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Showing posts with label 1099. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1099. Show all posts

Sunday, February 14, 2021

What Does It Mean To File A Return?

 

The IRS generally has three years to examine a return and assess additional taxes after it has been filed.

This can put pressure on whether what was filed is a “return.”

I am looking at a case involving this issue.

Mr Quezada (Q) ran a stonemasonry business. He had a number of people working for him over the years. Like many a contractor, he treated these individuals as subcontractors and not employees.

OK.

He filed Form 1099s.

OK.

Most of these 1099s did not include social security numbers.

Oh oh.

This is a problem. If a payor requests a social security number and an individual refuses to provide it, the tax Code requires the payor to withhold “backup withholding.” The same applies if an individual provides a bogus social security number.

Say that you are supposed to pay someone $1,000 for stone masonry work, but they refuse to provide a social security number.

COMMENT: Let’s be honest: we know what is going on here.

You are required to withhold 24% and send it to the IRS. You should pay the person $860 and send $240 to the IRS.

QUESTION: what are the odds that anyone will ever claim the $240?

FURTHER QUESTION: And how could one, since there is no social security number associated with the $240?

Mr Q was supposed to file the following forms with the IRS:

·      Form 1099

·      Form 1096 (the summary of the 1099s)

·      Form 945 (to remit the $240 in our example)

He filed the first two. He did not file the third as he did not withhold.

Mr Q filed for bankruptcy in 2016. The creditors had a chance to file their claims.

In the spirit of bayoneting the dead, the IRS wanted backup withholding taxes from 2005 onward.

It filed its claim – for over $1.2 million.

QUESTION: how could 2005 (or 2006? or 2007?) still be an open tax year?

The IRS gave its argument:

1.    The liability for backup withholding is reported on Form 945.

2.    Mr Q never filed Form 945.

3.    The statute of limitations never started because Mr Q never filed the return.

The IRS was alluding to the Lane-Wells case.

In Lane-Wells the taxpayer filed one type of corporate tax return rather than another, mostly because it thought that it was the first type and not the other. The distinction meant money to the IRS.

The Supreme Court agreed with the IRS.

The IRS likes to consider Lane-Wells as its trump card in case one does not file a return, unintentionally leaves out a schedule or files the wrong form altogether. The courts have fortunately pushed back on this position.

Mr Q had a problem. He had not filed Form 945. Then again, from his perspective there was no Form 945 to file. He was between a rock and a hard spot.

The Appeals Court hearing Mr Q’s case realized the same thing.

The Court reasoned that the issue was not whether Mr Q filed the “magic” form. Rather, it was whether Mr Q filed a return that:

·      Showed the liability for tax, and

·      Allowed calculation of the amount of tax

Here is the Court:

The IRS could determine that Q[uezada] was liable for backup-withholding taxes by looking at the face of his Forms 1099; if a particular form lacked a TIN, then Q[uezada] was liable for backup withholding taxes applied to the entire amount …”

There is the first test.

For each subcontractor who failed to supply a TIN, the IRS could determine the amount that Q[uezada] should have backup withheld by multiplying the statutory flat rate for backup withholding by the amount Q[uezada] paid the subcontractor.”

There is the second test.

The Court decided that Q had filed returns sufficient to give the IRS a heads-up as to the liability and its amount. The IRS could but did not follow up. Why not? Who knows, but the IRS was time-barred by the statute of limitations.

Our case this time was Quezada v IRS, No 19-51000 (5th Cir. 2020).

Monday, January 18, 2021

Can You Tell When You Are Being Audited?

 I am looking at a Tax Court pro se decision.

Pro se means that the taxpayer represents himself or herself.

Technically, that is explanation insufficient. I, for example, could represent someone in Tax Court and it would still be considered to be pro se.

I tend to shudder at pro se cases, because too often it is a case of someone not knowing what they don’t know. And – once you are that far into the tax system – you had better be up-to-speed with tax law as well as tax procedure. Either can trip you up.

There is a cancer surgeon who inherited an IRA in 2013. He took distributions in both 2014 and 2015 – distributions totaling over $508 thousand - but he researched and came to the conclusion that the distributions were not income.

COMMENT:  How did he get there? The first thing that comes to mind is that these were Roth IRAs, but that was not the case. He argued instead that the IRAs included nondeductible contributions, and those nondeductible amounts were not taxable income coming out.

The reference here is to nondeductible IRAs, the cousin to Roth IRAs. These bad boys would be almost extinct except for their use in backdoor Roth conversions. Still, the doctor was wrong: it is EXTREMELY unlikely that a nondeductible IRA would be fully nontaxable. The reason is that only the contributions are nontaxable; any earnings on the contribution would be taxable. I suppose that one could have a completely nontaxable distribution, but that would mean the nondeductible IRA had no - none, nada, zippo - earnings over its existence. That would be among the worst investments ever.

The IRS computerized matching program kicked-in, as the IRA distributions would have triggered issuance of a 1099. The IRS caught 2014. The doctor disagreed he had income. The IRS machinery ground-on and resulted in the issuance of a 90-day letter (also known as a Statutory Notice of Deficiency) for 2014. The purpose of the SNOD is to reduce a proposed tax assessment to an actual assessment, and it is nothing to snicker about. The doctor had the option to appeal to the Tax Court, which he did.

Practice can be described as doing what is not taught in school, so the story took an unusual twist. The doctor was contacted by a revenue agent for a real and actual audit of his 2014 tax return. The agent however was looking at issues other than the IRA, and the doctor did not mention that the IRS Automated Under Reporting unit was looking at 2014. The agent continued blithely on, not knowing about the AUR and eventually expanding his audit to 2015.

QUESTION: Why didn’t the doctor tell the agent about AUR? I would have tried to consolidate the exams myself.

The doctor was dealing with AUR over matching. They wanted money for 2014.

The doctor was also dealing with a living, breathing agent about 2014. The agent wanted money, but that money was from areas other than the IRA.

The doctor took both SNODs to Tax Court.

He argument was straightforward – he invoked the tax equivalent of double jeopardy: Section 7605(b):

         (b) Restrictions on examination of taxpayer

No taxpayer shall be subjected to unnecessary examination or investigations, and only one inspection of a taxpayer’s books of account shall be made for each taxable year unless the taxpayer requests otherwise or unless the Secretary, after investigation, notifies the taxpayer in writing that an additional inspection is necessary.

If there was double jeopardy, the doctor clearly wanted the revenue agent’s proposed assessment, as it did not include the IRA.

Did the doctor have an argument?

This Code section has an interesting history. It goes back to the 1920s, at a time when only the wealthy were subject to income tax and there were no computers, 1099s and what-not. Matching was not even a fevered dream. What did exist, however, was the potential for human abuse and repetitive examinations to beat someone into submission. The progenitor of our Section 7605(b) came into existence as an early version of taxpayer protection and rights.

What the Tax Court focused on was whether there were two “examination(s) or investigations.” If the answer was yes, the Court would have to continue to the next question: was the additional examination “unnecessary?”

The Court did not need to continue to the second question, as technically there were not two examinations. You see, the matching program is driven by 1099s and other reporting forms. The AUR unit is not “auditing” in the traditional sense; it is instead trying to reconcile what a taxpayer reported to what an independent party reported.  

Additionally, the only thing AUR is looking at is income.  AUR is not concerned with deductions. Its review does not rise to the level of an examination as AUR is intentionally ignoring all the deductions on one’s return.

But I get it: it does not feel that way to the person interacting with the AUR unit. And there definitely is no real-world difference when AUR wants additional money from you.

But there is a technical difference.  

The doctor saw two examinations. I suspect most people would agree. However, the doctor technically had one examination. He was not in double jeopardy. Section 7605(b) did not apply.

Our case this time was Richard Essner v Commissioner, TC Memo 2020-23.


Tuesday, January 5, 2021

Pay Me In Bitcoin

 

He plays right guard for the Carolina Panthers and had a great quote about cryptocurrency:

         "Pay me in Bitcoin.”

We are talking about Russell Okung.

I believe he earned about $13 million for the 2020/2021 season, so he can move a lot of Bitcoin.

And Bitcoin had quite the run in 2020, moving from approximately $7,200 in January to $30,000 by year-end. The payment platform company Square added Bitcoin as an investment, and PayPal started a new service allowing its users to buy, hold and sell Bitcoin through their PayPal account.

Then there is, as always, the near inexplicable behavior of some people. In October, John McAfee (yes, John of McAfee computer security products) was arraigned for tax fraud. He was charged with, among other things, not reporting income for his work promoting cryptocurrencies.

The IRS is paying more attention.

We have existing guidance that the IRS views cryptos – which include Bitcoin and Ethereum – as property and not currency. While this might sound like an arcane topic for a business school seminar, it does have day-day-day consequences. If you buy something for $11 and pay with a $20 bill, there is likely no tax consequence.  A crypto is not currency, however. Pay for that $11 purchase using your Bitcoin and the IRS sees the trading of property.

What does that mean?

Taxwise you sold crypto for $11. You next have to determine your cost (that is, “basis”) in the crypto. If less than $11, you have a capital gain. If more than $11, you have a capital loss. The gain or loss could be long-term if you held the crypto for more than one year; otherwise, it would be a short-term gain or loss.

Assume that you have frequent transactions in crypto. How are you to determine your basis and holding period every time you pay with crypto?

You had better buy software to do this, or use a wallet that tracks it for you. Otherwise you could have a tax mess on your hands at the end of the year.

You can, by the way, also have ordinary taxable income (rather than capital gain) from cryptos. How? Say that you do consulting work for someone and they pay you in crypto.  You have gig income; gig income is ordinary income; that crypto is ordinary income to you.

By the way, mining Bitcoin is also ordinary income.

The IRS had a question about cryptos on a schedule in prior years, but for 2020 it is moving the following question to the top of Form 1040 page 1:

At any time during 2020, did you receive, sell, send, exchange, or otherwise acquire any financial interest in any virtual currency?”

The IRS moved the question to make it prominent, of course, but there is another reason. Remember that you are signing that tax return “to the best of your knowledge and belief” and “under penalties of perjury.” The IRS is raising the stakes for not reporting.

Expect more computer matching. Expect more notices.   

Even Treasury is upping its game.

There is a form that one files with the Treasury if one owns or has authority over $10,000 or more in a foreign bank or other financial account. We tax veterans remember it as the FBAR (Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts) report, but the name has since been revised to FinCen 114 (Financial Crimes Enforcement Network). Here is Treasury telling us that we will soon be reporting cryptos on their form:

Currently, the Report of Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts (FBAR) regulations do not define a foreign account holding virtual currency as a type of reportable account. (See 31 CFR 1010.350(c)).  For that reason, at this time, a foreign account holding virtual currency is not reportable on the FBAR (unless it is a reportable account under 31 C.F.R. 1010.350 because it holds reportable assets besides virtual currency).    However, FinCEN intends to propose to amend the regulations implementing the Bank Secrecy Act (BSA) regarding reports of foreign financial accounts (FBAR) to include virtual currency as a type of reportable account under 31 CFR 1010.350.

This area is moving in one direction – more reporting. There is currently some inconsistency in how cryptocurrency exchanges report to the IRS (Form 1099-B versus 1099-K versus 1099-MISC). I expect the IRS to lean harder – and soon - on standardizing this reporting. This genie is out of the bottle.

Saturday, December 29, 2018

Is A Form 1099 Automatically Income?


I have a tax question for you.

It may seem straightforward, but this issue actually went to the Tax Court.

You bought a house in 2008. You took out a first and second mortgage.

During 2011 you fell behind on the mortgage. You caught up in 2012.

In 2014 you received a check for $13,508 from the mortgage company. Included with the check was a note stating
… based on a recent review of your account, we may not have provided you with the level of service you deserve, and are providing you with this check.”
The letter also stated you could call with any questions. You did but obtained no more information than we have above. You cashed the check.

The mortgage company sent a Form 1099-MISC for $12,789 and a 1099-INT for $719.
QUESTION: Do you have taxable income?
Several things are crossing through my mind.
(1)  First, if you deducted the $12,789 as mortgage interest, the recovery of a previous interest deduction can be taxable.
(2) Second, how would you know without further detail from the mortgage company?
(3) Third, is their reporting on a Form 1099 fatal?
I admit, I am thinking mortgage interest. To the extent the interest was previously deducted, its recovery could be taxable under the tax benefit doctrine.

The IRS has an easy argument.
Hey, you received a 1099. Two, in fact. A 1099 means income. If the 1099 is wrong, contact the mortgage company and have them void the 1099. Until then, as far as we are concerned you have income.
You have a tougher argument. You have to show that the monies are from a nontaxable source, but the mortgage company is not exactly baring its soul here.

You show the Court the letter. You point out that you paid both principal and interest on the mortgage. It is possible that the mortgage company is repaying you for principal it overcharged.

Did you rise to the occasion?

Here is the Court:
We hold that petitioner presented credible evidence that the $12,789 was a reimbursement for a mistake that [...] had made on his accounts. This return of $12,789 of petitioner’s mortgage payments was not a taxable event and the amount is therefore not includible in income.”
All parties agree that the $719 is taxable as interest income.

You did a good job, but you had a big break.

The IRS presented nothing other than they had received two 1099s. Most of the time that is a winning play.

But you could trump it by providing enough doubt that the 1099s sprung from a taxable source.

You did.

You may have had a sympathetic Court, though. You see, you served in the U.S. Army, and you were serving in Africa as you caught up on your mortgage during 2012.

The Court wouldn’t say, of course. We have to read between the lines.

Our case this time is Jin Man Park v Commissioner.


Saturday, August 25, 2018

Issuing 1099s As Retaliation


I continue to be surprised when people use IRS forms as retaliation.

The form of choice tends to be a 1099. The intent – of course – is to provoke an IRS audit.

There was an incessant legal battle several years back at a Cincinnati CPA firm that detonated. I happen to know the parties involved, and I was interested in the use of 1099s as weapons of war. The senior partner in the imbroglio however was not amused with my interest, seemed surprised that so much of the combat was available to one who could search legal records, and told me where to take a long walk. Quite the charmer.

I am reading a case involving doctors in Illinois. There was an anesthesiologist (Nicholas Angelopoulos - “Nick”) who went into business with an orthopedist (Hall).  Hall owned a company (Keystone) which employed Nick and two other doctors.

There was a cost-sharing arrangement among the doctors, which is common enough but which seemed to change without much explanation.

There was question whether Nick and the other two doctors were ever owners of Keystone (an S corporation). There were e-mails, draft shareholder agreements and meeting agendas, and the doctors were charged for equipment purchased by the practice.  Dr Hall, however, maintained that he was the only shareholder.

OK.

There was an LLC called WACHN, comprised of our four doctors plus another and which purchased medical condominiums. Each of the doctors kicked-in $110,000 and the LLC borrowed the rest, although the doctors had to personally guarantee the debt. Nick said that he never signed the operating agreement and that his signature was forged by use of a signature stamp.

Odd.

Each of the four doctors was required to contribute $100,000 towards a “cash reserve” in Keystone’s bank account. Hall argued that it was necessary to avoid paying checking fees, and that – eventually – there would be more money to distribute to everyone. Nick thought that he was paying for his ownership in Keystone.
COMMENT: Folks, if your bank requires hundreds of thousands of dollars to avoid fees, you really need to consider another bank.
There were questions about how the numbers were calculated and allocated among the doctors in Keystone, but Hall assured the doctors that the practice manager (Hall’s brother in law, by the way) had assured him everything was in order.

I feel better.

In 2007 two of the doctors left.

Later in 2007, Nick told Hall that he too was leaving.

In March, 2008 Hall gave Nick a hand-written sheet stating that Nick owed $151,769. Hall, being a good sport, said that he would offset the $110,000 that Nick had put into WACHN, but Nick had to transfer his interest to Hall. Hall would then – back to that good sport thing – “forgive” the remaining $40,769. Hall did not address removing Nick as a guarantor for WACHN’s debt, though.

Nick told Hall where to go.

Keystone issued Nick a 1099 for $159,577.

Hall said that Nick still owed $100,000 toward the Keystone cash reserves and $28,000 towards the WACHN buy-in. There was also a $38,010 bonus that Hall was paying Nick on the way out, being a good sport and all. Nick responded that he had paid everything he was supposed to pay, and – by the way – what bonus?

Sure enough, in 2011 the IRS swooped in on Nick.

Mission accomplished.

Turns out the $38,010 bonus was right. That however left a bogus $121,567 on the 1099.

Let’s fast forward through the rest.

Nick sued Hall and Keystone. There were several lawsuits, but we are concerned here with the tax-related lawsuit.

The Court decided that Keystone and Hall filed a fraudulent 1099 because of “spite arising out of the larger disputes between the parties.” Code Section 7434 allows for damages in this circumstance, and the Court gets to decide.

The Court awarded Nick damages of $178,954.

Our case this time was Angelopoulos v Keystone Orthopedic Specialists.

Friday, June 30, 2017

Issuing 1099s In Anger


Several years ago, I received an angry call from another CPA.

He had lost a couple of key partners, to which he responded with an almost Game-of-Thrones vindictiveness. He had been charged with issuing false Form 1099s to his former partners.

They dragged him into Court for this and other reasons.

I had looked into the 1099 matter. It is not every day a CPA is charged with issuing false tax forms.

Why would somebody do this: issue false 1099s?

Because chum in the water.

Let’s talk about the Petrunak case.

Petrunak was a pyrotechnician.

This guy made fireworks. He owned a company called Abyss Special FX, Inc. (Abyss), and he could do both indoor and outdoor fireworks displays.

This also meant that he was under regulation by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF).

A couple of ATF agents conducted a mandatory inspection and found a number of violations. Petrunak challenged their findings and had his day in administrative court. I do not know what the details were, but the judge revoked Petrunak’s fireworks license.

So much for Abyss and his paycheck.

Petrunak reckoned he lost a lot of money – both as real-money losses and as money he would have made except for the ATF agents.

He had time to think about it. He thought about it for five years.

He had Abyss send each of them a Form 1099-MISC for $250,000.

Half a million. He figured that was about what they had cost him.

Abyss deducted that half million. As Abyss was an S corporation, there was a big loss passed-through to Petrunak to use on his individual return.

Needless to say, both ATF agents omitted that 1099 from his/her individual tax return.

One agent however got pulled for audit.

The IRS wanted taxes of over $100 grand. She spent a lot of time contesting and unraveling that mess.

Exactly what Petrunak wanted. Forms 1099 are chum in the water to the IRS.

Problem is, the IRS pursued Petrunak after the ATF agent’s audit. He admitted to filing those 1099s, but he was right in doing so and those two had lied – to a judge, unbelievable! – and an IRS person told him that he might be able to issue 1099s for his business costs. He estimated his costs to be half a million.

The IRS charged him with three counts of making false and fraudulent IRS forms.

He fought back, going to the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals.

How did it turn out?

Petrunak is going to prison for 24 months.

His accounting was fantastical, but I get his anger.

Circling back, the accountant who called me was angry because I did not agree with him.

To be kind, let’s say his side of story was … creative.

But then, have a CPA play in a field with accounts receivable, deferred compensation, cash transfers, buyout agreements and whatnot and a talented – and motivated - practitioner can get creative.

He did.

Problem was: he picked a fight with tax CPAs. Two of them.

Bad call. 

It cost him a few bucks.

Sunday, June 25, 2017

How Do You Really Know If You Filed A Tax Return?


Here is what caught my attention:
The Internal Revenue Service … determined a deficiency of $541,552 in petitioner’s 2012 Federal income tax and an accuracy-related penalty of $107,995.”
This is the Whitsett case. She is a doctor and specializes in blood transfusions. Way back in 1982 she and her husband bought 4,000 shares of Immucor, Inc stock for $11,000. She kept it after the divorce.

Fast forward to 2011 and someone agreed to acquire Immucor for $27 per share.

She had almost 20 years for the stock to split and split again; she now owned 63,594 shares.

By my math 63,594 times $27 = $1,717,038.

How I wish I had those problems.

Come tax time she takes the paperwork to her accountant, whom she had used for decades. She showed him paperwork accompanying her $1.17 million check, captioned “Corporate Action Advice.” It said that …

·      The “payment date” was August 19, 2011
·      The “tax year” was 2012
·      The sale was “processed” on January, 2012

I have no idea what this “action advice” was trying to say. As a tax CPA, I report someone’s financial life to the IRS one year at a time. It is critical to me to know whether this sale took place in 2011 or 2012. Whoever wrote this “advice” must have been crazed or did not command the language.
COMMENT: If I were the CPA, I would be on the phone to shareholder services. Or I would ask you to call. Either way, we are investigating.
QUESTION: There is one more thing that could help with determining the tax year. Can you guess what it is?

Dr W’s accountant takes a look at the paperwork and decides that 2011 is the proper year to report the gain.

The accountant was also under the impression that she had been reinvesting dividends. He does a calculation (totaling $628,437), adds it to $11,000 and determines that her “basis” in the stock was $639,437.

And her gain is $1,077,601 (1,717,038 – 639,437).

He extends her return and has her send an extension payment of $154,776.

The return was extended until October 15, 2012. For some reason, he did not finish it on time. Instead he finished it in February, 2013. He sent Dr W a copy of her return as well as a letter explaining that he had “filed the return electronically.”

Happens all the time.
COMMENT: Except that a step is missing. Do you know what it is?
There was $5,393 due, and the Dr sent a check.

All done, right?

Nope.

The Dr gets a Form 1099-B reporting the sale of the stock in 2012.
COMMENT: Now he has to amend her 2011 to remove the sale.
The accountant reviewed the paperwork and decided that nothing needed to be reported in 2012, as she had reported the sale the year before. As if to provide an exclamation point, he did not even show the sale on her 2012 return with zero gain, if only to avoid tripping the IRS computers. He was pretty certain about his game. 
COMMENT: This is not done. Even if I was absolutely convinced that the 1099 was in error, I would report it on your return and then find a way to back it out. The IRS simply matches A to B; in the event of a mismatch, the IRS computers send out an automatic notice. The notice does not pass human eyeballs until you respond (or eventually, should you fail to respond).
Late in 2013 the IRS sent the Dr a notice asking where her 2011 return was. They were showing a credit of $165,562 but no return.

For some reason the Dr sent another check for $5,393. Why? Who knows.

She asked him about that 2011 return. He assured her that he filed it electronically.
COMMENT: If the IRS is asking, you did not file. You may have thought you did, but you are not going to win this fight. Send them a copy. Some practitioners even include a legend such as “Information Only – Previously Filed.” You can attach a note to this effect. No one is going to read the note and – more likely than not – you will receive a notice for late filing, but there is no harm.
Her accountant was so sure, however, that he sent the IRS nothing. Not a letter. Not a call. Nothing. What could possibly go wrong?

By October, 2014 the IRS sent the Dr a notice for big-time taxes due for 2012. Remember that - according to the IRS - she sold that stock in 2012.

In February 2015, the accountant backed down and admitted that the sale should have been reported in 2012. He also blew the calculation of her stock basis by adding $628,437 for reinvestments. Turns out that she had not reinvested. He promised to amend the 2011 and 2012 returns.

He amended nothing.

Finally – and fed up – she hired an attorney.

On April 10, 2015, the attorney amended the 2011 return, removing the sale of stock. 
QUESTION: Do you recognize the significance of the date: April 10, 2015?
Without the stock sale, she had a gigantic overpayment for 2011, which the attorney applied to 2012 and the stock sale.

The case, by the way, was not about the story we have just told. No sir. The case was because the IRS wanted gigantic penalties from Dr W.

Huh?

From their perspective, she refused to file a 2011 return, even after being reminded.

And – on top of that – she left out a big stock sale on her 2012 return.

If that was all you knew, she would look pretty bad.

From her side, the IRS looks like a bully. She reported the stock gain and paid the tax A YEAR EARLY.

Granted, the paperwork was a disaster, but the money was there before its time. If anything, the IRS should pay interest for banking her money.

The Tax Court fortunately reversed the penalties against Dr W. They felt she had acted with “reasonable cause” and “in good faith.” She relied on a long-standing tax advisor. He went off the rails, but how was she to know?

Remember that the penalty was over a hundred grand.

Back to our questions:

(1) The accountant should have questioned why he did not have a Form 1099-B for 2011. Anything can happen and paperwork gets lost, but the lack of one made me curious immediately.
(2) The accountant is not allowed to release her return without written permission from Dr W. Why? Because it not his return, that is why. He should have requested her to sign an authorization and mail it back to him before filing anything.
(3) The significance of the date is the statute of limitations. The original due date for a 2011 return was April 15, 2012. Add three years and make it April 15, 2015. If she wanted to get her 2011 refund (and she did), she had to get her amended return in by April 15, 2015. She made it by 5 days.

I am not sure what happened with the accountant. Was there a foul-up with his software? Did he attempt to electronically file but not recognize that the attempt failed? Why did he ignore a Form 1099, knowing that those things are chum-in-the-water for the IRS? Why did he not recognize that the statute of limitations was closing on a hundred-and-fifty grand?


And why not just send another copy of the return to the IRS and be done with it?

Saturday, May 27, 2017

How To Hack Off An IRS Auditor

Let’s discuss an excellent way to anger a revenue agent auditing your tax return.

Eric and Mary Kahmann have owned a jewelry business for 45 years. They report the business on their personal return as a proprietorship (that is, a Schedule C). they primarily sell at shows throughout the United States, although they also sell through Amazon and PayPal.

PayPal introduces a tax variable: Form 1099-K.

Yep, another blasted 1099. This time Congress was concerned that people were selling stuff (through Amazon, for example) and not correctly reporting their income. Amazon will sell your stuff, but the cash is likely going through Pay Pal or its equivalent. Do enough business and PayPal will send you a 1099-K at the end of the year.

Issue number one.

In addition, Mr. Kahmann’s two brothers were also in the jewelry business. Whereas they did not work with or for him, they would use his two merchant accounts to process payments.

Issue number two.

The IRS audited the Kahmann’s 2011 year.

Why? Who knows. What did not help were the following numbers:

Gross sales reported by the Kahmanns     $128,070
Gross sales reported on the 1099-Ks         $151,834

Guess what? This happens quite a bit, and it does not necessarily mean shenanigans. I will give you one example:
Customer refunds
If one accounts for customer refunds by subtracting them from sales, one can have the above discrepancy. The 1099-K does not – of course – know about any refunds.

The revenue agent asked for bank statements.
COMMENT: This has become standard IRS procedure for a Schedule C audit. It means nothing. You can however flame it into roaring meaningfulness by …
The Kahmanns refused to provide the bank statements.

Brilliant!  

I would seriously consider firing a client who did that to me. Is it a pain? Yes. Will the bank charge you for the copies? Yep. Is it fair? Fair is beside the point. It is what it is.

The revenue agent issued a summons to the bank for the three accounts she knew about. 
COMMENT: Yes, the IRS can get to those accounts. In addition, now the agent has to question whether she knows about all your accounts. Your chances of getting her to believe anything you say are falling fast.
Let’s grade the Kahmanns’ conduct during this audit so far:

                  F

The agent got the bank statements and added up all the deposits. The total was $169,603.

Wait, it gets better.
She could not trace one of the 1099-Ks into the bank statements, so she added that number ($15,745) to the $169,603. She now calculated gross receipts as $188,073.
The Kahmanns have a problem.
They have to show that some of those deposits were not income. Could be. Perhaps they borrowed money. Perhaps they transferred monies between accounts. Perhaps they received family gifts.

Perhaps Mr. Kahmann deposited his brothers’ PayPal transactions, given that they were using his merchant accounts.

There are two technical issues here that a tax nerd would recognize:

(1) There is recourse to having the IRS add-in $15,745 from a 1099-K just because the agent could not figure-out how it was deposited. A taxpayer can shift the burden of proof back to the IRS, meaning that the IRS is going to need something more than a piece of paper with “1099-K” printed somewhere on it.

There is a catch: you must cooperate with the IRS during the exam. Guess who did not cooperate by refusing to provide bank statements?

Bingo!

(2) Alternatively, a taxpayer can show that the deposits are not income.

Say that a deposit belonged to Kahmann’s brother. You can have the brother (or his accountant, more likely) show that the deposit was included in gross sales reported on the brother’s tax return.

It’s a pain, but it is not brain surgery.

The Kahmanns provided letters from the brothers.

The IRS wanted to meet with the brothers.

The brothers did not want to meet with the IRS.

The Kahmanns submitted books and records to support their tax return. The handwriting appeared to have been written all at once rather than over the year. The ink was also the same throughout.

Unlikely. Suspicious. Dumb.

You can guess how this wound up.


The Court agreed with the IRS recalculation of income. The Kahmanns owed big bucks. There were penalties too. 

Normally I am quite pro-taxpayer.  Am I sympathetic this time?

Not a bit.



Saturday, November 12, 2016

You Got Repossessed And The Bank Says You Have HOW MUCH Income?


I ran into a cancellation-of-debt issue recently.

You may know that – should the bank or finance company cancel or agree to reduce your debt – you will receive a Form 1099. The tax Code considers forgiveness of debt to be taxable income, as your “wealth” has increased - supposedly by an amount equal to the debt forgiven. There are exceptions to recognizing income if you are insolvent, file for bankruptcy and several other situations.

Let me give you a situation here at galactic headquarters:

Married couple. Husband is a doctor. Husband buys a boat. He puts both the boat and the promissory note in the wife’s name, presumably in case something happens and he gets sued. They divorce. It is understood that he will keep the boat and make the bank payment. He does not. The boat is repossessed and then sold for nickels on the dollar. Wife (who was never taken off the note) receives a Form 1099-C. She has cancellation-of-debt income, which is bad enough. To make it worse, income is inflated as the bank appears to have sold the boat at a fire-sale price.

Our client is – of course – the wife.

The person who signs on the note receives the 1099 and reports any cancellation-of-debt income. If the debt “belongs” to your spouse and not to you, you better have your name removed from the debt before you get out of divorce court. The IRS argues that – if you receive a 1099 that “belongs” to your ex-spouse - you should seek restitution by repetitioning the court. This makes it a divorce and not a tax issue. The IRS is not interested in a divorce issue.

It all sounds fine until real life.

The wife received a $100,000-plus Form 1099-C from that boat.

Let’s reflect on how she there:

(1)  The wife doesn’t have a boat and never did. Hubby wanted a boat. She signed on the note to keep hubby happy.
(2)  The wife’s divorce attorney forgot to get that note out of her name. Alternatively, the attorney could have seen to it that wife also wound up with the boat.
(3)  For whatever reason, husband let the boat be repossessed.
(4)  The bank issued a Form 1099-C to the wife. The income amount was simple math: the debt less whatever the bank received for the boat.

Let’s introduce real life:
  • What if the bank makes a mistake?
  • What if the bank virtually gives the boat away?

The IRS has traditionally been quite inflexible when it comes to these 1099s. If the bank reports a number, the IRS will run with it.

You can see the recipe for tragedy.

Fortunately, the IRS pressed too far with the 2009 Martin case.

In 1999 Martin bought a Toyota 4-Runner. He financed over $12 thousand, but stopped making payments when the loan amount was about $6,700. The Toyota was repossessed. He received a Form 1099-C for the $6,700.
… which meant that the bank received zero … zip… zilch… on the sale of the 4-Runner.
Doesn’t make sense, does it?

The IRS did not care. Go back to the lender and have them change the 1099, they said.
COMMENT: Sure. I am certain the lender will jump right on this.
Martin did care. He told the Court that the Toyota was worth roughly what he owed on it when repossessed, and that the 1099-C was incorrect.

Enter Code section 6201(d):
(d) Required reasonable verification of information returns In any court proceeding, if a taxpayer asserts a reasonable dispute with respect to any item of income reported on an information return filed with the Secretary under subpart B or C of part III of subchapter A of chapter 61 by a third party and the taxpayer has fully cooperated with the Secretary (including providing, within a reasonable period of time, access to and inspection of all witnesses, information, and documents within the control of the taxpayer as reasonably requested by the Secretary), the Secretary shall have the burden of producing reasonable and probative information concerning such deficiency in addition to such information return. 

Normally, the IRS has the advantage in a tax controversy and the taxpayer has the burden of proof. 

Code section 6201(d) provides that – if you can assert a reasonable dispute with respect to an item of income reported on an information return (such as a 1099-C), you can shift the burden of proof back to the IRS.

The Tax Court decided that Martin had shifted the burden of proof. The 4-Runner had to be worth something. The ball was back in the IRS’ court.

Granted, Martin was low-hanging fruit, as the bank reported no proceeds. The IRS should have known better than to take this case to court, but they did and we now have a way to challenge an erroneous 1099-C.  

In our wife’s case, I am thinking of getting a soft appraisal on the value of the boat when repossessed. If it is materially different from the bank’s calculation (which I expect), I am considering a Section 6201(d) challenge.

Why? Because my client should not have to report excess income if the bank gave the boat away. That was a bank decision, not hers. She had every reasonable expectation that the bank would demand and receive fair market value upon sale. Their failure to do so should not be my client’s problem. 

Which will be like poking the IRS bear.


But she has received a questionable $100,000-plus Form 1099-C. That bear is already chasing her.