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Monthly Archives: February 2022

Tighter Controls Over Beneficial Ownership Reporting in Panama

Panama has enacted Law 254, requiring international legal entities to provide their resident agent with accounting records annually. The Law adjusts existing legislation on anti-money laundering (AML) and aims to meet international standards on tax transparency. 

The Law is divided into three main areas, dealing with accounting records, due-diligence and registration of final beneficiaries.
 
Resident agents must obtain know-your-client information, including clients’ financial, transactional and risk profiles. They must also continuously monitor the business relationship with the client and check the clients’ declared activities. Beneficial owners must be checked against European Union, Financial Crimes Enforcement Network and United Nations sanctions lists for AML purposes.
 
Legal entities will be obliged to keep a copy of the share certificates and shareholders' registry of the corporations. These must be retained for at least five years and made available on request to the Directorate General of Revenue of Panama.
 
The timeframe for the registration of ultimate beneficial owners of legal entities will be reduced. Changes to beneficial ownership data must be updated within 15 days of a change, instead of the previous 30 days.
 
A range of penalties will be enforced for resident agent non-compliance with any of the new measures and legal entities failing to register or update beneficial ownership information may be suspended from the Public Registry of Panama.

Have an International Tax Problem?

 Contact the Tax Lawyers at
Marini & Associates, P.A. 


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or 
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Sources:
Arias Law (PDF)
Mata & Pitti
HG.org

Read more at: Tax Times blog

What Where The Most Litigated Issues In 2021?

Procedurally Taxing nicely summarized the National Taxpayer Advocate's new approach to calculating the most litigated issues in her annual report.  You can read about her approach starting on page 183 of the report.   

Instead of just looking at the tried cases, which she does capture, she also looks at the cases in which taxpayers filed a Tax Court petition.  It’s all in how you define litigation.  Is it best measured by the relatively small number of cases that get tried and receive an opinion, i.e., looking at the end of the case where about 1% of the filed cases end up, or by looking at the filed cases in which taxpayers started litigation but for a variety of reasons did not follow it to a conclusion by trial and opinion?  Since she gives you both sets of data, it’s hard to complain no matter which set of information you prefer.

Here are the charts, with the first one based on opinions issued and the second one on petitions filed:

Some things come out the same in either measure as the report states:

[Gross income disputes] was the number one issue among those litigated in the Tax Court with 66 substantive opinions issued. It was also the largest category of cases petitioned to the Tax Court. In FY 2021, taxpayers petitioned the Tax Court in 13,558 cases where gross income was an issue during the examination.

In the same vein, trade or business disputes came in second under both methods:

50 opinions where this category of issues was litigated in the Tax Court. Taxpayers petitioned the Tax Court in 2,255 instances where trade or business expenses were an issue during the examination in FY 2021.20 This category is high on our list as the second most prevalent category of opinions issued at the Tax Court and the second most petitioned issue in the Tax Court.

Have an IRS Tax Problem?

 Contact the Tax Lawyers at
Marini & Associates, P.A. 


for a FREE Tax HELP Contact us at:
www.TaxAid.com or www.OVDPLaw.com
or 
Toll Free at 888 8TAXAID (888-882-9243) 


 

Read more at: Tax Times blog

What Happened in Collection During 2021?

Procedurally Taxing nicely summarized the National Taxpayer Advocate's annual report, which reported that collection due process notices and hearing requests continue to fall.  Some of the falloff in the most recent period is no doubt attributable to the pandemic, but the trend was set before Covid arrived.  Here is a graph displaying the trend:

The report gives more details and explanations for those interested.  It also included a chart on the number of family status cases petitioned to the Tax Court.  The number of Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) cases seems low when you read about the number of EITC audits.

This section of the report also contains an analysis of the number of non-Tax Court cases litigated during the past year.  Even more than the CDP filing chart above, a chart showing the number of lien cases referred to the Department of Justice shows a precipitous decline.  

Perhaps, the decline should come as no surprise given the decline in revenue officers over this period.  Without revenue officers to initiate these cases, there can be no referrals to DOJ.  

The number is getting close to approaching zero which is bad news for tax administration.  Again, of course, the pandemic plays a role, but the slide started before the pandemic arrived.

The decline in suits is more than matched by the decline in liens, levies and seizures.  The chart below shows the amazing decline in these activities.  This chart shows not only the recent drop off as a result of the pandemic but also the 10-year decline as the IRS’ resources were squeezed by Congressional budgetary action.

No big surprises that the IRS is struggling in its enforcement efforts, that these efforts have declined significantly over the past decade or that they declined significantly during the pandemic.  Still, a pretty bleak picture of the IRS’ ability to pursue meaningful collection action when needed.

Have an IRS Tax Problem?

 Contact the Tax Lawyers at
Marini & Associates, P.A. 


for a FREE Tax HELP Contact us at:
www.TaxAid.com or www.OVDPLaw.com
or 
Toll Free at 888 8TAXAID (888-882-9243) 


 

Read more at: Tax Times blog

Ruling Moves Circuits Closer To Tax Procedure Split on Conservation Easements

According to Law360, big news came out of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit at the end of 2021, involving a closely watched conservation easement case.

In Hewitt v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, the Eleventh Circuit overturned the U.S. Tax Court when it held that a provision in the conservation easement regulations, promulgated in the 1980s, is procedurally flawed under the Administrative Procedure Act.

This case should be of interest to those following the developing body of cases involving the application of the APA's rules to U.S. Department of the Treasury and Internal Revenue Service determinations.

Also the holding of this case has important implications for the dozens, if not hundreds of taxpayers that have had conservation easement deductions challenged based on these regulations.

The Treasury regulations at issue in Hewitt are the so-called proceeds regulations codified at Treasury Regulation Section 1.170A-14(g)(6)(ii), which provides guidance on how to allocate condemnation sale proceeds between the donor and the donee in the rare event of an extinguishment of a conservation easement.

These regulations are intended to ensure that a donation complies with the protected-in-perpetuity requirement under Internal Revenue Code Section 170(h)(5). The proceeds regulations require a proportional allocation of proceeds between the donor and the donee according to a specific formula.

The donee must receive a share of the sale proceeds that is "at least equal to the proportionate value that the perpetual conservation restriction at the time of the gift, bears to the value of the property as a whole at that time."

Taxpayers can deviate from that formula only where "state law provides that the donor is entitled to the full proceeds from the conversion without regard to the terms of the prior perpetual conservation restriction."

Under the easement at issue in Hewitt, in the unlikely event that the easement was extinguished, the share of the sales proceeds payable to the donee would generally be determined under the regulations' prescribed proportionate value formula.

But the easement also provided that the donee's share would be reduced by any appreciation attributable to post-donation improvements to the property.

Based on this improvements provision, the IRS denied the taxpayers' entire charitable contribution deduction, arguing that the easement improperly reduced the donee's share of extinguishment proceeds in violation of the proceeds regulations.

In the Tax Court, the taxpayers argued that the IRS misinterpreted the proceeds regulations and that, in any event, the proceeds regulations were procedurally and substantively invalid. The Tax Court rejected both of those arguments and sustained the IRS' determination.

On Appeal, The Eleventh Circuit Held That The Treasury Failed To Follow The APA's Procedural Rules When Promulgating The Proceeds Regulations By Neglecting To Respond To A Significant Comment Regarding The Treatment Of Post-Donation Improvements.

Therefore, the court held that the commissioner's interpretation of the regulations to disallow the subtraction of improvements "was arbitrary and capricious and therefore invalid under the APA's procedural requirements," and reversed the Tax Court, ruling in favor of the taxpayers.

For other taxpayers in the Eleventh Circuit that have only the improvements provision issue and no other identified problems with their easement deeds, this case should be considered a big win and should result in the allowance of the claimed conservation easement deductions — subject, of course, to any valuation-based challenges. But for other taxpayers, the scope of this decision is arguably less clear.

We may get more clarity on the scope of Hewitt when the Sixth Circuit issues its decision in Oakbrook. The decision is expected imminently, oral argument was held a few weeks prior to the Hewitt argument.

The Oakbrook facts overlap significantly with those in Hewitt, it has both the improvement provision issue and a similar APA challenge to the regulations.

In addition, the Oakbrook easement has a second problem under the proceeds regulations, because it provides that the donee is entitled to a fixed value determined at the time of the donation, rather than a proportionate value determined at the time of the sale.

Thus, it is possible that the Sixth Circuit will sidestep the issues in Hewitt involving the validity of the regulations entirely, by deciding that the proportionate value problem violates the statute, rather than the regulations.

Alternatively, the court could review the validity of the proceeds regulations as applied to the proportionate value issue, without addressing the improvement provision.

Finally, and most interestingly, it is possible that the Oakbrook court will address the very same issues that were addressed in Hewitt and either agree with Hewitt or set up a split in the circuits regarding the APA challenge to the regulations.

Taking a step back from its implications on conservation easement cases, Hewitt represents one of the few successful challenges to a Treasury regulation on procedural grounds.

The Treasury and IRS were long considered immune from the APA's requirements, but the trend has shifted in recent years. We expect that this trend could continue, and we may continue to see more challenges to Treasury and IRS agency determinations in appropriate cases.


Have an IRS Tax Problem?

 Contact the Tax Lawyers at
Marini & Associates, P.A. 


for a FREE Tax HELP Contact us at:
www.TaxAid.com or www.OVDPLaw.com
or 
Toll Free at 888 8TAXAID (888-882-9243) 


 

Read more at: Tax Times blog

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