HOLMES, Judge.
The taxpayers in this case agreed to extend the statute of limitations for any income tax due on any return made by or for them "for the period(s) ended December 31, 2000." Each of the taxpayers was also a partner in a partnership that had a tax year that ended on December 19, 2000. Does an extension for individual returns for a year that ends on December 31 include any partnership items from partnerships whose tax years ended less than a month before? In
This is a Son-of-BOSS case—perhaps the last of its kind—in which the parties agree about all of the Commissioner's adjustments in the notice of final partnership administrative adjustment (FPAA).
Only some of the deal's details need be discussed. Brubaker and his colleagues—Todd Clendening and Jeffrey Rupp—each formed limited liability companies (LLCs). The LLCs, which were disregarded for federal income-tax purposes,
These tax losses were soon reported. On February 18, 2001, Inman Partners filed its initial and final Form 1065, U.S. Return of Partnership Income, for its short tax year ended December 19, 2000. Brubaker and Clendening filed their S corporations' 2000 Forms 1120S, U.S. Income Tax Return for an S Corporation, in the same month, and Rupp filed his S corporation's 2000 Form 1120S in March 2001. The S corporations all reported losses from the sale of assets that Inman Partners distributed, and those losses flowed through to Brubaker, Clendening, and Rupp. Brubaker and Clendening reported these losses on their tax returns for 2000, which they each filed jointly with their wives on April 15, 2001; Rupp reported his on a joint return that he filed with his wife in July.
The Commissioner saw something he didn't like on the returns, but IRS examinations often take a long time. So he asked the partners to sign consents to extend the statute of limitations for their tax years ending December 31, 2000. (Notice the use of a specific date here, rather than a formula like "their 2000 tax year.") The partners were in tax trouble at least in part because of the flowthrough losses from a partnership, so the Commissioner chose to use Forms 872-I, Consent to Extend the Time to Assess Tax as Well as Tax Attributable to Items of a Partnership. There was another round of extensions as the audits dragged on. Here's a summary:
All the Forms 872-I that the Commissioner secured here were the same. They all included broad language to make clear that the extensions included assessments attributable to partnership items:
These forms also included the language that the parties would later fight about: The partners and the Commissioner agreed that "[i]ncome tax due on any return(s) made by or for the * * * taxpayer(s) for the period(s) ended December 31, 2000 may be assessed at any time on or before" June 30, 2005 (for the first round) and June 30, 2006 (for the second).
The Commissioner finished his audit and issued an FPAA for Inman Partners on May 18, 2006—a little more than one month before the partners' extended statutes of limitations on assessment would expire. The Commissioner determined in the FPAA that Inman Partners was a sham, so he adjusted all partnership items to zero and asserted accuracy-related penalties for the resulting underpayments. Inman Partners' tax matters partner didn't agree and timely petitioned our Court for readjustment of partnership items.
Partnerships don't pay tax. Sec. 701. But partners in a partnership are required to include on their own tax returns their distributive shares of the partnership's income, gain, loss, deduction, or credit. Sec. 702(a). Because partnerships will sometimes have tax years that differ from those of their partners, subchapter K provides a timing rule:
Sec. 706(a) (emphasis added). Inman Partners' short tax year ended on December 19, 2000—within each of its partners' tax years, which all ended on December 31, 2000. That means that the partners had to include their distributive shares of Inman Partners' income, gain, loss, deduction, or credit for its final tax year on their 2000 tax returns. To tie this to the disputed language in the IRS forms, the partners had to use these partnership numbers to report the "income tax due" on their returns for the calendar year 2000.
The partners here did just that. The Commissioner wasn't satisfied with how they reported their incomes, however, so he made adjustments to Inman Partners' partnership items. This is where another timing issue comes up: Section 6501(a) provides the general rule that any tax deficiency "shall be assessed within 3 years after the return was filed (whether or not such return was filed on or after the date prescribed) * * * and no proceeding in court without assessment for the collection of such tax shall be begun after the expiration of such period." That statute of limitations is for the "return required to be filed by the taxpayer (and does not include a return of any person from whom the taxpayer has received an item of income, gain, loss, deduction, or credit)."
There are exceptions to section 6501(a)'s general three-year statute of limitations. Among those, a taxpayer and the Commissioner may, before the three years expires, consent in writing to extend the statute so that "tax may be assessed at any time prior to the expiration of the period agreed upon." Sec. 6501(c)(4)(A). The parties can then extend that deadline if they put it in writing before the extended statute expires.
Inman Partners filed its partnership return on February 18, 2001, but it wasn't actually due to be filed until April 15, 2001.
Let's consider the agreements' language again. In each of the Forms 872-I, the partners and the Commissioner agreed that "[i]ncome tax due on any return(s) made by or for the * * * taxpayer(s) for the period(s) ended December 31, 2000 may be assessed at any time on or before" June 30, 2005 (in the first instance) and June 30, 2006 (in the second). The Commissioner and each partner signed the first and second Forms 872-I before the statutes would have otherwise expired and those forms specifically referred to partnership and affected items.
The partners don't doubt the agreements' timeliness, but they do question their coverage of these partnership items. Recall that any agreement under section 6501(c)(4) applies for partnership and affected items "only if the agreement expressly provides that * * * [it] applies to tax attributable to partnership items." Sec. 6229(b)(3). The Forms 872-I seem to do so:
But did the agreements here apply to Inman Partners' partnership and affected items for its short tax year ended December 19, 2000?
We held that they weren't. The Form 872-I extended section 6501(a)'s deadline to assess tax against the couple "attributable to any partnership items, affected items, computational adjustments, and partnership items converted into nonpartnership items."
There is no difference between this case and