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Showing posts with label itemized. Show all posts
Showing posts with label itemized. Show all posts

Sunday, October 1, 2023

A Current Individual Tax Audit

 

We have an IRS audit at Galactic Command. It is of a self-employed individual. The self-employeds have maintained a reasonable audit rate, even as other individual audit rates have plummeted in recent years.

I was speaking with the examiner on Friday, lining up submission dates for records and documents. We set tentative dates, but she reminded me that Congress was going into budget talks this weekend.  Depending on the resolution, she might be furloughed next week. No prob, we will play it by ear.

This is a relatively new client for us. We did not prepare the records or the tax returns for the two years under audit. We requested underlying records, but there was little there for the first year and only slightly more for the second. We then did a cash analysis, knowing that the IRS would be doing the same.

COMMENT: The IRS will commonly request all twelve bank statements for a business-related bank account. The examiner adds up the deposits for the twelve months and compares the total to revenues reported on the tax return. If the tax return is higher, the IRS will probably leave the matter alone. If the tax return is lower, however, the IRS will want to know why.

We had a problem with the analysis for the first year: our numbers had no resemblance to the return filed. Our numbers were higher across the board: higher deposits, higher disbursements, higher excess of deposits over disbursements.

Higher by a lot.

The accountant asked me: do you think …?

Nope, not for a moment.

Implicit here is fraud.

There are two types of tax fraud: civil and criminal. Yes, I get it: if you have criminal, you are virtually certain to have civil, but that is not our point. Our point is that there is no statute of limitations on civil fraud. The IRS could go back a decade or more - if they wanted to.

I do not see fraud here. I do see incompetence. I think someone started using a popular business accounting software, downloading bank statements and whatnot to release their inner accountant. There are easy errors to one not familiar: you do not download all months for an account; you do not download all the accounts; you fail to account for credit cards; you fail to account for cash transactions.

OK, that last one could be a problem, if significant.

The matter reminded me of a famous tax case.

It is easy to understand someone committing fraud on his/her tax return. Put too much in, leave too much out. Do it deliberately and with malintent and you might have fraud.

Question: can you be responsible for your tax preparer’s fraud?

Vincent Allen was a UPS driver in Memphis. He used a professional preparer (Goosby) for 1999 and 2000.  Allen did the usual: he gave Goosby his W-2, his mortgage interest statement, property taxes and whatnot. Standard stuff.

Goosby went to town on miscellaneous itemized deductions; He goosed numbers for a pager, computer, meals, mileage and so forth. He was creative.

The IRS came down hard, understandably.

They also wanted fraud penalties.

Allen had an immediate defense: the three-year statute had run.

The IRS was curt: the three years does not apply if there is fraud.

Allen argued the obvious:

How was I supposed to know?

Off to Tax Court they went.

The Court looked at the following Code section:

 § 6501 Limitations on assessment and collection

(c)  Exceptions.

(1)  False return.

In the case of a false or fraudulent return with the intent to evade tax, the tax may be assessed, or a proceeding in court for collection of such tax may be begun without assessment, at any time.

The Court noted there was no requirement that the “intent to evade” be the taxpayer’s.

The statute was open.

Allen owed tax.

The IRS - in a rare moment of mercy - did not press for penalties. It just wanted the tax, and the Court agreed.

The Allen decision reminds us that there is some responsibility when selecting a tax preparer. One is expected to review his/her return, and – if it seems too good …. Well, you know the rest of that cliche.

Do I think our client committed fraud?

Not for a moment.

Might the IRS examiner think so, however?

It crossed my mind. We’ll see.

Our case this time was Allen v Commissioner, 128. T.C. 37.


Sunday, July 23, 2023

There Is No Tax Relief If You Are Robbed

 

Some tax items have been around for so long that perhaps it would be best to leave them alone.

I’ll give you an example: employees deducting business mileage on their car.

Seems sensible. You tax someone on their work income. That someone incurs expenses to perform that work. Fairness and equity tell you that one should be able to offset the expenses of generating the income against such income.

The Tax Cut and Jobs Act of 2017 (TCJA) did away with that deduction, however. Mind you, the TCJA itself expires in 2025, so we may see this deduction return for 2026.

There are reasons why Congress eliminated the deduction, we are told. They increased the standard deduction, for example, and one could not claim the mileage anyway if one’s itemized deductions were less than the standard deduction. True statement.

Still, it seems to me that Congress could have left the deduction intact. Many if not most would not use it (because of the larger standard deduction), but the high-mileage warriors would still have the deduction if they needed it.

Here’s another:  a tree falls on your house. Or you get robbed.

This has been a tax break since Carter had liver pills.

Used to be.

Back to the TCJA. Personal casualty and theft losses are deductible only if the loss results from a federally declared disaster.

Reread what I just said.

What does theft have to do with a federally declared disaster?

Nothing, of course.

I would make more sense to simply say that the TCJA did away with theft loss deductions.

Let’s talk about the Gomas case.

Dennis and Suzanne Gomas were retired and living their best life in Florida. Mr. G’s brother died, and in 2010 he inherited a business called Feline’s Pride. The business sold pet food online.

OK.

The business was in New York.

We are now talking about remote management. There are any numbers of ways this can go south.

His business manager in New York must have binged The Sopranos, as she was stealing inventory, selling customer lists, not supervising employees, and on and on.

Mr. G moved the business to Florida. His stepdaughter (Anderson) started helping him.

Good, it seems.

By 2015 Mr. G was thinking about closing the business but Anderson persuaded him to keep it open. He turned operations over to Anderson, although the next year (2016) he formally dissolved the company. Anderson kept whatever remained of the business.

In 2017 Anderson prevailed on the G’s to give her $20,000 to (supposedly) better run the business.

I get it. I too am a parent.

Anderson next told the Gs that their crooked New York business manager and others had opened merchant sub-accounts using Mr. G’s personal information. These reprobates were defrauding customers, and the bank wanted to hold the merchant account holder (read: Mr. G) responsible.

          COMMENT: Nope. Sounds wrong. Time to lawyer up.

Anderson convinced the G’s that she had found an attorney (Rickman), and he needed $125,000 at once to prevent Mr. G’s arrest.

COMMENT: For $125 grand, I am meeting with Rickman.

The G’s gave Anderson the $125,000.

But the story kept on.

There were more business subaccounts. Troubles and tribulations were afoot and abounding. It was all Rickman could do to keep Mr. G out of prison. Fortunately, the G’s had Anderson to help sail these treacherous and deadly shoals.

The G’s never met Rickman. They were tapping all their assets, however, including retirement accounts. They were going broke.

Anderson was going after that Academy award. She managed to drag in friends of the family for another $200 grand or so. That proved to be her downfall, as the friends were not as inclined as her parents to believe. In fact, they came to disbelieve. She had pushed too far.

The friends reached out to Rickman. Sure enough, there was an attorney named Rickman, but he did not know and was not representing the G’s. He had no idea about the made-up e-mail address or merchant bank or legal documents or other hot air.

Anderson was convicted to 25 years in prison.

Good.

The G’s tried to salvage some tax relief out of this. For example, in 2017 they had withdrawn almost $1.2 million from their retirement accounts, paying about $410 grand in tax.

Idea: let’s file an amended return and get that $410 grand back.

Next: we need a tax Code-related reason. How about this: we send Anderson a 1099 for $1.1 million, saying that the monies were sent to her for expenses supposedly belonging to a prior business.

I get it. Try to show a business hook. There is a gigantic problem as the business had been closed, but you have to swing the bat you are given.

The IRS of course bounced the amended return.

Off to Court they went.

You might be asking: why didn’t the G’s just say what really happened – that they were robbed?

Because the TCJA had done away with the personal theft deduction. Unless it was presidentially-declared, I suppose.

So, the G’s were left bobbing in the water with much weaker and ultimately non-persuasive arguments to power their amended return and its refund claim.

Even the judge was aghast:

Plaintiffs were the undisputed victims of a complicated theft spanning around two years, resulting in the loss of nearly $2 million dollars. The thief — Mrs. Gomas’s own daughter and Mr. Gomas’s stepdaughter — was rightly convicted and is serving a lengthy prison sentence. The fact that these elderly Plaintiffs are now required to pay tax on monies that were stolen from them seems unjust.

Here is Court shade at the IRS:

In view of the egregious and undisputed facts presented here, it is unfortunate that the IRS is unwilling — or believes it lacks the authority — to exercise its discretion and excuse payment of taxes on the stolen funds.

There is even some shade for Congress:

It is highly unlikely that Congress, when it eliminated the theft loss deduction beginning in 2018, envisioned injustices like the case before this Court. Be that as it may, the law is clear here and it favors the IRS. Seeking to avoid an unjust outcome, Plaintiffs have attempted to recharacterize the facts from what they really are — a theft loss — to something else. Established law does not support this effort. The Court is bound to follow the law, even where, as here, the outcome seems unjust.

To be fair, Congress changed the law. The change was unfair to the G’s, but the Court could not substitute penumbral law over actual law.

The G’s were hosed.

Seriously, Congress should have left theft losses alone. The reason is the same as for employee mileage. The Code as revised for TCJA would make most of the provision superfluous, but at least the provision would exist for the most extreme or egregious situations.

COMMENT: I for one am hopeful that the IRS and G's will resolve this matter administratively. This is not a complementary tale for the IRS, and – frankly – they have other potentially disastrous issues at the moment. It is not too late, for example, for the IRS and G’s to work out an offer in compromise, a partial pay or a do-not-collect status. This would allow the IRS to resolve the matter quietly. Truthfully, they should have already done this and avoided the possible shockwaves from this case.

Our case this time was Gomas v United States, District Court for the Middle District of Florida, Case 8:22-CV-01271.

Monday, May 22, 2023

Tax Preparer Gives Gambler A Losing Hand

 

I am looking at a bench opinion.

The tax issue is relatively straightforward, so the case is about substantiation. To say that it went off the rails is an understatement.

Let us introduce Jacob Bright. Jacob is in his mid-thirties, works in storm restoration and spends way too much time and money gambling. The court notes that he “recognizes and regrets the negative effect that gambling has had on his life.”

He has three casinos he likes to visit: two are in Minnesota and one in Iowa. He does most of his sports betting in Iowa and plays slots and table games in Minnesota.

He reliably uses a player’s card, so the casinos do much of the accounting for him.

Got it. When he provides his paperwork to his tax preparer, I expect two things:

(1)  Forms W-2G for his winnings

(2)  His player’s card annual accountings

The tax preparer adds up the W-2Gs and shows the sum as gross gambling receipts. Then he/she will cross-check that gambling losses exceed winnings, enter losses as a miscellaneous itemized deduction and move on. It is so rare to see net winnings (at least meaningful winnings) that we won’t even talk about it.

COMMENT: Whereas the tax law changed in 2018 to do away with most miscellaneous itemized deductions, gambling losses survived. One will have to itemize, of course, to claim gambling losses.   

Here starts the downward cascade:

Mr. Bright hired a return preparer who was recommended to him, but he did not get what or whom he expected. Rather than the recommended preparer, the return preparer’s daughter actually prepared his return.”

OK. How did this go south, though?

The return preparer reported that Mr. Bright was a professional gambler ….”

Nope. Mind you, there are a few who will qualify as professionals, but we are talking the unicorns. Being a professional means that you can deduct losses in excess of winnings, thereby possibly creating a net operating loss (NOL). An NOL can offset other income (up to a point), income such as one’s W-2. The IRS is very, very reluctant to allow someone to claim professional gambler status, and the case history is decades long. Jacob’s preparer should have known this. It is not a professional secret.

Jacob did not review the return before signing. For some reason the preparer showed over $240 grand of gross gambling receipts. I added up the information available in the opinion and arrived at little more than $110 grand. I have no idea what she did, and Jacob did not even realize what she did. Perhaps she did not worry about it as she intended the math to zero-out.

She should not have done this.

The IRS adjusted the initial tax filing to disallow professional gambler status.

No surprise.

Jacob then filed an amended return to show his gambling losses as miscellaneous itemized deductions. He did not, however, correct his gross gambling winnings to the $110 grand.

The IRS did not allow the gambling losses on the amended return.

Off to Tax Court they went.

There are several things happening:

(1)  The IRS was arguing that Jacob did not have adequate documentation for his losses. Mind you, there is some truth to this. Casino reports showed gambling activity for months with no W-2Gs (I would presume that he had no winnings, but that is a presumption and not a fact). Slot winnings below $1,200 do not have to be reported, and he gambled on games other than slots. Still, the casino reports do provide some documentation. I would argue that they provide substantiation of his minimum losses.

(2)  Let’s say that the IRS behaved civilly and allowed all the losses on the casino reports. That is swell, but the tax return showed gambling receipts of $240 grand. Unless the casino reports showed losses of (at least) $240 grand, Jacob still had issues.

(3)  The Court disagreed with the IRS disallowing all gambling deductions. It looked at the casino reports, noting that each was prepared differently. Still, it did not require advanced degrees in mathematics to calculate the losses embedded in each report. The Court calculated total losses of slightly over $191 grand. That relieved a lot – but not all – of the pressure on Jacob.

(4)  Jacob did the obvious: he told the Court that the $240 grand of receipts was a bogus number. He did not even know where it came from.

(5)  The IRS immediately responded that it was being whipsawed. Jacob reported the $240 grand number, not the IRS. Now he wanted to change it. Fine, said the IRS: prove the new number. And don’t come back with just numbers reported on W-2Gs. What about smaller winnings? What about winnings from sports betting? If he wanted to change the number, he was also responsible for proving it.

The IRS had a point. It was being unfair and unreasonable but also technically correct.

Bottom line: the IRS was not going to permit Jacob to reduce his gross receipts number without some documentation. Since all he had was the casino reports, the result was that Jacob could not change the number.

Where does this leave us? I see $240 – $191 = $49 grand of bogus income.

My takeaway is that we have just discussed a case of tax malpractice. That is what lawyers are for, Jacob.

Our case this time was Jacob Bright v Commissioner, Docket No. 0794-22.

Monday, May 8, 2023

Penalty Abatement For Preparer Errors

 

I was looking over a law review article weighing the pros and cons of different types of Tax Court decisions.

Nerd train, I admit.

But there is something here to talk about.

There are several types of Tax Court opinions. Some have precedential value, and some do not. Precedence means that a Court applies the law in the same manner to cases with the same facts.

One type is a Memorandum opinion. These tend to be heavily factual, and they involve relatively well-settled law.

Another is the Summary (or S) opinion. These involve a relatively modest amount of tax (currently $50 grand) and use a streamlined set of procedures.

The reason for different types of opinion is grounded in practicality. Memo opinions allow the Court to process more clear-cut cases without worrying about establishing unanticipated precedent. The S opinions allow taxpayers a forum without having to hire an attorney to navigate cumbersome Tax Court procedural rules.

I am looking at a case decided as a bench opinion. 

Think about the judge issuing an oral opinion right there and then and you have a bench opinion.

And these types can be combined. A judge may, for example, issue a bench opinion in a memo or S case.

I am looking at something I know all too well.

Mr. Trammer was an IT consultant.

Mrs. Trammer was a social worker.

Mr. Trammer worked primarily from home. Depending upon, he was paid as a W-2 employee or as a 1099 gig worker. He had an office-in-home and all that.

Mrs. Trammer was a W-2 employee. She drove around Michigan visiting childcare and foster care locations. She at times would purchase gifts for the kids.

She sounds like a good person.

They reported all kinds of deductions on their 2019 and 2020 returns: business deductions for the gig, employee business deductions for the social work, charitable deductions for the church.

If you recall, many itemized deductions were reduced or eliminated altogether beginning in 2018.

No surprise, the IRS disallowed a swath of deductions. Some – like employee business deductions – simply did not exist for the tax year at issue. Others – like office-in-home for the gig – had calculation errors.

Got it. They need to dig up documentation. They should immediately concede on the calculation error and employee expenses. The matter should be resolved as routine in correspondence exam.

Off to Tax Court they went.

Huh?

Upon reflection, this makes sense. The IRS and Covid did not play well together. They were not answering the phones over there. Faxing supporting documentation to the AUR Unit was often a joke. I suspect this matter went to Court by default.

Here we go:

The Trammers relied on a paid return preparer to prepare their returns for the years at issue. Although the individual return preparers identified on the 2019 and 2020 returns differed, the Trammers used the same preparation firm for both years.”

That does not sound like a CPA firm. Granted, I prepare only a fraction of returns I sign - staff accountants generally prepare - but I do review all returns before signing. 

Each year, they brought their records … who decided what items to report on the Trammers’ return and where.”

Yep.

The returns contained obvious errors such as reporting the same expense in multiple places.”

The old list-the-same-thing-over-and-over routine. Often these returns are not complex, but the preparer must be diligent when moving numbers. It consequently is common to give these returns to more experienced staff. Ideal would be to give the return to the same experienced staff every year.

The Court made short work of the returns.

Schedule C/Gig work

They failed to demonstrate the amount of expenses that they incurred or the business purposes for those expense, and they did not provide sufficient evidence from which the Court could formulate an estimate.”

Form 2106/employee business expenses

… the Trammers failed to substantiate the expenses Mrs. Trammer incurred in the conduct of her social work.”

Schedule A/Itemized Deductions

The Trammers failed to substantiate itemized deductions in excess of the standard deduction amounts that the Commissioner allowed…”

The IRS wanted penalties. They always do.

Not his time. Here is the Court:

The Trammers relied on a return preparer to whom they had been referred. They supplied the return preparer with necessary and accurate information each year, and the return preparer decided what to do with that information. The Trammers reasonably relied in good faith on their return preparer’s judgement. Accordingly, the section 6662 accuracy-related penalty does not apply for the years in issue.”

I am impressed, as I was expecting a rubber stamp.

What was different this time?

For one thing, Mr. Trammer showed up for the trial, and Mrs. Trammer participated via conference call. This gave them a chance to humanize their situation. While not conceding the errors, the Court did believe them when they said they tried. The Court, however, was not as kind to the preparer.

And remember: the next person cannot use this case (technically) as precedent in a future penalty. The Court had room to be lenient.

Our case this time was Trammer v Commissioner, TC Bench Order March 14, 2023.

Sunday, April 10, 2022

Losing Deductions By Not Filing A Tax Return

I have become increasingly reluctant to accept a nonfiler as a client. That said, a partner somehow sneaks one or two a year into Command Center, and I – reluctant or not – become involved. It would not be so bad if it was just a matter of catching-up with the paperwork, but often one needs to stave off Collections, establish a payment plan, request penalty abatement (done after the taxes are paid, meaning I have to monitor it in my spare time) and on-and-on.

Try doing this during IRSCOVID202020212022. It is zero fun.

I am looking at a nonfiler that took a self-inflicted wound.

Let’s talk about Shawn Salter.

Salter was a loss prevention manager over 10 Home Depot stores in Arizona.  He worked from home but drove regularly to his stores. Home Depot offered to reimburse his mileage, but he turned it down. He thought that claiming the mileage on his return would give him a bigger refund.

COMMENT: Well, yes, as he was paying out-of-pocket for gasoline and wear-and-tear on his car. Clearly he is not a Warren Buffet successor.

Salter got laid off in 2013.

He took money out of his IRA to get through, but that is not the point of our discussion today.

He needed to file a 2013 return so he could get that tax refund, especially since he turned down the opportunity to be reimbursed.

What did he not do?

He did not file a 2013 return.

Eventually the IRS figured it out and asked for a tax return.

Salter blew it off.

The IRS prepared a “substitute for return.” You do not want the IRS to do this, by the way. The IRS will file you as single with no dependents (whether you are or not), include all your gross income and do its very best to not spot you any deductions. It is intentionally designed to maximize your tax liability.

The IRS wanted over $6 grand in tax, with all the assorted interest and penalty toppings.

Now Salter cared.

He told the IRS that he had used H&R Block software to file his return.

The IRS clarified that it had no 2013 tax return, either from H&R Block or from anyone else. Send us a copy, they said.

He did not have a copy to send. He did not have certified mail receipts or record of electronic filing. He had nothing.

Hard to persuade anyone with nothing.

Here is the Court:

We find that the petitioner did not file a return for 2013, ...”

This created a problem.

Salter wanted to claim that mileage, meaning that he needed to itemize his deductions.

OK.

Not OK. There is a tax issue.

Which is …?

Did you know that itemizing your deductions is considered a tax election?

And …?

You have to file a tax return to make the election.

Easy, you say, Salter should prepare and file a 2013 return claiming itemized deductions. Doing so is the election.

Too late. That window closed when the IRS prepared the substitute for return. The substitute is considered a return, and it did not itemize. Remember how a substitute works: income is reported at gross; deductions are grudgingly given, if given at all. 

No mileage. No deduction. No refund. Tax due.

As we said: self-inflicted wound.

Our case this time was Salter v Commissioner, T.C. Memo 2022-29.


Sunday, August 15, 2021

"I Never Heard Of The Alternative Minimum Tax"

 

I am looking at a case that involves the alternative minimum tax.

While it still exists, much of the steam has thankfully been taken out of the AMT. It started off as Congressional reaction to a handful of ultrawealthy families paying little to no income taxes decades ago. Congress’s response was to require a second tax calculation, disallowing certain things – such as exemptions for your dependents.

Yes, you read that correctly, you large-family tax scofflaw.

Now, it wouldn’t be so bad if this thing had been scaled to only reach the wealthy and ultrawealthy, but that is not what Congress did. Congress instead gave you a spot, and then you were on your own. For 2017 that spot was approximately $84 grand in income for marrieds filing jointly.

I used to see the AMT as often as a Gibson’s employee sees donuts.


Thankfully the Tax Cut and Jobs Act of 2017 did a couple of things to defang the AMT:

(1) It increased the exemption (that is, the spot) for everyone. Marrieds now have an exemption of approximately $115,000, for example.

(2)  More importantly, it adjusted a previous rule that phased-out the exemption as one’s income increased. For example, marrieds in 2017 would start phasing-out when their income reached approximately $160,000. Now it is over $1 million, which makes a lot more sense it if was truly targeted at the wealthy.

Why the absurdly low previous income thresholds for the AMT, especially since it was supposed to target the “rich?” Think of it as Congressional addiction to paper crack – the paper being your dollar bills.

The tax law is a little saner until 2026, when the TCJA goes “poof.” Much prior tax law will then resurrect – including the previous version AMT.

Robert Colton and Alina Mazwin (R&A) filed a joint return for 2016.

The IRS did its computer matching and sent them a notice. There was $125,000 reported by JP Morgan Chase Bank. The IRS wanted taxes on it.

R&A explained to the IRS that the $125,000 was a legal settlement, and that half of it went to Mr Colton’s ex-spouse.

The IRS said OK, but we want taxes on the $62,500.

Let’s take an aside here. You may have heard that lawsuit settlements are not taxable. That is only partially true. The lawsuit has to involve physical injury (think a car crash, for example) to be tax-free.

It appears that Mr Colton’s settlement was of the non-car crash variety, meaning that it was taxable.

R&A then amended their 2016 return, picking up the $62,500 but also claiming a miscellaneous itemized deduction of $80,075 for attorney fees.

Hah! They might even get a tax refund out of this, right? Take that, IRS.

Except …

Guess what is not deductible for the AMT.

Yep, that miscellaneous itemized deduction.

So – for AMT purposes – their income went up by the $62,500 but there was no deduction for the related legal fee.

How much income did R&A have before the IRS contacted them?

About $40 grand.

Yep, the AMT had been bent so far beyond recognition that it trapped someone amending a return to show perhaps $100 grand in income.

Folks, that income level does not go you invited to the cool parties on Martha’s Vineyard.

Let me share a line from the case:

Petitioners stated in their petition that ‘[they] never heard of [the] alternative minimum tax.”

I get it. I consider it unconscionable that an average person has to hire someone like me to prepare their taxes.  

Our case this time for the home gamers was Colton and Mazwin v Commissioner, T.C. Memo 2021-44.


Sunday, February 11, 2018

Saying Goodbye To Employee Business Expenses


Let’s talk about miscellaneous itemized deductions - likely for the last time.

These are the deductions at the bottom of the form when you itemize, and you probably itemize if you own a house and have a mortgage. Common miscellaneous deductions include investment management fees (if someone, such as Simply Money, manages your savings) and employee business expenses.

These are the “bad” expenses that are deductible only to the extent they exceed 2% of your income (AGI), because … well, because the government wants more of your money.

I am reading a case concerning a bodyguard and his employee business expenses.

His name is Rick Colbert and he retired after 30 years from the Long Beach, California Police Department. He gigged-up with Screen International Security Service Ltd (SISS) in Beverly Hills. They assigned him celebrities. He chauffeured them, deflected paparazzi, installed and monitored security devices, patrolled their estates, performed access point control and responded to distress calls.

SISS had a reimbursement policy. It did not cover everything, but it did cover a lot. Colbert did not seek any reimbursement.

He filed his 2013 tax return and reported SISS income of $25,546.

He then deducted employee business expenses of $23,965.
COMMENT: One can tell he is not in it for the money.
Those numbers are out-of-whack, and the IRS audited him. Like the IRS we know and love, they bounced all of his employee business expenses, arguing that he had not substantiated anything.

On to Tax Court they went.

The Court went through the list of expenses:

(1) $211,154 for a pistol and target practice.

Looks legit, said the Court.

(2) $86 for earbuds

To avoid annoying celebrities.

The Court grinned. OK.

(3) $1,711 for clothing and dry cleaning

Nope said the Court.

We have talked about this before. If you can wear the clothing about town and day-to-day, there is no deduction. It is just another personal expense, unless our protagonist wanted to dress up like “Macho Man" Randy Savage.


(4) $1,609 for a gym membership, weight loss pills and other stuff.

Uhh, no, said the Court, as these are the very definition of “personal, living, or family expenses.”

(5) Office in Home

This would have been nice, be he did not use space “exclusively” for the office, which is a requirement. This would hurt a send time when the Court got to his …

(6) iPad and printer

Computers are like cars when it comes to a tax deduction: you have to keep records to document business use. The reason you never hear about this requirement is because of a significant exception – if you keep the computer in an office you can skip the records requirement.

When Colbert lost his office-in-home, he picked-up a record-keeping requirement. He lost a deduction for his iPad, printer and supplies.

(7) $5,003 for his cellphone

It did not help that his internet and television were buried in the bill.

The Court disallowed his cellphone, which amazes me. Seems to me he could have gone through his bills and highlighted what was business-related.

He won some (primarily his mileage) but lost most.

And his case is now among the last of its kind.

Why?

The new tax bill does away with employee business expenses, beginning in 2018. There is NO DEDUCTION this year.

If you have significant employee business expenses, you really, really need to arrange a reimbursement plan with your employer. Your employer can deduct them, even though you cannot. Why the difference?

Because, to your employer, they are just “business expenses.” 

Friday, August 19, 2016

Deducting Everything - The Tanzi Doctrine


I admit: I got a chuckle from reading the case.

The taxpayers (Tanzi's) are married, and for the year in question they were employed by Seminole State College, which is Sanford, Florida. I remember a conversation with a Sanford CPA a year or two ago lamenting that there no longer was separation between Orlando and Sanford. I was in Orlando this year, and he is right - there isn't.

Our taxpayer was an adjunct instructor teaching communications, and his wife worked at the campus library. Although an adjunct, he held a PhD in communications, so we can presume he was hoping for a permanent full-time position.

On their 2011 return they deducted the following as employee expenses:

            (1) 100% of their telephone, internet and television
            (2) depreciation
            (3) books, CDs and DVDs
            (4) computer expenses

The IRS bounced the employee expenses and sent them a notice for approximately $3,000.

Employee expenses are a subset of "miscellaneous deductions." One has to itemize to get to miscellaneous deductions, and even then these miscellaneous deductions are not what they used to be. The common itemized deductions are mortgage interest, real estate taxes and contributions. Living in Florida, our taxpayers did not have to concern themselves with another common itemized deduction - state income taxes. Chances are the first three got them into itemized deduction range, and their miscellaneous deductions then became usable. It is rare that miscellaneous deductions by themselves will be enough to get you to itemize.


Miscellaneous deductions are not tax-efficient, though. The Code requires that you reduce your miscellaneous deductions by 2% of your adjusted gross income, so that portion is immediately forfeited.
EXAMPLE: You and your spouse make a combined $150,000. You would have to immediately reduce your miscellaneous deductions by $3,000 (i.e., $150,000 times 2%). If your miscellaneous deductions totaled $3,500, only $500 would be deductible. And yes, it is intentional. It is a way for Congress to pry a few more tax dollars from everyone who incurs employee expenses.
COMMENT: My daughter is working before returning to graduate school. She is required to use her car for work. Although reimbursed something for mileage, it is not the full rate permitted by the IRS. Her employer explained to her that she could deduct the difference come tax time. As her dad and tax advisor, I explained that this was not true. She would not have enough to itemize, and her unreimbursed mileage would be deductible only if she itemized.
By the way, you forfeit all miscellaneous deductions if you are subject to the AMT (alternative minimum tax). As I said, they are not efficient.

The Tanzi's were deducting employee business expenses. The IRS was questioning how 100% of their telephone and internet - just to start - became business. There is a long-standing doctrine that an employee is "in the business" of being an employee, but one still has to show some nexus between the expenses and being an employee. I receive a W-2, for example, but I cannot deduct my Starbucks tab solely for the reason that I am an employee. I would have a business nexus if I met a client there, but not because I was picking up coffee for my commute to the office.

The IRS wanted to know what that nexus was.

The Tanzi's argued that they must constantly expand their "general knowledge" to be effective at their jobs. Mr Tanzi explained that individuals holding terminal degrees - such as himself, coincidently - especially bear a lifelong burden of "developing knowledge, exploring [and] essentially self-educating."   Mr. Tanzi insisted that all expenses paid in pursuing his general knowledge should be deductible as unreimbursed business expenses.
COMMENT: If Mr Tanzi won this argument, I would immediately try to expand the Tanzi doctrine to include tax CPAs with Masters degrees who also maintain a tax blog. Our burdened ranks must constantly expand our general knowledge to be effective at our jobs. I for example sometimes work with and write about international tax matters. Seems to me that a trip overseas to visit my wife's family should be deductible, as it expands my knowledge of being overseas, or some reasoning along those lines.
The tax Code recognizes that some expenses are simply personal in nature. There is even a Code section that says this out loud:
  Section 262 - Personal, living, and family expenses
      (a) General rule
Except as otherwise expressly provided in this chapter, no deduction shall be allowed for personal, living, or family expenses.

Here is the Court:
While we find credible the Tanzi's testimony that they spent significant time and resources educating themselves, we do not believe the expenses are ordinary and necessary for the trades of being a professor or a campus librarian but rather are personal, living or family expenses nondeductible under section 262(a)."
No surprise for the Tanzi's, but I am a bit disappointed. Looks like I won't be able to deduct my life expenses as ordinary and necessary to the business of being a tax CPA and blogger. Those tax refunds would have been sweet.