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Another Court Rules on Jurisdiction for Overpayment Interest Suits – Part One

Posted on Aug. 20, 2019

We welcome back guest blogger Bob Probasco of Texas A&M University School of Law for an update on taxpayer suits to recover overpayment interest. Today, Part One sets the stage and recaps the status of the ongoing Pfizer and Paresky cases. Christine

Last year, I wrote about the Pfizer and Paresky cases, which involved questions about jurisdiction and statutes of limitations for taxpayer suits seeking interest payable to them by the government for overpayments. Recently, the District Court for the Western District of North Carolina issued its opinion in Bank of America Corp. v. United States, 2019 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 109238 (W.D.N.C. June 30, 2019) addressing the issue.

Setting the stage

There are two district court jurisdictional statutes at issue in these cases. This first is 28 U.S.C. § 1346(a)(1). It has no dollar limitation. That’s the statute we rely on when filing tax refund suits, so I will refer to it as “tax refund jurisdiction.” But I will keep that term in quotes; taxpayers sometimes argue successfully that this covers suits for overpayment interest, although technically those are not refund suits.

The second is § 1346(a)(2), which provides jurisdiction for any claim against the United States “founded either upon the Constitution, or any Act of Congress, or any regulation of an executive department . . . .” This is commonly referred to as “Tucker Act jurisdiction” and for district courts is limited to claims of $10,000 or less. The comparable jurisdictional statute for the Court of Federal Claims, § 1491(a)(1), has no such limitation.

There are also two different statutes of limitation potentially applicable. The general federal statute of limitations, § 2401 (for district courts or § 2501 for the Court of Federal Claims), requires that complaints be filed within six years after the right of action first accrues. In the Code, section 6532(a)(1) requires the taxpayer to file a refund suit no later than two years after the claim is disallowed.

As a result of all this, not to mention different precedents in different circuits, taxpayers who file suits for overpayment interest may sometimes want to file in district court and other times prefer the Court of Federal Claims. The government’s position is that these claims fit under Tucker Act jurisdiction only, not “tax refund jurisdiction.” And the government may disagree about whether the taxpayer’s preferred venue is available. There may also be a secondary dispute, concerning which statute of limitations applies and whether the suit was filed timely.

Brief recap and current status of Pfizer

The underlying issue in the Pfizer case was straightforward: whether overpayment interest is due when the IRS mails a refund check within the 45-day safe harbor of section 6611(e) but the check is not received by the taxpayer and must be replaced. Pfizer filed suit in the Southern District of New York (SDNY), asserting “tax refund jurisdiction,” to take advantage of a favorable precedent in the Second Circuit. Tucker Act jurisdiction would be available in the SDNY, but is limited to $10,000, and therefore inadequate for this case. The government filed a motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction, asserting that standalone suits for overpayment interest do not fall within the scope of “tax refund jurisdiction.” The court agreed with Pfizer and denied that motion to dismiss.

But the government filed a second motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction, arguing that the refund statute of limitations in the Code had expired and the suit was not filed timely. Pfizer argued that the general six-year statute of limitations in § 2401 applied even though Pfizer was relying on “tax refund jurisdiction” rather than Tucker Act jurisdiction. The court disagreed with Pfizer, applied the two-year statute of limitations from the Code, and granted the government’s motion to dismiss the case.

The case is currently on appeal. Pfizer asked the court, if it affirms the decision below, to transfer the case to the Court of Federal Claims (CFC). That would allow the case to proceed, as suit was filed within the six-year general statute of limitations for Tucker Act claims, although the Second Circuit precedent Pfizer wanted to rely on would not be binding in the CFC. Keith and Carl filed an amicus brief arguing that even if the filing deadline in section 6532(a) applies, it is not jurisdictional and is subject to estoppel or equitable tolling arguments. At oral arguments on February 13, 2018, the Second Circuit panel asked the parties whether it could assume without deciding that claims for overpayment interest fell within the terms of § 1346(a)(1) and proceed to the statute of limitations issue. Roughly 18 months later, we’re still waiting for an answer.

Brief recap and current status of Paresky

The Pareskys have been trying to resolve these tax issues since 2009, first to claim substantial losses that generated refunds and then to get interest on the refunded amounts. It has been a very long, complicated struggle and makes you wonder what would have happened if they hadn’t been represented by very competent tax advisors. In the course of the attempted resolution, the IRS advised them to file a refund claim and, when the claim was denied in 2015, advised that they had two years to file suit. Relying on those statements, the Pareskys filed suit in 2017 in the CFC. The government filed a motion to dismiss, arguing that the six-year statute of limitations applied and had expired in 2016. The plaintiffs argued that the two-year statute of limitations applied; alternatively, they argued that that the six-year statute of limitations didn’t start in 2010, as the government asserted, or was suspended due to government misconduct.

The first step in the court’s decision was relatively easy, because there are numerous precedents in the Federal Circuit that the six-year statute of limitations applies to claims for overpayment interest. It took more effort to analyze when the claims accrued. The normal documentary evidence was not available because it had been destroyed in the normal course of business, during the very long period this dispute had lasted. The court was left with “complicated factual issues” that it resolved in the government’s favor. Finally, the court concluded that the taxpayers had not met the burden of proof to apply the accrual suspension rule. But the CFC denied as moot the government’s motion to dismiss because it granted the taxpayers’ motion to transfer the case to the District Court for the Southern District of Florida (SDF). That would allow the Pareskys to try to persuade the SDF that “tax refund jurisdiction” covers claims for overpayment interest and that the Code statute of limitations applies.

In Pfizer, the taxpayer appealed to the Second Circuit and the question of whether to transfer to another jurisdiction if that was unsuccessful was deferred. In Paresky, the case was transferred immediately rather than giving the plaintiffs an opportunity to convince the appellate court to rule in their favor on the jurisdictional issue. I don’t know if the plaintiffs’ desires were a deciding factor in that difference between the two cases. But Pfizer clearly wanted to remain in the SDNY if possible, while the Pareskys seemed caught by surprise at the jurisdictional challenge, given the advice they received from the IRS, and were open to immediate transfer. They filed a motion to transfer very soon after the government’s motion to dismiss.

In the SDF case, the Pareskys filed an amended complaint, asserting jurisdiction under §§ 1346 and 1491. (This phrasing provides for alternative theories, as “§ 1346” does not distinguish between “tax refund jurisdiction,” § 1346(a)(1), and Tucker Act jurisdiction, § 1346(a)(2). But § 1491 does not apply in district court.) The government quickly filed a motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction, and the parties repeated their arguments over which statute of limitations applied. The parties’ submissions on the motion to dismiss were completed on February 26, 2019. We’re still waiting for the district court’s decision, and possibly an appeal to the Eleventh Circuit.

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