Legal Sidebari
Supreme Court To Address Foreign Account
Reporting Penalties
June 29, 2022
Federal law requires U.S. persons with a financial interest in or signature or other authority over foreign
financial accounts totaling more than $10,000 to report these accounts by filing a Report of Foreign Bank
and Financial Accounts, commonly known as
an FBAR, each year. The IRS may levy civil penalties of up
to $10,000 for each non-willful violation. Two U.S. Courts of Appeals recently adopted conflicting
interpretations of whether this maximum penalty applies to each unreported account or to each unfiled
annual FBAR form. In one case, more than $2 million in penalties may hinge on that interpretive
question. At the request of both the defendant in that case and the U.S. Solicitor General, the U.S.
Supreme Court agreed to review the case and resolve the conflict during its October 2022 term. This
Legal Sidebar discusses the relevant penalty provisions and the interpretive approaches of the divergent
court rulings.
Reporting Requirements
Congress enacted the Bank Secrecy Act (BSA) in part to address t
he serious and widespread use of
foreign financial institutions to evade domestic criminal, tax, and regulatory requirements. The BSA
requires U.S. citizens, residents, and entities to report—independent of any tax obligations—certain
foreign financial transactions, relationships, and accounts. One provision of the BSA
, 31 U.S.C. § 5314, establishes the reporting requirements, empowering the Secretary of the Treasury to adopt implementing
regulations.
In 1986, Congres
s amended the BSA and gave the Secretary of the Treasury authority to impose civil
penalties for willful violations of Section 5314. For violations “involving a failure to report the existence
of an account” or related information, the Secretary could impose a penalty no greater than “an amount
(not to exceed $100,000) equal to the balance in the account at the time of violation; or $25,000.”
In the American Jobs Creation Act of 2004, Congress
expanded the available penalties, allowing the
Secretary to impose penalties for both willful and non-willful violations. The civil penalties section as
amende
d (31 U.S.C. § 5321(a)(5)) provides that the Secretary may impose a penalty “on any person who
violates, or causes any violation of section 5314.” For non-willful violations, “the amount of any civil
penalty imposed . . . shall not exceed $10,000.” (In practice, this value i
s adjusted for inflation, but the
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court rulings discussed below use the original statutory values in discussing the interpretive question.) If
any violation is due to reasonable cause and “the amount of the transaction or balance in the account at
the time of the transaction was properly reported,” no penalty shall be imposed.
For willful violations, the maximum penalty is “the greater of $100,000 or 50 percent of the amount
determined under subparagraph (D).
” Subparagraph (D) provides that, “in the case of a violation
involving a failure to report the existence of an account” or related information, the relevant amount is the
balance in the account at the time of violation. The maximum penalty for a willful violation is thus the
greater of $100,000 or 50% of the balance of the account at the time of violation. The reasonable cause
exception does not apply to willful violations. The IR
S must assess any penalty, willful or non-willful,
within six years of the violation.
The IRS currently interprets the $10,000 maximum penalty for
non-willful violations and the $100,000
element of the maximum penalty for
willful violations as applying on a per-account basis, to each
unreported or improperly reported foreign account. Several defendants accused of non-willful violations
have challenged the IRS’s position, arguing that the maximum penalty for non-willful violations applies
on a per-form basis, so that the maximum penalty for non-willfully failing to file an FBAR in any
particular year is $10,000, regardless of the number of foreign accounts the regulations required the
defendant to report.
United States v. Boyd
I
n United States v. Boyd, a divided panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit adopted the
per-form interpretation. Defendant Jane Boyd filed an otherwise-accurate FBAR for the year 2010 more
than a year late. The IRS determined that Boyd committed thirteen non-willful FBAR violations, one for
each of thirteen accounts she did not report when required. It assessed a penalty of $47,279. Boyd argued
that she committed only a single violation by failing to file the 2010 FBAR on time, so the maximum
statutory penalty was $10,000. The district court ruled for the IRS.
The Ninth Circuit majority, however, agreed with Boyd. It
stated that the general provisions of Section
5314 can only be violated by violating the implementing regulations, quoting an observation from the
Supreme Court’s 1
974 decision in
California Bankers Association v. Schultz, in which the Court rejected
a constitutional challenge to the BSA. The Ninth Circuit
noted that one regulation requires that foreign
accounts be reported on the FBAR and another that the FBAR be filed by a deadline. The court held that
Boyd’s accurate but tardy FBAR only violated this second regulation, so she committed only a single
non-willful violation.
The government
argued that the phrasing of references to violations and accounts in the civil penalties
statutory section, including the reasonable cause exception and the willful penalty provision,
demonstrated congressional intent to impose maximum penalties on a per-account basis. Those
provisions, according to the government, showed that Congress understood violations of Section 5314 in
terms of the failure to report a particular account. The court rejected this approach and
interpreted the
absence of any similar reference to accounts in the non-willful penalty provision as an intentional
omission by Congress, indicating that the maximum penalty there was not tied to accounts.
Judge Ikut
a dissented and would have adopted the per-account interpretation. She
argued that the term
violation should be read consistently throughout the civil penalties section, rejecting the majority’s
intentional omission argument. Judge Ikuta also
disagreed with the majority’s interpretation of the
applicable regulations, contending that the duty to file an FBAR does not subsume the duty to report
individual accounts.
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United States v. Bittner
Months later, i
n United States v. Bittner, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit declined to follow
Boyd and instead adopted the per-account interpretation. Alexandru Bittner was born in Romania and
became a naturalized citizen of the United States in 1987. From 1990 to 2011, he returned to Romania
and became a successful businessman with numerous financial accounts in several European countries.
Bittner learned of his FBAR obligations on his return to the United States and filed forms at that time.
The IRS assessed $2.72 million in penalties for 272 non-willful violations, based on his failure to report
between 51 and 61 accounts in each of the five years for which penalties
could still be levied. The district
court ruled for Bittner and held that the maximum penalty applied on a per-form basis, so the maximum
penalty was $50,000.
The Fifth Circuit reversed on this point. That court
rejected both the district court’s and the
Boyd majority’s reliance on
Schultz, noting the differences in subject matter and the intervening statutory
amendments. The Fifth Circuit also focused on the statutory language rather than the Treasury
regulation
s, noting that, while Congress specifically referred to violations of regulations elsewhere in the
civil penalties section, it did not do so in the account-reporting penalty provisions.
The Fifth Circuit
, citing Judge Ikuta’s dissent in
Boyd, held that Section 5314 imposes both a substantive
obligation to report every covered account and a procedural obligation to file the appropriate reporting
form. The maximum penalties provision, the court
determined, is most naturally read as referring to
violations of these duties rather than the particular requirements of the implementing regulations.
Otherwise, the court
explained, the Secretary could expand the scope of potential penalties by adopting
more complex reporting requirements.
The court als
o relied on the principle that the use of the term
violation throughout the civil penalties
section should be read consistently. The court thus held that because
violations are textually linked to
accounts in both the willful penalty provisions and the reasonable cause provision, the use of
violation in
the non-willful maximum penalty should be read similarly, compelling the per-account interpretation.
The interpretive split between the Fifth Circuit and Ninth Circuit is also reflected in decisions of U.S.
district courts outside those circuits. District courts i
n New Jersey and Connecticut have adopted the per-
form view, while two district
courts i
n Florida have adopted the per-account approach.
Supreme Court Review and Considerations for Congress
Bittner
filed a petition for a writ of certiorari with the Supreme Court. Th
e Chamber of Commerce of the
United States, th
e American College of Tax Counsel, and t
he Center for Taxpayer Rights filed amicus
briefs in support of Bittner’s petition. Together, these filings emphasize the distinct circuit split, potential
discouragement of voluntary compliance, the settlement pressure imposed by large potential penalties,
alleged conflicts between the IRS’s current position and previous IRS publications, and the alleged
arbitrariness of leveraging penalties based on the number of foreign accounts disconnected from the
amount of funds within those accounts. In response, the Solicitor General al
so urged the Court to accept
the case, arguing that the circuit split should be resolved in favor of the per-account interpretation.
On June 21, 2022, the Supreme Court
granted Bittner’s petition. While the Court is expected to hear the
case in the October 2022 term, Congress could intervene in the interpretative dispute by amending the
B
SA provisions at issue to clearly adopt a per-form or a per-account maximum penalty. No such bill has
been proposed. The proposed Stop Tax Havens Abuse Act, introduced in th
e House and Senate, includes
an unrelated alteration that would affect the calculation of account balances when used to determine
maximum penalties for willful violations.
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Author Information
Alexander H. Pepper
Legislative Attorney
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