United States v. Askins & Miller Orthopaedics, P.A.

924 F.3d 1348
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedMay 23, 2019
Docket18-11434
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 924 F.3d 1348 (United States v. Askins & Miller Orthopaedics, P.A.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Askins & Miller Orthopaedics, P.A., 924 F.3d 1348 (11th Cir. 2019).

Opinion

GRANT, Circuit Judge:

The IRS says it needs a preliminary injunction against Askins & Miller Orthopaedics-a serial employment-tax delinquent-to ensure that it gets its due as taxes continue to pile up. It could just wait for nonpayment and later seek a money judgment, but if past is prologue, the money will be long gone before the IRS can collect. Given the alternative of a valid but potentially useless action for damages, does the IRS necessarily have an "adequate" remedy at law that puts an injunction out of the question? We conclude that it does not, so we vacate the district court's order denying injunctive relief and remand for further proceedings.

I.

The facts in this case tell a cyclical and monotonous story about the IRS's years-long battle against two brothers, but the long and short of it is this: Askins & Miller Orthopaedics habitually fails to pay its federal employment taxes, and the government seeks injunctive relief to make sure it gets paid going forward.

Askins & Miller is a Sarasota medical practice run by brothers Philip H. Askins and Roland V. Askins III. As an employer, Askins & Miller is required under the tax laws to 1) withhold from its employees' wages and pay over to the IRS federal income and Federal Insurance Contributions Act (FICA) taxes, and 2) pay its own FICA taxes. These payments must be deposited in an appropriate federal depository bank. But since 2010, Askins & Miller has repeatedly failed to pay these taxes-both its own share of FICA taxes and the income and FICA taxes it has withheld from its employees-to the IRS. Askins & Miller does not dispute its tax liability; indeed, it has filed returns documenting it. It just fails, over and over again, to pay.

*1352 The IRS has tried several collection strategies over the years. It started with an effort to achieve voluntary compliance: IRS representatives have spoken with the Askins brothers "at least 34 times" since December 2010, including 27 in-person meetings. Twice they entered into installment agreements that set up monthly payments to bring Askins & Miller back into compliance, but the company defaulted both times. Two other times, they warned Askins & Miller that continued noncompliance could prompt the government to seek an injunction.

The IRS has employed more aggressive means as well. It served levies on "approximately two dozen entities," but most "responded by indicating that there were no funds available to satisfy the levies." Three entities paid some money, but not nearly enough to satisfy Askins & Miller's debts or to keep pace with its accrual of new liabilities. Additionally, the IRS's ability to collect payments through levies has been hampered by the defendants' attempts to hide Askins & Miller's funds and to keep the balances in Askins & Miller's accounts low. Between 2014 and 2016, the Askins brothers transferred money from Askins & Miller to "RVA Trust," which operates a private hunting club for the brothers, and "RVA Investments," an accounting business associated with their father. The IRS also discovered additional accounts at BankUnited and Stonegate Bank. It did not seek to levy RVA Trust, RVA Investments, or the bank accounts because it discovered them after this case had been referred to the Department of Justice and because the IRS believed that "there is a substantial risk that any new levy would result in [the defendants] opening new undisclosed accounts and moving the money there."

Next up were the brothers' personal assets: because the brothers ran Askins & Miller and were responsible for its failure to pay the taxes, the IRS "assessed trust fund recovery penalties against Roland V. Askins III for tax periods in 2014-2016 and against Philip Askins for tax periods in 2009-2012 and 2014-2016." Trust fund recovery penalties allow the IRS to hold a company's officers personally liable for the taxes withheld from employees' wages-which belong to the government and are merely held in trust by the company-when those officers willfully fail to remit the employees' taxes to the IRS. The IRS issued levies to "approximately 15 entities" associated with Roland, but only one entity made any payments; that source was enough "to satisfy current trust fund recovery penalties assessments [sic] against Roland," but not enough "to keep pace with the rate at which the company" continued to accrue liabilities. The IRS levied "approximately six entities" for Philip, but after one paid less than $ 2,000, Philip closed the account. The IRS does not believe the brothers have enough assets in their own names to cover the debts, and even if they did, trust fund recovery penalties cannot be used to cover Askins & Miller's share of its own employment taxes (as distinct from employees' taxes that were withheld from their paychecks).

The IRS "consistently" filed notices of federal tax liens, but this approach was a nonstarter: liens "are only valuable insofar as a taxpayer has property against which the liens can be enforced," and Askins & Miller "does not own any substantial property." For the same reason, the IRS considered but decided not to pursue asset seizure: the most promising target, a 2004 Cadillac worth $ 10,000, was apparently not worth the effort.

Feeling as if it had reached the end of its rope, the IRS sued Askins & Miller and both brothers in 2017. It asserted two counts: one for permanent injunctive relief *1353 requiring Askins & Miller and the brothers to take specific steps to ensure that future payments would be made before the brothers could divert the money, and another for damages to account for outstanding liabilities between 2010 and 2015. Relying on a declaration from one of its revenue officers, the IRS asked the district court to issue a preliminary injunction-largely mirroring the permanent injunction that it sought in its complaint-designed to prevent Askins & Miller from incurring further tax liabilities while the litigation was still ongoing. But the district court denied the motion without prejudice because it found the declaration conclusory, and because it thought the proposed injunction was "effectively an 'obey-the-law' injunction."

Trying again, the IRS submitted a more detailed declaration and additional argument as to why the court should issue a preliminary injunction. It contended that the proposed injunction was not an "obey-the-law" one and that it lacked an adequate remedy at law because all of its previous collection efforts had proven unsuccessful. The IRS also argued that because the company appeared to be judgment-proof, the money judgment it sought for past liabilities was likely meaningless. But again, the court declined: although the court found that three of the four factors for granting injunctive relief were "not seriously disputed," it denied an injunction because it concluded that the availability of an action for damages was an adequate remedy at law and that the IRS therefore could not show irreparable harm. The court also suggested that the injunction, at least as drafted and proposed by the IRS, 1 was still, effectively, a disfavored "obey-the-law"

*1354 injunction. The IRS appealed. See

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
924 F.3d 1348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-askins-miller-orthopaedics-pa-ca11-2019.