330 West Hubbard Restaurant Corp. v. United States

37 F. Supp. 2d 1050, 82 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 7298, 1998 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 18835, 1998 WL 832637
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedNovember 24, 1998
Docket98 C 178
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 37 F. Supp. 2d 1050 (330 West Hubbard Restaurant Corp. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
330 West Hubbard Restaurant Corp. v. United States, 37 F. Supp. 2d 1050, 82 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 7298, 1998 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 18835, 1998 WL 832637 (N.D. Ill. 1998).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

ASPEN, Chief Judge.

This case marks the fourth contest between the IRS and the restaurant industry over the collection of the FICA tax — the tax which funds our social security and medicare systems, see I.R.C. §§ 3101, 3111 — on tips earned by restaurant employees. In the first action, in Alabama, a restaurant prevailed, see Morrison Restaurants, Inc. v. United States, 918 F.Supp. 1506 (S.D.Ala.1996), but then lost on appeal, see Morrison Restaurants, Inc. v. United States, 118 F.3d 1526 (11th Cir.1997). In Florida, a restaurant again first prevailed, see Bubble Room, Inc. v. United States, 36 Fed. Cl. 659 (1996), and lost on appeal, see Bubble Room, Inc. v. United States, 159 F.3d 553 (Fed.Cir.1998). The industry was successful in California, see Fior D’Italia, Inc. v. United States, 21 F.Supp.2d 1097 (N.D.Cal.1998), and similar cases are pending in New York and elsewhere. Now before us in Chicago are cross motions for summary judgment from the IRS and yet another restaurant.

*1051 Collection of the FICA tax on tips has proved troublesome because employees who earn tips, such as restaurant waiters and waitresses, sometimes lie to their employers about the amounts they receive (in violation of I.R.C. § 6053(a); see also Treas. Reg. § 31.6053-1) as well as to the IRS. When employees honestly report the full amount of their tips, the employer withholds the employees’ share of the FICA tax from their paychecks, see I.R.C. § 3102(a) and (c)(1), the employees make up for any shortfall, see id. § 3102(c)(2) and (c)(4), the employer pays the same total amount for its share, see id. § 3111, and the full tax has been paid. When employees underreport, however, restaurants which rely on employee tip reports do not withhold enough money for the employee share and likewise underpay their own share. See id. §§ 3102(c)(1), 3121(q), 6053(a). At a time when “saving social security” is the subject of great public attention, see, e.g., House O.K.s Social Security Plan, CHI. TRIB., Sept. 26, 1998, at 2, this does not amuse the IRS: unreported tips recently were estimated as high as $9 billion per year. See Luisa Beltran, Federal Court Strikes Down IRS Tip Reporting Program, ACCT. TODAY, Nov. 25, 1996, at 10.

There are two ways to collect FICA taxes after employees have underreported their tips. The IRS could audit the restaurant itself and collect the employer’s share of the FICA tax on the aggregate amount of unreported tips from all of the restaurant’s tipped employees without regard to making an assessment against individual employees. This is the procedure the IRS tried in this case. Coco Pazzo, the restaurant in question, collected from its employees all of the tips they earned each day and redistributed the entire tip pool every week, giving each employee some percent of the pool based on his or her category of employment (waiter, bartender, etc.). (This may be atypical: the restaurants in Morrison, Bubble Room, and Fiar D’ltalia did not collect tips from their employees.) By comparing the tips Coco Pazzo distributed to its employees with the tips those employees reported back to it and in their tax returns, an IRS agent calculated that Coco Pazzo’s employees failed to report a total of $1,112,453.92 in tips between 1993 and 1995, which meant that Coco Pazzo had underpaid its share of the FICA tax by $85,104. The agent issued a notice and demand letter pursuant to I.R.C. § 3121(q) for that amount, 1 and Coco Pazzo paid $1.53 and *1052 sued for a refund. The IRS has moved for summary judgment for the remainder.

' The IRS’s supports this approach with reference to I.R.C. § 3111, which imposes the employer’s share of the FICA tax on employee “wages,” and to § 3121(a) and (q), which together state that all tips received by employees are “wages” “deemed to have been paid” by the employer for purposes of the employer’s share of the FICA tax. Subsection (q) further clarifies that to the extent an employee reports tips to the employer pursuant to § 6053(a), those tips are deemed to have been paid by the employer at that time, but if the employee does not report some tips, those tips are deemed to have been paid by the employer at the time that the IRS notifies the employer of the need to pay its share of the FICA tax on them. Id. § 3121(q). This provision, the IRS points out, makes no sense unless Congress has assumed that the employer is obligated to pay its share of the FICA taxes on tips its employees have hidden. See also id. § 45B(b)(A) (giving employers a tax credit by looking, in part, to tips “deemed to have been paid by the employer to the employee pursuant to section 3121(q) (without regard to whether such tips are reported under section 6053)”).

The IRS could instead first make assessments against individual employees, report the amount of underreporting to the restaurant, and (only) then demand payment of the employer’s share of the FICA tax. That is what Coco Pazzo insists that the IRS must do, and Coco Pazzo’s motion for summary judgment accordingly states that it agrees to pay its share of the FICA tax if the IRS first assesses an individual employee for the same amount. The IRS did make assessments against 98 Coco Pazzo employees for a total of $42,709.06, so Coco Pazzo has agreed to pay that same amount. The IRS was unable, however, to locate ten employees who filed returns in 1993 and four employees who filed returns in 1994, and over the three years Coco Pazzo employees failed to file a total of thirty-four yearly returns.

Coco Pazzo’s reading of the FICA provisions is that the IRS must first make individual determinations because I.R.C. § 3111 imposes the employer’s share of the FICA tax “with respect to having individuals in his employ” (emphasis Coco Pazzo’s); § 3121(b) defines employment for FICA purposes as services “performed ... by an employee” (emphasis Coco Paz-zo’s); and § 3121(q) provides that “tips received by an employee in the course of his employment shall be considered remuneration for such employment” (emphasis Coco Pazzo’s).

There are two answers to this. First, of course the FICA tax is imposed on individual employee wages, but that fact offers no guidance on how the IRS should collect the tax from an employer when employees lie about their wages. The use of the singular (“an employee,” “his employment”) indicates nothing, since in the U.S.Code “words importing the singular include and apply to several persons, parties, or things.” 1 U.S.C. § 1; see also I.R.C. § 7701(m)(l)(l).

Second, as we have already observed, the IRS did

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37 F. Supp. 2d 1050, 82 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 7298, 1998 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 18835, 1998 WL 832637, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/330-west-hubbard-restaurant-corp-v-united-states-ilnd-1998.