Attorney-at-Law

“WIN YOUR CASE AT DISCOVERY” – MAYBE

In Uncategorized on 04/27/2026 at 15:47

In order to achieve the result long and loudly touted by the CLEfloggers, you have to make proper requests and demands. Duane P. Kuck & Cindy-Leigh Kuck, Docket No. 13722-24, filed 4/27/26 didn’t, says Judge Benjamin A. (“Trey”) Guider, III.

DP and Cindy-Leigh were offside with their Branerton request, serving before IRS had answered, hence the case wasn’t “at issue” as required by Rule 38. Hence, no sanctions.

Next, formal discovery must wait 30 (count ’em, 30) days after case is at issue before formal discovery can commence. DP and Cindy-Leigh served their interrogs five (count ’em, five) days after case at issue, hence Rule 70(a)(2) bars Rule 104(a) sanctions for IRS nonreponse.

DP and Cindy-Leigh have a point, though. IRS’ reasons why their charitable donation deductions were disallowed wasn’t stated in the Form 886 attached to the SND; all the 886 said was the deduction was disallowed.

OK, says Judge Trey Guider, except.

“However, the 27-page Form 886 sent to petitioners in the March 19, 2025, administrative file– and attached to petitioners’ motion for sanctions as Exhibit 2–contains a comprehensive explanation of why the noncash charitable deductions were disallowed. While this document was not attached to the NOD as respondent stated, it has nonetheless been in petitioners’ possession for more than a year. And the fact that petitioners attached this Form 886-A to their motion acknowledges their awareness of the document and its contents. As such, sanctions are not warranted.” Order, at pp. 2-3.

No general bad-faith sanctions, either, as Rule 104(a)s are only available when a party disobeys a court order, and there are none here.

Taishoff respectfully asks Tax Court judges to denominate 90-day letters (Section 6213(a) notices of deficiency) as either SNODs or SNDs (Statutory Notices of Deficiency) and not NODs, to avoid confusion with Notices of Determination, such as result from CDPs, EE-vs-IC classifications, 501(c)(3) revocations, whistleblower award denials or rejections, Section 7345 passport grabs, pension plan revocations, interest abatement denials, et hoc genus omne

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