United States v. Witkemper, No. 21-2029 (7th Cir. 2022)
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Witkemper was the president and sole shareholder of Maximum, which had employees, but in 2004-2006 never withheld and remitted federal income and insurance contribution taxes (FICA taxes). Maximum went bankrupt. Unable to fully collect the unpaid taxes during the bankruptcy proceedings, the IRS lodged an assessment totaling $385,705.54 and recorded a notice of a federal tax lien against Witkemper, who sent the IRS a signed Offer in Compromise. The IRS accepted the Offer. Witkemper began making the required monthly minimum payments, $500. Witkemper successfully sought to rescind the settlement after it had been in effect only 205 days. Witkemper then began making property transfers to his wife and children without any consideration.
The IRS viewed the transactions as fraudulent conveyances and filed suit. The Witkempers had no response to the merits of the government’s position but argued that the government could not prove that its initial assessment of the FICA tax penalties fell within the statutory deadline, citing “unreliable government records” containing clerical errors. They claimed that because the government filed its complaint more than 10 years after it assessed the FICA recovery penalties the lawsuit was outside the limitations period, which was not tolled by the Offer, which had “forged signatures.” The Seventh Circuit affirmed a $385,705.54 judgment in the government’s favor, finding the case “not close," the Witkempers’ counsel never should have pressed the appeal.
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