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Seeking Attorney’s Fees for Violation of Automatic Stay

Posted on Apr. 15, 2019

What does a court do when the statute requires exhaustion of administrative remedies before a grant of attorney’s fees and the administrative agency (here the IRS) guides people to perform an impossible act in order to seek to exhaust administrative remedies? That was the issue facing the bankruptcy court in Langston v. Internal Revenue Service, Case No. 17-10236-B-13 (Bankr. E.D. Cal. 2019). In the end, the court denied the request for attorney’s fees because of precedent in the 9th Circuit but the courts are split on the issue and the IRS is about a decade behind in updating its guidance to the public on how to make an administrative request to fix a problem it creates by violating the automatic stay. Outdated language referencing the non-existent “Chief, Local Insolvency Unit” role remains in the current version of the CFR.

Mr. Langston is a retired federal employee who also owed federal taxes. I don’t think he is the only retired federal employee with this issue, but the government especially wants individuals to whom it is paying a pension to pay their taxes. So, it has a program for taking from their pension payments to satisfy the outstanding tax debt. The program is a perfectly legitimate method for the IRS to collect past due taxes except when used while the automatic stay comes into effect. That’s what caused the problem here.

Mr. Langston and his wife filed a Chapter 13 bankruptcy case in January 2017. The bankruptcy court notified the IRS within two weeks of the filing and the IRS filed a proof of claim one week thereafter. So, it is indisputable that the IRS knew about the automatic stay. Normal procedures would have had it input a code into its computer system almost immediately after learning of the case. Here, it is not the IRS specifically that took the action violating the stay. The agency taking from his pension and sending the money to the IRS was the Office of Personnel Management (OPM). It could well be that the debt offset indicator arrived at the OPM before the bankruptcy case and there was a delay in that office in taking action. It is also possible that there was a delay at the IRS getting information about the stay to OPM or a delay at OPM in putting the stay into its system. The bankruptcy court does not go into the details of how the problem occurred and it really does not matter in the resolution of the case, but it should matter to the IRS and OPM so that a system exists to immediately notify OPM of the stay and for OPM to immediately put the stay into its system.

For undescribed reasons, OPM sent to Mr. Langston a letter he received in early April saying that it would withhold a part of his pension to satisfy the outstanding federal tax debt. OPM withheld almost $400 a month for four months starting in April 2017. The Langstons’ bankruptcy lawyer filed an adversary proceeding in May 2017 after informally trying to convince the IRS to stop taking the money. Their representative did not seek to formally stop the taking of the pension funds prior to bringing the suit. The IRS eventually gave back all of the money taken by OPM. In responding to the complaint which undoubtedly included a request for monetary damages, the IRS would have pointed out that the Langstons did not first try to resolve the problem administratively. Apparently, in doing so the IRS informed the Langstons that they were supposed to send a request to the “Chief, Local Insolvency Unit” of their district.

A few reorganizations ago, there existed in every IRS district (also a thing of the past) an insolvency unit that handled bankruptcy cases and a few other related proceedings. Most of the IRS bankruptcy function was centralized some time ago, and local offices no longer had someone with the title “Chief, Local Insolvency Unit.” Of course, if you weren’t following the staffing flows of the IRS, you would have no easy way of knowing this and that was the problem the Langstons faced in trying to make their administrative request for relief. Here’s what the court said about it:

Then, Langstons’ counsel tried without success to find the right “Chief, Local Insolvency Unit” to receive an administrative claim. Many web searches and even formal discovery was met with no identified “Chief, Local Insolvency Unit.” Exasperated, Langstons’ counsel sent the administrative claim addressed to “Chief, Local Insolvency Unit” to every IRS office located within this district. The IRS admitted in discovery that to their knowledge no employee retains the title of “Chief Local Insolvency Unit” after the IRS reorganized in 2010. The IRS instead referred debtors’ counsel to a listing of “Collection Advisory Groups.” The IRS did respond after receiving debtor’s administrative claim noting they were referring it to the “Local Insolvency Unit.” But the IRS did not name a “Chief” of that unit. And so, it goes.

The Langstons could not show they had actual damages from the taking of $400 of his pension for four months. Of course, they did incur attorney’s fees as their attorney tried to get the IRS to stop taking their money. So, they sought attorney’s fees even though they were not entitled to damages. The IRS fought the payment of attorney’s fees stating:

… [the] court does not yet have subject matter jurisdiction to decide the attorney’s fees issue because the debtors filed this adversary proceeding before filing an administrative claim with the IRS. They reason that their waiver of sovereign immunity under § 106(a)(1) for attorney’s fees claims stemming from automatic stay violations is conditioned upon a debtor’s compliance with 26 U.S.C. §§ 7430 and 7433 and the applicable regulations before filing suit. Counsel for the United States noted in oral argument that the Plaintiffs have now complied with the exhaustion requirement because they filed the administrative claim, albeit at the wrong time and that more than six months have passed with no action by the IRS. 26 C.F.R 301-7433-2(d)(ii).

The debtors must have wondered, “Wait a minute, how could we file an administrative claim prior to filing suit when your instructions told us to file the claim with someone who does not exist?” Seems like a reasonable question to ask.

The IRS responded with two arguments. First, it argued

“all that is required to satisfy the plain language of the regulation is that a writing be sent to ‘Chief, Local Insolvency Unit’,” the actual existence of an individual with that title being immaterial for compliance.

 

[Keep that in mind because this is not the only place where the title in the regulations or other IRS guidance does not match the actual lineup at the IRS. Of course, the IRS did not say where the taxpayers should mail this letter and that could become an issue in a future case.]

Second, the IRS argued that the debtors’ reliance on Hunsaker v. United States, 902 F.3d 963, 968 (9th Cir. 2018) was misplaced. Les blogged the district court opinion in Hunsaker here and the bankruptcy court opinion here. We did not blog the 9th Circuit’s opinion in Hunsaker, in which it reversed the district court and determined that the bankruptcy code did waive sovereign immunity to obtain damages for emotional distress. The IRS argued that the Langstons’ reliance on the 9th Circuit opinion was misplaced because Hunsaker did not address the situation where the only issue involved attorney’s fees. It determined that there was a waiver for emotional damages, but here that issue does not exist.

The bankruptcy court looked at the litigation on this issue around the country and found that courts are split over the sovereign immunity argument. Focusing on 9th Circuit jurisprudence, it found a 1992 opinion, Conforte v. United States, 979 F.2d 1375, 1377 (9th Cir. 1992) (almost all cases involving Conforte are worth reading if you enjoy cases with lurid details) holding that debtors must exhaust administrative remedies in order to receive attorney’s fees. So, on the legal aspect of the IRS argument, the court finds that the IRS is correct in the precedent controlling it.

Then the court addressed the factual issue of whether the debtors did try to exhaust administrative remedies despite the barriers imposed by the IRS. It stated:

In none of the cases previously discussed have the courts examined this issue raised by Plaintiffs — that complying with the statute is impossible. The courts either found that the taxpayer made no attempt (see Swensen v. United States (In re Swensen), 438 B.R. 195, 198 (Bankr. N.D. Iowa 2010); In re Rae v. United States, 436 B.R. 266, 275 (Bankr. D. Conn. 2010); Kight v. Dep’t of Treasury/IRS (In re Kight), 460 B.R. 555, 566 (Bankr. M.D. Fla. 2011)), or found that the taxpayer’s attempt was deficient for a number of reasons (see Klauer v. United States (In re Klauer), 23 Fla. L. Weekly Fed. D 153, at *11-14 (M.D. Fla. 2007); Don Johnson Motors, Inc. v. United States, 532 F. Supp. 2d 844, 883 (S.D. Tex. 2007); McIver v. United States, 650 F. Supp. 2d 587, 593 (N.D. Tex. 2009); Barcelos v. United States (In re Barcelos), 576 B.R. 854, 857-58 (Bankr. E.D. Cal. 2017); Galvez v. IRS, 448 F. App’x 880, 886 (11th Cir. 2011); Kuhl v. United States, 467 F.3d 145, 148 (2d Cir. 2006); In re Lowthorp, 332 B.R. 656, 659-61 (Bankr. M.D. Fla. 2005)), but no court addressed whether compliance was possible because the tax-payer was required to send the documents to a person that did not exist, nor was that argument ever raised.

Because the debtors’ original and amended complaint did not allege that they exhausted their administrative remedies, the court ultimately concludes that it cannot award attorney’s fees. But it does not stop there. Before dismissing the case without prejudice, it finds that

Plaintiff actually did send such a notice but after the lawsuit was filed. The IRS now admits Plaintiffs have complied and could proceed with another action for attorney’s fees.

I do not know if that means we should stay tuned for the second suit for attorney’s fees or that the Langstons can get fees if the IRS does not adequately resolve the matter. In any event, it’s clear that the law here is not clear. It’s also clear that the IRS paints itself into a corner when it asks people to do the impossible.

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