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Showing posts with label attorney. Show all posts
Showing posts with label attorney. Show all posts

Sunday, February 4, 2024

Incorrect Submission Leads to Dismissal of Refund Claim

 

You should be able to talk with someone at the IRS and work it out over the phone.”

I have lost track of how many times I have heard that over the years.

I do not disagree, and sometimes it works out. Many times it does not, and we recently went through a multi-year period when the IRS was barely working at all.

There are areas of tax practice that are riddled with landmines. Procedure - when certain things have to be done in a certain way or within a certain timeframe – is one of them. Ignore those letters long enough and you have an invitation to Tax Court. You do not have to go, but the IRS will – and automatically win.

I was looking at a case recently involving a claim.

Tax practitioners generally know claims under a different term – an amended return. If you amend your individual tax return for a refund, you use Form 1040X, for example.

There are certain taxes, including penalties and interest, however, for which you will use a different form. 

Frankly, one can have a lengthy career and rarely use this form. It depends – of course – on one’s clients and their tax situations.

And yes, there is a serious procedural trap here – two, in fact. If you use this form but the IRS has instructed use of a different form, the 843 claim will be invalid. You will be requested to resubmit the claim using the correct form. By itself it is little more than an annoyance, unless one is close to the expiration of the statute of limitations. If that statute expires before you file the correct form, you are out of luck.

There is another trap.

Let’s look at the Vensure case.

Vensure is a professional employer organization, or PEO. This means that they perform HR, including payroll responsibilities, for their clients. They will, for example, issue your paycheck and send you a W-2 at the end of the tax year.

Vensure had a client that stiffed them for approximately $4 million. As you can imagine, this put Vensure in a precarious financial situation, and they had trouble making timely payroll tax deposits in later quarters.

I bet.

Vensure did two things:

(1)  They filed amended payroll tax returns (Forms 941X) for refund of payroll taxes remitted to the IRS on behalf of their deadbeat client.

(2)  They submitted Forms 843 for refund of penalties paid over the span of six quarters (payroll taxes are filed quarterly).

Notice two things:

(1)  The claim for refund of the payroll taxes themselves was filed on Form 941X, as the IRS has said that is the proper form to use.

(2)  The claim for refund of the penalties on those taxes was filed on Form 843, as the IRS has said that is the proper form for the refund or abatement of penalties, interest, and other additions to tax.

Vensure’s attorney prepared the 843s. Having a power of attorney on file with the IRS, the attorney signed the forms on behalf of the taxpayer, as well as signing as the paid preparer. He did not attach a copy of the power to the 843, however, figuring that the IRS already had it on file.

Makes sense.

But procedure sometimes makes no sense.

Take a look at the following instructions to Form 843:

You can file Form 843 or your authorized representative can file it for you. If your authorized representative files Form 843, the original or copy of Form 2848, Power of Attorney and Declaration of Representative, must be attached. You must sign Form 2848 and authorize the representative to act on your behalf for the purposes of the request.” 

The IRS bounced the claims.

The taxpayer took the IRS to court.

The IRS had a two-step argument:

(1) For a refund claim to be duly filed, the claim’s statement of the facts and grounds for refund must be verified by a written declaration that it is made under penalties of perjury. A claim which does not comply with this requirement will not be considered for any purpose as a claim for refund or credit. 

(2)  Next take a look at Reg 301.6402-2(c):  

Form for filing claim. If a particular form is prescribed on which the claim must be made, then the claim must be made on the form so prescribed. For special rules applicable to refunds of income taxes, see §301.6402-3. For provisions relating to credits and refunds of taxes other than income tax, see the regulations relating to the particular tax. All claims by taxpayers for the refund of taxes, interest, penalties, and additions to tax that are not otherwise provided for must be made on Form 843, "Claim for Refund and Request for Abatement."

Cutting through the legalese, claims made on Form 843 must follow the instructions for Form 843, one of which is the requirement for an original or copy of Form 2848 to be attached.

Vensure of course argued that it substantially complied, as a copy of the power was on file with the IRS.

Not good enough, said the Court:

The court agrees with the defendant that the signature and verification requirements for Form 843 claims for refund are statutory.”

Vensure lost on grounds of procedure.

Is it fair?

There are areas in tax practice where things must be done in a certain way, in a certain order and within a certain time.

Fair has nothing to do with it.

Our case this time was Vensure HR, Inc v The United States, No 20-728T, 2023 U.S. Claims.






Sunday, February 6, 2022

Taxpayer Wins Refund Despite Using Wrong Form


Let’s look at a case that comes out of Cincinnati.

E. John Rewwer (Rewwer) had a professional practice which he reported on Schedule C (proprietorship/disregarded entity) of his personal return.

He got audited for years 2007 through 2009.

The IRS disallowed expenses and assessed the following in taxes, interest and penalties:

           2007            $  15,041

           2008            $137,718

           2009            $ 55,299

Rewwer paid the assessments.

He then filed a claim for refund for those years. More specifically his attorney filed and signed the refund claims, including the following explanation:

The IRS did not properly consider documentation of my expenses during my income tax audit. I would ask that the IRS reopen the audit, reconsider my documentation, and refund the amounts paid as a result of the erroneous audit adjustments, including any penalty and interest that may have accrued.”

I am not certain which expense categories the IRS denied, but I get it. I have a similar (enough) client who got audited for 2016. IRS Holtsville disallowed virtually every significant expense despite being provided a phonebook of Excel schedules, receipts and other documentation.  We took the matter to Appeals and then to Tax Court. I could see some expenses being disallowed (for example, travel and entertainment expenses are notoriously difficult to document), but not entire categories of expenses. That told me loud and clear that someone at IRS Holtsville could care less about doing their job properly.

Wouldn’t you know that our client is being examined again for 2018? Despite taking the better part of a day faxing audit documentation to IRS Holtsville, we are back in Tax Court.  And I feel the same way about 2018 as I did about 2016: someone at the IRS has been assigned work above their skill level.

Back to Rewwer.

The attorney:

(1)  Sent in claims for refund on Form 843, and

(2)  Signed the claims for refunds.

Let’s take these points in reverse order.

An attorney or CPA cannot sign a return for you without having a power of attorney accompanying the claim. Our standard powers here at Galactic Command, for example, do not authorize me/us to sign returns for a client. We would have to customize the power to permit such authority, and I will rarely agree to do so. The last time I remember doing this was for nonresident clients with U.S. filing requirements. Mail time to and from could approach the ridiculous, and some of the international forms are not cleared for electronic filing.

Rewwer’s claims were not valid until the signature and/or power of attorney matter was resolved.

Look at this Code section for the second point:

§ 301.6402-3 Special rules applicable to income tax.

(a) The following rules apply to a claim for credit or refund of income tax: -

(1) In general, in the case of an overpayment of income taxes, a claim for credit or refund of such overpayment shall be made on the appropriate income tax return.

(2) In the case of an overpayment of income taxes for a taxable year of an individual for which a Form 1040 or 1040A has been filed, a claim for refund shall be made on Form 1040X (“Amended U.S. Individual Income Tax Return”).

Yep, there is actually a Code section for which form one is supposed to use. The attorney used the wrong form.

For some reason, the IRS allowed 2008 but denied the other two years.

The IRS delayed for a couple of years. The attorney, realizing that the statute of limitations was about to expire, filed suit.

This presented a window to correct the signature/power of attorney issue as part of the trial process.

To which the IRS cried foul: the taxpayer had not filed a valid refund claim (i.e., wrong form), so the claim was invalid and could not be later perfected. Without a valid claim, the IRS claimed sovereign immunity (the king cannot be sued without agreement and the king did not so agree).

The IRS had a point.

But the taxpayer argued that he had met the “informal claim” requirements and should be allowed to perfect his claim.

The Supreme Court has allowed imperfect claims to be treated as informal claims when:

(1) The claim is written

(2)  The claim adequately tells the IRS why a refund is sought, and

(3)  The claim adequately tells the IRS for what year(s) the claim is sought.

The point to an informal claim is that technical deficiencies with the claim can be remedied – even after the normal statute of limitations - as long as the informal claim is filed before the statute expires.

As part of the litigation, Rewwer refiled years 2007 and 2009 on Forms 1040X, as the Regulations require. This also provided opportunity to sign the returns (and power of attorney, for that matter), thereby perfecting the earlier-filed claims.

Question: did the Court accept Rewwer’s informal claim argument?

Answer: the Court did.

OBSERVATION: How did the Court skip over the fact that the claims – informal or not – were not properly signed? The IRS did that to itself. At no time did the IRS deny the claims for of lack of signatures or an incomplete power of attorney. The Court refused to allow the IRS to raise this argument after-the-fact to the taxpayer’s disadvantage: a legal principle referred to as “estoppel.”  

Look however at the work it took to get the IRS to consider/reconsider Rewwer’s exam documentation for 2007 and 2009. Seems excessive, I think.

Our case this time was E. John Rewwer v United States, U.S. District Court, S.D. Ohio. 

COMMENT: If you are wondering why the “United States” rather than the usual “Commissioner, IRS,” the reason is that tax refund litigation in federal district courts is handled by the Tax Division of the Department of Justice.

Sunday, January 30, 2022

An Attorney Learns Passthrough Taxation

 

I have worked with a number of brilliant attorneys over the years. It takes quite a bit for a tax attorney to awe me, but it has happened.

But that law degree by itself does not mean that one has mastered a subject area, much less that one is brilliant.

Let’s discuss a case involving an attorney.

Lateesa Ward graduated from law school in 1991. She went the big firm route for a while, but by 2006 she opened her own firm. For the years at issue, the firm was just her and another person.

She elected S corporation status.

We have discussed S status before. There is something referred to as “passthrough” taxation. The idea is that a business – an S corporation, a partnership, an LLC – skips paying its own tax. Rather the tax-causing numbers are pushed-out to the owners – shareholders, partners, members – who then include those numbers on their personal return and pay the taxes thereon personally.

Why would a rational human being do that?

Sometimes it makes sense. A lot of sense, in fact.

I will give you one example. Say that you have a regular corporation, one that the tax nerds call a “C.” Say that there is real estate in there that has appreciated insanely. It wouldn’t hurt your feelings to sell the real estate and pocket the money. There is a problem, though. If the real estate is inside a “C,” the gain will be taxed to the corporation upon sale.

That’s OK, you reason. You knew taxes were coming.

When you take the money out of the corporation, you pay taxes again.

Huh?

If you think about, what I just described is commonly referred to as a “dividend.”

That second round of income taxes hurts, unless one is a publicly-traded leviathan like Apple or Amazon. More accurately, it hurts even then, but ownership is so diluted that it is unlikely to greatly impact any one owner.

Scale down from the behemoths and that second round of tax probably locks-in the asset inside the C corporation. Not exactly an efficient use of resources, methinks.

Enter the passthrough.

With some exceptions (there are always exceptions), the passthrough allows one – and only one – round of tax when you sell the real estate.

Back to Lateesa.

In 2011 the S corporation deducted salary to her of $62,388.

She reported no salary on her personal return.,

In 2012 the S deducted salary to her of $73,448.

She reported salary of $47,171.

In 2011 her share (which was 100%, of course) of the firm’s profits was $1,373.

She reported that.

Then she reported the numbers again as though she was self-employed.

She reported the numbers twice, it seems.

The IRS could not figure out what she was doing, so they came in and audited several years.

There was the usual back-and-forth with documenting expenses, as well as quibbling over travel and related expenses. Standard stuff, but it can hurt if one is not keeping adequate records.

I was curious why she left her salary off her personal return. I have a salary. Maybe she knew something that has escaped me, and I too can run down my personal taxes.

She explained that only some of the officer compensation was salary or wages.

Go on.

The rest of the compensation was a distribution of “earnings and profits.” She continued that an S corporation shareholder is allowed to receive tax-free distributions to the extent she has basis.

Oh my. Missed the boat. Missed the harbor. Nowhere near water.  Never heard of water.

What we are talking about is a tax deduction, not a distribution. The S corporation took a tax deduction for salary paid her. To restore balance to the Force, she has to personally report the salary as income. One side has a deduction; the other side has income. Put them together and they net to zero. The Force is again in balance.

Here is the Court:

Ward also took an eccentric approach to the compensation that she paid herself as the firm’s officer.”

It did not turn out well for Ms. Ward. Remember that there are withholdings and employer-side payroll taxes required on salary and wages, and the IRS was already looking at other issues on those tax returns. This audit got messy.

There was no awe here.

Our case this time was Lateesa Ward v Commissioner and Ward & Ward Company v Commissioner, T.C. Memo 2021-32.

Sunday, July 25, 2021

Penalties, Boyle and “Reductio Ad Absurdum.”

 

In logic there is an argument referred to as “reductio ad absurdum.” Its classic presentation is to pursue an assertion or position until it – despite one progressing logically – results in an absurd conclusion. An example would be the argument that the more sleep one gets, the healthier one is. It does not take long to get to the conclusion that someone who sleeps 24 hours a day – in a coma, perhaps – is in peak physical condition.

I am looking at a tax case that fits this description.

What sets it up is our old nemesis – the Boyle decision. Boyle hired an attorney to take care of an estate tax return. The attorney unfortunately filed the return a few months late, and the IRS came with penalties a-flying. Boyle requested penalty abatement for reasonable cause. The Court asked for the grounds constituting reasonable cause. Boyle responded:

                  I hired an ATTORNEY.”

Personally, I agree with Boyle.

The Court however did not. The Court subdivided tax practice in a Camusian manner by holding that:

·      Tax advice can constitute reasonable cause, as the advice can be wrong;

·      Relying on someone to file an extension or return for you cannot constitute reasonable cause, as even a monkey or U.S. Representative could google and find out when the filing is due.

 Here is an exercise for the tax nerd.

(1)  Go to the internet.

(2)  Tell me when a regular vanilla C corporation tax return is due.

(3)  Change the corporate year-end to June 30.

a.    When is that return due?

Yes, the due dates are different. I know because of what I do. Would you have gone to step (3) if I had not pushed you?

Jeffery Lindsay was in prison from 2013 to 2015. He gave his attorney a power of attorney over everything – bank accounts, filing taxes and so on. Lindsay requested the attorney to file and pay his taxes. The attorney assured him he was taking care of it.

He was taking care of Lindsay, all right. He was busy embezzling hundreds of thousands of dollars is what he was doing. Lindsay got wind, sued and won over $700 grand in actual damages and $1 million in punitive damages.

The IRS came in. Why? Because the last thing that the attorney cared about was filing Lindsay’s taxes, paying estimates, any of that. It turns out that Lindsay had filed nothing for years. Lindsay of course owed back taxes. He owed interest on the tax, as he did not pay on time. What stung is that the IRS wanted over $425 grand in penalties.

He did what you or I would do: request that the penalties be abated.

The Court wanted to know the grounds constituting reasonable cause.

Are you kidding me?

Lindsay pointed out the obvious:

         I was in PRISON.”

Here is the Court:

One does not have to be a tax expert to know that tax returns have fixed filing dates and that taxes must be paid when they are due.”

The Court agreed with the IRS and denied reasonable cause.

Lindsay was out hundreds of thousand of dollars in penalties.

I consider the decision the logical conclusion of Boyle. I also think it is a bad decision, and it encapsulates, highlights and magnifies the absurdity of Boyle using the logic of “reductio ad absurdum.”

Our case this time was Lindsay v United States, USDC No 4:19-CV-65.


Saturday, June 5, 2021

A CPA’s Signature And The Informal Claim Doctrine

 

I am looking at case where the CPA signed a return on behalf of a client.

Been there and done that.

There is a hard-and-fast rule when you do this.

Let’s go through it.

The Mattsons were working in Australia for the Raytheon Corporation.

In April, 2017 they timely filed their 2016 individual tax return, paying $21,190 in federal taxes.

COMMENT: This immediately strikes me as odd. I would have anticipated a foreign income exclusion. Maybe they were over the exclusion limit, meaning that some of their income was exposed to U.S. tax. Even so, I would then have expected a foreign tax credit, offsetting U.S. tax by taxes paid to Australia.

Turns out they had signed a closing agreement when they went to Australia. The agreement was with the IRS, and they waived their right to claim the foreign income exclusion.

Ahh, that answers my first question.

Why would they do this?

In return for agreeing not to claim the 911 exclusion, the government of Australia has entered into an agreement with the United States Government not to subject the income earned by the taxpayer to Australian taxes."

Yep, there are advantages to working with the big company. It also answers my second question.

Seems to me that we are done here. Taxpayers paid taxes on their Australian wages solely to the United States. In exchange they forwent the foreign income exclusion. Makes sense.

The Mattsons changed CPA firms. The new firm prepared an amended 2016 return for – you guessed it – the foreign income exclusion.

COMMENT: I presume the new firm did not know about the closing agreement.

A CPA at the firm signed the amended return on behalf of the Mattsons.

No problem, but she did not attach a power of attorney authorizing the CPA to sign the return.

Not good, but there is time to fix this.

The IRS held the amended return and sent a letter wanting to know why the Mattsons had taken a position contrary to the closing agreement.

Me too.

In May, 2019 the CPA firm requested an Appeals hearing.

OK.

In July, 2019 the IRS sent a letter that they were disallowing the refund.

The taxpayers filed suit in Court.

To me, the controversy was done with discovery of the closing agreement. There is a Don Quixote quality to this story once that fact came to light.

There is a requirement in the tax Code and a list of cases as long as my arm that taxpayers have to sign a return, especially a claim (that is, a return requesting a refund). A CPA can sign the return on behalf of a client, but the CPA is charged with attaching a copy of a power of attorney to the return.

Hold on, argued the CPA. We sent a power of attorney to the IRS in November, 2018.

This is new information.

And it introduces the “informal claim” doctrine to our discussion.

The idea is that the taxpayer can correct the defect in a claim. That is what “informal” means in this context – think of the first claim as a placeholder until it is perfected. The CPA firm had failed to initially attach a power of attorney, but it subsequently corrected this error in November, 2018.

Issue: the claim has to be perfected BEFORE the start of a lawsuit.

Fact One: the lawsuit was filed in July, 2019.

Fact Two: the power was sent to the IRS in November, 2018.

Reasoning: the dates work.

Question: did the taxpayer correct their claim in time?

I sign powers of attorney all the time. I doubt I go a week without filing at least one with the IRS. I like to explain to clients (unless they have been through the process before) what the limitations are to a standard tax power of attorney. I can call the IRS, request and/or agree to adjustments or stays, and so forth.

However, what our standard power does not do is allow me to sign the return. A client can give me that authority, true, but is has to be separately stated on the power. Our routine powers here at Galactic Command, for example, do not include the authority to sign a return on behalf of a client. In truth, unless there are exceptional circumstances, I do not want that authority. I don’t want to receive a client’s refund check, either.

I can almost visualize what happened.

The CPA signed the return. She knew that she needed a power, so she – or a staff accountant – generated one from their software. It was a default power, the one they – like we – use in almost all cases. No one paused to consider that the default power was not appropriate in this instance.

There was still time to fix this. The firm could revise the power to allow the CPA authority to sign, collect the appropriate signatures and record the power with the IRS.

But they had to do this before bringing suit.

Which they did not.

The informal claim doctrine did not apply, because the placeholder claim was not perfected before filing suit.

Our case this time was Mattson v U.S., 2021 PTC 110 (Fed Cl 2021).


Sunday, December 6, 2020

Do. Not. Do. This.

Here is the Court:

With respect to petitioner’s Federal income tax for 2013 and 2014, the Internal Revenue Service … determined deficiencies and accuracy-related penalties as follows:

Year  Deficiency Penalty

2013 $338,752    $67,750

2014 7,030,829   1,406,166

I cannot turn down at least skimming a Tax Court case with penalties well over $1.4 million.

Turns out our protagonist is an attorney. He more than dabbled in tax practice:

·      During law school, he took courses in tax law and participated in a tax clinic assisting low-income taxpayers

·      During school he was employed by Instant Tax Services (ITS) in Baltimore. ITS operated on a franchise basis, and he was the area manager for four storefronts. After graduation he served as general counsel for five years.

·      While serving as general counsel, he started acquiring storefronts on his own behalf. By 2013 he owned he owned franchises for 19 locations.

·      These stores were profitable. Aggregate profits exceeded $800 grand over the years 2008 through 2010.

You know, sometimes I wonder what swoon I was in to spend an entire career with a CPA firm. It appears that the money is in setting up and franchising seasonal tax preparation storefronts.

In 2012 ITS attracted the attention of the U.S. Department of Justice – and in a bad way. In 2013 a district court permanently enjoined ITS and its owner from having anything to do with preparing federal tax returns.

COMMENT: Ouch.

Our protagonist was good friends with the owner of ITS. So close, in fact, that Justice refused to allow him to take over the ITS tax preparation business.

COMMENT: Something about helping the ITS owner hide around $5 million.

A third party stepped up to take over the ITS business. This new person formed Great Tax LLC, and many of the ITS franchisees came on board.

Our protagonist was not to be denied, however. He bought the tax preparation software from ITS, put it in an entity called Refunds Plus, LLC (RP), and in turn leased the software to Great Tax LLC.

COMMENT: There is existing commercial tax preparation software, of varying levels of sophistication. We, for example, use software that allows for very complicated returns. It costs a fortune, by the way. There is other software that tones it down a bit, as perhaps the tax practice prepares few or no returns of great complexity. In any event, writing my own software seems a monumental waste of time and money, except for the following tell:

“using this software to process tax returns for GTX customers, most or all of whom expected refunds.”

Most or all?  Riiiigggghht. Perhaps it is just as well that I have stayed with a CPA firm for all these years.

Great Tax LLC paid our protagonist $100.95 for each return it processed and which claimed a refund.

COMMENT: Was a non-refund return free?

Our protagonist worked out an arrangement with Great Tax which allowed him to take money out of Great Tax’s bank account. He also opened a bank account for RP. He moved over $3 million from Great Tax during 2014.

However, he did not deposit the monies from Great Tax into the RP bank account.

So where did the money go?

Who knows.

Since this went to Court, we know that the IRS figured-out what was going on.

Our protagonist agreed that he owed the taxes, but he requested abatement of the penalties for reasonable cause.

He has my attention: what was his reasonable cause?

·      He was a cash-basis taxpayer.

And I like meatball sandwiches. Pray tell what that has to do with anything.

·      There was little to no cash activity in the RP business bank account.

Seriously? Was he aware that failure to deposit funds in its entity-related account is an indicia of fraud?

·      He relied on an attorney.

Reliance on a professional can provide reasonable cause. Tell me more.

·      She had been working as a full-time lawyer for about a year.

Not impressed.

·      She had acquired some of the former ITS franchises.

Had to be a story somewhere.

·      She had represented him when the IRS pressed in a separate action for abuse of the earned income credit.

We just learned where all those refund returns came from.

Let me get this right: his reasonable cause argument is that an attorney prepared his return?

·      No.

Who prepared the return?

·      An accountant.

Why then are we talking about an attorney?

·      She advised our protagonist that he was not required to report the $3 million as gross receipts for 2014.

Our protagonist in turn told the accountant the same thing?

·      Yep. He relied on an attorney.

If this is true, she may be in the running for the worst attorney of the decade.

And why would he – an experienced attorney with some tax background – listen to an attorney with limited experience?

·      The attorney and our protagonist were codefendants in a lawsuit alleging misappropriation of funds.

Yessir.

The Court requested documentary evidence that an attorney would advise that moving approximately $3 million to bank accounts of one’s choosing was not taxable income.

I’m in: I want to see those documents myself.

·      She supplied no evidence of letters, memos or e-mails – dated before those returns were filed – in which she advised petitioner about the reporting of RP’s gross receipts.”

Rain is wet. Nighttime is dark.

How did the Court decide this mess?

We did not find either’s testimony on that point credible. Petitioner’s testimony was self-serving, and [the attorney] did not strike the Court as an objective or candid witness.”

The Court did not believe a word.

Our protagonist owed the tax. He owed the penalties.

Frankly, I am surprised that the IRS did not go after fraud in this case. Perhaps the IRS was prioritizing its limited resources.

I would say our protagonist got off easy.

Folks, this is not tax practice. You know what it is.

Do. Not. Do. This.

Our case this time was Babu v Commissioner, TC Memo 2020-21.

Saturday, February 3, 2018

Honest Attorneys Go Farr

I had forgotten about the conversation.

About a couple of years ago I received a call from a nonclient concerning tax issues for his charity. I normally try to help, at least with general tax issues. I rarely, if ever, help with specific tax advice. That advice is tailored to a given person or situation and should occur in a professional – and compensated – relationship.

Some accountants will not even take the call. I get their point. Tax season, for example, is notorious for nonclient phone calls saying “I just have a quick question.” Sure. Get a Masters degree, practice for 30 years and you will have your answer, Grasshopper.

This phone-call fellow was thinking about drawing payroll from a charity he had founded. It had to do with housing, and he was thinking of contributing additional rental properties he owned personally. However, those rentals provided him some sweet cash flow, and he was looking at ways to retain some of that flow once the properties were in the charity.

Got it. A little benevolence. A little self-interest. Happens all the time.

What about drawing management fees for … you know, managing the properties for the charity.

Someone has to. A charity cannot do so itself because, well, it doesn’t have a body.

Now the hard facts: the charity did not have an independent Board or compensation committee. He was reluctant to form one, as he might not be able to control the outcome. There was no pretense of a comparative compensation or fee study. He arrived at his number because he needed X-amount of money to live on.

Cue the sounds of warning sirens going off.

This is not a likely client for me. I have no problem being aggressive – in fact, I may be more aggressive than the client - but we must agree to play within the lines. Play fudge and smudge and you can find another advisor. We are not making a mutual suicide pact here.

Let’s talk about “excess benefits” and nonprofits.

The concept is simple: the assets of a nonprofit must be used to advance the charitable mission and not for the benefit of organization insiders. If the IRS catches you doing this, there is a 25% penalty. Technically the IRS calls it an “excise tax,” but we know a penalty when we see one. Fail to correct the problem in a timely fashion and the penalty goes to 200%.

That is one of the harshest penalties in the Code.

Generally speaking, an excess benefit requires two things:

(1) Someone in a position to exercise substantial influence over the charity. The term is “disqualified,” and quickly expands to others related to, or companies owned by, such people.
(2) The charity transfers property (probably cash, of course) to a disqualified person without fair value in exchange.

The second one clearly reaches someone who is paid $250,000 for doing nothing but opening the mail, but it would also reach a below-market-interest-rate loan to a disqualified person.

And the second one can become ninja-level sneaky:
When the organization makes a payment to a disqualified for services, it must contemporaneously document its intent to treat such payment as consideration for services. The easiest way to do that is by an employment contract with the issuance of a Form W-2, but there can be other ways.
Fail to do that and it is almost certain that you have an excess benefit, even if the disqualified person is truly working there and even if the payment is reasonable. Think of it as “per se”: it just is.
Yet it happens all the time. How do people get around that “automatic” problem?

There is a safe-harbor in the Code.

(1) An independent Board approves the payment in advance.
(2) Prior to approval, the Board does comparative analysis and finds the amount reasonable, based on independent data.
(3) All the while the Board must document its decision-making process. It could hire an English or History graduate to write everything down, I suppose.
Follow the rules and you can hire a disqualified.

Don’t follow the rules and you are poking the bear. 

I thought my caller did not have a prayer.

Would I look into it, he asked.

Cheeky, I thought.

As I said, I forgot about the call, the caller and the “would I look into it.”

What made me think about this was a recent Tax Court decision. It involves someone who had previously organized the Association for Honest Attorneys (AHA). She had gotten it 501(c)(3) status and continued on as chief executive officer.

From its 990 series I can tell AHA is quite small.

Here is a blip from their website:

However, our C.E.O. has 40+ years experience, education and observation of the legal system, holds a B.S. and M.S. Degree in Administration of Justice from Wichita State University, and has helped take ten cases to the United States Supreme Court.

I do not know what a Masters in Administration of Justice is about, but it sounds like she has chops. She should be able to figure out the ins-and-outs of penalties and excess benefits.

She used the charity’s money for the following from 2010 through 2012:
  1. Dillards
  2. Walmart
  3. A&A Auto Salvage
  4. Derby Quick Lube
  5. Westar Energy
  6. Lowes
  7. T&S Tree Service
  8. Gene’s Stump Grinding Service
  9. an animal clinic
  10. St John’s Military School (her son’s tuition)
  11. The exhumation and DNA testing of her father’s remains

Alrighty then. 

The Tax Court went through the exercise: she used charity money for personal purposes; she never reported the money as income; there was no pretense of the safe harbor.

She was on the hook for both the 25% and 200% excise tax.

How did she expect to get away with this?

I suspect she was playing the audit lottery. If she was not caught then there was no foul, or so she reasoned. That is more latitude than I have. As a tax professional, I am not permitted to consider the audit lottery when deciding whether to take or not take a tax position.

The case is Farr v Commissioner, T.C. Memo 2018-2 for the home gamers.