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Sunday, February 23, 2020

When Bidding Is Not Marketing

I was talking with a client recently. He is a real estate developer, and he was telling me about a tense run-in several years ago with the county about a proposed development. Think NIMBY (not in my backyard) and you have the context.

Believe it or not, there is a tax issue there.

Let’s set it up by discussing Hisham Ashkouri (HA).

HA was an architect. He was bidding on projects in Washington state and Utah. He was also bidding on projects in Libya and in the Republic of Tartarstan, which is in Russia.

Those last two are certainly off the beaten path.

Using different companies, he submitted development bid proposals. I am not sure what was in these bid proposals, but over three years (2009 – 2011), he deducted over $500 grand in bid expenses.

Sounds expensive.

The IRS audited the three years.

And disallowed the bid expenses.

That doesn’t sound right, thought I.

HA argued that he had deducted marketing and promotion expenses.

Then HA went foot-in-mouth:
“If any of those projects had resulted in ‘a real estate transaction …, I would be having 20 percent ownership.’”
Let’s introduce Code Section 263A. That bad boy generally deals with the acquisition of property, and its intention is to make you capitalize everything under the sun when you acquire – including constructing or developing – property. “Capitalize” is accounting-speak for depreciating something rather than deducting it immediately.

If you depreciate over one year, then I suppose the net effect is approximately the same. If you have to depreciate over 39 years, well, it is going to hurt.

HA fired off first and strong:

The deductions …"could not be capitalized as they were used for marketing and promotion with no real estate transaction." Although petitioners fail to cite any authority in support of that claim, they are correct that section 263A does not require the capitalization of "marketing, selling, advertising, and distribution costs." 

The Court however nailed the issue:
Mr. Ashkouri's testimony regarding the projects he pursued was not particularly detailed, but we take him as having acknowledged that, had he been awarded any of the projects, he would have acquired an ownership interest in the property being developed. He did not identify any project for which he claimed deductions in which he would not have received an ownership interest had he been awarded the contract.”
Every project would have resulted in the acquisition of an ownership interest. This is not marketing or promotion in a conventional sense. HA’s possible ownership interest at the end lands these transactions within the Section 263A dragnet.

So what? He did not win any of these bids, and he would get to deduct the bid costs when the contract was awarded to someone else. Granted, the deduction might be held-up a year or two – until the bid was awarded – but HA would eventually get his deduction.

Here comes the Scooby Doo mystery portion of the case:
But petitioners have not established when (if ever) the development contracts Mr. Ashkouri sought were awarded to others, when Mr. Ashkouri received written notice that no contract would be awarded, or when he abandoned his bid or proposal for each project.”

Seriously? He could not show that the bid went to someone else or was withdrawn entirely? I am not getting this at all.

The Tax Court then backed-up and ran over the body a second time – apparently to make sure that it had stopped breathing:
Even if we were to accept that the expenses in issue were not subject to deferral under section 1.263A-1(e)(3)(ii)(T), Income Tax Regs., we would still conclude that respondent properly disallowed the deductions for architectural or contract services claimed on the Schedules C for Mr. Ashkouri's proprietorship because petitioners did not adequately substantiate the expenses underlying the claimed deductions. In general, section 162(a) allows a deduction for "all the ordinary and necessary expenses paid or incurred during the taxable year in carrying on any trade or business". When called upon by the Commissioner, however, a taxpayer must substantiate his expenses.”
Bam! Even if HA provided evidence about the bid outcomes, the Court was still going to say “No.”

Back to my real estate guy.

What was the tax issue back when?

His transaction involved real estate development. There is no question that he would have had an ownership interest if the project went through; in fact, he would be the only owner.

Let’s say he incurred significant expenses – legal, engineering and the like – while battling the county.

Would have had to capitalize those expenses rather than deduct them right away?



Sunday, February 16, 2020

Faxing A Return To The IRS


We recently prepared a couple of back California tax returns for a client.

The client had an accounting person who lived in California – at least on-and-off -for part of one year. The client itself is located in Tennessee and had little to do with California other than perhaps shipping product into the state. It is long-standing tax doctrine that having an employee in a state can subject a company to that state’s income tax, so I agreed that the client had to file for one year.

The second year was triggered by a one-off Form 1099 issued by someone in Los Angeles. The dollar amount was inconsequential, and I am still at a loss how California obtained this 1099 and why they burned the energy to trace it back to Tennessee. I am not convinced the client sold anything into California that second year. One could sell into Texas, for example, but have the check issued by corporate in Los Angeles.

The client did not care about the details. Just get California off their back.

California requested that we fax the returns to a unit rather than sending them through the regular system

And therein can exist a tax trap.

Let’s talk about it.

Seaview Trading LLC got itself into Tax Court for transacting in a tax shelter. The tax-gentle term is “listed transaction,” but you and I would just call it a shelter. At issue was a $35 million tax deduction, so we are talking big bucks.

The transaction happened in 2001.  The examination started in 2005. On July 27, 2005 the IRS sent Seaview a letter stating that it had never received its 2001 return.

Oh, oh.

This was a partnership, and for the year we are talking about there existed rather arcane audit rules. We will not need to get into the weeds about these rules, other than to say that failing to file a return was bad news for Seaview.

In 2005 Seaview’s accountant faxed a copy of the 2001 tax return to the IRS agent, stating that the return had been timely filed and that Seaview was providing a copy of what it had filed in 2002. He also included a certified mail receipt for the return.

The IRS maintained its position that it had never received the 2001 return. In 2010 the IRS issued its $35 million disallowance.

Fast forward to the Tax Court.

$35 million will do that.

The Court decided to review the case in two steps:

(1)  Did faxing the return to the agent in 2005 constitute “filing” the return?
(2)  If not, does the certified mail receipt constitute evidence of timely filing?

Personally, I would have reversed the order, as I consider certified mailing to be presumptive evidence of timely filing. That is why accountants recommend certified mail. It is less of an issue these days with electronic filing, but every now and then one may decide – or be required – to paper file. In that situation I would still recommend that one use certified mail.

The Court held that faxing the return to the agent did not constitute the filing of a return.

The tax literature observed and commented that faxing does not equal filing.

But there is a subtlety here: Seaview’s accountant indicated that he was supplying the agent a copy of a timely-filed 2001 return. By calling it a copy, the accountant was saying – at least indirectly – that the agent did not need to submit the return for regular processing. That said, it would be unfair for Seaview to later reverse course and argue that it intended for the agent to submit the return for processing.

The IRS won this round.

Now they go to round two: does the certified mail receipt provide Seaview with presumptive proof of timely mailing?

Seaview presents issues that we do not have with our client. We are not playing with listed transactions or obscure audit rules. California just wants its $800 minimum fee for a couple of years. They do not really care if our client actually owes. They want money.

Our administrative staff tried to fax the returns this past Friday but had problems with the fax number. I called the unit in California to explain the issue and discuss alternatives, but I never got to speak with an actual human being. I will try again (at least briefly; I have other things to do) on Monday. If California blows me off again, we will mail the returns.

I fear however that mailing the returns to general processing will cause issues, as the unit will probably issue some apocalyptic deathnote before gen pop routes the returns back to them. We will mail the returns to the specific unit and cross our fingers that not everyone there is “busy serving other customers.”

How I wish I had one of those jobs.

BTW, you can bet we will certify the mail.

Sunday, February 9, 2020

Marijuana And Tax-Exempt Status


I am not surprised.

I am looking at a Private Letter Ruling on a tax -exempt application for an entity involved with marijuana and CBD.

I doubt the CBD plays any role here. It is all about marijuana.

I have become sensitive to the issue as I have two friends who are dealing with chronic pain. The pain has risen to the level that it is injuring both their careers. The two have chosen different ways to manage: one does so through prescriptions and the other through marijuana.

Through one I have seen the debilitating effect of prescription painkillers.

The other friend wants me to establish a marijuana specialization here at Command Center.

I am not. I am looking to reduce, not expand, my work load.

What sets up the tax issue?

Federal tax law. More specifically, this Code section:
        § 280E Expenditures in connection with the illegal sale of drugs.
No deduction or credit shall be allowed for any amount paid or incurred during the taxable year in carrying on any trade or business if such trade or business (or the activities which comprise such trade or business) consists of trafficking in controlled substances (within the meaning of schedule I and II of the Controlled Substances Act) which is prohibited by Federal law or the law of any State in which such trade or business is conducted.

Marijuana is a Schedule I substance, so it runs full-face into Section 280E. There is “no deduction or credit” allowed on that tax return.

There is one exception, and that has to do with the cost of the marijuana itself. Accountants refer to this as “cost of sales,” and it would include more than just the cost of the product. It would include costs associated with buying the product or storing it, for example. Still, the big bucks would be with the cost of the product itself.

There is a Court decision which defines taxable revenues as revenues after deduction for cost of goods sold. The decision applies to all businesses, not just marijuana.

What it leaves out is everything other than cost of sales, such as rent, utilities or the wages required to staff and run the business.

That gets expensive. One is paying taxes on business profit, without being allowed to deduct all the costs and expenses normally allowed in calculating business profit. That is not really “profit” in the common usage of the word.

I am reading that someone applied for tax exempt status. They argued that their exempt purpose was:

·      To aid financially disadvantaged patients and families affected by the cost of THC and CBD medical treatment
·      To educate health providers about THC and CBD medical treatments
·      To support research into said THC and CBD medical treatments

The entity anticipated the usual stuff:

·      It will be supported by contributions and gifts
·      It will develop a website, which will give it another venue to educate about its mission as well as fundraise
·      It will develop relevant medical and treatment literature
·      It will conduct relevant seminars and classes
·      It will organize support groups for patients and their families
·      It will track and publish relevant medical data

The IRS led with:
You were formed to aid financially disadvantaged patients and patient’s families who are affected by the costs of THC and CBD medical treatment by providing financial support to cover costs of living and other expenses that the patients may incur.”
It continued:
… you are providing funding to the users of these substances who may be struggling to pay living and/or travel expenses because of their use of these illegal substances. Furthermore, your financial assistance is only available to users of these substances.”
In response the entity argued that it did not directly provide THC or CBD to individuals nor did it provide direct funding for the same.

The IRS was unmoved:
You were formed for the purpose of providing financial assistance to individuals who are engaged [in] an illegal activity which is contrary to public policy.”
The IRS rejected the tax-exempt application.

There are numerous tax-exempts throughout the nation that counsel, research, educate and proselytize concerning their mission. A substance abuse clinic can provide methadone, for example. What it cannot do is provide the heroin.

The entity could, I suppose, withdraw the financial support platform from its mission statement, greatly increasing the likelihood for tax-exempt status.

If its core mission was to provide such financial support, however, this alternative might be unacceptable.

If I were advising, I might consider qualifying the entity as a supporting organization for a pain clinic. The clinic would likely address more than marijuana therapy (it would have to, otherwise we are just circling the block), which represents a dilution of the original mission. In addition, a supporting organization transfers some of its governance and authority to the supported organization. It may be that either or both of these factors could be deal-breakers.

It has been interesting to see the continuing push on this area of tax law.


Sunday, February 2, 2020

The IRS And Lack Of A Postmark


The IRS botches things every now and then.

I walked in Friday morning to a botch.

And before leaving Friday I was reading a near-botch that a taxpayer was able to rescue.

Let’s talk about it.

I received a client collection notice for approximately $25 grand. The entire amount represents penalties, and we are appealing the penalties. Generally speaking, an appeal puts a stay on collection activity.

I did what you would do: I called the phone number.

About an hour and a half later (seriously, IRS?) I spoke with an IRS representative.

I explained what happened and inquired about the stay. He asked for a few minutes while he investigated.

He found our appeal arriving in Memphis and then transferring to Kansas City. The file then went cold.

Got it: Kansas City never opened the file. Once Memphis closed, the IRS collection machinery went back online.

This was easy to resolve: I faxed him the appeal while on the phone; he forwarded the appeal; he then granted a stay on collection activity.

Point is: the IRS makes mistakes. Protect yourself.

One of the easiest ways to protect yourself is to certify your mailings. Granted, I would not certify an estimated tax payment, but I would certify more significant transactions with the IRS, such as (paper) filings, responding to correspondence audits or entering the procedural carousel.

Some procedural steps (think notices) have defined response periods. Miss them and you make your advisor’s job much more difficult – if not near impossible.

The granddaddy of defined response periods is the Statutory Notice of Deficiency, sometimes called a “NOD” or a “SNOD” and also known as the 90-day letter.

The 90-day letter means that the IRS intends to assess, a necessary procedural step (generally, there is always an exception) before the IRS can bring its full Collections weaponry to bear. If you want to contest the assessment without paying it first, you had better file with the Tax Court. 

You have 90 days.

Not 91.

Let’s talk about Seely v Commissioner.

The IRS audited Michael and Nancy Seely’s 2013, 2014 and 2015 tax returns. The IRS issued the SNOD. The last day to respond was June 26, 2017.

The taxpayers’ attorney prepared and mailed a Tax Court petition in response to the SNOD.

The Tax Court received the petition on July 17, 2017.

Oh, oh.

Like night follows day, the IRS motioned to dismiss.

The taxpayer will lose this argument 999 times out of 1,000.

But there was something peculiar about the Seely’s petition. It had all the necessary postage but had no discernable postmark. For all practical purposes, it was like it was never mailed.

There is a special rule for this unlikely occasion: the Court looks at extrinsic evidence, and both parties (the taxpayer and IRS) are allowed to present such evidence.

The Seelys came out strong: their attorney filed a declaration with the Court that his office had mailed the petition on June 22, 2017 at a specified mail location.

The IRS came with their argument:

(1)  It takes approximately 8 to 15 days for the Postal Service to deliver mail from the Seeley’s city to Washington, D.C.
(2)  If mailed on June 26, then it would have arrived at the Tax Court no later than Friday, July 14.
(3)  It didn’t. It arrived instead on Monday, July 17.

This argument is standard IRS play.

But the Court allowed for one more factor: unusual volumes of mail or staffing issues due to the intervening July 4th  holiday.

The Court reasoned that might explain the one day the IRS was disallowing.

The Court decided for the Seelys.

This is a rare taxpayer win.

You know what else would constitute extrinsic evidence and have also handcuffed the IRS?

Certify the mailing with the Post Office.

Sunday, January 26, 2020

Maple Trees, Blueberries and Startup Expenses


It is one of my least favorite issues in tax law. It is not a particularly technical issue; rather, it too often imitates theology and metaphysics:

When does a business begin?

For some businesses, it is straightforward. As a CPA my business starts when I take office space or otherwise offer my services to the public. Other businesses have their rules of thumb:
·        An office building begins business when it obtains a certificate of occupancy from the appropriate municipal government.
·        A restaurant begins (usually) after its soft opening; that is, when it first opens to family, friends, possibly food reviewers and critics - and before opening to the general public.
What can make the issue difficult was a 1980 change in the tax law. It used to be that start-up costs could not be immediately deducted. Rather one had to accumulate and deduct them over a 5-year period.

Unfortunate but not ruinous.

In 1980 the law changed to allow a $5,000 deduction; the balance was to be deducted over a 15-year period.

Can you imagine the potentially fraught and tense conversations between a taxpayer and the tax advisor? Rather than injecting moderate but acceptable pain, Congress introduced dispute between a practitioner and his/her client.

Let’s look at a case involving startup costs.

James Gordon Primus lived in New York and worked as an accountant at a large accounting firm. In 2011 his mother bought 266 acres in southwest Quebec on his behalf. The property contained almost 200 acres of maple trees. The trees were mature enough to produce sap, so I suppose he could start his new business of farming.



But there were details. There are always details.

He wanted to clear the brush, as that would help with production later on. He also wanted to install a collection pipeline, for the obvious reason. He also had plans for blueberry production.

He started thinning the maple brush in 2011, right after acquiring the property.

Good.

In 2012 and 2013 he started clearing for blueberry production. 

He ordered 2,000 blueberry bushes in 2014.

In 2015 he began installing the pipeline and planted the blueberry bushes.

In 2016 he readied the barn.

In 2017 he finally collected and sold maple sap.

Got it: 6 years later.

On 2012 he deducted over $200 grand for the farm.

On 2013 he deducted another $118 grand.

That caught the attention of the IRS. They saw $318 grand of startup expenses. They would spot him $5 grand and amortize the rest over 15 years.

Not a chance argued Primus.

He started clearing in 2011, and clearing is an established farming practice. He was in the trade or business of farming by 2012.

Clearing is an accepted practice, said the Court, but that does not mean that one has gotten past the startup phase. Context in all things.

Primus offered another argument: a business can start before it generates revenues.

That is correct, responded the Court, but lack of revenue does not mean that business has started.

Here is the Court:
Petitioner’s activities during 2012 and 2013 were incurred to prepare the farm and produce sap and plant blueberries. Those are startup expenses under section 195 and may not be deducted under section 162 or 212.”
The taxpayer struck out.

Get this issue wrong and the consequences can be severe.

How would one plan for something like this?

I do not pretend to be an expert in maple farming, but I would pull back to general principles: show revenues. The IRS might dismiss the revenues as inconsequential and not determinative that a startup period has ended, but one has a not-inconsequential argument.

That leads to the next principle: once one has established a trade or business, the expenses of expanding that trade or business (think blueberries in this instance) are generally deductible.

I wonder how this would have gone had Primus tapped and sold sap in 2012. I am thinking limited production but still enough to be business-consequential. Perhaps he could market it as “rare,” “local,” “artisanal” and all the buzz words.

Perhaps he could have followed the next year with another limited production. I am trying to tamp-down an IRS “not determinative” argument.

Would it have made a difference?

Sunday, January 19, 2020

Nigerian Oil And IRS Termination Assessment


I am reading a 34-page case that starts with the following:
During the first quarter of 2015 petitioner received about $750,000 from entities allegedly seeking to purchase Nigerian crude oil. Shortly thereafter he attempted to wire $300,000 to a foreign bank. The U.S. Secret Service flagged the transaction and alerted the Internal Revenue Service.  Believing that petitioner intended ‘quickly to depart from the United States or to remove his property therefrom,’ the IRS made a termination assessment under Section 6851(a).
I have never seen a termination assessment in practice.

It has to do with IRS Collections, and one does not just stumble into this. The IRS discovers (or is otherwise led to believe) that one has concealed assets with no intention of informing the IRS.
COMMENT: BTW a taxpayer has probably crossed the line from civil to criminal here. He/she should see a tax attorney, as matters are going south very soon.  
If dealing with a tax year for which the filing date has passed (for example, your 2018 tax year) then the collection is referred to as a jeopardy assessment.

If dealing with one’s current tax year, then it is a termination assessment. The IRS just closes your tax year (irrespective of what month or day it is), fast-forwards the notice periods and goes after your assets.  Think drug trafficking, for example, and you get the idea.

The other thing that would trigger a termination assessment is suspicion that one is going to flee the country.

Our protagonist is named Ugori Timothy Wilson Onyeani. Nope, I cannot explain how that collection of names came together, but let’s hereafter refer to him as UTWO.

UTWO was born in Nigeria. He moved to the U.K. to practice medicine. There was misconduct and his medical license was revoked. He came to the U.S. and got an MBA from DeVry University.

In the same year as he graduated from DeVry, he incorporated American Hope Petroleum & Energy Corp (AHPE). Mind you, there were no Board of Directors, employees, records, meetings, operations or the glimmer of any.

What it did have was a website.
 COMMENT: You see this coming, don’t you?
UTWO presented AHPE as an “independent crude oil purchasing and selling expert,” alleging it had “a team of experts” and was “securely invested in crude purchasing.”
COMMENT: Did I mention that UTWO had zero background in oil and gas? One would think his father was a politician.
He represented that he was brokering the sale of crude oil owned by the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC).

Mind you, the NNPC had no idea who he was, but let us not interrupt UTWO’s story.

A couple of companies stepped-up and wanted to buy oil from AHPE. There are deposits for such things, so the two advanced $744,895.
COMMENT: Born every minute, it seems.
On or around March 3, 2015 UTWO attempted to wire $300 grand to London. His bank flagged the transaction and starting investigating. He responded by opening accounts at another bank, one in his name and one in AHPE’s name.

UTWO was scrupulous about handling company funds, though, using them for clearly business purposes such as trips to Sea World, purchases from Victoria’s Secret, trips to aquariums and flooring for his house.

Eventually the second bank also got spooked about AHPE/UTWO’s activities and froze his accounts.

The Secret Service informed the IRS, who came in with an audit. They found deposits over $800 grand (income as far as the IRS was concerned), no business expenses and a tax bill of $289,043.

The bank remitted the $289 grand to the IRS. The bank was no fool.

Then came a twist:  AHPE/UTWO returned $400 grand of advance deposits in a private settlement.

All the above took place in the same year - 2015. 

In 2016 UTWO and his wife filed their joint individual income tax return. The return reported his wife’s income of $41,893 and that was about it.

The IRS had a meltdown. It had found $800 grand, and UTWO was reporting none of it. The IRS wanted tax of $273,407, a fraud penalty of $205,055 and a slushee machine.
COMMENT: The fraud penalty is 75%. Never, ever go there.
Off they went to Tax Court.

Let’s go through the numbers again. The IRS found approximately $800 grand. AHPE/UTWO returned $400 grand of it. This leaves $400 grand. The IRS levied a tax payment of $289 grand, representing a tax rate of over 70%.

What about the fraud penalty of $205 grand, asked the IRS.

Where is the evasion - a badge of fraud - asked the Court.

The IRS answered: the fraud occurred when he filed a personal return leaving out the $800 grand.

Disagree, answered the Court. UTWO was preserving the position he was arguing in Court, i.e., that the IRS assessment was improper. It would have been legal suicide for him to report otherwise.

And the funds were held in IRS escrow, pointed out the Court. At that point evasion of tax was impossible.

The Court determined that no penalties were appropriate.

And UTWO got out of this as well as possible.

The key?

That he received $800 grand and repaid $400 grand in the same year. As a cash-basis taxpayer, he could not deduct that $400 grand until he paid it. He paid it in the same year as he received the $800 grand, so he could net the two.

I suspect he will get a refund.

Sunday, January 12, 2020

Can You Have Reasonable Cause For Filing Late?


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:
  1.  The estate was fully paid-in. In fact, it was more than fully paid-in.
  2.  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..