Borenstein v. Comm'r
This text of 149 T.C. No. 10 (Borenstein v. Comm'r) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Decision will be entered for respondent.
P's return for the taxable year 2012 was originally due on Apr. 15, 2013. She requested and received a six-month extension of time to file that return. By virtue of that extension the due date for filing her 2012 return was Oct. 15, 2013.
P made tax payments for 2012 totaling $112,000. All of these payments were deemed made on Apr. 15, 2013.
On June 19, 2015, R issued P a notice of deficiency for 2012. On Aug. 29, 2015, shortly before filing her petition, P submitted a delinquent return for 2012 that reported a tax liability of $79,559. P and R agree that P for 2012 has a deficiency of $79,559 and an overpayment of $32,441.
R contends that P is not entitled under
1.
2.
LAUBER,
The question we must decide is whether petitioner, who did not file a timely return, is limited to the two-year lookback period in
There is no dispute as to the following facts, which are drawn from the parties' stipulation of settled issues, stipulation of facts, and attached exhibits. Petitioner resided in Connecticut when she filed her petition.
Petitioner's Federal income tax return for 2012 was originally due for filing on April 15, 2013. On that date she secured a six-month extension of time to file that return.
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Decision will be entered for respondent.
P's return for the taxable year 2012 was originally due on Apr. 15, 2013. She requested and received a six-month extension of time to file that return. By virtue of that extension the due date for filing her 2012 return was Oct. 15, 2013.
P made tax payments for 2012 totaling $112,000. All of these payments were deemed made on Apr. 15, 2013.
On June 19, 2015, R issued P a notice of deficiency for 2012. On Aug. 29, 2015, shortly before filing her petition, P submitted a delinquent return for 2012 that reported a tax liability of $79,559. P and R agree that P for 2012 has a deficiency of $79,559 and an overpayment of $32,441.
R contends that P is not entitled under
1.
2.
LAUBER,
The question we must decide is whether petitioner, who did not file a timely return, is limited to the two-year lookback period in
There is no dispute as to the following facts, which are drawn from the parties' stipulation of settled issues, stipulation of facts, and attached exhibits. Petitioner resided in Connecticut when she filed her petition.
Petitioner's Federal income tax return for 2012 was originally due for filing on April 15, 2013. On that date she secured a six-month extension of time to file that return.
As of January 17, 2013, petitioner had made toward her expected 2012 tax liability estimated tax payments aggregating $72,000. She enclosed an additional payment of $40,000 with her extension request. Thus, as of April 15, 2013, her tax payments for 2012 totaled $112,000. That total amount was deemed paid on April 15, 2013.
Petitioner did not file a return for 2012 by the October 15, 2013,*45 due date or during the ensuing 22 months. On June 19, 2015, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS or respondent) sent her a timely notice of deficiency that determined a deficiency of $1,666,463 and additions to tax under
Shortly before filing her petition, petitioner submitted to the IRS Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Service Center a delinquent return for 2012. This return, filed on August 29, 2015, reported an income tax liability of $79,559, which the parties agree is correct. Because petitioner did not submit this return until after the notice of deficiency was issued, her deficiency for 2012 is $79,559. The parties agree that she is not liable for additions to tax under
The return petitioner filed on August 29, 2015, reported an overpayment of $38,447. At no time before filing that return had petitioner submitted a claim for refund of any portion of this overpayment. The parties have since stipulated that petitioner's correct overpayment for 2012 is*46 $32,441, viz., $112,000 in total payments minus the $79,559 tax liability. The question we must decide is whether petitioner is entitled to a credit or refund of this overpayment.
The taxpayer bears the burden of proving her entitlement to a refund or credit.
Once this Court has jurisdiction over a deficiency case,
The general rule set forth above is subject to the proviso in
Where the lookback period in
Petitioner's hypothetical refund claim is deemed to have been filed on June 19, 2015, and she made her $112,000 tax payment on April 15, 2013, more than two years previously. Because no portion of the tax was paid within the two-year lookback period prescribed by
In response to the Supreme Court's decision in In a case described in
Congress made this amendment effective for taxable years that ended after August 5, 1997.
Respondent offers what he believes to be a "plain language" interpretation of the final sentence of
The "third year" after that date began on October 15, 2015. But the notice of deficiency was mailed on June 19, 2015. That date was during the second year, not during the third year, "after the due date (with extensions) for filing the return," as the 1997 amendment requires. Respondent accordingly contends that the exception set forth in the final sentence of
This case is one of first impression because it is the first time this Court has been called upon to interpret the final sentence of
In The due date for filing petitioner's tax return was August 15, 2005. Because the notice of deficiency was mailed in the third year after the due date (with extensions) for filing the tax return, the applicable period during which an overpayment may be refunded under
On two other occasions we have interpreted the final sentence of
Petitioner and amici curiae urge us to reject respondent's interpretation of the statute. Although they advance a variety of arguments, they begin with a practical observation, which is best illustrated by a series of hypotheticals.
Petitioner paid her 2012 tax on April 15, 2013. If the notice of deficiency had been mailed between that date and April 15, 2015, she would be allowed a refund under the two-year lookback rule in
But if the notice of deficiency was mailed between April 16 and October 15, 2015--i.e., during the second half of the second year after the extended due date, as was true here--we would be unable to allow a refund under*53 respondent's construction of the statute. The result, according to petitioner, would be "a six-month black hole period into which tax refunds disappear when a nonfiling taxpayer secures an extension of time to file." According to amici curiae: "The idea that the Tax Court should somehow be stripped of contiguous jurisdiction to issue refunds is unreasonable, unsound and incongruous."8
The arguments that petitioner and amici curiae advance against this result begin (as they must) with the text of the statute. "[T]he starting point for interpreting a statute is the language of the statute itself. Absent a clearly expressed legislative intention to the contrary, that language must ordinarily be regarded as conclusive."
Petitioner's textual argument focuses on the parenthetical "(with extensions)" as it appears in the longer phrase, "during the third year after the due date (with extensions) for filing the return of tax." Respondent contends that this parenthetical phrase modifies "due date,"*54 the immediately preceding noun. Petitioner contends that "with extensions" should be taken instead to modify "the third year," a noun phrase that appears earlier in the sentence. In that event, "the third year" would be determined by reference to the original due date for her return and would be prolonged to include the six-month extension period. Alternatively, petitioner contends that "with extensions" should be taken to modify "3 years," the last two words in the sentence. In that event,
We find neither of these constructions plausible from the standpoint of normal English syntax. A modifying phrase is normally read to modify the nearest plausible antecedent. This rule is typically referred to as the "last antecedent" rule.
This rule of construction, we think, is especially powerful*55 when the modifying phrase is embedded within a longer grammatical unit that has a familiar meaning or is a term of art. Here, "with extensions" is embedded within the phrase "due date * * * for filing the return of tax." Phrases similar to this appear throughout the Code.
Wholly apart from sentence structure, construing "with extensions" to modify "due date" results in a more logical and natural reading. Congress knows that due dates for filing tax returns can be extended; "with extensions" is thus read quite naturally to modify "due date." Years, on the other hand, do not have "extensions"; they cannot be extended but invariably end 12 months after they begin. Congress is thus unlikely to have intended "with extensions" to modify "3 years" or "the third year."
In a similar*56 vein, amici curiae urge that we consult the dictionary to learn that the preposition "with" has among its accepted meanings "inclusive of." But unless the parenthetical phrase is read to modify something other than "due date," making this substitution does not help petitioner. The "due date (inclusive of extensions) for filing the return of tax" was October 15, 2013--the same date produced by respondent's construction of the statute. In effect, amici curiae argue that we should view "inclusive of" as modifying the gestalt of the entire sentence, i.e., the sentence should be read generously to be "inclusive of" taxpayers like petitioner. That is not how prepositions work.
Alternatively, petitioner contends that we should interpret the final sentence of
We find this argument unpersuasive. First, it is just a different way of stating petitioner's threshold argument, namely, that the parenthetical phrase "with extensions" does not modify "due date," the immediately preceding noun, but rather modifies "3 years," a noun phrase that appears at the end of the sentence after 27 intervening words. We have rejected that argument for the reasons previously stated.
Second, petitioner's argument ignores a significant difference in how the two statutory provisions are drafted. In
Third, creating a lookback period of 3-1/2 years, as petitioner urges, is at odds with the legislative history.
Petitioner next contends that her interpretation, even if problematic on the "plain meaning" front, is supported by the statute's legislative history. Statutory text is ambiguous where "the*59 ordinary and common meaning of the statutory language supports more than one interpretation."
We do not find the statutory text at issue to be "ambiguous." The phrase "due date (with extensions) for filing the return of tax" does not have two possible meanings. Rather, we find it to have a single unambiguous meaning when construed in accordance with the ordinary language that Congress employed. Petitioner seeks to inject ambiguity into this statute by positing that "with extensions" modifies other words that appear earlier or later in the sentence. But because this interpretation does violence to the rules of ordinary English syntax, it does not create an "ambiguity."
In any event, the legislative history does not have the force that petitioner attributes to it. Congress in 1997 added a new final sentence to
The legislative history does not have the specificity or establish the breadth of purpose that petitioner asserts, and we find the legislative history insufficient to countermand the plain meaning of the words Congress enacted. In proposing the 1997 amendment the House report contrasted a taxpayer who does not file a return before a notice of deficiency is issued with an identical taxpayer who files a return by the date the notice is issued. H.R. Rept. No. 105-148,
Contrary to petitioner's view, this legislative*61 history does not establish congressional intent that all nonfilers be treated identically "during the three-year period following the initial due dates of their returns." Nor does it establish intent that all nonfilers be treated the same, without regard to whether they secured extensions of time to file. It is true that the taxpayer in
Finally, if we reject petitioner's textual arguments and interpret the last sentence of
The "anti-absurdity" canon, while of ancient pedigree, is invoked by courts nowadays quite rarely. In order for a party to show that a "plain meaning" construction of a statute would render it "absurd," the party must show that the result would be "so gross as to shock the general moral or common sense."
There are very few Supreme Court cases in which the "anti-absurdity" doctrine arguably played a significant role. In
In the absence of constitutional concerns, the Supreme Court in recent decades has consistently held that, unless a statute has "conflicting provisions or ambiguous language," the court's "role is to interpret the language of the statute enacted by Congress."
Although a plain-language interpretation of the final sentence of
If the phrase "with extensions" were to modify the "third year," as petitioner urges, it would help a subset of nonfilers including petitioner. The notice of deficiency in this case, which was mailed on June 19, 2015, would then have been mailed "during the third year (with extensions)" after April 15, 2013, the original due date for filing her 2012 return. She would thus benefit from the three-year lookback period.
But the manner in which Congress drafted the 1997 amendment means that this benefit would be limited in scope. Assume another subset of taxpayers situated similarly to petitioner, except that their notices of deficiency were mailed between April 16 and October 15, 2016. The notices of deficiency would then have been mailed "during the third*65 year (with extensions)" after April 15, 2013, the original due date for filing their 2012 returns. Although the final sentence of
For the 1997 amendment to help both sets of taxpayers, the phrase "with extensions" would need to modify, not only "the third year" (which appear 5 words earlier), but also "3 years" (which appear 27 words later). To have it modify either would violate normal English syntax. To have it modify both would be a linguistic impossibility.
In short, the 1997 amendment as enacted by Congress does not produce absurd results. Rather, because of what seems inartful drafting, it has one or more gaps in coverage. As has often been said, courts should not attempt to fill statutory gaps in order to fashion judicial remedies.
Anyone who has managed to plod thus far through this Opinion will understand that the statutory provisions we are construing are extremely technical and complex. It is possible that the drafters of the 1997 amendment did not think through all of the ramifications of Congress' decision to "inject filing extensions into the lookback period mechanism," as petitioner puts it. But wittingly or unwittingly Congress placed the words "with extensions" in the text of the statute immediately after "due date." We must give meaning to those words.
The text enacted by Congress makes syntactic sense and has an unambiguous meaning. Construing that text according to its plain meaning does not produce a result "so gross as to shock the general moral or common sense."
To reflect the foregoing,
Footnotes
*. A memorandum amici curiae was filed by T. Keith Fogg and W. Edward Afield as attorneys for the Philip C. Cook Low-Income Taxpayer Clinic and the Harvard Federal Tax Clinic.↩
1. All statutory references are to the Internal Revenue Code (Code) in effect at all relevant times, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure. We round all monetary amounts to the nearest dollar.↩
2.
Section 6512(b)(3)(A) is inapplicable here because it refers to tax paid "after the mailing of the notice of deficiency." Petitioner paid the tax at issue on April 15, 2013, more than two years before the notice of deficiency was mailed.Section 6512(b)(3)(C)↩ is likewise inapplicable because it refers to tax paid within the limitations period for a claim for refund filed "before the date of the mailing of the notice of deficiency." Petitioner's only "claim for refund" took the form of her delinquent 2012 return, which was submitted on August 29, 2015, more than two months after the mailing of the notice of deficiency on June 19, 2015.3. The filing of a return reporting an overpayment generally constitutes the filing of a claim for refund.
;McGregor v. United States , 650 F.2d 289, 225 Ct. Cl. 566, 566 (1980)sec. 301.6402-3(a)(1) , Proced. & Admin. Regs. But the converse is not true for the deemed claim for refund undersection 6512(b)(3)(B) ; that deemed claim does not constitute a deemed return. . As a result,Lundy , 516 U.S. at 248-250section 6512(b)(3)(B) does not "incorporate[] a uniform 3-year look-back period for Tax Court cases[.]" .Id.↩ at 2484.
Section 6511(c) governs situations where the period of limitations has been extended by agreement.Section 6511(d)↩ sets forth special rules for (among other things) bad debt losses, net operating losses, and foreign tax credits.5. The fact pattern presented here--i.e., where the notice of deficiency was mailed to a nonfiling taxpayer during the second year after the extended due date for filing the return--was before the Court in
. However, the statutory amendment we are considering did not apply in that case because it involved a 1996 calendar taxable year.Healer v. Commissioner , 115 T.C. 316 (2000) (noting that this amendment was effective for taxable years ending after August 5, 1997);Brosi , 120 T.C. at 9see .Healer , 115 T.C. at 321↩6. In
Zarky , we simply noted that, under the final sentence ofsection 6512(b)(3) , "the * * * notice of deficiency must have been mailed to * * * [the taxpayer] during the third year after the due date" for filing his return.123 T.C. at 135 . In , the IRS mailed the notices of deficiency on June 13, 2011, during the fourth year after the original due date of the return. We held that the taxpayers did not qualify for a three-year lookback period, noting: "The due date for petitioners' 2007 tax return was April 15, 2008, * * * and no facts in the record indicate that petitioners sought or obtained a filing extension."Butts , T.C. Memo. 2015-74 .Id.↩ at 1395 n.77. Amici curiae rely heavily on
, but that case did not involve the 1997 statutory amendment at issue here. The taxpayer there filed a delinquent returnKrape v. Comm'r , T.C. Memo 2007-125, 93 T.C.M. (CCH) 1239before the IRS mailed him a notice of deficiency, so the final sentence ofsection 6512(b)(3) could not possibly have applied. Rather, the Court inKrape was applying the general lookback rules ofsections 6511(b)(2) and6512(b)(3)(B)↩ .8. If the notice of deficiency had been mailed between April 16 and October 15, 2016, the final sentence of
section 6512(b)(3) as construed by respondent would apply to petitioner. But because all of her 2012 tax payments were deemed made on April 15, 2013, they would lie beyond the three-year lookback period specified in the final sentence ofsection 6512(b)(3) . Thus, none of her payments would be eligible for refund.See infra↩ pp. 26-27.9. The reference in the final sentence of
section 6512(b)(3) to "the applicable period undersubsections (a) and(b)(2) of section 6511 " is clearly a reference to the lookback period undersection 6511(b)(2) and not the limitations period undersection 6511(a) .See (holding that the "restrictions [ofLundy , 516 U.S. at 240section 6512(b)(3) ] governing the Tax Court's authority to award a refund of overpaid taxes incorporate only the look-back period and not the filing deadline from§ 6511↩ ").10. Two other principles caution against embracing the countertextual interpretation that petitioner and amici curiae urge. First, as the Supreme Court noted in
, this Court's ability to allow refunds of overpayments was codified by Congress as a limit on ourLundy , 516 U.S. at 242jurisdiction. See sec. 6512(b)(1) ,(2) , and(3) . As a court of limited jurisdiction, "we may exercise jurisdiction only to the extent expressly authorized by Congress." (declining to extend our collection due process jurisdiction to determine overpayments or order credits or refunds). Second, by amendingGreene-Thapedi v. Commissioner , 126 T.C. 1, 6 (2006)section 6512(b)(3) in 1997 to permit more liberal credit and refund of taxes paid, Congress was to that extent enacting a waiver of sovereign immunity. Such waivers generally are strictly construed. ("[A] waiver of sovereign immunity 'will be strictly construed, in terms of its scope, in favor of the sovereign.'" (quotingSossamon v. Texas , 563 U.S. 277, 285, 131 S. Ct. 1651, 179 L. Ed. 2d 700 (2011) .Lane v. PenÞa , 518 U.S. 187, 192, 116 S. Ct. 2092, 135 L. Ed. 2d 486↩ (1996)))11. The Supreme Court in
Lundy disregarded a fair body of legislative history arguably supporting a result opposite to that which it reached.See 516 U.S. at 253-263 (Thomas, J., dissenting). Instead, the majority believed itself "bound by the terms Congress chose to use when it drafted the statute." . Like the majority inId. at 249Lundy , we think it appropriate to construesection 6512(b)(3)↩ according to the plain language that Congress employed.12. Other Supreme Court cases have discussed, though not literally invoked, the "anti-absurdity" doctrine when construing statutes to avoid potentially unconstitutional outcomes.
See, e.g., ;United States v. X-Citement Video, Inc. , 513 U.S. 64, 115 S. Ct. 464, 130 L. Ed. 2d 372 (1994) .Pub. Citizen v. U.S. Dep't of Justice , 491 U.S. 440, 109 S. Ct. 2558, 105 L. Ed. 2d 377↩ (1989)
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