Under IRC Sec. 7122(a), taxpayers may request an offer in compromise (OIC) with the IRS to settle outstanding tax liabilities for less than the full amount owed. To qualify, taxpayers must prove that their outstanding tax liabilities exceed the amount of income and assets available to satisfy those liabilities during the time remaining in the collection period, generally, the statute of limitation. This is known as establishing the taxpayer’s reasonable collection potential (RCP).
The higher the taxpayer’s RCP, the lower the taxpayer’s chances of qualifying for an OIC. In calculating the RCP, the IRS takes into account current and potential earnings, as well as the value of assets exceeding those needed for necessary living expenses. The sum of the taxpayer’s income and assets is treated as available to satisfy the taxpayer’s federal tax liability.
Taxpayers that dispose of their assets solely to qualify for an OIC are likely to fail, since a number of court cases support the IRS’ practice of including dissipated assets in the RCP calculation. A dissipated asset is defined as any asset (liquid or nonliquid) that has been sold, transferred or spent on nonpriority items or debts and that is no longer available to pay the tax liability.
Dissipated assets are not limited to those lost through negligence or disregard of one’s tax liabilities, however. In Layton, T.C. Memo. 2011-194, the taxpayer’s request for an OIC was rejected after the IRS examiner included the excess balance of an IRA distribution in the RCP calculation. The taxpayer had been unemployed for several years and had liquidated an IRA account to help pay her necessary living expenses. The remaining balance of the taxpayer’s IRA distributions, however, went to pay other nonessential debts. The taxpayer was not able to demonstrate that the debts she paid were necessary living expenses, so the Tax Court ruled in favor of the IRS.
Read more at: Tax Times blog