                                                                                                                           Opinions of the United
2002 Decisions                                                                                                             States Court of Appeals
                                                                                                                              for the Third Circuit


3-25-2002

Tolve v. Commissioner IRS
Precedential or Non-Precedential:

Docket 0-2289




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Recommended Citation
"Tolve v. Commissioner IRS" (2002). 2002 Decisions. Paper 199.
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NOT PRECEDENTIAL

                   UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                       FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
                             __________

                            NO. 00-2289
                             __________

                    RICHARD TOLVE; BETTE TOLVE,
                                                      Appellants

                                  v.

                   COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE
                              __________

           On Appeal from the United States Tax Court
                     Tax Court No. 00-4113
                   Honorable James S. Halpern
                           __________

                   Argued on November 7, 2001
Before: BECKER, Chief Judge, McKEE and RENDELL, Circuit Judges.

                        (Filed March 22, 2002)
                              __________

                                       Frank Agostino, Esq.    [ARGUED]
                                       Susan M. Flynn, Esq.
                                       Calo Agostino
                                       27 Warren Street
                                       Hackensack, NJ 07601
                                           Counsel for Appellants

                                       Teresa T. Milton, Esq.     [ARGUED]
                                       Teresa E. McLaughlin, Esq.
                                       United Stats Department of Justice
                                       Tax Division
                                       P.O. Box 502
                                       Washington, DC 20044
                                           Counsel for Appellee

                              __________

                               OPINION
                              __________

RENDELL, Circuit Judge.

     This appeal comes to us from the Tax Court's grant of summary
judgment in favor
of the Internal Revenue Service ("IRS"). At the heart of this appeal is
the Tax Court's
refusal to permit the taxpayers, Richard and Bette Tolve, to withdraw
their deemed
admissions and to amend their pleadings so as to raise a statute of
limitations defense as
to the IRS's claim for additions to tax and interest. They claim that the
consent form only
waived the statute of limitations regarding the amount of the tax itself,
and also that the
statute of limitations had run regarding any tax liability of Bette Tolve
because she did
not sign the consent form at all. The Tax Court refused to permit
withdrawal of the
admissions and granted the IRS's motion for summary judgment. We will
affirm.
                               I.
     As we write only for the parties, who are familiar with the events
that concern us,
we will only note those facts that are particularly relevant to our
ruling. On their joint
federal income tax return for 1981, the Tolves reported losses and credits
that flowed
through to them under 701 from a partnership called Stu-Co Energy
Associates
("Stu-Co"). As part of a broader tax shelter examination, the Tolves'
1981 tax return was
audited. As part of this audit, on February 27, 1985, an IRS Form 872-A
(the "Consent")
was submitted to the IRS with the purported signatures of both Richard and
Bette Tolve.
It is uncontested that the purpose of this form was to extend the statute
of limitations
regarding "tax" deficiency; it is disputed what the term "tax," as used in
this Consent,
means. The form was a standard IRS form, but contained typed language
limiting the
"amount of any deficiency assessment to that resulting from" six different
items, none of
which reference additions to tax or interest.
     Three and a half years later, in September, 1999, counsel for the
Commissioner
sent a series of letters and requests to the Tolves in an effort to
prepare the case for trial,
then set for January 10, 2000.    After several misdirected communications,
on
November 17, 1999, a request for admissions, as well as all other
documents previously
sent to a different address, were sent to the Tolves at their New York
address. The Tolves
admit to having received this package sometime after November 25, 1999.
     Pursuant to Tax Court Rule 90(c), matters set forth in a request for
admissions are
deemed admitted if the party on whom the request is served does not
respond within
30 days after service. As the Tolves did not respond to the request for
admissions at all,
their substance was deemed to be admitted.
     On the date set for trial the Tolves filed a motion to withdraw the
deemed
admissions, a motion to amend the petition, and a motion for partial
summary judgment
regarding whether the Consent extended the statute of limitations for
assessment of any
item other than the tax. The Commissioner objected to the Tolves' motions
and sought
summary judgment that the entire amount was due. The Tax Court denied the
Tolves'
motions. By doing so the Tax Court effectively disposed of all the issues
in the
underlying action because the deemed admissions established the
"timeliness" of the
assessment and that they owed the amount of the tax, the additions to tax,
and the interest,
as listed in the deficiency notice. The Tax Court accordingly granted the
Commissioner's
motion and entered judgment for the entire amount claimed by the IRS to be
due. The
Tolves now appeal from the Tax Court's orders.
                               II.
     The Tax Court exercised jurisdiction over this case pursuant to 26
U.S.C.
("I.R.C.")     6214 and 7442. We have jurisdiction to review the Tax
Court's final order
pursuant to I.R.C.    7482(a).
     We review both the Tax Court's refusal to permit the withdrawal of
deemed
admissions and its refusal to allow the petition to be amended for abuse
of discretion.
Cureton v. Nt'l Collegiate Athletic Assoc., 252 F.3d 267, 272 (3d Cir.
2001) (amend
petition); Am. Auto. Assoc. v. AAA Legal Clinic of Jefferson Crooke, 930
F.2d 1117,
1119 (5th Cir. 1991) (admissions); 999 v. C.I.T. Corp., 776 F.2d 866, 869
(9th Cir. 1985)
(admissions). Our standard of review is therefore a narrow one. We have
explained that
a finding of an abuse of discretion is appropriate only "if no reasonable
man would adopt
the [tax] court's view. If reasonable men could differ as to the
propriety of the action
taken by the trial court, then it cannot be said that the trial court
abused its discretion."
Washington v. Philadelphia County Court of Common Pleas, 89 F.3d 1031,
1044 (3d Cir.
1996).
     A.    Motion to Withdraw Admissions
     The Tolves' admissions essentially resolve issues of "timeliness" and
the amount
due in the IRS's favor. The Tax Court correctly referenced the applicable
standard
governing the withdrawal of admissions in such proceedings. Rule 90(f) in
pertinent part
provides:
     [W]ithdrawal or modification may be permitted when the presentation
of the
     merits of the case will be subserved thereby, and the party who
obtained the
     admission fails to satisfy the Court that the withdrawal or
modification will
     prejudice such party in prosecuting such party's case or defense on
the merits.

Two issues are presented: first, whether the merits are "subserved," or
promoted, by
allowing the Tolves to withdraw their admissions, and, second, whether the
IRS is
prejudiced in any way by the same.
               1.    Subserving the Merits
     In its order the Tax Court reasoned that the merits were not
"subserved" because
the Tolves' statute of limitations defense was without merit. It based
this conclusion on a
terse determination that the meaning of "tax" on the form was clear.
While the Tax
Court's view of "tax" was a correct statement of tax court decisions as to
the meaning of
"tax," the Tax Court borrowed these rulings as conclusive on the issue of
the plain
meaning of "tax" in the specific Consent executed by the Tolves. By
ruling that the
meaning of "tax" was clear, the Tax Court foreclosed any discussion of the
proper
interpretation of the form itself, which, as we have noted, contained
specific typed
limiting language. We view the issue as to whether the Consent extended
the statute of
limitations as to only the tax, or also as to the additions to tax and
interest, to be not quite
as clear cut as the IRS suggests or the Tax Court concluded.
     The Supreme Court has said that a consent to extend the time period
for the
assessment of tax is "not a contract . . . [but is] essentially a
unilateral waiver of a defense
by the taxpayer." Stange v. United States, 282 U.S. 270, 276 (1931).
However, courts
have analyzed taxpayer consent in contractual interpretation terms. See
Ripley v.
Commissioner, 103 F.3d 332, 337 (4th Cir. 1996); Kronish v. Commissioner,
90 T.C.
684, 693 (1988). In interpreting the waiver agreement in terms of
contract principles,
courts have looked to the "plain meaning" of the form. See United States
v. Hodgekins,
28 F.3d 610, (7th Cir. 1994); Stenclik v. Commissioner, 907 F.2d 25, 27
(2d Cir. 1990).
We conclude that the plain meaning of the form before us is not limited to
the statutory
meaning of the words "tax" or "deficiency." Rather the meaning of the
form can only be
determined by examining the contract language and deciding whether its
meaning is, in
fact, "plain." We conclude that it is not. The typed words of limitation
reference very
specific items of tax resulting from adjustments relating solely to their
investment in
Stu-Co. We cannot say that they clearly include additions and interest,
as those words
appear nowhere in the typed portion (or in the form itself, for that
matter). As the tax
court has explained, the meaning of the form must be determined by looking
at the
specific restricted form at issue. See Ferguson v. Commissioner, 64
T.C.M. (CCH)
431(1992) (explaining that in order to determine whether amounts assessed
by the IRS
were covered by the consent, the court would focus on the "extensive and
detailed
language of the restriction").
     In Anthony v. United States, 987 F.2d 670 (10th Cir. 1992), the Tenth
Circuit
Court of Appeals was called on to determine the meaning of the word
"taxes" in a
settlement agreement between the IRS and the taxpayer. In that case, the
IRS argued that
the word "taxes" did not include interest. The Tenth Circuit found that
the meaning of
"taxes" was ambiguous in the agreement, and therefore looked instead to
the intent of the
parties. Id. at 673. The court rejected the IRS's argument that they had
not settled the
claim for interest and that "taxpayers should have been aware of the
additional interest."
Id. at 673. Interestingly, the IRS makes that same claim here, but makes
it as the basis for
the opposite conclusion   arguing that tax clearly includes interest. The
court in Anthony
concluded that the parties' intent was to limit the taxpayers' liability
to only the taxes
themselves.
     Here, in denying the Tolves' motion, the Tax Court explained that "we
[have]
indicated that the word 'tax' in such waivers [as the form 872] included
any applicable
interest, penalty or other additions to tax." It then references tax
court rulings as to the
meaning of "tax" in the context of a standard form. Pleasanton Gravel Co.
v.
Commissioner, 85 T.C. 839 (1985) (citing Picard v. Commissioner, 28 T.C.
955, 961
(1957)). This may be a correct reading of the word "tax," but this should
not end the
consideration of the meaning of the Consent at issue here in light of the
additional typed
portion containing limiting language. The Tolves contend, and we agree,
that this
language could well be viewed as distinguishing the consent from the
unrestricted consent
in the cases relied on by the IRS and the Tax Court, such as Pleasanton
Gravel and
Picard, which only considered the meaning of "tax" in the form without
additional
qualification. For this reason, the Tax Court was wrong to simply adopt
the reasoning of
those courts as to "tax" without considering the meaning of the form,
including additional
language included on the Tolves' consent.
     As we find ambiguity in the meaning of the form, the parties
intentions should
have been explored in determining the meaning of the form. Further
proceedings before
the Tax Court would be required in order to resolve this issue.
               2.    Prejudice
     However, we must consider the element of prejudice that will result
here if the
parties now need to explore their respective intentions in entering into
the Consent many
years ago. If the inquiry into the meaning of tax at this late date is
allowed, the Tolves'
having failed to raise it in their pleading challenging the deficiency
assessment, the
government would be forced to adduce evidence of intent at this late date.
We think that
unfair prejudice provides grounds for us to affirm the Tax Court's denial
of the Tolves'
motion, even though we disagree with its analysis in so doing. Although
the admission
itself was received by the government only a few weeks before trial, we
cannot help but
consider the fact that the Tolves' motion raises an entirely new issue,
essentially an
affirmative defense available to them when they challenged the assessment
in 1988, and
we find this fact persuades us to deny them the relief they seek. The
Tolves would have
us not merely put the IRS to its proof regarding the merits of their
liability, but rather,
require it to defend on an entirely new basis, raising an affirmative
defense separate and
apart from the merits of the case. Whether viewed as prejudicial, or as
not "subserving
the merits," we cannot conclude that denial of their motion by the Tax
Court was an
abuse of discretion.

     B.    Motion to Amend the Petition
     Similarly, we affirm the Tax Court's denial of the Tolves' motion to
amend their
petition to raise the statute of limitations defense at this late date
regarding the assessment
of additions to tax and interest, and to allege that Mrs. Tolve never
executed or ratified
the Form 872-A. We find no reason to disturb the Tax Court's denial as we
find that this
issue also should have been raised by the Tolves when they challenged the
deficiency
assessment several years ago, in 1988, or at least not on the eve of
trial. They did not,
and the Tax Court did not abuse its discretion in denying this motion.
                               III.
     Accordingly, we will AFFIRM the order of the Tax Court.
_________________________
TO THE CLERK OF COURT:
     Please file the foregoing Not Precedential Opinion.


                              /s/ Marjorie O. Rendell
                              Circuit Judge
