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Thursday, January 26, 2012

Terrance Clem Wright v Commissioner

I have a question for you: if you wanted to convince the IRS that you are unable to pay back taxes because of financial hardship, would you hesitate to send them copies of your bank statements?
Let’s take a look at another pro se case before the Tax Court: Terrance Clem Wright v Commissioner. This is also a good opportunity to review the sequence of possible IRS Collections actions against a taxpayer.
Terrance Wright (TCW) fell behind on his taxes for 1999, 2000, 2001, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, and 2008.
On March 18, 2010 the IRS sent him a notice advising him that a notice of federal tax lien (NFTL) had been filed because of his back taxes and that he could request a hearing with the Appeals Office.
On April 25, 2010 TCW filed a request for a Due Process Hearing. The intent of a CDP is to delay a hasty IRS collection action and allow the taxpayer to propose an alternative. He did not contest the tax liabilities but instead requested an installment agreement.
On November 19, 2010, the IRS sent TCW a letter scheduling a telephone conference on January 18, 2011.  The IRS requested TCW to provide financial information and a payment proposal. This would help the IRS Appeals Officer make a decision.
On January 18, 2011, TCW and the Appeals Officer had their telephone conference. TCW told the Appeals Officer that he could not currently afford to make any payments. The Appeals Officer told TCW that - while he had provided some financial information – he unfortunately had not provided bank statements. She needed the bank statements to review his situation and make her decision. Until then she did not have enough information to determine whether TCW should be placed in currently not collectible (CNC) status. She encouraged TCW to pursue CNC status when he obtained all of the necessary financial documents.
NOTE: CNC status means that the IRS will not pursue action for a period of time, very often a year. It does not mean that the tax debt is gone, only that the IRS is granting time for you to get your financial affairs back in order.
Once informed by the Appeals Officer of the alternative, TCW liked the idea of CNC. This does not appear to have occurred to him previously, which indicates – at least to me – that he was not represented by a tax professional.
On February 2, 2011, the IRS issued a notice telling TCW that he would not receive an installment agreement or CNC.
OBSERVATION: Notice the dates: January 18 and February 2. This is not a lot of time, especially by IRS standards. Remember that it took him seven months to get to Appeals. TCW needed to have burnished his case by or before the hearing, as time is short once you are in Appeals.
The Appeals Office, at least in Cincinnati and this part of the country, is undermanned and overworked. I was told recently, for example, that Chicago Appeals are being heard in Wisconsin. My general experience with Appeals has been satisfactory, but one has to be aware and sensitive that these people are pressed for time. I am certain that TCW’s Appeals Officer was frustrated with his lack of cooperation.  
TCW, in a pique, filed a petition with the Tax Court on March 1, 2011.  TCW did not contest the underlying tax debt or the denial of an installment agreement. Instead, TCW’s only argument was that he could not afford to pay. He wanted the IRS to suspend collection action on the basis of his economic hardship. He wanted a CNC, and he wanted the Tax Court to tell the IRS to let him have one.
Here is the Tax Court:
Suspension of collection activity is a “collection alternative” that the taxpayer may propose and that the Office of Appeals must take into consideration. The Internal Revenue Manual (IRM) makes provision for a taxpayer's account to be declared “currently not collectible” in cases of “hardship.” To justify suspension of collection on the ground that the account should be deemed CNC, petitioner must show that he cannot afford to pay the liabilities; and to do so he must show his financial circumstances, including the money that is available to him and the expenses that he bears.
The Appeals officer requested that petitioner submit bank statements and other financial information so that collection alternatives could be considered. Petitioner submitted some of the requested information but failed to submit bank statements. Because petitioner failed to submit the requested bank statement information, the Appeals officer was unable to accurately ascertain petitioner's financial circumstances and, consequently, determined that she could not calculate the appropriate installment agreement terms or grant petitioner CNC status. In the absence of the requested information, respondent's Appeals officer did not abuse her discretion in denying petitioner's request for collection alternatives.
My take? Send the bank statements. It really is that simple.

Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Can the IRS Disallow Your Net Operating Loss Carryback?


Here is a quiz question:
            Can the IRS reopen a tax year if you file an NOL carryback?
Most tax accountants will remember the intent of IRC Section 7605(b), even if they may not remember the specific citation:
No taxpayer shall be subjected to unnecessary examination or investigations, and only one inspection of a taxpayer's books of account shall be made for each taxable year unless the taxpayer requests otherwise or unless the Secretary, after investigation, notifies the taxpayer in writing that an additional inspection is necessary.
This language entered the Code in 1921, and its intent was and is to relieve taxpayers from unnecessary annoyance.
The question is whether it is the original year that is being reopened or whether it is the carryback from a later year that is being reviewed.
The IRS expounded on IRC Section 7605 in Rev Procedure 2005-32. The wording we are after is “reopening.” Section 2.04 of the Rev Procedure informs us that new section 4.02 is being added to define the “reopening” of a closed tax case.
The new section 4.02 states:
A reopening of a closed case involves an examination of a taxpayer’s liability that may result in an adjustment to liability unfavorable to the taxpayer for the same taxable period as the closed case, with exceptions, some of which are noted below. The Service’s review, including an inspection of books of account, of a taxpayer’s claim for a refund on an amended excise or income tax return, as well as the Service’s review of a Form 843, Claim for Refund and Request for Abatement, claiming a refund for an overpayment reported on a return, is not a reopening.
Someone ran face-first into this in FAA 20114701F. Here are the facts:
Taxpayer deducted a bad debt loss in Year 1. It was audited and the IRS allowed the loss. Enough time goes by that the statute of limitations for Year 1 expires. In a later year Taxpayer has an NOL, which it carries-back to Year 1. The IRS however was still churlish about that bad debt deduction in Year 1.
The FAA goes on to reason that the IRS did not pick this fight. Rather the Taxpayer did by electing to carryback its net operating loss and claiming a refund. The Taxpayer’s action allowed the IRS to “reopen” the closed year.
There was some saving grace, thankfully. The IRS decided it could deny Taxpayer’s claim for refund dollar-for-dollar – but only to the extent of the refund. The worst that could happen is that the Taxpayer would not receive any refund, resulting of course in a total waste of the net operating loss carryback. But hey, at least the Taxpayer did not have to write a check to the IRS for the audacity of claiming a tax refund.

Friday, January 20, 2012

1099s and Weatherly v Commissioner

There are two new questions on your income tax returns this year:

·         Did you make any payments in 2011 that would require you to file Form(s) 1099?
·         If “Yes,” did you file or will you file all required Forms 1099?

Several points come immediately to mind:

·         Remember that you are signing this return as being “true, correct and complete” to the best of your knowledge.
·         I, as the preparer, have to exercise due diligence by also asking you this question.
·         What are the consequences of answering “No?”

Congress will be unsatisfied until it has combed your sofa cushions for loose change. This pressure unfortunately passes down to the IRS, and we are seeing the results in OVDI, FATCA, automated collections and taxpayer liens. Obviously they believe there is money to be found here.

This brings us to Jeremiah Weatherly v. Commissioner (TC Memo 2011-206). It’s a tax case having to do with Forms 1099.

JW operated a bailiff consulting business. These are people who perform evictions and serve process, for example. He hired daily workers to help out. He must have been doing relatively well, as he reported $177,925 of Contract Labor on his 2005 return.

He got audited. The IRS wanted his Forms 1099. JW provided the IRS with 64 Forms 1099.There was a problem, however. JW had not filed the Forms with the IRS.

                OBSERVATION: Really, JW?

The IRS now had no confidence in the 64 Forms 1099, so they requested JW obtain and submit Forms 4669 from the 64 people. Form 4669 requires the payee to report the amount of the payment and where it is reported on his/her return.

OBSERVATION: This is not going to go over well.

JW’s response rate was pretty much what you would expect: he got eight replies. The IRS bounced 2 of them, as the social security numbers were invalid. With the remaining six, JW was able to document $25,115 of his Contract Labor expense. The IRS simply disallowed the remaining $152,810.

JW appealed pro se to the Tax Court. He got schooled. Tax law and long-standing tax doctrine require a taxpayer to maintain records sufficient to establish the amounts of allowable deductions and enable the Commissioner to determine the correct tax liability. This is a two-step requirement: your records have to be good enough for you to prepare a correct return AND to allow someone to double-check your work.

The Tax Court asked for JW’s books and records. Nothing. The Tax Court asked for other evidence to substantiate that these amounts were actually paid. Nothing. The Court then wanted JW to testify about his bookkeeping practices. Nothing. Frustrated, the Court held for the IRS. JW got charged with additional tax of $67,436 and penalties of $29,425.

What can we learn from JW?

Let’s admit, JW should never have represented himself. All he accomplished was to aggravate the Court. It is possible that another taxpayer – more responsive and attuned – could have obtained a different result. The Court did try to help JW, even alluding to the Cohan rule where it will allow estimates as long as the Court is convinced that there truly was an expenditure.

Nonetheless, we can see the position the IRS can and may take if one fails to file Forms 1099. Perhaps your bookkeeping practices are different from JW’s, and you could have provided the Court with substantial and satisfactory alternative documentation. However remember that you would have engaged – and paid – a tax CPA to represent you at audit and Appeals before even arriving at the Court. And you would still be at the Court’s mercy.

This process seems expensive to me. Here is another idea: issue 1099s, especially since you are now required to affirmatively respond to the new questions on your 2011 tax returns. There is now one more reason for the Court to turn you down: you lied when you answered “No” to the first question.

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

The IRS Is Now Accepting E-Files for the 2012 Tax Season


Tax season officially started yesterday, when the IRS started accepting e-filed returns. Electronic filing is expanding: approximately 100 million returns were e-filed for 2011. The IRS is certainly encouraging this momentum. Professional tax preparers – such as Kruse & Crawford – have to submit individual income tax returns electronically if they expect to prepare more than 10 returns in 2012. One does not have much of a tax practice if one does not prepare more than 10 individual tax returns in a year. The percentage of e-filed individual returns has increased from 58% in 2008 to 77% last year.
The Free File has also started, which allows one to e-file federal individual tax returns for free if one’s income is less than $57,000.

One last note: tax returns will be due Tuesday, April 17th this tear. That is because the 15th is on a weekend and the next business day (Monday) is a holiday in Washington, D.C.

Friday, January 13, 2012

The SMLLC and the Family Payroll Tax Exemption

If you are a single-member LLC (SMLLC) reporting for tax purposes as a sole proprietorship, you may be interested in a recent payroll tax change.

An SMLLC is reported for income tax purposes as either a corporation or a proprietorship. A question came up in recent years on how to treat an SMLLC for payroll tax purposes. In August, 2007 the IRS issued final regulations requiring the SMLLC to be treated as the taxpayer for employment tax purposes. This meant that it had to get an identification number separate from its sole member, for example. These regulations became effective January 1, 2009.

This in turn raised the question on what to do with the family employment tax exemption. The family tax exemption allows a proprietor who pays his/her spouse or children the following:

·         For a child under age 18, unemployment, FICA and Medicare taxes will not apply
·         For a child over 17 but under 21, unemployment taxes will not apply
·         For a spouse, unemployment taxes will not apply

By treating the SMLLC as an entity distinct from the sole member, the parent was not employing the family member, at least technically. This threw-out the family employment tax exemption.

Talk about unintended consequences.

The IRS has now reversed course and has expanded the family tax exemption to SMLLCs – and has made the exemption retroactive to January 1, 2009. This could mean that amended payroll tax returns are in order.

Example: You operate as a SMLLC. You have 7 employees, which include your spouse, a child age 16 and a child age 19. What are the federal employment tax consequences?
a.       The child age 17 is exempt from FICA, Medicare and unemployment
b.      The child age 19 is exempt from unemployment
c.       The spouse is exempt from unemployment

Tuesday, January 10, 2012

WSJ article "More Firms Enjoy Tax-Free Status”

I read this today on The Wall Street Journal:
Sixty-nine percent U.S. companies were organized as pass-throughs, or nontaxable organizations, in 2008, compared with 24% in 1986, according to data from the Internal Revenue Service. Members of Congress and the business community disagree on whether the exemption should change. Increasingly, traditional for-profit companies are at a competitive disadvantage against pass-throughs.
The article title is “More Firms Enjoy Tax-Free Status.”
Here is a gripe: it is misleading nonsense to refer to passthroughs as tax-free or nontaxable. Passthroughs are partnerships, LLCs and S corporations, and generally their income is allocated to and reported by their owners and partners. For Kruse & Crawford clients, this means that the passthrough income is reported on one or more individual income tax returns. It is there that tax is calculated and paid. Client tax estimates are due, and we are presently working on several estimates due on January 16th.  I stayed here late last night working on something the Wall Street Journal says is nontaxable and apparently not “for profit.”
If passthroughs are “nontaxable” or not “for profit,” then this tax guy has missed the boat for more than two decades.

Wednesday, January 4, 2012

The Anschutz Company v. Commissioner

So what do you do when you own a fortune in stock but do not want to pay the tax man?
Let’s look at Philip and Nancy Anschutz and The Anschutz Company (TAC). Philip Anschutz (PA) began acquiring oil and mineral companies during the 1960s. He expanded his activities to include railroad, real estate and entertainment companies. This meant he owned large blocks of various companies’ stock, and he housed them in TAC. TAC was an S corporation, a fact which is important and to which we will return later.
Well, if you keep buying companies, eventually you wind up having a lot of money invested in those companies. In the late 1990s and early 2000s, PA and TAC began looking for ways to free up some of that invested cash.
In 2000 and 2001 TAC received approximately $375 million from a series of variable prepaid forward contracts with Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette (DLJ). The contracts involved shares of Union Pacific and Andarko Petroleum. DLJ later became part of Credit Suisse.
Let’s get into eye-rolling territory and talk about a “forward contract.” Here is an example:
You want to unload $250 million worth of AJ stock but delay any tax consequence. Tony Soprano (TS) wants to help you. You hire a firm (BADA BING) who proposes a business deal involving TS. You loan the stock to TS. No, instead you loan the stock to BADA BING and you grant TS a security interest in the shares. TS then sells the stock. TS sells short, though.
QUESTION: By selling short, TS is saying that he does not own the stock. This is consistent with the story so far, as you lent the stock to TS. TS has a security interest in the stock, but that interest is not the same as owning the stock. Therefore TS has to sell short. He is protected however because – if ever called upon – he can deliver your shares to close-out the trade. Remember, your shares are in his possession.
                What do you get out of this? Nothing so far.
But let’s say that TS gives you 75% the money from the short sale. Ah, now you have something – you have cash in your pocket. The transaction as described is now a “prepaid” forward contract. The “prepaid” means that you got money.
There is more. You get a 5% prepaid lending fee because, by golly, you are lending the use of your shares to TS.
Somewhere down the line this story has to end, however. Say that 8 or 10 years down the road you are obligated to deliver to TS either:
·         a (variable) number of AJ shares, or
·         cash, or
·         equivalent but not identical stock 
The variable number of shares permitted to settle the contract makes this a variable prepaid forward contract.
There is also a way to do this with puts and calls and is referred to as a collar. It is interesting in a train-wreck sort of way, but let’s spare ourselves that discussion.
Let’s give TS some incentive to do the deal. We can add the following:
·         If the stock appreciates over the term of the deal, you get the first 50% in appreciation but TS gets ALL the appreciation after that.
·         TS kept 25% of the cash. He could invest it over the term of the deal and keep the earnings.
·         TS did sell the stock short, so if the stock goes down, the short sale would earn TS additional profit.
·         Upon the occurrence of certain events (bankruptcy, material change in economic position), TS could accelerate the settlement date of the deal.
How could TS lose money? TS already sold all the stock and paid you 75% of the proceeds. TS kept the remaining 25% for a period of time. Granted, TS did sell the shares short, so TS would have the risk of the stock going up in price over the term of the deal. This is how one loses money on a short sale, as it would make it more expensive for TS to close out his short position. But wait, TS has physical possession of your stock. If you do not make TS whole, he will simply take your stock to cover the short sale. What if the stock goes down? Then TS has a profit on the short sale. TS dealt a pretty good hand for himself.
How could you lose money? You really can’t. If the stock goes down, you buy it at the lower price and deliver it to TS. If the stock goes up you participate in the gain. Not all the gain, but still a gain. You lose by not making as much money as you could have by holding on to the stock. I can live with that kind of loss.

What was the underlying tax law that drove this transaction? Under long-standing tax law, a taxpayer did not have a sale - for tax purposes – of securities until the taxpayer delivered shares from his/her long position. In a forward contract, the delivery is delayed for years, possibly many years. So a forward contract, even a prepaid forward contract, of securities was not considered a "sale.” The IRS changed this in 1997 with Section 1259, which provided tax rules for constructive sales of financial positions. You may remember that you used to be able to protect an appreciated stock position at year-end by something called a “short sale against the box.” Then one day your accountant told you that you could not do that anymore because the law had changed. Tax law now requires you to have some level of risk in the position. The question is: how much risk?
Since TAC entered into these transactions in 2000 and 2001, it at least had the warning of Section 1259. TAC did not however have clarification of how far it could push the “link” between a variable contract and a stock loan. Tax law takes time to evolve. This is an innovative tax area involving financial instruments and derivatives, and tax clarification takes time. In 2006 the IRS finally gave warning that it did not like this structure. Too late for TAC to close the barn door, of course.
The IRS went after TAC.
What was the IRS position? We can hear the IRS saying:
“TAC did not keep enough risk to avoid a constructive sale of the Union Pacific and Andarko stock.”
What was TAC’s position? We can almost hear them saying:
“What are you talking about? We entered into two transactions - a prepaid variable and a stock loan, not one. The prepaid variable did not rise to the level of a constructive sale. The loan was to Wilmington Trust Company as collateral agent and trustee. Last time we checked, Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette was not Wilmington Trust Co.
In addition, is it fair to make tax law retroactive?”
In 2010 the Tax Court agreed with the IRS. TAC immediately appealed. The Appeals Court handed down its decision on Tuesday, December 27, 2011.
The 10th Circuit Appeals Court noted that TAC effectively exchanged its shares for …
(1)    Upfront monies of 75% and 5%
(2)    the  potential to benefit to a limited degree if the pledged stock increased in value, and
(3)    the elimination of any risk of loss of value in the pledged stock

NOTE: Think about this for a moment. TAC transferred its shares to DLJ and DLJ relieved TAC of any risk of loss. What does this sound like?
The 10th Circuit Appeals Court further reasoned that DLJ…
(1)    obtained all incidents of ownership in the shares, including the right to transfer them
(2)    acquired an interest in the property that it could not prudently abandon
(3)    had a present obligation to pay monies to TAC
(4)    had the right to sell or rehypothecate the shares

NOTE: DLJ had an immediate obligation to pay TAC and also had the right to sell the shares. What does that sound like?

Welcome to the new tax shelters. There was a time that shelters involved real estate or oil and gas and relied on nonrecourse loans or accelerated depreciation. Contemporary shelters use financial derivatives.
At the heart of this case is a metaphysical tax question: when is a sale a sale? The IRS did not challenge the substance of the deal. What it did challenge was this important detail: TAC lent its shares to DLJ to make the deal work. TAC argued that the stock loan and variable forwards were separate deals and that the stock was loaned to Wilmington Trust, not DLJ. The Tax Court in 2010 could not overcome the fact that, when TAC lent its shares, the shares were effectively gone and could not be recovered. A common factor of a sale is that the seller no longer has possession of the property sold.  
Why did TAC do this? TAC is an S corporation. S corporations can pay tax if they have a unique fact pattern called “built-in gains.” Sure enough, TAC had built-in gains in the Union Pacific and Andarko stock. The built-in gain had a clawback period of ten years. Sale of property with built-in gains within this period triggers the built-in gains tax. TAC was trying to avoid the double-taxation of built-in gains and then capital gains.
TAC lost big. The taxes were about $110 million. Oh, add on about another $30 million for penalties and taxes. Since TAC was an S corporation, all its income, deductions and credits flowed-through to PA and were reported on his individual income tax return. This means that PA lost big too.