I read earlier this week an
excellent article on Murrin v. Commissioner, 158 F.4th 527 (3d Cir.
2025), here,
cert petition pending (see here).
Bryan Camp, The New Forever Rule for Record Retention (Tax Notes March
3/25/26), here.
Professor Camp is concerned, as he was in filing an amicus brief in Murrin,
with the potential application to innocent taxpayers of § 6201(c)(1)’s unlimited statute of limitations for a “false or
fraudulent return with
the intent to evade tax.” Murrin held that the taxpayer’s fraud is not
required and that a return preparer’s fraud would suffice to apply the unlimited
statute of limitations for fraud. For further on Murrin,
see my post Third Circuit Holds Taxpayer Fraud is not Required for
6501(c)(1) Unlimited Statute of Limitations, Creating Conflict (Federal Tax Procedure Blog 8/18/25;
10/17/25).
In an alarmist mode, Professor Camp concludes his article by stating that, unless
the problem of § 6201(c)(1) applying to innocent taxpayers is fixed, “I think
we must all advise our clients to keep their records . . . forever.” (Emphasis supplied.) What does forever mean in this context? That's a quibble. Professor Camp is not
just content to provide that bottom line from Murrin but repeats his
arguments in his amicus brief as to error in Murrin and the predicate
tax court opinion in Allen v. Commissioner, 128 T.C. 37 (2007), here.
I encourage those interested in the issue (which I call the Allen
issue) to read Professor Camp’s article. I have not recently stepped through
the legislative and statutory history he discusses in support of his claims,
but my recollection is that I was not then sure that they support his claims.
In any event, I am sure that for a long period of time since the early tax law,
practitioners, including me, assumed that § 6201(c)(1) required taxpayer fraud. Allen appeared out of the blue, so to speak. But now that, in Justice Kagan's words “we are all textualists now,” if we focus on the text of §
6201(c)(1), there is no textual reading that would limit its scope to taxpayer
fraud if the fraud is on the return. In other words, at best regarding Professor Camp's claims, the actual text is ambiguous as to whether the text of § 6201(c)(1) requires the taxpayer's fraud.
Further, on the purpose of § 6201(c)(1), I do not conceive it is as a punishment
provision but a recognition that fraud on the return makes discovery by the IRS
more difficult. After all, the consequence of the unlimited statute of
limitations is that the taxpayer pays the tax the taxpayer owed ab initio. True, the
taxpayer may have to pay interest, but tax and interest are not penalties. The
taxpayer Professor Camp is concerned about is the truly innocent taxpayer
relying on a fraudulent preparer; for such a taxpayer there will be no penalty
because (i) § 6662 civil penalty which does not apply with taxpayer reasonable
cause (unless, for some § 6662 civil penalties, the reasonable cause exception
does not apply which is not likely in an innocent taxpayer context) and (ii) § 6663 civil fraud penalty does not apply unless
taxpayer fraud is involved. So, from that perspective, the truly innocent taxpayer suffers no
penalty with respect to the fraud on the return; rather, he would just pay
the tax and interest that are in the helpful metaphor, his dues for a civilized
society.
That’s all I have on the merits of Murrin and Allen.
Just a few more comments: