Filed: Mar. 29, 2004
Latest Update: Mar. 03, 2020
Summary: 122 T.C. No. 15 UNITED STATES TAX COURT ROBERT EUGENE POINDEXTER, Petitioner v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent Docket No. 14428-01L. Filed March 29, 2004. P reported tax on his 1994 and 1996 Federal income tax returns but did not remit those amounts. R assessed those amounts and demanded payment thereof. After several years of continued nonpayment, R issued to P a notice of intent to levy. P timely requested a hearing pursuant to sec. 6330, I.R.C. At the hearing, P asserted that th
Summary: 122 T.C. No. 15 UNITED STATES TAX COURT ROBERT EUGENE POINDEXTER, Petitioner v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent Docket No. 14428-01L. Filed March 29, 2004. P reported tax on his 1994 and 1996 Federal income tax returns but did not remit those amounts. R assessed those amounts and demanded payment thereof. After several years of continued nonpayment, R issued to P a notice of intent to levy. P timely requested a hearing pursuant to sec. 6330, I.R.C. At the hearing, P asserted that the..
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122 T.C. No. 15
UNITED STATES TAX COURT
ROBERT EUGENE POINDEXTER, Petitioner v.
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
Docket No. 14428-01L. Filed March 29, 2004.
P reported tax on his 1994 and 1996 Federal income
tax returns but did not remit those amounts. R
assessed those amounts and demanded payment thereof.
After several years of continued nonpayment, R issued
to P a notice of intent to levy. P timely requested a
hearing pursuant to sec. 6330, I.R.C. At the hearing,
P asserted that the amounts of tax shown on his 1994
and 1996 returns are incorrect but would not say
whether he believed his correct income to be higher or
lower than the amounts reported. R subsequently issued
to P a notice of determination upholding the proposed
collection action. P timely petitioned the Court for
review, and R moved for summary judgment.
1. Held: A taxpayer who reports an amount of tax
on his tax return is not precluded from challenging the
accuracy of that amount at a sec. 6330, I.R.C.,
hearing. Montgomery v. Commissioner,
122 T.C. 1
(2004), followed.
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2. Held, further, summary judgment is appropriate
since P has averred no facts sufficient to show error
in the taxes assessed on the basis of his 1994 and 1996
returns or otherwise with respect to the notice of
determination.
Elizabeth A. Maresca and Katherine Scovin (specially
recognized), for petitioner.
Peggy Gartenbaum, for respondent.
OPINION
HALPERN, Judge: This case is before the Court to review a
determination made by one of respondent’s Appeals officers (the
determination) that respondent may proceed to collect by levy
unpaid income taxes assessed by respondent against petitioner for
1994 and 1996 (the assessments). We review such determinations
pursuant to section 6330(d)(1).1 Petitioner has assigned error to
the determination, and, as we understand that assignment, it is
principally that, in making the determination, the Appeals
officer failed to consider the accuracy of the assessments, which
petitioner claims do not reflect his true income tax liabilities
for the years in question. Respondent denies that the Appeals
officer erred, and he moves for a summary disposition in his
favor (the motion), that the determination be sustained, on the
1
Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to
the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, and all Rule
references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.
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following grounds: (1) Since petitioner reported the unpaid
taxes on returns he made, the Appeals officer properly refused to
consider the accuracy of the assessments; (2) even if the Appeals
officer erred in refusing to consider the accuracy of the
assessments, petitioner has failed to aver facts sufficient to
show error in the assessments; and (3) petitioner has failed to
aver facts showing any other error in the determination.
Summary judgment may be granted with respect to all or any
part of the legal issues in controversy “if the pleadings,
answers to interrogatories, depositions, admissions, and any
other acceptable materials, together with affidavits, if any,
show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and
that a decision may be rendered as a matter of law.” Rule
121(b). We are satisfied that there is no genuine issue as to
any material fact and that a decision may be rendered as a matter
of law. For the reasons that follow, we shall grant the motion
on the basis of respondent’s second and third grounds and enter
an appropriate order and decision in respondent’s favor.
Background
The following facts are gathered from the pleadings, the
parties’ trial memoranda, the motion and declaration of Peggy
Gartenbaum, one of respondent’s counsel, submitted in support of
the motion, petitioner’s opposition to the motion, and other
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items constituting the record. There appears to be no
disagreement as to the following facts.
Petitioner filed his 1994 Federal income tax return (the
1994 return) on April 16, 1997, reporting tax of $2,084, no
withholding or estimated tax payments, and an estimated tax
penalty of $107. Petitioner did not remit any amount with the
1994 return. On May 19, 1997, respondent assessed the tax
liability shown on the 1994 return and issued to petitioner a
notice and demand for payment with respect thereto.
Petitioner filed his 1996 Federal income tax return (the
1996 return) on April 15, 1997, reporting tax of $66,874, no
withholding or estimated tax payments, and an estimated tax
penalty of $270. Petitioner did not remit any amount with the
1996 return. On June 2, 1997, respondent assessed the tax
liability shown on the 1996 return and issued to petitioner a
notice and demand for payment with respect thereto.
Petitioner did not make the payments demanded, and, on
January 23, 2001, respondent notified petitioner of his intent to
levy with respect to petitioner’s unpaid tax liabilities for 1994
and 1996. In response, petitioner timely submitted to respondent
Form 12153, Request for a Collection Due Process Hearing. In the
request, petitioner, a songwriter, stated his belief that the
taxes shown on the 1994 and 1996 returns (together, the returns)
are incorrect. He explained that he was in a dispute with
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certain record companies over royalties due him in connection
with songs he had written. He asked the assistance of the
Internal Revenue Service (IRS) to subpoena information from the
record companies so that he could make proper returns.2 Other
than asking for such assistance, he did not propose any
alternatives to collection.
On November 15, 2001, an Appeals officer held the hearing
petitioner had requested. At the hearing, petitioner stated that
he had filed the returns so as not to get into trouble and that
he had not paid the taxes shown because he did not believe the
amounts to be correct. He would not say whether he believed his
correct income to be higher or lower than the amounts reported.
Although the Appeals officer concluded on the basis of section
6330(c)(2)(B) that petitioner’s underlying tax liabilities were
not properly at issue, he advised petitioner that he could file
amended returns adjusting the tax shown on the returns.
Petitioner declined to do so.3
As required by section 6330(c)(1), the Appeals officer
verified that the requirements of applicable laws and
2
Both at and before the hearing petitioner requested,
petitioner was advised that the IRS had no authority to intervene
in his dispute with the record companies by subpoenaing
information from them for him.
3
Subsequently, petitioner was provided with blank Forms
1040X, Amended U.S. Individual Income Tax Return, along with the
accompanying instructions, for his use should he change his mind
(apparently, he has not done so).
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administrative procedures had been met. He also made the
determination required by section 6330(c)(3)(C) that the proposed
collection action (levy) balanced the need for efficient
collection of taxes with petitioner’s legitimate concerns that
any collection action be no more intrusive than necessary. On
December 5, 2001, a manager in the Appeals Office issued to
petitioner a Notice of Determination Concerning Collection
Action(s) Under Section 6320 and/or 6330 (i.e., the
determination), sustaining the proposed collection action.
In the petition, petitioner states his disagreement with the
assessments, claiming that they are inaccurate because of (1)
false and fraudulent information stated on the returns, (2)
errors in the assessment procedures, (3) reliance on incorrect
written advice from the IRS, (4) error and failure of the IRS in
following its own procedures and advice, (5) improper execution
of levies, and (6) erroneous and inconsistent tax information
contained in the determination.
Discussion
I. Overview of Section 6330
Section 6330 entitles a taxpayer to notice of the taxpayer’s
right to request a hearing before certain lien and levy actions
are taken by the Commissioner in furtherance of the collection
from the taxpayer of unpaid Federal taxes. If a hearing is
requested, the Appeals officer conducting the hearing must verify
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that the requirements of any applicable law or administrative
procedure have been met. Sec. 6330(c)(1). The taxpayer
requesting the hearing may raise “any relevant issue relating to
the unpaid tax or the proposed levy”. Sec. 6330(c)(2)(A). The
taxpayer may raise challenges “to the existence or amount of the
underlying tax liability”, however, only if he “did not receive
any statutory notice of deficiency for such tax liability or did
not otherwise have an opportunity to dispute such tax liability.”
Sec. 6330(c)(2)(B). Following the hearing, the Appeals officer
must determine whether the collection action is to proceed,
taking into account the verification the Appeals officer has
made, the issues raised by the taxpayer at the hearing, and
“whether any proposed collection action balances the need for the
efficient collection of taxes with the legitimate concern of the
* * * [taxpayer] that any collection action be no more intrusive
than necessary.” Sec. 6330(c)(3). We have jurisdiction to
review such determinations where we have jurisdiction of the
underlying tax liability. Sec. 6330(d)(1)(A).
II. Section 6330(c)(2)(B) Is Not Limited to Taxpayer Challenges
to Liabilities Asserted by the Commissioner That Differ in
Amount From Taxpayer-Determined Liabilities
Respondent’s first ground for summary judgment is that,
since petitioner reported the unpaid taxes on returns he made,
the Appeals officer properly refused to consider the accuracy of
the assessments. Although respondent concedes that petitioner
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neither received a statutory notice of deficiency for 1994 or
1996 nor otherwise had an opportunity to dispute his liabilities
as assessed for those years, respondent argues that section
6330(c)(2)(B) allows a taxpayer to challenge the underlying tax
liability only when the taxpayer is challenging a liability
asserted by the Commissioner that differs in amount from the
taxpayer’s self-determined liability (i.e., the amount set forth
on a return the taxpayer made). In Montgomery v. Commissioner,
122 T.C. 1 (2004), we rejected exactly that argument, and that
case governs here. We therefore reject respondent’s first ground
for summary judgment.
III. Petitioner Has Failed To Aver Facts Sufficient To Show
Error in the Assessments
Respondent’s second ground for summary judgment is that,
even if the Appeals officer erred in refusing to consider the
accuracy of the assessments, petitioner has failed to aver facts
sufficient to show error in the assessments. We have set forth
the gist of petitioner’s averments under the heading Background,
above, and we agree with respondent that petitioner has failed to
raise a justiciable issue.
Rule 331 addresses the commencement of a levy action under
section 6330(d). Such an action is commenced by the filing of a
petition, Rule 331(a), and Rule 331(b) specifies the content of
the petition. Rule 331(b)(4) and (5) requires the petition to
contain:
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(4) Clear and concise assignments of each and
every error which the petitioner alleges to have been
committed in the notice of determination. * * *
(5) Clear and concise lettered statements of the
facts on which the petitioner bases each assignment of
error.
Pursuant to section 6330(c)(2)(B), petitioner was entitled
to challenge at his Appeals Office hearing the existence or
amount of the underlying tax liabilities for 1994 and 1996 giving
rise to the assessments. If the validity of those underlying tax
liabilities is properly at issue, we review the matter de novo.
Sego v. Commissioner,
114 T.C. 604, 610 (2000). For the validity
of those underlying tax liabilities to be properly at issue,
however, petitioner must comply with Rule 331. His pleading must
contain a sufficient specificity of facts so that the Court can
conduct a meaningful hearing to determine whether respondent can
proceed with the collection of those liabilities. Petitioner’s
averments make clear that he disagrees with his income tax
liabilities as shown on the returns. However, other than
claiming that the returns contain false and fraudulent
information and may be based on incorrect written advice from the
IRS, petitioner fails to specify the basis of his disagreement;
i.e., he fails to identify the items of income, deduction, or
credit, or the computations, that are incorrect. Without such
specificity, how could respondent possibly mount a defense, and
what precisely is it that the Court is to decide?
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Apparently, the root of petitioner’s disagreement with the
returns is his dispute with certain record companies over
royalties. Petitioner has tried to involve respondent in that
dispute by asking respondent to subpoena information from the
record companies so that he could make what he believes would be
more accurate returns. Respondent claims that neither section
6330 nor any other provision of the Internal Revenue Code
authorizes the IRS to aid petitioner as he has requested and
there is no evidence that Congress intended taxpayers to use
section 6330 to redress grievances against third parties.
Respondent further claims that petitioner presented no evidence
of the proper amount of royalties due him, nor any evidence
supporting his claim that the record companies violated his
copyrights or that he even has copyrights to any songs.
Petitioner, in his opposition to the motion, does not contradict
any of those assertions.
Petitioner may well have a dispute with the record
companies, and the returns may or may not be accurate, but
petitioner has placed nothing before us regarding the underlying
liabilities that we can properly adjudicate. Like the taxpayers
in Horn v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2002-207, and Smith v.
Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2002-59, whose efforts to dispute their
“self-assessed” liabilities we rejected, petitioner was not
prepared to allege and prove the facts showing his returns were
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incorrect. See also Montgomery v. Commissioner, supra at 19
(Marvel, J., concurring). We conclude that respondent’s second
ground (together with his third ground, discussed next) justifies
summary judgment.
IV. Petitioner Has Failed To Aver Facts Showing Any Other Error
in the Determination
Although petitioner avers errors in the assessment
procedures and in other procedures, and improper execution of
levies, he sets forth no factual basis for those claims. Indeed,
respondent has yet to make any levies with respect to the
assessments. Except as we have discussed with respect to the
Appeals officer’s refusal to consider the accuracy of the
assessments, we see no error in the determination.
V. Conclusion
Petitioner has failed to put before us grounds on which we
could find that the Appeals officer erred in the determination.
On that basis, respondent is entitled to summary disposition in
his favor.
To reflect the foregoing,
An appropriate order and
decision will be entered for
respondent.