LegalEagleMan wrote:The Operative
That was always my first thought as well, however Petitioner is not or more like was not suing for actions "under any Act of Congress for the apprehension or punishment of criminals or the collection of the revenue". The Petitioner is claiming he has no knowledge as to why the lien is there, he lacks the facts necessary to determine anything. My wording I would say. The record is void of the necessary facts, to get where this is right now one would have to be assuming facts not in evidence. (Petitioner is changing his stance in his last brief, this kind of changed is not to was not suing above)
Let me see if I can unravel what you are attempting to say. I believe that you are claiming that the petitioner is not suing for actions under any Act of Congress for the collection of revenue and therefore the removal from state court is not valid. I disagree with that because you are taking the "any Act of Congress" out of context. Let's examine this in further detail using the facts from the Circuit Court opinion.
First, whether the Federal tax lien is supposed to be attached to the petitioner's property or not, is somewhat irrelevant to the issue at hand. In placing a Federal tax lien on a piece of property, the IRS agents, acting for the United States, are acting under the authority granted to them by the Secretary of the Treasury who is using his authority granted by 26 USC (which is supported by an act of Congress). If the IRS has determined there is a tax deficiency, whether that deficiency is correct or not, the IRS has the authority to file a Federal tax lien on property of the taxpayer.
As I have already stated, whether the petitioner believes the Federal tax lien should exist or not is irrelevant to the issue of the removal from state court to the District Court. He is suing the United States and 28 USC 1442(a) applies.
LegalEagleMan wrote:
It certainly COULD be an "internal revenue" case, it certainly could be the Petitioner suing the US government under an Act of Congress, it COULD be all kinds of things. It all seems premature at this point without the necessary facts, although like I said Petitioner's last brief seem to step away from the point I was making.
It absolutely is an internal revenue case. In the first paragraph of the Circuit Court's opinion, it states that Schiaffino alleges he received a notice of federal tax lien.
LegalEagleMan wrote:I can see your point on a few issues because now Petitioner is kind of saying something else in his last brief. He is now trying to go along with the order, which would make what you said more likely. If Petitioner had or does stay with his original line of thinking than this would all be premature assuming facts not in evidence.
I am in no way claiming Petitioner could "win" in State court if the US has an agency order, Sovereign immunity claim could be used at that point. However, it would than get to a position were Petitioner could move the case to CoA directly. Thinking out loud. I am actually waiting to see one more case in the CoA that touches on what I am talking about that is presently in CoA to give me more insight.
Glancing at the petitioner's last brief, I believe I know what he is arguing. He states that the U.S. did not follow statutory procedure when filing the Federal tax lien and therefore the state court should hear the matter. I believe he is using the erroneous argument that in order for the U.S. to file a Federal tax lien, that the U.S. must follow state and county laws on filing liens. Of course, he is wrong.
The Circuit Court has already found that the District Court properly found that the removal from state court was correct and the dismissal of the petitioner's motion to remand was also correct. The only issue left is can the District Court grant the petitioner relief. Since the District Court is barred from removing a Federal tax lien under 26 USC 7421, the only appropriate action is to dismiss for petitioner's failure to state a claim for which relief may be granted.
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