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Showing posts with label late. Show all posts
Showing posts with label late. Show all posts

Sunday, September 20, 2020

A Failed E-Filed Return Hit With Penalties

 

I have noticed something about electronic filing of tax returns, especially state returns: there is a noticeable creep to demanding more and more information. I can understand if we are discussing tax-significant information, but too often the matter is irrelevant. We received a bounce from Wisconsin, for example, simply because there was a descriptor deep in the state return without an accompanying number.

How did this happen? Perhaps there was a number last year but not one this year. Could an accountant have scrubbed it out? Yes, in the same way that I could have played in the NFL. Work on a return of several hundred pages, add a few states in there for amusement, tighten the screws by closing in on a 15th deadline and you might miss a description on a line having no effect on the accuracy of the return.

Why is this an issue?

Because if a state – say Wisconsin - bounces a return, then it is the same as never having filed a return. The penalties for not filing a return are more severe than – for example - filing a return but not paying the tax. Does it strike you as a bit absurd for a state to argue that one never filed a return when an accountant prepared (and charged one for) that state return?

The US Tax Court has reviewed the issue of what counts as a federal tax return in a famous case called Beard v Commissioner. The Court looks at four items, each of which has to be met:

·      It must purport to be a return;

·      It must be signed under penalty of perjury;

·      It must contain sufficient information to allow the calculation of the tax; and

·      It must be an honest and reasonable attempt to satisfy the requirements of the tax law.

Let’s look at a case involving the Beard test.

John Spottiswood (let’s call him Mr S) filed a joint 2012 tax return using TurboTax. He made a mistake when entering a dependent’s social security number. He submitted the electronic return through TurboTax on or around April 12. Within a short period, TurboTax sent him an e-mail that the IRS had rejected the return.

Problem: The e-mail was sitting in TurboTax. Mr S needed to log back in to TurboTax to see the e-mail. A professional would know to check, but an ordinary individual might not think of it.

Another Problem: Mr S owed almost $400 grand with the return. Since the return was never accepted, the bank transfer never happened. He did not pay the tax until almost 2 years later.

The IRS tagged him over $40 grand for late payment of tax.

I have no issue with this. Think of the $40 grand as interest.

The IRS also tagged him over $89 grand for late filing of the return.

I have an issue here. Mr S did try to file; the IRS rejected his return. I see a significant difference between someone trying and failing to file a return and someone who simply blew off the responsibility to file. It strikes me as profoundly unfair to equate the two.

Mr S protested the late filing penalty.

He had two arguments:

(1)  He did file (per the Beard standard).

(2)  Failing that, he had reasonable cause to abate the penalty.

I like the first argument. I would advise Mr S to provide a copy of the return to the Court and request Beard.

COMMENT: I suppose the issue is whether the return would meet the third test – sufficient information to calculate the tax. I would argue that it would, as the IRS could deny the dependency exemption and recalculate the tax accordingly. If Mr S objected to the loss of the exemption, he could investigate and correct the social security number.

FURTHER COMMENT: The IRS argued that it could not calculate the tax because it had rejected the return. I consider this argument sophistry, at best. The IRS could simply reject a return ... some returns … all returns … and make the same argument.

But Mr S could not provide a copy of the return.

Why not? Who knows. I suppose he never kept a copy and later lost the username and password to the software.

The Court cut him no slack. To conclude that the return met the Beard standard, the Court had to … you know … look at his return.

That left his second argument: reasonable cause.

The Court again cut him no slack.

The Court said that he should have logged back into TurboTax and yada yada yada.

Seems severe except for one thing: how could Mr S fail to realize that he never got dinged with an almost-$400 thousand bank transfer? I get that he carried a large bank balance, but reasonable people would pay attention when moving $400 grand.

Mr S could not provide a copy of his return nor could he explain how he could blow-off $400 grand. The Court was not buying his jibe.

There was no Beard for Mr S, nor was there reasonable cause to abate the penalty.

OBSERVATION: It occurs to me that Mr S may have received no advantage from the dependency exemption. This case involves a 2012 tax return, and for 2012 it is very possible that the alternative minimum tax (AMT) applied to this return. The AMT serves to disallow selected tax attributes to higher-income taxpayers – attributes such as a dependency exemption (I am not making this up, folks). The Court did not say one way or the other, but I am left wondering if he was penalized for something that did not affect his ultimate tax.

Our case this time was Spottiswood v US.


Sunday, March 15, 2020

Can You Get Penalty Abatement If Your Accountant Dies?


What if you give your tax documents to your CPA and your CPA dies before preparing your return?

I am reading a case where that happened.

I will lead with this: the IRS assessed almost $41,000 in penalties.

The Willetts had a longstanding relationship with their CPA (Goode). In August, 2015 they gave her all the tax documents to prepare their 2014 tax return.

Time passed and the Willetts attempted to reach Goode, but without success. In October, she finally responded, explaining she had been ill and in a nursing home. She would cover any penalties and interest associated with their return.

In November, 2015 (mind you, the return was due October 15) Mrs Willett visited Goode at her home. Ms Goode assured her she would bounce back and finish their return.

That was the last time the Willetts spoke with Goode, who passed away in February, 2017.

The Willetts had some foreboding, however, as they contacted other CPA firms to address their 2014 return. There were obstacles – Goode had original documents, for example – but they were trying. The Willetts were told that the firms were already too busy with individual returns or that their return was too complex.
COMMENT: Folks, that sounds odd to this practitioner. Methinks there is more to the story.
They finally found and hired a CPA in June, 2016. They filed their 2014 return in September, 2016 – eleven months late.

You already know the IRS came back hot with penalties and interest.

The Willetts took the case to a District Court in California.
COMMENT: That means that they had to pay the penalties and then litigate for a refund. Had they gone to Tax Court, they would not have had to pay the penalties and interest before bringing suit. That would be the upside. The downside to the Tax Court is that the judges are tax specialists. It is a little harder to spin a tale to a specialist, as opposed to a district judge who is a generalist and hears a spectrum of cases.
Penalties can be abated for reasonable cause, but there is a case out there – Boyle – that greatly circumscribes a taxpayer’s ability to rely on an accountant in order to abate penalties. The Boyle decision (sort of) divided tax practice into two categories for purpose of penalty abatement:

(1) The first category is “routine” compliance, such as looking up when a tax return is due and making sure it gets filed by then.
(2) The second category includes professional advice, such as whether a Code section affects a taxpayer or what certain provisions from the 2017 Tax Cut and Jobs Act even mean.

The Boyle court acknowledged that one could rely on an accountant for column two issues, but one probably could not rely for purposes of column one.  The IRS has subsequently interpreted Boyle aggressively, arguing that the qualifier “probably” is not even required in the preceding sentence.

So how does Boyle work when your CPA dies? Is it more like column one or more like column two?

The Court discussed issues surrounding taxpayer reliance on an agent, but at heart the Court was looking at someone who relied on an accountant – apparently a sole practitioner – who was quite ill, in and out of nursing facilities and incapable of producing timely work.

Question: what would a reasonable person do?

After all, the concept is reasonable cause.

The Court was not at all persuaded that reasonable people would wait endlessly for their accountant to recover from a nursing home stay before preparing their return. A reasonable person would seek-out another accountant – even if it was a one-off engagement - in order to meet their tax responsibilities.

There was no reasonable cause.

I admire the Willetts’ loyalty to their practitioner, but their delay cost them $41 grand.


Sunday, March 1, 2020

Corporation Still Owed Penalties Even After Its Officers Died


I had a conversation this week with another practitioner.

He has an elderly client who is having memory issues. This client in turn is represented by another person – an agent. The agent refuses to sign or provide consent to the filing of the elderly client’s tax return.

My first thought was that there must be odd stuff on the client’s return, but I am assured that is not the case. The agent is – how to say this delicately – not a likeable person.

The practitioner asked me what I would do.

The issue is that a tax return is confidential information. We – as CPAs – are not allowed to release a return, even to the IRS, without permission from the client. The IRS requests that this permission be in writing, which is why you sign a form and return it to your preparer before he/she electronically files your return.

Theory is easy. Life is messy.

Let’s segue by looking at a penalty case.

The taxpayer was protesting $58 thousand in penalties.

Turns out the taxpayer was an S corporation. This type of corporation (normally) does not pay tax. Rather it divides up its income among its shareholders (on Form K-1, to be specific), who in turn include those numbers on their individual tax returns.

For years 2011 through 2013 the company did not file returns with the IRS.

Yep, that is going to hurt.

But it did issue K-1s to its shareholders, so (supposedly) all taxes were timely and correctly paid to the Treasury.

Seems odd. Why would the company issue K-1s but not file the return itself with the IRS?

Turns out that there were a number of related family companies – 19 of them, in fact. The patriarch of the family (Victor) hired a CPA (Tapling) to function as CFO for all his companies.

Victor was diagnosed with and treated for cancer. He died December 30, 2013.

We are talking about penalties for years 2011 through 2013, so I suspect that Victor’s illness is involved.

In 2010 Tapling himself was diagnosed with cancer. He eventually died from complications in 2016.

Tapling prepared and distributed the K-1s for years 2011 through 2013 but did not however send the returns to the IRS. Why? Perhaps he was waiting for the passing of authority within the family. Perhaps he did not consider it within his corporate authority to actually sign the returns. Maybe the transition involved family members who wanted Tapling gone, and he did not want to provide easy reasons for his dismissal.    

The IRS came in hot.

It led with the Boyle decision (of which we have spoken before), arguing that the corporation was more than Victor or Tapling. It had a Board of Directors, for example, and the Board could have – should have – stepped in to be sure that returns were being filed.

The company argued that Boyle involved an agent. This situation involved corporate officers and not agents. Its officers were gravely ill and did not timely discharge their responsibilities, much to the company’s detriment.

I see both sides.

To me, the IRS and the company should compromise. Perhaps the IRS could abate 50% of the penalty, and the company would hold its nose and write a check. Both sides could acknowledge that the other side had valid points. Life is messy.

Not a chance:
Consequently the court grants defendant’s motion for summary judgement and denies plaintiff’s motion for summary judgement.”
The IRS won it all.

Our case this time for the home gamers is Hunter Maintenance & Leasing Corp., Inc.v United States.


Sunday, January 12, 2020

Can You Have Reasonable Cause For Filing Late?


I am looking a reasonable cause case.

For the non-tax-nerds, the IRS can abate penalties for reasonable cause. The concept makes sense: real life is not a tidy classroom exercise. If you have followed me for a while, you know I strongly believe that the IRS has become unreasonable with allowing reasonable cause. I have had this very conversation with multiple IRS representatives, many of whom agree with me.

I am looking at one where the penalty was $450,959.

To put that in perspective, a January 29, 2019 MarketWatch article stated that the median 65-year-old American’s net worth is approximately $224,000.

Surely the IRS would not be assessing a penalty of that size without good reason – right?

Let’s go through the case.

Someone died. That someone was Agnes Skeba, and she passed away on June 10, 2013.

Agnes had an estate of approximately $14 million, the bulk of which was land (including farmland) and farm machinery. What the estate did not have was a lot of cash.

On March 6, 2014 the attorney sent an extension form and payment of $725,000 to the IRS.         
COMMENT: An estate return is due within 9 months of death, if the estate is large enough to require a return. Seems within 9 months to me.

The attorney included the following letter with the payment:

Our office is representing Stanley L. Skeba, Jr. as the Executor of the Estate of Agnes Skeba. Enclosed herewith is a completed “Form 4768 — Application for Extension of Time to File a Return and/or Pay U.S. Estate Taxes” along with estimated payment in the amount of $725,000 made payable to “The United States Treasury” for the above referenced Estate Tax.
Additionally, we are requesting a six (6) month extension of time to make full payment of the amount due. Despite the best efforts of this office and the Executor, the Estate had limited liquid assets at the time of the decedent’s death. Accordingly, we have been working to secure a mortgage on a substantial commercial property owned by the Estate in order to make timely payment of the balance of the Estate Tax anticipated to be due.

Currently, we have liquid assets in the amount of $1.475 million and the estimated value of the total estate is $14.7 million. Accordingly, we have submitted payments in the amount of $575,000 to the State of New Jersey, Division of Revenue, for State estate taxes payable and in the amount of $250,000 to the Pennsylvania Department of Revenue for State inheritance taxes payable. We are hereby submitting the balance of available funds to you, in the amount of $725,000, as partial payment of the expected U.S. Estate Taxes for the Estate.

We are in the process of securing a mortgage, which was supposed to close prior to the taxes being due, in the amount of $3.5 million that would have permitted us to make full payment of the taxes timely. Due to circumstances previously unknown and unavoidable by the Executor, the lender has not been able to comply with the closing deadline of March 7, 2014. It is anticipated that the lender will be clear to close within fourteen (14) days and then we will remit the balance of the estimated U.S. Estate Taxes payable.

Additionally, there has been delays in securing all of the necessary valuations and appraisals due to administrative delays caused by contested estate litigation currently pending in Middlesex County, New Jersey.

I would say he did a great job.

But the estate did not pay-in all of its estimated tax ….

A few days later the estate was able to refinance. The estate made a second payment of $2,745,000 on March 18, 2014. This brought total taxes paid the IRS to $3,470,000.

COMMENT: Mrs. Skeba died on June 10th. Add 9 months and we get to March 10th. OK, the second payment was a smidgeon late.

Now life intervened. It took a while to get the properties appraised. The executor had health issues severe enough to postpone the court proceedings several times. The estate’s attorney was diagnosed with cancer, delaying the case. Eventually the law firm replaced him as lead attorney altogether, which caused further delay.

As we said: life.

The estate asked for an extension for the federal estate tax return. The filing date was pushed out to September 10, 2014.

The estate was finally filed on or around June 30, 2015.

          COMMENT: Nine-plus months later.

The tax came in at $2,528,838, with estimated taxes of $3,470,000 paid-in. The estate had a refund of $941,162.

Until the IRS slapped a $450,959 penalty.

Huh?

The IRS calculated the penalty as follows: 
$2,528,838 – 725,000 = 1,803,838 times 25% = $450,959

The reason? Late filing said the IRS.

On first pass, it seems to me that the worst the IRS could do is assess penalties for 8 days (from March 10 to March 18). Generally speaking, penalties are calculated on tax due, meaning the IRS has to spot taxes you already paid-in.

In addition, need we mention that the estate was OVERPAID?

The attorney asked for abatement. Here is part of the request:

Beyond September 10, 2014, the Estate continued to have delays in filing due to the pending and anticipated completion of the litigation over the validity of the decedent’s Will, which would impact the Estate’s ability to complete the filing and the executor’s capacity to proceed. Initially, it, was anticipated that the trial of this matter would be heard before Judge Frank M. Ciuffani in the Superior Court of New Jersey in Middlesex County, Chancery Division-Probate Part in July of 2014. Due to health concerns on behalf of the Plaintiff, Joseph M. Skeba, the Judge delayed these proceedings multiple times through the end of 2014, each time giving us a new anticipation of the completion of the trial to permit the estate tax return to be filed. Upon the Plaintiffs improved health, the Judge finally scheduled a trial for July 7, 2015, which was expected to allow our completion in filing the return.
           
Accordingly, this litigation, which was causing us reason to delay in the filing, gave rise to the estate’s inability to file the return.

Finally, in May of 2015 we were notified of the Estate’s litigation attorney, Thomas Walsh of the law firm of Hoagland Longo Moran Dunst & Doukas, LLP, that he was diagnosed with cancer that would possibly cause him to delay this matter from proceeding as scheduled. In early June, we were notified by Mr. Walsh’s office that his prognosis had worsened and he would be prevented from further handling the litigation of this matter, so new counsel within his firm would be assisting in carrying this matter through trial. Due to the change in counsel, it was deemed that the anticipated trial was no longer predictable in scheduling, so the Estate chose to file the return as it stood at such time.

Displaying the compassion and goodwill toward man of deceased General Soleimani, on or around November 5, 2015 the IRS responded to the attorney’s letter and stated that the reasons in the letter did not “establish reasonable cause or show due diligence.”

Shheeeessshh.

The accountant got involved next. He included an additional reason for penalty abatement:

I do not believe the IRS had knowledge of the extension in place at the time the penalty was assessed, nor did they have a record of the additional payment of $2,745,000. The IRS listed the unpaid tax as $1,803,838 and charged the maximum 25% to arrive at the penalty of $450,959.50. The estate not only paid the entire tax the estate owed by the due date to pay but also had an overpayment. Section 6651(b) bars a penalty for late filing when estimated taxes are paid.
           
The IRS did not respond to the accountant.

The accountant tried again.

Here is the Court:

                To date, IRS Appeals has not responded to either letter.

I know the feeling, brother.

You know this is going to Court. It has to.

The estate’s argument was two-fold:
  1.  The estate was fully paid-in. In fact, it was more than fully paid-in.
  2.  There was reasonable cause: an illiquid estate, health issues with the executor, issues with obtaining appraisals, an estate attorney diagnosed with cancer, on and on.

The IRS came in with hyper-technical wordsmithing.

Based on § 6151, the Government cleverly reasons that the last day for payment was nine months after the death of Agnes Skeba—March 10, 2014; because no return was filed by that date a penalty may be assessed. Applying the rationale to the facts, the Government contends only $750,000 was paid on or before March 10, 2014, when $2,528,838 was due on that date. Referring back to § 6651(a)(1), a 25% penalty on the difference may therefore be assessed because it was not paid by March 10, 2014. As such, the full payment of the estate tax on March 18, 2014 is of no avail because the “last date fixed” was March 10, 2014. Accordingly, the Government argues that the imposition of a penalty in the amount of $450,959.00 is appropriate.

The Court brought out its razor:

The Government puts forth a valid point that there is an administrative need to complete and close tax matters. Here, the Estate had nine months to file the return, the extension added six months, and Defendant unilaterally added another nine months to file the return. Although there was the timely payment of the estate taxes, the matter, in the Government’s view, lingered and the administrative objective to timely close the file was not met. See generally Boyle, 469 U.S. at 251. There may be a need for some other penalty for failure to timely file a return, but Congress must enact same.

Slam on the wordsmithing.

COMMENT: Boyle is the club the IRS trots out every time there is a penalty and a late return. The premise behind Boyle is that even an idiot can Google when a return is due. The IRS repetitively denies penalty abatement requests – with a straight face, mind you – snorting that there is no reasonable cause for failure to rise to the level of a common idiot.

That said: did the estate have reasonable cause?

Finally, another issue in this case is whether Plaintiff demonstrated reasonable cause and not willful neglect in allegedly failing to timely file its estate tax return. Although the Court has already determined that the penalty at issue was not properly imposed pursuant to the Government’s flawed statutory rationale, it will review this issue for completeness.

In the tax world, folks, that is drawing blood.

In this case, Mr. White submitted his August 17, 2015 letter explaining the rationale for not filing. (See supra at pp. 5-6). For example, in Mr. White’s letter, he indicated that certain estate litigation was delayed due to health conditions suffered by the executor. (Id.). Additionally, Mr. White refers to the Hoagland law firm and one of the attorneys assigned to the case as having been diagnosed with cancer. (Id.). The Hoagland firm is a very prestigious and professional firm and based on same, Mr. White’s letter shows a reasonable cause for delay.

In addition, Mr. White’s prior letter of March 6, 2014 notes that there was difficulty in “securing all of the necessary valuations and appraisals. . . caused by the contested litigation.” (Hayes Cert., Ex. C). Drawing from my professional experience, such appraisals often require months to prepare because a farm located in Monroe, New Jersey will often sit in residential, retail, and manufacturing zones. To appraise such a farm requires extensive knowledge of zoning considerations. Thus, this also constitutes a reasonable cause for delay.

I hope this represents some whittling away of the Boyle case. That said, I wonder whether the IRS will appeal – so it can protect that Boyle case.

I would say the Court had little patience with the IRS clogging up the pipes with what ten-out-of-ten people with common sense would see as reasonable cause.

Our case this time for the home gamers was Estate of Agnes R. Skeba vs U.S..

Sunday, July 21, 2019

Depression And Disability


I am reading a Tax Court case where the taxpayer represented himself. This is referred to as “pro se.” Technically, it does not mean that you cannot have an attorney or advisor with you; it rather means that the attorney or advisor is not admitted to practice before the Tax Court. If I was your CPA, for example, I would field the questions-and-answers on your behalf while you sat there silent and forlorn. You would still be considered to be “pro se,” as I do not practice before the Court. Had I practiced in the D.C. area or with the national tax office of a large firm, I might have been more interested in pursuing admission to practice.

The taxpayer’s name is Walter Kowsh, and he had an incredible string of misfortune. Walter lived in New York. His wife died at age 53, leaving him with two teenage children and an elderly parent.

Then he lost several friends on the 9/11 attacks on the World Trade Center. Some of those friends had gone to his wife’s funeral.

By 2002 he could longer work because of depression and anxiety attacks.

He started taking prescriptions, including Wellbutrin and Paxil.

His depression became debilitating.

He started collecting on his private disability insurance.

He did not however apply for Social Security disability. Too bad, as there is a case (Dwyer) that accepts social security as proof of disability.

He took an early distribution from his 401(k) or IRA in 2003. He did not however file a tax return for 2003.

So the IRS tentatively prepared one for him.

After a string of IRS notices, he finally prepared and filed his 2003 return.

The IRS next wanted penalties for late filing as well as the 10% penalty on the early distribution.

Walter needed an out from both penalties. Is there way to do it?

Yep.

Disability would do it. Disability is an exception to the 10% penalty and is also reasonable cause to abate a late filing penalty.

Walter argued that he was disabled.

Question is: did Walter’s depression rise to the level of a disability?

Incredible story, said the IRS. Get us a doctor’s letter, and let’s wrap this up.

Walter could not – or would not - get a doctor’s letter. His own doctor refused to provide one.

This was a bad start.

How about a prescription history from the pharmacy? asked the IRS. They might be able to print out your history for the whole year.

Nope, said Walter.

I am already collecting disability, continued Walter. What part of “disability” do you not understand?

Walter could really have used a tax advisor at this point.

You see, collecting disability from an insurance company lends strong credibility to Walter’s claim, but disability is a medical diagnosis. The insurance reinforces the diagnosis but is not a substitute for it.

Rest assured the Court was curious why Walter’s doctor would not provide a letter, or why he refused to have another doctor provide one…
… despite numerous requests from respondent.”
Respondent means the IRS.

And I am curious myself.

I do not doubt that he was depressed. I also do not doubt that he considered himself disabled. What I don’t understand is the big pushback on what appears to be a reasonable request.

It is not personal, Walter. Stop taking it that way.

Walter lost.

You see the downside to a true pro se.

I would have been screaming at Walter for sabotaging his own case. He would have gotten that doctor’s letter or I would have fired him.

But Walter made the tax literature for the point that collecting private disability insurance, by itself and without further substantiation, does not prove disability for purposes of the tax Code.

Tax geeks will remember Walter for decades.

Sunday, March 17, 2019

No Harm No Foul? Fuhgeddaboudit!


I am looking at a case involving whether a penalty requires a supervisor’s approval before being imposed.

It is dry stuff.

The rest of the case is what caught my eye.

Mr and Mrs Allen extended their individual tax return. They also owned 100% of an S corporation.
COMMENT: An S corporation’s income is reportable on its shareholder’s personal return. Since M/M Allen owned 100% of their S, all of the S corporation’s income would be reported on their return.
Somebody somewhere forgot to extend the S corporation return. It was due March 15, and it was filed on September 13.
COMMENT: Meaning it was filed 6 months late. The penalty is $195 per month per owner. The math is ($195 times 2) times 6 = $2,340. Not filing that extension got expensive.
The Allens thought that this was outrageous. After all, all of the corporation’s income went on their return, and their return was properly extended. There was no harm to the Treasury. Surely that lack of harm was reasonable cause for abatement.

The IRS told them to pound salt.

Off to Tax Court they went.

Let’s slide to the side a bit. If this had been a partnership, they would have requested abatement under Rev Proc 84-35. A partnership comes under 84-35 scope if:

·        There are 10 or fewer partners
·        Who are individuals (except nonresidents) or an estate
·        The partners each have the same income/loss allocation percentage
·        Each partner has reported his/her share of the income/loss on a timely filed return
·        There is one more requirement concerning audit procedures, which need not concern us here

Rev Proc 84-35 says that – if you meet the above – you have “reasonable cause.” Consider that reasonable cause is grounds to abate a penalty and 84-35 is a way out of a penalty.

Guess what: S corporations have no equivalent to Rev Proc 84-35. Why? Who knows? Is it fair? What does fair have to do with anything?

So the Allens have no 84-35 pass. They instead based everything on their correctly extended underlying personal return.

Here is the Court:
[] evidently conceives that the sole purpose of the Form 1120S is to give the shareholder the information that he or she needs in order to file a Form 1040 tax return; and since Mr. and Mrs. Allen knew the affairs of [], did eventually file their Form 1040 timely …, and did not fail to report any income, the intended purpose of the S corporation’s filing requirement was accomplished and the penalty was moot.”
Lots of shade here, Tax Court. The Allens were instead arguing no loss to the Treasury, so the Treasury could afford to be magnanimous and not impose an otherwise burdensome penalty just because. Save us from the French court of Louis XVI, why don’t you?

Back to the Court:
[] cites no authority in support of its claim that the penalty should be waived on the grounds that its two shareholders were aware of the information to be shown on the return. Section 6699 does not include a condition of harm before the penalty is imposed; it simply imposes a penalty when the filing is late (without reasonable cause).”
I am at a loss why the Court is looking for “authority” when all the Allens are requesting is reasonable cause. Reasonable cause is an equity and not statutory argument. It does not need to be based on chapter and verse from the dustiest tome in the most unvisited tax library in the land. Statutory says you stop and wait at a red light. Equity says you stop and then run the light because you are transporting someone experiencing a heart attack to the hospital.

Ahh, you know how this case turned out.

And I continue to point out that the IRS long ago stopped using penalties to disincentive bad tax behavior and abatement to incentivize good tax behavior. The IRS is now using penalties to pad its budget. In that world, abatement is tantamount to the IRS taking money from its own wallet, something it will not do willingly.

I was saddened to see the Tax Court drink the same Kool-Aid. To be fair, I suppose the Court did not want to go where the IRS has been reluctant to proceed regulatorily. I nonetheless argue that the Court whiffed on a chance to force the IRS to be reasonable when determining reasonable cause.

Our case this time was ATL & Sons Holding Inc v Commissioner.

Sunday, February 10, 2019

Do You File An Accurate Return Or A Timely Return?


I have alerted the staff here at CTG command center that I prefer and expect to file all business returns, especially passthrough returns, on a timely basis, irrespective of whether we have all required information. Granted, there is some freeplay – we cannot file if we have no information, for example, or if so much information is missing that a filing would not be construed as substantially correct.

The reason?

Penalties for late filing.

Let’s say that you and a partner have an LLC. The return is due in March and can be extended to September. You file an extension but, for whatever reason, do not file the partnership return until December.

What just happened?

(1)  You might think that the return is only 2 months late, as it was extended until September. That is incorrect. You have until September 15 to file the return. Fail to do so, and it is as if you never filed an extension. That return is now late beginning March 16.
(2)  So what? Here is so what: the penalty is $195 per K-1 per month. There are two K-1s: you and a partner. The penalty is $390 per month. Multiply that by the number of months, and you can see how this gets expensive fast.
(3)  You might be able to get out of this penalty. Revenue Procedure 84-35 allows an avenue for small partnerships with 10 or fewer partners, for example. Depending on the facts, however, there may be no easy out. Like fire, you do not want to be playing with this.

There are a hundred variations on the theme. Let me give you one. This one involves an estate tax return. Let’s review the key points, and you decide whether there is cause for a late-filing penalty. 
  • The decedent died February 24, 1986.
  • On May 6, 1986 the estate was admitted to probate.
    • The wife was appointed executrix.
  • The estate hired an attorney.
  • The estate tax return was due November 24, 1986 (nine months after death). No extension was filed.
  • In January, 1987 the executrix filed an inventory with the probate court. Four assets were listed but given no value. One of those assets was an interest in a trust, which asset took on a life of its own. 
    • The assets which were valued - that is, excluding the four which were unvalued - were enough the require the filing of a federal estate tax return.
  • In 1991 (five years later) the estate filed suit concerning the trust.
  • In 1994 the common pleas court entered judgement.
  • In 1996 the executrix filed a revised and final accounting with the probate court.
  •  In 1997 the estate finally filed a federal estate tax return. 
     The IRS immediately went after late filing penalties. Why wouldn’t it? The tax return was filed more than 10 years after the decedent died.

The gross estate was over $2 million. Those items that could not initially be valued came in around $200 grand.

The IRS charged in and chanted its standard wash-rinse-repeat hymn: the taxpayer cannot escape penalties for the non-extension or late filing of a return pursuant to the Supreme Court’s Boyle decision.

But the estate punched back with reasonable cause: the executrix did not have values for some of the assets that were eventually distributable from the estate. Heck, they had to sue to even get to some of those assets!

What do you think? Is there reasonable cause?

Let me give you a clue: the disputed assets were about 10% of the final estate.

And we come back to a phrase I used early on: “substantially correct.” Tax Regulations require only that the estate return be “as complete as possible.” There are numerous cases where pending litigation – even if the outcome is expected to materially affect the estate’s final tax liability – has not been considered reasonable cause for not filing a return.

The Court pointed out two things:

(1)  The executrix knew (or should have known) early on that the estate was large enough – even excluding the disputed items – to require filing a return.
(2)  She could have paid at least the tax on that amount, or estimated and also included tax on the disputed items.
a.     The Court pointed out that disputed assets were only 10% of the estate.

The executrix did not have reasonable cause. She should have filed and paid something, even if she later had to amend the estate tax return.

My thoughts?

I agree with the Court. I believe the estate was ill-advised. 

There is a sub-story in here concerning the attorney (who thought the accountant was taking care of the estate tax return) and the CPA (who was never told to prepare an estate tax return, at least not until years after the return would have been due). Why didn’t the attorney reach out earlier to the CPA, at least for peace of mind? Who knows? Why didn’t the long-standing CPA – who would have known the decedent - ask about an estate return? Again, who knows?

Our case this time was Estate of Thomas v Commissioner.

COMMENT: I am looking (translation: I printed but have not yet read) a case where a taxpayer did use estimates but still got nailed with penalties. We may come back to that one in the near future.







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.