One thing predictable in every Dixieland Boondockery is IRS’ partial summary J motion seeking a finding of Section 6751(b) compliance. Barring names, numbers, and dates, each such Order is as alike as cans of Coca Cola from a coin-operated vending machine. Especially is this true as the greatest number of these cases are Golsenized to 11 Cir, where Kroner reigns supreme. So long as supe supervises RA at the time of sign-off, that’s just fine.
Riddle Aggregates, LLC, Ornstein-Schuler, LLC, Tax Matters Partner, Docket No. 31104-21, filed 8/11/25, is such another. The trusty Riddle attorneys spare ex-Ch J Kathleen (“TBS = The Big Shilleagh”) the usual desperate hunt for disputed facts or pleas for extended discovery, and agree with IRS’ names and dates and electrons.
But they note for the record “For purposes of preserving this issue for appeal, petitioner notes its disagreement with our interpretation of section 6751(b) and that of the Eleventh Circuit.” Order, at p. 4.
Taishoff says I hope the trusty Riddle attorneys get to the Supreme Court, and the Supremes put paid to this nonsense.
My readers, I am sure, are as tired as I of the upside-down-and-backwards reading of Section 6751(b). The testimony of the ABA Tax Section back in 1997 was clear; the aim was to get a second look before penalties were threatened to bludgeon taxpayers into disadvantageous settlements.
But the drafting of the implementing statute is atrocious; Charles Dickens’ Circumlocution Office could not have done better to figure out How Not To Do It. The word “assessment” was used by inept drafters, unaware of the technical meaning given in Section 6203, that is, entry of the amount of tax due in the Office of the Secretary. But Section 6213(a) provides that no assessment of tax or penalty (entry on the records) may be made once a petition has been timely filed in a deficiency case. Once a case has been thus commenced, assessment is barred until decision is final per Section 7481.
Wherefore, a SND may be issued without Section 6751(b) signoff, timely petitioned, litigated, decision entered, notice of appeal and appeal bond posted, appeal decided, remanded, new trial, appeal, bonded, appeal decided, certiorari petitioned and granted, Supreme Court decision rendered, remand to Tax Court, and decision entered. Assessment made twenty (count ’em, twenty) years after penalties first mentioned. Supe and RA have grown old together and are at their retirement party when a clerk runs in with a CPAF, which they both sign. 11 Cir is satisfied with that result.
Yes, I know Judge David Gustafson foresaw that; see my blogpost “Money-Back Guarantee Meets the Boss Hoss,” 11/30/16. And Judge Holmes really unloaded on this farcical schemozzle; see my blogpost “Stir, Baby, Stir – That Silt,” 12/20/17.
Nonetheless the vending machine grinds on.
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