Ignorance of the Existence and Impact of Election to Waive Carryback Period Placed in Return By Preparer Does Not Allow Taxpayers to Escape Its Effect

The Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals, in the case of Bea v. Commissioner, Case No. 18-10511, held that a married couple could not obtain relief from making an irrevocable election with their tax returns merely because they were not aware of the election.  Rather, the Court found that the taxpayer had signed and submitted a return that had the election on it, and the fact they failed to review the return before filing did not allow them to obtain relief.

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Simplified Inventory Election for Small Businesses May Be a Tax Disaster for Marijuana Businesses

An interesting article appeared in Tax Notes Today on February 1, 2019 that raised a question regarding whether a business that is deemed to be trafficking in a federally controlled substance might significantly increase its federal tax if it makes the election added by the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act to escape the provisions of IRC §471(a) and account for its inventory either:

  • By accounting for such inventory as non-incidental materials and supplies pursuant to Reg. §1.162-3, or

  • Conforms to such taxpayer’s method of accounting reflected in an applicable financial statement of the taxpayer with respect to such taxable year or, if the taxpayer does not have any applicable financial statement with respect to such taxable year, the books and records of the taxpayer prepared in accordance with the taxpayer’s accounting procedures.

This election is open to businesses that have average annual gross receipts of $25 million or less for the prior three years (adjusted for inflation) and which is not a tax shelter as defined by IRC §448(a)(3)..

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IRS Publishes Information on Issues Related to Tax Court and Government Shutdown

The IRS has issued a notice on their website (“IRS Update on Shutdown Impact on Tax Court Cases; Important Information for Taxpayers, Tax Professionals with Pending Cases”) dealing with issues that arise with taxpayers for whom the shutdown has created issues with their tax situation.  Although the shutdown has now ended (at least temporarily), many issues will continue for quite a period after operations resume at the Tax Court.

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W-2 Wage Calculation Revenue Procedure for §199A Released in Final Form by IRS

The final regulations under §199A state that the IRS may provide for methods of computing taxable wages.[1]  At the same time as the final regulations were issued, the IRS finalized a revenue procedure to provide for acceptable methods of computing W-2 wages.

Revenue Procedure 2019-11 provides for methods of computing W-2 wages for purposes of IRC §199A.  The revenue procedure was issued during 2018 in draft form, and the final version has no significant changes from the original proposed version.

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IRS Confirms Sequestration Reduction Will Not Apply to §53(e) Corporate Minimum Tax Credit Refunds

The IRS confirmed that AMT credit refunds under the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act will not be subject to reduction under sequestration in an announcement on the IRS website (Effect of Sequestration on the Alternative Minimum Tax Credit for Corporations (fiscal year 2019)).  However, claims for years beginning before January 1, 2018 by taxpayers making an election under IRC §168(k)(4) will be subject to a 6.2% sequestration reduction for claims processed on or after October 1, 2018 and on or before September 30, 2019.

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New York State Publishes Position on Requirements for Out of State Sellers to Collect Sales Tax

New York has published guidance on how it will handle out of state sellers following the Wayfair decision in Notice N-19-1.  The Notice provides:

A business that had no physical presence in New York State but has both made more than $300,000 in sales of tangible personal property delivered in the state and conducted more than 100 sales of tangible personal property delivered in the state in the immediately preceding four sales tax quarters is required to register as a sales tax vendor, and collect and timely remit the applicable state and local sales tax. 1 The sales tax quarters are: March 1 through May 31, June 1 through August 31, September 1 through November 30, and December 1 through February 28/29.

Note that, unlike South Dakota’s requirement to collect the tax if a taxpayer has over $200,000 in sales or 100 transactions, in this case, the seller has to have both $300,000 in sales and more than 100 sales in a year.  However, while New York’s standard is more forgiving here than South Dakota’s, the announcement is not all good news for out of state sellers.

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Limited Waiver of Underpayment of Estimated Tax Penalties Offered to Individuals on 2018 Taxes

Update (March 22, 2019) - The IRS has now revised this relief to drop the percentage to 80% from the 85% provided in the Notice discussed below. See Special 2018 Underpayment Penalty Relief Expanded to Apply to Those That Paid in At Least 80% of Total Tax Due.

The IRS has announced a somewhat modest waiver of underpayments of 2018 estimated taxes in Notice 2019-11.

Due to changes in the tax law under the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, the IRS modified the withholding tables and calculations. However, many employees simply used the withholding allowances they had used in the past rather than going through the IRS withholding calculator.  As well, the calculator does not necessary properly take all situations into account.

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Supreme Court to Review Case Regarding When a State May Impose Its Income Tax on a Trust

The US Supreme Court has agreed to look at under what circumstances a state can impose its income tax on a trust by granting certiorari in the case of North Carolina Dept. of Revenue v. Kaestner Family Trust, Case No. 18-457.

Last July the North Carolina Supreme Court decided that the state had no right to impose its income tax on a trust that, while it had a North Carolina beneficiary, was established in New York, did not have a North Carolina trustee and had no property in North Carolina.  (See the prior article on Current Federal Tax Developments that discussed the original case along with another case on state taxation of trusts at Two States Find Their State’s Statutes for Taxing Trusts Violate Due Process Clause.)

Image copyright 123rf.com/Le Moal Olivier

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Income Verification and Certain Other User-Fee Programs Reopened by IRS

The IRS announced that the agency will reopen the Income Verification Express Program and some user-fee based program (IRS Statement - IRS Reopens IVES, Some Fee-based Programs, www.irs.gov).  These programs had been suspended during the government shutdown.

The IRS statement notes the reasons why the agency is reopening these programs:

While the IRS remains closed during the partial government shutdown, the agency recognizes the immediate hardship incurred if information is not available through the Income Verification Express Service (IVES) program as well as by taxpayers who have been unable to certify their residency in the United States for certain tax treaty benefits or by those who have been unable to obtain photocopies of tax returns.

Photo by Finn Hackshaw on Unsplash

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Syndicate Rules May Create Problems for Small Businesses and §163(j) Interest Limits

An exception to the general rule that small businesses are exempt from the §163(j) limits on the deduction for business interest applies to any entity that is a “tax shelter.”  The most likely problem to arise that many may not initially notice is that the organization might meet the definition of a syndicate.

On January 11, 2019, Tax Notes Today published a story that featured comments from Tony Nitti, CPA that discussed the potential issues that may arise with the interest deduction limitation under §163(j) and the syndicate rules.

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Second Draft Version of Publication 535 Removes Real Estate and Insurance Agents/Brokers from SSTB Category

In the full draft revision (January 7, 2019) of Publication 535, the IRS removed the language that had previously included real estate agents and insurance agents as specified service trades or businesses from the full publication.

In a previous version of the document the IRS, issued on December 19, 2018, the IRS had provided the following definition of a brokerage business:

Brokerage services, including arranging transactions between a buyer and a seller for a commission or fee such as stock brokers, real estate agents and brokers, insurance agents and brokers, (emphasis added) and intellectual property brokers;

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Filing Season Set to Begin on January 28, Refunds to Be Issued Even if Partial Government Shutdown Continues

In News Release IR-2019-01 the IRS announced that it will begin processing tax returns this year on January 28, 2019 and, despite the partial government shutdown, will issue refunds that may be due on returns filed this year.

The release notes:

As in past years, the IRS will begin accepting and processing individual tax returns once the filing season begins. For taxpayers who usually file early in the year and have all of the needed documentation, there is no need to wait to file. They should file when they are ready to submit a complete and accurate tax return.

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Discussion Draft for Technical Corrections for TCJA Posted by Representative Brady

The day before moving from Chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee to the ranking member of the committee, Rep. Kevin Brady released a discussion draft of the technical corrections to the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act.

Normally I’d not not worry much about a document issued by the ranking minority member of the committee, but in this case it does outline what a principal author of TCJA now believes needs to be fixed. Time will tell how many of these changes make it into law.

Discussion Draft of Technical Corrections for TCJA

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IRS Significantly Raises Limits On Value of Vehicles for Cents Per Mile and Fleet-Average Valuation Rule

In Notice 2019-8 the IRS has set the maximum values for 2018 for employer provided vehicles under which the cents per mile method (Reg. §1.61-21(e)) or fleet-average valuation rule (Reg. §1.61-21(d)) may apply.

The IRS is making a significant increase in this number.  The agency explains its reasoning as follows:

Consistent with the substantial increase in the dollar limitations on depreciation deductions under section 280F(a), as modified by section 13202(a)(1) of the Act, the IRS and the Treasury Department intend to amend Treas. Reg. § 1.61-21(d) and (e) to incorporate a higher base value of $50,000 as the maximum value for use of the vehicle cents-per-mile and fleet-average valuation rules effective for the 2018 calendar year. Further, the IRS and the Treasury Department intend that the regulations will be modified to provide that this $50,000 base value will be adjusted annually using section 280F(d)(7) for 2019 and subsequent years.

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IRS Issues Safe Harbor Procedure on Charitable Contribution Credits That Apply to Payments Made for a Trade or Business

(Modified to add commentary on applicability date of the safe harbor)

In Revenue Procedure 2019-12 the IRS released a set of safe harbor rules that apply to C corporations and certain passthrough entities that receive a state tax credit for amounts paid to organizations qualified under §170(c).

The procedure was issued in response to proposed regulations issued in 2018 that will apply to charitable contributions made by individuals after August 27, 2018. In such cases, an individual must reduce any charitable contribution claimed by any state tax credit received for making the contribution exceeds 15% of the contribution amount.

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