JetPay Corp. v. United States, No. 21-10131 (5th Cir. 2022)
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JetPay is a national company offering credit card processing services to merchants and banks. JetPay processed credit card payments for customers purchasing tickets from Direct Air, placing the funds in Direct Air's escrow account until the passengers took the flights. After Direct Air ended its operations and filed for bankruptcy, JetPay asserts that it was contractually obligated to use its own funds to reimburse thwarted passengers. JetPay timely filed with the IRS for a refund of the excise taxes it repaid to the consumers, but the IRS denied the claim.
The Fifth Circuit affirmed the district court's adverse grant of summary judgment against JetPay, agreeing with the district court that the company was not a proper party to seek a refund from the IRS. JetPay did not pay the tax to the Secretary, and thus the court did not consider whether the company qualifies as "the person who collected the tax" under 26 U.S.C. 6415(a). In this case, JetPay is neither a customer required to pay the tax before taking a flight nor an airline required to collect it. The court also concluded that the economic burden test does not apply to JetPay's case. Finally, the court rejected JetPay's equitable subrogation claim.
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