Hull v. United States

146 F.3d 235
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedJune 8, 1998
Docket97-1931 to 97-1933
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 146 F.3d 235 (Hull v. United States) 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
Hull v. United States, 146 F.3d 235 (4th Cir. 1998).

Opinions

Affirmed by published opinion. Judge NIEMEYER wrote the majority opinion, in which Chief Judge WILKINSON joined. Judge WIDENER wrote a dissenting opinion.

OPINION

NIEMEYER, Circuit Judge:

Section 6532(a) of the Internal Revenue Code requires a taxpayer who wishes to file a tax refund suit against the United States to do so within two years after the taxpayer is mailed formal notice of disallowance of the claimed refund or, if the taxpayer waives formal notice, within two years after the taxpayer’s waiver is “filed.” At the request of the Internal Revenue Service Appeals Office in Baltimore, the taxpayers in these three cases waived formal notice of disallowance and mailed their waivers to the appeals officer in Baltimore. The appeals officer later sent letters to the taxpayers, indicating that the taxpayers’ files were being closed and referencing receipt of their waivers. When the taxpayers filed these refund suits within two years after receiving acknowledgment of their waivers but more than two years after their waivers were received by the Appeals Office, the district court dismissed the cases as untimely under I.R.C. § 6532(a)(3). For the reasons that follow, we affirm.

I

On April 15, 1994, John Hull and other similarly situated taxpayers filed claims with the IRS for refunds of taxes paid for the 1990 tax year. The taxpayers claimed that they had been overtaxed for lump sum distributions from the Maryland Retirement System and that they were eligible for 10-year income averaging. After the IRS proposed rejection of the claimed refunds, it assigned an appeals officer in Baltimore to the taxpayers’ cases to hear administrative appeals brought by the taxpayers. The appeals officer assigned to the taxpayers’ cases informed William Park, the taxpayers’ representative, that the IRS had adopted a uniform litigation posture for all Maryland Retirement System cases and that the IRS would not allow any part of the taxpayers’ claims. The appeals officer asked Park to waive formal notice of disallowance of the refund claims, which Park agreed to do. He executed waivers on behalf of the taxpayers on December 7, 1994, and mailed them in duplicate to the appeals officer in Baltimore, requesting date-stamped copies in return to show receipt. Park never received date-stamped copies of the waivers, but three weeks later he received form letters from the appeals officer, stating for each [237]*237taxpayer, “We have closed this case on the basis agreed upon and are sending the case file to the service center_ An official notice of full or partial disallowance of claim for refund will not be sent because a waiver, form 2297, was signed.” That letter for Hull was mailed on December 29, 1994, and for the other taxpayers, on December 27, 1994.

Form 2297, the waiver form that Park executed on behalf of the taxpayers, includes a waiver of the requirement that notice of claim disallowance be sent to the taxpayers by certified or registered mail and advises persons signing the form that “the filing of this waiver is irrevocable and it will begin the 2-year period for filing suit for refund of the claims disallowed as if the notice of disallowance had been sent by certified or registered mail.” The Appeals Office in Baltimore received the taxpayers’ waivers in this case on December 8, 1994, as indicated by the date stamp: “RECEIVED 1994 DEC-8 AM 10:54 APPEALS OFFICE BALTIMORE MARYLAND.” There is no evidence in the record when the waiver forms were actually handed to the appeals officer assigned to the eases.

Because Park did not receive duplicate copies of the waiver forms stamped with the date of receipt and received only the letters advising the taxpayers that the officer was closing the files, Park construed the letters as “both an informal acknowledgment of dis-allowance and notice that the Waiver was filed on December 29, 1994.” He believed therefore that the December 29 date (or December 27 with respect to the taxpayers other than Hull) was the last date when suit could be filed.

In the hope that favorable precedent might be issued by the courts with respect to the substantive issue about pension plan distributions, Park decided, as a strategic matter, to hold off the taxpayers’ refund suits for as long as legally possible. On December 11, 1996, more than two years after Park mailed his waivers to the Appeals Office, he sent the taxpayers’ files to litigation counsel, indicating that their suits needed to be filed by December 29, 1996. Litigation counsel filed these three actions in the district court on December 17, 1996 — more than two years after Park mailed the waivers to the Appeals Office, more than two years after the Appeals Office received the waivers, but within two years of when the Appeals Office sent the acknowledgment letters to the taxpayers.

The IRS filed a motion under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(1) in each action, alleging that the suit was untimely under I.R.C. § 6532(a)(3) and that the statute of limitations was jurisdictional. The district court agreed with the IRS, concluding that because a waiver is filed when the taxpayer submits it to the IRS or when the IRS receives it, the refund suits, filed more than two years after their waivers were filed, were untimely. These appeals followed.

II

The taxpayers contend that their refund suits, filed on December 17, 1996, were timely because the two-year statute of limitations did not begin to run until December 27 or 29, 1994, when the appeals officer “who requested the waiver acknowledged[its] receipt and advised taxpayer’s representative that ‘an official notice of full or partial disallowance of claim for refund will not be sent because a waiver, Form 2297, was signed,.' [Emphasis supplied].” They argue that for purposes of I.R.C. § 6532(a)(3), a document is filed “when it is placed in the custody of the officer appointed by law to receive it.” Because there is an absence of any evidence as to when the waivers were actually received by the appeals officer,, they maintain that the court can only rely on the December 27 or 29 date when the appeals officer acknowledged receiving the waivers. The taxpayers accept the district court’s reliance on the definition of “to file” as meaning “[t]o deliver an instrument or other paper to the proper officer or official for purpose of being kept on file by him,” see Black’s Law Dictionary 628 (6th ed.1990), but contend that the district court erred when it relied so heavily on the date of delivery to the Appeals Office and ignored the date of receipt by the appeals officer who requested it.

The United States contends that the waivers were filed on December 8, 1994, when they were received by the Baltimore Appeals Office of the IRS, and that a refund suit filed [238]*238over two years later was untimely. The United States contends that “[i]n these circumstances, the district court was constrained by Section 6532 to dismiss taxpayers’ refund suits for lack of subject matter jurisdiction and it properly did so.” The United States argues that the ruling urged by the taxpayer — that a document is not filed until it is distributed to a specific IRS employee assigned to process the document — “is unsupported by any authority, is contrary to common sense and would be far more harmful than beneficial to the vast majority of taxpayers.”

Section 6532(a) of the Internal Revenue Code, which controls the issue before us, reads in pertinent part:

(1)...

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
146 F.3d 235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hull-v-united-states-ca4-1998.