JOHN R. BROWN, Chief Judge:
In this appeal by the Government from the decision awarding to Taxpayers a refund of income taxes for the year 1954, we face the maze of the mitigation provisions of the Code. The precise question presented is whether the mitigation provisions of the 1954 Internal Revenue Code, 26 U.S.C.A. §§ 1311-1314, require the Commissioner’s deficiency notice containing adjustments under these provisions to be served
after,
and not before, the statutory “determination” that triggers post-limitations adjustments. While we differ slightly with some of the reasoning leading the District Court to an affirmative reply, we affirm its judgment for the Taxpayers.
I.
The four Taxpayers, members of the same family, sought recovery of income taxes assessed and collected for the year 1954. Although the legal issue boils down to a simple, easily phrased question, in order to understand the sole issue it is painfully necessary to review the long and rather complex history of the circumstances from which the action arises. Doing so sharply reminds us that old tax cases never die, nor unfortunately do they ever fade away. Cf. Seaboard Coast Line R.R. v. Gulf Oil Corp., 5 Cir., 1969, 409 F.2d 879. It all started in 1950. Now two decades, five Presidents, and two wars later, it percolates to us for the second time. For the factual summary that follows we borrow freely and almost verbatim from the District Court’s excellent opinion, Belcher v. O’Donnell, N.D.Ala., 1967, 270 F.Supp. 835, 43 T.C. 927.
In July 1950, the Belcher Land & Timber Company, a partnership,
sold a tract of land known as the Allendale Tract to Atlanta Highway Estates. The sale was made on the installment basis, and the unpaid purchase price was represented by a promissory note secured by a mortgage. Atlanta defaulted in 1953, and the partnership foreclosed the mortgage. The partnership bid in the property at the foreclosure sale and received a foreclosure deed dated February 14, 1953. The amount of the bid was less than the balance due on the installment obligation. Subsequently, in July 1954, Atlanta transferred to the partnership its statutory right under Alabama law to redeem the property pursuant to an agreement that its obligation to the partnership would be satisfied at less than face value. Notwithstanding this, the partnership realized capital gain on the disposition of the obligation, and at issue here is the tax on the distributive shares of that gain.
None of the Taxpayers included in his income tax return for 1953 and 1954 any part of his distributive share of this gain. The Internal Revenue Service issued timely statutory notices of deficiency to each Taxpayer on June 24, 1959, contending for the first time that the partnership realized taxable income in 1953 upon its reacquisition of the Allen-dale tract by a foreclosure sale in that year, and that distributive shares of the partnership gain were includable in the gross income of each Taxpayer for that year. All of the Taxpayers filed petitions in the Tax Court contesting the deficiency notice for 1953. The proceedings in the Tax Court were consolidated and a decision was rendered under the caption of Belcher v. Commissioner, decided January 8, 1965 (P-H Memo T.C., ¶ 65,001).
In addition to the Taxpayers in the present proceeding, Mary Belcher Abernathy was a party to the proceeding in the Tax Court for the year 1953. She was one of the beneficiaries of the Belcher Trust, and her interest in the Commissioner’s determination that the
partnership received gain on the Allen- • dale tract mortgage foreclosure in 1953 was identical except as to amount with that of the other members of the family. She and her husband filed a joint return for 1953 and became joint petitioners in the consolidated Tax Court case.
The notices of deficiency involved in the Tax Court proceeding covered the years 1950 through 1955 for each of the Taxpayers. Each of them paid the deficiencies for the years 1950 and 1951 and filed claims for refund for those years. The Abernathys also paid the deficiencies for the years 1952, 1954 and 1955 and filed claims for refund for the latter years as well. The deficiencies for 1953 were not paid by any of the Taxpayers or the Abernathys, but, as mentioned above, petitions for redetermination were filed in the Tax Court for that year.
Upon denial of the claims for the years 1950, 1951, 1952, 1954 and 1955, suits for refund were instituted in the District Court and were consolidated for trial under the caption of Belcher v. Patterson (N.D.Ala.), decided October 10, 1960, 60-2 U.S.T.C. ¶ 9733.
One of the issues raised in Belcher v. Patterson by the Abernathys related to the cost of sales of parcels in 1955 from the reacquired Allendale tract. They maintained that the foreclosure of the mortgage did not constitute a taxable event, but in the alternative, if it did, the basis of the property should be stepped up to the extent that such gain was recognized. The District Court found that the foreclosure constituted a taxable event but declined to determine the year of its occurrence. 60-2 U.S.T.C. ¶ 9733, at 78040-41.
At the conclusion of the trial but before an opinion was filed, the Government filed a motion for a setoff against the Abernathys based upon information that the Tax Court petitioners in Belcher v. Commissioner were alleging that the Allendale tract mortgage foreclosure did not constitute a taxable event in 1953 but rather in 1954 and 1955.
The Government requested the District Court to determine the specific year in which the taxable event occurred.
On appeal this Court held that the District Court’s refusal to make a determination of the specific year in which the gain constituted a taxable event was error.
Patterson v. Belcher, 5 Cir.,
1962, 302 F.2d 289, cert. denied, 371 U.S. 921, 83 S.Ct. 289, 9 L.Ed.2d 230. On remand, the District Court in Abernathy v. Patterson, N.D.Ala., 1963, 63-2 U.S.T.C. ¶ 9678, determined that the mortgage foreclosure constituted a taxable event in 1954. The court held that the amount of refund due the Abernathys for 1954 on other issues should be offset by their distributive share of partnership gain for the same year resulting from the extinction of the mortgagor’s right of redemption. The judgment of the District Court entered in Abernathy v. Patterson became final on July 2, 1963, when the defendant’s appeal was dismissed before it had been docketed in this court.
On January 22, 1964, the Commissioner sent to each of the Taxpayers herein
a statutory notice of deficiency determining that a part of the gain realized by the partnership from the Allendale tract mortgage foreclosure should be included in the gross income of each partner for the year 1954.
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JOHN R. BROWN, Chief Judge:
In this appeal by the Government from the decision awarding to Taxpayers a refund of income taxes for the year 1954, we face the maze of the mitigation provisions of the Code. The precise question presented is whether the mitigation provisions of the 1954 Internal Revenue Code, 26 U.S.C.A. §§ 1311-1314, require the Commissioner’s deficiency notice containing adjustments under these provisions to be served
after,
and not before, the statutory “determination” that triggers post-limitations adjustments. While we differ slightly with some of the reasoning leading the District Court to an affirmative reply, we affirm its judgment for the Taxpayers.
I.
The four Taxpayers, members of the same family, sought recovery of income taxes assessed and collected for the year 1954. Although the legal issue boils down to a simple, easily phrased question, in order to understand the sole issue it is painfully necessary to review the long and rather complex history of the circumstances from which the action arises. Doing so sharply reminds us that old tax cases never die, nor unfortunately do they ever fade away. Cf. Seaboard Coast Line R.R. v. Gulf Oil Corp., 5 Cir., 1969, 409 F.2d 879. It all started in 1950. Now two decades, five Presidents, and two wars later, it percolates to us for the second time. For the factual summary that follows we borrow freely and almost verbatim from the District Court’s excellent opinion, Belcher v. O’Donnell, N.D.Ala., 1967, 270 F.Supp. 835, 43 T.C. 927.
In July 1950, the Belcher Land & Timber Company, a partnership,
sold a tract of land known as the Allendale Tract to Atlanta Highway Estates. The sale was made on the installment basis, and the unpaid purchase price was represented by a promissory note secured by a mortgage. Atlanta defaulted in 1953, and the partnership foreclosed the mortgage. The partnership bid in the property at the foreclosure sale and received a foreclosure deed dated February 14, 1953. The amount of the bid was less than the balance due on the installment obligation. Subsequently, in July 1954, Atlanta transferred to the partnership its statutory right under Alabama law to redeem the property pursuant to an agreement that its obligation to the partnership would be satisfied at less than face value. Notwithstanding this, the partnership realized capital gain on the disposition of the obligation, and at issue here is the tax on the distributive shares of that gain.
None of the Taxpayers included in his income tax return for 1953 and 1954 any part of his distributive share of this gain. The Internal Revenue Service issued timely statutory notices of deficiency to each Taxpayer on June 24, 1959, contending for the first time that the partnership realized taxable income in 1953 upon its reacquisition of the Allen-dale tract by a foreclosure sale in that year, and that distributive shares of the partnership gain were includable in the gross income of each Taxpayer for that year. All of the Taxpayers filed petitions in the Tax Court contesting the deficiency notice for 1953. The proceedings in the Tax Court were consolidated and a decision was rendered under the caption of Belcher v. Commissioner, decided January 8, 1965 (P-H Memo T.C., ¶ 65,001).
In addition to the Taxpayers in the present proceeding, Mary Belcher Abernathy was a party to the proceeding in the Tax Court for the year 1953. She was one of the beneficiaries of the Belcher Trust, and her interest in the Commissioner’s determination that the
partnership received gain on the Allen- • dale tract mortgage foreclosure in 1953 was identical except as to amount with that of the other members of the family. She and her husband filed a joint return for 1953 and became joint petitioners in the consolidated Tax Court case.
The notices of deficiency involved in the Tax Court proceeding covered the years 1950 through 1955 for each of the Taxpayers. Each of them paid the deficiencies for the years 1950 and 1951 and filed claims for refund for those years. The Abernathys also paid the deficiencies for the years 1952, 1954 and 1955 and filed claims for refund for the latter years as well. The deficiencies for 1953 were not paid by any of the Taxpayers or the Abernathys, but, as mentioned above, petitions for redetermination were filed in the Tax Court for that year.
Upon denial of the claims for the years 1950, 1951, 1952, 1954 and 1955, suits for refund were instituted in the District Court and were consolidated for trial under the caption of Belcher v. Patterson (N.D.Ala.), decided October 10, 1960, 60-2 U.S.T.C. ¶ 9733.
One of the issues raised in Belcher v. Patterson by the Abernathys related to the cost of sales of parcels in 1955 from the reacquired Allendale tract. They maintained that the foreclosure of the mortgage did not constitute a taxable event, but in the alternative, if it did, the basis of the property should be stepped up to the extent that such gain was recognized. The District Court found that the foreclosure constituted a taxable event but declined to determine the year of its occurrence. 60-2 U.S.T.C. ¶ 9733, at 78040-41.
At the conclusion of the trial but before an opinion was filed, the Government filed a motion for a setoff against the Abernathys based upon information that the Tax Court petitioners in Belcher v. Commissioner were alleging that the Allendale tract mortgage foreclosure did not constitute a taxable event in 1953 but rather in 1954 and 1955.
The Government requested the District Court to determine the specific year in which the taxable event occurred.
On appeal this Court held that the District Court’s refusal to make a determination of the specific year in which the gain constituted a taxable event was error.
Patterson v. Belcher, 5 Cir.,
1962, 302 F.2d 289, cert. denied, 371 U.S. 921, 83 S.Ct. 289, 9 L.Ed.2d 230. On remand, the District Court in Abernathy v. Patterson, N.D.Ala., 1963, 63-2 U.S.T.C. ¶ 9678, determined that the mortgage foreclosure constituted a taxable event in 1954. The court held that the amount of refund due the Abernathys for 1954 on other issues should be offset by their distributive share of partnership gain for the same year resulting from the extinction of the mortgagor’s right of redemption. The judgment of the District Court entered in Abernathy v. Patterson became final on July 2, 1963, when the defendant’s appeal was dismissed before it had been docketed in this court.
On January 22, 1964, the Commissioner sent to each of the Taxpayers herein
a statutory notice of deficiency determining that a part of the gain realized by the partnership from the Allendale tract mortgage foreclosure should be included in the gross income of each partner for the year 1954. Assessments of the tax deficiencies were made on May 8, 1964, and were paid by the Taxpayers on August 20, 1964.
Subsequent to these assessments, the Tax Court entered its decision in Belcher v. Commissioner on January 8, 1965, for the year 1953, in which, after independently canvassing the findings and conclusions arrived at by the District Court in Abernathy v. Patterson, it agreed that “the mortgage foreclosure resulted in taxable income to the partnership, and hence to all the partners, in the year 1954 and not in the year 1953.” Its decision became final on April 8, 1965.
The Taxpayers filed claims for refund on February 25, 1965, asserting that the assessments and collection of taxes for the year 1954 were barred by the statute of limitations. After a period of more than six months had elapsed, and on February 21, 1966, they initiated and filed the refund suits now before us.
In its amended answer filed on May 16, 1966, the Government referred to the judgment of the District Court in Abernathy v. Patterson and to the decision of the Tax Court in Belcher v. Commissioner. In the pretrial order the contentions of the parties were stated as follows:
“In each case it is contended that the assessment of income taxes for the year 1954 was barred by the statute of limitations and, therefore, that such taxes were erroneously assessed and illegally collected.
“Relying upon the provisions of the mitigation sections of the Code, 26 U.S.C.A. § 1311 et seq., defendant insists that the assessment as to each Taxpayer was made within one year after determination by this court of the occurrence of a taxable event in the year 1954 in the case of a related Taxpayer (Abernathy).”
By letter dated October 24, 1966, addressed to the District Court, with a copy to opposing counsel, the Government advised that at the trial it intended to rely upon the decision of the Tax Court in Belcher v. Commissioner as a determination which validated the assessments made herein. While no formal amendment of the pretrial order was requested or entered, at the trial the Government was permitted to rely upon the judgment of the District Court in Abernathy v. Patterson and alternatively upon the Tax Court decision in Belcher v. Commissioner. In its brief filed in the District Court the Government abandoned its reliance upon Abernathy v. Patterson on the ground that the determination made therein was not one of exclusion as required by the 1954 Code to support the new assessment.
The District Court held that the assessments and collections of taxes for
1954, which were concededly barred by the statute of limitations when made, were not validated by subsequent Tax Court determination in Belcher v. Commissioner
II.
The mitigation provisions of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, 26 U.S.C.A. §§ 1311,
1312,
1313,
and 1314
(set out in separate footnotes for ease of reference), provide that under specified circumstances, where an error has been made in the inclusion or exclusion of an item of income or in the allowance or disallowance of a deduction or in the tax treatment of a transaction affecting the basis of property, the error may be corrected even though the ordinary period of limitations has run for that year. The basic object of the mitigation provisions is to eliminate a double tax or a double deduction or an inequitable avoidance of tax. These provisions are intended to attribute income or deductions to the proper year and to the proper taxpayer, and to establish the proper basis for depreciable property. See generally 2 J. Mertens, Law of Federal Income Taxation §§ 14.01-14.22 (rev. ed. 1967). It helps in wending through this legalistic labyrinth to focus on the mitigation situation we have here. Like much else in today’s juridical jargon it carries a shorthand numerical symbol, see Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co. v. Berry, 5 Cir., 1965, 350 F.2d 49. This is a Section 1312(3) (B) case which the code categorizes as:
“(B) Items not included in income.— The determination requires the exclusion from gross income of an item not included in a return filed by the taxpayer and with respect to which the tax was not paid but which is includible in the gross income of the taxpayer for another taxable year or in the gross income of a related taxpayer.”
The aim of this complex structure and the warning flag to be heeded was well characterized for us by Judge Wisdom in United States v. Rachal, 5 Cir., 1962, 312 F.2d 376, 383:
“The overriding purpose of [these provisions] is to permit an equitable adjustment by treating an error as if it had never existed. Senate Report No. 1567 makes it clear that ‘disputes as to the year in which income or de-deductions belong * * * should
never
result in a double tax or a double deduction of tax, or an inequitable avoidance of tax.’ (Emphasis added.) S.Rep. No. 1567, 75 Cong., 3d Sess., 49 (1938). The danger of an over-liberal interpretation of statutory purpose is reduced, at least to some extent, by the necessity for fitting the facts of each case into the concrete, detailed requirements set out in the statute.”
But as this case demonstrates, whether avoidance of tax is “inequitable” is a matter measured by the statute, which covers 7 categories — several of which can benefit the Government only, some which can work only for taxpayers’ advantage, and some which apply across the board. See 2 J. Mertens, Federal Income Taxation § 14.04, at 24-25 (rev. ed. 1967).
Section 1311(a) (note 7,
supra)
sets forth the general conditions in which the mitigation provisions shall apply:
General rule. — If a determination (as defined in section 1313) is described in one or more of the paragraphs of section 1312 and, on the date of the determination, correction of the effect of the error referred to in the applicable paragraph of section 1312 is prevented by the operation of any law or rule of law * * * then the effect of the error shall be corrected by an adjustment made in the amount and in the manner specified in section 1314.
Section 1312 (note 8,
supra)
describes the circumstances under which the adjustment provided in Section 1311 is authorized. As previously noted, the provision pertinent to the present case is paragraph (3) (B). Section 1313(a)
$ $ $ $ ^
(note 9,
supra)
defines a determination to include “(1) a decision by the Tax Court or a judgment, decree, or other order by any court of competent jurisdiction, which has become final.”
In the instant case, the Tax Court’s decision in Belcher v. Patterson, in 1965
constitutes a determination under Section 1313(a). That decision also constitutes a determination within the meaning of Section 1312(3) (B). It requires the exclusion of an item from Taxpayers’ gross incomes which was not included in returns filed by them for any other year and for which no tax had been paid. It also is clear that the Commissioner’s determination, taxing the gain on the transaction in 1953, was erroneous. The Tax Court, with respect to all Taxpayers, as well as the District Court with respect to the Abernathys, held that the Taxpayers realized taxable gain on the transaction, but this gain was not achieved in 1953 but should have been recognized in 1954.
Section 1311(b) contains still other conditions necessary for the adjustment. Subparagraph (1) is not applicable to a Section 1312(3) (B) case. Subpara-graph (2) (A) of Section 1311(b), however, applies to the situation of a double exclusion from income, and provides:
“(A) Determination described in section 1312(3) (B). — In the case of a determination described in section 1312(3) (B) (relating to certain exclusions from income), adjustment shall be made under this part only if assessment of a deficiency for the taxable year in which the item is includible or against the related taxpayer was not barred, by any law or rule of law, at the time the Secretary or his delegate first maintained, in a notice of deficiency sent pursuant to section 6212 or before the Tax Court of the United States, that the item described in section 1312(3) (B) should be included in the gross income of the taxpayer for the taxable year to which the determination relates.”
Here again our case fits the statute, for at the time the Commissioner first maintained in a notice of deficiency that ■the gain was includible in the Taxpayers’ incomes for 1953, the statute of limitations had not run for 1954.
Finally, Section 1314 (note 10, supra) sets forth the procedure by which the adjustments are to be determined. In particular, subsection (a) describes how the amount of adjustment required by the mitigating provisions should be computed, and subsection (b) sets forth the manner in which these adjustments are to be implemented.
As a structure mitigating the harshness of the statute of limitations for assessments or refunds of taxes, it has its own built-in, very short limitation period of one year. In relevant part Section 1314(b) provides that where the adjustments result in deficiencies, the deficiencies shall be assessed in the regular manner “as if on the date of the determination one year remained before the exipiration of the periods of limitation upon assessment.” See note 10,
supra.
This brings us to the basic question presented to this Court: What is the effect to be given to the language of Section 1314(b) ? Before we examine this, a time table brings us out of lunar orbit:
Jan. 31, 1963: District Court determined taxable 1954
July 2, 1963: District Court judgment final (on dismissal of Government’s appeal)
Jan. 22, 1964: Commissioner’s deficiency notice based on 1954
May 8, 1964
Aug. 20, 1964: Assessments and payment deficiency
Jan. 8, 1965: Tax Court decision holding 1954 and capital gains
Febr. 25, 1965: Taxpayers’ claim for refund
April 8, 1965: Tax Court judgment final
Febr. 21, 1966: Taxpayers’ suit for refund
Taxpayers contend that the deficiency notices were not timely, since the notice
issued (Jan. 22, 1964) was prior to the only qualifying determination by the Tax Court (April 8, 1965). The Government, on the other hand, contends that section 1314(b) merely establishes the absolute point in time, namely, one year after the beginning of the revived limitation period, beyond which a notice of deficiency may not be issued. It argues — because it has to and fails if it does not succeed — that an ineffectual deficiency notice, i.e., a premature one, may under certain circumstances be validated
by
a subsequent determination and that the statute of limitations is suspended if the notice fairly reveals the Government’s contention and is issued at any time prior to the expiration of the one-year period.
This Court has previously commented upon the daedal structure of the mitigation provisions.
Further, it is too doctrinaire simply to say that these sections are to be applied evenhandedly to Government and taxpayer alike. The categories are not so structured, and, more important,' there is quite a difference between allowing a deficiency assessment by the Government long after the usual statute of limitations has run and allowing a refund request (claim) by a citizen taxpayer. As the previous discussion had shown, the fundamental design of the statute is that the occurrence of a statutory determination, under specified circumstances, gives either the Government or the taxpayer the right to seek relief under these provisions. When this happens, one effect is that the statute of limitations is extended for one year following the determination, and thus a deficiency notice may be sent or claim for refund filed within that time. The Government takes the position that since some cases allow a premature but revealing claim for refund to suffice, the same must be true for its awesome deficiency notice, which sets in train formidable coercive sanctions.
We cannot accept this argument for several reasons. First, the whole scheme of mitigation rests on a “determination”. Consequently, the chronological sequence obviously contemplates a determination followed by the deficiency notice. See notes 7-10 supra. This is also spelled out in the applicable Treasury Regulation.
Both the structure of the Act and an exploration of consequences from a contrary reading support the conclusion that the language means that the notice of deficiency is to follow, rather than precede, the final determination.
For example, contemplate what would have happened had (1) Taxpayers here chosen to contest the 1964 deficiency notices in a separate Tax Court proceeding,
on the ground that the assessments and collection for 1954 were barred by limitations, and (2) the Tax Court had made a final decision in that hypothetical proceeding before rendering its decision (April 8, 1965) in
Belcher.
In that event, Taxpayers’ contention would have to have been sustained. This is true because prior to the Tax Court’s April 8, 1965, determination there would have been no statutory determination upon which the Government could have relied to overcome the already effective statute of limitations and to invoke the mitigation provisions. Likewise, the same result would have obtained in a refund suit in the District Court, if that suit had proceeded to judgment before the Tax Court’s 1965 determination.
Stated another way, until the qualifying determination in 1965, the Government simply was not authorized to open the year 1954. Regardless of the course adopted by Taxpayers to challenge the 1964 deficiency notice, such a trial court would have been compelled to hold the notice invalid because not yet authorized by the mitigation provisions. We do not feel that this result should change because of the adventitious circumstance that Taxpayers’ challenge did not reach trial until after the qualifying determination in 1965.
Seeking sauce for taxpayer and Government alike, the Government urges that, as with a premature refund claim, the premature deficiency notices here adequately informed Taxpayers of its intentions. In support of this approach the Government first stresses the cases of Moultrie Cotton Mills v. United States, 1957, 151 F.Supp. 482, 138 Ct.Cl. 208, and Esterbrook Pen Co. v. United States, D.N.J., 1960, 60-2 U.S.T.C. ¶ 9609. These cases involved refund claims (rather than assessments) filed prior to a qualifying determination. In each case the Court held that when there was a claim for refund pending at the time of the determination and the claim adequately apprised the Government of the grounds relied upon for an adjustment, the taxpayer was not required to file a second claim after the date of the determination. The Government urges that if there is no useful purpose in requiring a taxpayer to file a second claim for refund when his first claim has sufficiently informed the Commissioner of the nature and basis of his claim, it should be equally fruitless
to require the Government to issue a second deficiency notice to the same taxpayers if the first notice sufficiently apprised them of the basis of the deficiency and made the same adjustment that would have been included in a second notice.
In our view there is a significant distinction between the
Moultrie
and
Ester-brook
cases and the one before us now. In those decisions the adjustment authorized by the qualifying determination would necessarily be the same as that requested in the refund claim filed before the determination.
But as we point out shortly, in this case the adjustment authorized by the qualifying determination could have deviated substantially from the adjustment made in the premature deficiency notices.
Pursuing this same tack, the Government points out that the 1964 deficiency notices fully apprised Taxpayers of the Government’s position,
i. e.,
(1) that it relied on the mitigation provisions, and (2) that the item in question was taxable in the year 1954 at capital gain rates. The argument continues that “the Commission was able equally, either in January, 1964, or after April 1965, to calculate the proper adjustments under § 1314(a).” The Government can make this assertion, however, only because of the fortuitous circumstance that the Tax Court reached the same decision in
Belcher
that the District Court had reached in
Abernathy
regarding the issues of rate of tax and year of taxability.
But it would have been quite another matter had the Tax Court in
Belcher
decided that the income item in question should have been taxed at
ordinary
rather than
capital gain
rates. It came as no shock to us on oral argument when the Government counsel acknowledged that in this situation it would not have felt itself bound by its earlier 1964 deficiency notices, and that it would have felt free to issue deficiency notices within one year after such determination seeking to have the income taxed in the year 1954 at ordinary income rates. The Government would, therefore, have been treating its earlier deficiency notices as a nullity. Looking at the plain words of the statute, a Court would be hard pressed to deny that right to the Government. The Government’s plea is not for evenhandedness. Its reading would bring about, not ameliorate, hardship.
There is another reason why we should resist the- Government’s impor-tunities to “read out and read in” what it needs in a statute which is so very, very complex as it tries to deal differently with different problems. There is simply no need for it, either here or generally in tax administration. The Government simply went to sleep. More than that, it slept through several alarms sounded gratuitously by Taxpayers.
Taxpayers filed their claim for refund on February 25, 1965, one and one-half months before the Tax Court judgment in
Belcher
became final. The refund claim asserted precisely that limitations had run prior to the assessment under the 1964 notices and challenged the Government’s right to rely on the mitigation provisions to authorize these assessments.
The Government was put
on notice by the refund claim that the District Court’s decision in
Abernathy
in 1963 would be the only possible determination qualifying under Section 1313, since the Tax Court’s decision in
Belcher
did not become final until more than one month after the refund claim was filed. In addition, the claim noted that the
Abernathy
decision did not meet the requirements of Section 1312(3) (B) — the provision upon which the Government ultimately relied both below and here.
Therefore, the Government had notice in February 1965 that it had issued the deficiency notices under a mitigating “determination” that did not meet the statutory requirements. Accordingly, there remained over one year —from February 1965 to April 8, 1966 (when the one year extension on limitations expired) — for the Government to recognize its error, see all bright and shiny the existence of a qualifying determination in
Belcher,
and issue a second notice pursuant to that determination.
But the Government did nothing, not even in the face of specific warnings from Taxpayers first in February 1965 and renewed later in their argument in the refund suit filed in February 1966. Congress passed an Act which would work well and easily. But the statute had to be heeded. For this Court in the guise of interpretation to extricate the Government from its default would be to let ourselves fall victim to “the danger of an over-liberal interpretation of statutory purposes” that Judge Wisdom has warned us of. United States v. Rachal,
supra,
312 F.2d at 383.
Here, the Government clearly had notice of its failure to comply with the statutory provisions at a time when it was still possible to do so. Having failed to avail itself of the abundant chance to rectify its mistake, the Government must now pay the piper.
Affirmed.