Peter Knappe v. United States

713 F.3d 1164, 2013 WL 1339106, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 6809, 111 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 1531
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedApril 4, 2013
Docket10-56904
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 713 F.3d 1164 (Peter Knappe v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peter Knappe v. United States, 713 F.3d 1164, 2013 WL 1339106, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 6809, 111 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 1531 (9th Cir. 2013).

Opinion

OPINION

PAEZ, Circuit Judge:

When can you trust your accountant’s advice about when your taxes are due? That is the question we face today. Appellant Peter Knappe, acting as the executor of an estate, asked his accountant to apply for an extension of the deadline to file the estate-tax return from the Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”). The accountant told Knappe that the deadline had been extended one year, when in fact 'it had been extended only six months. Acting on the bad advice, Knappe filed the tax return several months late, and the IRS assessed significant penalties against the estate. Knappe initiated this action in the Central District of California, seeking a refund of the penalty. The district court granted summary judgment to the Government on the ground that Knappe had not shown “reasonable cause” to excuse the penalty, as that term is used in 26 U.S.C. § 6651(a)(1). We affirm.

I. Background

Ingborg Pattee died on November 30, 2005, leaving behind a substantial estate. Her will named as the executor of the estate Peter Knappe, a longtime friend *1166 and successful businessman. Because Knappe had no prior experience serving as the executor of an estate or preparing an estate-tax return, he enlisted the help of Francis Burns, a Certified Public Accountant. Burns had worked as a corporate tax accountant for Knappe’s company for many years, and Knappe had always been satisfied with his work. In December 2005, Burns told Knappe that the Pattee estate would need to file a United States Estate Tax. Return, IRS Form 706. He also correctly informed Knappe that the deadline to file the return was nine months from the date of Pattee’s death: August 30, 2006.

At some point before that deadline, Knappe realized he did not have time to obtain real estate appraisals that he needed to prepare the return accurately. Knappe sought Burns’s advice about requesting an extension of the filing deadline from the IRS. Burns told Knappe that he could obtain an extension of both the filing and payment deadlines, and that the same extension was available for both deadlines. Knappe authorized Burns to prepare and file IRS Form 4768, an “Application for Extension of Time To File a Return and/or Pay U.S. Estate (and Generation-Skipping Transfer) Taxes.”

Form 4768 gives taxpayers three options: they can seek an extension of the Form 706 filing deadline, seek an extension of the time to pay any estate tax due, or both. The instructions that accompany Form 4768 explain the difference between the two categories of .extensions. The instructions for “Part II, Extension of Time to File Form 706” state that an “executor may apply for an automatic 6-month extension of time to file Form 706.” An executor who is “out of the country” may apply for an additional extension in excess of the automatic six months; the instructions warn, however, that “[y]ou cannot combine an application for an automatic extension and an additional extension on the same Form 4768.” Finally, the instructions explain that an executor who failed timely to apply for the automatic six-month extension may apply for an “extension for cause.” “Unless the executor is out of the country,” however, extensions for cause are limited to “6 months from the original due date of the Form 706.”

The instructions for “Part III, Extension of Time to Pay” explain that such an extension “may not exceed twelve months” and is granted at the discretion of the IRS. In contrast to extensions of the filing deadline, the IRS may grant up to ten consecutive extensions of the payment deadline— parceled out one year at a time — provided the taxpayer can establish “why it is impossible or impractical for the executor to pay the full amount of the estate tax by the estate tax return due date.”

The two types of extensions are thus subject to two different sets of rules. Extensions of the filing deadline are granted automatically for six months, and only foreign executors can seek additional time. Extensions of the payment deadline, on the other hand, are purely discretionary, and the IRS may grant multiple extensions, each as long as a year.

Burns filed Form 4786 on August 30, 2006, applying for the six-month automatic filing extension and a one-year discretionary payment extension.

After filing the completed Form 4768 with the IRS, Burns sent a copy to Knappe. Knappe gave the form a cursory review, but did not examine it in detail. Knappe testified that there was no reason he could not have scrutinized the form, but that he mostly noticed the extension date Burns had requested, “8/30/2007,” and Burns’s estimate that the taxes owed would total $1.1 million.

*1167 The IRS approved the extension request in writing on January 11, 2007. On the form itself, which the IRS returned to Burns, an IRS agent had hand-written “2/28/07” next to the box Burns had checked to apply for the automatic six-month extension of the filing deadline. A new document, titled “Notice to Applicant,” was attached to the returned application. The Notice to Applicant included two sections: the first relating to the application for an extension of the filing deadline, and the second to the application for an extension of the payment deadline. Three checkboxes appeared in both sections: “Approved,” “Not approved because,” and “Other.” None of the boxes was checked in the first section. In the second section, the IRS agent had checked “Approved” and had typed, “TO 8/30/2007 only.”

At the time Burns prepared Form 4768, he mistakenly believed that it was possible to request a twelve-month extension of the filing deadline, even though he had read the instructions and reviewed the relevant statutes and Treasury regulations. Before Burns filed the form, he advised Knappe explicitly that he could obtain a twelvemonth extension of both the filing and payment deadlines. Knappe testified that he believed that the extension application would extend both the filing and payment deadlines for one year — -to August 30, 2007. Knappe’s understanding of the deadlines rested entirely on Burns’s representations; he made no independent effort to assay the rules. When the IRS approved the automatic six-month extension to the filing deadline and the discretionary one-year extension to the payment deadline, neither Burns nor Knappe realized their mistake.

Convinced that the filing deadline had been extended one year, Knappe elected to wait until May 2007 to file the return, in part to accommodate Burns’s busy schedule during tax season. Burns and Knappe worked together to complete the return, and on May 18, 2007, Burns sent Knappe the completed Form 706. Burns also prepared a cover letter for Knappe to send to the IRS, which read, “Enclosed for filing is United States Estate Tax Return Form 706 for the above referenced decedent. The extended payment date/due date of this return is August 30, 2007 as shown on the IRS Form 4768 attached to this return.” Knappe filed the return and cover letter on behalf of the estate on May 29, 2007. He also enclosed a check for the balance of the estate tax. Knappe later testified that he could have filed the estate-tax return by February 28, 2007 if he had understood that Burns had only obtained a six-month extension.

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Bluebook (online)
713 F.3d 1164, 2013 WL 1339106, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 6809, 111 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 1531, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peter-knappe-v-united-states-ca9-2013.