We have an IRS audit at Galactic Command. It is of a
self-employed individual. The self-employeds have maintained a reasonable audit
rate, even as other individual audit rates have plummeted in recent years.
I was speaking with the examiner on Friday, lining up submission
dates for records and documents. We set tentative dates, but she reminded me
that Congress was going into budget talks this weekend. Depending on the resolution, she might be
furloughed next week. No prob, we will play it by ear.
This is a relatively new client for us. We did not
prepare the records or the tax returns for the two years under audit. We
requested underlying records, but there was little there for the first year and
only slightly more for the second. We then did a cash analysis, knowing that the
IRS would be doing the same.
COMMENT: The IRS will commonly request all twelve bank statements for a business-related bank account. The examiner adds up the deposits for the twelve months and compares the total to revenues reported on the tax return. If the tax return is higher, the IRS will probably leave the matter alone. If the tax return is lower, however, the IRS will want to know why.
We had a problem with the analysis for the first year:
our numbers had no resemblance to the return filed. Our numbers were higher across
the board: higher deposits, higher disbursements, higher excess of deposits
over disbursements.
Higher by a lot.
The accountant asked me: do you think …?
Nope, not for a moment.
Implicit here is fraud.
There are two types of tax fraud: civil and criminal.
Yes, I get it: if you have criminal, you are virtually certain to have civil,
but that is not our point. Our point is that there is no statute of limitations
on civil fraud. The IRS could go back a decade or more - if they wanted to.
I do not see fraud here. I do see incompetence. I think
someone started using a popular business accounting software, downloading bank
statements and whatnot to release their inner accountant. There are easy errors
to one not familiar: you do not download all months for an account; you do not
download all the accounts; you fail to account for credit cards; you fail to
account for cash transactions.
OK, that last one could be a problem, if significant.
The matter reminded me of a famous tax case.
It is easy to understand someone committing fraud on
his/her tax return. Put too much in, leave too much out. Do it deliberately and
with malintent and you might have fraud.
Question: can you be responsible for your tax preparer’s
fraud?
Vincent Allen was a UPS driver in Memphis. He used a
professional preparer (Goosby) for 1999 and 2000. Allen did the usual: he gave Goosby his W-2, his
mortgage interest statement, property taxes and whatnot. Standard stuff.
Goosby went to town on miscellaneous itemized
deductions; He goosed numbers for a pager, computer, meals, mileage and so
forth. He was creative.
The IRS came down hard, understandably.
They also wanted fraud penalties.
Allen had an immediate defense: the three-year statute
had run.
The IRS was curt: the three years does not apply if
there is fraud.
Allen argued the obvious:
How was I supposed to know?
Off to Tax Court they went.
The Court looked at the following Code section:
§ 6501 Limitations on assessment and
collection
In the case
of a false or fraudulent return with the intent to evade tax, the tax may be
assessed, or a proceeding in court for collection of such tax may be begun
without assessment, at any time.
The Court noted there was no requirement that the “intent to evade” be the taxpayer’s.
The statute was open.
Allen owed tax.
The IRS - in a rare moment of mercy - did not press for
penalties. It just wanted the tax, and the Court agreed.
The Allen decision reminds us that there is some responsibility
when selecting a tax preparer. One is expected to review his/her return, and –
if it seems too good …. Well, you know the rest of that cliche.
Do I think our client committed fraud?
Not for a moment.
Might the IRS examiner think so, however?
It crossed my mind. We’ll see.
Our case this time was Allen v Commissioner, 128.
T.C. 37.