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Overview Bankruptcy Terms Bankruptcy Legislation Bankruptcy Section 6658 Bankruptcy Fraud Statute of Limitations Golden Parachute Definition of "pending" Chapter 9 Cases Collection Delinquent Accounts Common Issues IRS Case Processing Proof of Claim Chapter 7 Cases Payments Chapter 11 Chapter 12 Chapter 13 Closing
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Bankruptcy
Section 6658

SEC
.
6658.
COORDINATION WITH TITLE 11.
6658(a) CERTAIN FAILURES TO PAY TAX. --No addition to the tax shall be made
under section
6651, 6654,
or 6655 for failure to make timely payment of tax
with respect to a period during which a case is
pending under title 11 of the United States Code --
6658(a)(1)
if
such tax was incurred by the estate and the failure
occurred pursuant to an order of the court finding
probable insufficiency of funds of the estate to pay
administrative expenses, or
6658(a)(2)
if
--
6658(a)(2)(A)
such
tax was incurred by the debtor before the earlier of
the order for relief or (in the involuntary case)
the appointment of a trustee, and
6658(a)(2)(B)(i)
the
petition was filed before the due date prescribed by
law (including extensions) for filing a return of
such tax, or
6658(a)(2)(B)(ii)
the
date for making the addition to the tax occurs on or
after the day on which the petition was filed.
6658(b)
EXCEPTION FOR COLLECTED TAXES. --Subsection (a)
shall not apply to any liability for an addition to
the tax which arises from the failure to pay or
deposit a tax withheld or collected from others and
required to be paid to the
United States
.
Rev.
Rul. 2005-9, February
7, 2005
ISSUE
When is a bankruptcy case no longer
"pending" for purposes of the relief from
the imposition of certain penalties provided under
section 6658 of the Internal Revenue Code for the
period during which a bankruptcy case is pending?
FACTS
In Situations A, B, and C described
below: (1) an individual taxpayer files a bankruptcy
petition under Chapter 7 or Chapter 11 of title 11
of the U.S. Code ("the Bankruptcy Code")
and has an income tax liability for a taxable year
that ended prior to the filing of the bankruptcy
petition; (2) the prepetition tax liability is
excepted from discharge under section 523(a)(1)(A)
of the Bankruptcy Code; (3) the tax liability is
reported on a timely filed tax return, but is not
paid in full; and (4) the failure to pay penalty
under section 6651(a)(2) may be imposed except to
the extent of the relief provided by section 6658 of
the Internal Revenue Code for the period during
which the bankruptcy case is pending.
Situation A. The taxpayer files a Chapter 7
bankruptcy petition on Date 1. The court enters an
order granting the debtor a discharge on Date 2,
which is six weeks after Date 1. Distributions from
the bank-ruptcy estate are made and the Service
receives partial payment of income taxes on Date 3,
one year after Date 1. The court discharges the
trustee and closes the case on Date 4, which is 30
days after receiving the trustee's final report.
Situation B. The taxpayer files a Chapter 11
bankruptcy petition on Date 1. The plan is confirmed
and the taxpayer receives a discharge on Date 2.
Payments to the Service commence on Date 3. The
court closes the case on Date 4, which is 30 days
after Date 3. Payments under the plan are required
to be made for several years after Date 4.
Situation C. The facts are the same as in Situation
B, except that the court does not close the case
on Date 4. Beginning approximately one year after
Date 3, the taxpayer fails to make payments as
required under the plan. Shortly after the default,
the Service files a motion to dismiss the case and
the court enters a dismissal order on Date 5.
LAW
AND
ANALYSIS
Section 6658(a) provides, in part, that "[n]o
addition to the tax shall be made under section
6651, 6654, or 6655 for failure to make timely
payment of tax with respect to a period during which
a case is pending under title 11 of the United
States Code ...." Section 6658 applies to tax
arising before the taxpayer files a bankruptcy
petition if (1) the petition was filed before the
due date of the return or (2) the date for making
the addition to the tax occurs on or after the day
on which the petition was filed. Section 6651
imposes penalties for failure to file a return or
pay a tax, and section 6654 and 6655 impose
penalties for failure to pay estimated taxes. The
term "pending" is not defined in section
6658.
A bankruptcy case is commenced by filing a petition
with the bankruptcy court pursuant to sections 301
through 304 of the Bankruptcy Code. A case is
"pending" for purposes of section 6658
after the debtor files a petition with the
bankruptcy court. A bankruptcy case is no longer
pending for purposes of
section 6658 when it is closed or dismissed. See
Carey v. Saffold, 536 U.S. 214, 219-220 (2002)
(consulting Webster's Third International Dictionary
for the ordinary meaning of the word
"pending," the Court determined that a
state court application for collateral review
remains pending "until the application has
achieved final resolution").
Section 350 of the Bankruptcy Code requires the
court to close a case once the estate is fully
administered and the court has discharged the
trustee. Bankruptcy Rule 5009 provides that in
Chapter 7 cases, there is a presumption that the
estate has been fully administered and the case may
be closed if (1) the trustee has filed a final
report and final account and has certified that the
estate has been fully administered, and (2) within
30 days after the trustee's filing and
certification, no objection has been filed by the
United States trustee or a party in interest.
Bankruptcy Rule 3022 provides that the court shall
enter a final decree closing a Chapter 11 case after
an estate is fully administered. The Advisory
Committee Notes to the 1991 amendments to Bankruptcy
Rule 3022 provide that the final decree closing the
case should not be delayed solely because payments
required by the plan have not been completed. Fed.
R. Bankr. P. 3022 advisory committee notes.
Whether a case has been fully administered and
should be closed presents a different question under
Chapter 7 than under Chapter 11. Although a Chapter
7 case is not fully administered and generally is
not closed until after final distribution of the
property of the estate, a Chapter 11 case may be
considered fully administered and may be closed
shortly after payments commence under the plan even
though the debtor will continue to make payments.
However, in both Chapters 7 and 11, the closing of
the case marks the end of the bankruptcy court's
administration of the estate and is, therefore, the
proper date on which a case is no longer pending for
purposes of section
6658.
Similarly, the dismissal of a bankruptcy case
terminates the case and the bankruptcy court's
administration of the bankruptcy estate. The
legislative history to section 349 of the Bankruptcy
Code, which sets forth the effect of a dismissal of
a bankruptcy case, provides that the purpose of
section 349 is "to undo the bankruptcy case, as
far as practicable, and to restore all property
rights to the position in which they were found at
the commencement of the case." S. Rep. No. 989,
95th Cong., 2d Sess. 48 (1978).
In Situation A, the case is pending under
section 6658 until the court closes the case on Date
4. The entry of the discharge order on Date 2 does
not terminate the relief provided by section 6658
because the estate has not been fully administered.
In Situation B, the confirmation of the plan
on Date 2 discharges the debtor from all
pre-confirmation dischargeable debts. The
confirmation of the plan does not terminate the
administration of the estate. Under section 350 and
Bankruptcy Rule 3022, the estate is not fully
administered until it is closed on Date 4. As of
Date 4, the administration of the estate is complete
and the case is no longer pending even though the
debtor is required to make payments under the plan
for several years. Thus, the penalty relief provided
by section 6658 ceases as of Date 4.
In Situation C, the bankruptcy court does not
close the case 30 days after confirmation of the
plan as in Situation B, but keeps the case
open while the debtor complies with the terms of the
plan. However, one year after confirmation, the
debtor fails to make the payments required by the
terms of the plan. The default does not terminate
the case or end the court's involvement in the
administration of the estate. The order dismissing
the case terminates the administration of the
estate. The prohibition against imposition of the
penalty ends on Date 5, the date on which the
dismissal order is entered.
Although Situations A, B, and C
describe bankruptcy cases filed under Chapters 7 and
11 of the Bankruptcy Code, the treatment of a case
as no longer pending when the case is closed or
dismissed as set forth in this ruling also applies
to bankruptcy cases filed under Chapters 12 and 13
of the Bankruptcy Code.
HOLDING
A bankruptcy case is no longer pending for purposes
of relief under section 6658 when the bankruptcy
case is closed or dismissed.
DRAFTING INFORMATION
The principal author of this revenue ruling is the
Collection, Bankruptcy & Summonses Division,
Office of Associate Chief Counsel (Procedure and
Administration). For further information regarding
this revenue ruling, contact Delores Dillmann at
(202) 622-3620 (not a toll-free call).
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