Duane Whittaker & Candace Whittaker

CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedMay 15, 2023
Docket3147-21
StatusUnpublished

This text of Duane Whittaker & Candace Whittaker (Duane Whittaker & Candace Whittaker) 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.

Bluebook
Duane Whittaker & Candace Whittaker, (tax 2023).

Opinion

United States Tax Court

T.C. Memo. 2023-59

DUANE WHITTAKER AND CANDACE WHITTAKER, Petitioners

v.

COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent

—————

Docket No. 3147-21L. Filed May 15, 2023.

Caleb B. Smith, for petitioners. 1

Lisa R. Jones and Paul A. George, for respondent.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

HOLMES, Judge: Duane and Candace Whittaker offered to settle their $33,000 tax bill for only $1,629. 2 The Whittakers argued that the Commissioner should accept such a low offer because they were both near retirement age and burdened with significant unpaid debt and loss of their jobs during the pandemic. The IRS’s settlement officer rejected the offer because she concluded that the Whittakers had enough income and home equity to pay the tax bill in full.

1 The Whittakers were clients of the University of Minnesota Ronald M. Mankoff Tax Clinic, which gives students the opportunity to represent clients before the IRS and the courts. The Court thanks them for their work on this case. 2 In addition to the $33,000 bill stemming from 2015, the Whittakers intended

the $1,629 to also satisfy their liabilities from 2004, 2005, 2006, and 2018. Taken together, the Whittakers total outstanding liability was around $50,000 at the time of their offer. We focus on the sum from 2015 since that is the tax directly at issue.

Served 05/15/23 2

[*2] The question in this case is whether this rejection was an abuse of discretion.

Background

The Whittakers are hardworking people—Mrs. Whittaker was a family and community-empowerment specialist for a local school district who also worked part time as a tutor and as a mall security guard. Mr. Whittaker is a veteran and self-employed personal trainer. The couple have faced financial hardship long before 2015. They have significant unpaid debts, including even unpaid student loans of more than $60,000, and other personal debt of about $10,000.

They also have tax troubles. They owe the IRS income tax for tax years 2004–06 and 2018. And they owe Minnesota about $9,700 for their 2015 tax year.

In 2018 the Commissioner sent them a notice of his intent to levy to collect their 2015 tax debt. The Whittakers timely asked for a collection due process (CDP) hearing under section 6330. 3 The Whittakers wanted to compromise their tax debt, which triggered the IRS to refer their case to an IRS offer examiner who told them that they needed to fill out and return IRS Form 433–A (OIC), Collection Information Statement for Wage Earners and Self-Employed Individuals, if they wanted her to consider an alternative to forced collection.

After a telephone conference between one of their lawyers and the examiner, the Whittakers submitted an offer-in-compromise (OIC) in May 2019. By the time they submitted the OIC, the Whittakers were in their mid-60s, and Mrs. Whittaker was less than a year away from retirement from the Northwest Suburban Integration School District.

The OIC included a completed Form 433–A, exhibits such as the mortgage statement for their home, their county property-tax statement, and a tax order from the Minnesota Department of Revenue. They also included a copy of a retirement letter for Mrs. Whittaker, her employment contract with the school district, her Social Security benefits statement, pay stubs from her jobs with the school district and

3 Unless otherwise indicated, all statutory references are to the Internal

Revenue Code, Title 26 U.S.C., in effect at all relevant times, all regulation references are to the Code of Federal Regulations, Title 26 (Treas. Reg.), in effect at all relevant times, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure. 3

[*3] the mall, and a list of her expenses that included her student-loan, health-care billing, and personal credit-card statements to paint the full picture of her financial situation. They included a copy of a money order for an initial 20% payment of $325.80 for their OIC. 4 The OIC also included a number of exhibits from Mr. Whittaker—a profit-and-loss statement for his personal-training business, business checking-account statements, and a military-pay letter from the Department of Defense. The Whittakers noted that they could provide additional information to support their claims in the OIC if the IRS so desired.

In their OIC, the Whittakers stressed that their age and difficult financial situation meant that they would very soon have to rely on their retirement savings as a source of income rather than as a nest egg. They also volunteered that they could not borrow against their home both because it was in disrepair and because the terms of their mortgage forbade it.

The IRS usually shuffles the OICs that taxpayers send in to a centralized unit unimaginatively called the Centralized Offer in Compromise Unit. This part of the IRS bureaucracy rejected the Whittakers’ OIC in February 2020. Someone at the Unit calculated that the Whittakers could pay—or to use IRS jargon, had a reasonable collection potential (RCP) of—about $250,000. The case-activity record (the equivalent of timesheets for IRS employees) shows that the Whittakers’ lawyer spoke with a settlement officer who explained that “the special circumstances [that the Whittakers raised] were considered; but did not warrant acceptance of the offer.” There was, however, nothing in the activity record to suggest that the settlement officer asked the Whittakers about their ability to access their equity in their home.

When the Unit thinks it should reject a taxpayer’s OIC, the IRS still allows an appeal to a different part of the IRS, the IRS Office of Appeals. (It has since been rechristened the IRS Independent Office of Appeals. Taxpayer First Act, Pub. L. No. 116-25, § 1001, 133 Stat. 981, 983 (2019).) The Whittakers’ timing couldn’t have been worse—their appeal hit IRS Appeals just as the pandemic hit the country. After a hearing in March 2020, the record shows that the settlement officer

4 The IRS requires taxpayers who want an OIC to pay an application fee and

submit an initial partial payment. The Whittakers at first neglected to include the fee along with the partial payment. After being notified of the error, the Whittakers’ attorney sent the required sum. 4

[*4] reached out to one of the Whittakers’ lawyers to schedule a second hearing. 5 But there were long gaps between her attempts to reach the Whittakers’ lawyers, and their lawyers did not finally get in touch with the settlement officer until September 2020.

Their conversation seems to have been short. One of the lawyers spoke with the settlement officer and asked for a call back to discuss the case. Later that day, after looking through the files for about 15 minutes, the settlement officer did call back to say that she agreed with the rejection because the Whittakers had an RCP of about $250,000 against a total liability of about $50,000. 6 The settlement officer reiterated that the special circumstances that the Whittakers raised in their OIC were considered, but that she thought their offer was way too low because the Whittakers could fully pay without hardship. The settlement officer pointed out, for instance, that the Whittakers could fully pay the liability with “just one of the investment account[s,] leaving the other investment and the equity in the home.” She did offer the Whittakers a streamlined installment agreement 7 and gave their lawyer time to speak with the Whittakers to see if that was what they wanted.

Remember, though, that this was in the middle of the worst part of the pandemic. The Whittakers responded with a five-page fax, in which they again argued that the IRS should accept their OIC, but also

5 The activity record shows a call made in February 2020, and another one in September 2020.

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