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:
- The estate was fully paid-in. In fact, it was more than fully paid-in.
- 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..