I have a
certain amount of concern whenever we approach a major due date. Let’s use your
personal tax return as an example. It is due on April 15; an extension
stretches that out to October 15.
What is the
big deal?
Penalties. Fail
to extend the return, for example.
How does
this happen?
A client
moves to another city. A client was unhappy with your fees last year, and you
are uncertain if the client is staying with you. A client’s kid starts working,
prompting a tax return for the first time. A client gets involved with some business,
and the first time you hear about it is when his/her information comes in. A
client does business in a new state.
Or – let’s
be frank here – you just miss it.
There are
two common penalties; think of them as the salt and pepper of penalties:
· Failure to file
· Failure to pay
We associate
the IRS with taking our money, so one would easily assume that the more onerous
penalty is failure to pay. It is not. Owe money past April 15 and the IRS will
charge a penalty of ½% per month.
Fail to
file, however, and the penalty is 5% per month.
Yep, 10
times as much.
And when
does the penalty start?
Miss that
extension and it starts April 16.
Huh? Don’t
you have until October 15 to file that thing?
Yes, IF you
file an extension.
You do not
want to miss that extension.
I was
reading a case about the Laidlaw brothers. They sold Harley Davidson
motorcycles, and they got pulled into Court for a welfare benefit plan that
went awry.
There was
one issue left: did their accountant file extensions for the two brothers by
April 15? If not, those penalties included 5 zeroes. We are talking enough-to-buy-a-house
money.
To add to
the stress, the trial occurred about a decade after the tax year in question.
The
accountant’s name was Morgan, and he presented extensions showing zero tax due
for each brother. The IRS said it never received any extensions. Morgan did not
send the extensions certified mail, but he recalled sending both extensions in
the same envelope. He remembered taking the envelope to the post office and checking
for proper postage. He took pride that the Post Office had never returned an
extension request for insufficient postage.
He pointed
out that there was no question about an extension for the year before, and the
year before that, and so forth. The brothers were significant clients to his
firm, and he went the extra mile.
The IRS was
having none of it. They pointed out that Morgan had many clients, and the
likelihood that he could remember something that specific from a decade ago was
dubious. Additionally, any memory was suspect as self-serving.
Sounds like
Morgan needed to present well in front of the Court.
And there is
the rub. The Laidlaw case went Rule
122, meaning that depositions were submitted to the Court, but there was no
opportunity for face-to-face questioning.
Here is the
Court:
… we had no opportunity to observe Mr. Morgan’s credibility as a witness. The reliability of a witness’ testimony hinges on his credibility. We were not provided a full opportunity – so critical to our being able to find the witness reliable – to evaluate Mr. Morgan’s credibility on the issue of timely filing because petitioners never offered his live testimony in a trial setting. While we can learn much from reading the testimony, it is not the same as a firsthand observation of the witness’ demeanor and sincerity, both essential aspects of credibility and reliability.
The brothers
lost, and the IRS collected a sizeable penalty amount.
Back in the
day, we used to log all extensions going to the IRS. We would certify each
envelope and then attach the receipt to a log detailing each envelope’s
contents. Granted, that log could not prove that a given envelope contained a
given extension, but it did show our attention to policies and procedures. I
recall getting out of at least one sizeable penalty by arguing that point to
the IRS.
Those were
different times, and many (including me) would say that today’s IRS is less
forgiving of basic human error
And, to some
extent, we are talking ancient history with extension procedure. Today’s
practices, our included, has moved to electronic filing. Our software tracks
and records our extensions and returns and their receipt by the IRS. I do not
need to keep a mail log as my software does it for me.
Morgan
needed something like a log. It would have given the Court confidence in and support
for his recollection of acts occurring a decade earlier, even without him being
present to testify in person.
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