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Sunday, July 23, 2023

There Is No Tax Relief If You Are Robbed

 

Some tax items have been around for so long that perhaps it would be best to leave them alone.

I’ll give you an example: employees deducting business mileage on their car.

Seems sensible. You tax someone on their work income. That someone incurs expenses to perform that work. Fairness and equity tell you that one should be able to offset the expenses of generating the income against such income.

The Tax Cut and Jobs Act of 2017 (TCJA) did away with that deduction, however. Mind you, the TCJA itself expires in 2025, so we may see this deduction return for 2026.

There are reasons why Congress eliminated the deduction, we are told. They increased the standard deduction, for example, and one could not claim the mileage anyway if one’s itemized deductions were less than the standard deduction. True statement.

Still, it seems to me that Congress could have left the deduction intact. Many if not most would not use it (because of the larger standard deduction), but the high-mileage warriors would still have the deduction if they needed it.

Here’s another:  a tree falls on your house. Or you get robbed.

This has been a tax break since Carter had liver pills.

Used to be.

Back to the TCJA. Personal casualty and theft losses are deductible only if the loss results from a federally declared disaster.

Reread what I just said.

What does theft have to do with a federally declared disaster?

Nothing, of course.

I would make more sense to simply say that the TCJA did away with theft loss deductions.

Let’s talk about the Gomas case.

Dennis and Suzanne Gomas were retired and living their best life in Florida. Mr. G’s brother died, and in 2010 he inherited a business called Feline’s Pride. The business sold pet food online.

OK.

The business was in New York.

We are now talking about remote management. There are any numbers of ways this can go south.

His business manager in New York must have binged The Sopranos, as she was stealing inventory, selling customer lists, not supervising employees, and on and on.

Mr. G moved the business to Florida. His stepdaughter (Anderson) started helping him.

Good, it seems.

By 2015 Mr. G was thinking about closing the business but Anderson persuaded him to keep it open. He turned operations over to Anderson, although the next year (2016) he formally dissolved the company. Anderson kept whatever remained of the business.

In 2017 Anderson prevailed on the G’s to give her $20,000 to (supposedly) better run the business.

I get it. I too am a parent.

Anderson next told the Gs that their crooked New York business manager and others had opened merchant sub-accounts using Mr. G’s personal information. These reprobates were defrauding customers, and the bank wanted to hold the merchant account holder (read: Mr. G) responsible.

          COMMENT: Nope. Sounds wrong. Time to lawyer up.

Anderson convinced the G’s that she had found an attorney (Rickman), and he needed $125,000 at once to prevent Mr. G’s arrest.

COMMENT: For $125 grand, I am meeting with Rickman.

The G’s gave Anderson the $125,000.

But the story kept on.

There were more business subaccounts. Troubles and tribulations were afoot and abounding. It was all Rickman could do to keep Mr. G out of prison. Fortunately, the G’s had Anderson to help sail these treacherous and deadly shoals.

The G’s never met Rickman. They were tapping all their assets, however, including retirement accounts. They were going broke.

Anderson was going after that Academy award. She managed to drag in friends of the family for another $200 grand or so. That proved to be her downfall, as the friends were not as inclined as her parents to believe. In fact, they came to disbelieve. She had pushed too far.

The friends reached out to Rickman. Sure enough, there was an attorney named Rickman, but he did not know and was not representing the G’s. He had no idea about the made-up e-mail address or merchant bank or legal documents or other hot air.

Anderson was convicted to 25 years in prison.

Good.

The G’s tried to salvage some tax relief out of this. For example, in 2017 they had withdrawn almost $1.2 million from their retirement accounts, paying about $410 grand in tax.

Idea: let’s file an amended return and get that $410 grand back.

Next: we need a tax Code-related reason. How about this: we send Anderson a 1099 for $1.1 million, saying that the monies were sent to her for expenses supposedly belonging to a prior business.

I get it. Try to show a business hook. There is a gigantic problem as the business had been closed, but you have to swing the bat you are given.

The IRS of course bounced the amended return.

Off to Court they went.

You might be asking: why didn’t the G’s just say what really happened – that they were robbed?

Because the TCJA had done away with the personal theft deduction. Unless it was presidentially-declared, I suppose.

So, the G’s were left bobbing in the water with much weaker and ultimately non-persuasive arguments to power their amended return and its refund claim.

Even the judge was aghast:

Plaintiffs were the undisputed victims of a complicated theft spanning around two years, resulting in the loss of nearly $2 million dollars. The thief — Mrs. Gomas’s own daughter and Mr. Gomas’s stepdaughter — was rightly convicted and is serving a lengthy prison sentence. The fact that these elderly Plaintiffs are now required to pay tax on monies that were stolen from them seems unjust.

Here is Court shade at the IRS:

In view of the egregious and undisputed facts presented here, it is unfortunate that the IRS is unwilling — or believes it lacks the authority — to exercise its discretion and excuse payment of taxes on the stolen funds.

There is even some shade for Congress:

It is highly unlikely that Congress, when it eliminated the theft loss deduction beginning in 2018, envisioned injustices like the case before this Court. Be that as it may, the law is clear here and it favors the IRS. Seeking to avoid an unjust outcome, Plaintiffs have attempted to recharacterize the facts from what they really are — a theft loss — to something else. Established law does not support this effort. The Court is bound to follow the law, even where, as here, the outcome seems unjust.

To be fair, Congress changed the law. The change was unfair to the G’s, but the Court could not substitute penumbral law over actual law.

The G’s were hosed.

Seriously, Congress should have left theft losses alone. The reason is the same as for employee mileage. The Code as revised for TCJA would make most of the provision superfluous, but at least the provision would exist for the most extreme or egregious situations.

COMMENT: I for one am hopeful that the IRS and G's will resolve this matter administratively. This is not a complementary tale for the IRS, and – frankly – they have other potentially disastrous issues at the moment. It is not too late, for example, for the IRS and G’s to work out an offer in compromise, a partial pay or a do-not-collect status. This would allow the IRS to resolve the matter quietly. Truthfully, they should have already done this and avoided the possible shockwaves from this case.

Our case this time was Gomas v United States, District Court for the Middle District of Florida, Case 8:22-CV-01271.

Monday, July 17, 2023

Income And Cancellation of Bank Debt

 

There is a basic presumption in the tax Code that any accession to “wealth” is income. It isn’t much of a leap for the tax Code to then say that all income is taxable unless otherwise excluded.

Let’s next look at “wealth.” I propose a working definition as follows:

          Assets (A) = Liabilities (L) + Wealth (W)

A little algebra shows the following:

          A – L = W

Here is spiff on the above: do you have wealth if your liabilities go down?

Let’s look at the Katrina White case.

Katrina started a business in 2015. She took out a business loan for $15,000. She leased space for her business, signing a three-year lease.

The business did not work out. The family lent her $8 grand, but there was no way to save it. She had repaid the bank less than a grand when her remaining debt of $14,433 was discharged. The bank sent her a 1099, of course, as all American life events can apparently be reduced to a 1099.

Katrina never made a payment on the lease. Since rent was late for more than two months, the entire lease became due and payable. That fiasco totaled $21,700.

 She filed her return.

The IRS said she left out income of $14,433.

How?

Let’s go through it.

Katrina said that her wealth (that is, A – L = W) was as follows when the business failed:                 

Real property

28,500

Personal property

3,560

32,060

Student loans

5,294

Utilities

961

Utilities, estimated

2,500

Furniture loan

1,120

Judgements

8,128

Bank loan

14,433

Lease breach

21,700

Family loan

7,800

61,936

Net wealth

(29,876)

The IRS wasn’t buying this. They argued that:

·      The estimated utilities were a no go.

·      The family loan wasn’t really a “loan.”

·      While we are at it, the lease breach wasn’t really a loan, as the landlord had no intention of enforcing the debt.

The IRS math was as follows:

Real property

28,500

Personal property

3,560

32,060

Student loans

5,294

Utilities

961

Furniture loan

1,120

Judgements

8,128

Bank loan

14,433

29,936

Net wealth

2,124

The matter went to Tax Court.

The Court pointed out the obvious: Katrina signed a valid and binding lease contract. Perhaps the landlord decided that there was nothing there to pursue, but it cannot be argued that she had an enforceable debt.

The Court saw the following:

Real property

28,500

Personal property

3,560

32,060

Student loans

5,294

Utilities

961

Furniture loan

1,120

Judgements

8,128

Bank loan

14,433

Lease breach

21,700

51,636

Net wealth

(19,576)

Let’s recap our numbers:

Wealth per Katrina was          ($29,876)

Wealth per the IRS was              $2,124

Wealth per the Court was        ($19,576)

Remember what we said at the beginning, that all income is taxable unless there is an exception?  Well, there is an exception for cancellation of debt. Several, in fact, but today we are concerned with only one: insolvency. The Code says that one does not have income to the extent that one is insolvent.

What is insolvency?

Go back to the formula: A – L = W.

To the extent that “W” is negative, one is insolvent. Another way of saying it is that one has more debts than assets.

So, who showed negative “W”?

Well, Katrina did. So did the Court.

Katrina was insolvent. That was an exception to cancellation of indebtedness income. Katrina did not have taxable income. The IRS lost.

Our case this time was Katrina White v Commissioner, T.C. Memo 2023.-77.

Sunday, July 9, 2023

Choose The Lesser Of IRS Grumpiness

 

Let’s talk about the failure to file (FTF) penalty.

Most of us must file an annual income tax return. Unless one is an expat (that is, an American living overseas), the return is due April 15. One can extend the return for six months (that is, until October 15), but the extension is for filing paperwork and not for payment of tax.

How is one supposed to estimate the tax if a significant amount of information is unavailable? Many times, there are estimates or informed guesses; the tax preparer will extend the return using those. Sometimes there are no estimates and no informed guesses; one then does their best. I doubt there isn’t a veteran tax preparer that hasn’t been blindsided by a Schedule K-1.

Let’s continue.

You extend your return. Your K-1 comes in heavier than expected. You owe $5,000 in tax with the return, which you file and pay on October 15.

You will have something called the Failure to Pay (FTP) penalty. The tax nerds know this as the Section 6651(a)(2) penalty. The penalty is as follows:

One-half of 1% for each month or part of a month

To a maximum of 25%

Let’s use our $5,000 example.

I count seven months from April through October (remember: a part of a month counts as a month).

The FTP penalty would be $5,000 times .005 times 7 = $175. It stings, but it is not crushing.

Let’s say the return was filed on October 30.

Has something changed?

Yep.

The IRS is strict about filing deadlines. If the return is extended to October 15, then you have until October 15 to file the return (or at least put it in the mail or submit the electronic file). The 15th is not a suggestion.

What happens if you miss the deadline?

You then filed your return late.

Back to our example. You file the return on October 30. You are just 15 days late. How bad can 15 days be?

It is not intuitive. If you file the return on October 30, you have blown the extension, meaning it is like you never submitted an extension at all. Any penalty calculation starts on April 16.

So what? The FTP penalty is still the same: $5,000 times .005 times 7, right?

The difference is that you have just provoked FTP’s big brother: the Failure to File (FTF) penalty. The FTF is the gym-visiting, MMA-training, creatine supplementing and aggressive sibling to the FTP.

Start with the FTP penalty. Multiply it by 10. The tax nerds know the FTF as the Section 6651(a)(1) penalty. 

Are we saying the FTF penalty is $5,000 times .05 times 7?

Nope, this is tax. There is a loop-the-loop to the FTF calculation.

  • The maximum (a)(1) and (a)(2) penalty is 5% per month or part of a month.
  • The math stops when you get to 25% in total.

The first loop means that the FTP penalty comes in at .005 and the FTF penalty comes in at .045 per month (or part thereof), as the maximum cannot exceed .050 per month.

The second loop means that the math stops when you get to 25%.

How does a tax pro handle this?

Easy: multiply by 25%.

Let’s go back to the math: $5,000 times 25% = $1,250.

This could have stopped at $175 had you just filed the return on October 15. Nah, you thought to yourself. What’s another couple of weeks?

$1,075, that’s what ($1,250 - $175). That is an expensive two weeks.

So, what got me fired up about this topic?

I saw the following on a tax return this past week:


Go to the bottom where it reads “Interest Penalties.” Go across to “Failure to File.” You will see $3,619.

Someone has just thrown away over three-and-a half grand by dragging their feet on filing. There goes a vacation, new electronics for the house, an IRA contribution - anything better than sending it to the government.

The client has two years of this, BTW.

But CTG, you say, maybe they did not have the money to pay.

The FTF does not mean that one is unable to pay. Granted, in real life the two issues often go together. One rationalizes. I do not have any money; if I delay filing maybe I can also delay IRS dunning letters and collection activity.

Maybe, but practice tells me it is rarely worth it. You have to go over four years with an FTP penalty before you equal just five months of FTF penalty. That money is just too expensive.

Let’s go back to our example.

Say the $5,000 is for tax year 2021. The taxpayer filed the return on or before October 15, 2022 and only now can pay the tax. What have we got?

First, the FTF penalty goes away, as the return was filed on time.

Second, the FTP penalty would be: $5,000 times .005 times 16 = $400. (I am running the penalty from April 2022 to July 2023)
Third, there will be interest, of course, but let’s ignore that for now.

$400 versus $1,075. Seems clear to me.

What can be done if one cannot get numbers together by October 15?

Here’s a thought.

I have a client who owns a successful drywalling company. We extended his return several years ago, and sure enough – closing in on October 15 – he was out-of-town, relaxed and unconcerned about any looming doom. However, I knew that he had a good year, and that any tax due was going to be significant. An FTF penalty on significant tax due was also going to be significant. We decided to file his return with the best numbers available, intending to amend whenever we obtained more precise numbers.

Did I like doing that?

That is a No.

Did he avoid the FTF?

That is a Yes, but he delayed getting us more accurate numbers. That delay created its own problems. Problems which were … completely … avoidable.

What is our takeaway?

File your return. Extend if you must, but file by the extension date. File even if you cannot pay. Yes, the IRS will penalize you. The IRS is grumpy about not getting its money. The IRS is grumpier, however, about not getting the tax return in the first place.

Remember: when given the option, choose the lesser of IRS grumpiness.

Monday, July 3, 2023

A Firefighter Sues

The taxation of legal settlements can be maddening.

The general rule is found in IRC Section 61, which can be colloquially summarized as:

If it breathes, moves, or eats, it is taxable.

Then come the exceptions.

The Code begins with a broad rule, and then you must find and fit into an exception to avoid taxability. A big exception for legal settlements is Section 104(a)(2):

        § 104 Compensation for injuries or sickness.

(a)  In general.

Except in the case of amounts attributable to (and not in excess of) deductions allowed under section 213 (relating to medical, etc., expenses) for any prior taxable year, gross income does not include-

(1)  amounts received under workmen's compensation acts as compensation for personal injuries or sickness;

(2) the amount of any damages (other than punitive damages) received (whether by suit or agreement and whether as lump sums or as periodic payments) on account of personal physical injuries or physical sickness;

What can we learn here?

(1) The Code does not care whether the judge decides or if the parties instead come to an agreement.  
(2)  It does not care if one gets paid in a lump sum or in a series of payments.

(3) It cares very much that the settlement is for something physical – whether injury or sickness.  

What about something nonphysical, such as mental or emotional distress?

Reviewing the history of the Code helps here, as we learn that the Code was changed in 1996 to clarify that mental and emotional injury settlements are excludable from income only if they arose from physical injury or sickness.

This gives the following rule of thumb:

          Physical               =       nontaxable

          Nonphysical        =       taxable      

The attorney must be aware of the above demarcation and wordsmith accordingly if some or all the settlement is for nonphysical damages. 

Can it be done?

Let’s look at the Montes case.

Suzanne Montes wanted to be a firefighter since she was a little girl. She was one of the few women to pass the exam to get into the San Francisco Fire Academy. She then was one of the few women to graduate from the program.

Good for her.

In 2016 she received a sweet assignment to a firehouse in downtown San Francisco.

You may know that firefighters work as a team and in 24-hour shifts. There are about 10 shifts per month, so they spend a LOT of time together. Suzanne was a woman. The remainder of the team were men. Many did not welcome her. First came the disparaging comments, then sabotaging her equipment, then doing - I do not know what specifically and I do not want to know – “disgusting and extremely unsanitary” things to her personal property and effects.

Thanks, guys, for painting men as knuckle-dragging Neanderthals. Way to represent the team.

She complained.

She sued.

She won approximately $380 grand.

Good.

She went to a CPA when it was time to file. The CPA advised that the $380 grand was not taxable.

Even better.

You know the IRS balked, as we are looking at a Tax Court case.

The IRS’s first argument?

Start with the complaint, which claimed sex discrimination and retaliation, including the intentional infliction of emotional distress.

There are no allegations of physical disease or harm to her in the complaint.”

We are not seeing the magic words here: physical injury, physical sickness or micrato raepy sathonich.

Hopefully her attorney salvaged this in the settlement agreement.

Here is the Court:

Our detective work here begins and ends with the settlement agreement.”

Oh oh.

There are no allegations of physical injury …, and indeed, in the summary of the complaint it says, ‘She has lost compensation for which she would have been entitled. She has suffered from emotional distress, embarrassment, and humiliation and her prospects for career advancement have been diminished.’”

No magic words.

Yep, she lost her case. The settlement was taxable.

The Court did hand her a small victory, though. Penalties did not apply because she took a reasonable position based on the advice of a CPA.

Our case this time was Montes v Commissioner, Docket No. 17332-21, June 29, 2023.