I am looking at a district court opinion from
Illinois.
I find the discussion of the numbers a bit confusing. It happens
sometimes.
But there something here we should talk about.
We have recently discussed the tax concept of a
“claim.” In normal-person-speak, it means you want the government to refund
your money. The classic claim is an amended income tax return, but there can be
claims for other-than-income taxes. It is its own niche, as using
the wrong form can result in having your claim rejected.
Let’s look at the American Guardian Holdings
case.
AGH filed its 2015 tax return on September 19, 2016.
Here are the numbers on the original tax return:
Original |
|
Revenues |
152,092,338 |
Taxable income |
4,880,521 |
Tax |
1,327,806 |
First |
||||
Original |
Original |
Amended |
||
Revenues |
152,092,338 |
152,092,338 |
154,808,792 |
|
Taxable income |
4,880,521 |
4,880,521 |
11,084,397 |
|
Tax |
1,327,806 |
1,327,806 |
148,243 |
|
Refund |
(1,179,563) |
Let me see: The 2015 return would have been extended to October 15, 2016. The amended return was prepared June 6, 2019. Yep, we are within the statute of limitations.
Problem: AGH never sent the amended return.
Answer: AGH hired a new accountant.
The new accountant filed an amended return on
September 19, 2019.
COMMENT: Still a few days left on the statute.
For some reason, the accountant incorporated the first
amended (even though it had not been filed) into the second amended, resulting
in the following hodgepodge:
First |
Second |
||||
Original |
Amended |
Original |
Amended |
||
Revenues |
154,808,792 |
141,773,572 |
154,808,792 |
? |
|
Taxable income |
11,084,397 |
7,446,746 |
11,084,397 |
? |
|
Tax |
1,327,806 |
148,243 |
1,327,806 |
0 |
|
Refund |
(1,179,563) |
(148,243) |
|||
Total refund |
(1,327,806) |
Huh? I would find that second amended confusing. On first impression it appears that AGH is filing a claim for $148,243, but that is incorrect. AGH was stacking the second amended on top of its first. AGH is filing a claim for $1,327,806, which is the entire tax on the original return.
Not surprisingly, the IRS also responded with “huh?”
It could not process the second amended return because the “Original” numbers
did not match its records.
AGH responded by filing yet another amended return
(third amended). Mind you, at this point it was after October 15, 2019, and the
statute of limitations was in the rear view mirror.
AGH did the following:
(1) AGH explained that the new and shiny (third) amended return incorporated the previously (non-filed) first amended return and the second (actually filed) amended return. As a consequence, the “previously-filed amended return for 2015 should be discarded.”
COMMENT: NO!
(2) AGH further explained that it was filing Form
1120-PC (a specialized tax form for property and casualty insurance companies) as
its third amended return rather than the Form 1120 originally filed because it
had received permission to change its method of accounting.
COMMENT: NO!!
I am somewhat shocked at how deep a hole AGH had dug,
and more shocked that it kept digging.
Let’s go through the wreckage:
(1) AGH filed its (second) amended return/claim within
the statute of limitations.
(2) This creates an issue if the claim is
imperfect, as one would be perfecting the claim AFTER the statute expires.
Fortunately, there is a way (called the informal claim doctrine) that allows
one to perfect a claim after the original filing date and still retain the
benefit of that original date.
(3) The IRS immediately seized on the
“previously-filed amended return for 2015 should be discarded” statement to
argue that AGH had violated the informal claim doctrine. If the second amended return was discarded, there
was no timely-filed return to which the informal claim doctrine could attach.
Fortunately, the Court decided that the use of the word “discard” did not actually
mean what it sounded like. AGH dodged a bullet, but it should never have fired.
(4) That leaves the third amended return, which
was filed after the statute expired. AGH of course argued informal claim, but
it had committed a fatal act by changing its method of accounting. You see, the
informal claim allows one to clarify, document and explain whatever issue is
vague or in dispute within the claim at issue. What one is not allowed to do is
to change the facts. AGH had changed the facts by changing its method of accounting,
meaning its third amended return could not be linked to the second via the informal
claim doctrine.
(5) Standing on its own, the third amended of
course failed as it was filed after the statute had expired.
This case is a nightmare. I am curious whether there
was a CPA or law firm involved; if so, a malpractice suit is almost a given. If
the work was done in-house, then … AGH needs to tighten up its hiring
standards. The case reads like there were no adults in the room.
All is not lost for AGH, however.
Remember that AGH filed its second amended return within
the statute of limitations. The matter then
went off the rails and the Court booted the third amended return.
But that leaves the second amended. Can AGH resuscitate
it, as technically the Court dismissed the third claim but not necessarily the
second? It would likely require
additional litigation and associated legal fees, and I would expect the IRS to
fight tooth and nail. AGH would have to weigh the cost-benefit.
Our case this time was American Guardian Holdings,
Inc v United States of America, No. 1:2023cv 01482, Northern District of
Illinois.
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