Wednesday, October 30, 2019

Cert Petition Filed in Baldwin re Timely-Mailing, Timely Filing Regulations and Chevron (10/30/19)

Some conservative/libertarians who claim loudly to fear the administrative state are now worked up over a tax case.  In Baldwin v. United States, 921 F.3d 836, 840 (9th Cir. 2019), here, which I discuss in my Federal Tax Procedure 2019 Practitioner edition (p. 188 n. 832).  Baldwin applied the dreaded Chevron and Brand X, feared as tools of the dreaded administrative state.

The background is the timely mailing timely filing rule of Section 7502.  Baldwin held that, because of changes in the regulations (through the filters of Chevron and Brand X), the requirements of 7502 pre-empt the field of timely mailing-timely filing.  Here is the discussion in the text and footnote of the practitioner edition.
2. Common Law Mailbox Rules.
    a. General. 
The Supreme Court has summarized the common-law mailbox rule:  
The rule is well settled that if a letter properly directed is proved to have been either put into the post office or delivered to the postman, it is presumed, from the known course of business in the post office department, that it reached its destination at the regular time, and was received by the person to whom it was addressed.  
This rule may apply in tax cases, although the decisions are varied as to how and if it applies (i.e. some courts hold that § 7502 pre-empts the field, particularly in light of changes to the underlying regulations n832 ).
   n832 Baldwin v. United States, 921 F.3d 836 (9th Cir. 2019). Regs. § 301.7502-1(e)(2) provides that, if there is no actual delivery (which would set the latest date), proof of proper use of the USPS methods or the designated PDS methods “are the exclusive means to establish prima facie evidence of delivery.” DOJ (and thus the IRS’s) position, accepted by the Court in Baldwin, is currently arguing that these regulations to limit mailing as delivery to the prescribed method are exclusive under the authority of Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc., 467 U.S. 837 (1984) on the basis that the statute itself is ambiguous as to the application of the mailbox rule. As such, not only is the regulation valid, it pre-empts earlier judicial authority to the contrary under Nat’l Cable & Telecomms.  ss’n v. Brand X Internet Servs., 545 U.S. 967 (2005) (which hold that Chevron qualified interpretive regulations can pre-empt judicial authority except where the judicial authority precludes the interpretation).
The Cato Institute, NFIB and some scholars have filed an amicus brief on the Baldwin petition for cert. See William Yeatman, Baldwin v. United States Is Ideal Vehicle to Revisit Reflexive Deference, 36 Yale J. on Reg.: Notice & Comment (10/29/19), here.  I recommend the article, although it uses APA-speak which may not be familiar to many tax procedure types who spend their time wallowing around in the IRC.  The linked article has further links to the amicus brief.  A key excerpt from the article:
Last Friday, the Cato Institute and National Federation of Independent Business filed a brief in support of their petition. We argue that if Baldwin stands, and the IRS is permitted to wave away 50 years of adverse court decisions with a handful of pages in the Federal Register, then the Court’s inaction would occasion an awful template for other agencies. A sham notice-and-comment process cannot sustain an invitation for judicial deference. 
If the Supreme Court takes the case, then it promises to be an administrative law blockbuster. There are any number of doctrinal questions that potentially could come into play. For example: 
•  To what extent is statutory silence not an implied delegation of interstitial lawmaking authority?
•  Is Brand X uniform?
•  Where do judge-made concepts like evidentiary principles and substantive canons fit into the Chevron framework?
•  How serious is the Court about linking agency expertise to the availability of deference?
Finally, for those readers of this blog entry who are fans of the APA, I do highly recommend the  Yale J. on Reg.: Notice & Comment blog, here.  Worth perusing every few days.

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