This assessment was upheld by the High Court in 2010 and Russell failed to overturn it when he took the case to the Court of Appeal in 2012.
Russell's original tax bill was around $5 million, but penalties and compound interest over 25 years inflated it to $138 million at the time of his High Court case and in excess of $177 million when he went to the Court of Appeal.
The IRD issued a demand for $367 million last year and then sought summary judgemnt in the High Court at Auckland for this amount.
The IRD's application was heard last month, with the department saying Russell had not paid the amount demanded and had no defence to the claim.
Russell's lawyer, on the other hand, submitted that his client had offered to pay the debt through installments at $1000 a week for the rest of his life. The IRD rejected this proposal, which Russell said was irrational.
Russell has also filed for a judicial review of this rejection of the installment-proposal.
In his decision released this week, Associate Judge Jeremy Doogue said the entry of summary judgment would not create any difficulty for this judicial review bid.
Even so, the judge said Russell's prospect of success in this application "are not great".
In concluding, Associate Judge Doogue said there were no grounds to decline granting the judgment and made it in favour of the IRD for $367 million.
According to Russell's lawyer yesterday, his client's tax debt had since ballooned to more than $400 million.