Jodell Sample

CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedNovember 17, 2025
Docket22656-22
StatusUnpublished

This text of Jodell Sample (Jodell Sample) 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
Jodell Sample, (tax 2025).

Opinion

United States Tax Court

T.C. Memo. 2025-118

JODELL SAMPLE, Petitioner

v.

COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent

__________

Docket Nos. 4394-20, 22656-22, Filed November 17, 2025. 11655-23L. __________

Eric Johnson, for petitioner.

Paul A. George, for respondent.

MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION

HOLMES, Judge: Joseph Schara is a dentist who has long practiced in Minnesota. His wife, Jodell Sample, has long worked with him as the office manager and receptionist. Their tax troubles began when the couple stopped reporting Schara’s income from his dental practice on their return for 2011. Then they stopped reporting Sample’s salary from the dental practice. Over the next several years, Schara continued to underreport their income and underpay their tax. Even though she signed every return they filed together, Sample says she caught on only when a revenue officer dropped by their office in 2015.

This revelation didn’t seem to faze her. Schara continued to manage their finances. Sample continued to not worry about them, but the couple’s tax debt grew to more than $300,000. She argues that Schara’s deception about their situation continued for years, and she now wants to extract herself from their joint liability by requesting innocent-spouse relief from their joint liabilities for tax years 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2017, and 2018.

Served 11/17/25 2

[*2] FINDINGS OF FACT

I. Their Marriage

Schara and Sample were married in 1995. Schara owned his own dental practice and hired Sample as his office manager. The couple worked together for years, and his business was their main source of income. Sample’s formal education had ended with high school, and she relied heavily on Schara when it came to the family’s finances.

Sample didn’t bother to check the mail. She signed their joint returns without reading them. Schara oversaw the couple’s financial affairs; in his wife’s eyes, he had a track record of solving any issues that arose, and he assured her that everything was taken care of. Though she worked alongside him, she did not show any interest in his business finances and never bothered to check his books. While she was aware that they had unpaid tax before the revenue agent’s 2015 visit, Schara had consistently assured her that the tax debts were “just temporary” and that he would pay them.

By 2015, this “just temporary” problem had been going on for years. They had failed to pay the tax due at the time they filed their return for 2004, and it took them almost a decade to do so. They also had unreported income for tax years 2008 and 2010. The IRS knew about this and was launching correspondence at the couple, but as far as we can tell from the record, Sample wasn’t involved in the resulting back-and-forth with the IRS or their accountant.

The couple legally separated in late March 2019 after Sample learned of the full extent of their financial problems. The terms of the separation were unusually favorable to her. Schara agreed to be solely responsible for their federal and state tax debts. Sample received one of their shared cars, their main residence in Minnesota, a second home in Montana, and Schara’s entire section 401(k) account. We specifically note that their legal separation has not meant a physical separation. Although Sample has filed numerous innocent-spouse requests, she has continued to live with Schara in their marital home, at least into 2021 and with nothing in the record to suggest that this arrangement has not continued. 3

[*3] II. History of Innocent Spouse Requests

Section 6015 1 offers (b), (c), and (f) relief, each named after its subsection. After her legal separation began, Sample began trying to obtain relief from the accumulated tax debt. For five of these years she filed two Forms 8857, Request for Innocent Spouse Relief. For one of these years she asked for all three kinds of relief, but for the rest only (f) relief. For the sixth year she asked for innocent-spouse relief at the hearing (called a collection-due-process, or CDP, hearing) that the Code offers taxpayers who face enforced collection of a tax debt.

We first describe in detail these requests, the method and kind of relief Sample sought, and then try to straighten out the resulting malocclusion of scopes and standards of review, as well as the different substantive standards for relief of each type that Sample seeks.

A. 2011–14

Sample submitted her first request for innocent-spouse relief for tax years 2011–14. When filing their returns for those tax years, Sample and Schara either paid a de minimis amount of tax or withheld less than their tax due:

Tax Year Withholding Paid Estimated Tax Paid Tax Still Owed 2011 $1,163 $200 $81,344 2012 5,955 — 120,227 2013 6,155 — 78,062 2014 17,047 — 14,769

Sample’s 2014 return was also the first where she omitted the wages from her job at the dental office.

By the end of 2021, the couple had an outstanding balance of $589,393 for these four years. Sample sent the Commissioner her Form 8857 in April 2019 and included a list of assets and liabilities. For the

1 Unless otherwise indicated, statutory references are to the Internal Revenue

Code, Title 26 U.S.C. (I.R.C. or Code), in effect at all relevant times, regulation references are to the Code of Federal Regulations, Title 26 (Treas. Reg.), in effect at all relevant times, and Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure. 4

[*4] years 2011–13, she asked only for equitable relief under section 6015(f). For tax year 2014, she asked for (b) and (c) relief as well.

The IRS’s Cincinnati Centralized Innocent Spouse Operation (CCISO) issued two preliminary determinations. Both denied Sample’s requests. She filed an administrative appeal with the IRS 2 and asked for a chance to give oral testimony. The office denied this request and issued a final determination that denied her relief for all four years.

B. 2017

On their 2017 return, the couple reported that they owed another $6,000:

Estimated Tax Year Withholding Paid Tax Still Owed Paid 2017 $83,570 $23,943 $5,972

They did not pay, and the Commissioner sent Sample a notice of intent to levy 3 in June 2021. She asked for a CDP hearing soon after. In her request she asked for an installment agreement or an offer-in- compromise, or for the account to be placed in currently-not-collectible status. She abandoned her request for these collection alternatives shortly afterward and again asked for innocent-spouse relief from this underpayment. The Appeals officer (AO) assigned to her hearing sent her request off to CCISO, which once more made a preliminary determination to deny her relief.

Sample appealed the denial back to IRS Appeals. AO Rassenfoss sustained CCISO’s denial and recommended that she send him any additional documents to make sure they made it into the administrative record, should she want to appeal again to our Court. This may not have been the best advice. Remember that Sample had made this request for innocent-spouse relief in the runup to her CDP hearing. CDP hearings are also held at IRS Appeals, but typically a different part of IRS Appeals. And so her request for relief was routed to the AO in charge of

2 If CCISO denies an innocent-spouse claim, the taxpayer may request an

administrative appeal at Appeals. IRM 25.15.1.10.1 (Jan. 27, 2023). 3 When the Commissioner wishes to collect tax by seizing a taxpayer’s property,

he must issue a notice of intent to levy, which informs a taxpayer of her right to a CDP hearing. I.R.C. § 6330. 5

[*5] her CDP hearing.

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