White & Case v. United States

22 Cl. Ct. 734, 67 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 755, 1991 U.S. Claims LEXIS 112, 1991 WL 47004
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedApril 5, 1991
DocketNo. 90-718T
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 22 Cl. Ct. 734 (White & Case 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
White & Case v. United States, 22 Cl. Ct. 734, 67 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 755, 1991 U.S. Claims LEXIS 112, 1991 WL 47004 (cc 1991).

Opinion

OPINION

LYDON, Senior Judge:

This TEFRA partnership readjustment case is before the court in an unusual procedural posture with regard to the court’s jurisdiction over the subject matter of plaintiff’s complaint.1 Pursuant to an order of the court dated January 16, 1991, both parties have submitted briefs on the issue of jurisdiction. Plaintiff’s brief, filed February 27, 1991, urges the court to dismiss plaintiff’s complaint for lack of jurisdiction, pursuant to RUSCC 12(h)(3).2 Defendant, on the other hand, maintains that the court has jurisdiction over the complaint, in its brief filed February 28, 1991. Thereafter, both parties filed reply briefs, and since neither party desired oral argument, the issue presented by the briefs of the parties is ready for decision.

FACTS

The facts pertinent to the jurisdictional issue presently before the court have been stipulated by the parties and are not in dispute. Plaintiff White & Case is a general partnership engaged in the practice of law, with its principal office in New York, New York.3 In 1986, the taxable year in issue, plaintiff had seventy-two partners. Sometime between 1984 and 1986, the partnership established retirement plans for some of its partners. The dispute between the parties centers on the Service’s proposed disallowance of all deductions taken by fifty-seven of the partners in 1986 for their retirement plan contributions.

On May 15, 1987, plaintiff filed a timely Form 1065, Partnership Return of Income, for its 1986 taxable year, which ended on September 30,1986. On March 8,1990, the Service mailed to plaintiff, on Form 872-P, a request to extend the statute of limitations with respect to the partnership’s 1986 taxable year, pursuant to section 6229(a) of [736]*736the Internal Revenue Code (the Code).4 The requested extension was limited to adjustments pertaining to the retirement plans and trusts for twenty named partners of White & Case. On March 27, 1990, the Service mailed to plaintiff another Form 872-P which corrected the prior date of December 31, 1987, and substituted December 31, 1991, as the date to which the extension was requested. On April 6,1990, plaintiff sent the Service a letter declining to consent to an extension of the statute of limitations for the tax year 1986, and suggesting that the time for providing a notice of the beginning of administrative procedures had already expired for plaintiff’s 1986 tax year. Plaintiff never entered into an agreement with the Service to extend the statute of limitations for the 1986 tax year.

On May 11, 1990, a Friday, the Service issued to plaintiff’s tax matters partner (TMP) and to other 1986 partners a notice of beginning of administrative procedures at the partnership level-(commencement notice) with respect to the taxable year 1986. Defendant concedes that no such notice was issued to plaintiffs on or before January 15, 1990. On the following Monday, May 14,1990, the Service issued and mailed to the TMP a notice of Final Partnership Administrative Adjustment (FPAA), which is the partnership equivalent of a statutory notice of deficiency. On July 11, 1990, the Service mailed copies of the FPAA to other 1986 partners. In the FPAA sent to plaintiff, the Service proposed to disallow the entire amount of the 1986 contributions made by White & Case to the retirement plans for fifty-seven partners.

Section 6223(d) of the Code requires that the commencement notice be mailed to each notice partner at least 120 days before the FPAA is mailed to the TMP.5 Since the Service did not mail the commencement notice at least 120 days before it mailed the FPAA, the Service notified plaintiff, on September 30, 1986, that all partners had the right to elect to treat partnership items as nonpartnership items for the purpose of any further partnership proceedings pursued by the Service or in court, pursuant to section 6223(e)(3)(B).6 All of plaintiff’s partners so elected, with the exception of the TMP.

Plaintiff, through its TMP, filed in this court on August 2, 1990 a petition for readjustment of partnership items for the taxable year 1986, pursuant to section [737]*7376226(a).7 Count I of plaintiff’s complaint challenges the court’s jurisdiction on the ground that the FPAA is invalid because it was not issued in compliance with the limitation period of sections 6223 and 6229. Plaintiff therefore seeks dismissal of its own suit, which could prevent the Service from assessing additional tax against its partners with respect to the partnership items at issue.8

DISCUSSION

A. The Statutory Scheme

A partnership is not liable as an entity for federal income taxes. However, the partnership must file an annual information return, Form 1065, to report items of partnership income, deduction and credit. These items are allocated among the partners, who must report their shares of partnership items on their individual tax returns. Until 1982, administrative and judicial proceedings regarding partnership items were conducted at the individual partner level. In 1982, Congress enacted Code sections 6221 through 6232 (TEFRA Partnership Provisions), which provide for administrative and judicial proceedings for adjustments in the tax treatment of partnership items at the partnership level.

B. The Jurisdictional Issue

The issue before the court is whether the Service’s issuance of the FPAA on May 14, 1990, only three days after the issuance of the commencement notice, renders the FPAA invalid under the statutory scheme, thus depriving the court of jurisdiction over plaintiff’s complaint.

Plaintiff takes the position that the FPAA is invalid because it was issued fewer than 120 days after the issuance of the commencement notice. Plaintiff reads the 120-day notice requirement of section 6223 as, in effect, pushing back the statute of limitations by 120 days. Section 6229 sets forth a three-year statute of limitations during which time the Service may make partnership assessments. This section provides for the limitations period to expire on the later of the date the partnership return was filed, or the date it was due to be filed. Here, the partnership return was timely filed on May 15, 1987, and the limitations period expired on May 15, 1990. The FPAA was issued on May 14, 1990. The FPAA tolls the three-year statute of limitations for tax assessments of partnership items from the date it was mailed to the TMP. § 6229(d). Plaintiff argues that, because the commencement notice was not issued until May 11, 1990, there is no way the Service could issue a FPAA 120 days later and still remain within the three-year limitations period. The latest date the commencement notice could have been issued, asserts plaintiff, was January 15, 1990 in order for the Service to issue a timely FPAA 120 days later on May 15, 1990.

Plaintiff maintains that any other reading of the statutory scheme would be contrary to the legislative purposes of the TEFRA partnership provisions. Plaintiff asserts that Congress intended the 120 days between the commencement notice and the FPAA as a procedural safeguard for partners to attempt to resolve disputes with the Service before the FPAA is issued. [738]

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Bluebook (online)
22 Cl. Ct. 734, 67 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 755, 1991 U.S. Claims LEXIS 112, 1991 WL 47004, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-case-v-united-states-cc-1991.