Medical Practice Solutions, LLC v. Comm'r
This text of 2010 T.C. Memo. 98 (Medical Practice Solutions, LLC v. Comm'r) 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.
Opinion
An appropriate order and decision will be entered.
SUPPLEMENTAL MEMORANDUM OPINION
GUSTAFSON,
At the time Ms. Britton filed her petition, she resided in Massachusetts.
Ms. Britton was the sole member 3*132 of the LLC for the calendar quarters ending September 30, 2006, December 31, 2006, and June 30, 2007. She does not allege that she elected to treat the LLC as a corporation (and she previously stipulated,
On December 10, 2007, the IRS issued a Final Notice of Intent to Levy and Notice of Your Right to a Hearing for the two quarters ending December 31, 2006, and June 30, 2007; 5 and on December 18, 2007, the IRS issued a Notice of Federal Tax Lien Filing and Your Right to a Hearing Under
Before Ms. Britton's CDP hearing was conducted by the IRS Office of Appeals (discussed below), IRS collection personnel continued their work on her liabilities to some extent. Beginning January 16, 2008, collection personnel corresponded with Ms. Britton's husband about the Brittons' request that the lien on her home be released, because (the Brittons alleged) Ms. Britton had no equity in the house, since Ms. Britton owed a mortgage to Mr. Britton.
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An appropriate order and decision will be entered.
SUPPLEMENTAL MEMORANDUM OPINION
GUSTAFSON,
At the time Ms. Britton filed her petition, she resided in Massachusetts.
Ms. Britton was the sole member 3*132 of the LLC for the calendar quarters ending September 30, 2006, December 31, 2006, and June 30, 2007. She does not allege that she elected to treat the LLC as a corporation (and she previously stipulated,
On December 10, 2007, the IRS issued a Final Notice of Intent to Levy and Notice of Your Right to a Hearing for the two quarters ending December 31, 2006, and June 30, 2007; 5 and on December 18, 2007, the IRS issued a Notice of Federal Tax Lien Filing and Your Right to a Hearing Under
Before Ms. Britton's CDP hearing was conducted by the IRS Office of Appeals (discussed below), IRS collection personnel continued their work on her liabilities to some extent. Beginning January 16, 2008, collection personnel corresponded with Ms. Britton's husband about the Brittons' request that the lien on her home be released, because (the Brittons alleged) Ms. Britton had no equity in the house, since Ms. Britton owed a mortgage to Mr. Britton. According to the collection personnel's record, Ms. Britton *134 alleged that she "gave her husband Randy a $ 100,000 mortgage after the LLC taxes accrued and were assessed, and one week before the NFTL [notice of Federal tax lien] was recorded", but "Mr. Britton did not provide proof that there was actual transfer of value in exchange for the mortgage granted to him". In late January the collection personnel decided not to discharge the lien, and on February 6, 2008, the IRS sent the Brittons a letter advising them that their application for a discharge was not accepted.
Ms. Britton timely requested a collection due process (CDP) hearing before the Office of Appeals with respect to both collection notices by submitting to the IRS on January 9, 2008, a Form 12153. 6 The Form 12153 names Ms. Britton as the person requesting the hearing, gives the LLC's EIN, states the Beverly address, and refers to the Form 941 liabilities. Ms. Britton did not propose a collection alternative on her Form 12153 but rather requested withdrawal of the lien and requested penalty abatement. As in
On February 19, 2008, an IRS appeals officer 7 sent a letter to Ms. Britton scheduling her CDP hearing before the Office of Appeals for March 4, 2008. The letter was addressed to -- MEDICAL PRACTICE SOLUTIONS LLC CAROLYN BRITTON SOLE MBR
Following the CDP hearing, the appeals officer researched the lien issue and determined that the lien had been properly filed against Ms. Britton because the LLC is a disregarded entity. During the course of the appeals officer's research he discovered that Ms. Britton had petitioned this Court (i.e., in
On May 9, 2008, the Office of Appeals issued two Notices of Determination Concerning Collection Action(s) Under MEDICAL PRACTICE SOLUTIONS LLC
In attachments to the notices, the appeals officer stated: "With the best information available, *138 the requirements of various applicable law or administrative procedures have been met". However, the attachments to the notices did not describe the "best information available" that the appeals officer used to verify that the requirements had been met. The attachments do state that "[t]ranscripts of the taxpayer's accounts show the Service Center issued [notice and demand]" for payment. However, the attachments do not indicate that transcripts were also consulted to verify that proper assessments had been made.
On June 16, 2008, Ms. Britton timely petitioned this Court to review the notices of determination. The petition alleges seven points of error that can be grouped into the following four issues (which we discuss below in parts II.A through II.D): (A) whether the appeals officer obtained the requisite verification that "applicable law or administrative procedure" had been satisfied under (B) whether Ms. Britton is personally liable for the tax liabilities of the LLC; (C) whether the appeals officer erred in refusing to consider a collection alternative; and (D) whether the lien on Ms. Britton's house should have been released given *139 her alleged lack of equity in it. 9
On March 16, 2009, the parties jointly moved under
The appeals officer who had conducted the first CDP hearing had retired, and a different appeals officer was appointed to conduct the supplemental hearing. She examined the file developed during the first CDP hearing, and she found *141 transcripts and other documents that had been consulted by the prior appeals officer. She concluded that the documents showed the prior appeals officer had verified the fulfillment of the legal and administrative requirements.
The appeals officer also did her own independent review and verified that the legal and administrative requirements had been satisfied. On November 3, 2009, she mailed to Mr. and Ms. Britton copies of a Form 4340 for each of the periods, each of which shows a timely assessment, an unpaid balance, and the mailing of a "Statutory Notice of Balance Due" before the mailing of a "Statutory Notice of Intent to Levy" and "Federal Tax Lien". The Forms 4340 identify the taxpayer as -- MEDICAL PRACTICE SOLUTIONS LLC BRITTON CAROLYN SOLE MBR
The parties reported on their compliance with the Court's remand order, and they then cross-moved for summary judgment.
If a taxpayer fails to pay any Federal income tax liability *142 after notice and demand, chapter 64 of the Code provides two means by which the IRS can collect the tax: First,
However, Congress has added to chapter 64 of the Code certain provisions (in subchapter C, part I, and in subchapter D, part I) as "Due Process for Liens" and "Due Process for Collections". The IRS must comply with those provisions after filing a tax lien and before proceeding with a levy. Within five business days after filing a tax lien, the IRS must provide written notice of that filing to the taxpayer.
The pertinent procedures for the agency-level CDP hearing are set forth in
If the taxpayer is not satisfied with the determination of the Office of Appeals, the taxpayer may "appeal such determination to the Tax Court".
This Court has held that an appeal pursuant to
Where the pertinent facts are not in dispute, a party may move for summary judgment to expedite the litigation and avoid an unnecessary trial.
The party moving for summary judgment bears the burden of showing that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact, and factual inferences will be drawn in the manner most favorable to the party opposing summary judgment.
Respondent has shown that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that he is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. We discuss here the issues that Ms. Britton has raised, none of which effectively contradicts respondent's showing.
A. Respondent has shown verification as required by section 6330(c)(1) .
o the IRS's timely assessment of the liability, o the taxpayer's failure to pay the liability, o the giving to the taxpayer of notice and demand for payment of the liability, o the giving to the taxpayer of notice of intent to levy,
Respondent has now demonstrated that the verification was obtained -- i.e., that the IRS made timely assessments, that it gave Ms. Britton notice and demand for payment, *148 that Ms. Britton did not fully pay the liabilities, and that the IRS gave her notice of the lien and the proposed levy and of her right to a hearing. At the supplemental hearing, the appeals officer both reconstructed the information available at the original CDP hearing (which she confirmed by reviewing documents in the administrative record that had not previously been included in our record in this appeal) to confirm that these requirements were verified at that hearing and made her own verification of these requirements with, inter alia, updated information on Forms 4340 from the IRS's records. Respondent's motion sets out in detail, with citations of the IRS's records, its compliance with the applicable requirements.
Ms. Britton suggests no error in respondent's analysis. Rather, her principal contention as to verification is in effect a restatement of her contention that she is not liable for the LLC's employment taxes. That is, she contends that the Office of Appeals did not obtain verification that the liabilities had been assessed
B.
As is noted above,
As for the law, Ms. Britton attempts to dispute here the validity of the "check-the-box" regulations,
Consequently, Ms. Britton's arguments about the liability of the LLC versus her own liability, or assessments being made against the LLC and not herself, or the use of the LLC's EIN rather than her Social Security number, or the presence of both her name and the LLC's name on the demand for payment and the Forms 4340, or notices of the lien and of the proposed levy being given to herself rather than to the LLC--all of these arguments fail because Ms. Britton and the LLC are, as we explicitly held, "a single taxpayer or person to whom notice is given."
Ms. Britton seems to lay special stress on the fact that respondent "admits" that the IRS "only assessed the tax liability against MPS under its Employee Identification Number", rather than under Ms. Britton's number. However, the IRS's issuance of an Employer Identification Number does not necessarily indicate the existence of a distinct taxpayer. On the contrary, some individuals have "both a social security number * * * and an employer identification number".
As for the facts, there can be no plausible suggestion that Ms. Britton was confused or misled about the IRS's assertion of her liability for *153 the LLC's employment taxes. She signed and filed two of the LLC's three Form 941 returns that gave rise to the liabilities, and her husband and representative signed the third. On her own Form 12153 requesting the CDP hearing, she gave her own name
As we held in
C.
In her petition Ms. Britton argued that she should have been allowed to enter into an installment agreement to pay the liabilities at issue. However, while her representative did express to the appeals officer an interest in such an agreement, Ms. Britton never actually proposed any installment agreement; and the appeals officer determined in April 2008 that she was ineligible for an installment agreement because she was "not in compliance with federal tax deposits". 16 In our previous opinion in this case we did not decide this issue, but we noted "the apparent lack of merit in her contentions about collection alternatives" and observed that "[t]he Office of Appeals does not abuse its discretion to reject a collection alternative where (as appears, from the record before us, to be the case here) the taxpayer did not propose a specific alternative, *156 see
Ms. Britton has not renewed this argument in any subsequent filing; and we find that she has abandoned it.
D.
Before Ms. Britton's CDP hearing with the Office of Appeals, IRS collection personnel had decided not to discharge the lien on her house. She had argued that she had no equity in the house, but the IRS determined that Ms. Britton "gave her husband Randy a $ 100,000 mortgage after the LLC taxes accrued and were assessed, and one week before the NFTL [notice of Federal tax lien] was recorded", and that *157 "Mr. Britton did not provide proof that there was actual transfer of value in exchange for the mortgage granted to him". We assume, see
However, there is no other information in the CDP hearing record that relates to this issue. In particular, there is no information in the CDP hearing record about the value of the house or about any mortgage loans or their unpaid balances. 17 From the Court's previous opinion Ms. Britton was on notice that the issue was not even apparent -- much less substantiated -- in the CDP hearing record. In this appeal Ms. Britton did not allege that any information was omitted from the CDP record, did not attempt to supplement the record in any way, and did not request or attempt to substantiate this issue in the supplemental *158 hearing on remand.
Given this cursory and paperless "rais[ing]" of this issue, we cannot find, even entertaining all presumptions in Ms. Britton's favor, that the appeals officer abused her discretion by failing to consider whether the lien on Ms. Britton's house should be discharged. The record before her included nothing to support an argument that a discharge was warranted.
E. *159 Ms. Britton shows no lack of an "Impartial Officer" .
After the supplemental CDP hearing, Ms. Britton raised an additional argument under the rubric of "ex-parte communications". The hearing under this subsection shall be conducted by an officer or employee who has had no prior involvement with respect to the unpaid tax * * * before the first hearing under this section * * *.
Ms. Britton invokes this ex-parte communications principle in an attempt to invalidate the CDP proceedings that have been conducted in this case, but she distorts the actual principle. She seems to argue that because printouts of IRS transcripts were generated by personnel other than the appeals officer herself who made the verification, her work involved impermissible "ex parte communications", and she lacked independence and failed to be an impartial officer. However, by requiring the appeals officer to "obtain verification
"Ex parte communications" with IRS collection *161 personnel might compromise the independence of the Office of Appeals; but if (as it appears) Ms. Britton objects to the appeals officer's consultation with her colleagues in the Office of Appeals, then she misunderstands the applicable principles. Generally, "[i]ntra-Appeals communications during the deliberation process do not compromise or appear to compromise that independence. Appeals employees may communicate freely with other Appeals employees without inviting the taxpayer/representative to participate."
To the extent Ms. Britton complains about the appeals officer's consultation with attorneys from the Office of Chief Counsel who are responsible for this litigation, she similarly misunderstands the ex-parte communications principles.
Focusing on the statutory requirement that the appeals officer must have had "no prior involvement", Ms. Britton seems to argue that once an employee *162 in the Office of Appeals has had any connection with her case, he is disabled by that "prior involvement" from working on the next phase of her case and therefore taints the proceedings by his involvement. However, what
To reflect the foregoing,
Footnotes
*. This opinion supplements
Med. Practice Solutions, LLC v. Commissioner↩ , T.C. Memo. 2009-214.1. Except as otherwise noted, all section references are to the Internal Revenue Code (Code, 26 U.S.C.), and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.
2. The parties originally submitted this case as fully stipulated pursuant to
Rule 122 . We decided that respondent's Office of Appeals had abused its discretion in determining to proceed with collection without verifying that all legal and procedural requirements had been met (assection 6330(c)(1) requires), and we remanded the case to the Office of Appeals to clarify the record as to that verification. See . After conducting a supplemental hearing, the Office of Appeals issued a supplemental notice of determination stating that a verification had been made. The parties have now briefed that verification issue and have renewed their arguments about the additional issues in the case.Med. Practice Solutions, LLC v. Commissioner , T.C. Memo. 2009-214↩3. Ms. Britton does not deny that she was the sole member of the LLC. On the contrary, she stipulated the fact in
; and on the signature block on her opposition in this case she identifies herself as "Carolyn Britton, Sole Member" (as she has done in her filings in this case since March 4, 2009). However, Ms. Britton submitted with her opposition and cross-motion the declaration of her representative and husband, Randy Britton, who states that he did not ever tell the appeals officer how many members there were. Nonetheless, the settlement officer concluded in the first CDP hearing that Ms. Britton was the sole member; the notices of determination identified her as "SOLE MBR"; and Ms. Britton does not claim that she disputed the settlement officer's conclusion at any time in the original or supplemental hearing.Medical Practice I , 132 T.C. at 1264. Ms. Britton contends that the record does not show assessments against the LLC, but the self-authenticating Forms 4340, Certificate of Assessments, Payments, and Other Specified Matters, which the appeals officer provided to Ms. Britton during the supplemental hearing, plainly show the assessments.↩
5. The record does not show why the notice of intent to levy covered only two periods, while the notice of Federal tax lien covered three periods.↩
6. The Form 12153 bore Ms. Britton's name (not the name of the LLC) and was signed by Ms. Britton's husband and attorney-in-fact, Randy Britton.↩
7. The employee who conducted the CDP hearing is identified in the hearing record as a "settlement officer".
Section 6330(c)(1) and(c)(3) refers to the person who conducts the CDP hearing as an "appeals officer"; butsection 6330(b)(3) refers to the person as "an officer or employee", andsection 6330(b)(1) and(d)(2)↩ refers more generally to the "Internal Revenue Service Office of Appeals". We use the statutory term "appeals officer" throughout this opinion.8. We construe broadly the petition of Ms. Britton as a pro se litigant. See
Rule 31(d) ; . The petition's references to defects in the assessment and in the issuance of notices and to lack of "proper procedure" were sufficient to plead a dispute as to whether verification was obtained as required bySwope v. Commissioner , T.C. Memo. 1990-82section 6330(c)(1)↩ .9. We previously stated that Ms. Britton did not raise her contention as to equity in her home in her Form 12153 (requesting the CDP hearing) nor at the CDP hearing.
. Respondent allows, however, that if her Form 12153 is "liberally constru[ed]", then the issue may have been implicitly raised in the contention in Form 12153 that "the filing of the notice [of lien] was * * * not in accordance with administrative procedures". We therefore assume that the issue was raised in Ms. Britton's request for a CDP hearing, and we discuss it below in part II.D.Med. Practice Solutions, LLC v. Commissioner , T.C. Memo. 2009-214↩ n.710. To the extent practicable, a CDP hearing concerning a lien under
section 6320 is to be held in conjunction with a CDP hearing concerning a levy undersection 6330 , and the conduct of the lien hearing is to be in accordance with the relevant provisions ofsection 6330 . Seesec. 6320(b)(4) ,(c)↩ .11. Our decision in
Medical Practice I aligned itself with uniform authority, including the judgment of two Courts of Appeals. See ;McNamee v. Dept. of the Treasury , 488 F.3d 100 (2d Cir. 2007) . We note, however, that for employment taxes related to wages paid on or after January 1, 2009 (i.e., after the periods in issue), a disregarded entity is treated as a corporation for purposes of employment tax reporting and liability.Littriello v. United States , 484 F.3d 372 (6th Cir. 2007)26 C.F.R. sec. 301.7701-2(c)(2)(iv)↩ , Proced. & Admin. Regs.12. "Social security number" is defined in
26 C.F.R. sec. 301.7701-11 , Proced. & Admin. Regs., and "employer identification number" is defined in26 C.F.R. sec. 301.7701-12 , Proced. & Admin. Regs. See also26 C.F.R. sec. 301.6109-1(a)(1)↩ , Proced. & Admin. Regs. (describing the principal types of taxpayer identifying numbers).13.
26 C.F.R. sec. 301.6109-1(h)(2) , Proced. & Admin Regs., provides that "a single owner entity that is disregarded as an entity separate from its owner undersection 301.7701-3↩ , must use its owner's taxpayer identifying number (TIN) for federal tax purposes." The record in this case does not show that Ms. Britton has ever obtained a distinct TIN for herself (apart from the LLC's EIN), and we therefore cannot rule out the possibility that the LLC's EIN is in fact Ms. Britton's TIN.14. It is not clear whether the use of the Beverly address on the notices was incorrect. The Code requires that such notices be "(A) given in person; (B) left at the dwelling or usual place of business of such person; or (C) sent by certified or registered mail, return receipt requested, to such person's last known address". See
sec. 6330(a)(2) (emphasis added); see alsosec. 6320(a)(2) . If Ms. Britton and the LLC are "a single taxpayer or person to whom notice is given", (emphasis added), then a notice mailed to the LLC's address has arguably been mailed to the sole member's address.Medical Practice I , 132 T.C. at 127↩15. Cf.
("the intent ofEstate of Brandon v. Commissioner , 133 T.C. 83, ___, 2009 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 22, *8 (2009)section 6320 was fulfilled because the estate received notice, made a timely request for, and received, a hearing relating to the" notice of Federal tax lien); (an erroneously addressed notice of deficiency underMulvania v. Commissioner , 81 T.C. 65, 67-68 (1983)sec. 6212 is nevertheless valid if the taxpayer receives actual notice of the Commissioner's determination in a timely fashion); (an erroneously addressed notice and demand underBarmes v. IRS , 116 F. Supp. 2d 1007, 1014 (S.D. Ind. 2000)sec. 6303 is nevertheless valid where the notice "contained * * * [the taxpayer's] name, stated the amount of tax owing, and reached * * * [the taxpayer] at the address of his business. Therefore, the formal requirements of the statute have been met. To be sure, [the taxpayer] * * * had actual notice of the assessment").16. See
("Internal Revenue Service guidelines require a taxpayer to be current with filing and payment requirements to qualify for an installment agreement"); seeGiamelli v. Commissioner , 129 T.C. 107, 111-112 (2007)Internal Revenue Manual pt. 5.14.1.4.1(19) (Sept. 26, 2008) ("Compliance with filing, paying estimated taxes, andfederal tax deposits↩ must be current from the date the installment agreement begins" (emphasis added)).17. The only information that Mr. Britton's declaration cites is from prior communication not with the Office of Appeals but with collection personnel -- i.e., the "ICS History Transcript" that does recount, at 19-27, exchanges of information about mortgages. "The Integrated Collection System (ICS) provides workload management, case assignment/tracking, inventory control, electronic processing, and case analysis tools to support the
SB/SE [Small Business/Self-Employed]organization collection fieldwork ."IRM 5.1.20.2.2.1(1) (May 27, 2008) (emphasis added). Thus, the information exchanges recounted in the ICS History Transcript are communicationsnot↩ with Appeals but with SB/SE collection personnel. The transcript therefore does nothing to show what information (if any) Ms. Britton provided during her CDP hearing.
Related
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2010 T.C. Memo. 98, 99 T.C.M. 1392, 2010 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/medical-practice-solutions-llc-v-commr-tax-2010.