Alan H. Ginsburg and Estate of Harriet F. Ginsburg, Alan H. Ginsburg, Personal Representative v. Commissioner , 127 T.C. No. 5 ( 2006 )


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    127 T.C. No. 5
    UNITED STATES TAX COURT
    ALAN H. GINSBURG AND ESTATE OF HARRIET F. GINSBURG, DECEASED,
    ALAN H. GINSBURG, PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE, Petitioners v.
    COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
    Docket No. 13330-05.              Filed August 30, 2006.
    A TEFRA partnership claimed losses from an
    investment. See Tax Equity and Fiscal Responsibility
    Act of 1982 (TEFRA), Pub. L. 97-248, secs. 402-407(a),
    96 Stat. 648. Ps reported the losses as shareholders of
    their two wholly owned S corporations, each of which
    owned a 50-percent interest in the partnership. R
    examined the Federal tax return of the partnership.
    Subsequently, R sent a letter to the representative for
    the partnership stating that R accepted the return as
    filed. The partnership and R executed six consecutive
    Forms 872-P, Consent to Extend the Time to Assess Tax
    Attributable to Items of a Partnership, for the taxable
    year 1995, the year at issue. The time to assert
    partnership adjustments has expired pursuant to the
    Forms 872-P. Ps and R executed nine consecutive Forms
    872, Consent to Extend the Time to Assess Tax, related
    to Ps’ 1995 Federal tax return.
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    R sent a notice of deficiency for 1995 to Ps
    before the expiration date of the last Form 872.
    However, the Forms 872 did not specify that they also
    included tax attributable to partnership or affected
    items. Ps contend that the deficiency notice adjusts
    partnership items and therefore is invalid. R contends
    that the notice adjusts affected items, not partnership
    items. In addition, R stated in argument that there
    are also adjustments of affected items which are
    specific to Ps’ ability to take losses that flow
    through from the partnership.
    Held: The notice adjusts both partnership and
    affected items. We have jurisdiction to review those
    adjustments to the extent that they are for affected
    items.
    Held, further, under sec. 6229(b)(3), I.R.C., the
    notice of deficiency is untimely because the Forms 872
    did not reference adjustments for partnership or
    affected items.
    N. Jerold Cohen, Sheldon M. Kay, and Joseph M. DePew, for
    petitioners.
    Stephen R. Takeuchi, for respondent.
    OPINION
    GOEKE, Judge:   This case is before us on petitioners’
    motions to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction and for summary
    judgment.   The issue raised by petitioners’ motion to dismiss is
    whether respondent’s notice of deficiency properly adjusted
    losses attributable to a partnership at the partner level
    - 3 -
    pursuant to the TEFRA provisions of sections 6221-6234.1
    Specifically, the inquiry centers on whether these losses should
    be classified as “partnership items” or as “affected items” under
    the applicable statutes.   We hold that the adjustments in the
    notice of deficiency limiting petitioners’ claimed losses concern
    affected items over which we have jurisdiction.
    The issue raised by petitioners’ motion for summary judgment
    is based on the assumption that we hold that the items respondent
    seeks to adjust are affected items.    Under that assumption,
    petitioners question whether the period of limitations on
    assessment of tax attributable to affected items as set forth in
    sections 6501 and 6229 has expired.    In particular, we must
    decide whether section 6229(b)(3) causes the extension of the
    period of limitations in this case to be ineffective regarding
    the affected items at issue.   We hold that it does, and that
    therefore the period of limitations on assessment has run.
    Background
    The parties agree on the basic facts.    At the time that the
    petition was filed, petitioner Alan Ginsburg, who is a fiduciary
    for the Estate of Harriet Ginsburg, had a mailing address in
    Winter Park, Florida.   In 1995, the taxable year at issue, Mr.
    and Mrs. Ginsburg, who were married at the time, owned 100
    1
    Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to
    the Internal Revenue Code, as amended, and all Rule references
    are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.
    - 4 -
    percent of the stock of North American Sports Management, Inc.
    (NASM), an S corporation.   Harriet Ginsburg, who is now deceased,
    owned 100 percent of the stock of Family Affordable Partners,
    Inc. (FAP), also an S corporation.      NASM and FAP each owned 50
    percent of the profits and losses and capital of UK Lotto, L.L.C.
    (UK Lotto), a TEFRA partnership.   NASM and FAP were not subject
    to the S corporation TEFRA procedures, sections 6241-6245,
    because they had fewer than five shareholders and had not
    otherwise elected application of the unified procedures under
    section 301.6241-1T(c)(2)(v), Temporary Proced. & Admin. Regs.,
    52 Fed. Reg. 3003 (Jan. 30, 1987).2
    Entity and Individual Returns
    Form 1065, U.S. Partnership Return of Income, for UK Lotto
    reflected a total ordinary loss of $7,351,237.      Of that amount,
    $6,936,038 was attributable to a loss reported on its Form 1065
    from Pascal & Co., a partnership of which UK Lotto was a partner.
    NASM and FAP each reported 50 percent of the total loss from UK
    Lotto along with other items of income, deductions, gain, and
    loss unrelated to UK Lotto in their respective Forms 1120S, U.S.
    Income Tax Return for an S Corporation.      NASM reported a total
    ordinary loss from trade or business in 1995 of $4,087,725.      FAP
    2
    Sec. 301.6241-1T(c)(2)(v), Temporary Proced. & Admin. Regs.
    was issued under former sec. 6241, which was repealed by the
    Small Business Job Protection Act of 1996, Pub. L. 104-188, sec.
    1307(c)(1), 110 Stat. 1781, effective for tax years beginning
    after Dec. 31, 1996.
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    reported a total ordinary loss from trade or business in 1995 of
    $2,941,054.   On their 1995 Form 1040, U.S. Individual Income Tax
    Return, petitioners reported the losses of $4,087,725 and
    $2,941,054 from NASM and FAP, respectively, on the attached
    Schedule E, Supplemental Income and Loss, Statement 15, Income or
    Loss From Partnerships and S Corporations.     Petitioners reported
    total net losses on their Schedule E of $3,045,269.
    Extensions of Period To Assess Tax
    Respondent examined the 1995 Form 1065 of UK Lotto.     UK
    Lotto and respondent entered into six consecutive Forms 872-P,
    Consent to Extend the Time to Assess Tax Attributable to
    Partnership Items, for partnership items relating to UK Lotto’s
    1995 tax year.   The last Form 872-P executed on behalf of UK
    Lotto and respondent for the taxable year 1995 extended the
    period to assess any Federal income tax attributable to
    partnership items to any time on or before December 31, 2003.      On
    April 25, 2003, respondent sent a letter to the representative
    for UK Lotto stating that respondent accepted the 1995
    partnership return as filed.   Respondent did not conduct any more
    TEFRA partnership proceedings.
    In addition, petitioners and respondent executed nine
    consecutive Forms 872, Consent to Extend the Time to Assess Tax,
    for petitioners’ 1995 taxable year.      The last Form 872 extended
    the period to assess any Federal income tax to any time on or
    - 6 -
    before June 30, 2005.   The Forms 872 did not reference
    partnership items.
    Notice of Deficiency
    Respondent issued to petitioners a notice of deficiency for
    the taxable year 1995 dated April 26, 2005.    The total amount of
    the deficiency was $2,726,742.    Respondent also determined a
    penalty of $545,348 under section 6662(a).    In his notice of
    deficiency, respondent listed the following Schedule E
    adjustments:
    Family Affordable Partners, Inc.     $3,468,019
    North American Sports Mgmt., Inc.     3,468,019
    Respondent provided the same explanation for both adjustments,
    except that one referred to FAP and the other to NASP:
    Since it has not been established that Pascal and
    Company incurred a deductible $6,936,038.00 loss in
    1995, nor has it been established that any loss
    attributable to Pascal and Company is allowable to UK
    Lotto, LLC * * * or not limited, nor has it been
    established that any loss attributable to Pascal and
    Company is allowable to * * * [Name of S Corporation],
    or not limited, nor has it been established that any
    loss attributable to Pascal and Company is allowable to
    you, or not limited, your $3,468,019.00 distributive
    loss in 1995 from * * * [Name of S Corporation], that
    represents 50% of the claimed $6,936,038.00 loss by UK
    Lotto, LLC, * * * from Pascal and Company, is
    disallowed, and your taxable income is increased by
    3,468,019.00 for 1995.
    In their Statement 15 accompanying Schedule E, petitioners
    did not list any specific item of loss that corresponded with the
    $3,468,019 that respondent disallowed.
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    Discussion
    I.   Petitioners’ Motion To Dismiss for Lack of Jurisdiction
    Petitioners’ motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction
    focuses on whether the disallowed losses are partnership items
    that must be adjusted at the partnership level.   If we find that
    those losses are partnership items, then we do not have
    jurisdiction over respondent’s adjustments in the notice of
    deficiency because such items may not be adjusted in an
    individual deficiency proceeding.   See sec. 6230(a)(1).
    TEFRA provisions divide disputes arising from “partnership
    items” from those arising from “nonpartnership items”.     Maxwell
    v. Commissioner, 
    87 T.C. 783
    , 787 (1986) (citing section
    6231(a)(3) and (4)).   If the tax treatment of a partnership item
    is at issue, the statute requires the matter to be resolved at
    the partnership level.   Sec. 6221; Maxwell v. Commissioner, supra
    at 787-788.   Section 6231(a)(3) defines a partnership item as
    “any item required to be taken into account for the partnership’s
    taxable year * * * to the extent regulations prescribed by the
    Secretary provide that, for purposes of this subtitle, such item
    is more appropriately determined at the partnership level than at
    the partner level.”    Partnership items under section 6231(a)(3)
    and the applicable regulations include items of loss reflected on
    - 8 -
    the partnership tax return.     Maxwell v. Commissioner, supra at
    790; sec. 301.6231(a)(3)-1(a)(1)(i), Proced. & Admin. Regs.
    Section 6231(a)(4) defines the term “nonpartnership item” as
    “an item which is (or is treated as) not a partnership item.”
    Section 6231(a)(5) provides that the term “affected item” means
    “any item to the extent such item is affected by a partnership
    item.”    An affected item is by definition neither a partnership
    item nor a subchapter S item.    Dial USA, Inc. v. Commissioner, 
    95 T.C. 1
    , 5 (1990).    An affected item, rather than being
    universally applicable to every partner, is peculiar to a
    particular partner’s tax posture.       Maxwell v. Commissioner, supra
    at 790.
    Petitioners argue that the notice of deficiency shows that
    respondent has adjusted partnership items reflected in the 1995
    tax return of UK Lotto.    Respondent maintains the items adjusted
    in the notice of deficiency were not partnership items but
    affected items that were ultimately disallowed on petitioners’
    tax returns for reasons that were unique to petitioners’
    circumstances.
    The notice of deficiency potentially disallows the loss on
    three levels:    The partnership level, the S corporation level,
    and the individual partner level.    We will address the parties’
    arguments in the context of each level.
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    A.   Partnership Level
    Respondent concedes that UK Lotto is a partnership within
    the meaning of section 6231(a)(1).      Respondent did not issue
    notices of final partnership administrative adjustment (FPAAs)
    with respect to UK Lotto for 1995.      The loss attributable to
    Pascal & Co. is a partnership item at the TEFRA-entity level.
    See sec. 6231(a)(3); sec. 301.6231(a)(3)-1(a)(1)(i), Proced. &
    Admin. Regs.    The limitations period for issuing FPAAs pertaining
    to UK Lotto’s 1995 return expired on December 31, 2003, pursuant
    to the last Form 872-P executed on behalf of UK Lotto and
    respondent for the taxable year 1995.      See sec. 6229(a) and
    (b)(1).   Consequently, the tax treatment of all partnership items
    with respect to UK Lotto is final.      See Roberts v. Commissioner,
    
    94 T.C. 853
    , 857 (1990).   There can be no partnership proceedings
    to adjust or modify the partnership items as reported on the UK
    Lotto return.   In addition, respondent through his letter in
    April 2003 conceded administratively that the loss attributable
    to Pascal & Co. is allowable at the UK Lotto partnership level.
    B.   S Corporation Level
    NASM and FAP are not TEFRA entities.      They each reported 50
    percent of the loss from UK Lotto.      NASM and FAP are “pass-thru”
    partners under section 6231(a)(9).      Section 6231(a)(9) provides
    that a “‘pass-thru partner’ means a partnership, estate, trust, S
    corporation, nominee, or other similar person through whom other
    - 10 -
    persons hold an interest in the partnership with respect to which
    proceedings under this subchapter are conducted.”     Since the S
    corporations are not TEFRA entities, there is no issue of whether
    the adjustments should have taken place at the S corporation
    level.
    C.      Partner Level
    Petitioners hold their interest in UK Lotto as “indirect
    partners” under section 6231(a)(10).     Section 6231(a)(10)
    provides that an “‘indirect partner’ means a person holding an
    interest in a partnership through 1 or more pass-thru partners.”
    Petitioners argue that the adjustments made in the notice of
    deficiency are inconsistent with respondent’s position that the
    disallowed losses are affected items.
    Petitioners argue that the notice of deficiency describes
    only partnership items, and that the explanation of adjustment
    calculates the disallowance of the loss to petitioners as if the
    basis for disallowing it was a partnership level adjustment.
    Petitioners therefore conclude that we are without jurisdiction
    over the items in dispute because all partnership items must be
    determined at the partnership level and not the partner level.
    See sec. 6221.
    Respondent contends that the notice of deficiency
    originally refers to affected items, not partnership items.
    Respondent argues that the reasons for disallowing the losses to
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    petitioners include the limitation of partnership losses to the
    partner’s basis in a partnership interest, the at-risk limitation
    under section 465, the passive loss limitation rules under
    section 469, and the S corporation loss limitation rules under
    section 1366, which are all “affected item bases” for disallowing
    losses at the partner level.   Respondent reasons that the
    statement in the notice of deficiency “nor has it been
    established that any loss attributable to Pascal & Co. is
    allowable to you, or not limited” (emphasis added) encompasses
    the possibility that the loss was not allowable to petitioners
    for reasons that were peculiar to their individual tax
    circumstances.
    Despite the technical inaccuracies3 in respondent’s notice
    of deficiency, the existing jurisprudence regarding the
    sufficiency of a notice of deficiency favors respondent.     It is
    well settled that no particular form is required for a notice of
    deficiency, and that the Commissioner need not explain how the
    3
    On Schedule E of their 1995 Form 1040 petitioners claimed
    losses of $4,087,725 from NASM and $2,941,054 from FAP. However,
    the notice of deficiency adjusted $3,468,019 of loss from each of
    the S corporations, which is each S corporation’s share of loss
    from Pascal & Co. reflected on the tax return filed by UK Lotto.
    If the notice of deficiency was adjusting an affected item, there
    would have been calculations to redetermine the flow-through
    amounts from NASM and FAP. In addition, the notice of deficiency
    does not discuss petitioners’ bases, nor do the adjustments take
    into account any of the passive income petitioners reported.
    None of the adjustments respondent made correspond to any of the
    losses petitioners deducted on Schedule E of their Form 1040 or
    the accompanying Statement 15.
    - 12 -
    deficiencies were determined.    See Benzvi v. Commissioner, 
    787 F.2d 1541
    , 1542 (11th Cir. 1986); Barnes v. Commissioner, 
    408 F.2d 65
    , 68 (7th Cir. 1969) (citing Commissioner v. Stewart, 
    186 F.2d 239
    , 242 (6th Cir. 1951), revg. a Memorandum Opinion of this
    Court), affg. T.C. Memo. 1967-250.       In Stoecklin v. Commissioner,
    
    865 F.2d 1221
    (11th Cir. 1989), affg. T.C. Memo. 1987-453, the
    Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit required that “A
    deficiency notice * * * at a minimum must show that * * * ‘a
    deficiency exists for a particular year and specify the amount of
    the deficiency.’”    
    Id. at 1224
    (quoting Benzvi v. Commissioner,
    supra at 1542)).    Similarly, this Court has stated that “the
    notice is only to advise the person who is to pay the deficiency
    that the Commissioner means to assess him; anything that does
    this unequivocally is good enough.”       Jarvis v. Commissioner, 
    78 T.C. 646
    , 655-656 (1982) (quoting Olsen v. Helvering, 
    88 F.2d 650
    , 651 (2d Cir. 1937)).
    Respondent argues that his adjustments are based on the
    limitation of the partnership losses to the partner’s basis in
    the partner’s partnership interest, the at-risk limitation under
    section 465, and the passive loss limitation rules under section
    469.    We have previously held that each of these items is unique
    to the individual characteristics of each partner and does not
    have a uniform effect on all of the partners.       Estate of Quick v.
    Commissioner, 
    110 T.C. 172
    , 188 (1998) (holding that a passive
    - 13 -
    loss under section 469 is an affected item because treatment of
    the loss does not produce a uniform effect on the partners),
    supplemented 
    110 T.C. 440
    (1998); Hambrose Leasing 1984-5 Ltd.
    Pship. v. Commissioner, 
    99 T.C. 298
    , 308-309 (1992) (holding that
    the amount a partner has at risk under section 465 is an affected
    item); Dial USA, Inc. v. Commissioner, 
    95 T.C. 5-6
    (a
    shareholder’s basis in an S corporation cannot always be
    determined by simply looking at S corporation items).
    We conclude that the phrase “allowable to you, or not
    limited” in respondent’s notice of deficiency suffices to notify
    petitioners of the possibility of an affected items adjustment.
    The fact that there is a reference to affected items, however
    obscure, is sufficient despite the inconsistent adjustments made
    in the notice of deficiency.4
    The items respondent seeks to adjust are affected items.
    Respondent would have to determine these items on the basis of
    factors that were unique to petitioners, such as each
    petitioner’s basis in the S corporations and the extent to which
    each petitioner was at risk with respect to the Pascal & Co.
    investment.   We have jurisdiction over affected items in this
    case, even though no FPAA was issued.    See Roberts v.
    Commissioner, 
    94 T.C. 860
    (holding that the Court has
    4
    We do not address the burden of proof in this situation and
    whether respondent’s adjustments raise new matters under Rule
    142(a).
    - 14 -
    jurisdiction over affected items when the Government accepts the
    partnership return as filed because that fulfills the requirement
    that there be an “outcome of a partnership proceeding” before
    assessment of affected items); cf. GAF Corp. & Subs. v.
    Commissioner, 
    114 T.C. 519
    (2000) (Tax Court must dismiss for
    lack of jurisdiction when the notice of deficiency adjusts
    partnership or affected items before the completion of the
    partnership-level proceeding).    This situation is distinguishable
    from GAF Corp. and similar to Roberts because respondent accepted
    UK Lotto’s return as filed.
    Having decided that we maintain jurisdiction and that
    respondent’s assertion that the items in question are affected
    items is correct, we must now resolve the issue of whether the
    period of limitations under section 6229 has run on respondent’s
    adjustments.
    II.   Statute of Limitations
    The central point of contention in the issue involving the
    statute of limitations is whether respondent’s omission of a
    reference to partnership items in the Forms 872 executed with
    petitioners results in the expiration of the periods of
    limitation under sections 6501 and 6229.
    A.   Respondent Did Not Include Partnership Items in the
    Forms 872
    Section 6229(a) provides:
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    SEC. 6229.   PERIOD OF LIMITATIONS FOR MAKING
    ASSESSMENTS.
    (a) General Rule.--Except as otherwise provided
    in this section, the period for assessing any tax
    imposed by subtitle A with respect to any person which
    is attributable to any partnership item (or affected
    item) for a partnership taxable year shall not expire
    before the date which is 3 years after the later of–-
    (1) the date on which the partnership
    return for such taxable year was filed, or
    (2) the last day for filing such return
    for such year (determined without regard to
    extensions).
    Section 6229(b) allows the parties to extend the period for
    assessment by agreement.   However, section 6229(b)(3) provides an
    important precondition to extending the period:
    (3) Coordination with section
    6501(c)(4).--Any agreement under section
    6501(c)(4) shall apply with respect to the
    period described in subsection (a) only if
    the agreement expressly provides that such
    agreement applies to tax attributable to
    partnership items.
    Although “partnership items” were not referenced in the
    consents petitioners executed, respondent argues that section
    6229 does not apply to this situation because the period of
    limitations under section 6501 is still open.   Respondent asserts
    that section 6229 merely extends the general period of
    limitations provided by section 6501, and that when the period
    under section 6501 is still open, reliance on section 6229 is
    unnecessary.   In support of his assertion, respondent quotes the
    following passage from our Opinion in Rhone-Poulenc Surfactants &
    - 16 -
    Specialties, L.P. v. Commissioner, 
    114 T.C. 533
    , 537 (2000),
    appeal dismissed and remanded 
    249 F.3d 175
    (3d Cir. 2001):
    Section 6501(a) provides a general period of
    limitations for assessing and collecting any tax
    imposed by the Code. Section 6501(a) defines the
    period in relation to the filing of the return of the
    person liable for tax; in this case petitioner rather
    than the partnership. Section 6229(a) sets forth a
    minimum period for assessing any income tax with
    respect to any person that is attributable to any
    partnership item or affected item. This minimum period
    is defined in relation to the filing of the partnership
    return. This minimum period can be greater than, or
    less than, the period of limitations in section 6501.
    Respondent’s reliance on Rhone-Poulenc is misplaced.   In
    Rhone-Poulenc, at the time the FPAA was issued, the period for
    assessing taxes under section 6501 was still open under section
    6501(e) (6-year period in cases involving substantial omissions
    of gross income).5   Respondent did not issue an FPAA to UK Lotto
    for the 1995 taxable year.   Instead, respondent accepted the 1995
    partnership tax return with no changes.   The period for assessing
    any partnership item relating to UK Lotto expired on December 31,
    2003, the ending date of the last Form 872-P executed between the
    tax matters partner for UK Lotto and respondent.   The period for
    assessing taxes due from petitioners is open, if at all, solely
    5
    Both the Court of Federal Claims and the U.S. Court of
    Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit have agreed with the
    Court’s analysis in Rhone-Poulenc Surfactants & Specialties, L.P.
    v. Commissioner, 
    114 T.C. 533
    , 537 (2000), appeal dismissed and
    remanded 
    249 F.3d 175
    (3d Cir. 2001). See Andantech L.L.C. v.
    Commissioner, 
    331 F.3d 972
    (D.C. Cir. 2003), affg. in part and
    remanding T.C. Memo. 2002-97; Schumacher Trading Partners II v.
    United States,     Fed. Cl.     (July 31, 2006).
    - 17 -
    by reason of agreements to extend the period for assessing tax
    under section 6501(c)(4), which provides that taxpayers and the
    Commissioner may extend the time for assessment by agreement.6
    Respondent maintains that section 6229(b)(3) does not apply
    because it references only partnership items and not affected
    items.    Respondent’s position therefore is that the parties
    validly extended the period of limitations pursuant to section
    6501(c)(4) and that section 6229(b)(3) refers only to partnership
    items and therefore does not affect the limitations period.     For
    the reasons stated below, we hold that respondent’s position is
    incorrect.
    B.     Respondent’s Position Ignores the Cross-Reference in
    Section 6229(b)(3) to Section 6229(a), Which Includes
    Affected Items
    Contrary to respondent’s interpretation, “tax attributable
    to partnership items” refers to what must be stated in the
    agreement in order to extend the period of limitations, not to
    the limitations period itself.7   The preceding phrase “the period
    described in subsection (a)”, references section 6229(a), which
    6
    The general period of limitations under sec. 6501(a), which
    generally provides that tax must be assessed within 3 years after
    the return was filed no matter when it was due, has clearly
    expired with respect to both the partnership and petitioners
    individually as those returns were filed in 1996, and respondent
    issued the notice of deficiency in 2005. Respondent has not
    argued that section 6501(e) is applicable to this case.
    7
    See Schumacher Trading Partners II v. United 
    States, supra
    ,
    for a discussion of the role of sec. 6229(b)(3).
    - 18 -
    describes the period for assessing tax with respect to any
    partnership item or affected item.      The parenthetical in
    subsection (a) refers specifically to affected items.     Therefore,
    it would have been redundant to include a similar parenthetical
    in subsection (b)(3) because the reference to “partnership items”
    in that subsection was intended to refer only to the language
    required in the Form 872.   The pertinent limitations period is as
    described in subsection (a).
    C.     Respondent’s Argument Implies That Section 6229 Applies
    Only If There Is an Adjustment at the Partnership Level
    Although respondent does not specifically make this
    argument, implicit in his reading of the statute is that there
    must be a partnership level adjustment in order for section 6229
    to apply.    In this case, we do not have an adjustment because the
    partnership return was accepted as filed.     Therefore, following
    this logic, it would not be necessary to include reference to
    partnership or affected items in the Forms 872.     We analyze this
    problem by reference to the statute.
    Section 6229(b)(3) provides that any agreement under section
    6501(c)(4) shall apply with respect to the period described in
    subsection (a) only if the agreement expressly applies to “tax
    attributable to partnership items.”     As 
    stated supra
    in section
    B, the phrase “tax attributable to partnership items” describes
    what must be in the agreement under section 6501(c)(4).        The
    period extended is “the period described in subsection (a)”,
    - 19 -
    which is “the period for assessing any tax imposed by subtitle A
    with respect to any person which is attributable to any
    partnership item (or affected item) for a partnership taxable
    year”.      Sec. 6229(a).   Accordingly, respondent’s position is
    inconsistent with the statute because respondent confuses what is
    required to be in the agreement extending the period of
    limitations with the period extended.
    D.     Respondent’s Position Is Inconsistent With Prior
    Caselaw, Secondary Authority, and Respondent’s Own
    Pronouncements
    Our conclusion that section 6229(b)(3) applies to affected
    items is further solidified by our Court-reviewed Opinion in
    Rhone-Poulenc Surfactants & Specialties, L.P. v. Commissioner,
    
    114 T.C. 533
    (2000).        We provided a detailed explanation of the
    scope of section 6229(b)(3) and its coordination with section
    6501(c)(4).      We stated that those sections were “intended to
    allow taxpayers and the Commissioner to extend the period of
    limitations for assessments of tax attributable to partnership
    items only where the extension agreement expressly provides that
    it applies to tax attributable to partnership items.”        
    Id. at 555.
        We further quoted a treatise regarding the scope of the
    rule in section 6229(b)(3):       “‘A standard extension of the
    limitations period under section 6501(c)(4) (Treasury Form 872)
    with respect to nonpartnership items does not apply to
    - 20 -
    partnership and affected items unless it specifically so
    provides.’”   
    Id. (quoting 2
    Willis et al., Partnership Taxation,
    par. 20.08[2][a] (6th ed. 1999)).8
    In his own manual, the Commissioner emphasized the need to
    include a reference to affected items in the Form 872.      See
    Internal Revenue Manual (IRM) 4.31.2.6.3.    While the IRM does not
    have the force of law, the manual provisions do constitute
    persuasive authority as to the IRS’s interpretation of the
    statute.   Griswold v. United States, 
    59 F.3d 1571
    , 1576 n.8 (11th
    Cir. 1995).
    In Maxwell v. Commissioner, 
    87 T.C. 791
    n.6, we
    determined that a deficiency attributable to an affected item is
    a “deficiency attributable to a partnership item.”    
    Id. The issue
    in Maxwell was whether we had jurisdiction over a partner’s
    deficiency proceeding when the items that were the subject of the
    adjustments were affected items determined by reference to a
    partnership item that was not the subject of a partnership level
    proceeding as required by section 6225(a).    We determined that we
    did not have jurisdiction over the affected item at issue because
    8
    See 2 Willis et al., Partnership Taxation, par. 20.08[2][a]
    (6th ed. 1999) (citing sec. 6229(b)(3)); 13 U.S. Tax Rep. (RIA)
    par. 62,214.08 (2006) (“An agreement to extend the period of
    limitations on assessment and collection under I.R.C. §
    6501(c)(4) applies to the period of limitations for assessment of
    income tax attributable to a partnership item or affected item
    only if the agreement expressly provides that it applies to tax
    attributable to partnership items.”).
    - 21 -
    “Affected items depend on partnership level determinations,
    cannot be tried as part of the personal tax case, and must await
    the outcome of the partnership proceeding.”    
    Id. at 792.
        We
    explained that a “deficiency attributable to an affected item
    such as a partner’s carryback of a partnership’s investment tax
    credit is also a ‘deficiency attributable to a partnership
    item.’”   
    Id. at 791
    n.6.   Thus, following our reasoning in
    Maxwell, the phrase “tax attributable to partnership items” in
    section 6229(b)(3) also includes affected items.9
    E.    Respondent’s Position Would Have Untenable Consequences
    Following respondent’s logic, we would have to conclude that
    since section 6229(b)(3) applies only to partnership items, the
    Forms 872 would not have to make a specific statement about
    affected items that are directly related to partnership
    adjustments, such as the amount of loss a partnership could claim
    from a particular transaction.   We think that this result is
    incorrect and that it would negate the import of the statute
    because it would make the application of section 6229(b)(3)
    ambiguous and potentially superfluous.   “An interpretation that
    9
    Computational adjustments resulting from partnership
    proceedings may be assessed directly without issuing a notice of
    deficiency. See 2 McKee et al., Federal Taxation of Partnerships
    and Partners, par. 9.07[2][c] (1997). We do not decide today
    whether affected items that would be the subject of a
    computational adjustment are included in the language of sec.
    6229(b)(3) because in this case we are not dealing with that
    special kind of assessment.
    - 22 -
    renders a statutory provision superfluous should be avoided,
    since it would offend ‘the well-settled rule of statutory
    construction that all parts of a statute, if at all possible, are
    to be given effect.’”   Rhone-Poulenc Surfactants & Specialties,
    L.P. v. Commissioner, supra at 547 (quoting Weinberger v. Hynson,
    Westcott & Dunning, Inc., 
    412 U.S. 609
    , 633 (1973)).
    In Rhone-Poulenc Surfactants & Specialties, L.P. v.
    Commissioner, supra at 549-550, we emphasized the importance of
    ensuring that extension agreements under section 6229(b)(3) be
    precise:
    Contract principles are pivotal in determining the
    existence and scope of that agreement because section
    6501(c)(4) requires a written agreement. Section
    6229(b)(3) imposes a default rule for purposes of
    determining whether an agreement encompasses
    assessments that are attributable to partnership items.
    * * * [Citations omitted.]
    If we were to adopt respondent’s interpretation, such a course of
    action would not only make the application of section 6229(b)(3)
    of questionable significance, but also would leave doubt as to
    whether the parties had a meeting of the minds, which the
    application of section 6229(b)(3) avoids.
    In interpreting section 6229(b)(3), we are cognizant of the
    principle that limitations statutes barring the collection of
    taxes otherwise due and unpaid are strictly construed in favor of
    the Commissioner.   Colestock v. Commissioner, 
    102 T.C. 380
    , 387
    (1994) (citing Badaracco v. Commissioner, 
    464 U.S. 386
    , 391-392
    - 23 -
    (1984)).    Nevertheless, the period referenced in the statute is
    the period described in section 6229(a), as we further described
    in Rhone-Poulenc Surfactants & Specialties, L.P. v. Commissioner,
    
    114 T.C. 533
    (2000).
    III.   Conclusion
    Respondent’s notice of deficiency adequately references
    affected items over which this Court has jurisdiction.
    Nevertheless, on the basis of the statute and our precedent, we
    conclude that to extend the period of limitations for affected
    items the Forms 872 must specifically reference “partnership
    items” as required by section 6229(b)(3).      Respondent’s failure
    to include any reference to tax attributable to partnership items
    in the Forms 872 executed with petitioner results in the
    expiration of the period of limitations for any affected items
    adjustments respondent might raise in this case.
    To reflect the foregoing,
    An appropriate order and
    decision will be entered.