Texas Eastern Corp. v. United States

18 Cl. Ct. 387, 1989 WL 120461
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedOctober 11, 1989
DocketNo. 326-87T
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 18 Cl. Ct. 387 (Texas Eastern Corp. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Texas Eastern Corp. v. United States, 18 Cl. Ct. 387, 1989 WL 120461 (cc 1989).

Opinion

OPINION

ANDEWELT, Judge.

In this tax action, plaintiffs, Texas Eastern Corporation and Affiliates (Texas Eastern), seek a tax refund covering tax years 1970 through 1974. This action is presently before the court on cross-motions for summary judgment. The central issue raised is one of first impression. It involves the calculation of statutory interest on tax overpayments in a situation where the Internal Revenue Service (the IRS) initially credited {i.e., offset) overpayments for certain tax years against perceived deficiencies for other tax years but then later determined that no such deficiencies ever existed. The parties disagree as to whether and to what extent plaintiffs should be deemed to have paid deficiency interest in the course of the crediting process. To the extent deficiency interest was erroneously paid, plaintiffs would be entitled to receive statutory interest on those payments. The parties agree that there are no material issues of fact in dispute and that this court can resolve this issue on summary judgment. Furthermore, the parties indicated they likely would be able to stipulate as to the refund due plaintiffs based on this court’s decision.

I.

In 1979, the IRS completed two audits of plaintiffs’ tax returns for tax years 1970 through 1974 and concluded that plaintiffs had underpaid their taxes in 1970, 1973, and 1974, and had overpaid their taxes in 1971 and 1972,1 as follows:

Deficiency Overassessment
1970 $ 943,214.65
1971 $ 9,916,143.21
1972 10,208,623.06
1973 6,264,347.14
1974 10,553,859.77

To determine the amount of money owed plaintiffs, the IRS offset the overas-sessments in 1971 and 1972 against the proposed deficiencies for 1970, 1973, and 1974. It offset the proposed deficiencies for 1970 ($943,214.65) and 1973 ($6,264,-347.14) plus a portion of the proposed deficiency for 1974 ($2,708,581.42) against the $9,916,143.21 overassessment in 1971. The remaining portion of the proposed deficiency for 1974 ($7,845,278.35) was offset against an equal portion of the $10,208,-623.06 overassessment in 1972. The IRS refunded to plaintiffs the remaining $2,363,344.71 in overassessments for 1972 together with $3,062,345.76 in statutory interest.

The 1979 offset and refund by the IRS did not preclude plaintiffs from continuing to pursue claims for tax years 1970 through 1974, and plaintiffs did pursue certain additional depreciation-related deductions for each of the five tax years. Ultimately, the IRS agreed to these deductions. On March 21, 1983, the parties agreed, in effect, that as a result of these additional deductions, the IRS’s 1979 calculations of deficiencies and overassessments did not reflect plaintiffs’ true tax liability and that the correct classification of plaintiffs’ tax payments for tax years 1970 through 1974 is as follows:

Deficiency Overassessment
1970 $ 589,773.11
1971 12,020,372.23
1972 11,473,928.12
1973 7,482,468.75
1974 $ 5,557,478.84

Thus, comparing the 1983 figures with the 1979 calculations, the original tax payments made for 1970 and 1973 were reclassified from deficiencies to overassessments, the amounts of the overassessments for 1971 and 1972 were increased, and the amount of the deficiency for 1974 was decreased. In recalculating the taxes due based on the new 1983 figures, the parties agreed that the total amount of over-payments for 1970 through 1974 was $26,-009,063.37, or $23,645,718.66 in excess of the amount of overpayments refunded to [389]*389plaintiffs in 1979. The IRS refunded these additional overassessed taxes together with interest thereon, as follows:

Overassessed Taxes 2 Interest Allowed
1970 $ 1,532,987.76 $ 1,810,806.96
1971 2,104,229.02 2,408,928.74
1972 1,265,305.06 1,366,807.92
1973 13,746,815.89 13,878,753.03
1974 4,996,380.93 4,691,344.78

Thus, in 1979 and 1983, the IRS refunded to plaintiffs a combined total of $26,009,-063.37 in overassessed taxes and $27,218,-987.19 in statutory interest.

There is no dispute that in 1979 and 1983 the IRS returned to plaintiffs all of the overpaid taxes for 1970 through 1974. Rather, the dispute herein relates to the amount of statutory interest due plaintiffs. For purposes of resolution of the central issue raised in the parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment, plaintiffs do not dispute that they received the correct amount of interest on the monies they originally had overpaid in taxes, i.e., that they received interest on the 1970 through 1974 overpayments for the time period when the IRS retained the overpaid funds. Instead, plaintiffs contend that the IRS incurred a distinct obligation to pay additional interest when in 1979 it erroneously offset the over-payments against perceived deficiencies. As explained below, plaintiffs contend, in effect, that the process of the 1979 offset resulted in plaintiffs paying deficiency interest on deficiencies that did not exist, and that controlling statutes and regulations require the IRS to pay statutory interest on such erroneous payments of deficiency interest,

II.

In general, the Internal Revenue Code (the Code)3 provides that taxpayers who underpay their taxes must pay interest to the IRS (deficiency interest) on the amount of underpayment and taxpayers who overpay their taxes are entitled to receive interest from the IRS (statutory interest) on the amount of overpayment. Section 6601 of the Code covers deficiency interest and obliges the taxpayer to pay interest on an underpayment from “the last date prescribed for payment ... to the date paid” (Section 6601(a)). Section 6611 of the Code covers statutory interest and obliges the IRS to pay interest on “overpayments” (Section 6611(a)). Section 301.6611-l(b) of the Treasury Regulations on Procedure establishes the general rule that statutory interest commences on the date that payments by the taxpayer to the IRS exceed the amount the taxpayer is finally determined to owe the IRS.4

The interest rate for statutory and deficiency interest has varied, but up until 1987 the two rates did not differ from each other.5 In addition, until January 1, 1983, the Code provided that interest on both deficiencies and overpayments would be simple interest. In 1982, the Code was amended to provide for compound interest [390]*390after December 31, 1982.6

In situations where a taxpayer has overpaid taxes for certain tax years and underpaid taxes for other tax years, Section 6402(a) sets forth the general rule that the IRS may credit (i.e., offset) overpayments against deficiencies, as follows:

(a) General

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Bluebook (online)
18 Cl. Ct. 387, 1989 WL 120461, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-eastern-corp-v-united-states-cc-1989.