In Harrison v. IRS, 2021 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 45582 (D. D.C.
3/11/21),* here, the taxpayers entered the OVDP program prior to the IRS
offering the Streamlined Domestic Procedures (“SDP” program in 2014. The SDP penalty requirements were less than
the OVDP’s penalty requirements and required taxpayers to certify
nonwillfulness and provide support for that certification. Incident to the SDP, the IRS permitted
taxpayers then in OVDP to “transition” to SDP.
The transition required (just as the SDP required) that taxpayers
certify nonwillfulness and support the certification. The IRS (through its Central Review
Committee, determined that the taxpayers had not established their nonwillfulness
and therefore left them in OVDP where the options were (i) accept the OVDP penalty
structure which was more than SDP but less than the law could impose outside
OVDP or (ii) opt out of OVDP and take their chances on audit. Rather than take the risk of higher penalties
on audit, the taxpayers chose to accept the OVDP penalty structure. Accepting OVDP required that the taxpayers
enter a closing agreement which provided, in part, that the taxpayers would not
file a claim for refund of any amounts paid pursuant to the closing agreement. They did and paid the resulting tax,
penalties and interest, including the miscellaneous offshore penalty in lieu of
an FBAR penalty in the amount of $519,943.44.
Two years after entering the closing agreement, the
taxpayers brought what was in effect a refund suit but, apparently realizing that
the closing agreement might be a bar, couched the suit under a mélange of legal
theories: (i) APA claims that the
transition rules were adopted without notice and comment and, in any event,
were arbitrary and capricious under APA section 706(2)(A); (ii) Due Process
claim based on the alleged purported absence of procedural protections; and
(iii) duress claim that the Closing Agreement was invalid.
The Court rejected their claims. The Procedurally Taxing Blog has a good
discussion of the APA aspect of the case. Leslie Book, APA
Offers No Avenue For Relief For Challenge to Offshore Transition Rules Penalty
Regime (Procedurally Taxing Blog 3/15/21), here. Basically, the Court held that a
refund suit would be an adequate remedy thus precluding subject matter
jurisdiction of the APA claims. I encourage readers to read that blog and will only address here some nuances on the APA claims.
In the blog, Professor Book states: “The needle can still be thread: if someone
else has fully paid and is not subject
to a closing agreement they could bring a refund suit in federal court and get
a court to consider the merits of the APA challenge.” That is the part I want to thrash upon further.
Let’s posit that a taxpayer in the situation in the case did
not accept the OVDP settlement but instead took their chances on audit and the general
maximum 50% penalty was imposed. No
closing agreement is required. So, in
that case, I suppose Professor Book’s statement is that the taxpayers could
then pursue their APA claims in the refund suit; alternatively, and more
likely, the government would have pursued a collection suit and the taxpayer’s
APA arguments could be pursued there (recall that the government must bring
that suit within two years of the assessment of the FBAR penalty). (In considering a refund suit possibility,
recall also that full pre-litigation payment may not be required (James R.
Malone, Half a Loaf Might Suffice: FBARS, Flora and Federal Jurisdiction (Post
& Schell Tax Controversy Posts 2/13/17), here.) and in the collection suit,
no pre-litigation payment is required.)
I suppose both of those potential options to present the APA claims
might be deemed sufficiently adequate to preclude stand alone jurisdiction to
present the APA claims.
What exactly are those APA claims?
Failure to adopt with notice and comment rulemaking