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Yearly Archives: 2023

Full 9th Circ. Decided that Failure to File Return With the Appropriate Service Center Is Not a Filing That Starts the Statute of Limitations

 

On May 13, 2021 we posted 9th Cir Reverses Tax Court's Finding That Return Supplied During an IRS Examination is Not a Filed Return where we discussed that the Tax Court had concluded that the signed copy of the Form 1065 faxed to agent was not a return under the Beard test, See Beard v. Commissioner, 82 T.C. 766, 777 (1984), the 9th Circuit went on to analyze this issue. The 9th Circuit found that the Form 1065 that Seaview faxed to agent met all the Beard criteria and therefore was a return. 

Now according to Law360, the full Ninth Circuit ruled on March 10, 2023 that the IRS timely disallowed a partnership's $35.5 million loss as the partnership's failure to strictly comply with filing rules meant the agency's readjustment deadline didn't pass, overruling a three-judge panel.

The Ninth Circuit majority ruled that the Tax Court was correct in finding that the IRS' 2010 tax adjustment was timely because of Seaview's failure to comply with Treasury Regulation Section 1.6031(a)-1(e)(1) 

Under that regulation, Seaview was required to send its returns to a service center in Utah, rather than providing copies of those returns to an IRS agent and attorney, the majority said.

"Because Seaview Did Not Meticulously Comply With The Regulation's Place-For-Filing Requirement, It Is Not
Entitled To Claim The Benefit of The Three-Year
Limitations Period," The Opinion Said.

"Having never properly filed its return, Seaview is instead subject to the provision allowing taxes attributable to partnership items to be assessed 'at any time.'"


But U.S. Circuit Judge Patrick J. Bumatay disagreed. The IRS has long encouraged taxpayers to file untimely returns with IRS officials who ask for them, and the majority's decision "throws our tax system into disarray" as "taxpayers can no longer trust what the IRS has told them about how to file delinquent tax returns," Judge Bumatay said.

"Based on the ordinary meaning of 'filing,' we should have held that a delinquent partnership return is 'filed' when an IRS official authorized to obtain and process a delinquent return asks a partnership for such a return, the partnership delivers the return to the IRS official in the manner requested, and the IRS official receives the return," Judge Bumatay added.

The Ninth Circuit case focused on what constitutes a tax return that is properly filed with the IRS. The three-judge panel said in its May decision that copies of returns the partnership gave the agency in 2005 and 2007 constituted filings of those returns that kicked off the three-year statute of limitations under Internal Revenue Code Section 6229(a).

Internal guidance at the IRS contradicts the agency's assertions that the partnership's returns had to be filed with the Utah service center for them to be treated as having kick-started the statute of limitations, the three-judge panel found.

But the Ninth Circuit majority disagreed that IRS documents cited by Seaview support its arguments that its returns were properly filed. Moreover, the partnership misses the mark in arguing that the place-of-filing rules apply only to timely filings, as the regulation's "place-for-filing requirement contains no carveout for delinquent returns," the majority said.

As U.S. Circuit Judge Bridget S. Bade said in her dissent in the panel decision, "nothing in the text of the regulation indicates that compliance with the place-for-filing requirement is conditioned upon compliance with the time-for-filing requirement, such that filing at the designated place somehow becomes optional whenever a taxpayer files its return late," the majority added.

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     Contact the Tax Lawyers at

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

Read more at: Tax Times blog

Appeals Deny Settlement Policy For Int'l Penalties

According to Law360, despite speculation of an imposed settlement range, the IRS Independent Office of Appeals doesn't have mandated settlement ranges for penalties involving some international related tax returns, appeals officials said Tuesday.

No national settlement range exists for penalties related to Forms 5471 or 5472, Elizabeth Askey, deputy chief of the Internal Revenue Service appeals office, said on a panel during a tax conference hosted by the Federal Bar Association and broadcast online.

"Each Of These Cases Is Worked On Its Own Merits,
And The Appeals Officer Will Consider All The
Applicable Penalty Relief Criteria," She Said.

Those criteria include reasonable cause and litigation hazards, Askey said. She made those comments in connection with a Dec. 7 memo for IRS appeals office employees working international penalties. It says first-time abatement waivers generally aren't available for relief from international penalties addressed in the Internal Revenue Manual. However, the memo adds an exception for technical workers to allow them to consider and recommend granting first-time abatement penalty relief on some systematically assessed penalties for filers of Forms 5471 and 5472, which are information returns.

Form 5471 is for U.S. persons regarding certain foreign corporations. Form 5472 is for 25% foreign-owned U.S. corporations or foreign corporations engaged in U.S. trades or businesses under Internal Revenue Code Sections 6038A and 6038C.

The memo removes an inconsistency between the penalty-and-interest section and the appeals section of the Internal Revenue Manual, Askey said, adding that the appeals section had said first-time abatement wasn't available for Form 5471 and 5472 penalties.

Joshua Wu of Latham & Watkins LLP called the move to align the international penalty and appeals sections helpful for taxpayers with Form 5471 and 5472 penalty cases in IRS appeals. 

"And because the penalty applies for each foreign corporation, they can add up quickly if a taxpayer has multiple 5471 filing requirements," Wu said. "First-time abatement relief is especially useful for otherwise compliant taxpayers who may have yet to become familiar with the complex international reporting rules and failed to file a Form 5471."

The IRS provided Law360 with the memo but declined to comment further. The memo doesn't address Form 3520, which is used to report transactions with foreign trusts and receipt of certain foreign gifts, or Form 3520-A, the annual information return for a foreign trust with a U.S. owner.

However, Andy Keyso, chief of the appeals office, referred to those forms and said he hears the same speculation regarding a national settlement range being imposed by the IRS or that the office is imposing on its officers.

"There Is Certainly No Settlement Policy Imposed By
IRS Or Imposed By Appeals That Our Appeals Officers
Are Restrained By Here,"
Keyso Said During The Panel. "

They Truly Do Look At What Are The

Facts In Each Particular Case."

National Taxpayer Advocate Erin Collins, in her 2020 Annual Report to Congress, listed the agency's assessment of international penalties as one of the most serious problems facing taxpayers. Her report said the agency's treatment of foreign information reporting penalties under Sections 6038 and 6038A as systemically assessable wasn't legally supportable, was administratively problematic, and hit taxpayers with stress, costs and delays.

There are late-filing penalties under Section 6038 for Form 5471 and under Section 6038A for Form 5472, and for at least the last decade the IRS has automatically imposed them for late original corporate and partnership income returns that included them, Matthew Cooper, a managing director with Deloitte Tax LLP's Washington national tax group, told Law360. Cooper was a panelist Tuesday.

Jason B. Freeman of Freeman Law PLLC told Law360 that the idea of a national settlement range is a major concern for him and that he believes speculation regarding it comes from observations in practice.

"It's a phenomenon that, whether deliberate or not, though I largely believe it's deliberate, is a natural consequence of centralizing the review through the use of technical experts," he said. "Practitioners commonly hear appeals officers refer to the position taken by a 'technical expert.'"

Need an FBAR Penalty Relief Problem?  
 


 Contact the Tax Lawyers at 
Marini& Associates, P.A. 
 
 
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or 
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Read more at: Tax Times blog

SCOTUS Ruled That Non-willful Failure To File A FBAR Report Warrants a $10,000 Penalty Per Form Not Per Account!

The U.S. Supreme Court ruled on February 28, 2023, in Alexandru Bittner v. U.S., case number 21-1195, that the Bank Secrecy Act's $10,000 maximum penalty for the nonwillful failure to report foreign bank accounts applies on a per-form basis and not per account. 

The justices ruled 5-4 in determining the nonwillful failure to file a report of foreign bank and financial accounts, or FBAR, warrants a penalty of $10,000 per form rather than $10,000 for each account undisclosed. In the case, Alexandru Bittner, a naturalized U.S. citizen from Romania, filed federal tax returns but not the FBAR for several years. The IRS then imposed a total penalty of $2.72 million on 272 accounts for 2007 through 2011.

"Best Read, The BSA Treats The Failure To File A
Legally Compliant Report As One Violation
Carrying A Maximum Penalty Of $10,000,


not a cascade of such penalties calculated on a per-account basis," Justice Neil Gorsuch said in the majority opinion.

Have an FBAR Penalty Problem?  
 


 Contact the Tax Lawyers at 
Marini& Associates, P.A. 
 
 
for a FREE Tax Consultation at: 
www.TaxAid.com or www.OVDPLaw.com 
or 
Toll Free at 888-8TaxAid (888) 882-9243







Read more at: Tax Times blog

IRS Extends Certain Lookback Periods For COVID & Hurricane Extended Returns

According to Law360, the IRS said it will disregard a period in 2020 and another in 2021 between April 15 of each year and the date of postponed tax filing deadlines for determining the start of lookback periods for some tax refund or credit determinations.

The Internal Revenue Service said in Notice 2023-21 that while Notices 2020-23 and 2021-21 postponed certain filing due dates, postponements and extensions aren't the same thing. The postponements didn't lengthen the lookback periods under Internal Revenue Code Section 6511(b)(2)(A ), the IRS said.

According to the agency's notice, under Section 6511(a) , taxpayers must file refund or credit claims within three years of filing returns or two years after paying the tax, whichever comes later. Section 6511(b)(2) limits credit or refund amounts to amounts of tax paid within a specific period immediately before the filing of refund or credit claims, the lookback period, according to the notice. For taxpayers filing claims within three years of filing returns, lookback periods are three years plus the periods of filing extensions, and otherwise they're two years, the IRS said.

The notice allows taxpayers who had return filing due dates postponed by Notices 2020-23 and 2021-21 but didn't get extensions and who timely file credit or refund claims to be credited or refunded amounts paid on April 15 of each year, according to Notice 2023-21.


Have a Tax Problem?


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


for a FREE Tax Consultation Contact us at:

or Toll Free at 888-8TaxAid (888)882-9243.


Read more at: Tax Times blog

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