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Showing posts with label timely. Show all posts
Showing posts with label timely. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 13, 2024

Not Quite The Informal Claim Doctrine

 

I am looking at a district court opinion from Illinois.

I find the discussion of the numbers a bit confusing. It happens sometimes.

But there something here we should talk about.

We have recently discussed the tax concept of a “claim.” In normal-person-speak, it means you want the government to refund your money. The classic claim is an amended income tax return, but there can be claims for other-than-income taxes. It is its own niche, as using the wrong form can result in having your claim rejected.

Let’s look at the American Guardian Holdings case.

AGH filed its 2015 tax return on September 19, 2016.

Here are the numbers on the original tax return:     

Original

Revenues

152,092,338

Taxable income

4,880,521

Tax

1,327,806

 The accountant found an error and amended the return on June 6, 2019.

First

Original

Original

Amended

Revenues

152,092,338

152,092,338

154,808,792

Taxable income

4,880,521

4,880,521

11,084,397

Tax

1,327,806

1,327,806

148,243

Refund

(1,179,563)

Let me see: The 2015 return would have been extended to October 15, 2016. The amended return was prepared June 6, 2019. Yep, we are within the statute of limitations.

Problem: AGH never sent the amended return.

Answer: AGH hired a new accountant.

The new accountant filed an amended return on September 19, 2019.

COMMENT: Still a few days left on the statute.

For some reason, the accountant incorporated the first amended (even though it had not been filed) into the second amended, resulting in the following hodgepodge:

First

Second

Original

Amended

Original

Amended

Revenues

154,808,792

141,773,572

154,808,792

?

Taxable income

11,084,397

7,446,746

11,084,397

                        ?

Tax

1,327,806

148,243

1,327,806

0

Refund

(1,179,563)

(148,243)

Total refund

(1,327,806)

Huh? I would find that second amended confusing. On first impression it appears that AGH is filing a claim for $148,243, but that is incorrect. AGH was stacking the second amended on top of its first. AGH is filing a claim for $1,327,806, which is the entire tax on the original return.

Not surprisingly, the IRS also responded with “huh?” It could not process the second amended return because the “Original” numbers did not match its records.

AGH responded by filing yet another amended return (third amended). Mind you, at this point it was after October 15, 2019, and the statute of limitations was in the rear view mirror.

AGH did the following:

(1)  AGH explained that the new and shiny (third) amended return incorporated the previously (non-filed) first amended return and the second (actually filed) amended return. As a consequence, the “previously-filed amended return for 2015 should be discarded.”

COMMENT: NO! 

(2)  AGH further explained that it was filing Form 1120-PC (a specialized tax form for property and casualty insurance companies) as its third amended return rather than the Form 1120 originally filed because it had received permission to change its method of accounting.

COMMENT: NO!!

I am somewhat shocked at how deep a hole AGH had dug, and more shocked that it kept digging.

Let’s go through the wreckage:

(1)  AGH filed its (second) amended return/claim within the statute of limitations.

(2)  This creates an issue if the claim is imperfect, as one would be perfecting the claim AFTER the statute expires. Fortunately, there is a way (called the informal claim doctrine) that allows one to perfect a claim after the original filing date and still retain the benefit of that original date. 

(3)  The IRS immediately seized on the “previously-filed amended return for 2015 should be discarded” statement to argue that AGH had violated the informal claim doctrine.  If the second amended return was discarded, there was no timely-filed return to which the informal claim doctrine could attach. Fortunately, the Court decided that the use of the word “discard” did not actually mean what it sounded like. AGH dodged a bullet, but it should never have fired.

(4)  That leaves the third amended return, which was filed after the statute expired. AGH of course argued informal claim, but it had committed a fatal act by changing its method of accounting. You see, the informal claim allows one to clarify, document and explain whatever issue is vague or in dispute within the claim at issue. What one is not allowed to do is to change the facts. AGH had changed the facts by changing its method of accounting, meaning its third amended return could not be linked to the second via the informal claim doctrine.

(5)  Standing on its own, the third amended of course failed as it was filed after the statute had expired.    

This case is a nightmare. I am curious whether there was a CPA or law firm involved; if so, a malpractice suit is almost a given. If the work was done in-house, then … AGH needs to tighten up its hiring standards. The case reads like there were no adults in the room.

All is not lost for AGH, however.

Remember that AGH filed its second amended return within the statute of limitations.  The matter then went off the rails and the Court booted the third amended return.

But that leaves the second amended. Can AGH resuscitate it, as technically the Court dismissed the third claim but not necessarily the second?  It would likely require additional litigation and associated legal fees, and I would expect the IRS to fight tooth and nail. AGH would have to weigh the cost-benefit.

Our case this time was American Guardian Holdings, Inc v United States of America, No. 1:2023cv 01482, Northern District of Illinois.

Monday, August 14, 2023

Why You Always Use Certified-Mail For A Paper-Filed Return

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.

 



Sunday, December 5, 2021

A Tax Refund When The IRS Fails To Process A Return


I am looking at a case involving a tax refund. The IRS bounced it, and I am having a hard time figuring out what the IRS was thinking.

Let’s talk about it.

James Willetts filed an extension for his 2014 individual tax return. He sent a $8,000 payment and extended the return from April 15 to October 15, 2015.

Standard stuff.

He did not file the return by October 15, 2015.

Oh well.

He finally filed the 2014 return on April 14, 2018.

April 15, 2015 to April 14, 2018 is less than three years, and that is not even including the six-month extension on the 2014 return.

The IRS rejected the return because of potential identity theft.

I presume that the IRS sent a notice, but Willetts did not respond. The Court goes on to observe that it was unclear whether Willetts even knew there was an identity issue before bringing suit.

COMMENT: That struck me as odd, as one of the first things a tax professional would do is obtain a transcript of Willett’s tax account. I then noted that Willetts brought suit as “pro se,” generally interpreted as going to Court without professional representation. Technically, that is incorrect, as one can go to Court with a CPA and still be considered “pro se,” but, in Willetts’ case, I am inclined to believe he was truly pro se.

The issue before the Court was straight-forward: did Willetts file his return in time to get his refund?

Let’s go tax nerd for a moment:

(1)  A taxpayer may recoup a tax overpayment by filing a claim within a statutorily-prescribed period of time.

(2)  That period of time is:

a.    Three years from when the return was filed, if the return was filed within three years of when the return was due; otherwise

b.    … two years from when the tax was paid.

(3)  The three years in (2)(a) extends with a valid tax extension.

Let’s parse this.

(1) Willetts' 2014 tax return was due April 15, 2015.

(2) He had a valid extension until October 15, 2015.

(3) His three-year period for filing a refund claim would run – at a minimum - until April 15, 2018. Since he also had a valid extension, the extension period gets tacked-on. He therefore had until October 15, 2018 to file a refund claim within the three-year lookback period.

You can see where the IRS was coming from. It did not have a tax return in its system until after October 15, 2018.

However, Willetts filed - or at least attempted to file - a return on April 14, 2018. It wasn’t his fault that the IRS held up processing.

The Court made short work of this.

A tax return is deemed filed the day it is received by the IRS, regardless of whether it is accepted, processed, ignored or destroyed by the IRS. The IRS’ own records showed Willetts' return as received on May 2, 2018, well within the period ending October 15, 2018.

The return was filed timely. Willetts was due his refund.

I have a couple of observations:

(1)  I do not understand why the IRS pursued this. The rules here are bright-line. The IRS did not have a chance of winning; in fact, the case strikes me as borderline harassment. 

What concerns me is the mountain of paper returns – especially amended returns – waiting unopened and unprocessed at the IRS as I write this. Are we going to see Willetts-like foot-dragging by the IRS on those returns? Is the IRS going to force me to file with the Tax Court to get my clients their refunds?   

(2)  Let’s play what-if.  

Say that Willetts had filed his return on November 1, 2018, so that all parties would agree that he was outside the three-year lookback period. Once that happened, his refund would be limited to any taxes paid within the previous two years. His 2014 taxes would have been deemed paid on April 15, 2015, meaning that none, zero, zip of his 2014 taxes were paid within two years of November 1, 2018. There would be no refund. This, by the way, is the how-and-why people lose their tax refunds if they do not file their returns within three years.   

Our case this time was Willetts v Commissioner, Tax Court November 22, 2021.

Monday, November 15, 2021

Not Filing A Return and Owing Tax

 

The question comes up periodically, even among accountants: 

Is there a penalty for filing a late return if the taxpayer has a refund?

In general, the answer is no. Mind you, this is not an excuse to skip filing. If anything, you have money due to you. Do not file for three years and you are losing that refund.

Let’s switch a variable:

Is there a penalty for filing a late return if the taxpayer owes taxes?

Uhhhh, yes.

As a rule of thumb, assume an automatic 25% penalty, and it can be more.

So what happens if someone cannot file by the extended due date?

I have a one of these clients. I called him recently to send me his 2020 information.

His comment?

         I thought you took care of it.”

Now, I have been at this a long time, but I cannot create someone’s return out of thin air. Contrast that with estimating a selected number or two on a tax return. That happens with some regularity, although - depending on the size and tax sensitivity of the numbers – I might flag the estimates to the IRS’ attention. It depends.

Let look at the Morris case.

James and Lori Morris were business owners in Illinois. In 2013 James expanded the business, creating a new company to house the same. They had a long-standing relationship with their CPA.

The IRS came in and looked at the 2013 return. It appears that there were issues with the start-up and expansion costs of the new business, but the case does not give us much detail on the matter.

The Morris’ held up filing a return for 2014. They also held up filing 2015 and 2016, supposedly from concern of repeating the issue the IRS was addressing on the 2013 return.

Seems heavy-handed to me.

Well, as long as they were fully paid-in:

They did not make any estimated tax payments during the year at issue and did not have tax withheld from their paychecks during 2015. Petitioner-husband had a minimal amount of tax withheld from his wages during 2016. Petitioner-wife had withholding credits of $10 and $11 during 2015 and 2016, respectively.”

Got it: next to nothing paid-in.

Maybe the businesses were losing money:

For 2015 and 2016 petitioners, respectively, had ordinary income from their S corporations of over $2.2 million and $3 million.”

What was going on here? I am seeing income over $5 million for two years with little more than $21 of tax paid-in.

The Morris’ argued that their long-standing CPA advised that filing a return while an audit for earlier years was happening could subject them to perjury charges.

COMMENT: Huh? There are areas all over the Code where a taxpayer and the IRS might disagree. If it comes to pass, one appeals within the IRS or files with a court. The system does not lock-down because the IRS disagrees with you.

Frankly, I am curious what was on that return that the issue of “perjury” even saw the light of day.

Oh, well. Let’s have the CPA testify. Hopefully the Morris’ will have reasonable cause for penalty abatement because of their reliance on a tax professional.

Mr Knobloch (that is, the CPA) did not testify at trial, and there is no evidence in the record except for petitioner-husband’s testimony of Mr. Knobloch’s alleged advice.”

The Court was not believing this for a moment. 

We need not accept a taxpayer’s testimony that is self-serving and uncorroborated by other evidence, and we do not do so here.”

I find myself wondering why the CPA did not testify, although I have suspicions.

I also do not understand why – even if there were substantive issues of tax law – the Morris’ did not pay-in more for 2015 and 2016.  Did they think they had losses? OK, they would be out the money for a time but they would get it back as a refund when they file the returns.

They instead racked-up big penalties.

Our case this time was Morris v Commissioner, T.C. Memo 2021-120.


Sunday, April 25, 2021

Tax Court And Delivery Services

 We sent a petition to the Tax Court on Friday. It needs to arrive by Monday.

Technically, the petition does not have to arrive Monday, as long as it is in the care of an “approved” delivery service. I do not like to count on that extra day(s), however, so I treat the final day of the 90-day letter as an absolute deadline. In truth, I do not like waiting this late into the 90 days, but there was, you know, tax season and all.

COMMENT: Yes, the individual filing deadline was moved to May 17, but we made a concerted effort to prepare as many individual returns as possible by April 15. The majority of us here at Galactic Command do not like or appreciate a Dunning-Kruger Congress requiring us to again reschedule our personal lives.  

You may remember the old days when people used to go to the post office on April 15th and mail their returns, especially if there was money due. Clearly there is no way that the return could make it to the IRS on the 15th if one mailed it on the 15th. The reason this worked (and still works, although it is much less of an issue with electronic filing) is Code Section 7502.

            § 7502 Timely mailing treated as timely filing and paying.


(a)  General rule.

(1)  Date of delivery.

If any return, claim, statement, or other document required to be filed, or any payment required to be made, within a prescribed period or on or before a prescribed date under authority of any provision of the internal revenue laws is, after such period or such date, delivered by United States mail to the agency, officer, or office with which such return, claim, statement, or other document is required to be filed, or to which such payment is required to be made, the date of the United States postmark stamped on the cover in which such return, claim, statement, or other document, or payment, is mailed shall be deemed to be the date of delivery or the date of payment, as the case may be.

This Section means that putting the return in the mail timely equals the IRS receiving it timely.

Mail service in our corner of the fruited plain has been … substandard recently. We have an accountant who no longer uses mail delivery for repetitive time-sensitive filings, such as sales and payroll taxes. She has too many experiences of mail taking a week to go crosstown that she has given up on regular mail for certain returns.

It is easier nowadays to avoid the post office, of course, with Fed Ex and UPS and other delivery services available.

We sent our petition via Fed Ex.

I am looking at a case that deals with “approved” delivery services.

What makes this an issue is that a delivery service is not approved until the IRS says it is. Granted, a lot of services have been approved, but every now and then one blows up. Use CTG Galactic Delivery, for example, have a hiccup – or just cut it too close – and you may not like the result.

A law firm sent a Tax Court petition the day before it was due. The admin person shipped it with Fed Ex using “First Overnight” delivery.

OK.

Something weird happened, and the package got relabeled. Why? Who knows. The result however is the petition got to the Tax Court late.

In general, one would consider Fed Ex to be a safe bet and Fed Ex to be squarely within the list of approved delivery services. The problem is that the IRS does not look at Fed Ex overall as “approved.” It instead looks at the delivery options of Fed Ex as individually approved or not. When the law firm sent their petition, the following services were approved:


·      Fed Ex Priority Overnight

·      Fed Ex Standard Overnight

·      Fed Ex 2 Day

·      Fed Ex International Priority

·      Fed Ex International First

You know what service is not on the list?

Fed Ex First Overnight, the one the law firm used.

Now, Fed Ex Overnight eventually got added to the list, but not in time to save the law firm and this specific filing.

Are their options left if one blows the Tax Court filing?

Yes, but the options are less appealing. One could litigate in District Court, for example, but that would require one to pay the assessed tax in full and then sue for refund.

There is also audit reconsideration, but I shudder to take that option with IRS COVID 2020/2021. The IRS has the option of accepting or rejecting a reconsideration request. I can barely get the IRS to do what it HAS to do, so the idea of giving it the option to blow me off is unappealing.

For the home gamers, our case this time was Organic Cannabis Foundation LLC et al v Commissioner.