We have
spoken before of social-worker duties the tax Code expects of a professional preparing
a return with an earned income credit, a refundable child credit or the
American Opportunity (that is, the college) credit.
Take the
earned income credit, for example. If you have two children, that credit can be
$5,616; have three and the credit can reach $6,318. Remember that the credit is
refundable – meaning the IRS will write you a check – and no wonder this
provision is rife with fraud.
If the IRS wanted
to push-back on the fraud, it could require a preparer to review documentation
that a child (or several) actually lives with the parent/taxpayer.
To be certain
to get the preparer’s attention, the IRS could also impose a penalty if the
preparer failed to do so.
Let’s have
the IRS tighten this up a notch by also requiring a form or schedule with the
return requiring the preparer to declare that he/she did all of this
Sherlocking.
Which is why
I will not prepare a return with these credits unless I have known (or,
alternatively, my partner has known) the client for a while.
This rule is
expanding in 2018 to include head of household filing status.
Oh boy.
Let’s go
through a Tax Court case I was reviewing recently.
(1) Joe and Cerice lived together and had a child
in 2006.
(2) The relationship went south either late
2014 or early 2015.
(3) Cerise moved in with her mother.
(4) Joe and Cerise started sharing custody,
although Joe’s parents also took care of the child while he was working.
(5) There was a custody proceeding in 2015, and
the Court order gave each parent equal time. For some reason, the Court came
back in 2016 and reduced Joe’s share of parental time.
(6) The Court stated that Cerise could claim the
child in 2015 and all odd-numbered years. Joe could claim the child in
even-numbered years.
QUESTION: Who claims the child in 2014?
The
technical detail here is that head-of-household status requires the child to
spend more than one-half of the year with the claiming parent.
Let’s say
that I have never met Joe or Cerise. I meet with either one, who asks me to prepare
the 2014 return. Whoever I meet with wants to claim the child, of course, as it
will power head of household status, an earned income credit and a child
credit. I suspect either Joe or Cerise could present a formidable argument that
the child was with him/her for more than one-half of the year.
What am I
supposed to do?
I would of
course look at the custody agreement, but that doesn’t start until the
following year. No help there.
I could get
assurance from the other parent that he/she is not claiming the child.
Let’s say
that fails.
I could get
a letter from the pediatrician, I suppose.
Or the
school, if the child were old enough.
Or maybe the
landlord where either Joe or Cerise lives.
Here I am social-working
this situation. If I don’t, the IRS can penalize me $510. For each instance.
Miss both the head of household and refundable child care credit and the
penalty is $1,020.
Which might
be more than I am charging to prepare the return.
How keen would
you be to accept Joe or Cerise as a client?
That is my
point.
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