With a Side of Four
That’s the pot-au-feu served up by the trusty attorney for Carver Mountain Reserve, LLC, Carver Mountain Reserve IP, LLC, Tax Matters Partner, et al., Docket Nos. 15761-24, 15778-24, and 15802-24, a tripartite entry filed 5/8/26. Said trusty attorney, whom I’ll call Sammy, sends Judge Christian N. (“Speedy”) Weiler to what we used to call the “law books,” an archaic research vehicle now superseded by the Interweb.
Sammy claims IRS’ war on these syndicated conservation easements violates the Fifth, Seventh, Eighth, and Fourteenth Amendments, and cites a case implicating the Fourth Amendment and the APA as well.
Judge Speedy Weiler brings out a carafe of somber reasoning and copious citation of precedent, bubbling with blown-up arguments. Constitutional topers should drink up the three (count ’em, three) pages thereof.
But Sammy claims it’s really that the FPAAs were issued outside 3SOL, hence barred. So Judge Speedy Weiler holds up ruling on Sammy’s summary J motion on that point until IRS answers. And IRS should stick to the 3SOL issue in its answer.