United States v. Toth

U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit
United States v. Toth, 33 F.4th 1 (1st Cir. 2022)

United States v. Toth

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals For the First Circuit

No. 21-1009

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

Appellee,

v.

MONICA TOTH,

Defendant, Appellant.

APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

[Hon. Allison D. Burroughs, U.S. District Judge]

Before

Barron, Chief Judge, Lynch and Lipez, Circuit Judges.

Jeffrey P. Wiesner, with whom Jennifer McKinnon and Wiesner McKinnon LLP were on brief, for appellant. Jennifer M. Rubin, Tax Division, Department of Justice, with whom David A. Hubbert, Acting Assistant Attorney General, Francesca Ugolini, Tax Division, Department of Justice, and Bruce R. Ellisen, Tax Division, Department of Justice, were on brief, for appellee.

April 29, 2022 BARRON, Chief Judge. In 2013, the U.S. Internal Revenue

Service ("IRS") ordered the imposition of a penalty of over

$2 million against Monica Toth for willfully failing to report her

Swiss bank account in violation of the Bank Secrecy Act ("Act").

See

31 U.S.C. § 5314

(a). Toth contested the penalty and refused

to pay it. The government filed this suit in the U.S. District

Court for the District of Massachusetts to obtain a judgment

against Toth for the full amount of the penalty and then moved for

summary judgment against Toth. The District Court ruled for the

government on that motion, and Toth now appeals. We affirm.

I.

Congress passed the Act in 1970 to curb the use of

foreign bank accounts to evade taxes. See Cal. Bankers Ass'n v.

Shultz,

416 U.S. 21, 28-30

(1974). The Act requires U.S. residents

and citizens to file reports and keep records of certain

relationships with foreign financial agencies.

31 U.S.C. § 5314

(a).

U.S. Department of Treasury ("Treasury") regulations

promulgated to implement the Act require an individual to file a

Report of Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts ("FBAR") with the

IRS for each calendar year that individual has more than $10,000

in a foreign bank account.

31 C.F.R. §§ 1010.350

(a), 1010.306(c).

If an individual fails to file an FBAR, the Act authorizes the IRS

to impose a civil penalty of up to $10,000 for each violation.

- 2 -

31 U.S.C. § 5321

(a)(5)(B). If an individual "willfully" fails to

file an FBAR, the permissible maximum penalty that the statute

authorizes increases to the greater of either $100,000 or

50 percent of the value in the account at the time of the

violation.

Id.

§ 5321(a)(5)(C)-(D).

Toth is a U.S. citizen who, since 1999, has had a foreign

bank account with the Union Bank of Switzerland ("UBS"). Toth was

subject to the Act's special reporting requirements for that

account for at least the years 2005-2009, as in each of those years

the account had at least $10,000 in it.

Toth first filed an FBAR disclosing her Swiss UBS account

to the IRS in 2010. The next year, the IRS audited Toth. The

audit revealed that Toth had failed to comply with the Act's

reporting requirements prior to 2010, and the IRS filed the

delinquent FBAR forms on her behalf for the relevant period (2005-

2009).1 At the end of the investigation, the IRS concluded that

Toth's failure to file an FBAR had been willful for the 2007

calendar year. The IRS assessed a civil penalty against Toth, in

consequence of her failure to file the requisite form, of

$2,173,703, which, being half the value of her Swiss UBS account

1 Toth contends that she attempted to file the necessary FBARs for this period in 2010 prior the audit. The forms, however, were sent to the wrong agency such that the IRS never had a record of them prior the IRS audit.

- 3 - at the time of the violation, was the maximum allowable penalty

set forth in the Act, see id. § 5321(a)(5)(C)-(D).2

Toth did not pay this penalty. The government then filed

a civil suit against Toth in the District of Massachusetts on

September 16, 2015, for a judgment imposing the full penalty that

the IRS had assessed against her, as well as interest and late

fees. Two different process servers attempted unsuccessfully to

serve Toth personally. The government completed service by leaving

a copy of the complaint at her residence on January 11, 2016, as

permitted by Massachusetts Rule of Civil Procedure 4(d)(1) and

Federal Rule of Civil Procedure ("Rule") 4(e)(1).3

A couple of weeks later, on February 5, 2016, the

government moved for a default judgment against Toth on the ground

that she had failed timely to answer the complaint.4 The District

Court granted the government's motion and issued a notice of

default on February 9, 2016.

Shortly thereafter, Toth began to respond to the

government's filings. She opposed the government's motion for

2 The IRS also found, as part of that audit, that Toth had an outstanding tax liability and assessed against her a tax penalty for tax fraud. 3 Another copy of the complaint was sent to Toth via certified mail on January 14, 2016. 4 Toth was required to answer the complaint by February 1, 2016.

- 4 - default judgment on April 28, 2016, and the following day the

District Court held a hearing to discuss Toth's opposition to the

government's already granted motion.

At that hearing, the District Court made clear that it

was willing to reconsider the default but only if Toth either

"g[o]t a lawyer or . . . start[ed] showing up in court to defend

it." And, when Toth explained that she had not responded to the

government's complaint because she "didn't know what it was" and

that the law is "a world that . . .[she] d[oes]n't know about,"

the District Court strongly encouraged Toth to hire a lawyer,

worked with the government to provide Toth with a non-compulsory

list of lawyers she could hire, and granted Toth a 30-day

continuance to retain counsel. Following the hearing, Toth moved

to set aside the default judgment, but she did not hire a lawyer.

The District Court granted Toth's motion to set aside

the default judgment on August 17, 2016. The District Court ruled

that "this action should proceed on the merits" due to "the

circumstances, which include a pro se plaintiff, a potential

judgment of over $2 million and a dispute about service and actual

notice of the case."

A little less than two months later, on October 13, 2016,

Toth moved to dismiss the complaint under Rules 12(b)(4)

and 12(b)(5) for untimely service of process, Rule 12(b)(2) for

lack of personal jurisdiction, and Rule 12(b)(6) for failure to

- 5 - state a claim. The District Court denied Toth's motion on all

three grounds. United States v. Toth (Toth I), No. 15-CV-13367,

2017 WL 1703936

, at *1 (D. Mass. May 2, 2017).

Toth filed her answer to the complaint after the District

Court denied Toth's motion to dismiss. The case then proceeded to

discovery.

At a scheduling conference to set deadlines for

discovery, the District Court noted that Toth had failed to confer

with the government's counsel as required by Rule 26(f). In

response to Toth's expression of confusion as to what initial

disclosures were, the District Court once again urged Toth to hire

a lawyer.

By January 2018, Toth had missed two deadlines for

responding to discovery requests and amending her initial

disclosures set by the District Court. By that time, the

government also had both moved to compel discovery twice and sought

sanctions pursuant to Rule 37. The District Court ordered Toth to

comply with the government's discovery requests and, as a sanction

for having failed to have done so previously, forbade her from

raising any non-privilege-based objections in her responses.

The government then again moved for sanctions against

Toth on March 9, 2018, on the ground that, as of February 9th,

Toth had failed to respond to the government's discovery requests.

- 6 - The District Court refrained from ruling on the motion until it

heard from the parties at a hearing scheduled for March 12th.

At that hearing, Toth provided the government with her

amended initial disclosures as well as her responses to the

government's discovery requests. The government in July

nonetheless moved once more for sanctions against Toth on the

ground that her responses were inadequate and noncompliant with

the District Court's prior order imposing sanctions.

Toth did not oppose the government's motion, and the

District Court ordered Toth to "show cause as to why these

sanctions should not be imposed." The District Court noted "the

gravity of the proposed sanctions," which included a finding of

fact necessary for the government to impose the more than

$2 million penalty against Toth -- namely, that Toth had violated

the Act's reporting requirements willfully in 2007. See

31 U.S.C. § 5321

(a)(5)(C).

Toth then filed four responses on September 10, 2018,

September 14, 2018, September 25, 2018, and October 12, 2018. One

of the responses disputed the government's characterization of her

conduct during discovery. The three other responses disputed that

she had willfully violated the Act.

On October 15, 2018, the District Court granted the

government's motion for sanctions under Rule 37. United States v.

Toth (Toth II), No. 15-CV-13367,

2018 WL 4963172

, at *5 (D. Mass.

- 7 - Oct. 15, 2018). The District Court ordered as the sanction that

several facts be "taken as established," including that Toth

violated the Act willfully.

Id. at *5-6

. The District Court

recognized that the order imposed a "strong sanction[],"

id. at *5

, but explained that it was necessary due to Toth's "severe,

repeated, and deliberate" "violations of the [District] Court's

discovery orders" that amounted to "a pattern of stonewalling,"

id. at *4

.

Discovery continued, and Toth -- after having then hired

a lawyer -- produced documents that she had not previously

disclosed. Toth moved to vacate the sanctions order on March 15,

2019. The District Court refused to do so. United States v. Toth

(Toth III), No. 15-CV-13367,

2019 WL 7039627

, at *1, *2 (D. Mass.

Dec. 20, 2019).

The government moved for summary judgment, which the

District Court granted on September 16, 2020. United States v.

Toth (Toth IV), No. 15-CV-13367,

2020 WL 5549111

(D. Mass. Sept.

16, 2020). The District Court in its opinion so ruling reaffirmed

its prior determination that Toth's violation of the Act had been

willful.

Id.

at *5-*6; see also

31 U.S.C. § 5321

(a)(5).

The District Court then turned to the defenses that Toth

had raised in response to the motion for summary judgment with

respect to the size of the penalty that the IRS sought to impose

through the suit. These defenses were based on a Treasury

- 8 - regulation and the U.S. Constitution's Excessive Fines and Due

Process Clauses.

Id. at *6-9

. The District Court rejected each

contention, and, having found as a matter of law that Toth had

willfully failed to report her Swiss UBS account in 2007 and that

the IRS did not err in assessing a penalty equal to the statutory

maximum in this case, entered a judgment against Toth for

$2,173,703.00 for Toth's willful failure to timely file an FBAR

for the 2007 calendar year, $826,469.56 in late fees, and

$137,925.92 in interest.

Id. at *9

. Toth filed this timely

appeal.

II.

We first consider Toth's challenge to the District

Court's denial of her motion to dismiss the government's suit for

lack of personal jurisdiction based on Rules 12(b)(4) and 12(b)(5).

See Precision Etchings & Findings, Inc. v. LGP Gem, Ltd.,

953 F.2d 21, 23

(1st Cir. 1992). We conclude that the challenge is without

merit.

The government filed the complaint in this case on

September 16, 2015. Rule 4(m) required at that time that a

defendant be served with a summons within 120 days of the filing

of the complaint. A new version of Rule 4(m) took effect, however,

on December 1, 2015, which was before the government had completed

service on Toth. That new version shortens the time for completing

service from what it had been -- 120 days -- to 90 days. Proposed

- 9 - Amendments to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure,

305 F.R.D. 457

, 463 (U.S. 2015). It also applies to "all proceedings in civil

cases . . . commenced [after December 1, 2015] and, insofar as

just and practicable, all proceedings then pending."

Id. at 460

.

The parties agree that the government served Toth

118 days after it filed its complaint. They thus agree that the

government served her with process within the 120-day deadline set

by the old version of Rule 4(m) but after the 90-day deadline set

by the new version. For that reason, they also agree that the

service was effective only if it would not be "just and

practicable" to apply the new version of Rule 4(m) to Toth's case,

such that the old version of the rule (with its longer, 120-day

deadline) applies.

The parties agree that our review is de novo. See United

States v. Mojica-Rivera,

435 F.3d 28, 31-32

(1st Cir. 2006).

Assuming that is the case, we discern no error by the District

Court, even under that standard of review.

The District Court made no explicit finding as to whether

it would be "just and practicable" to apply the 90-day deadline

(instead of the 120-day deadline) to this case. But, the District

Court did find that Toth "knew [the government's process server]

was attempting to serve her with legal process and . . . made a

deliberate effort to avoid service." Toth II,

2018 WL 4963172

- 10 - at *1;5 cf. Ruiz Varela v. Sanchez Velez,

814 F.2d 821, 823

(1st

Cir. 1987) (holding, in a case concerning Rule 4(m), that

"[e]vasion of service by a putative defendant constitutes good

cause" for extending the deadline for completing service). Indeed,

the record supportably shows that Toth did so before the 90-day

period itself had run. And, the government had made this point in

its opposition to Toth's motion to dismiss, in which she made the

same argument that she makes to us regarding the "just and

practicable" standard.

Thus, the record leads us to conclude that the District

Court premised its decision not to apply the 90-day deadline on

the implicit determination that it would not be "just and

practicable" to apply that deadline in this case because doing so

would reward deliberate attempts to evade earlier service. Cf.

United States v. Rodriguez,

14 F.3d 45

(1st Cir. 1993) (unpublished

table decision) (affirming the district court's "implicit finding

that [the] appellant's son [in that case] was 'residing' in her

house for the purposes of" determining whether service of process

Toth takes issue with certain statements the District Court 5

made in a hearing regarding her evasion of service of process. But, she does not challenge on appeal the District Court's finding of fact that she evaded service of process as premised on these misstatements. Toth instead relies on these misstatements by the District Court regarding the government's attempts to serve her to contend that the government was affirmatively misleading the District Court in its motion requesting sanctions. We address that contention when we consider Toth's challenge to the District Court's order imposing sanctions against her.

- 11 - satisfied Rule 4(d)'s requirements). And, we see no basis for

concluding that the District Court erred in making that

determination. See Hinton v. Va. Union Univ.,

185 F. Supp. 3d 807, 843

(E.D. Va. 2016) ("As a general matter, . . . it is unjust

to expect parties to abide by deadline-setting rules that were not

in effect when the clock began ticking on a particular activity.");

Freeman v. United States,

166 F. Supp. 3d 215, 218

(D. Conn. 2016)

(applying the 120-day version of Rule 4(m) rather than the 90-day

version); Vela v. City of Austin, No. 1-15-CV-1015,

2016 WL 1583676

, at *3 (W.D. Tex. Apr. 19, 2016) (same); Cankat v. Cafe

Iguana, Inc., No. 15-CV-5219,

2016 WL 1383490

, at *1 n.1 (E.D.N.Y.

Apr. 7, 2016) (same). Indeed, we note, that as of December 1,

2015, there would have only been 14 days left on the clock for the

government to complete service under the new version of that rule.

Cf. Mojica-Rivera,

435 F.3d at 33

(considering the amount of time

the party would have to file the motion if an amendment to the

Federal Rules of Civil Procedure that shortened the window in which

a party could file a motion was operative to determine whether it

was "just and practicable" to implement that new deadline).

III.

Toth's next challenge is to the grant of summary judgment

against her and depends on her contention that the District Court's

order sanctioning her under Rule 37(a)(2)(A) for discovery

- 12 - violations was unwarranted. That order required "the following

facts to be taken as established:

1. Defendant had legal control over, and the legal authority to direct the disposition of the funds in, the Account (and any sub- accounts), by investing the funds, withdrawing the funds, and/or transferring the funds to third-parties, between the date the Account was opened and at least December 31, 2008.

2. Should the United States establish that Defendant is liable for the penalty alleged in the complaint, for the purposes of calculating the amount of such penalty, the Account (and any sub-accounts) contained $4,347,407 as of the penalty-calculation date.

3. Defendant had a legal obligation to timely file an FBAR regarding the Account in each calendar year that the Account was open, including with regard to calendar year 2007.

4. Defendant willfully failed to file an FBAR regarding the Account with respect to calendar year 2007.

Toth II,

2018 WL 4963172

at *5-6.6

In entering summary judgment against Toth, the District

Court relied on the facts -- including the fact that Toth

"willfully failed to file an FBAR regarding the [Swiss UBS] account

6 Toth also appealed the District Court's decision to deny her motion to vacate sanctions, which the District Court treated as a motion to reconsider. Toth, however, makes no distinct arguments challenging that decision by the District Court, and so we find any arguments to that effect waived. See United States v. Zannino,

895 F.2d 1, 17

(1st Cir. 1990) ("[A] litigant has an obligation to spell out its arguments squarely and distinctly, or else forever hold its peace." (quoting Rivera–Gomez v. de Castro,

843 F.2d 631, 635

(1st Cir. 1988))).

- 13 - with respect to calendar year 2007" -- that the sanctions order

required to be taken as having been established. Thus, the summary

judgment ruling against her cannot stand if the sanctions order

cannot. But, as we will explain, we do not agree with Toth that

the District Court abused its discretion in imposing the sanction

-- severe though it was.

A.

Toth focuses in challenging the sanctions order on the

District Court's decision to require that it be taken as an

established fact that she "willfully failed to file an FBAR" for

the 2007 calendar year. She argues that this requirement was a

particularly harsh sanction because, she contends, it "was

tantamount to a default judgment," in that it precluded her from

denying that she willfully failed to file an FBAR for the 2007

calendar year. She then argues that the sanction, given that

feature of it, was "extreme [and] unwarranted" because her conduct

was far less "severe, repeated and deliberate" than the District

Court found.

We review the District Court's "choice of sanction"

under Rule 37 "for abuse of discretion." AngioDynamics, Inc. v.

Biolitec AG,

780 F.3d 429, 435

(1st Cir. 2015). We consider both

the substantive and the procedural factors that caused the District

Court to impose the sanction. Vallejo v. Santini-Padilla,

607 F.3d 1, 8

(1st Cir. 2010). Substantive factors can include "the

- 14 - severity of the violation, the legitimacy of the party's excuse,

repetition of violations, the deliberateness . . . of the

misconduct, mitigating excuses, prejudice to the other side and to

the operations of the court, and the adequacy of lesser sanctions."

Robson v. Hallenbeck,

81 F.3d 1, 2

(1st Cir. 1996). Procedural

ones can include "whether the offending party was given sufficient

notice and opportunity to explain its noncompliance or argue for

a lesser penalty." Malloy v. WM Specialty Mortg.,

512 F.3d 23, 26

(1st Cir. 2008) (per curium). We see no abuse of discretion.

B.

The District Court based the sanction on the finding

that Toth's "persistent violations of the Court’s discovery

orders" were "severe, repeated, and deliberate." Toth II,

2018 WL 4963172

at *4. The District Court acknowledged that Toth was

proceeding pro se but explained that it "ha[d] been very

accommodating to [Toth], affording her numerous extensions, ample

notice, and many opportunities to explain herself."

Id.

The

District Court emphasized that it had "attempted warnings and

lesser sanctions to no avail."

Id. at *5

. The District Court

then concluded that, in light of Toth's "pattern of stonewalling

this litigation, including not meeting her discovery obligations

despite numerous chances to do so,"

id. at *4

, it saw "no effective

option[] other than" to "tak[e] as established the four facts

identified,"

id. at *5

.

- 15 - The record supportably shows that Toth failed from the

outset to respond to the government's discovery requests and

repeatedly missed deadlines for doing so set by the District

Court.7 Hooper-Haas v. Ziegler Holdings, LLC,

690 F.3d 34, 37

(1st

Cir. 2012) ("We have said . . . that a party who flouts a court

order does so at its own peril."). Specifically, Toth did not

respond to the government's discovery requests until March 12,

2018 -- just nine days before discovery overall was scheduled to

end and three months after the District Court had ordered Toth to

respond to the government's discovery requests. Moreover, Toth

did not amend her initial disclosures to conform with the Federal

Rules until March 12, 2018, even though the District Court set

October 6, 2017, as the deadline by which Toth was required to

serve the government with her initial disclosures and had ordered

Toth to amend her initial disclosures one month later.8 Toth II,

2018 WL 4963172

, at *3-4.

7 For example, Toth failed to respond to any of the government's emails and other efforts to communicate with her to satisfy its obligation to confer prior to the scheduling conference. See Fed. R. Civ. Proc. 26(f)(1). 8 On appeal, Toth tries to explain away her failure to timely respond to the government's discovery requests by suggesting that, as a pro se litigant, she was "overwhelmed with 1,200 pages of documents produced by the government." But, she does not explain why she needed to examine the government's documents before producing her own or why she did not seek an extension of time from the District Court to do so.

- 16 - The record also supportably shows that the District

Court repeatedly gave Toth second chances. For example, the

District Court extended the deadline by which she was ordered to

provide discovery and even cautioned the government "to remember

that [Toth] currently represents herself and that her efforts will

be held to a less demanding standard."

Moreover, the record shows that the District Court

repeatedly warned Toth that she could face sanctions if she

continued to fail to meet the court's deadlines, and that the

District Court did not act on those warnings until three months

had passed in which Toth had failed to amend her initial

disclosures or respond to the government's discovery requests. On

January 19, 2017, for example, the District Court imposed its first

set of sanctions against Toth, "prohibiting her from withholding

documents or information based on non-privilege objections." Toth

II,

2018 WL 4963172

, at *4. Toth was also warned that "[i]f [she]

fail[ed] to comply," the District Court "may enter strong sanctions

against her, including, but not limited to, . . . accepting

certain facts as established, including that [she] acted

'willfully' when she failed to file an FBAR" and "entering a

default against [her]."

Nevertheless, the record shows, Toth continued to fail

to meet the District Court's deadlines. It further shows that

when she did eventually serve her initial discovery responses on

- 17 - March 12, 2017, her production consisted of just three single-page

documents -- a copy of her college transcript, a copy of an

envelope mailed to her by the District Court, and a Notice of

Electronic Filing generated in this case -- and were replete with

non-privilege-based objections in direct violation of the District

Court's earlier sanction against her.9

Thus, we cannot say that the District Court was mistaken

in its characterization of Toth's discovery violations as

"persistent." Toth II,

2018 WL 4963172

at *4. Nor can we say

9 On appeal, Toth disputes the District Court's characterization of her initial response to the government's discovery requests as "facially deficient." She points out that in total, "her responses comprised 28 single-spaced pages and included a one-and-a-half-page table of contents with a key to identify the documents referenced in her responses." But, the District Court's conclusion that she withheld documents and produced a facially deficient response was premised primarily on the fact that "[h]er document production consisted of just three single-page documents, her responses to the [g]overnment's requests for production and interrogatories disregarded the [District] Court's sanction precluding [Toth] from withholding documents based on non-privilege objections, and her amended initial disclosures failed to comply with Rule 26." Toth II,

2018 WL 4963172

, at *8. Toth herself does not dispute the District Court's finding that her amended initial disclosures were non-compliant. Further, she admits that her interrogatories contained objections. And, finally, she does not dispute that her document production consisted of just three single-page documents; rather she seeks to excuse this by insisting that she did not withhold documents because "the government's document requests sought documents that had been either destroyed or lost over the years." (quotation omitted). But, after the "willfulness" sanction was imposed, Toth produced documents that had previously not been disclosed.

- 18 - that the District Court abused its discretion in selecting the

sanction it chose. Hooper-Haas,

690 F.3d at 37

("A court faced

with a disobedient litigant has wide latitude to choose from among

an armamentarium of available sanctions."). The record shows that

the discovery violations continued despite the District Court's

imposition of lesser sanctions against Toth and warnings that if

Toth continued to fail to comply with its discovery orders, she

could be sanctioned severely, including by requiring that it be

taken as established that she willfully failed to file her 2007

FBAR. See Remexcel Managerial Consultants, Inc. v. Arlequin,

583 F.3d 45, 51

(1st Cir. 2009) (noting that a severe discovery

sanction "provides a useful remedy when a litigant is confronted

by an obstructionist adversary and plays a constructive role in

maintaining the orderly and efficient administration of justice."

(quoting KPS & Assocs., Inc. v. Designs by FMC, Inc.,

318 F.3d 1

,

13 (1st Cir. 2003))).

The sanction did take one of Toth's primary defenses off

the table -- that she did not willfully violate the Act. But, she

still had her other arguments, which she advances on appeal,

including her regulatory and constitutional challenges. Thus, we

agree with the District Court that the sanction at issue does not

rise to the level of a default judgment. Toth II,

2018 WL 4963172

,

at *5; cf. Chilcutt v. United States,

4 F.3d 1313, 1320

(5th Cir.

1993) (finding that a sanction "was a far cry from a default

- 19 - judgment" when the defendant was still able to present the

affirmative defense of comparative negligence).

Moreover, the District Court gave Toth an opportunity to

explain why this sanction was inappropriate. In fact, the District

Court gave Toth an extended deadline to do so after Toth initially

failed to timely respond to the government's motion seeking the

imposition of the sanctions at issue here.

For these reasons, we reject Toth's contention that the

District Court abused its discretion when it ordered that it was

established for the purposes of this litigation that Toth's failure

to file an FBAR in 2007 was willful. And, in consequence, we

conclude, reviewing de novo, that there is "no genuine issue as to

any material fact" with respect to whether Toth willfully failed

to file an FBAR for the 2007 calendar year and affirm the District

Court's grant of summary judgment on that issue. Lawless v.

Steward Health Care Sys., LLC,

894 F.3d 9, 21

(1st Cir. 2018)

(quoting McKenney v. Mangino,

873 F.3d 75, 80

(1st Cir. 2017)).

IV.

Toth also challenges the District Court's grant of

summary judgment to the government with respect to the amount of

the penalty that was imposed against her. Toth first points to a

Treasury regulation that she contends precludes a penalty of that

amount from having been imposed. Finding no merit to that

- 20 - contention, we then also address her constitutionally based

challenges to the amount of the penalty that was imposed.

A.

Toth contends that, even though the more than $2 million

penalty that the IRS assessed against her for her willful failure

to file an FBAR for the year 2007 is permitted by statute, see

31 U.S.C. § 5321

(a)(5)(C)(i)(II), (a)(5)(D)(ii), the penalty is still

unauthorized. That is so, she contends, because the amount of the

penalty exceeds the amount that the IRS may impose as a penalty

under a regulation that the Treasury promulgated in 1987.

The regulation in question is

31 C.F.R. § 1010.820

(g)(2)

(2012), and Toth is right that it states that the maximum penalty

that may be imposed for a willful failure to file in FBAR is

$100,000. The question, though, is whether that regulation remains

operative in the face of the statutory changes regarding the

maximum penalty that were made after the regulation's issuance.

Toth contends that the 1987 regulation does remain

operative and that it therefore places a ceiling on the penalty

that may be imposed that is much lower than the statutory maximum

that Congress set by statute after the regulation was promulgated.

For that reason, she contends, the penalty at issue is unauthorized

because an agency is required to follow its own regulations, see

Accardi v. Shaughnessy,

347 U.S. 260, 267

(1954).

- 21 - We do not agree. Rather, reviewing de novo, see

Rideout v. Gardner,

838 F.3d 65, 71

(1st Cir. 2016), we conclude,

like every other circuit to have considered this issue, see United

States v. Kahn,

5 F.4th 167, 175

(2d Cir. 2021); United States v.

Horowitz,

978 F.3d 80, 90-91

(4th Cir. 2020); United States v.

Rum,

995 F.3d 882, 892

(11th Cir. 2021); Norman v. United States,

942 F.3d 1111, 1117

(Fed. Cir. 2019), that the regulation in

question does not limit the IRS's ability to impose the statutory

maximum penalty against Toth because the statutory amendments that

increased the maximum amount for a civil penalty for a willful

failure to file an FBAR from the $100,000 amount to the present

one superseded the regulation.

At the time that the regulation was promulgated, in 1987,

the maximum penalty under the statute for a willful failure to

file an FBAR was $100,000.

31 U.S.C. § 5321

(a)(5) (1987). That

amount, of course, is the precise amount that the 1987 regulation

at issue itself identified as the maximum.

31 C.F.R. § 1010.820

(g)(2) (1987); see also Rum,

995 F.3d at 892

(noting

that the regulation "mirrored the language of the statute at that

time"); United States v. Garrity, No. 3:15-cv-243,

2019 WL 1004584

,

*1-2 (D. Conn. Feb. 28, 2019) (same).

In addition, the regulation was promulgated pursuant to

a grant of statutory authority that did not -- at least in any

clear way -- confer the power on the Treasury to establish a

- 22 - ceiling on the maximum penalty that would be lower than the maximum

penalty allowed by statute. See also Kahn,

5 F.4th at 175-76

(finding that "[n]othing in [the] language [of § 5321] authorizes

the Secretary to promulgate a rule that would nullify a statutory

provision that was deemed necessary by Congress"); Norman,

942 F.3d at 1117-18

(concluding the same). The regulation was

promulgated instead pursuant to

31 U.S.C. § 5314

(b)(5), which is

merely a general grant of authority that provides that Treasury

"may prescribe[]" regulations "necessary to carry out" the Act's

reporting requirements for foreign accounts.

Indeed, there is no statutory provision that expressly

confers on the Treasury the authority to impose a maximum penalty

by regulation that is lower than the one set by statute. By

contrast, there is a provision -- § 5314(b)(3) -- that expressly

confers the authority on Treasury to set by regulation the maximum

size of the transactions that must be reported under the Act.

31 U.S.C. § 5314

(b)(3) (permitting the Treasury to set through

regulation "the magnitude of transactions subject to a requirement

or a regulation under" the Act); see also Garrity,

2019 WL 1004584

,

at *3 (noting that "where Congress intended in the [Act] to rely

on [Treasury] first to flesh out the clear statutory scheme by

regulation, it made that intention clear" and did not do so with

respect to the size of the maximum civil penalty under

§ 5321(a)(5)(C)-(D)).

- 23 - Finally, and as we have noted, the regulation was

promulgated as an interpretive rule. Compare Amendments to

Implementing Regulations; the Bank Secrecy Act,

51 Fed. Reg. 30233

,

30236 (proposed Aug. 25, 1986) (proposing § 103.47(a)-(b), which

caps the maximum penalty for a willful violation of § 5321(a)(5)

by a financial institution to $10,000), with Amendments to

Implementing Regulations Under the Bank Secrecy Act,

52 Fed. Reg. 11436

, 11446 (Apr. 8, 1987) (containing § 103.47(g)(2), which

states that "for any willful violation committed after October 27,

1986" -- the date the Act was amended -- "the Secretary [of the

Treasury] may assess upon any person," "in the case of a

violation . . . involving a failure to report the existence of an

account" "a civil penalty not to exceed the greater of the amount

(not to exceed $100,000) equal to the balance in the account at

the time of the violation or $25,000"); see also Kahn,

5 F.4th at 176-77

(describing the history of the 1987 rule). As such, it is

properly understood to have been clarifying rather than

substantive, which points against the notion that it purported to

set a ceiling on the amount of the penalty different from the one

that Congress had set. See La Casa Del Convaleciente v. Sullivan,

965 F.2d 1175, 1178

(1st Cir. 1992) ("[A]n interpretive rule is

merely a clarification or explanation of an existing statute or

rule and . . . creates no new law and has no effect beyond the

- 24 - statute." (quotation omitted)); Hoctor v. U.S. Dep't of Agric.,

82 F.3d 165, 169

(7th Cir. 1996).

In sum, neither the amount of the maximum penalty

identified in the regulation, nor the statute authorizing the

promulgation of the regulation, nor the means of its promulgation

suggests that the Treasury intended the regulation to set a ceiling

on the penalty that would apply even if the statute that set the

maximum penalty at the time of the regulation's issuance was

amended to raise it. Rather, the text of the regulation, the

statute authorizing its promulgation, and the means of its

promulgation each accords with an understanding that the Treasury

intended the regulation merely to parrot the maximum amount for

the penalty that Congress had set at the time that the regulation

was promulgated. See also Kahn,

5 F.4th at 177

(characterizing

the 1987 regulation as a "parroting regulation"); cf. United States

v. Vogel Fertilizer Co.,

455 U.S. 16, 26

(1982) (noting that the

Supreme Court "has firmly rejected the suggestion that a regulation

is to be sustained simply because it is not 'technically

inconsistent' with the statutory language, when that regulation is

fundamentally at odds with the manifest congressional design"

(quoting United States v. Cartwright,

411 U.S. 546, 557

(1973)));

Norman,

942 F.3d at 1118

("It is well settled that subsequently

enacted or amended statutes supersede prior inconsistent

regulations.").

- 25 - Moreover, the regulation's history supports the same

conclusion. See also Kahn,

5 F.4th at 176-77

(reviewing the

history of the 1987 regulation at issue here). In 1986, the

Treasury initiated rulemaking to update the regulations

implementing the Act. See Amendments to Implementing Regulations,

51 Fed. Reg. at 30233. Two years earlier, Congress had increased

the civil penalties that applied to violations of recordkeeping

requirements of the Act committed by financial institutions from

$1,000 to $10,000, see Pub. L. 98–473 § 901(a),

98 Stat. 1837

,

2135 (1984), and the proposed rules contained a regulation that

reflected that change, see Amendments to Implementing Regulations,

51 Fed. Reg. at 30236.

But, before the Treasury published the final rule

responding to those statutory developments, Congress amended

§ 5321(a)(5)'s maximum penalties once more. This time, though,

the amendments enabled the Treasury to impose a civil penalty up

to "the amount (not to exceed $100,000) equal to the balance in

the account at the time of the violation" or $25,000 against any

person who willfully failed to report the existence of a foreign

account in violation of the Act.

31 U.S.C. § 5321

(a)(5)(A)-(B)

(1987). As a consequence, the Treasury adjusted the part of the

rule regarding civil penalties to reflect that newly enabled

$100,000 maximum civil penalty. In fact, the Treasury even

explained in the final rules, published in 1987, that the "maximum

- 26 - penalty" provided for in the rule "reflect[ed] [the] civil

penalties applicable to . . . violations after October 1986 under

the Anti-Drug Abuse Act of 1986." Amendments to Implementing

Regulations Under the Bank Secrecy Act, 52 Fed. Reg. at 11440

(emphasis added).

Thus, when Congress amended § 5321(a)(5)(C)-(D) to

permit the IRS to impose a penalty in excess of $100,000, the 1987

regulation was superseded because the regulation -- as merely a

regulation parroting a then-operative statutory maximum -- could

have no effect once a new statutory maximum had been set. Cf.

Gonzalez v. Oregon,

546 U.S. 243, 257

(2006) ("[T]he existence of

a parroting regulation" that "merely . . . paraphrase[s] the

statutory language" "does not change the fact that the question

here is not the meaning of the regulation but the meaning of the

statute."). True, the regulation does not expressly state that it

would have no effect in the event Congress set a new statutory

maximum penalty. But, given the parroting nature of the rule, the

regulation's silence on that score cannot fairly be read to reflect

an intent by the Treasury to establish a $100,000 limit for all

time no matter what new maximum Congress might impose by statute.

Cf. United Dominion Indus., Inc. v. United States,

532 U.S. 822, 836

(2001) (refusing to construe a tax regulation that listed

reporting requirements to exclude a reporting item not enumerated

- 27 - when there was "no reason [for the agency] to [have] consider[ed]"

it "at the time the regulation was drawn").

Toth nonetheless contends that there are reasons to

construe the regulation's text to establish a still-controlling

ceiling, notwithstanding the context and history just described.

We are not persuaded.

Toth first points out that the Treasury did not withdraw

or amend the regulation for twelve years after Congress increased

the maximum penalty to exceed the cap set forth in the

regulation -- a period that included the years she failed to report

her Swiss UBS account as well as the IRS's audit of her. But, the

Supreme Court explained when presented with a similar argument

regarding a failure by the Treasury to amend a prior regulation

that the failure "is more likely a reflection of [its] inattention

than any affirmative intention on its part to say anything at

all" -- especially in light of the Treasury's "relaxed approach to

amending its regulations to track [legislative] changes." United

Dominion Indus.,

532 U.S. at 836

; cf. Garrity,

2019 WL 1004584

, at

*3 ("[The Treasury] could not override Congress's clear directive

to raise the maximum willful FBAR penalty by declining to act and

relying on a regulation parroting an obsolete version of the

statute."). And, we conclude that, in light of the reasons just

recounted that support an understanding of the 1987 regulation to

- 28 - have merely parroted the then-operative statutory maximum, this

same logic applies equally here.

Toth next argues that the Treasury can be understood to

have reaffirmed its commitment to the $100,000 ceiling based on

other regulations that she purports implement the amended version

of § 5321(a)(5). See

31 C.F.R. § 1010.821

. She contends that

these regulations, which left the regulation imposing the $100,000

maximum in place, show the Treasury's implicit approval of that

maximum. But, the regulations Toth points to are merely

congressionally mandated updates to tables listing statutory

maximum penalties to account for inflation; they do not reflect

any policy assessment about the merits of the new statutory maximum

penalty under § 5321(a)(5). See

28 U.S.C. § 2461

. Moreover, other

regulations that are not statutorily mandated parrot the language

of the new maximum civil penalty under § 5321(a)(5)(C)-(D), which

indicates that the Treasury does not understand itself to be bound

by the $100,000 regulatory "limit." See, e.g., Financial Crimes

Enforcement Network; Amendment to the Bank Secrecy Act

Regulations—Reports of Foreign Financial Accounts,

75 Fed. Reg. 8844

, 8854 (proposed Feb. 26, 2010) (codified at

31 C.F.R. § 1010

).

Finally, Toth relies on two interpretive rules that she

contends are applicable: (1) the rule of lenity, which is a

"longstanding principle" of statutory construction that "demand[s]

resolution of ambiguities in criminal statutes in favor of the

- 29 - defendant," Hughey v. United States,

495 U.S. 411, 422

(1990); and

(2) the canon that "[i]f the words [of a tax statute] are doubtful,

the doubt must be resolved against the government and in favor of

the taxpayer," United States v. Merriam,

263 U.S. 179, 188

(1923).

But, even if we were to assume (contrary to the government's

position) that these canons apply to a regulation implementing

§ 5321 -- which is itself neither a criminal measure nor one that

imposes a tax -- the only question that Toth raises concerns

whether a regulation that was expressly identified as

"reflect[ing]" the terms of statute prior to its amendment is

operative even when it would no longer "reflect[]" the statute's

terms after the amendment. Amendments to Implementing Regulations

Under the Bank Secrecy Act, 52 Fed. Reg. at 11440. We are not

aware of any authority, though, that suggests that the rule of

lenity or the tax canon may be used to resolve a question of such

supersession, especially as she has failed to show that (given the

history we have recounted that underlies the regulation's

promulgation) there is the kind of ambiguity as to that question

that triggers such canons, see, e.g., United States v. Anzalone,

766 F.2d 676, 681

(1st Cir. 1985) (finding an ambiguity created by

a regulation, the validity of which neither party questioned, that

adopted a narrower construction of a statutory provision than the

text of that provision itself would support); see also Kahn,

5 F.4th at 177

(finding that the rule of lenity does not apply to a

- 30 - penalty under § 5321(a)(5)); United States v. Bittner,

19 F.4th 734

, 748 (5th Cir. 2021) (finding that neither the rule of lenity

nor the tax canon applies to a penalty under § 5321(a)(5)). We

thus reject Toth's contention that the Treasury regulation bars

the IRS from imposing a penalty that exceeds $100,000 for her

willful failure to file an FBAR in 2007.10

B.

We turn, then, to Toth's two federal constitutional

grounds for overturning the grant of summary judgment against her,

each of which take aim solely at the amount of the penalty.

Reviewing de novo, Rideout,

838 F.3d at 71

, we find neither ground

for so ruling persuasive.

1.

Toth first contends that the more than $2 million penalty

that she faces for willfully failing to file an FBAR for the 2007

calendar year violates the Excessive Fines Clause of the Eighth

Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. See U.S. Const. amend. VIII

("Excessive bail shall not be required, nor excessive fines

imposed, nor cruel and unusual punishments inflicted." (emphasis

10 We also note that to the extent Toth argues that the disagreement among federal courts as to whether the 1987 regulation is still operative creates an ambiguity that the rule of lenity can resolve, such an argument also fails. See Reno v. Koray,

515 U.S. 50

, 64–65 (1995) ("A statute is not 'ambiguous' for purposes of lenity merely because there is a division of judicial authority over its proper construction." (internal quotation marks omitted)).

- 31 - added)). Only monetary penalties that function as "punishment for

some offense" are encompassed by the Clause. United States v.

Bajakajian,

524 U.S. 321, 327-28

(1998) (quoting Browning–Ferris

Industries of Vt., Inc. v. Kelco Disposal, Inc.,

492 U.S. 257, 265

(1989)). Therefore, the penalty at issue here must qualify, at

least in part, as "punishment" even to implicate the Excessive

Fines Clause.

The Supreme Court explained in Austin v. United States,

509 U.S. 602

(1993), that there is no per se rule that the Excessive

Fines Clause only applies to criminal proceedings.

Id. at 607

.

What matters is whether that penalty, even if only a civil one,

"is punishment."

Id. at 610

. The Court has also explained that

"a civil sanction that cannot fairly be said solely to serve a

remedial purpose, but rather can only be explained as also serving

either retributive or deterrent purposes, is punishment."

Id.

(quoting United States v. Halper,

490 U.S. 435, 448

(1989)).

The Court then applied that logic in Austin to hold that

an in rem civil forfeiture under

21 U.S.C. § 881

(a)(4) and (a)(7),11

imposed following the successful prosecution of the owner of the

11Section 881(a)(1) and (a)(7) provide that "[t]he following shall be subject to forfeiture to the United States and no property right shall exist in them," including "controlled substances which have been manufactured, distributed, dispensed, or acquired" and "real property . . . , which is used, or intended to be used, in any manner or part, to commit, or to facilitate the commission of, a violation of this subchapter punishable by more than one year's imprisonment."

21 U.S.C. § 881

(a)(1), (a)(7).

- 32 - property in question for violating state drug laws, was

"punishment" and thus subject to the limitation imposed by the

Eighth Amendment's Excessive Fines Clause.

Id. at 606, 620

. In

reaching that conclusion, the Court emphasized that the civil

forfeiture at issue could only be imposed following the conviction

of a drug-trafficking crime,

id. at 619-20

, and relied on

legislative history that suggested that Congress enacted the

forfeiture provision because "traditional criminal sanctions of

fine and imprisonment [were] inadequate to deter or punish the

enormously profitable trade in dangerous drugs,"

id. at 620

, rather

than to redress "any damages sustained by society or to the cost

of enforcing the law,"

id. at 621

.

The Court applied that same logic in a subsequent case,

United States v. Bajakajian,

524 U.S. 321

(1998), to find that a

civil forfeiture under a different statutory scheme,

18 U.S.C. § 982

(a)(1),12 also was a "fine" under the Eighth Amendment.

Bajakajian,

524 U.S. at 328

. As the Court explained in Bajakajian,

the in personam forfeiture was "imposed at the culmination of a

At the time Bajakajian was decided, § 982(a)(1) provided 12

that "the court, in imposing sentence on a person convicted of an offense in violation of [

31 U.S.C. § 5316

, which required any individual who transports more than $10,000 out of the United States to report it or face criminal penalties,] shall order that the person forfeit to the United States any property, real or personal, involved in such offense, or any property traceable to such property."

18 U.S.C. § 982

(a)(1) (1998).

- 33 - criminal proceeding,"

id. at 328

, in part, for, what the government

in that case conceded, was the punitive purpose of deterrence,

id.

at 329 & n.4.13

But, unlike the civil forfeitures held to constitute

"punishment" in both Austin and Bajakajian, this civil penalty is

not tied to any criminal sanction. Rather, it was imposed

following an administrative tax audit in which the IRS determined

that Toth had failed to report a foreign bank account. Nor has

the government conceded any punitive purpose.

Moreover, we conclude that, even if those points of

distinction are not themselves dipositive, the civil penalty here

is like the civil forfeitures in One Lot Emerald Cut Stones and

One Ring v. United States,

409 U.S. 232

(1972), Stockwell v. United

States,

80 U.S. 531

(1871), and the other early customs laws that

Bajakajian itself recognized did not constitute punishment for

purposes of the Excessive Fines Clause,

524 U.S. at 342-43

(explaining that the "early monetary forfeitures," such as the

ones discussed Stockwell and One Lot Emerald Cut Stones, "were

13The government also asserted that it had "an overriding sovereign interest in controlling what property leaves and enters the country" and that seizure of money secretly transported out of the country in violation of

31 U.S.C. § 5316

would compensate the government for that informational loss.

Id.

But, given the government's concession that the forfeiture was at least in part punitive, the Court found the deterrent nature of the penalty "sufficient to bring the forfeiture within the purview of the Excessive Fines Clause."

Id.

at 329 n.4.

- 34 - considered not as punishment for an offense, but rather as serving

the remedial purpose of reimbursing the [g]overnment for the losses

accruing from the evasion of customs duties"). And, too, it is

like the civil tax penalties found not to be punishment for Double

Jeopardy purposes in Helvering v. Mitchell,

303 U.S. 391

, 398

(1938), and Excessive Fines purposes in McNichols v. C.I.R.,

13 F.3d 432, 434-435

(1st Cir. 1993) (quoting Helvering, 303 U.S. at

401); see also Thomas v. C.I.R.,

62 F.3d 97, 98

(4th Cir. 1995)

("[T]he Excessive Fines Clause is not implicated, since the

addition to [the] tax[es] [owed] is not a punitive measure.");

United States v. Alt,

83 F.3d 779, 784

(6th Cir. 1996) (same);

Tyler v. Hennepin Cty.,

26 F.4th 789, 794

(8th Cir. 2022); Little

v. C.I.R.,

106 F.3d 1445, 1455

(9th Cir. 1997) (same); Kitt v.

United States,

277 F.3d 1330, 1337

(Fed. Cir. 2002) (same); cf.

United States v. Dunkel,

182 F.3d 923

(7th Cir. 1999) (unpublished

table decision).14

14Toth argues in her reply brief that we should not rely on Double Jeopardy cases in analyzing whether § 5321(a)(5) is "remedial" because Toth suggests that some statutes may be considered "remedial" for Double Jeopardy purposes yet remain subject to the Excessive Fines Clause. But, she has not shown that the two Double Jeopardy cases on which we rely here -- One Emerald Lot Cut Stones and Helvering -- involved statutes that, though remedial for the former purpose, are not for the latter. See Zannino,

895 F.2d at 17

("It is not enough merely to mention a possible argument in the most skeletal way, leaving the court to do counsel's work, create the ossature for the argument, and put flesh on its bones."); see also Villoldo v. Castro Ruz,

821 F.3d 196

, 206 n.5 (1st Cir. 2016) (noting that new arguments cannot be

- 35 - We make that assessment because -- unlike the forfeiture

at issue in Bajakajian, which was ordered notwithstanding that

there "was no fraud on the United States, and [the subject of the

forfeiture] caused no loss to the public fisc,"

id. at 329

,

339 -- here there was such a fraud and loss. Indeed, Congress

authorized the imposition of a penalty of this size for willfully

failing to comply with the Act's reporting requirements to address

the fact that "[i]t has been estimated that hundreds of millions

in tax revenues [were] lost" due to the secret use of foreign

financial accounts -- which Congress characterized as the "largest

single tax loophole permitted by American law," H.R. Rep. No. 91-

975, at 4397-98 (1970), and that it was very difficult for law

enforcement to police the use of these accounts, causing costly

investigations to stretch on for years, id. at 4397.15 Cf.

Bajakajian,

524 U.S. at 343

(explaining that the monetary penalty

at issue in One Lot Emerald Cut Stones was remedial in part because

made for the first time in reply briefs). We note, too, that Bajakajian, in finding the statute there at issue was not "solely" remedial for Excessive Fines purposes, distinguished it from the statute at issue in One Emerald Lot Cut Stones. See Bajakajian,

524 U.S. at 342-43

. 15Similarly, the Senate Report discussing the 2004 amendments to § 5321(a)(5) explains that the impetus for those amendments was that "the number of individuals involved in using offshore bank accounts to engage in abusive tax scams ha[d] grown significantly in recent years" -- underscoring the concern that the secret use of foreign accounts enables individuals to evade taxes. S. Rep. 108-192, at 108 (2003).

- 36 - the penalty was proportioned on the value of the non-reported

goods); One Lot Emerald Cut Stones,

409 U.S. at 237

(holding that

the forfeiture of goods for a failure to pay import duties on them

is a "reasonable form of liquidated damages," as the more expensive

the illegally imported good, the more the government has likely

missed out on revenue); Stockwell,

80 U.S. at 533, 546-47

(finding

that a statutory scheme that permitted the government to impose on

an individual who deals in illegally imported goods a penalty equal

to double the value of those goods was "remedial" because "[t]he

act of abstracting goods illegally imported, receiving,

concealing, or buying them, interposes difficulties in the way of

a government seizure, and impairs, therefore, the value of the

government right" such that "[i]t is . . . hardly accurate to say

that the only loss the government can sustain from concealing the

goods liable to seizure is their single value").16

Of course, the government does have means for recouping

tax losses from undisclosed foreign assets other than imposing a

penalty for a failure to comply with a reporting requirement about

For that reason, too, Toth's argument that the civil penalty 16

assessed against her is a "fine" because, like in Austin, the penalty could be subject to "dramatic variations in the value" fails, Austin,

509 U.S. at 621

. Like in One Lot Emerald Cut Stone, the tax loss to the government is likely to increase the higher the value in the account, see

409 U.S. at 237

. Thus, the fact that the penalty under § 5321(a)(5)(C)(i) is keyed to the amount in the bank account at the time of the violation fails in and of itself to make it a "punishment."

- 37 - the existence of those assets. But, the fact that Congress may

tax a foreign account once it learns of it does not prevent a

penalty assessed under § 5321(a)(5) from being remedial. In that

regard, Helvering and McNichols make clear that a tax penalty for

failing to file taxes can exceed the amount owed in taxes without

thereby constituting punishment. See Helvering, 303 U.S. at 401

(finding that the government could require an individual who had

failed to pay his taxes to both pay the amount owed in taxes that

had not been paid as well as impose a 50 percent penalty for

willfully failing to pay those taxes); McNichols,

13 F.3d at 434

-

36 (same); see also Landa v. United States,

153 Fed. Cl. 585

, 599

(2021) ("Though the FBAR penalty is not an internal-revenue tax,

the Court finds instructive cases involving tax penalties that

address, as does the FBAR penalty, behavior related to financial

accounts."). And, as Congress explained, governmental

investigations into funds hidden abroad "are often delayed or

totally frustrated," in part due to the "time consuming and

ofttimes fruitless [nature of] foreign legal process." H.R. Rep.

No. 91-975, at 4397 (1970). We add only that the frustration of

governmental efforts to recoup what is owed from a foreign account

is likely to be especially effective in the circumstance in which

- 38 - this penalty may be imposed -- namely, when the holder of the

undisclosed foreign account is willfully seeking to hide it.17

Nor are we persuaded by Toth's argument that the fact

that § 5321(a)(5) provides for different maximum penalties

depending on the willfulness of the violation necessarily reveals

that a deterrent or retributive purpose underlies the provision

that authorizes the maximum penalty to be imposed. Compare

31 U.S.C. § 5321

(a)(5)(C)-(D) (permitting the imposition of a civil

penalty not to exceed $100,000 or the value of the bank account at

the time of the violation, whichever is greater, for willful

violations), with

id.

§ 5321(a)(5)(B)(i) (permitting the

imposition of a civil penalty not to exceed $10,000 for non-willful

violations). The "culpability of the owner" in the forfeiture

scheme at issue in Austin did support the determination that it

was a "fine" for Eighth Amendment purposes.

509 U.S. at 621-22

.

But, the petitioner's underlying failure to report income or pay

taxes in McNichols was concededly willful, and there is no

suggestion in our opinion that this fact was sufficient to make it

a "fine" under the Excessive Fines Clause.

13 F.3d at 433-35

; see

Notably,

31 U.S.C. § 5322

(a) and (b), which makes it a 17

criminal offense to willfully commit the same reporting offense under the Act, uses the word "fine" to describe the monetary penalty that could be imposed if an individual is convicted under it, see One Lot Emerald Cut Stones,

409 U.S. at 236

, while there is no such reference to a "fine" in the civil analog that is at issue.

- 39 - also Helvering, 303 U.S. at 399-404 (concluding that a similar

focus on culpability in a provision of the Tax Code that permitted

the imposition of a 50 percent addition to a tax assessment if the

tax evasion was found to be willful was not found by the Supreme

Court to render an otherwise remedial penalty punitive). Toth

develops no argument as to why we should depart from McNichols on

this score.

We also do not see why the existence of a lower penalty

for the same violation when it is not committed willfully in and

of itself makes the higher penalty "punishment." After all,

Congress could choose to permit the government to only recover a

portion of its losses or investigatory costs and the scheme would

be no less remedial. Moreover, the tax scheme at issue in

McNichols provided for a lower 5 percent penalty for a negligent

or intentional, non-fraudulent failure to pay certain taxes, and

the gradient nature of that scheme did not prevent this circuit

from concluding that the 50 percent penalty for tax fraud was

remedial in nature. See McNichols,

13 F.3d at 433-35

(discussing

the penalty assessed against McNichols for tax fraud);

26 C.F.R. § 301.6653-1

(providing for a 5 percent penalty for underpayment

due to negligence or intentional disregard, without intent to

defraud).

Thus, for all these reasons, we conclude that a civil

penalty imposed under § 5321(a)(5)(C)-(D) is not a "fine" and as

- 40 - such the Excessive Fines Clause of the Eighth Amendment does not

apply to it.

2.

Toth bases her final federal constitutional ground for

contending that the grant of summary judgment against her must be

reversed due to the amount of the penalty on the Due Process Clause

of the Fifth Amendment. But, in support of this contention, Toth

cites in her opening brief only to BMW of North America, Inc. v.

Gore,

517 U.S. 559

(1996), which is a case that involves a punitive

penalty imposed by a jury. That choice of argument presents a

problem for Toth because in Sony BMG Music Entertainment v.

Tenenbaum,

719 F.3d 67

(1st Cir. 2013), we held that BMW does not

apply to cases like this one that involve a penalty set by statute.

Id. at 70-71

. Moreover, even though the government contends in

its brief to us that the Sony standard and not the BMW standard

applies, Toth in her reply brief does not attempt to show that her

Fifth Amendment rights were violated under the Sony framework.

Rather, she contends only that Sony is distinguishable, such that

BMW applies here, because a penalty imposed pursuant to § 5321

presents a "peculiar[] . . . circumstance" given that "the FBAR

penalty statute conflicts with the applicable Treasury regulation

concerning the amount of the FBAR penalty."

New arguments, however, may not be made in reply briefs.

See Villoldo,

821 F.3d at 206

n.5. In addition, for reasons that

- 41 - we have explained, the statute does not conflict with the

regulation. We thus conclude that Toth has waived any argument as

to whether the penalty that the IRS assessed against her violates

the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment. See Zannino,

895 F.2d at 17

.

V.

For these reasons, we affirm the judgment of the District

Court.

- 42 -

Reference

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