                        T.C. Memo. 2009-37



                      UNITED STATES TAX COURT



                   CAROL WHALEN, Petitioner v.
          COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent



     Docket No. 10930-07.                Filed February 17, 2009.



     Richard L. Hunn, Stephen A. Kuntz, Jonathan D. Mishkin, and

Joseph C. Sleeth, Jr., for petitioner.

     Randall G. Durfee and Gordon Sanz, for respondent.



             MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION


     COHEN, Judge:   Respondent determined deficiencies and

additions to tax with respect to petitioner’s Federal income

taxes as follows:
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                                     Additions to Tax
Year    Deficiency   Sec. 6651(a)(1)     Sec. 6651(a)(2)       Sec. 6654

2003     $180,424      $36,627.97           $26,046.56         $4,149.93
2004      621,488      139,834.80            62,148.80         17,809.35

Respondent has conceded all deficiencies and additions to tax for

both years; respondent also concedes that petitioner is entitled

to a refund in the amount of $17,633 for 2003.      The issue that

remains for decision is whether petitioner is entitled to a

credit and refund of, or otherwise to recover or recoup, $258,328

paid in 2004.    Unless otherwise indicated, all chapter and

section references are to the Internal Revenue Code, and all Rule

references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.

                          FINDINGS OF FACT

       Some of the facts have been stipulated, and the stipulated

facts are incorporated in our findings by this reference.

Petitioner resided in Texas at the time her petition was filed.

       In 2001, petitioner and John Clifford Baxter (Baxter) were

wife and husband and domiciled in Texas, a community property

jurisdiction.    Baxter was an employee of Enron Corp. (Enron).

Baxter died in January 2002, and petitioner became executrix of

his estate.    The estate was in administration for the rest of

2002 and throughout 2003 and 2004.      As surviving spouse,

petitioner completed a joint Form 1040, U.S. Individual Income

Tax Return, for 2001 that was filed on August 9, 2002.      She

reported as income Baxter’s wages as listed on Form W-2, Wage and

Tax Statement, and his nonemployee compensation as listed on Form
                                 - 3 -

1099-MISC, Miscellaneous Income, both forms having been sent to

her by Enron.

       The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) audited Enron with

respect to its 2001 employment taxes.    As a result of the Enron

audit, the IRS determined that income reported as non-employee

compensation to some of its employees, including Baxter, was in

fact wages and should have been subject to employment taxes and

withholding.    Enron and the IRS entered into a settlement, and,

on November 18, 2004, Enron remitted to the IRS a check for the

full amount of the employment taxes and income tax withholding

due.

       After making the payment, Enron sent to Baxter’s estate a

Form W-2c, Corrected Wage and Tax Statement, and a corrected Form

1099-MISC for Baxter for 2001.    These forms reflected the

recharacterized wage income and Federal taxes, as well as

additional wage income, reported with respect to Baxter’s

compensation.    Enron also notified Baxter’s estate that it had

remitted $516,657.16 in income tax withholding on behalf of

Baxter and requested reimbursement for this additional tax.    On

December 30, 2004, petitioner reimbursed Enron for the entire

withholding tax amount.

       Around the same time as the Enron audit, the IRS also

audited petitioner’s 2001 joint tax return.    On June 3, 2005, the

IRS sent petitioner and Baxter’s estate a notice of deficiency
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for 2001 in which the IRS reclassified Baxter’s non-employee

compensation as additional wage income.   This amount correlated

with the Enron audit and settlement.   The IRS, however, did not

allow a credit for the additional income tax withholding of

$516,657.16.   In the notice, the IRS also determined other

unreported income that ultimately resulted in a deficiency of

$215,756.   Neither petitioner nor Baxter’s estate disputed the

notice of deficiency for 2001, and, in January 2006, they paid

the balance due of $243,735.10 (consisting of the deficiency of

$215,756, interest of $42,308.31, and a penalty for failure to

pay tax of $1,994.32, less a credit for overpayment of

$16,323.53).

     Petitioner did not timely file an income tax return for 2003

or 2004, and the IRS prepared substitute for returns for her.     On

February 20, 2007, the IRS sent petitioner notices of deficiency

for 2003 and 2004.   The items that caused the 2003 and 2004

deficiencies, mostly unreported capital gains and dividends, were

unrelated to those that caused the 2001 deficiency.   Petitioner

then filed Federal income tax returns for 2003 and 2004, as well

as the petition for this case with respect to both notices of

deficiency for those years.   On her 2004 tax return, petitioner

claimed a credit of $258,328 as her community one-half interest

in the $516,657 of income tax withholding remitted by Enron to

the IRS during 2004, and she claimed a resulting overpayment of
                                - 5 -

$258,328.   The IRS accepted as filed and agreed with petitioner’s

2003 and 2004 Federal income tax returns with one exception:     the

IRS disallowed the $258,328 credit for income tax withholding

claimed on petitioner’s 2004 return.

                               OPINION

     It is undisputed that the Government collected tax on the

wage income in issue twice:   once from Enron pursuant to section

3402 and again from petitioner when her 2001 joint return was

filed and her portion of the amount in the notice of deficiency

for 2001 was paid.   Because petitioner reimbursed Enron,

petitioner personally paid the amount of the tax twice while

Enron broke even.    Petitioner asserts that she has been unfairly

double taxed and seeks to recover $258,328.

     Respondent counters that, at the time she made the payment

to Enron in 2004, petitioner had many options:   (1) She could

have refused to pay Enron (However, had petitioner not reimbursed

Enron in 2004, Enron’s payment of the taxes might have been

additional income to her.   See Old Colony Trust Co. v.

Commissioner, 279 U.S. 716 (1929).); (2) she could have provided

to Enron a Form 4669, Statement of Payments Received, attesting

to the fact that some or all of the income, in respect of which

Enron made the payment, had already been reported on the joint

2001 tax return and the tax paid; (3) protective refund claims

for the year 2001 could have been filed; or (4) the notice of
                                - 6 -

deficiency for the year 2001 could have been contested in this

Court.   Respondent stresses that none of these possible courses

of action was taken.    We must decide only whether petitioner has

a remedy in this case.

     Petitioner first argues that the tax Enron paid on Baxter’s

behalf is, in essence, withholding tax for which she is entitled

to a credit.   An employer is required to withhold Federal income

tax from the wages of its employees.    Sec. 3402(a).   Employees,

as recipients of the income being taxed, are allowed a credit for

the amount withheld by their employer and can apply it to their

tax due (section 31 credit).    Sec. 31(a).   Petitioner, relying on

a novel interpretation of section 31(a), contends that she is

entitled to her community one-half share of a section 31 credit

for 2004, even though the income that was taxed was earned by

Baxter in 2001.    Petitioner ultimately argues that the section 31

credit gives her an overpayment for 2004 and a refund due of

$258,328.   Respondent contends that petitioner is attempting to

recast the payment made by Enron into withholding for the year

2004, thus avoiding the legal consequences that would occur if

the payment were attributed to 2001.

     Petitioner seeks this relief with respect to her 2004 notice

of deficiency.    Under sections 6213(a) and 6214(a), we have

jurisdiction to redetermine a deficiency “without regard to the

credit under section 31”.    Sec. 6211(b)(1); see Redcay v.
                               - 7 -

Commissioner, 12 T.C. 806, 809-810 (1949).    Before trial,

respondent had accepted petitioner’s 2004 Federal income tax

return and concluded that petitioner had no remaining deficiency

for 2004.   Petitioner is, however, properly before us with

respect to her 2004 notice of deficiency.

     We also have jurisdiction to determine the amount of an

overpayment in a related deficiency proceeding.   See sec. 6512;

Greene-Thapedi v. Commissioner, 126 T.C. 1, 9-10 (2006).

     [I]f the Tax Court finds that there is no deficiency
     and further finds that the taxpayer has made an
     overpayment of income tax for the same taxable year,
     * * * the Tax Court shall have jurisdiction to
     determine the amount of such overpayment, and such
     amount shall, when the decision of the Tax Court has
     become final, be credited or refunded to the taxpayer.
     * * * [Sec. 6512(b)(1); emphasis added.]

     Having established that there is no deficiency for 2004, we

can consider using the section 31 credit to determine an

overpayment if:   (1) The tax Enron paid can be characterized as

withholding tax that results in the credit; (2) petitioner is the

proper recipient of the credit; and (3) the credit applies to the

same taxable year as the 2004 deficiency.    If all conditions are

satisfied, the section 31 credit would result in an overpayment

of $258,328.   See secs. 31(a), 6401(b)(1), 6512(b).

     In considering the first condition, the Enron payment is the

equivalent of withholding tax made on behalf of Baxter.

Respondent collected the tax pursuant to chapter 24, subchapter A

(entitled “Withholding from Wages”), section 3402(a) (entitled
                                 - 8 -

“Requirement of Withholding”).    Even though the wages were earned

in 2001 and no actual act of withholding occurred during that

year, respondent could not have had authority to collect the tax

from Enron unless it was deemed subject to “withholding”.

     While we agree with respondent that the tax liability of an

employer under sections 3403 and 7501 is independent of the

liability imposed on an employee under section 1, we also agree

with petitioner that these two liabilities are for the same

income tax.   When the withholding tax was originally enacted,

representatives of the 78th Congress stated that it was “not an

additional tax--merely a collection device.”   H. Doc. 237, 78th

Cong., 1st Sess. 5 (1943); accord Baral v. United States, 528

U.S. 431, 436 (2000) (“Withholding and estimated tax remittances

are not taxes in their own right, but methods for collecting the

income tax”); cf. sec. 3402(d) (relieving the employer of

liability for the tax if it is paid directly by the employee).

To conclude that withholding tax is a separate tax invites the

possibility of an employee’s income being taxed twice.   The Enron

payment therefore could plausibly be characterized as withholding

tax under chapter 24 with a corresponding section 31 credit being

allowed to a proper recipient for an appropriate year.   Sec.

31(a)(1).

      Regarding the second condition, the recipient of the

section 31 credit is the person subject to the income tax imposed
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upon the wages from which the tax was withheld.      Sec. 1.31-1(a),

Income Tax Regs.     However, if a husband and wife domiciled in a

community property State make separate returns and, for income

tax purposes, each reports one-half of the wages received by the

income-producing spouse, then each spouse is entitled to one-half

of the credit allowable for the tax withheld.       Id.; see Porter v.

Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1996-475.       Petitioner filed separately

from Baxter’s estate in 2004.     Respondent, assuming the credit

could be available only for 2001, failed to argue at trial or on

brief that petitioner is not a proper recipient.      Petitioner is

considered a proper recipient of a one-half share of the credit.

     The final condition is that 2004 be the proper year that the

section 31 credit would be allowed.      Petitioner interprets

section 31(a) as affording her the credit in 2004.      When

interpreting a statute, we must begin with “the language of the

statute itself.”     Consumer Prod. Safety Commn. v. GTE Sylvania,

Inc., 447 U.S. 102, 108 (1980); see La. Credit Union League v.

United States, 693 F.2d 525, 541 (5th Cir. 1982).      Section 31(a)

provides:

     SEC. 31.     TAX WITHHELD ON WAGES.

            (a)   Wage Withholding for Income Tax Purposes.--

                 (1) In general.--The amount withheld as tax
            under chapter 24 shall be allowed to the recipient
            of the income as a credit against the tax imposed
            by this subtitle.
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                 (2) Year of credit.--The amount so withheld
            during any calendar year shall be allowed as a
            credit for the taxable year beginning in such
            calendar year. If more than one taxable year
            begins in a calendar year, such amount shall be
            allowed as a credit for the last taxable year so
            beginning. [Emphasis added.]

       The words of the statute must be construed in their

“ordinary, everyday”, and plain meaning.    Crane v. Commissioner,

331 U.S. 1, 6 (1947).    Petitioner contends it is clear that the

phrase “The amount so withheld during any calendar year” entitles

her to the credit in 2004 because 2004 was the calendar year that

Enron withheld and remitted the additional income tax.

Respondent, on the other hand, argues that this section means

that the credit is allowed to petitioner, if at all, for 2001,

the year in which the income was earned.    We agree with

respondent.

       Petitioner is under the impression that the income tax

withheld for 2001 is somehow independent of the income tax

imposed in 2001.    As discussed supra, withholding tax is not a

separate tax but an alternate method of collecting a single

income tax.    The tax paid by Enron was the income tax for 2001.

The fact that the tax is constructively withheld does not change

this; the tax is considered withheld for petitioner’s 2001 income

tax.    It is irrelevant that the withholding tax/income tax of

2001 was actually paid in 2004.    Cf. Baral v. United States,

supra at 435-437 (holding that remittances of withholding tax
                              - 11 -

described in section 6513(b)(1) are considered “paid” on the due

date of a calendar year taxpayer’s income tax return, rather than

on the date that a tax liability was assessed).   Therefore,

petitioner is properly denied the use of the section 31 credit to

determine an overpayment for 2004.

     Petitioner alternatively argues that she should recover or

recoup $258,328 on principles of equity.   Specifically, she

contends that the Government is unjustly enriched by double

taxation and that this Court should determine either that

petitioner’s funds are being held in constructive trust or that

her funds may be equitably recouped.

     With respect to these equity arguments, we must first

acknowledge that our jurisdiction is limited to the extent

authorized by Congress.   See sec. 7442; Fernandez v.

Commissioner, 114 T.C. 324, 328 (2000).    As an Article I court,

we cannot exercise general equitable powers to expand our

jurisdiction over a matter not provided for by statute.     Woods v.

Commissioner, 92 T.C. 776, 785, 787 (1989).   But cf. Commissioner

v. McCoy, 484 U.S. 3, 7 (1987) (“The Tax Court is a court of

limited jurisdiction and lacks general equitable powers.”).

Nonetheless, we have applied numerous equitable principles to

decide matters over which we do have jurisdiction.   See Woods v.

Commissioner, supra at 784, 787 (listing equity-based principles

incorporated by the Tax Court in dispositions of cases, such as
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waiver, duty of consistency, estoppel, substantial compliance,

abuse of discretion, laches, and the tax benefit rule).

     Constructive trust allows a plaintiff to seek restitution

“where money * * * identified as belonging in good conscience to

the plaintiff could clearly be traced to particular funds * * *

in the defendant's possession.”   Great-West Life & Annuity Ins.

Co. v. Knudson, 534 U.S. 204, 213 (2002).   “A court of equity

could then order a defendant to transfer title * * * to a

plaintiff who was, in the eyes of equity, the true owner.”     Id.

Petitioner argues that respondent was unjustly enriched by the

tax paid by Enron with respect to Baxter’s income on his behalf.

She therefore contends that these funds should be determined to

have been held in constructive trust by respondent and returned

to her.

     Without getting into a myriad of concerns as to whether (and

how) constructive trust should be applied, we recognize that we

do not have jurisdiction to rule on this issue.   Petitioner

received a 2001 notice of deficiency that gave her standing to

petition this Court regarding her income for that year being

taxed twice.   She did not pursue this course but, instead,

petitioned this Court with respect to her 2003 and 2004 notices

of deficiency, in which the funds petitioner wishes to recover

are not involved.   Because the “double payment of tax” issue has

no relation to the notices of deficiency properly before us, we
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do not have jurisdiction and cannot apply constructive trust

without exceeding our jurisdiction.

     On the other hand, we do have specific jurisdiction with

respect to petitioner’s argument to recoup $258,328 through the

judicially created doctrine of equitable recoupment.   Sec.

6214(b); see Menard, Inc. v. Commissioner, 130 T.C. 54, 64 (2008)

(clarifying that section 6214(b) permits the Tax Court to use

equitable recoupment to the same extent that is available in

civil tax cases before the District Courts of the United States

and the U.S. Court of Federal Claims).   Respondent argues on

brief that petitioner failed to specifically plead equitable

recoupment.

     Respondent is correct in that petitioner should have abided

by the Rules of this Court and amended her petition to plead

equitable recoupment.   See Rule 39.   We need not consider special

matters constituting an avoidance or affirmative defense not

properly raised.   See Mecom v. Commissioner, 101 T.C. 374, 382

(1993), affd. without published opinion 40 F.3d 385 (5th Cir.

1994).   Nevertheless, we will entertain petitioner’s equitable

relief argument for the following reason:   respondent did not

object when petitioner first raised equitable recoupment in her

pretrial memorandum and later at trial and on brief.   Respondent

therefore had notice of petitioner’s argument of equitable

recoupment before trial, had opportunity to present evidence
                              - 14 -

opposing it at trial, and argued the issue on brief.   When an

issue is tried by implied consent of the parties, it is treated

as if it had been raised in the pleadings.   Rule 41(b).   The

argument whether to apply equitable recoupment is properly before

us.

      Equitable recoupment resolves the discrepancy caused by two

inconsistent tax treatments of a single item affecting a taxpayer

in two separate years--one treatment being found erroneous in a

closed year while the other is deemed correct in an open year.

See generally Bull v. United States, 295 U.S. 247, 259-263

(1935).   If certain requirements are satisfied, equitable

recoupment may be used as an affirmative defense that allows a

taxpayer to recover a tax overpayment, which occurred in a time-

barred year, by using it to offset a current deficiency.     Id.;

Menard, Inc. v. Commissioner, supra at 62.   (The Government can

also use equitable recoupment as a means to offset a taxpayer’s

refund with a time-barred deficiency in taxes.   Bull v. United

States, supra at 262.)   By waiving the statute of limitations

with respect to the taxpayer’s overpayment, equitable recoupment

prevents an unfair windfall to the Government that would

otherwise result from these inconsistent tax treatments.     See

Estate of Mueller v. Commissioner, 101 T.C. 551, 552 (1993).

      A taxpayer’s use of equitable recoupment is limited to

defending against the Government’s valid claim for additional tax
                                 - 15 -

by reducing or eliminating it.     Estate of Mueller v.

Commissioner, 107 T.C. 189, 198 (1996), affd. on other grounds

153 F.3d 302 (6th Cir. 1998).     (The limitation we imposed in

Estate of Mueller, confining equitable recoupment to defensive

uses, was not derived from any restrictions regarding our own

equitable powers but, instead, drawn from the body of existing

caselaw that had developed in refund litigation.)       However, once

a taxpayer’s time-barred overpayment completely eliminates the

current deficiency, equitable recoupment has served its

restricted defensive purpose.     Id.     Equitable recoupment cannot

be used affirmatively to recover a tax overpayment, the refund of

which is barred by the statute of limitations.        Id.   Where the

Government claims that the taxpayer owes additional tax and the

Court finds that there is no tax due to the Government, there is

nothing left to defend against.     Id.

     As a result of respondent’s concessions, there is no tax due

regarding the 2003 and 2004 deficiencies that are before us.

Equitable recoupment, therefore, has no application in this case.

Petitioner cannot use equitable recoupment only for the purpose

of procuring her overpayment made with respect to 2001, as that

expands the application of equitable recoupment beyond what any

court has ever done.   See id.    Thus, we do not address the

requirements of equitable recoupment or whether they have been

satisfied.
                        - 16 -

To reflect the foregoing,


                                 An appropriate decision

                            will be entered.
