Just about all tax returns are moving to
electronic filing.
It makes sense. Our server sends a return to the government
server, starting the automated processing of the return. Minimal manpower,
highly automated, more efficient.
COMMENT: Electronic filing however does allow states
and other filing authorities to include filing “bombs,” which can be very
frustrating. We had a bomb recently with the District of Columbia. It could
have been resolved – should have, in fact – but that would have required
someone in D.C. to answer our e-mail
request or telephone call. Belatedly realizing this was a bar too high, we
called the client to inform them of a change in plans. We would be paper filing
instead.
Sometimes a state will say they never received a
return. Our software maintains log events, such as electronic transmission of returns
and their acceptance by the taxing authority. Tennessee has done this over the
last few years as they updated some of their systems. Fortunately, the matter generally
resolves when we present proof of electronic filing.
Do you remember when – not too many years ago – standard
professional advice was to send tax returns using either certified or
registered mail? That was that era’s equivalent of today’s electronic filing.
We used to, back in the Stone Age, send our April 15th individual extensions
as follows:
· Include
multiple extensions per envelope. There could be several envelopes depending on
the number of extensions.
· Include
a cover sheet detailing the extensions included in the envelope.
· Certify
the mailing of the envelope.
The problem with this procedure is that it could be
abused. One could mail an empty envelope to the IRS, certifying the same. If
any question came up, one could point to that envelope as “proof” of whatever.
I do not know how often this happened in practice, but I recall having this
very conversation with IRS representatives.
This reminds me of a recent case dealing with an issue
arising from putting a paper-filed return in the mail. As we move exclusively
to electronic filing, this issue will transition to history – along with rotary
phones and rolodexes.
Let’s talk about the Pond case.
The IRS audited Stephen Pond’s return and made a
mistake, concluding that Pond had underpaid his taxes. Pond paid the notice for
tax due and interest on the 2012 tax year. The matter also affected 2013, so
Pond overpaid his taxes for that year also. Pond’s accountant caught the
mistake and filed for a refund for both years.
The accountant did the following:
(1) He mailed the 2012 and 2013 tax refund claims
in the same envelope to Holtsville, New York.
(2) He
mailed a claim for refund of overpaid 2012 interest to Covington, Kentucky,
which in turn forwarded the matter to Andover, Massachusetts.
Andover responded first. It wanted proof of the
underlying 2012 filing (as the overpaid interest was for 2012). It took a while,
but Pond eventually received his 2012 refund, including interest.
Time passed. There was no word about 2013. Pond contacted
the IRS and was told the IRS never received the 2013 amended return.
COMMENT: While not said, I have a very good guess what
happened. The IRS has had a penchant for stapling together whatever arrives in a
single envelope. For years I have recommended separate envelopes for separate returns,
as I was concerned about this possibility. It raised the cost of mailing, but I
was trying to avoid the staple-everything-together scenario.
Pond sent a duplicate copy of his 2013 amended return.
Months went by. Crickets.
Pond contacted Holtsville and was informed that the
IRS had closed the 2013 file.
Oh, oh.
A couple of weeks later Pond received the formal
notice that the IRS was denying 2013 because it had been filed after statute of
limitations had run.
Pond filed a formal protest. He filed with Appeals. He
eventually brought suit in district court. The district court held against
Pond, so he is now in Appeals Court.
This is tax arcana here that we will summarize.
(1) The general way to satisfy a statutory filing
requirement is physical delivery.
(2) Mail can constitute physical delivery.
a. However,
things can happen after one drops an envelope into the mailbox. The post office
can lose it, for example. It would be unfair to hold someone responsible for a
post office error, so physical delivery has a “mailbox” subrule:
If one can prove that an
item was mailed, the subrule presumes that the item was timely delivered.
NOTE: Mind you, one still
must prove that one timely put the item in the mail.
(3) Congress codified the mailbox rule in 1954 via
Section 7502. That section first included certified and registered mail as acceptable
proof of filing, and the rule has been expanded over the years to include
private delivery services and electronic filing.
(4) The
question before the Court was whether Section 7502 supplanted prior common law (physical
delivery, mailbox rule) or rather was supplementary to it.
a. Believe
it or not, the courts have split on this issue.
b. What
difference does it make? Let me give an example.
There is an envelope
bearing a postmark date of October 5, 20XX (that is, before the October 15th
extension deadline). The mail was not certified, registered, or delivered by an
approved private delivery service.
If
Section 7502 supplanted common law, then one could not point to that October 5 date as proof of timely filing. The only protected filings are certified or
registered mail, private delivery service or electronic filing.
If
Section 7502 supplemented but did not override common law, then that October 5 date would suffice as proof of timely mailing.
Let’s fast forward. The Appeals Court determined that
Pond did not qualify under the safe harbors of Section 7502, as he did not use
certified or registered mail. He could still prove his case under common law,
however. Appeals remanded the case to the District Court, and Pond will have
his opportunity to prove physical delivery.
My thoughts?
If you are paper filing – especially for a refund - always,
always certify the mailing. Mind you, electronic filing is better, but let’s
assume that electronic filing is not available for your unique filing situation.
Pond did not do this and look at the nightmare he is going through.
Our
case this time was Stephen K Pond v U.S., Docket No 22-1537, CA4, May
26, 2023.