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Showing posts with label opinion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label opinion. Show all posts

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.

Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Olsen v Commissioner

You may recall that there is a”super” penalty that the IRS can assess if one understates his/her tax by too much. This penalty is not trivial: it is 20% and is called the accuracy-related penalty. In many cases the IRS assesses the penalty as a mathematical exercise. You can however request that the penalty be abated by providing a reasonable cause for doing so. A long illness or the death of a close family member, for example, has long been considered as reasonable cause.
We now have a new reasonable cause. I suspect that it will enter the tax lexicon as the “Geithner” defense, for the secretary of the Treasury under President Obama.
Here is what happened.
Kurt Olsen (KO)’s wife received interest income for 2007 from her mother’s estate. This means that she received a Schedule K-1, an unfamiliar form to the Olsens. KO normally prepared the tax returns, and he liked to use TurboTax. Upon receipt of the K-1, he upgraded his version of TurboTax as a precaution in handling this unfamiliar tax form.
TurboTax uses an interview process to obtain information. Using this process, KO entered the name and identification number of the estate. He also took a swing at entering the interest income, but something went wrong. The interest income did not show up on the return. KO was quite responsible and used the verification features in his upgraded software, but he did not discover the error.
The IRS did, though. They sent him a notice requesting an additional $9,297 in tax. The change in tax was large enough to trigger the “super” penalty of $1,859 ($9,297 times 20 percent).
KO knew he owed the tax, but he felt that the penalty was unfair. He felt strongly enough about the penalty that he pursued the issue all the way to the Tax Court. He represented himself under a special forum for small cases.
                Note: The tax term for representing yourself is “pro se.”
Now, the Tax Court has not been forthcoming in considering “tax software” as a reasonable cause. The Court has long expected one to use the software properly. In fact, a famous case (Bunney v Commissioner) has the Court stating that “tax preparation software is only as good as the information one inputs into it.”

The Court however took pains to distinguish KO, commenting that…

·         “We found petitioner to be forthright and credible.”
·         “It is clear that his mistake was isolated as he correctly reported the source of the income.”
·         “He did not repeat any similar error in preparing his tax return.”
·         “Petitioner acted reasonably in upgrading his tax preparation software to a more sophisticated version.”

The Court found reasonable cause to abate the penalty.

The key thing is that the taxpayer had an unusual source of income. He did not know where to look to check that the income had been properly included on his return. He did however meticulously follow the verification features in the software, and he relied – not unreasonably – on the software to report this transaction correctly.

This type of case unfortunately cannot be used as precedent. Tax Court Judge Armen also took care to cite the “unique facts and circumstances of this case.” Nonetheless, as more and more taxpayers use software to prepare their returns, it is expected that we will see more and more instances of the “Olsen” defense.