SEAVIEW TRADING, LLC, AGK INVE V. CIR, No. 20-72416 (9th Cir. 2023)
Annotate this Case
The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) generally has three years from the date a taxpayer files a tax return to assess any taxes that are owed for that year. In this case, we must decide whether a partnership “filed” its 2001 tax return by faxing a copy of that return to an IRS revenue agent in 2005 or by mailing a copy to an IRS attorney in 2007. If either of those actions qualified as a “filing” of the partnership’s return, the statute of limitations would bar the IRS’s decision, more than three years later, to disallow a large loss the partnership had claimed.
The Ninth Circuit affirmed the Tax Court’s decision. The court held that neither Seaview Trading LLC’s faxing a copy of their delinquent 2001 tax return to an IRS revenue agent in 2005, nor mailing a copy to an IRS attorney in 2007, qualified as a “filing” of the partnership’s return, and therefore the statute of limitations did not bar the IRS’s readjustment of the partnership’s tax liability. The court concluded that because Seaview did not meticulously comply with the regulation’s place-for-filing requirement, it was not entitled to claim the benefit of the three-year limitations period. The court wrote that its conclusion was consistent with cases from other circuits and a long line of Tax Court decisions. The court also rejected Seaview’s argument that the regulation’s place-for-filing requirement applies only to returns that are timely filed—not to those that are filed late.
Court Description: Tax. Affirming the Tax Court’s decision concluding that the Internal Revenue Service’s notice of final partnership administrative adjustment was timely, the en banc court held that neither Seaview Trading LLC’s faxing a copy of their delinquent 2001 tax return to an IRS revenue agent in 2005, nor mailing a copy to an IRS attorney in 2007, qualified as a “filing” of the partnership’s return, and therefore the statute of limitations did not bar the IRS’s readjustment of the partnership’s tax liability. In July 2005, an IRS revenue agent informed Seaview that the agency had no record of receiving the partnership’s return for the 2001 tax year. The revenue agent asked Seaview to send him retained copies of any 2001 return that Seaview claimed to have filed as well as proof of mailing. Seaview’s accountant complied with this request in September 2005 by faxing a copy of its 2001 Form 1065 to the revenue agent’s office in South Dakota, along with a certified mail receipt for an envelope that had been mailed to the Ogden Service Center in July 2002. Seaview initially claimed that it included its 2001 partnership return in that SEAVIEW TRADING, LLC V. CIR 3 envelope, which contained the tax return of another related entity, but Seaview conceded on appeal that it could not prove that the IRS received its 2001 return as part of that mailing. In July 2007, after the IRS commenced an audit of Seaview, Seaview’s counsel mailed the same copy of its 2001 return to the office of an IRS attorney in Minnesota. Neither the IRS revenue agent in South Dakota nor the IRS attorney in Minnesota forwarded the copies of Seaview’s 2001 partnership return to the relevant Service Center in Ogden, Utah, for processing. Nor did Seaview itself forward copies of its return to the Ogden Service Center at that time. In October 2010, the IRS issued a notice of final partnership administrative adjustment concerning Seaview’s 2001 return, in which it disallowed the $35.5 million loss Seaview had claimed. Through its tax matters partner, Seaview filed a petition in the United States Tax Court challenging the agency’s adjustment. Seaview conceded that it was not entitled to claim the $35.5 million loss, but it argued that the IRS’s disallowance of the loss was untimely. 26 U.S.C. § 6230(i) (2000), which was applicable during the period in question, provided that a partnership’s return “shall be filed . . . at such time, in such manner, and at such place as may be prescribed in regulations.” The implementing regulations, 26 C.F.R. § 1.6031(a)- 1(e)(2001), in turn, provided that “[t]he return of a partnership must be filed with the service center prescribed in the relevant IRS revenue procedure, publication, form, or instructions to the form” and that “[t]he return of a partnership must be filed on or before the fifteenth day of the fourth month following the close of the taxable year of the partnership.” The Tax Court held that Seaview never “filed” its 2001 return because it failed to send the return to 4 SEAVIEW TRADING, LLC V.CIR the designated place for filing under Treasury Regulation § 1.6031(a)-1(e)(1) )—namely, the IRS’s Ogden Service Center. The en banc court agreed. The en banc court explained that Seaview did not meticulously comply with the regulation’s place-for-filing requirement because neither the IRS revenue agent nor the IRS attorney to whom Seaview sent copies of its 2001 return qualified as a designated place for filing. And at no point was Seaview’s return ever forwarded to the designated place for filing at the Ogden Service Center. The en banc court concluded that because Seaview did not meticulously comply with the regulation’s place-for-filing requirement, it was not entitled to claim the benefit of the three-year limitations period. Rather, having never properly filed its return, Seaview was instead subject to 26 U.S.C. § 6229(c)(3) (2000), which allows taxes attributable to partnership items to be assessed “at any time.” The en banc court wrote that its conclusion was consistent with cases from other circuits and a long line of Tax Court decisions. The en banc court also rejected Seaview’s argument that the regulation’s place-for-filing requirement applies only to returns that are timely filed—not to those that are filed late. The en banc court additionally rejected Seaview’s contention that its position was supported by the IRS’s historical interpretation and practice, as evidenced by agency documents. Dissenting, Judge Bumatay wrote that because the IRS’s current position was inconsistent with the Tax Code, its regulations, and its own guidances, he would have reversed the Tax Court’s decision. Judge Bumatay explained that for over 20 years, the IRS has told taxpayers that they can file late or untimely tax returns with requesting IRS officials, and SEAVIEW TRADING, LLC V. CIR 5 has assured taxpayers it will accept all delinquent returns submitted by a taxpayer at the request of a Service representative. The IRS has also encouraged taxpayers to file their delinquent returns directly with the revenue officer instead of mailing them to the appropriate IRS Service Center. Judge Bumatay observed that the IRS had now backtracked on its public statements, and as a result, any taxpayers who filed their delinquent tax returns by sending them directly to requesting IRS officials may find that their returns were never deemed filed and, even worse, they may be liable to the IRS forever. In Judge Bumatay’s view, the IRS’s public guidances about filing delinquent tax returns with requesting officials adhered to the Tax Code and IRS regulations. Under the plain meaning of the Tax Code, Judge Bumatay would hold that a late partnership tax return is “filed” for statute-of-limitations purposes when (1) an IRS representative authorized to obtain and receive delinquent returns informs a partnership that a tax return is missing and requests that tax return, (2) the partnership responds by giving the IRS representative the tax return in the manner requested, and (3) the IRS representative receives the tax return. 6 SEAVIEW TRADING, LLC V.CIR
This opinion or order relates to an opinion or order originally issued on May 11, 2022.