Steve: Just a couple of off-topic footnotes, here. I can’t get to a copy of the text of the
Larsen case now, but I’ll respond to a couple of things you wrote:
Larsen did not file tax returns for the years in question and the IRS created substitute returns instead and promptly places liens on his retirement account. Larsen files Chapter 7 and tries to discharge his tax debt.
Well, Mr. Larsen may have been confused. Forget about the "valid assessment" problem. If Larsen did not file returns, then the taxes would have been non-dischargeable in the bankruptcy (also, the substitute returns by the IRS would not be treated as "returns" for purposes of the dischargeability issue).
And you wrote:
Without valid assessments no tax was due and he was free to keep his retirement.
Not exactly. Partially correct, maybe, depending on circumstances.
The lack of a valid assessment would mean that there was no tax
LIEN. A valid tax covered by a lien (or, more specifically a perfected lien) is a secured claim to the extent of the value of the property securing the lien. A valid tax not so covered is an unsecured claim. But there is no general legal requirement that a federal tax be assessed in order for the
tax to be legally due.
Once an individual is in bankruptcy, the claims for the unassessed federal income taxes for the pre-bankruptcy years for which the person did not file returns would be nondischargeable under 11 USC 523(a)(1)(B)(i), and would be payable from the funds in the estate (if funds are available and, of course, subject to the usual complex bankruptcy rules regarding priority, etc.). If the retirement account were excluded from the bankruptcy estate (a distinct possibility), the retirement account would not be used to pay the tax claims
through the bankruptcy process using funds of the estate. But once the IRS correctly assessed the tax, issued the post-assessment written "notice and demand," and the tax was not thereafter timely paid, the tax lien would arise.
Again, I can’t meaningfully comment that much more on what did or did not happen in
Larsen until (and unless) I read the text of the case.
"My greatest fear is that the audience will beat me to the punch line." -- David Mamet