ADDENDUM TO
TAX COURT PETITION
TAX COURT PETITION
Fraud upon the court consists of a pattern of
deceit and dishonesty directed at the court, so as to interfere with its
ability to impartially adjudicate a dispute.
Kenner v. Commissioner, 387 F.2d 689, 691 (7th Cir. 1968). It occurs where it can be clearly and
convincingly demonstrated that a party has set in motion an unconscionable
scheme calculated to interfere with the judicial system’s ability to
impartially adjudicate a matter. Aoude
v. Mobile Oil Corp., 892 F.2d 1115, 1118 (1st Cir. 1989). It is a special species of fraud regarded not
only as harmful to adverse parties, but to the judicial process itself. Kenner, 387 F.2d at 691.
The leading case on fraud upon the court is
Hazel-Atlas v. Hartford-Empire, in which the Supreme Court held that a judgment
based on fraud upon the court can, and should, be vacated, regardless of its
age. Hazel-Atlas Glass Co. v.
Hartford-Empire, 322 U.S. 238, 250 (1944).
The facts of Hazel-Atlas revealed an extensive fraudulent scheme
directed not only against the adverse party, but also against both the trial
and appellate courts. The U.S. Supreme
Court referred to this particular species of fraud as not only “an injury to a
single litigant. It is a wrong against the institutions set up to protect and
safeguard the public, institutions in which fraud cannot complacently be
tolerated consistent with the good order of society.”
The Tax Court possesses the authority to vacate
or modify its judgment, despite its finality under section 7481. The balancing of the statutory finality rule
and the implied judicial power to review and vacate fraudulently obtained
judgments led the Seventh Circuit to conclude that a judgment obtained through
fraud upon the court is not a judgment at all, and thus never becomes
final. Expressly rejecting the Eighth
Circuit’s decision in Jefferson Loan, the Seventh Circuit concluded that the
Tax Court possesses the power to inquire into the integrity of its own
decisions, even when such decisions have become final and immutable in all
other respects. However, the taxpayer’s
victory in Kenner was incomplete. While the court held that the Tax Court did
possess the authority to review an otherwise final judgment for alleged fraud
upon the court, it also held that the taxpayer failed to substantiate his
fraud claim. Fraud upon the court is
limited to “that species of fraud which does, or attempts to, defile the court
itself, or is fraud perpetrated by officers of the court, so that the court cannot
perform its task of impartially adjudicating cases.” The taxpayer was unsuccessful in establishing
a pattern of conduct that met the above definition of fraud upon the court.
The
year following the Seventh Circuit’s opinion in Kenner, Congress enacted the
Tax Reform Act of 1969. One of the
provisions in that legislation “elevated” the status of the Tax Court to that
of an Article I court, as opposed to an independent executive agency. Congress’ enactment of this provision could
be seen as tacit approval of the Seventh Circuit’s holding in Kenner. By
clearly defining the Tax Court as a court, Congress bestowed upon them judicial
authority. The authority to review
otherwise final judgments for alleged fraud upon the court would seemingly fall
into that category.
Three years later, the Ninth Circuit in
Toscano, citing Kenner, held that the Tax Court possessed the authority to
review and vacate an otherwise final judgment on the grounds of fraud upon the
court. Toscano v. Commissioner,
441 F.2d 930, 935 (9th Cir. 1971). The
Ninth Circuit subsequently addressed one of the most notorious claims of fraud
upon the Tax Court in Dixon, which involved a fraudulent scheme carried out by
counsel for the government. Dixon v.
Commissioner, 316 F.3d 1041 (9th Cir. 2003).
Proof of fraud by itself is insufficient. The
taxpayer must substantiate an intentional plan of deception designed to
influence the court in rendering its decision.
The Tax Court in Abeles held that it possessed
the authority to vacate a judgment rendered against a taxpayer over whom it had
acquired no jurisdiction. A prerequisite
to Tax Court jurisdiction is the issuance by the Internal Revenue Service of a
statutory notice of deficiency. The IRS
had delivered a notice to the taxpayer’s exspouse, proposing a deficiency on a
joint return filed by both the taxpayer and her spouse. However, the taxpayer in Abeles had recently
divorced from her husband and never received the notice. The husband subsequently filed a Tax Court
petition in his own name, later filing an amended petition purportedly
containing the taxpayer’s signature as well.
After the Tax Court rendered judgment for the government, the taxpayer
challenged the court’s judgment on jurisdictional grounds, claiming that she
was never a party to the case or the resulting judgment. The taxpayer successfully asserted that she
never filed a petition, stating that the signature on the amended petition was
a forgery. Accordingly, the judgment
rendered against the taxpayer was void. Abeles
v. Commissioner, 90 T.C. 103, 109 (1988).
As an Article I court, the Tax Court does not
possess implied judicial authority, including the equitable power to revisit a
final judgment to achieve a just result. Accordingly, section 7481’s finality
rule has been strictly construed. Exceptions to this rule have slowly
developed. Two exceptions that have developed without much contention are
correction of clerical errors and lack of jurisdiction. However, fraud upon the
court is a third exception that has been, and remains, quite contentious. The
Supreme Court held in 1944 that a district court possesses the authority to
revisit an otherwise final judgment on grounds of fraud upon the court.
However, it was more than twenty years before that exception was extended to
the Tax Court.