Goettee v. Commissioner, IRS

192 F. App'x 212
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedJuly 28, 2006
Docket05-1975
StatusUnpublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 192 F. App'x 212 (Goettee v. Commissioner, IRS) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Goettee v. Commissioner, IRS, 192 F. App'x 212 (4th Cir. 2006).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

Petitioners-Appellants, John and Marian Goettee, appeal the Order and Decision of the Tax Court denying them abatement of interest that had accrued on past-due taxes. The Goettees claim that the delay in payment was due in large part to the IRS and that they therefore should not be hable for interest accrual resulting from that delay. They also contend that the Tax Court abused its discretion in refusing to award them reasonable litigation costs in the action as a prevailing party.

Because the IRS is not compelled to abate interest for the periods in question under the applicable statutes and regulations, and because the Tax Court reasonably acted within its discretion in refusing to award litigation costs to the Goettees, we Affirm the Order and Decision of the Tax Court.

I.

During September 1981, the Goettees acquired a limited partnership interest in The Thompson Equipment Associates partnership (“TEA”), a type of shelter that came to be known as a “Barrister Books” shelter. The IRS subsequently found this type of shelter to be improper.

On October 15, 1986, the IRS sent the Goettees a notice of deficiency. In it, the IRS made adjustments on account of TEA items and determined deficiencies and additions to the Goettee’s tax liability for 1978, 1979, 1981, and 1982. On November 3,1986, the Goettees challenged this determination in Tax Court and sought a redetermination of their tax liabilities for all four years. The Tax Court assigned the Goettees’ case to a group of cases collectively referred to as the Barrister Books project. Andrew M. Winkler served as lead counsel for the IRS in the Barrister Books cases. Sometime around 1986, Winkler began extending a uniform settlement offer to Barrister Books investors by settlement letters one batch at a time. *215 Winkler decided not to send a letter to all Barrister Books investors simultaneously because he felt that it would be impossible for the IRS to process all of the settlements at once. Winkler stopped extending the offer on or about May 16,1989 because he was waiting for the resolution of Series 115, the lead case in the Barrister Books litigation project. In the spring of 1993, after the Series 115 case concluded, Winkler again began extending settlement offers. He sent the letters out roughly in alphabetical order, subject to some exceptions. For example, if several investors were represented by a single representative, Winkler extended the offer to those individual investors at the same time.

Although the Barrister Books settlements were complex, the IRS staffed the matter leanly. The agency assigned the work to officers to handle in addition to their normal case load. Around July 1993, the Goettees’ case was assigned, along with about seventy-five other Barrister Books cases, to appeals officer Fran Rowland in the IRS’s Cincinnati office. Like other appeals officers, Rowland managed multiple priorities while she processed the settlement of the Barrister Books cases. Cases nearing the end of the limitations period and those calendared for trial in Cincinnati and Columbus, Ohio were given a higher priority than the Barrister Books cases. Although Rowland’s caseload was down by about half in the spring of 1993, it returned to normal about the same time that the Barrister Books cases were assigned to her. Because of the increase in her workload, Rowland did not send settlement letters to any Barrister Books taxpayers until about September of 1993.

The settlement letters (1) stated the terms of the settlement offer, (2) asked the recipients to submit to Rowland copies of their canceled checks within 10 days so that she could verify the recipients’ actual cash investment in the partnership, and (3) stated that upon receipt of the verification information, Rowland would send to the taxpayer computations which showed the tax effects of the settlement offer to that taxpayer.

Once a taxpayer accepted the settlement offer and returned the signed decision document, Rowland prepared and submitted to her boss, Paul Becker, an appeals transmittal and case memorandum for his approval. If Becker approved, he signed the appeals transmittal and case memorandum and transmitted the settlement documents to Winkler. Winkler then reviewed the format and contents of the decision documents, signed them, and forwarded them to the Tax Court for entry of decision.

On November 24, 1993, Rowland sent the Goettees a settlement letter. On December 2, 1993, the Goettees returned the verification information to Rowland. On October 26, 1994, Rowland mailed the settlement documents to the Goettees. They signed the decision document on November 25, 1994, and mailed it to Rowland on December 14, 1994. The IRS eventually accepted the settlement and billed the Goettees for their tax deficiencies.

The Goettees paid all of the back taxes due, but asked for an abatement of the interest that had collected on the taxes due, which amounted to the following amounts: 1978: $65,336.10 — 1979: $36,-456.54 — 1981: $4,689.52 — 1982: $13,243.89. Following negotiations between the parties, the IRS decided to abate interest that had accrued between October 4, 1995 and November 20, 1996 because the Goettees had been given incorrect advice by the IRS during this time. The IRS refused to abate the interest that accrued during any other periods.

At some point during the negotiations between the parties, the Goettees also submitted $40,000 to the IRS as part of an *216 Offer in Compromise (“OIC”) of their interest liability. The IRS eventually rejected the OIC.

On December 6, 1996, the Goettees filed a timely petition with the Tax Court challenging the IRS’s denial of the majority of their request for abatement. The IRS filed a motion for partial summary judgment, which the Tax Court granted, holding that the statute under which the Goettees sought relief did not apply to tax year 1978. Accordingly, the case continued to trial only with respect to abatement of interest concerning the taxable years 1979, 1981, and 1982.

At trial, the Goettees contended that interest abatement was warranted for two specific periods during which their delay in payment was attributable to improper action by the IRS: the 828 day period between December 2, 1993 and October 26, 1994 during which time the IRS was computing the tax due after it made the Barrister Books settlement offer to the Goettees, and the 139 day period between December 14, 1994 and May 2, 1995 during which time the IRS was processing the Goettees’ signed settlement agreement. 1 The Goettees also requested that the Tax Court “order abatement for unspecified additional periods.” J.A. at 563. The Tax Court ultimately held that the IRS abused its discretion in not abating interest for the period of January 25 through April 24, 1995. With respect to all other periods at issue, the Tax Court held that the IRS did not abuse its discretion by not abating interest assessed against the taxpayers.

The Goettees filed a motion for reconsideration, which the Tax Court denied. In addition, they filed a motion for an award of reasonable litigation costs as a prevailing party in the amount of $59,735.09. The Tax Court also denied this motion.

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Bluebook (online)
192 F. App'x 212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goettee-v-commissioner-irs-ca4-2006.