“High up in the North in the land called Svithjod, there stands a rock. It is a hundred miles high and a hundred miles wide. Once every thousand years a little bird comes to this rock to sharpen its beak.
“When the rock has thus been worn away, then a single day of eternity will have gone by.” Hendrik van Loon, The Story of Mankind, 1921.
So one more little beak-slap at the side of The Rock of Svithjod at 400 Second Street, NW.
I have wearied my readers (these few, these happy few) before now with my reiterated recommendations for the improvement of the United States Tax Court, its operations and practices. I have regretted, and still regret, the necessity, but when I encounter such as Richard W. Medley, Docket No. 13511-22, filed 5/10/24, I again must suggest that Tax Court needs, and must have, some form of aid for the self-represented, whether an office for the self-represented, like the USDCs, or clerks or law secretaries deployed therefor.
I don’t have the latest statistics on the proportion of self-represented Tax Court petitioners, and I don’t know that Ch. Clk. Jeane and his subordinates keep any.* But a quick scan of any day’s docket shows a larger percentage of Tax Court pro ses than most, if not all, other Federal courts.
Mr. Medley wants STJ Adam B. (“Sport”) Landy to order IRS counsel and his own ex-counsel (who apparently bailed last year) to turn over files. Except ex-counsel “… stated to the Court that he returned to Mr. Medley ‘all materials (both hard copy and digital) Mr. Medley provided to Barnes Law at the outset of representation.’ Mr. Medley has not disputed receipt of these materials.” Order, at p. 2, footnote 2. So, since Mr. Medley tried neither informal nor formal discovery requests, his motion for discovery is tossed.
Mr. Medley also wants STJ Sport Landy to let him onto DAWSON to amend his petition and his reply to IRS’ answer, for which he’s already late. You can read STJ Sport Landy’s response for yourself at Order, p. 2. Spoiler alert- It’s strictly DIY.
Why judges and STJs need to be bothered with such stuff eludes me.
Now I know the urge to help is strong in Tax Court Judges and STJs. By way of illustration of the foregoing (as my high-priced colleagues would say), here’s Judge Christian N. (“Speedy”) Weiler testifying before the Senate Finance Committee in support of his appointment to the Tax Court Bench: “By my father’s example, he has shown me how to treat others with respect and kindness in all matters. My father has also shown me the importance of listening to my clients’ problems and how to work alongside them to help guide them to a resolution of their legal issue.” Opening Statement of Christian Weiler Nominee to be a Judge of the United States Tax Court, Senate Committee on Finance, July 21, 2020.
Far be it from me to disparage in the slightest Judge Speedy Weiler’s ideals, which all judges should embrace, or the assiduous practice thereof.
But might not a wise old clerk, or the equivalent of one of our State judges’ law secretaries, serve the same administrative function, guiding the perplexed and sparing both litigant and judge from the delay inherent in an overloaded docket? There are thousands of unnecessary orders issued to resolve problems that a phonecall (not The Phone Call), or a quick exchange of e-mails, with such a non-judicial assistant could solve. And expanding the Tax Court law secretaries’ role in this way could make that position even better training for whatever future path they follow.
I submit that at least part of the purported leisurely Tax Court atmosphere is caused by the dissipation of scarce judicial resources in administration. And it can be solved.
*Edited to add, 5/10/24: In point of fact, the hard laboring intake clerks and flailing date stampers in the fifty-year-old House That Vic Built do keep such statistics, among their other arduous labors. A tip of my battered Stetson to Sarah Silfies Finken, Esq., Administrative and Case Services Counsel, now serving as what we used to call an “acting jack”, an appointment without a rank, in Public Affairs, for turning me onto Page 21 of the FY2025 Congressional Budget Justification, wherein it is written “(I)n FY2023, taxpayers were self-represented (pro se) in 77 percent of the cases filed.” Jibes completely with what I thought; I doubt the number has changed since I started this blog.
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