Filed: May 18, 2000
Latest Update: Mar. 03, 2020
Summary: 114 T.C. No. 24 UNITED STATES TAX COURT THOMAS CORSON AND JUDITH CORSON, Petitioners v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent Docket No. 27181-85. Filed May 18, 2000. Ps T and J filed a joint Federal income tax return for the taxable year 1981, and R issued a notice of deficiency for taxes, additions to tax, and interest related thereto. Ps filed a joint petition for redetermination with this Court, and J later amended the petition to assert a claim for innocent spouse relief. Subsequentl
Summary: 114 T.C. No. 24 UNITED STATES TAX COURT THOMAS CORSON AND JUDITH CORSON, Petitioners v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent Docket No. 27181-85. Filed May 18, 2000. Ps T and J filed a joint Federal income tax return for the taxable year 1981, and R issued a notice of deficiency for taxes, additions to tax, and interest related thereto. Ps filed a joint petition for redetermination with this Court, and J later amended the petition to assert a claim for innocent spouse relief. Subsequently..
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114 T.C. No. 24
UNITED STATES TAX COURT
THOMAS CORSON AND JUDITH CORSON, Petitioners v.
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
Docket No. 27181-85. Filed May 18, 2000.
Ps T and J filed a joint Federal income tax return
for the taxable year 1981, and R issued a notice of
deficiency for taxes, additions to tax, and interest
related thereto. Ps filed a joint petition for
redetermination with this Court, and J later amended
the petition to assert a claim for innocent spouse
relief. Subsequently, J and R entered into a
stipulation in which J conceded liability for the
deficiencies determined by R but preserved her right to
pursue innocent spouse relief. T and R then signed a
similar stipulation settling all issues pertaining to
T’s tax liabilities for the 1981 year. At a later
date, J and R also executed a stipulated settlement
granting J complete relief from joint and several
liability pursuant to sec. 6015(c), I.R.C. When T
thereafter refused to sign a stipulated decision based
on these agreements, R filed a motion for entry of
decision. T contends that provisions of the Internal
Revenue Service Restructuring and Reform Act of 1998,
Pub. L. 105-206, sec. 3201, 112 Stat. 685, 734, confer
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upon him, as the nonelecting spouse, a right to
litigate in challenge of a decision by R to grant
relief under sec. 6015, I.R.C., to the electing spouse.
Held: T, the nonelecting spouse, should be
afforded an opportunity to litigate the decision by R
to grant relief from joint and several liability to J,
the electing spouse.
Held, further, respondent’s motion for entry of
decision will be denied.
Stephen Benda, for petitioner Thomas Corson.
Arthur A. Oshiro, for petitioner Judith Corson.
Robert H. Schorman, Jr., for respondent.
OPINION
NIMS, Judge: This matter is before the Court on
respondent’s motion for entry of decision. Broadly stated, the
issue to be resolved is whether objection by petitioner Thomas
Corson to respondent’s settlement with petitioner Judith Corson,
granting her relief under section 6015(c) from joint and several
liability, provides sufficient basis for the Court to deny
respondent’s motion for entry of decision. As more narrowly
framed by the contentions of the parties, the question raised is
whether provisions of the Internal Revenue Service Restructuring
and Reform Act of 1998 (Restructuring Act), Pub. L. 105-206, sec.
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3201, 112 Stat. 685, 734, confer upon the spouse not seeking
relief from joint and several liability rights that make such a
denial appropriate.
Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to
sections of the Internal Revenue Code in effect for the relevant
years, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of
Practice and Procedure.
Background
Thomas and Judith Corson filed a joint Federal income tax
return for their 1981 taxable year. (For convenience, Thomas
Corson and Judith Corson will hereinafter be referred to
collectively as petitioners and individually as Thomas and
Judith, respectively.) Petitioners subsequently separated in
1983 and divorced in 1984. A joint notice of deficiency was
issued by respondent to petitioners on April 12, 1985,
determining a tax deficiency of $21,711 and additions to tax
pursuant to section 6653(a)(1) and (2). Respondent further
determined that the deficiency constituted a substantial
underpayment attributable to tax motivated transactions, thus
rendering applicable the provisions for increased interest under
section 6621(d). The $21,711 deficiency resulted largely from
disallowance of losses relating to petitioners’ investments in
one of a group of tax shelter limited partnerships. In July of
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1985, petitioners filed with this Court a joint petition
contesting the notice of deficiency. Both at that time resided
in the State of California.
A test case involving the group of tax shelter partnerships
was thereafter litigated, and investment losses were held to be
nondeductible. See Krause v. Commissioner,
99 T.C. 132 (1992),
affd. sub nom. Hildebrand v. Commissioner,
28 F.3d 1024 (10th
Cir. 1994). Following this decision and based on its results,
settlement negotiations were initiated with parties in related
suits.
On June 11, 1996, Judith, now represented by separate
counsel, filed a motion to amend the 1985 petition to assert her
entitlement to innocent spouse relief under former section
6013(e). The motion was served on attorneys for respondent and
for Thomas, and neither raised an objection. The Court granted
Judith’s motion and filed the amendment on June 18, 1996.
Then, in November of 1996, Judith and respondent entered
into a stipulation resolving all issues with respect to Judith
except that of innocent spouse relief. The settlement stated
that, without considering the innocent spouse provisions of
section 6013(e), an income tax deficiency of $21,711 was due from
Judith for the 1981 taxable year, with increased interest under
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section 6621(c) (formerly section 6621(d)), but she was not
liable for additions to tax under section 6653(a)(1) or (2).
In early 1998, respondent’s Appeals Office began
consideration of Judith’s claim for innocent spouse relief. A
letter to Judith dated July 8, 1998, communicated, in part, the
following:
This letter is to inform you that all the facts
and circumstances that serve as the basis for your
claim for IRC 6013(e) “Innocent Spouse” relief were
carefully considered. In addition, this office served
notice of the claim on Thomas Corson, and requested
that he furnish any information relevant to a
determination as to whether or not such relief would be
appropriate. In response, Mr. Corson has furnished
information that must be given due consideration in
this matter.
The Appeals officer then concluded: “It would be my
recommendation that the requirements of the law are not met and
that Innocent Spouse relief could not be approved.”
On July 22, 1998, the Restructuring Act was enacted. The
statute, among other things, revised and expanded the relief
available to spouses filing joint returns, and Judith’s attorney
informed the Appeals officer that Judith elected to have the
newly promulgated section 6015(c) applied for purposes of
resolving her still-pending claim for relief.
Then, in November of 1998, Thomas and respondent entered
into a stipulation settling all issues with respect to Thomas.
Like the earlier settlement with Judith, this stipulation
reflected that an income tax deficiency of $21,711 was due from
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Thomas for the 1981 taxable year, with increased interest under
section 6621(c), but that he was not liable for additions to tax
under section 6653(a)(1) or (2).
Also in late 1998, respondent’s Appeals Office denied
Judith’s request for complete relief from joint and several
liability, and the case was released to the jurisdiction of the
Internal Revenue Service District Counsel. The matter was
thereafter calendared for trial beginning on May 17, 1999, in Los
Angeles, California. Prior to the scheduled court appearance,
Judith and respondent entered into a stipulation of settlement
agreeing that Judith qualified for relief under section 6015(c)
and was not liable for any deficiencies, additions to tax, or
interest in connection with the 1981 taxable year. When Thomas
subsequently refused to sign a stipulated decision based on this
agreement with Judith and his own previous settlement, respondent
on June 7, 1999, filed the motion for entry of decision that is
the subject of the instant controversy.
Discussion
I. Statutory Provisions and Case Law
As a general rule, section 6013(d)(3) provides that “if a
joint return is made, the tax shall be computed on the aggregate
income and the liability with respect to the tax shall be joint
and several.” An exception to such joint and several liability
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exists, however, for spouses able to satisfy the statutory
requirements for what has traditionally been termed “innocent
spouse” relief.
A. Prior Innocent Spouse Law
Prior to the enactment of the Restructuring Act, section
6013(e) governed the granting or denial of claims for innocent
spouse relief. Section 6013(e) read in part as follows:
SEC. 6013(e). Spouse Relieved of Liability in
Certain Cases.--
(1) In general.--Under regulations prescribed
by the Secretary, if--
(A) a joint return has been made under
this section for a taxable year,
(B) on such return there is a
substantial understatement of tax
attributable to grossly erroneous items of
one spouse,
(C) the other spouse establishes that in
signing the return he or she did not know,
and had no reason to know, that there was
such substantial understatement, and
(D) taking into account all the facts
and circumstances, it is inequitable to hold
the other spouse liable for the deficiency in
tax for such taxable year attributable to
such substantial understatement,
then the other spouse shall be relieved of
liability for tax (including interest, penalties,
and other amounts) for such taxable year to the
extent such liability is attributable to such
substantial understatement.
The section then went on to impose an additional requirement that
the understatement exceed a specified percentage of the innocent
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spouse’s income in order for relief to be available. See sec.
6013(e)(4). Section 6013(e) did not, however, set forth any
particular procedures to be followed in seeking relief or any
explicit guidelines regarding the availability of judicial
review.
Taxpayers desiring to claim entitlement to the relief
afforded by section 6013(e) typically did so by asserting
innocent spouse status either in their initial petition to this
Court for redetermination of a deficiency or in an amendment to
such a petition. See Garvey v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1993-
354; Himmelwright v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1988-114. The
issue would then be settled prior to trial or would remain a
contested question for judicial resolution. See Garvey v.
Commissioner, supra; Himmelwright v.
Commissioner, supra. If the
tax liability had been paid before the mailing of a deficiency
notice and section 6013(e) was invoked as the basis for a refund,
this Court would have no jurisdiction over the issue, and the
matter would generally be decided in U.S. District Court. Cf.
sec. 6213(b)(4).
Against this statutory and procedural background, the
question of whether one spouse had a right to challenge by
litigation the Commissioner’s decision to grant relief to the
other spouse was answered in the negative. See Estate of Ravetti
v. United States,
37 F.3d 1393, 1395-1396 (9th Cir. 1994); Garvey
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v.
Commissioner, supra; Himmelwright v.
Commissioner, supra. For
example, in Garvey v.
Commissioner, supra, this Court was faced
with a controversy having a procedural posture nearly identical
to that of the instant case. The Court declined, however, to
interfere with the parties’ settlement negotiations and granted
the Commissioner’s motion for entry of decision. See
id.
In deciding Garvey v.
Commissioner, supra, the Court also
relied on the earlier opinion issued in Himmelwright v.
Commissioner, supra. In that case, Mr. Himmelwright likewise
objected to the Commissioner’s motion for entry of decision
following his own settlement with the Commissioner and a
settlement between the Commissioner and Ms. Himmelwright granting
her relief under section 6013(e). See
id. Mr. Himmelwright
argued that he settled believing his wife would share the tax
burden, but the Court, observing that his agreement was not
contingent upon resolution of Ms. Himmelwright’s claim, saw no
reason to reject the Commissioner’s concession. See
id.
A similar viewpoint was taken by the Court of Appeals for
the Ninth Circuit, to which appeal in the instant case would
normally lie. See Estate of Ravetti v. United States, supra at
1395-1396. In Estate of Ravetti v. United States, supra at 1395,
the Court of Appeals noted the basic proposition that “A taxpayer
generally has no standing to challenge the tax liability
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determination of another taxpayer” and, hence, concluded that “A
taxpayer therefore lacks standing to challenge the ‘innocent
spouse’ relief granted to his or her spouse.”
Consequently, under prior law it is clear that Thomas’s
objection here would not furnish grounds for denying respondent’s
motion. We thus turn to whether changes wrought by the
Restructuring Act demand a different result.
B. Present Innocent Spouse Law
The Restructuring Act revised and expanded the relief
available to joint filers by striking subsection (e) from section
6013 and by promulgating in its place a new section 6015. See
Restructuring Act sec. 3201(a), (e)(1), 112 Stat. 734, 740.
Section 6015 was also given retroactive effect to the extent that
it was made applicable to any liability for tax arising after
July 22, 1998, and to any liability for tax arising on or before
such date but remaining unpaid as of July 22, 1998. See
Restructuring Act sec. 3201(g)(1), 112 Stat. 740.
Whereas section 6013(e) had offered only a single avenue of
relief, based on a spouse’s lack of knowledge or reason to know
of a substantial understatement, section 6015 authorizes three
types of relief. Subsection (b) provides a form of relief
available to all joint filers and similar to, but less
restrictive than, that previously afforded by section 6013(e).
Subsection (c) permits a taxpayer who has divorced or separated
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to elect to have his or her tax liability calculated as if
separate returns had been filed. Subsection (f) confers
discretion upon the Commissioner to grant equitable relief, based
on all facts and circumstances, in cases where relief is
unavailable under subsection (b) or (c).
Subsections (a), (e), and (g) of section 6015 address
general and procedural aspects relating to the operation of the
section and the role therein to be played by this Court and by
the Commissioner. Portions of these subsections relevant to the
present matter are set forth below:
SEC. 6015. RELIEF FROM JOINT AND SEVERAL LIABILITY ON
JOINT RETURN.
(a) In General.--Notwithstanding section
6013(d)(3)--
(1) an individual who has made a joint return
may elect to seek relief under the procedures
prescribed under subsection (b); and
(2) if such individual is eligible to elect
the application of subsection (c), such individual
may, in addition to any election under paragraph
(1), elect to limit such individual’s liability
for any deficiency with respect to such joint
return in the manner prescribed under subsection
(c).
Any determination under this section shall be made
without regard to community property laws.
* * * * * * *
(e) Petition for Review by Tax Court.--
(1) In general.--In the case of an individual
who elects to have subsection (b) or (c) apply--
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(A) In general.--The individual may
petition the Tax Court (and the Tax Court
shall have jurisdiction) to determine the
appropriate relief available to the
individual under this section if such
petition is filed during the 90-day period
beginning on the date on which the Secretary
mails by certified or registered mail a
notice to such individual of the Secretary’s
determination of relief available to the
individual. Notwithstanding the preceding
sentence, an individual may file such
petition at any time after the date which is
6 months after the date such election is
filed with the Secretary and before the close
of such 90-day period.
* * * * * * *
(4) Notice to other spouse.--The Tax Court
shall establish rules which provide the individual
filing a joint return but not making the election
under subsection (b) or (c) with adequate notice
and an opportunity to become a party to a
proceeding under either such subsection.
* * * * * * *
(g) Regulations.--The Secretary shall prescribe
such regulations as are necessary to carry out the
provisions of this section, including--
* * * * * * *
(2) regulations providing the opportunity for
an individual to have notice of, and an
opportunity to participate in, any administrative
proceeding with respect to an election made under
subsection (b) or (c) by the other individual
filing the joint return.
Additionally, the Restructuring Act directed the Secretary to
develop, within 180 days from the date of enactment, a form for
use by taxpayers in applying for relief under section 6015. See
Restructuring Act sec. 3201(c), 112 Stat. 740.
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To date, this Court has established Rules 320 through 325
which specify procedures relating to actions under section 6015.
Rule 325 addresses the participation of the nonelecting spouse:
paragraph (a) requires the Commissioner to serve notice of the
filing of a petition under section 6015 on the nonelecting
spouse, and paragraph (b) gives the nonelecting spouse 60 days in
which to file a notice of intervention with the Court. The
Secretary has also developed Form 8857 for the making of a
section 6015 election but has not issued any regulations pursuant
to section 6015(g)(2).
II. Contentions of the Parties
The primary basis for Thomas’ objection to respondent’s
motion for entry of decision is that section 6015(e)(4) alters
prior law and gives the nonelecting spouse a right to litigate in
this Court after a decision by the Commissioner to grant relief
under section 6015(b) or (c) to the electing spouse. Thomas
maintains that in providing the nonelecting spouse opportunity to
become a party to a proceeding under section 6015(c), section
6015(e)(4) confers upon the nonelecting spouse means to challenge
such a grant in this Court. Thomas finds in section 6015(e)(4) a
congressional intent that the nonelecting spouse become a “full
player” in the process of determining innocent spouse relief,
such that each of three parties now has rights to fully litigate
such issues. According to Thomas, a contrary view, which
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deprives the nonelecting spouse of the chance to vindicate his or
her position, renders hollow the statutorily mandated opportunity
to become a party.
Thomas further asserts that he was denied an opportunity to
meaningfully participate in the administrative process, as is
required under section 6015(g)(2). Accordingly, Thomas’
alternative position is that the Court should order
reconsideration by respondent, with additional input from Thomas,
of Judith’s entitlement to section 6015(c) relief.
Conversely, respondent and Judith contend that the
Restructuring Act does not confer upon the nonelecting spouse an
independent right to litigate or contest a grant of relief under
section 6015 to the electing spouse. Respondent first asserts
that the provisions of section 6015(e) are inapplicable in the
case of an existing judicial proceeding before the Court pursuant
to section 6213(a). Moreover, with respect to those instances
where section 6015(e) applies, respondent and Judith argue that
interpreting the section to afford to the nonelecting spouse an
independent litigation right would contravene congressional
intent to make innocent spouse relief easier to obtain. They
further maintain, because section 6015(e)(1) specifies that a
petition to the Tax Court may be filed by the electing spouse
after a determination of available relief by the Secretary (or
failure to rule), that this Court has jurisdiction under the
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section only over denials of relief, or disputes between the
Commissioner and the electing spouse regarding such relief (i.e.,
partial denials). Hence, their position is that, since the
nonelecting spouse has no right to raise the issue in this Court
if relief is granted prior to a petition by the electing spouse,
an anomalous result is created if the nonelecting spouse is
permitted to pursue litigation simply because the issue was
settled after suit was filed but before trial.
With respect to section 6015(g)(2), both respondent and
Judith aver that any right to participate afforded to Thomas
thereby was not violated. In addition, respondent maintains that
the section has no applicability to the matter at hand because
the decision to grant relief was made not in an administrative
proceeding but in settlement of a pending court proceeding.
We conclude, for the reasons explained below, that concerns
raised by promulgation of the Restructuring Act counsel us to
deny respondent’s motion for entry of decision.
III. Interpretation and Application
As indicated above, the ultimate issue in this case is
whether Thomas’ objection is a sufficient basis for denial of
respondent’s motion. In addressing this question, we must
determine what bearing, if any, the Restructuring Act has on the
right of a nonelecting spouse to litigate a grant of section 6015
relief to the electing spouse.
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Under present law, there exist at least two jurisdictional
bases upon which this Court may review a claim for relief from
joint and several liability. Such a claim may be raised as an
affirmative defense in a petition for redetermination of a
deficiency filed pursuant to section 6213(a). See Butler v.
Commissioner, 114 T.C. ___, ___ (2000) (slip op. at 18-20);
Charlton v. Commissioner, 114 T.C. ___, ___ (2000) (slip op. at
9-10). In a deficiency proceeding, we may take into account all
facts and circumstances relevant to ascertaining the correct
amount of the deficiency, including affirmative defenses. See
secs. 6213 and 6214; Butler v.
Commissioner, supra at ___ (slip
op. at 18); Woods v. Commissioner,
92 T.C. 776, 784-785 (1989);
Naftel v. Commissioner,
85 T.C. 527, 533 (1985). Innocent spouse
relief has traditionally been so characterized as an affirmative
defense, and passage of the Restructuring Act has not negated our
authority to hear it as such. See Butler v.
Commissioner, supra
at ___ (slip op. at 18-20).
Subsequent to the statute’s enactment, we held in Butler v.
Commissioner, supra at ___ (slip op. at 19-20): “our authority
to review petitioner’s affirmative defense that he or she is
entitled to innocent spouse treatment is governed by our general
jurisdiction to consider any issue which affects the deficiency
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before us.” A spouse or former spouse may therefore elect to
seek relief from joint and several liability by pleading the
issue in a petition for redetermination of a deficiency.
A second basis upon which we may exercise jurisdiction to
decide entitlement to relief from joint and several liability is
that established in section 6015(e). This provision enables an
electing spouse to petition for review of an administrative
determination regarding relief, or failure to rule, as a “stand
alone” matter independent of any deficiency proceeding. See
Fernandez v. Commissioner, 114 T.C. ___, ___ (2000) (slip op. at
7, 9).
Here, Judith’s claim for innocent spouse relief was raised
as an amendment to petitioners’ original petition for deficiency
redetermination. Although no subsequent filing was made to
substitute a claim for relief under section 6015 for the section
6013(e) claim, the parties apparently assumed that the issue was
still properly before the Court. In such circumstances, we treat
Judith’s request for relief under section 6015(c) as an amendment
to the petition, seeking our review of her entitlement under the
new statute. See Charlton v.
Commissioner, supra at ___ (slip
op. at 9-10). We thus consider her claim within the framework of
our traditional deficiency jurisdiction.
As a threshold matter, we note that “All concessions,
including stipulated settlement agreements, are subject to the
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Court’s discretionary review” and may be rejected in the
interests of justice. McGowan v. Commissioner,
67 T.C. 599, 607
(1976). We further observe that the enactment of section 6015,
including the creation of a stand alone proceeding in section
6015(e), has injected into this calculus considerations not
present when cases such as Estate of Ravetti v. United States,
37
F.3d 1393 (9th Cir. 1994), Garvey v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo.
1993-354, and Himmelwright v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1988-114,
were decided. Principally, we believe that the interests of
justice would be ill served if the rights of the nonelecting
spouse were to differ according to the procedural posture in
which the issue of relief under section 6015 is brought before
the Court. Identical issues before a single tribunal should
receive similar treatment. For this reason, we cannot summarily
dispose of the instant matter on the grounds of the above-
mentioned cases involving section 6013(e) without addressing
whether a nonelecting spouse would be afforded additional rights
in a section 6015(e) proceeding and whether to extend any such
rights to the present proceeding as well.
In the context of a stand alone proceeding, the right to
which the nonelecting spouse is entitled by the terms of section
6015(e)(4) is “an opportunity to become a party”. However,
because this statutory phrase is undefined, any conclusion
regarding what it entails must be based upon a probing of
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congressional intent. While legislative history is
unenlightening (the only statement in the conference report
accompanying the Restructuring Act which addresses the
nonelecting spouse’s role as a party before this Court discusses
a rule not enacted, see H. Conf. Rept. 105-599, at 251 (1998)),
the statutory framework surrounding section 6015(e)(4) offers
guidance.
Section 6015(e)(1) is structured so that administrative
consideration (or failure to rule) will precede any court action
when innocent spouse status is raised in a stand alone petition.
Section 6015(g)(2), in turn, contemplates an opportunity for the
nonelecting spouse to participate at the administrative level.
Section 6015(e)(4) then speaks of a similar chance for
participation should the matter move from an administrative to a
judicial forum. Hence, as a general premise, we believe that
these sections, when read together, reveal a concern on the part
of the lawmakers with fairness to the nonelecting spouse and with
providing him or her an opportunity to be heard on innocent
spouse issues. Presumably, the purpose of affording to the
nonelecting spouse an opportunity to be heard first in
administrative proceedings and then in judicial proceedings is to
ensure that innocent spouse relief is granted on the merits after
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taking into account all relevant evidence. After all, easing the
standards for obtaining relief is not equivalent to giving relief
where unwarranted.
While we do not have before us a case for determining the
precise contours of the rights granted to a nonelecting spouse
under section 6015(e), we are satisfied that section 6015(e)(4)
was intended to confer some participatory entitlement beyond the
complete absence thereof condoned in Estate of Ravetti v. United
States, supra, Garvey v.
Commissioner, supra, and Himmelwright v.
Commissioner, supra. Thus, until such rights are more explicitly
defined in appropriate cases, we will refrain from following a
rule that could lead to an anomaly in the Court’s treatment of
innocent spouse issues. We will instead effectuate the general
concern for fairness and merited relief evidenced in the statute
by permitting Thomas his day in court. We further note that our
disposition makes it unnecessary to reach Thomas’s alternative
contention.
To reflect the foregoing,
An order denying respondent’s
motion will be issued.