A federal appeals court has refused to lift an injunction by a lower court against the Internal Revenue Service’s tax preparer regulation regime.
In a
In January, a federal judge in Washington, D.C.,
The IRS then announced its intention to appeal the ruling in the case, known as Loving v. IRS, and asked the judge, James E. Boasberg, to suspend his original ruling, arguing that it would disrupt tax season (see
Last month, the IRS filed notices of appeal in both the district court and the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals announcing its intention to appeal the earlier rulings, and then filed a
The two sides then filed a pair of competing documents with the appeals court earlier this month. The tax preparers filed a
On Wednesday, the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals
A three-judge special panel of the D.C. Circuit upheld Judge Boasberg’s refusal to lift his injunction against the IRS’s registered tax return preparer regulations. The appeals court’s brief order found that the IRS “ha[d] not satisfied the stringent requirements for a stay pending appeal.”
“This ruling protects the rights of our clients and hundreds of thousands of tax-return preparers to continue earning an honest living while this case is on appeal,” said senior attorney Scott Bullock at the Institute for Justice, the lead attorney on appeal for the three independent tax preparers who challenged the regulations. “The IRS claimed that the sky would fall if the injunction remained, but both the district court and the appeals court saw through that rhetoric.”
“We will continue to fight the IRS’s unlawful power grab on appeal,” said Institute for Justice attorney Dan Alban, who won the case in the district court. “Congress never gave the IRS the authority to license tax preparers, and the IRS can’t give itself that power.”
“This is very similar to what happened in the district court below,” Alban noted. “The IRS is attempting to get the court to suspend the injunction while the appeal is pending, and now both the district court and the court of appeal have denied the IRS’s motion to do that, so the injunction will remain in place during the pendency of the appeal.”
Alban noted that the next major step will be the merits briefing which will conclude with an oral argument before a three-judge panel of the D.C. Circuit. “Right now, we’re waiting for the court to issue a scheduling order setting forth the briefing schedule and also setting an oral argument date.”
However, Alban sees the appeals court ruling as a vindication of the original finding by the lower court. “I don’t know how much it goes to the merits of the case because the court doesn’t analyze the merits specifically, but I think it vindicates our position that the IRS has been claiming that ‘the sky is falling, the sky is falling’ because of this injunction, and neither the district court nor the court of appeals gave any credence to those arguments," he said. "I think they saw through them and saw them for the exaggerations that they were.”