SPOTTSWOOD W. ROBINSON, III, Circuit Judge:
This appeal summons us to adjudge the validity of an oral agreement between a taxpayer and an official of the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) purporting to compromise a disputed income tax liability. The United States Tax Court held the agreement ineffective on the ground that
the official lacked authority to enter into it.
We affirm.
I
The taxpayer, Pierre Boulez, is a citizen of France and a world-renowned music director and conductor.
In 1971, Boulez contracted with Beacon Concerts, Ltd., a United Kingdom corporation,
to serve as director and conductor for musical organizations selected by Beacon.
The latter in turn contracted to provide Boulez’s services to the New York Philharmonic Symphony and the Cleveland Orchestra, both United States corporations.
For tax years 1971 and 1972, Boulez was a nonresident alien for purposes of United States income taxes.
During those years, Beacon received $207,473 for Boulez’s performances in the United States
and, after deducting its expenses and commissions, paid Boulez $188,495.
Boulez filed United States nonresident alien income tax returns for 1971 and 1972, but did not include in his gross income any of the monies Beacon received or paid to him for his services.
Boulez continued to perform in the United States for the New York Philharmonic Symphony during 1973, 1974 and 1975. He filed nonresident alien returns for the 1973 and 1974 tax years, and again failed to report any amount received by or from Beacon.
In 1975, IRS launched an investigation of Boulez’s tax obligations respecting the monies flowing through Beacon.
Boulez obtained counsel,
who engaged in a protracted series of negotiations with IRS on Boulez’s potential tax liability and assertedly reached an oral compromise
with IRS’s Director of International Operations.
Boulez claims that he was to file amended returns for 1973 and 1974 including in gross income the amounts paid to Beacon for his services in the United States; and that, in exchange, no adjustments were to be made by IRS, no payments for years prior to 1973 would be required, and no penalties for late filing or payment would be assessed.
Boulez then filed amended 1973 and 1974 returns conforming to the compromise and remitted $53,841 in additional taxes.
Appended to the amended returns was a letter from Boulez’s counsel stating that these returns were “in accordance with [counsel’s] conversation with” the Director.
Thereafter, Boulez did not oppose inclusion in his gross income for 1973 and years following of the amounts paid to Beacon for his performances in the United States.
He did not resist the applicability of any income tax convention to Beacon’s receipts for or payments to him, nor did he seek any refund of taxes paid in consequence of the compromise. Ultimately, he terminated his arrangement with Beacon and personally assumed the obligations imposed on Beacon by the contract with the Philharmonic.
In 1977, IRS commenced an unrelated audit of Boulez’s 1975 return, and later expanded it to an examination of his 1971 and 1972 returns.
In 1978, IRS issued a notice of deficiency informing Boulez that he owed additional taxes for 1971 and 1972. Underlying the notice was a determination that Boulez should have included in his gross income for those years amounts paid to Beacon for his performances in the United States.
Boulez challenged this ruling in the Tax Court
and moved for summary judgment on two grounds. He claimed that the 1976 oral agreement, which purported to settle any tax liability for 1971 and 1972, constituted a binding compromise.
Alternatively, Boulez asserted that if the agreement was not a bar, IRS was equitably estopped from assessing the deficiency because Boulez had relied upon the agreement and changed his position to his detriment.
The Tax Court held in favor of the Commissioner, reasoning that the Director of International Operations lacked authority to bind IRS by means of an oral agreement, because Treasury Regulation § 301.7122-1(d) requires offers and acceptances of compromise to be in writing.
Prom this decision, Boulez now appeals.
II
Boulez presses two arguments in an effort to demonstrate that the Tax Court erred in refusing to grant summary judgment in his favor. He first contends that the Treasury Regulation § 301.7122-l(d) is invalid for inconsistency with Section 7122(a) of the Internal Revenue Code
which, he says, sanctions oral compromises. He further contends that even if the regu
lation imposes a valid limitation on statutory authority to compromise, it is merely directory, and that a delegation order empowered the Director of International Operations, as the Commissioner’s delegate at the time of the agreement, to accept Boulez’s oral offer of compromise and thus to bind the agency. We agree with Boulez that the statute does not of its own accord forbid oral compromise agreements, but conclude that the regulation, which requires that all compromises be reduced to writing,
has the force and effect of law, and that the Director lacked authority to waive it.
The Commissioner argues that Section 7122(a) of the Code manifests the intent of Congress to outlaw oral compromise agreements. The Commissioner concedes, as he must, that the section does not expressly call for a writing, but he maintains that when viewed against the backdrop of its legislative history, it should be read to incorporate that requirement. The question thus posed appears to be one of first impression.
Undeniably, Section 7122(a) is facially ambiguous.
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SPOTTSWOOD W. ROBINSON, III, Circuit Judge:
This appeal summons us to adjudge the validity of an oral agreement between a taxpayer and an official of the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) purporting to compromise a disputed income tax liability. The United States Tax Court held the agreement ineffective on the ground that
the official lacked authority to enter into it.
We affirm.
I
The taxpayer, Pierre Boulez, is a citizen of France and a world-renowned music director and conductor.
In 1971, Boulez contracted with Beacon Concerts, Ltd., a United Kingdom corporation,
to serve as director and conductor for musical organizations selected by Beacon.
The latter in turn contracted to provide Boulez’s services to the New York Philharmonic Symphony and the Cleveland Orchestra, both United States corporations.
For tax years 1971 and 1972, Boulez was a nonresident alien for purposes of United States income taxes.
During those years, Beacon received $207,473 for Boulez’s performances in the United States
and, after deducting its expenses and commissions, paid Boulez $188,495.
Boulez filed United States nonresident alien income tax returns for 1971 and 1972, but did not include in his gross income any of the monies Beacon received or paid to him for his services.
Boulez continued to perform in the United States for the New York Philharmonic Symphony during 1973, 1974 and 1975. He filed nonresident alien returns for the 1973 and 1974 tax years, and again failed to report any amount received by or from Beacon.
In 1975, IRS launched an investigation of Boulez’s tax obligations respecting the monies flowing through Beacon.
Boulez obtained counsel,
who engaged in a protracted series of negotiations with IRS on Boulez’s potential tax liability and assertedly reached an oral compromise
with IRS’s Director of International Operations.
Boulez claims that he was to file amended returns for 1973 and 1974 including in gross income the amounts paid to Beacon for his services in the United States; and that, in exchange, no adjustments were to be made by IRS, no payments for years prior to 1973 would be required, and no penalties for late filing or payment would be assessed.
Boulez then filed amended 1973 and 1974 returns conforming to the compromise and remitted $53,841 in additional taxes.
Appended to the amended returns was a letter from Boulez’s counsel stating that these returns were “in accordance with [counsel’s] conversation with” the Director.
Thereafter, Boulez did not oppose inclusion in his gross income for 1973 and years following of the amounts paid to Beacon for his performances in the United States.
He did not resist the applicability of any income tax convention to Beacon’s receipts for or payments to him, nor did he seek any refund of taxes paid in consequence of the compromise. Ultimately, he terminated his arrangement with Beacon and personally assumed the obligations imposed on Beacon by the contract with the Philharmonic.
In 1977, IRS commenced an unrelated audit of Boulez’s 1975 return, and later expanded it to an examination of his 1971 and 1972 returns.
In 1978, IRS issued a notice of deficiency informing Boulez that he owed additional taxes for 1971 and 1972. Underlying the notice was a determination that Boulez should have included in his gross income for those years amounts paid to Beacon for his performances in the United States.
Boulez challenged this ruling in the Tax Court
and moved for summary judgment on two grounds. He claimed that the 1976 oral agreement, which purported to settle any tax liability for 1971 and 1972, constituted a binding compromise.
Alternatively, Boulez asserted that if the agreement was not a bar, IRS was equitably estopped from assessing the deficiency because Boulez had relied upon the agreement and changed his position to his detriment.
The Tax Court held in favor of the Commissioner, reasoning that the Director of International Operations lacked authority to bind IRS by means of an oral agreement, because Treasury Regulation § 301.7122-1(d) requires offers and acceptances of compromise to be in writing.
Prom this decision, Boulez now appeals.
II
Boulez presses two arguments in an effort to demonstrate that the Tax Court erred in refusing to grant summary judgment in his favor. He first contends that the Treasury Regulation § 301.7122-l(d) is invalid for inconsistency with Section 7122(a) of the Internal Revenue Code
which, he says, sanctions oral compromises. He further contends that even if the regu
lation imposes a valid limitation on statutory authority to compromise, it is merely directory, and that a delegation order empowered the Director of International Operations, as the Commissioner’s delegate at the time of the agreement, to accept Boulez’s oral offer of compromise and thus to bind the agency. We agree with Boulez that the statute does not of its own accord forbid oral compromise agreements, but conclude that the regulation, which requires that all compromises be reduced to writing,
has the force and effect of law, and that the Director lacked authority to waive it.
The Commissioner argues that Section 7122(a) of the Code manifests the intent of Congress to outlaw oral compromise agreements. The Commissioner concedes, as he must, that the section does not expressly call for a writing, but he maintains that when viewed against the backdrop of its legislative history, it should be read to incorporate that requirement. The question thus posed appears to be one of first impression.
Undeniably, Section 7122(a) is facially ambiguous. It does not specify that compromise agreements must be in writing, nor does it explicitly sanction oral settlements. The legislative history, although cited by the Commissioner in support of his position, does not plainly settle the question either. When, more than a century ago, the provision authorizing compromise agreements was first drafted,
the bill made the written opinion of the Solicitor of Internal Revenue prerequisite to a valid compromise agreement.
This particular requirement appears to be the only precondition Congress considered incorporating into the statute. It was deleted from the final version, however, and has not reappeared in any successor statute.
We can
find no suggestion that Congress, in the course of its deliberations, otherwise considered the form that compromise agreements should take. We thus are persuaded that Congress left to the Secretary of the Treasury the task of promulgating regulations addressing the requisite manner of offer and acceptance of compromises.
III
The Secretary has issued Treasury Regulation § 301.7122-l(d), which specifically requires a written offer and acceptance.
Boulez acknowledges that the compromise upon which he relies did not satisfy this demand, but claims that the regulation conflicts with the statute. Boulez further claims that breach of the regulation should not affect the validity of the compromise agreement because the regulation is merely directory in character and because in any event the Director, as the Secretary’s delegate, had authority to waive it in his instance. We find each of these arguments unpersuasive.
We address first the contention that the regulation contravenes the intent of Congress.
To prevail on this argument, Boulez must overcome the strong presumption of validity to which Treasury regulations are entitled.
The Supreme Court has con
sistently declared that a Treasury regulation must be complied with unless the taxpayer can demonstrate that it is “ ‘unreasonable and plainly inconsistent with the revenue statutes.’ ”
It is evident that Boulez has not discharged this burden. The crux of his argument is that Section 7122 sanctions oral compromises and that the Secretary cannot by regulation impose additional requirements that undermine the congressional purpose.
To be sure, courts will not hesitate to invalidate treasury regulations that do not reasonably adhere to statutory dictates or which frustrate legislative objectives,
but this case presents neither situation. Congress, in enacting Section 7122, empowered the Secretary to compromise disputed tax liabilities, but left to the Secretary the mechanics of effecting settlements.
In turn, the Secretary in specifying in Treasury Regulation § 301.7122-1(d)
that all offers of compromise be submitted and accepted in writing,
simply defined the form that compromise agreements must take. We find the requirement of a writing entirely reasonable, and a wholly permissible interpretation of Section 7122.
When, therefore, the parties negotiated the compromise of Boulez’s 1971-74 tax liability, they did so subject to the terms of the regulation, one of which is that the compromise agreement be in writing. Moreover, the regulation provides that “offers in compromise shall be submitted on forms prescribed by the Internal Revenue Service ...”
and warns that “[a]n offer in compromise shall be considered accepted only when the proponent thereof is so notified in writing.”
In the face of so unambiguous a mandate, we must adjudge the oral compromise devoid of binding effect unless for some reason it did not obtain in this case.
Acknowledging the compromise in issue was never reduced to writing in accordance with the strictures of the regulation, Boulez contends the oversight was inconsequential. The regulation, he asserts, is merely a procedural specification, directory and not mandatory in nature, whose breach should not affect the enforcement of the compromise agreement.
To demand full compliance with its terms, he says, is to adhere to a “technical procedural approach” that “‘would [ ...] sacrifice the principle of compromise to [the] mere form of procedure.’ ”
We emphatically reject Boulez’s characterization of the regulation, as well as his estimate of the significance of its breach. The authority on which Boulez relies in labeling the regulation directory concerns, not Part 301, but Part 601 of the Treasury regulations, otherwise known as the
“Statement of Procedural Rules.”
Part 601 rules differ significantly from the regulations here in question. Issued by the Commissioner, without need for approval by the Secretary, they serve merely as guidelines for conducting the internal affairs of the agency. The authority of the Commissioner to issue such rules derives from a statute empowering him to promulgate rules “for the government of his department, the conduct of its employees, the distribution and performance of its business, and the custody, use and preservation of the records, papers, and property.”
As such, the Statement of Procedural Rules is held to be directory, not mandatory in nature.
By contrast, it is the Secretary who possesses the authority to “prescribe all needful rules and regulations for the enforcement” of the internal revenue laws.
These regulations, when consistent with and reasonably adapted to enforcement of those statutes, have the force of law.
Treasury Regulation § 301.7122-l(d), promulgated by the Secretary pursuant to this statutory grant, announces the prerequisites to binding compromises under Section 7122. Its terms are mandatory, not directory in character.
Boulez’s claim that exacting compliance with the writing requirement of Treasury Regulation § 301.7122-l(d) reflects a “technical procedural approach” to the Treasury regulations is simply untenable. We are not dealing with a mere housekeeping provision, but with a fundamental tenet of formalizing agreements. Unlike procedures governing the internal affairs of IRS,
the writing requirement of Treasury Regulation § 301.7122-l(d) confers rights and imposes liabilities on third parties — as Boulez would be the first to insist if tables were turned and IRS invoked an oral compromise agreement against him. Conditioning the enforceability of Section 7122 compromise agreements on compliance with the writing requirement of Treasury Regulation § 301.7122-l(d) hardly evinces a hypertechnical approach to application of the rules.
IV
Boulez nonetheless maintains that even if the regulation is not precatory in nature, the Director of International Operations had authority to waive it in his instance.
He asserts that Delegation Order No. 11,
which empowered the Director to accept offers to compromise under Section 7122, does not confine itself to instances of full compliance with applicable regulations, and thus enabled the Director to enter into the oral agreement with Boulez’s counsel.
Put another way, Boulez insists that the Director’s authorization was not limited by Treasury Regulation § 301.7122-l(d).
This argument is flawed in two respects. First, the power conferred by Delegation Order No. 11 to enter into compromise agreements is sharply circumscribed by Revenue Procedure 64-44:
This is a “limited” delegation to the extent that the delegated authority must be exercised in accordance with the limitations prescribed by section 301.7122-1 of the Regulations on Procedure and Administration and with procedures established by the National Office.
Since the regulation calls for compromise agreements in writing, it is clear that the Commissioner, in delegating to the Director authority to compromise disputed tax claims, could not have intended that it could be exercised in contravention of the regulation.
To circumvent the limiting language of Revenue Procedure 64-44, Boulez points out that it specifically referred to Delegation Order No. 11 (Rev. 3),
and argues that it was “rendered obsolete” by Delegation Order No. 11 (Rev. 4),
the order in effect at the time of the compromise agreement in suit.
Boulez contends that because Revision 4 did not contain the phrase “subject to limitations contained in applicable regulations and procedures,” the authority of the Director of International Operations was not curtailed by Treasury Regulation § 301.7122-l(d).
We may easily reject this argument. We are in complete accord with the Tax Court’s conclusion that “in light of the clear reference to the limitations prescribed by sec. 301.7122-1, Proced. & Admin.Regs., set forth in Rev.Proc. 64-44, repetition of that language in subsequent revisions of Delegation Order No. 11 would have been superfluous.”
Revenue Procedure 64-44 continued in force at all times relevant to this case and was not superseded until 1980 when Revenue Procedure 80-6
was issued. Significantly, Revenue Procedure 80-6 contains virtually identical language, requiring the delegated authority to be exercised in accordance with the strictures of Treasury Regulation § 301.7122-1.
More deeply, Boulez’s assertion that the delegation order empowered the Director to waive application of the writing requirement — either because the order lacked restricting language or by virtue of some authority inherent in its terms — misconceives the nature of the delegation here. Whatever discretion the delegation order conferred upon the Director was discretion to compromise claims of tax liability, not the procedure by which compromise agreements were to be formalized.
Acting in
contravention of a regulation governing execution of compromise agreements, the Director was as much without authority to join in the oral arrangement with Boulez’s counsel as he would have been had power to compromise never been delegated to him.
On this appeal, Boulez has abandoned the estoppel arguments he urged upon the Tax Court,
and so relieves us of the necessity of addressing them here.
He does, however, renew his equitable arguments in the form of a policy argument to the effect that taxpayer confidence in the revenue system is best served by enforcement of oral agreements of the character at issue.
We think, to the contrary, that confidence in the system is promoted by even-handed application of publicly-accessible regulations, especially where, as here, their purpose is to minimize disputes over the existence and terms of agreements between taxpayers and the Government of the type giving rise to the instant litigation. Indeed, when a compromise of tax liability is at issue, the need for rigorous compliance with pertinent regulations may be at its greatest, for not only the integrity of the public fisc but also public faith in the equitable enforcement of the tax laws hangs in the balance. The writing requirement of Treasury Regulation
§ 301.7122-l(d) is a legally reasonable and an administratively sound condition to attach to exercises of delegated authority to compromise disputed tax liabilities, and justice is plainly served by consistent adherence to it.
The judgment of the Tax Court is accordingly
Affirmed.