[1] | UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT |
[2] | No. 99-50837 |
[3] | Keywords: willful evasion, 523(a)(1), plea bargain, alter ego |
[4] | August 28, 2000 |
[5] | IN THE MATTER OF: PAUL A. GROTHUES; MARILYN GROTHUES, DEBTORS, PAUL A. GROTHUES; MARILYN GROTHUES, APPELLEES, V. INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, APPELLANT. |
[6] | Before Jolly, Smith, and Barksdale, Circuit Judges. |
[7] | The opinion of the court was delivered by: Rhesa Hawkins Barksdale,
Circuit Judge |
[8] | Appeal from the United States District Court for the Western District
of Texas |
[9] | Primarily at issue is whether taxes owed by two corporations,
principally owned by Paul A. and Marilyn Grothues, were discharged in
the Grothues' personal Chapter 11 bankruptcy, despite: the IRS
claiming the Grothues are the alter egos of the corporations; and Ms.
Grothues, following Chapter 11 plan-confirmation, pleading guilty to
evading part of those taxes and, as part of her plea agreement,
promising to pay all of the taxes owed. The bankruptcy court held the
taxes were not discharged; the district court, they were. We AFFIRM in
PART, REVERSE in PART, and REMAND. |
[10] | I. |
[11] | At issue are fuel excise taxes owed by two diesel fuel wholesalers,
Southwest Oil Company of Jourdanton (SWOJ) and Southwest Oil Company of
Eagle Pass (SWEP). The taxes were assessed from September 1986 to
November 1994, for tax periods 1986-1990. |
[12] | In March 1987, the Grothues filed a joint petition for personal bankruptcy
under Chapter 11. The IRS filed proofs of claim for employment taxes the
debtors owed, as "responsible persons", but did not file
proofs of claim for any fuel excise tax liabilities. The plan of
reorganization, confirmed in August 1992, provided, inter alia, for
payment of the employment taxes, but did not make any provision for
payment of the excise taxes. |
[13] | In 1990, however, the IRS had begun a criminal investigation regarding
those (the corporations') unpaid excise taxes. And, approximately a year
after plan-confirmation, Marilyn Grothues pleaded guilty to one count of
a multi-count indictment for evading payment of excise taxes, in
violation of 26 U.S.C. § 7201 ("willfully attempt[] in any manner
to evade or defeat" payment of tax). In her plea agreement, she
agreed to pay all taxes, penalties, and interest owed by the
corporations, stipulating, for sentencing purposes only, that the tax
loss was approximately $716,000. (The Government claimed the
corporations owed over $4 million.) Accordingly, in November 1993, the
district court ordered, as a condition of sentence, that Ms. Grothues
"pay all taxes, penalties and interest due and owed". |
[14] | Ms. Grothues failed to do so. In March 1996, in an effort to collect
the amount due, the IRS filed notices of tax liens against the Grothues'
property, identifying the Grothues as the corporations' alter egos or
nominees. It then issued notices of intent to levy on some of the
Grothues' real property. |
[15] | To stop the sale of their property, the Grothues filed this adversary
action in bankruptcy court, maintaining that, pursuant to 11
U.S.C. § 1141(d)(1) (general discharge of pre-confirmation debts upon
plan-confirmation), any personal liability they might have had for the
excise taxes had been discharged in 1992, when their Chapter 11 plan was
confirmed. They also challenged the legality and amount of taxes owed. |
[16] | The IRS moved for summary judgment, asserting that, pursuant to 11
U.S.C. § 1141(d)(2) (debts listed in 11 U.S.C. § 523 non-dischargeable
as to individual debtors), the taxes-owed were excepted from discharge.
It relied upon subparts (A) and (C) of § 523(a)(1). The former is for
taxes specified in 11 U.S.C. § 507(a)(8), including excise taxes; the
latter, for taxes a "debtor ... willfully attempted in any manner
to evade or defeat". In addition, the IRS moved to dismiss, for
lack of jurisdiction, the Grothues' challenges to the legality and
amount of taxes owed, asserting those issues were not properly before
the bankruptcy court. |
[17] | Following a hearing on the motions in April 1997, the bankruptcy
court ruled in favor of the IRS. It held that, assuming the IRS had a
bona fide pre-confirmation claim for the excise taxes, it would not have
been discharged, because Ms. Grothues could not "oppose a [§
523(a)(1)(C)] finding of willful evasion of tax, in the face of having
pled guilty to evasion of paying a tax". The court dismissed, for
lack of jurisdiction, the Grothues' challenges to the legality and
amount of taxes owed. And, it denied their motion for reconsideration. |
[18] | Subsequent to the bankruptcy court's ruling, and on a date not
found in the record at hand, the IRS, based upon its alter ego
liability-theory, filed a complaint to foreclose its liens on the
Grothues' property. United States v. Marilyn Grothues, No.
SA-99-CA-148-OG (W.D. Tex.). (As discussed infra, the IRS contends the
still-pending foreclosure action is the proper forum to determine the
validity of that theory.) |
[19] | Appealing from bankruptcy to district court, the Grothues
contested the guilty-plea-precluded-discharge-holding, and pointed out
the bankruptcy court's failure to differentiate Mr. Grothues, who
was not charged with, or convicted of, tax evasion. In re Grothues, 245
B.R. 828, 829-30 (W.D. Tex. 1999). They also appealed the
lack-of-jurisdiction-ruling regarding the legality and amount of taxes
owed. Id. at 830. |
[20] | The district court reversed the bankruptcy court in part,
holding the IRS' excise taxes claim had been discharged. Id. It reasoned
that the IRS' "alter ego, nominee or related veil-piercing theory
... place[d] [its] claim outside of the context of ... [, inter alia,]
§ 523(a)(1)", because the IRS' claim was not for a tax, but for
"an equitable remedy" in the nature of "a declaratory
judgment that the Grothues' assets are available to satisfy" the
corporations' tax debts. Id. at 832. (The court noted that, because of
the non-retroactivity of the 1990 enactment of 26 U.S.C. § 4103, which
provides for "responsible person" liability with respect to
excise taxes, there was no such liability by which the Grothues could be
held liable personally for the excise taxes, at the time the
corporations incurred them. See id. at 831-32 & n.2.) The court
affirmed the bankruptcy court's lack-of-jurisdiction-ruling
regarding "the underlying tax liability". Id. at 830. (As
discussed infra, that holding was not appealed by the Grothues.) |
[21] | II. |
[22] | The IRS challenges the district court's holding its underlying claim
was not "for a tax" and was, therefore, discharged.
"Acting as a second review court", we examine de novo the bankruptcy
court's conclusions of law; its fact-findings, only for clear error.
E.g., In re Johnson, 146 F.3d 252, 254 (5th Cir. 1998). The IRS had the
burden of proving non-dischargeability by a preponderance of the
evidence. See Grogan v. Garner, 498 U.S. 279, 287 (1991). |
[23] | The principal issue is whether the IRS' underlying claim for the two
corporations' unpaid excise taxes, made against the Grothues through an
alter ego theory, falls within the § 523(a)(1)(C) discharge-exception,
in the light of Ms. Grothues' pleading guilty to willful tax evasion,
and her concomitant plea-agreement-promise to pay those taxes. And, if
non-dischargeability applies for that reason to Ms. Grothues, is it
equally applicable to Mr. Grothues? |
[24] | A. |
[25] | The district court's analysis was fundamentally flawed, according to
the IRS, because the alter ego theory is not an independent cause of
action, but merely a remedy to enforce a claimed substantive right -
here, to payment of taxes owed and non-dischargeable under § 523(a)(1).
In this regard, the IRS notes the discharge provisions make no
distinction between taxes incurred directly by a debtor's corporation,
and those incurred indirectly by a debtor operating through an
ineffective corporate form. It asserts that, as a matter of common
sense, a debtor who has pleaded guilty to evading a tax should not be
allowed to use bankruptcy law to avoid paying it, especially
where, as here, the debtor promises, in a post-confirmation plea
agreement, to pay the tax. |
[26] | Concomitantly, the IRS contends the district court erred in relying on
In re Hurricane R.V. Park, Inc., 185 B.R. 610, 613-15 (Bankr. D. Utah
1995), which held the IRS violated Hurricane's discharge-injunction by
filing post-confirmation tax liens against that corporate debtor's
property (as the IRS did against the Grothues' property), based on, as
here, an alter ego theory, and in an effort to collect taxes owed by an
officer of the corporate debtor. The IRS reads Hurricane as inapplicable
because, unlike the Grothues, Hurricane was a corporate debtor; the
discharge-exception in 11 U.S.C. §§ 1141(d)(2) and 523(a)(1)(C), at
issue here, applies only to individual debtors. |
[27] | While conceding the IRS' alter ego theory is simply a remedy, not a
claim per se, the Grothues assert the district court nevertheless
correctly held the IRS' underlying claims are not tax claims because the
Grothues had no direct liability for their corporations' taxes. To the
Grothues, the relevant point from Hurricane is that the IRS' alter ego
theory was not a tax claim. |
[28] | As the Grothues concede, the IRS' alter ego theory is just one of
several ways to pierce the corporate veil under the applicable Texas
law. Its use does not alter the IRS' underlying claim for the unpaid
excise taxes. See In re S.I. Acquisition, Inc., 817 F.2d 1142, 1152 (5th
Cir. 1987) (citing Castleberry v. Branscum, 721 S.W. 2d 270, 272 (Tex.
1986) ("alter ego remedy applies when there is such an identity or
unity between a corporation and an individual ... that all separateness
between the parties has ceased and a failure to disregard the corporate
form would be unfair or unjust") (emphasis added)); Peacock v.
Thomas, 516 U.S. 349, 353 (1996) (veil-piercing simply method of
assigning liability on "underlying cause of action"). |
[29] | And, as for the weight to accord Hurricane, § 523(a)(1)'s discharge
exceptions were not before that court. They do not apply to corporate
debtors. 11 U.S.C. § 1141(d)(2) (plan confirmation "does not
discharge an individual debtor from any debt excepted from discharge
under section 523") (emphasis added); Fein v. United States, 22
F.3d 631, 633 (5th Cir. 1994) (as to "individual debtors, Congress
consciously opted to place a higher priority on revenue collection than
on debtor rehabilitation") (citation omitted). |
[30] | B. |
[31] | Accordingly, the IRS has a claim for taxes. The Grothues challenge, on
several fronts, the bankruptcy court's non-dischargeability
holding, as well as asserting that, even if § 523(a)(1)(C)
non-dischargeability applies to Ms. Grothues, the underlying reasoning
is not applicable to Mr. Grothues. |
[32] | 1. |
[33] | Notwithstanding the IRS' underlying claim being "for a tax",
the Grothues maintain the bankruptcy court erred by basing
non-dischargeability on Ms. Grothues' criminal conviction alone. They
assert In re Bruner, 55 F.3d 195 (5th Cir. 1995), mandates a more
extensive analysis. To them, it requires, inter alia, determining
whether they had the ability to pay the taxes; and, in that regard, they
note the 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(1)(C) non-dischargeability standard is
different from that for criminal tax evasion under 26 U.S.C. § 7201.
Likewise, they base error on the bankruptcy court's holding all
the taxes non-dischargeable, despite Ms. Grothues' pleading guilty to
evasion for only one of the subject tax periods. Finally, they complain
that the IRS introduced no summary judgment evidence to support its
alter ego theory. |
[34] | a. |
[35] | Relying on In re Bruner, 55 F.3d at 197, the Grothues contend that,
for § 523(a)(1)(C) willful evasion, the bankruptcy court must
find the debtor: (1) had a legal duty to pay the tax; (2) knew of such
duty; and (3) "voluntarily and intentionally violated" it,
having preliminarily assessed the debtor's financial ability to pay the
tax. Id. We disagree. (We note, however, the elements of the three-prong
test - duty; knowledge; and voluntary and intentional violation - seem
implicit in Ms. Grothues' § 7201 criminal conviction, which required a
"willful[] attempt[] ... to evade or defeat" payment of
taxes.) |
[36] | The central issue in Bruner, 55 F.3d at 198-200, was whether §
523(a)(1)(C) willful evasion requires proof of an "affirmative
act", a question on which the circuits are split. Compare In re
Toti, 24 F.3d 806, 809 (6th Cir.) (§ 523(a)(1)(C) encompasses
"both acts of commission and ... omission"), cert. denied, 513
U.S. 987 (1994), with In re Haas, 48 F.3d 1153, 1158 (11th Cir. 1995)
(nonpayment of taxes "alone" not within scope of §
523(a)(1)(C)), abrogated in part by In re Griffith, 206 F.3d 1389,
1395-96 (11th Cir.), petition for cert. filed, 68 U.S.L.W. 3002 (U.S. 22
June 2000) (No. 99-2052). In Bruner, our court agreed with Toti, but did
so in dictum, because Bruner ruled that resolution of the issue was not
necessary, in the light of the Bruners having committed "acts of
omission and ... commission". Bruner, 55 F.3d at 200. |
[37] | To the extent the Grothues raise this point, the same is true here. In
addition to Ms. Grothues' guilty plea conviction for failing to file a
required excise tax return and to pay taxes she knew to be due, she
pleaded guilty to |
[38] | willfully attempt[ing] to evade and defeat a tax ... by making and
causing to be made false invoices for the sale of the fuel to be shown
to the [IRS] auditors, and by collecting excise taxes from customers,
and ... falsifying, and causing to be falsified, the books and records
of [SWOJ] and indicating that certain of said sales were for purposes
exempt from excise taxes, and all for the purpose of continuing the
scheme to defeat the assessment of taxes and payment of the tax, in
violation of Title 26, [U.S.C. §] 7201, and Title 18, [U.S.C. §] 2.
(Emphasis added.) |
[39] | Because, with its summary judgment motion, the IRS submitted Ms.
Grothues' plea agreement and a transcript of her sentencing hearing,
including the above, describing acts of omission and commission (such as
falsifying records), this evidence was more than sufficient. Moreover,
Ms. Grothues is estopped from denying she engaged in the charged
conduct. E.g., Johnson v. Sawyer, 47 F.3d 716, 722 n.13 (5th Cir. 1995)
(§ 7201 conviction necessitates finding "defendant ... acted
willfully and knowingly with specific intent to evade [a tax]"
(citation and quotation marks omitted), estopping defendant from taking
inconsistent position in civil action). See In re Goff, 180 B.R. 193,
199-200 (Bankr. W.D. Tenn. 1995) (debtor estopped from claiming
discharge of certain taxes in the light of his plea bargain admission he
willfully attempted to evade them). In short, Ms. Grothues "do[es]
not qualify as the sort of 'honest debtor' the Bankruptcy Code is
designed to protect". Bruner, 55 F.3d at 200 (emphasis added). |
[40] | As to the lack of a finding that the Grothues had the ability to pay
the taxes, the key § 523(a)(1)(C) determination is whether debtor's
conduct is willful. Whether debtor has the ability to pay is, of course,
an appropriate factor in making that determination, but it is not a
litmus test. In any event, the Grothues have not asserted they could not
pay the taxes. |
[41] | b. |
[42] | Regarding the non-dischargeability of the taxes for which Ms. Grothues
did not plead guilty to evading, the IRS maintains that, despite her
pleading guilty to such evasion for only one taxable period, she
admitted her "willful" conduct extended beyond that period.
The IRS bases its position on Ms. Grothues' stipulating in her plea
agreement that she caused a tax loss to the Government greater than for
that one period. In this regard, and although the record evidence
focuses on Ms. Grothues' willful conduct in the second quarter of 1988,
she stipulated her conduct caused a loss of approximately $716,000, well
above the $80,000 associated with her one-tax-period conviction and
obviously encompassing other tax periods (other taxes). And, in her plea
agreement, she promised to pay all of the corporations' unpaid excise
taxes, an integral provision made a condition of her sentence. |
[43] | In the light of these unique circumstances, we hold that, as to Ms.
Grothues, these other taxes are also non-dischargeable.*fn1
As a general matter, holding otherwise might -- indeed, probably would
-- encourage unscrupulous debtors to use bankruptcy law as a
shield against enforcement of criminal proceedings promises they had no
intention of keeping, but nevertheless made, in order to gain a more
favorable plea agreement/sentence. |
[44] | c. |
[45] | In addition to pointing to the IRS' not submitting summary judgment
evidence supporting its alter ego theory, the Grothues assert Ms.
Grothues was ordered only to pay taxes "due and owing" to the
IRS, and maintain there has been no determination she owed any taxes
due. |
[46] | The Grothues' liability for the taxes - and, concomitantly, the
validity of the IRS' alter ego theory - are not before us. As noted, the
Grothues did not appeal the district court's affirming the bankruptcy
court's no-jurisdiction-holding as to the legality and amount of taxes
owed. These issues are for the earlier-referenced foreclosure
proceeding. |
[47] | 2. |
[48] | Finally, all parties agree Ms. Grothues' plea agreement and
guilty-plea conviction do not support § 523(a)(1)(C)
non-dischargeability of Mr. Grothues' tax debt (if any). Nevertheless,
the IRS urges holding its tax claim non-dischargeable for him as well,
pursuant to the discharge exception for certain excise taxes under 11
U.S.C. §§ 523(a)(1)(A) and 507(a)(8). As discussed supra, the former
is a discharge-exception for taxes specified in the latter. Under §
507(a)(8), excise taxes are a priority claim if they concern a
"transaction occurring before the date of the filing of the
petition for which a return, if required, is last due, under applicable
law or under any extension, after three years before the date of the
filing of the petition". 11 U.S.C. § 507(a)(8)(E)(i). The IRS
advanced this contention in bankruptcy, as well as in district,
court; neither addressed it. The IRS, however, did not raise this issue
in its opening brief here. Therefore, it is deemed abandoned. E.g.,
Yohey v. Collins, 985 F.2d 222, 225 (5th Cir. 1993). |
[49] | III. |
[50] | For the foregoing reasons, we REVERSE that part of the district
court's judgment as to Marilyn Grothues; AFFIRM the remainder; and
REMAND this action for entry of a revised judgment or for such other
proceedings as may be appropriate. |
[51] | AFFIRMED in PART; REVERSED in PART; and REMANDED |
Opinion Footnotes | |
[52] | *fn1 . Accordingly, we need not
address the IRS' alternative reliance on the discharge-exception in §
523(a)(7) (debts "for a fine, penalty, or forfeiture payable to and
for the benefit of a governmental unit"). In any event, we would
not consider it, because the IRS did not raise this issue in its opening
brief here, thereby abandoning it. See infra. |