Trout v. Comm'r

131 T.C. No. 16, 131 T.C. 239, 2008 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 34
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedDecember 16, 2008
DocketNo. 5690-05L
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 131 T.C. No. 16 (Trout 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.

Bluebook
Trout v. Comm'r, 131 T.C. No. 16, 131 T.C. 239, 2008 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 34 (tax 2008).

Opinions

OPINION

Holmes, Judge:

David Trout offered the IRS $6,000 to settle his 1989, 1990, 1991, and 1993 tax bills which totaled $128,736.45. The Commissioner accepted this offer in 1997. As part of the deal, Trout agreed to file his tax returns, and pay any tax due, on time for the next five years. The Commissioner says that Trout broke that deal, and now wants to collect the original bill. Trout says that he did file his returns on time but that, even if he didn’t, his failure was too immaterial to be a breach of his contract with the IRS. And even if it was a breach, he argues that his default did not justify reinstating his original tax bill.

In Robinette v. Commissioner, 123 T.C. 85 (2004), we faced a very similar question and in our lead opinion looked at least in part to the State law of Arkansas to resolve it. Id. at 109. The Eighth Circuit carefully noted that “it is not clear that the Tax Court applied or relied upon Arkansas law. To the extent that Arkansas law might differ from the contract principles that derive from federal common law, * * * federal law governs this case.” Robinette v. Commissioner, 439 F.3d 455, 462 n.6 (8th Cir. 2006). Today, we revisit the issue and state more plainly that the federal common law of contracts applies. Using that law, we conclude that Trout breached his contract with the Commissioner, and we hold that the Commissioner did not abuse his discretion in refusing to reinstate the original deal.

Background

Before offering to compromise his tax debt, Trout had not always filed on time. In the years before he signed the deal in January 1997, he was late more often than not:

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Settling with the IRS in the form he did — called an offer-in-compromise (oic) — gave Trout a chance for a fresh start with the tax system. But there was a catch — the OIC provided that he had to satisfy “all of the terms and conditions of the offer” or the Commissioner could reinstate his original tax liability. One of these terms was that Trout had to .both file his returns on time, and pay the tax due, for five years after signing the OIC.

Trout, however, flopped back to his old ways within a year, by not filing his 1996 tax return until April 1998. The Commissioner either wanted to give Trout another chance or didn’t notice, because the OIC wasn’t defaulted. Trout filed and paid his 1997 taxes on time, but then fell back into trouble for 1998 and 1999. His 1998 return was due (with extensions) in October 1999. His 1999 tax return was due (again with an extension) in August 2000. The IRS says it never received either one, and the Commissioner finally noticed and sent “potential OIC default letters” to Trout and his lawyer in September 2001.1 These letters gave him 30 days to file and pay any taxes that he owed for 1999, and threatened him with termination of the OIC and the reinstatement of any of his original tax liabilities remaining unpaid if he didn’t.

After hearing nothing for almost seven months, the Commissioner sent Trout an “OIC default letter” on April 15, 2002. He sent this letter to Trout’s address in Phoenix, Arizona — the same address to which he sent the “potential OIC default letter” and the address which both parties agree was Trout’s residence during the 2001 and 2002 tax years. Another year passed, and in May 2003 the Commissioner sent a “Notice of Intent to Levy” (nil) to Trout — and sent it not to Phoenix, but to a concededly wrong address.

Trout never responded to the NIL that the Commissioner mailed to the wrong address, so the IRS went ahead and levied on his salary in September 2003. Trout complained, but the Commissioner took the position that when Trout didn’t timely file his 1998 return and pay the tax due, he was in default on the Oic’s condition that he file and pay his taxes on time for five years.

Trout blames the accountant who prepared both his 1998 and 1999 returns, arguing that the accountant put the wrong Social Security number on them by turning a “5” into a “2” and so it was the accountant who caused those returns to lose their way. Trout claims that this was just an honest clerical mistake. The wrong number belonged to a man who died in 1978, however, and the Commissioner has no record of taxes being timely filed for those years under either the correct or the mistaken number. When Trout learned this, he said he would file the missing returns.

The Commissioner’s heart then softened — he told Trout to go ahead and mail his missing 1998 and 1999 returns and resubmit the OIC. This got Trout moving, and the Commissioner finally received and filed the missing 1998 tax return in November 2003 (nearly four years after its extended due date). It showed the IRS owed him a small refund of about $1,350.

Trout’s 1999 return remains a problem — the Commissioner claims that he still has not received it in proper form even after all these years, despite several requests and the active involvement of Trout’s lawyers. The Commissioner did receive an unsigned copy of the 1999 return with a self-reported liability of $164 in late 2003. In December 2003, the Commissioner asked Trout to sign this late-filed 1999 return and send copies of both the 1998 and 1999 original returns (the ones that Trout claimed the IRS must have misfiled because his accountant got the Social Security number wrong) to prove that he had filed them when due. Trout never did so, and in March 2004 the Commissioner sent Trout another notice of his intent to levy.2 Trout requested a “Collection Due Process” (CDP) hearing. In May 2004, the Commissioner released the first levy and postponed levying under the second, having concluded that Trout was indeed entitled to a pre-levy hearing.

The 1999 return continued to bedevil both parties — on May 14, 2004, the Commissioner told Trout that that return was still unfiled. In November 2004, the Commissioner received another unsigned 1999 return which he promptly sent back for signing. In December 2004 — although the Commissioner still hadn’t gotten a signed 1999 return — he did get two checks. One was from Trout for $163, and the other one, written by Trout’s lawyers, was for $1. The Commissioner incorrectly posted these checks to Trout’s 1989 and 1990 accounts.

The missing 1999 return popped up again on January 12, 2005, when Trout’s lawyer faxed another unsigned 1999 return with a hand-corrected Social Security number. The Commissioner again bounced this one back for lack of a signature. Trout’s lawyer responded on January 27, 2005, with a letter insisting that Trout had filed his 1999 return (and citing Robinette). In February 2005, Trout’s lawyer finally sent in a signed 1999 return, but again with an incorrect Social Security number.

The CDP process ground on while the 1999 returns were being batted back and forth. In March 2005, the Appeals officer issued a notice of determination upholding the levy, and denying reinstatement of the OIC. The Appeals officer determined that Trout did not timely file his returns for 1998 and 1999 or timely pay the balance due for 1999.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
131 T.C. No. 16, 131 T.C. 239, 2008 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trout-v-commr-tax-2008.