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Four-Level System
1-1.20 To effectuate this policy the IRS utilizes a four-level system of collection. It begins its collection efforts
on each account by generating computer notices from a Regional Service Center. If the efforts of the Service
Center do not secure payment, the account is then assigned to the Automated Collection System (ACS). The
Automated Collection System attempts to collect the tax liability by initiating telephone calls to the taxpayer and
others. During the time that an account is assigned to Service Center and ACS, accounts may also be resolved by
Collection Support Staff assigned to handle "walk-ins" in local IRS offices. If none of these levels of the system
are successful in collecting the account, it is eventually assigned to a Revenue Officer for a field investigation.
Obviously, it is much less expensive for the IRS to collect a tax by mailing a notice or placing a telephone call
than it is to visit the taxpayer personally. For the taxpayer, however, personal negotiation is much more effective
than dealing with an automated system.
1-2.10 The IRS has ten Regional Service Centers which process all tax returns filed with the IRS. Service
Centers are extensively automated. The information on each tax return filed is encoded into the IRS computer at
a Service Center. That IRS computer system will determine if computational errors are contained on the return
and issue notices regarding errors. The computer also will analyze each return to determine its DIF score (the
score which determines whether it will be audited). The Service Center is also responsible for initiating notices to
taxpayers to collect balances due on tax returns.
1-2.20 The starting point for all collection action by the Service Center is the receipt of a document showing a
tax liability. That document could be a tax return showing a balance due, an audit closing agreement, an audit
deficiency that was not contested or a Tax Court judgment. Collection action should not be initiated if an appeal
of an audit is pending or if a Tax Court petition is pending.
1-2.30 Upon receipt of a tax return or other document showing a balance due, the following process takes place
in the Internal Revenue Service Center. Within several weeks after receipt of the document, the information is
placed on the computer system. That system will then initiate a series of notices. The first notice issued is a
document titled "Request for Payment," which informs the taxpayer that there is a balance due on the return,
states the amount of tax, interest and penalties due, and requests payment within ten days. This is the notice
statutorily required for the creation of a valid Federal Tax Lien. If the liability is for individual income taxes, and
the liability is relatively small, the taxpayer will normally receive four subsequent notices before the IRS
proceeds to take any administrative collection measures. If the balance is larger, the IRS will send only three
notices. If the liability is not paid after the initial notice, the taxpayer will receive a second notice, "Reminder,"
Notice 501. The IRS will issue Notice 503, "Urgent, Immediate action is required ", five weeks after the first
notice. The taxpayer will receive Notice 504, "Urgent, We intend to levy on certain assets. Please respond
NOW.", in the mail five weeks after issuance of Notice 503 if payment is not made after that notice. Notice 504
is the nastiest of the IRS letters. If the taxpayer fails to pay after Notice 504 the matter will be referred for
collection by the Automated Collection System (ACS). If ACS is unsuccessful in collecting or resolving the
matter the IRS will then issue Letter 1058, "FINAL NOTICE, NOTICE OF INTENT TO LEVY AND NOTICE
OF YOUR RIGHT TO A HEARING . PLEASE RESPOND IMMEDIATELY." If the taxpayer exercises her
appeal rights, collection will be held. If the taxpayer fails to appeal the IRS will levy after expiration of 30 days
from the notice. One unusual convention of the IRS is that each notice will bear a date which falls on Monday.
The IRS has been recently revising its notice procedure, but the process has yet to be published in its Manual.
Business Taxpayers
1-2.40 In the case of business taxes (either corporate income or withholding taxes), the IRS will send three
notices prior to initiating enforcement measures. The total time from first notice to enforcement action is
normally at least 16 weeks. The taxpayer will receive a first notice and a Notice 504 five weeks subsequent to
the first notice. The account will then be referred to ACS or a Revenue Officer for issuance of Letter 1058 if the
taxpayer fails to resolve the liability.
Accelerated Issuance
1-2.50 Taxpayers with a history of delinquency or who already owe taxes will receive fewer notices. The IRS
computer categorizes persons with a delinquency within 12 months as repeaters. Repeaters and persons with
other liabilities due will receive as few as two notices, the first notice and Notice 504. The IRS may also
accelerate issuance of large dollar cases. Usually taxpayers assessed with a trust fund recovery penalty receive
only two notices. An IRS employee may also request that the computer accelerate issuance of notices.
Notice of Levy
1-2.60 If the Service Center has computerized sources of income or assets of the taxpayer, such as wages, bank
accounts, certificates of deposit or accounts receivable, all of which can be seized administratively from the
taxpayer, it will issue a Notice of Levy against the taxpayer's assets approximately six weeks after the Letter
1058. If the Service Center does not have sources of income or other assets to levy upon, it will either assign the
case to the Automated Collection System (ACS) or issue a Taxpayer Delinquent Account (TDA) to a local area
office for collection, several weeks subsequent to the final notice.
1-3.10 A taxpayer may be able to secure a 60-month payment plan for 1040 liabilities of less than $25,000. The
IRS Restructuring and Reform Act of 1998 requires the IRS to grant a payment plan to individual taxpayers who
owe less than $25 thousand. The taxpayer should respond to the IRS on the first notice by writing to the Service
Center requesting 60 months to pay the tax liability. Your request for a payment arrangement on small dollar
accounts could also be made by transmitting the new IRS Form 9465. On many occasions the taxpayer has been
granted a payment plan, but the IRS failed to confirm the plan. If subsequent notices cease from the Service
Center, the taxpayer should assume that the Service has granted a plan. If the Service Center continues to issue
subsequent notices, the taxpayer should assume that her plan has been improperly processed by the Service and
contact either Collection Support Staff or a Revenue Officer.
1-4.10 Service Centers are of varying efficiency. The Philadelphia Service Center is generally acknowledged to
be the worst in the country. Fresno, Austin, Holtsville and Atlanta are usually in close competition to be the
second worst center. Ogden is the best Service Center. Inefficient Service Centers can create tremendous
problems for your clients. The Philadelphia Service Center once lost the records of federal tax deposits of 10,000
businesses and then proceeded to bill the companies. Obviously, the IRS does not agree with my appraisal of the
quality of IRS Service Centers.
1-5.10 If an account cannot be collected by a Returns Processing Center by using notices and/or levies upon the
taxpayer's wages or bank account, the matter will then be transferred to a Customer Service Center for telephone
collection efforts. Each Customer Service Center has a computerized telephone collection system. All ten
Service Centers have Customer Service Centers, and thirteen additional sites are spread across various regions of
the country.
APPENDIX
Notice of Participation under IRC § 6015. An individual whose former spouse was granted as a spouse under
section 6013(e) was not entitled to a Notice of Participation rights under section 6015.
Taxpayer contested proposed IRS levy actions based upon frivolous tax protestor arguments: The court held that
Pierson failed to raise a valid defense or challenge the Internal Revenue Service's proposed levy. It further
warned subsequent tax protestors of potential sanctions.
Case dismissed because the tax liability arose from a non-rebate erroneous refund that left the court without
jurisdiction.
The Tax Court held that it lacked jurisdiction to review administrative collection actions taken by the Internal
Revenue Service in an erroneous refund case because of no jurisdiction over the underlying tax liability.
The Tax Court held that the determination letters issued to a couple after they requested an appeal hearing but
before a conference was scheduled are invalid in light of section 6330. The couple was not provided an
opportunity for hearing before the determination letters were issued. Thus, the court concluded that the
determination letters were invalid.
A Collection Due Process hearing is not required to be held in person. The taxpayer requested that the hearing
be held in West Palm Beach. The court held that it was sufficient that the taxpayer had a hearing by telephone
with the Appeals Officer. The court further held that there was no explanation as to why a one-hour commute
would be an undue burden on the taxpayer. The court further held that Katz could not re-litigate the issues raised
and considered in previous administrative or judicial hearings.
Partial summary judgment granted to the government with respect to litigation of the nature and the amounts of
the tax liability. The taxpayer previously agreed to the liabilities in question in a stipulated decision entered by
the Tax Court.
The court held that it lacked the jurisdiction to review an Internal Revenue Service determination of frivolous
return penalties. The court further held that the Internal Revenue Service had initiated and completed its levy
action prior to the effective date of section 6330. Thus, Van Es was not entitled to the protection of that section
for prior collection activities. Van Es was granted thirty days after the order of dismissal to file an appeal with
the U.S. district court.
Howard v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo 2000-319 (2000)
The Tax Court had previously sustained an Internal Revenue Service determination of a deficiency by the
Service. The court held that the taxpayer could not now contest the underlying tax liability in a Collection Due
Process proceeding.
The Tax Court lacked jurisdiction to hear an employee's challenge to FICA liability. The taxpayer had contested
an IRS determination that he was liable for self-employment tax. An Internal Revenue Service Appeals Officer
determined that he was not liable for the self-employment taxes but was liable for FICA taxes.
The court held that it lacked jurisdiction on an individual's petition because he failed to file his initial petition
with a U.S. district court within thirty days of the notice of adverse collection action determination.
The court held that an individual does not have the right to subpoena witnesses and documents in an Internal
Revenue Service Collection Due Process hearing and that the Appeals Officer conducting the hearing may rely
upon Form 4340 ("Certificate of Assessments and Payments") to verify the assessment.
The court held that the Service did not abuse its discretion in allowing collection to proceed against a tax
protestor couple who refused to properly respond to notices of deficiency. The court determined that the
taxpayers repudiated their right to challenge a levy by returning the Internal Revenue Service notices with
frivolous defenses on it and not filing a petition.
The court sustained an Internal Revenue Service notice of determination concerning collection actions under
section 6320 and/or 6330. The taxpayer received a deficiency notice and did not file a Tax Court petition. When
the Internal Revenue Service issued a Notice of Intent to Levy, he requested a Collection Due Process hearing.
At the hearing he presented only frivolous arguments. The court specifically warned Hoffman that it was
authorized to impose substantial penalties on taxpayers who institute proceedings with frivolous and groundless
positions.
The court held that it lacked jurisdiction to hear an individual's claim for relief for tax liability because she did
not timely request a Collection Due Process after the final Notice of Intent to Levy. The taxpayer did not file
within thirty days and only filed an appeal after the Internal Revenue Service had issued Notices of Levy.
The court held that a tax protestor was not entitled to contest his tax liabilities before the Internal Revenue
Service Appeals Office under section 6330 because he had already received the deficiency notice and had
disregarded his opportunity to challenge the liability. The taxpayer did not raise further defenses to the 6330
notice.
The court held that it lacked jurisdiction to review a responsible person's administrative appeal under Section
6320 because it lacked jurisdiction over the underlying taxes and penalties arising under section 6672.
Provenzano v. United States, et al., 86 AFTR 2d para. 2000-5432 (USDC S.D. Cal. 2000)
The district court held that the taxpayer had not met the jurisdictional prerequisites for court jurisdiction because
he did file a refund claim with the Internal Revenue Service, allow six months to pass between the filing for the
refund and the suit in federal court; nor did he pay the assessed tax liability of least one employee for periods at
issue. Therefore, the court would not consider the taxpayer's 6320 and 6330 contest to the underlying tax
liability, although the court granted the government's motion to dismiss and allowed Provenzano thirty days to
amend his claim and properly state a claim upon which relief could be granted.
AJP Management v. United States, 87 AFTR 2d para. 2001-312 (USDC C.D. Cal. 2000)
The court found that the Appeals Officer did not abuse discretion when he issued a determination to allow the
IRS to serve Notices of Levy to collect employment taxes. The taxpayer argued that a better option was an
installment agreement or an Offer in Compromise. The court noted that the taxpayer continued to incur
additional tax liabilities during the pendency of its appeal.
TTK Management v. United States, 87 AFTR 2d para. 2001-313 (USDC C.D. Cal. 2000)
Mesa Oil, Inc. v. United States, 87 AFTR 2d para. 2001-366 (USDC D. Col. 2000)
The court entered judgment ordering a remand of the corporation's tax case to the Appeals Officer's finding that
the Officer who originally heard the company's appeal failed to meet statutory requirements of impartiality.
Mesa Oil, Inc. fell behind in its payroll taxes and the Internal Revenue Service issued a Notice of Intent to Levy
and a hearing notice under Section 6330. The Internal Revenue Service also filed a tax lien and issued an notice
pursuant to 6320. The court found that the Appeals Officer failed to make a proper balancing analysis and failed
to make an adequate record of the hearing. The taxpayer had proposed a one year repayment plan for its tax
liabilities. The Appeals Officer denied that proposal and the court held that the determination letter indicated
that the Appeals Officer prejudiced the case by making conclusions before Mesa's statutorily mandated hearing.
The court specifically ordered that a new Appeals Officer by assigned to hear a new Collection Due Process
hearing. The court further reminded the Appeals Officer to create an adequate record of the proceedings to
secure Mesa's right to judicial review.
Konkel v. Commissioner, et al. 86 AFTR 2d para. 2000-5545 (USDC M.D. Fla. 2000)
The court held that there was no abuse or indiscretion by the Appeals Officer in issuing a Final Notice of
Determination. The taxpayer had previously contested a proposed 6672 penalty through his representative, but
that representative subsequently withdrawn the protest. Konkel's new protest filed in response to an IRC § 6330
notice raised the same issues with respect to the underlying tax liability. Konkel denied knowledge that his
representative had previously requested an appeal and withdrawn it. The court held that Konkel had been given
an opportunity for a hearing on the underlying tax liability. Because he had an opportunity, he could not now
contest the liability. The taxpayer apparently failed to raise other defenses allowed under section 6330.
Case dismissed. Taxpayer had failed to file a timely Collection Due Process appeal and there was no statutory
provision allowing appeal of an equivalent hearing.
Lewis v. I.R.S., et al., 86 AFTR 2d para. 2000-5517 (USDC S.D. Tex. 2000)
The court dismissed the taxpayer's petition because the proper jurisdiction for income tax liabilities was in the
U.S. Tax Court.
Sparks v. United States, 85 AFTR 2d para. 2000-658 (USBC N.D. Okla. 2000)
The court granted the government's motion for summary judgment holding that an individual is barred from
relitigating her individual tax liabilities. The taxpayer had failed to file her individual income taxes for 1993 and
1994. She received a deficiency notice from the Internal Revenue Service based upon a Substitute For a Return
(SFR). The taxpayer previously petitioned to the U.S. Tax Court seeking redetermination of liabilities claiming
that she was a non-resident alien not subject to tax and various other tax protestor claims. She lost her case in tax
court but then attempted to re-litigate it before the United States Bankruptcy Court. Appropriately, she once
again lost.
Taxpayer contested the underlying tax liability and alleged that Form 4340, Certificate of Assessments and
Payments, was not a proper basis to verify the assessments. Petitioner raised no other arguments and offered no
collection alternatives. The respondent moved for summary judgment and a motion was granted after the
taxpayer failed to respond.
1-1.10 Page 1
Four-Level System
1-1.20 Page 1
1-2.10 Page 1
1-2.20 Page 2
1-2.30 Page 2
Business Taxpayers
1-2.40 Page 2
Accelerated Issuance
1-2.50 Page 3
Notice of Levy
1-2.60 Page 3
1-3.10 Page 3
1-4.10 Page 3
1-5.10 Page 4
2-1.10 Page 5
2-2.10 Page 5
2-2.20 Page 5
Liens on All Taxpayer Property
2-2.30 Page 6
2-3.10 Page 6
2-4.10 Page 6
2-5.10 Page 6
2-5.20 Page 7
2-6.10 RRA Section 3401, Due Process in IRS Collection Actions Page 7
2-6.20 Page 7
2-6.30 Page 8
Requirements of Notice
2-7.10 Page 8
2-9.10 Page 16
3-4.10 Page 17
3-4.13 Page 17
3-4.17 Page 17
3-4.25 Page 18
3-4.30 Page 18
3-5.10 Page 18
3-6.10 Page 18
Amount of Payments
3-6.20 Page 19
3-7.10 Page 19
3-7.20 Page 19
3-8.10 Page 19
3-8.20 Page 19
3-8.30 Page 19
3-9.10 Page 20
3-9.20 Page 20
Allowable Expenses
3-9.30 Page 20
Necessary Expenses
3-9.40 Page 21
Conditional Expenses
3-9.50 Page 22
3-9.60 Page 22
Housing Expense
3-9.70 Page 23
Transportation
3-9.80 Page 23
3-9.90 Page 23
Necessary Expenses: Other Unsecured Debts
3-9.100 Page 25
3-9.105 Page 25
3-9.110 Page 26
3-9.115 Page 26
3-9.120 Page 26
3-11.10 Page 27
60-Month Agreements
3-11.20 Page 27
3-12.10 Page 27
3-13.10 Page 28
Withholding by Employer
3-13.20 Page 28
Bargaining Tactics
3-13.30 Page 28
3-13.40 Page 28
3-19.10 Page 28
3-20 TAXPAYER ASSISTANCE ORDERS Page 29
3-20.10 Page 29
3-20.20 Page 29
Nonexclusive
3-20.30 Page 30
3-20.35 Page 30
3-20.40 Page 30
3-21.10 Page 30
3-21.20 Page 30
3-22.10 Page 31
APPENDIX Page 32