Barry J. Jewell v. United States ( 2008 )


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  •                      United States Court of Appeals
    FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT
    ___________
    No. 08-1175
    ___________
    Barry J. Jewell,                       *
    *
    Plaintiff – Appellee,      *
    * Appeal from the United States
    v.                               * District Court for the
    * Eastern District of Arkansas.
    United States of America,              *
    *
    Defendant – Appellant.     *
    ___________
    Submitted: September 26, 2008
    Filed: December 10, 2008
    ___________
    Before RILEY, BRIGHT, and MELLOY, Circuit Judges.
    ___________
    BRIGHT, Circuit Judge.
    This appeal stems from a civil action brought by appellee Barry J. Jewell
    against appellant the United States (“the IRS”) seeking a refund of his pro rata share
    of a tax sanction paid in conjunction with a closing agreement between his former law
    firm and the IRS. On appeal, the IRS challenges the decisions of the district court (1)
    denying the IRS’s motion to dismiss the complaint for lack of standing and (2)
    granting Jewell summary judgment on his claim that the IRS procured a closing
    agreement with Jewell by fraud or malfeasance. The IRS argues that Jewell lacked
    standing to challenge the closing agreement because the agreement was entered with
    Jewell’s law firm, and, even if Jewell had standing, the district court improperly
    concluded that the undisputed facts showed that the IRS had used fraud or
    malfeasance in procuring the agreement. We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. §
    1291, and we reverse.
    I. BACKGROUND
    Jewell was a shareholder in the law firm of Jewell, Moser, Fletcher &
    Holleman, P.A. (“JMFH”). JMFH sponsored four prototype retirement plans, which
    its clients, mostly small businesses, relied upon to create individual retirement plans.
    As the plans’ sponsor, JMFH had an obligation to ensure that (1) its prototype plans
    complied with federal law and (2) its clients amended their individual plans to comply
    with changes in federal law. See Rev. Proc. 2000-20, § 3.07.
    After Congress passed a series of laws that affected the retirement plans, the
    IRS required a sponsor to ensure that individual client plans were amended in
    accordance with the new laws by February 28, 2002, or the last day of the first plan-
    year beginning on or after January 1, 2001, whichever was later. See Rev. Proc. 2001-
    55. But if a sponsor submitted an amended prototype plan for IRS approval by
    December 31, 2000, the IRS extended the deadline for amendments made to
    individual plans to the later of September 30, 2003 or the last day of the twelfth month
    after the date on which the IRS approved the prototype plan. See Rev. Proc. 2000-20
    § 19.07.
    JMFH submitted its four amended prototype plans to the IRS on February 5,
    2002. Because JMFH failed to submit the prototype plans by December 31, 2000, the
    individual plans that relied on the prototype plans were not able to receive the
    extension. 
    Id. As a
    result, JMFH had to ensure that its four prototype plans and all
    of its clients’ individual plans complied with the new federal laws by, as relevant here,
    February 28, 2002. But during the summer and fall of 2002, the IRS requested that
    JMFH make several changes to its plans to bring them in compliance with the changes
    -2-
    in federal law. Thus, these individual plans, the IRS argued, were untimely and
    potentially subject to disqualification or other penalties.
    Meanwhile, in July 2002, one of JMFH’s shareholders (Scott Fletcher) left the
    firm. The remaining shareholders (JMFH’s president Keith Moser, John Holleman,
    and Jewell) redeemed Fletcher’s interest in the firm and continued to practice together
    until the end of August 2002. In a September 2002 letter, Jewell informed the IRS
    that JMFH “will stay in existence under my control” and will continue to act as the
    sponsor of the prototype retirement plans.
    In May 2003, the IRS determined that more than sixty of the individual plans
    sponsored by JMFH were not timely amended to comply with changes in federal law.
    The IRS proposed that JMFH enter into an umbrella closing agreement, in which it
    would deem the plans timely amended and JMFH would pay a penalty. Jewell,
    although signaling his willingness to enter into a closing agreement, disputed the
    nature of the plans’ deficiencies in a series of letters sent in the summer of 2003. For
    its part, the IRS indicated that JMFH had two options: (1) negotiate an umbrella
    closing agreement with the IRS to resolve all of the deficiencies or (2) decline to do
    so, which would result in the IRS’s review of each plan—a contingency that would
    likely result in plan disqualification or additional penalties. Negotiations between the
    IRS and Jewell (as a representative of JMFH) continued through the summer and fall
    of 2003.
    In June 2003, Jewell sought judicial dissolution of JMFH in Arkansas state
    court and an accounting of the firm’s receivables.1 In December 2003, Moser,
    JMFH’s president, sent the IRS a signed Form 2848 Power of Attorney and
    Declaration of Representative, which authorized only Moser and Fletcher to represent
    1
    In September 2004, the state court ordered the dissolution but deferred its
    decision as to the effective date. In December 2005, the state court ruled that the
    effective date of the dissolution was July 25, 2002.
    -3-
    JMFH before the IRS. In a letter that accompanied the Power of Attorney, Moser
    stated that JMFH had not yet been dissolved, that Jewell was not authorized to
    represent the firm, and that the firm would continue to sponsor the plans.
    Later that month, Moser and Fletcher agreed that JMFH would pay
    $26,800—almost one third of the IRS’s initial settlement offer—to settle with the IRS.
    In return, the IRS would determine that the plans were timely amended. The closing
    agreement contains a finality provision in accordance with 26 U.S.C. § 7121, which
    provides that the agreement is “final and conclusive” except that “the matter . . . may
    be reopened in the event of fraud, malfeasance, or misrepresentation of material fact.”
    Moser and Fletcher signed the closing agreement and returned the closing agreement
    to the IRS. Jewell did not sign the agreement. Moser, Fletcher, and Jewell divided
    the sanction equally, bundled three checks made out to the IRS, and sent the checks
    to the IRS.
    After unsuccessfully filing a claim for a refund with the IRS, Jewell filed this
    action in June 2006 against the IRS, seeking a refund of $8,933.33, his pro rata share
    of JMFH’s payment under the closing agreement. Jewell argued that the IRS had
    obtained the closing agreement through fraud, malfeasance, or misrepresentation of
    fact. The IRS moved to dismiss on the ground that Jewell lacked standing. The
    district court denied the motion, holding that because JMFH had stopped operating
    and Jewell had paid the sanction out of personal funds, Jewell had incurred direct
    harm and thus had standing to sue.
    After the parties cross-moved for summary judgment, the district court granted
    Jewell’s motion and denied the Government’s motion. The district court held that the
    IRS’s tactics in procuring the closing agreement qualified as “fraud or malfeasance”
    and therefore justified setting the agreement aside. Specifically, the district court
    concluded that the IRS presented JMFH with a “Hobson’s choice” in that the IRS
    demanded that JMFH “either accept the closing agreement and pay a penalty or
    -4-
    subject its clients to individual plan evaluations as ‘late amenders,’ submitting them
    to the harsh consequences of disqualification, penalty, or both.” The district court also
    held that the deficiencies in the plans were either insignificant or should have been
    excused because of Jewell’s good faith attempts to comply with the spirit of the
    changes to federal law, and ordered judgment to Jewell in the amount of $8,933.33
    plus interest. This appeal follows.
    II. DISCUSSION
    The IRS contends that the district court improperly concluded that Jewell had
    standing to challenge the propriety of the IRS’s closing agreement with JMFH. We
    review the district court’s conclusion that a plaintiff has standing de novo. St. Paul
    Area Chamber of Commerce v. Gaertner, 
    439 F.3d 481
    , 484 (8th Cir. 2006).
    A plaintiff must establish subject matter jurisdiction, for which standing is a
    prerequisite. See Jones v. Gale, 
    470 F.3d 1261
    , 1265 (8th Cir. 2006). “Standing
    includes both a constitutional and a prudential component.” Am. Ass’n of
    Orthodontists v. Yellow Book USA, Inc., 
    434 F.3d 1100
    , 1103 (8th Cir. 2006). The
    “irreducible constitutional minimum of standing” consists of three elements. See
    Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife, 
    504 U.S. 555
    , 560 (1992). First, a party must have
    suffered an “injury in fact,” an actual or imminent concrete and particularized invasion
    to a legally protected interest; second, the injury must be fairly traceable to the
    challenged action of the defendant; and third, the injury must be redressable by a
    favorable decision. Id.; 
    Gale, 470 F.3d at 1265
    .
    “Even if a plaintiff meets the minimal constitutional requirements for standing,
    there are prudential limits on a court’s exercise of jurisdiction.” Ben Oehrleins &
    Sons & Daughter, Inc. v. Hennepin County, 
    115 F.3d 1372
    , 1378 (8th Cir. 1997). One
    such prudential limitation is the requirement that “a litigant must assert his or her own
    -5-
    legal rights and interest, and cannot rest a claim to relief on the legal rights or interests
    of third parties.” Powers v. Ohio, 
    499 U.S. 400
    , 410 (1991).
    Here, the IRS argues that “[b]ecause JMFH is the entity from which the IRS
    collected the sanction, it is the only proper entity to bring suit seeking to set aside the
    closing agreement and to recover the payment.” As a result, Jewell does not have
    standing because he has not satisfied the prudential standing requirement that a litigant
    may generally assert only his own rights. We find this argument to be persuasive.
    This court has stated that “[s]tanding to sue [for a tax refund] extends only to
    the taxpayer from whom the tax was allegedly wrongfully collected.” Murray v.
    United States, 
    686 F.2d 1320
    , 1325 n.8 (8th Cir. 1982); cf. Collins v. United States,
    
    532 F.2d 1344
    , 1347 n.2 (Ct. Cl. 1976) (“In order to maintain an action for the refund
    of taxes under the Internal Revenue Code, the plaintiff must be the taxpayer who has
    overpaid his own taxes.” (emphasis added)). Here, it is undisputed that the IRS
    imposed the tax sanction against JMFH, not against the principals of the law firm
    individually. It is also undisputed that the closing agreement, signed by JMFH’s
    authorized representative, was between the IRS and JMFH.
    Even though Jewell ultimately contributed personal funds to JMFH’s effort to
    pay the tax sanction, Jewel cites no authority for the proposition that this fact, standing
    alone, gives him standing to sue. We agree with the IRS that “the fact that each of the
    principals of JMFH agreed to contribute 1/3 of the sanction is simply irrelevant here.”
    To the extent that any party was entitled to sue, JMFH is the appropriate party to raise
    its alleged injury as a result of the IRS’s conduct.2 And the record contains no
    evidence that Jewell obtained JMFH’s causes of action as part of the distribution of
    2
    Contrary to Jewell’s assertions, the fact that JMFH had been dissolved is of no
    consequence to its ability to raise a claim against the IRS because Ark. Code Ann. §
    4-26-1104(b)(4) permits a dissolved corporation to sue. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 17(b)
    (stating that a corporation’s right to sue is determined by reference to state law).
    -6-
    the firm’s assets. Because Jewell was not the taxpayer from whom the tax was
    collected, he cannot raise the rights of JMFH against the IRS. Accordingly, he lacks
    standing to sue the IRS for a refund. See 
    Murray, 686 F.2d at 1325
    n.8; cf. 20A Fed.
    Proc., L. Ed. § 48:1345 (“A shareholder cannot bring a refund suit for taxes paid on
    behalf of a corporation if the shareholder is not legally or contractually obligated to
    pay the corporate taxes.”).
    Jewell makes two arguments in support of his contention that he has standing.
    We find each to be unpersuasive. First, Jewell asserts that he, not JMFH, was the
    sponsor of the prototype plans, and, therefore, he has standing to sue the IRS. This
    argument is without merit, as Jewell has cited no authority for the proposition that
    being the sponsor of an IRS-approved prototype retirement plan automatically confers
    standing to sue for a tax refund. Even were we to so hold, JMFH sponsored the plans
    at issue, as demonstrated by the closing agreement and by Jewell’s own repeated
    assurances to the IRS that JMFH continued to act as the sponsor of the plans.
    Second, Jewell argues that the district court correctly held that he suffered a
    separate and distinct harm from the harm suffered by JMFH, and, therefore, he should
    be entitled to assert shareholder standing to sue. We disagree.
    It is well established that a shareholder or officer of a corporation cannot
    recover for legal injuries suffered by the corporation. See Heart of Am. Grain
    Inspection Serv., Inc. v. Missouri Dep’t of Agric., 
    123 F.3d 1098
    , 1102 (8th Cir.
    1997). But a shareholder may bring a direct suit when he asserts an injury “separate
    and distinct from that suffered by other shareholders.” Taha v. Engstrand, 
    987 F.2d 505
    , 507 (8th Cir. 1993). Here, even assuming that the IRS caused Jewell to be
    injured in a legally cognizable way, the injury that Jewell suffered is indistinguishable
    from the injury suffered by JMFH as an organization. Second, if we were to accept
    Jewell’s argument, personal financial loss alone would become the touchstone for
    shareholder standing. As we have noted elsewhere, “actions to enforce corporate
    -7-
    rights . . . cannot be maintained by a stockholder in his own name . . . even though the
    injury to the corporation may incidentally result in [the stockholder’s financial loss].”
    Potthoff v. Morin, 
    245 F.3d 710
    , 716 (8th Cir. 2001).
    III. CONCLUSION
    Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the district court. Because we
    conclude that Jewell does not have standing to bring this suit, we need not reach the
    IRS’s alternative argument.
    RILEY, Circuit Judge, dissenting.
    Because I believe the conclusions of the district court should be affirmed, I
    respectfully dissent.
    A.     Standing
    The first issue on appeal is whether Jewell had standing to bring his claim for
    a tax refund. As the majority correctly points out, the prudential limits of standing
    generally require plaintiffs to demonstrate they are asserting their own rights, and not
    the rights of a third party. See Powers v. Ohio, 
    499 U.S. 400
    , 410 (1991). This is
    equally true with respect to suits by corporate officers and shareholders. See
    Franchise Tax Bd. v. Alcan Aluminum Ltd., 
    493 U.S. 331
    , 336 (1990). Equitable
    restrictions prohibit shareholders from bringing suit solely to enforce the rights of a
    corporation or to recover for injuries sustained by the corporation. 
    Id. What the
    majority fails to embrace is Jewell’s claim falls squarely within a recognized
    exception to this equitable restriction. This exception permits “a shareholder with a
    direct, personal interest in a cause of action to bring suit even if the corporation’s
    rights are also implicated.” 
    Id. Arkansas courts
    have repeatedly held a shareholder
    may bring a direct suit against a third party where the shareholder asserts a direct
    -8-
    injury which is separate and distinct from the harm caused to the corporation. See,
    e.g., Hames v. Cravens, 
    966 S.W.2d 244
    , 247 (Ark. 1998).
    An analysis of the unique facts in this case shows Jewell had standing. On
    December 28, 2005, the Circuit Court of Pulaski County, Arkansas, determined JMFH
    had effectively dissolved as of July 25, 2002, “the last date upon which business of
    [JMFH] could have regularly been conducted.” Upon the July 2002 dissolution, the
    shareholders individually took possession of the corporation’s assets. As the district
    court found, JMFH had undergone a de facto dissolution and distribution long before
    Moser and Fletcher signed the IRS’s closing agreement in January 2004. As a result,
    Jewell was forced to pay one-third of the JMFH penalty with his own funds, for which
    Jewell was not reimbursed, nor could he be reimbursed, by the defunct corporation.
    The IRS admitted knowing “JMFH was no longer in business,” and one-third of the
    sanction would be paid by Fletcher’s law firm and two-thirds of the sanction would
    be paid by JMFH with Jewell contributing, under protest, $8,933.33.
    It is true Murray v. United States, 
    686 F.2d 1320
    , 1325 n.8 (8th Cir. 1982), says
    only “the taxpayer from whom the tax was allegedly wrongfully collected” has
    standing to sue for a refund. Contrary to the majority’s conclusion, the $8,933.33
    was, in fact, “collected” from Jewell, not from JMFH. Moreover, the $8,933.33 was
    not a tax. Jewell’s payment was a sanction or penalty relating directly to Jewell’s
    conduct in filing the amended plans.
    The IRS also threatened not to join the settlement agreement if Jewell did not
    cooperate by (1) keeping his clients in the settlement, and (2) personally contributing
    to the penalty payment. The IRS informed Moser “the Closing Agreement was an all
    or nothing deal” and if Jewell did not “go along,” then Jewell “had the potential of
    being sued by [Moser’s and Fletcher’s clients].” In the IRS answer to Jewell’s
    complaint, the IRS admitted the settlement “agreement was structured as a ‘blanket’
    agreement . . . that necessarily extended to all individual plans adopted by [JMFH’s]
    -9-
    clients and was not limited only to plan clients of one stockholder.” The IRS further
    acknowledged Jewell informed the IRS of Jewell’s “opposition to the [settlement]
    agreement” and the “payment of any sanction.”
    The IRS is authorized under 26 U.S.C. § 7121(a) “to enter into an agreement
    . . . with any person relating to the liability of such person” respecting a tax liability.
    Jewell was such a person. Based upon the facts of this case, Jewell did sustain a direct
    injury separate and distinct from any injury sustained by the extinct JMFH, and Jewell
    had standing to file suit for a tax refund.
    B.      Malfeasance
    Upon finding standing, the court should consider the second issue on appeal:
    whether the district court erred in holding the closing agreement was procured by the
    IRS through fraud, misrepresentation, or malfeasance. We review de novo a district
    court’s grant of summary judgment. See Hawkeye Nat’l Life Ins. Co. v. AVIS Indus.
    Corp., 
    122 F.3d 490
    , 496 (8th Cir. 1997). “Summary judgment is proper only if the
    record, viewed in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party, presents no
    genuine issue of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter
    of law.” Id.; see also Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c). Under 26 U.S.C. § 7121(b), a closing
    agreement may only be set aside if either party can demonstrate the existence of fraud,
    malfeasance, or misrepresentation of a material fact.
    Between 1994 and 2000, Congress passed several pieces of legislation,
    collectively referred to as GUST, which impacted the retirement plans sponsored by
    JMFH. See Rev. Proc. 2000-20 § 1.01, 2000-6 I.R.B. 553. This legislation required
    several specific provisions to be included in JMFH’s retirement plans for those plans
    to gain or retain qualified status for favorable tax treatment. See 26 U.S.C. 401(b);
    Rev. Proc. 2000-27 § 2.03, 2000-26 I.R.B. 1272; Rev. Proc. 2001-55 § 2.01, 2001-49
    I.R.B. 552. The deadline for these plan changes was the later of February 28, 2002,
    or the last day of the first plan year beginning on or after January 1, 2001. See Rev.
    -10-
    Proc. 2001-55 §3.01, 2001-49 I.R.B. 552. If a sponsor submitted an amended
    prototype plan for IRS approval by December 31, 2000, the deadline was extended for
    those individual plans relying on the prototype plan until September 30, 2003, or the
    last day of the twelfth month after the IRS approved the amended prototype plan,
    whichever was later. See Rev. Proc. 2000-20 § 19.01, 2000-6 I.R.B. 553; Rev. Proc.
    2003-72 §2.03, 2003-38 I.R.B. 578.
    After this legislation was enacted, JMFH was required to amend the four
    prototype retirement plans which it sponsored for JMFH clients. In an effort to
    comply, Jewell drafted amendments and submitted the firm’s four prototype plans to
    the IRS for approval on February 5, 2002, before the original deadline of February 28,
    2002. See Rev. Proc. 2001-55 §3.01, 2001-49 I.R.B. 552. Because JMFH’s prototype
    plans were not submitted by December 31, 2000, the individual retirement plans did
    not qualify for the September 30, 2003 extension, and each had to be submitted by the
    later of February 28, 2002, or the last day of the first plan year beginning on or after
    January 1, 2001. See Rev. Proc. 2000-20 § 19.07, 2000-6 I.R.B. 553.
    JMFH could not make the required amendments to the individual plans until the
    IRS issued confirmation letters informing JMFH whether its prototype plans were
    acceptable. JMFH was forced to wait five months and twenty days before the IRS
    responded to JMFH’s timely request for confirmation letters. When the IRS finally
    responded on July 25, 2002, the IRS asked JMFH to make minor changes to the
    prototype plans, changes consisting often of typographical errors. Jewell made the
    requested alterations and forwarded the changes to the IRS the following day, July 26,
    2002. Over two months later, on Friday, October 4, 2002, the IRS asked JMFH to
    make further inconsequential changes to its prototype plans. Jewell provided these
    changes to the IRS on the next working day, Monday, October 7, 2002. After eight
    months, the IRS issued opinion letters on October 9, 2002, approving JMFH’s
    amended prototype plans.
    -11-
    Because the IRS took over eight months to review JMFH’s timely prototype
    plans, Jewell faced a difficult situation. Jewell could either (1) begin submitting
    JMFH’s individual retirement plans before he received confirmation letters, without
    the changes eventually requested by the IRS, or (2) wait until the IRS issued
    confirmation letters, and then submit the individual plans after the deadline, which
    could result in those individual plans losing qualified status and favorable tax
    treatment. Believing he had an obligation to his clients, Jewell chose to begin
    submitting the individual retirement plans. As a consequence, some of the individual
    plans were submitted without one or more of the corrections the IRS later requested.
    Despite Jewell’s attempts to ensure timely submission of the individual plans, the IRS
    claimed over sixty of the individual plans had not fully incorporated the required
    amendments by the applicable deadline.
    The IRS sent Jewell a letter on May 23, 2003, informing Jewell of seven
    “deficiencies.” Each of the challenged plans had at least one of these deficiencies,
    making the plans “late-amenders” under GUST. Examples of the deficiencies include
    typographical errors, such as referencing an effective date of “August 5, 1997,”
    instead of “August 6, 1997,” and using the word “month” to specify a period of time
    instead of the phrase “calendar year month.” Some deficiencies Jewell had adopted
    from the IRS’ List of Required Modifications and still others were not deficiencies at
    all, but were mistakes made by the IRS.
    The May 23, 2003 letter advised Jewell to proceed under the Correction on
    Audit Program whereby JMFH would enter into a closing agreement which would
    grant relief from disqualification to each of JMFH’s clients who adopted individual
    plans based upon one of the firm’s prototypes. If JMFH entered into such an
    agreement and paid a cash sanction, the IRS would treat the prototype as if it had been
    submitted by December 31, 2000, thereby allowing the individual plans an extension
    under Rev. Proc. 2002-73. The IRS further notified Jewell, if an agreement could not
    be negotiated, the IRS would individually process the pending client plans as requests
    -12-
    by late-amenders under GUST, subjecting many JMFH clients to disqualification and
    unfavorable tax treatment.
    Jewell responded to the May 23, 2003 letter by indicating his willingness to
    negotiate an agreement. The IRS then proposed a $71,000 sanction, which did not
    “bear a reasonable relationship to the nature, extent, and severity” of the deficiencies,
    nor did it take “into account the extent to which correction occurred before audit,” as
    required by IRS Revenue Procedures pertaining to the Correction on Audit Program.
    See Rev. Proc. 2003-44 § 1.03, 2003-25 I.R.B. 1051. Negotiations continued between
    Jewell and the IRS until Jewell was excluded from the negotiations by his former
    partners. The IRS reached a closing agreement with Jewell’s former partners,
    describing the agreement as between the IRS and JMFH, the dissolved corporation.
    The IRS agreed to grant an extension to JMFH’s individual client plans in exchange
    for $26,800. Jewell did not sign the closing agreement, and when Jewell resisted
    payment under the agreement, IRS agents threatened that if Jewell removed his clients
    from consideration under the agreement, or if Jewell failed to pay one-third of the
    penalty, the IRS would conduct individual investigations on each of Jewell’s client
    plans and also decline to enter into the agreement with JMFH, exposing Jewell to
    lawsuits from JMFH’s clients. Jewell then, under protest, paid $8,933.33 of his own
    funds to cover one-third of the sanction.
    The United States Tax Court recognizes, “in determining whether closing
    agreements will be set aside the usual rules as to fraud and misrepresentation apply.”
    Bennett v. Commissioner, 
    56 T.C.M. 796
    (1988). “In order to establish fraud
    for purposes of setting aside a closing agreement,” a claimant must prove the
    “allegedly fraudulent misrepresentation: (1) [c]oncerned material facts; (2) was
    knowingly false; (3) was made with the intention that it be relied on in good faith by
    the other party without knowledge of its falsity; and (4) proximately caused injury or
    damages to the innocent party.” 
    Id. (citing Boatmen’s
    National Co. v. M.W. Elkins
    & Co., 
    63 F.2d 214
    , 216 (8th Cir. 1933)). “In order to establish a misrepresentation
    -13-
    of a material fact sufficient to set aside a closing agreement pursuant to section
    7121(b),” the claimant must prove “the representation made by one party contained
    incorrect or incomplete information or computations regarding the express terms
    reflected in the proposed closing agreement and that such information was in good
    faith and detrimentally relied upon by the other party in entering into the closing
    agreement.” 
    Id. Malfeasance is
    a “wrongful or unlawful act; esp[ecially] wrongdoing
    or misconduct by a public official.” Black’s Law Dictionary 976 (8th ed. 2004). In
    view of the IRS’s conduct, the district court set aside the closing agreement because
    the agreement was induced by the IRS’s fraud, misrepresentation of material fact, or
    malfeasance.
    The IRS’s malfeasance began when it started pressuring Jewell concerning
    these relatively trivial deficiencies in JMFH’s plans. The district court found a great
    majority of JMFH’s individual plans were timely, the few plans which were late were
    late by only a few days, and all of the plans were substantially correct. The record
    supports the district court’s findings and its conclusion a “good faith, quality
    submission mitigates the need for an IRS imposed penalty.” Jewell v. United States,
    No. 4:06-CV-684, slip op. at 9, 
    2007 WL 4150206
    , at *4 (E.D. Ark. Nov. 19, 2007).
    The IRS conceded the individual employer plans Jewell submitted were a bona fide
    effort to comply with GUST. The extended delays in response time were created by
    the IRS, not by Jewell or JMFH. As the district court aptly explained, “The IRS
    cannot be allowed to accept timely adoptions, ask for minor changes to those
    adoptions, and then declare the plan late and demand a penalty when the employer
    makes the IRS-requested changes.” 
    Id. at *6.
    I agree.
    When the IRS induced Jewell to pay one-third of the sanction, the district court
    accurately described this conduct as “extortionary, deplorable, and wrong.” 
    Id. at *3.
    In the May 23, 2003 letter, the IRS informed Jewell it would be in his benefit to
    negotiate an umbrella agreement, and if he failed to do so, the IRS would individually
    process the pending client plans as requests by late-amenders under GUST, subjecting
    -14-
    many JMFH clients to disqualification and unfavorable tax treatment. This
    compulsion was strengthened by a second letter dated August 22, 2003, in which the
    IRS notified Jewell the only way he could avoid “the harsh tax consequences of plan
    disqualification that would potentially be incurred by hundreds of employers, most of
    whom are very small entities” would be to pay a sanction under a closing agreement.
    Jewell’s choice was either to enter into an unfair closing agreement and pay a sanction
    or subject his clients to severe tax consequences. When Jewell was excluded from the
    negotiation process, Jewell suggested his clients should be removed from the
    agreement. The IRS threatened, if Jewell removed his clients from consideration
    under the agreement, or if Jewell failed to pay one-third of the penalty, the IRS would
    decline to enter into the agreement with JMFH, exposing Jewell personally to lawsuits
    from Moser’s and Fletcher’s clients.
    The IRS’s conduct exceeded its legal authority and was wrongful. Employees
    of the IRS are public officials and should be held to a higher standard than their
    conduct displayed in this case. Acting the part of a playground bully does not become
    the IRS or any public servant. This malfeasance justifies setting aside the closing
    agreement and returning Jewell’s money.
    For the foregoing reasons, I would affirm the district court’s grant of summary
    judgment in favor of Jewell.
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