Eric D. Clarkson

CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedSeptember 7, 2022
Docket16804-21
StatusUnpublished

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Eric D. Clarkson, (tax 2022).

Opinion

United States Tax Court

T.C. Memo. 2022-92

ERIC D. CLARKSON, Petitioner

v.

COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent

—————

Docket No. 16804-21L. Filed September 7, 2022.

Eric D. Clarkson, pro se.

Marissa J. Savit and Thomas A. Deamus, for respondent.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

LAUBER, Judge: In this collection due process (CDP) case peti- tioner seeks review pursuant to section 6330(d)(1) of the determination by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS or respondent) to uphold the filing of a notice of intent to levy. 1 The notice relates to petitioner’s liability for frivolous return penalties imposed for submissions he made to the IRS for tax years 2003–2016. See § 6702(a). Respondent has filed a Motion for Summary Judgment under Rule 121, contending that there are no disputes of material fact, that petitioner is liable for the penalties as a matter of law, and that the settlement officer (SO) did not abuse her discretion in sustaining the proposed levy. We agree and accord- ingly will grant the Motion.

1 Unless otherwise indicated, all statutory references are to the Internal Reve-

nue Code, Title 26 U.S.C., in effect at all relevant times, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.

Served 09/07/22 2

[*2] Background

The following facts are derived from the parties’ pleadings and motion papers, including accompanying declarations and exhibits. See Rule 121(b). Petitioner resided in New Jersey when he filed his Petition.

Petitioner failed to file timely Federal income tax returns for every year from 2003 to 2016. Using information supplied in third-party reports, the IRS prepared a substitute for return for each year and is- sued petitioner notices of deficiency. As of June 2020 his total balance due was more than $250,000.

Petitioner is no stranger to this Court. He initially petitioned the Court on October 28, 2015, docket No. 27236-15, disputing the notices of deficiency for 2003–2008. We dismissed that case for lack of jurisdiction on February 3, 2016. See § 6213(a). Petitioner did not challenge the notices of deficiency for 2009–2012, and the IRS duly assessed the tax for those years. He petitioned this Court, docket No. 14156-16L, chal- lenging collection action with respect to those liabilities. We granted summary judgment in respondent’s favor on March 24, 2017, rejecting petitioner’s challenge to his underlying tax liabilities for 2009–2012 and sustaining the collection action.

Throughout 2017 the IRS sent petitioner various letters about his filing and payment obligations, including a Letter 3174 (warning of im- pending levy action for 2003–2012) and a Letter 729 (asking that he sub- mit tax returns for 2013–2015). On September 27, 2017, petitioner re- plied to these letters by submitting a signed Form 1040, U.S. Individual Income Tax Return, for every year from 2003 to 2015 inclusive. He ex- plained that he intended these submissions to satisfy the IRS’s request for delinquent returns. He asked that the “record . . . be corrected” to reflect that, in the light of the data he put on the Forms 1040, “there has never been any tax due or owing.” He had previously submitted, on April 19, 2017, a substantially similar signed Form 1040 for 2016.

Petitioner reported the following on the Form 1040 for 2003:

Wages, salaries and tips -0- Adjusted gross income -0- Federal income tax withheld $3,035.36 Overpayment and refund requested 3,035.36 3

[*3] To this Form 1040 he attached a Form 4852, Substitute for Form W–2, Wage and Tax Statement. He created this Form 4852 himself to replace the Form W–2 that had been issued to him by Adolph Farmer Construction, Inc., reporting wages that the company had paid him dur- ing 2003. He checked a box falsely asserting that he had been “unable to obtain” or had “received an incorrect” Form W–2.

Petitioner placed the following entries on the Form 4852 he cre- ated for 2003:

Wages, tips, and other compensation -0- Federal income tax withheld $1,962.04 State income tax withheld 417.10 Social Security tax withheld 869.88 Medicare tax withheld 203.44

To explain why the entry for wages was zero, despite the withholding of tax, petitioner asserted that he had not received “any ‘wages’ as defined in section 3401(a) and section 3121(a).” He added that all other numbers were derived from “the W–2 sent to me.”

To his Form 1040 for 2003 petitioner also attached a Form 1099– MISC, Miscellaneous Income. Forms 1099–MISC are issued by payers of income to payees. But petitioner created this Form 1099–MISC him- self, putting zero in the box for “Nonemployee compensation” and show- ing no tax withheld. He asserted that this was a “corrected” Form 1099– MISC that was intended to “rebut” the Form 1099–MISC issued to him by Ahera Consultants, Inc. (Ahera), the payer of the income. Petitioner wrote:

The form is NOT INTENDED to represent a corrected 1099–MISC filed by the party identified therein as “PAYER.” The corrected form 1099–MISC herein pre- sented, is submitted to “rebut” a document known to have been submitted by the party identified therein as the “PAYER” which or who erroneously alleges a payment or payments to the party identified therein as “RECIPIENT” of “gains, profit or incomes” within the meaning of relevant law, which they ARE NOT.

The payments made to me by this “PAYER” did not result from any federally taxable activity whatsoever and do not 4

[*4] constitute any taxable income under relevant income tax law . . . . [T]his payer is not connected with any activity or of any status which would render payments to me subject to federal income excise tax, nor am I.

Petitioner reported the following on the Forms 1040 he submitted for 2004–2016:

Wages, salaries and tips -0- Adjusted gross income -0- Federal income tax withheld -0- Overpayment and refund requested -0-

To each Form 1040 he attached a “corrected” Form 1099–MISC. Each form mirrored the “corrected” Form 1099–MISC he submitted for 2003, and he appended to each the same explanation. He asserted that each “corrected” Form 1099–MISC was intended to “‘rebut’ . . . submi[ssions] by the party identified therein as ‘PAYER.’”

The IRS sent petitioner’s Forms 1040 for 2003–2016 to its Frivo- lous Returns Program (FRP). FRP, in turn, sent petitioner Letters 3176C warning him that his submissions constituted frivolous tax re- turns and that, if he did not withdraw them, he would incur a penalty of $5,000 for each submission.

Petitioner neither amended nor withdrew the Forms 1040 he had submitted. Instead, in a reply dated March 24, 2018, he reiterated and elaborated upon the arguments he had made previously. He argued that he was not an “employee of a corporation or employee of a partnership” and that he had no “duty . . . concerning . . . tax-related matters of any kind.” He asserted that he had received no “wages as defined in section 3401(a)” and that his “corrected” Forms 1099–MISC were intended to “rebut allegations made by others” that he had been paid taxable com- pensation. He expressed disagreement with the IRS’s characterization of his Forms 1040 as “submissions,” insisting that they were proper “re- turns” that the IRS must accept and process. He asserted that these “returns” could not legally be “withdraw[n] and replace[d]” even if he had wished to do so.

Lucy Bordley, an examining agent in FRP, proposed a $5,000 pen- alty for each of the Forms 1040 that petitioner had submitted. She pre- pared 14 separate Forms 8278, Assessment and Abatement of 5

[*5] Miscellaneous Civil Penalties, recommending assertion of penalties totaling $70,000. Ms.

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