The Honorable Charles E. Grassley,
United States Senate,
232 Russell Office Building,
Washington, D.C. 20510
Dear Senator Grassley:
I am responding to a question you raised about attorney fees in tax
cases during my testimony on May 20 before your Subcommittee on
Oversight of the Internal Revenue Service. You asked whether I
preferred the attorney fee reimbursement rules in the Equal Access
to Justice Act ("EAJA") or those in the Tax Equity and Fiscal
Responsibility Act ("TEFRA").
The American Bar Association and the Section of Taxation have long
supported a provision for reimbursement of a prevailing taxpayer's
litigation costs, including reasonable attorney fees. Neither the
ABA nor the Section has taken any position on the relative merits of
EAJA and TEFRA. The views expressed in this letter are therefore my
own and not those of the ABA or the Tax Section.
The attorney fee rules in TEFRA were enacted in response to certain
deficiencies in the EAJA as applied to tax cases, the most serious
of which was that the EAJA was held inapplicable to tax litigation
in the United States Tax Court. In addition to authorizing the Tax
Court to award attorney fees, TEFRA responds to an unprecedented
backlog of cases in the Tax Court by requiring taxpayers to exhaust
their administrative remedies within the Internal Revenue Service to
be eligible for attorney fee awards in court. TEFRA also
specifically defines a "prevailing party" in tax cases to include a
taxpayer who wins a significant issue of continuing precedential
importance even though he may lose other issues which involve a
greater amount of tax in the particular year in suit. Finally, TEFRA
makes all prevailing taxpayers eligible for attorney fee awards,
regardless of their net worth, subject to an overall limitation of
$25,000.
The TEFRA rules could be improved. For example, many members of the
tax bar believe that the burden of proof under TEFRA should be on
the Government, as it is in the EAJA, since the Government is in a
better position to explain why it brought or defended the case and
why its position was reasonable.
Imperfect as they are, however, the TEFRA rules address the special
problems of tax litigation while EAJA does not. Put to a choice,
therefore, my recommendation is to stay with TEFRA. If Congress is
dissatisfied with the way the TEFRA rules are working, changes
should be made within the existing TEFRA framework.
Sincerely,
M. Bernard Aidinoff
125 Broad Street
New York, N.Y. 10004