Showing posts with label 5 USC 703. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 5 USC 703. Show all posts

Sunday, November 20, 2022

District Court Holds IRS Tax Shelter Notice Imposing Obligations Invalid as a Legislative Rule Without Notice-and-Comment But Limits Holding to Parties (11/20/22)

In GBX Associates, LLC v. United States (N.D. Ohio Case No. 1:22cv401 Dkt. # 21 Memo. Opinion & Order 11/14/22), CL here and GS here, the Court held consistent with Sixth Circuit (including lower court) opinions that IRS Notice 2017-10, entitled “Listing Notice- Syndicated Conservation Easement Transactions,” was invalid because it was a legislative rule adopted without notice-and-comment.  After reaching that conclusion, the court focused on the APA language in 5 USC § 706(2) that the court “hold unlawful and set aside agency action” found to be “not in accordance with law” or ” without observance of procedure required by law “ The question was whether the scope of the remedy could include not only the plaintiff a material (investment advisor) before the court but universal applying throughout the country to all similarly situated parties.  The relief could either be granted by a universal injunction commanding the IRS not to apply the Notice or by “vacatur” declaring the rule null and void which would cover IRS action against all parties similarly situated not before the court.  The latter is sometimes call universal or nationwide vacatur.

I think the opinion is quite good in discussing the issues.  In a nutshell, the issue is whether an invalid rule (here the Notice requirements) adopted without the notice-and-comment required for legislative rules, making it void ab initio, should allow or require piecemealing the remedy, requiring it to be litigated by various aggrieved persons throughout the country.  The Court said (Slip Op. p. 18, cleaned up):

As noted above, GBX asserts that the Notice 2017-10 should be in vacated in whole (and not just as to GBX itself) because, by its very nature, the “set aside” remedy of vacatur set forth in APA § 706(2) acts against the agency action itself—not the government actor. GBX asserts that, under established case law from the Third, Ninth, and D.C Circuit Courts of Appeals, the “ordinary result” upon a finding of unlawful agency action is that the [agency action] itself is vacated—not that its application to the individual petitioners is proscribed. Defendants strongly disagree, arguing the law on this issue is, in fact, unsettled and “hotly contested.” Defendants emphasize, in particular, that the Sixth Circuit has not expressly ruled on this issue and that at least one district court in this Circuit has rejected GBX’s argument and declined to order universal relief under § 706(2).

The Court in GBX exercised her discretion in concluding (Slip Op. p. 32): "The Court declares that Notice 2017-10 is unlawful and hereby sets that Notice aside as to Plaintiff GBX Associates, LLC only."

This litigant-only or universal application issue is presented in Texas v. United States, 40 F. 4th 205 (5th Cir. 2022) (per curiam), GS here, a nontax case.  The Fifth Circuit opinion summarized its holding (at 212, emphasis supplied by JAT):