United States v. ITS Financial, LLC

592 F. App'x 387
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedNovember 21, 2014
Docket13-4341
StatusUnpublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 592 F. App'x 387 (United States v. ITS Financial, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth 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. ITS Financial, LLC, 592 F. App'x 387 (6th Cir. 2014).

Opinion

MICHELSON, District Judge.

This case concerns the scope of authority Congress gave courts to issue injunctive relief under § 7402 of the Internal Revenue Code. Specifically, we consider whether that provision permits a court to shut down the business of a tax preparation franchisor not directly involved in the preparation of tax returns. In light of the factual findings made by the district court, we find that the court had authority under § 7402(a) to issue the injunction.

I. Background

Appellant Fesum Ogbazion is the founder, CEO, and sole owner of Appellants ITS Financial, LLC; TCA Financial, LLC; and Tax Tree, LLC. TCA Financial is the holding company for ITS Financial. ITS Financial (“ITS”) operates a nationwide tax preparation franchise called Instant Tax Service. Ogbazion established Tax Tree to provide loans and other bank products for ITS franchises. ITS proclaims itself the fourth largest tax preparation franchise in the country, with hundreds of locations. The Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”) began investigating Ogbazion and his companies after compliance visits and audits of his franchisees revealed a pattern of misconduct. This civil action followed, ■ in March 2012.

In its complaint, the Government alleged that Appellants violated § 6701 of the Internal Revenue Code, which generally prohibits causing the understatement of tax liability, for which the Government sought injunctive relief under I.R.C. § 7408. 1 *390 And second, the Government alleged that Appellants engaged in conduct substantially interfering with the administration and enforcement of the internal revenue laws, making injunctive relief also appropriate under 26 U.S.C. § 7402(a). 2

In October 2012, as tax season approached, Appellants and the Government negotiated a stipulated preliminary injunction. Among other things, Appellants agreed to instruct their franchisees not to file tax returns using pay stubs instead of W-2s, to stop charging certain fees for tax preparation, and to offer refund anticipation loans only through a third-party lender. Appellants also agreed to a court-appointed third-party monitor to ensure compliance.

In November 2013, after a nine-day bench trial, and on the strength of 594 findings of fact and 152 conclusions of law, the district judge issued a permanent injunction enjoining Appellants from, among other things, “[ojperating, or being involved with in any way, any work or business relating in any way to preparation of tax returns.” Order of Permanent Injunction, United States v. ITS Fin., LLC, No. 12-cv-95, 2013 WL 6421916, at *1 (S.D.Ohio Nov. 6, 2013); see Decision, United States v. ITS Fin., LLC, No. 12-cv-95, 2013 WL 5947222 (S.D.Ohio Nov. 6, 2013).

Following is a brief summary of the district court’s extensive findings.

The ITS business model began with lur- ■ ing low-income customers by advertising tax refund anticipation loans that were rarely awarded and sometimes not in fact available. Once the customers were in the door, it was easier to convince them to let ITS file their tax returns. Or, in some cases, file their tax returns without permission, using information obtained in the loan application. ITS franchises charged deceptive and exorbitant fees to .file the returns, which were typically straightforward and took about fifteen minutes to prepare and file. The court-appointed third-party monitor found that in January 2013, the average total fee charged to ITS customers, including tax preparation and bank product fees, was $566.18-more than double the total fees that ITS’s major competitors charged. Ogbazion and ITS Financial developed this system and trained franchisees to implement it. The ITS franchisee manual even instructed franchisees to lie to the IRS about the fees they charged.

ITS trained franchisees to file tax returns using a pay stub rather than a W-2. This enabled ITS franchisees to file the tax return early, before the customer could go somewhere else to file. Because of its unreliability, the IRS prohibits the practice except in certain limited circumstances. ITS therefore trained and encouraged franchisees to conceal their use of pay stub filing from the IRS, such as by creating fake W-2s. The district court found that ITS’s practice “[i]n the aggregate,” “inevitably result[ed]” in the understatement of tax liability. Decision, 2013 WL 5947222, at *28.

ITS also obstructed and circumvented tax laws through their fraudulent applications for and use of electronic filer’s identi *391 fication numbers, or EFINs. The IRS uses EFINs to monitor and regulate electronic filing of tax returns. Suspension and termination of EFINs is one of the sanctions the IRS uses to enforce tax laws. EFINs are not transferable and a unique EFIN is required for every location from which electronic returns are filed. ITS fraudulently obtained hundreds of EFINs and loaned them out to ITS franchisees when their EFINs were suspended or terminated. ITS also encouraged its franchisees to fraudulently obtain back-up EFINs. ITS lied to the IRS about its use of EFINs, and encouraged its franchisees to lie about it.

The third-party monitor appointed by the court to monitor Appellants’ compliance with the stipulated preliminary injunction randomly selected ITS customers throughout the country and examined the franchisees’ records for those customers. The sample comprised three percent of the total returns processed by ITS franchisees. The monitor found widespread noncompliance. Of the franchisees examined in January 2013, more than 75 percent were noncompliant in some respect with the preliminary injunction’s requirements for customers who applied for a refund anticipation loan, and nearly 70 percent were non-compliant with requirements for customers who did not apply for the refund anticipation loan. Of franchisees examined in February 2013, more than 57 percent failed to comply with at least one of the preliminary injunction requirements for customers who applied for refund anticipation loans, and more than 62 percent failed to comply with at least one of the preliminary injunction requirements for customers who did not apply for refund anticipation loans.

ITS had about 150 franchisees between 2011 and 2013. ITS franchisees filed more than 110,000 returns each year in 2011 and 2012, and about 80,000 returns in 2013. The district court credited the testimony of the Government’s expert, who concluded based on a random sample of 480 tax returns prepared by ITS franchisees in five cities in the 2011 tax filing season that the true value of the tax harm for that year, across those five cities, was between $10 million and $25 million. The district court concluded that the harm to the. public — including the Government, ITS customers, and the lenders and service providers who conducted business with ITS— was “extensive and egregious, indeed appalling,” especially given “the nature of Instant Tax Service’s core customer — the working poor — who are particularly vulnerable to Defendants’ fraudulent practices.” Decision, 2013 WL 5947222, at *84.

II. Standard of Review

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Bluebook (online)
592 F. App'x 387, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-its-financial-llc-ca6-2014.