Portsmouth Ambulance, Inc. v. United States, No. 13-3826 (6th Cir. 2014)
Annotate this CaseIrwin and Fannin owned Portsmouth Ambulance, and Urgent Care Transports. In 2000, 2002, and 2005, they failed to pay federal employment and corporate income taxes for Urgent Care; the IRS recorded tax liens. Irwin and Fannin entered into a stock-purchase- agreement in 2006 and transferred 86% of the Portsmouth stock to new owners. The agreement gave the new owners an option to purchase the stock of Urgent Care. Portsmouth exercised the option and Urgent Care became its wholly-owned subsidiary. Irwin and Fannin notified the IRS of the change. Because of its outstanding tax liability, the IRS ordered a sale of Urgent Care’s assets. The sale did not raise sufficient funds. The new owners failed to pay federal employment taxes for 2008, and notice of tax liens was recorded. The IRS also filed a notice of federal tax lien against Portsmouth Ambulance as the alter ego of Urgent Care. A creditor bank sold the company’s assets and Portsmouth ceased operations. From sales proceeds, $333,769.24 was applied to Urgent Care’s tax liabilities and $302,818.16 was used to reduce Portsmouth’s tax liability. Portsmouth objected, arguing that it was not the alter ego of Urgent Care and filed refund claims, which the IRS either did not address or denied. The district court dismissed a suit, holding that 26 U.S.C. 6325(b)(4) and 7426(a)(4), established an exclusive procedure to seek refunds for satisfaction of a tax lien by a property owner with respect to another party’s tax liability and that a request for damages for allegedly unauthorized collection action was time-barred. The Sixth Circuit affirmed.
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