C. Wingate's affidavit stated that on June 8, 1967, his staff prepared and mailed to the Tax Court of the United States a petition for his client, P. P. Leventis, Jr., and Tina P. Leventis, 1 at the U.S. Post Office, Columbia, S.C., at 11 p.m. The letter from the postmaster made reference to sections 324.362, 324.363, and 324.366 of the Postal Manual pertaining to metered mail. The substance of those provisions is that metered mail will not be postmarked by the Post Office canceling device except when the wrong date appears in the meter stamp; if the wrong date does appear on the meter stamp, the envelope will be postmarked through the Post Office canceling machine to show the correct date; and that the metered mail will be examined while being routed for distribution to determine that it is properly prepared, which examination may be made by selective check of the pieces as they are distributed. The letter goes on to state that the Post Office at Columbia, S.C., follows the above procedures, but the volume of mail processed1968 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 192">*195 would prohibit the possibility of a positive statement that any single piece of metered mail on a given day was mailed bearing a correct or incorrect date in the meter stamp.
The basic rule is that a petition, in order to be timely filed, must be received by the Court in Washington, D.C., on or before the 90th day. However,
Section 301.7502-1(c)(1)(iii)(
1968 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 192">*198 Respondent points out that the dates on private postage meter stamps can be fixed at will by the sender and hence the above requirements of the regulations must be strictly complied with; and that petitioners have failed to carry their burden of proving that a piece of mail postmarked by the U.S. Post Office at Columbia, S.C., on June 8, 1967, would not have arrived and been delivered to the Tax Court in Washington, D.C., on or before 5:15 p.m., on Friday, June 9, at which time the Tax Court offices would have been closed until Monday morning, June 12.
While petitioners have not been very helpful to the Court in deciding this question, having offered no proof of when a piece of mail mailed from Columbia, S.C., at 11 p.m., on June 8, 1967, would ordinarily arrive in Washington, D.C., and be delivered to the addressee, and having filed no written memorandum in support of their position, we are nevertheless inclined to make the Tax Court forum available to taxpayers who wish to avail themselves of it, whenever it is possible to do so under the law. Under the circumstances here present, the question whether these petitions were timely filed so as to give the Tax Court jurisdiction is1968 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 192">*199 a question of fact. The date on the postage meter stamp 49 T.C. 353">*356 was clearly June 8, 1967, the last day for filing those petitions. Under the procedures prescribed in the Post Office Manual for handling private metered mail, if the date was incorrect it should have been corrected with a U.S. Post Office postmark, which was not the case here. 3 If we accept the postage meter stamp date as being the correct postmark date, then the only question is whether the piece of mail was received by the addressee within the time a properly addressed and mailed envelope sent by the same class of mail would have been received by the Tax Court.
Of course it is possible that a piece of mail sent by ordinary mail from Columbia, S.C., at 11 p.m., on Thursday, June 8, would have arrived in Washington, D.C., in time for delivery to the Tax Court before 5:15 p.m., on the next day, Friday, June 9. Columbia1968 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 192">*200 is approximately 475 miles from Washington and the railroad service between the two cities is reasonably good. However, being realistic, we are quite doubtful that a document mailed at 11 p.m., on June 8, would have been placed on a mail train for Washington before the next morning, and, if so, it is quite unlikely that it would even have arrived in Washington before 5:15 p.m., on June 9.
It is our conclusion that the envelope containing these petitions was received by the Tax Court not later than the time when an envelope, properly addressed, mailed and postmarked by the U.S. Post Office on June 8, 1967, would ordinarily have been received by the Tax Court in Washington, D.C. We therefore recognize the date on the postage meter stamp as the postmark date and conclude that the petitions in these cases were timely filed. Respondent's motions to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction are denied, and the order to show cause previously entered herein is discharged. 4
1. No reference was made to the petition of taxpayer in docket No. 2835-67, Dixie Beverage Co. of Charleston, Inc. However both petitions, which were signed by the taxpayers, arrived in the same envelope and we will assume that Wingate's affidavit was intended to include both petitions. There is no counsel of record for either petitioner.↩
2. Sec. 301.7502-1(c)(1)(iii)(
3. We recognize, of course, that because of the bulk of mail deposited in the post office, such an error might not have been detected.↩
4. It should be noted that our conclusion here, on a question of fact, would not necessarily control a situation where the petitions were mailed by registered or certified mail, with respect to which the requirements of the law and regulations are somewhat different.↩