Supreme Court Declines to Hear Case Regarding Mailbox Rule to Prove Timely Filing
The U.S. Supreme Court has decided not to hear the appeal from the Ninth Circuit in the case of Baldwin v. United States, Case No. 19-402.[1] The denial leaves standing the Ninth Circuit’s ruling that Reg. §301.7502-1(e)(2) rendered irrelevant a prior Ninth Circuit decision in the case of Anderson v. United States, 966 F.2d 487 (9th Cir. 1992).
We previously wrote about this case when it was first decided by the Ninth Circuit in April 2019.[2]
The issue involved whether a taxpayer could only show timely mailing of their document by producing a certified or registered mail receipt stamped by a U.S. Postal Service employee or whether they could resort to other evidence showing the document had been timely mailed. In 1992 the Ninth Circuit had ruled that other evidence could be considered in the Anderson case. Other circuits had held that provisions Congress enacted in IRC §7502 for proof of timely filing of documents were meant to be the sole method of proving such timely mailing.
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