Interim Revised Notice of Intent to Contact Third-Parties Procedures Issued by IRS

The Self-Employed/Small Business (SBSE) Division of the IRS has a memorandum outlining revised procedures for third party contact in SBSE-04-0719-0034.[1]  The revised procedures reflect changes made to IRC §7602(c)(1) by the Taxpayer First Act of 2019.

IRC §7602(c)(1), both before and after amendment, required the IRS to provide notice to the taxpayer prior to contacting third parties.  The IRS had taken the position, noted in the Internal Revenue Manual at IRM 25.27, Third Party Contacts, that providing the taxpayer with Publication 1, Your Rights as a Taxpayer, was sufficient notice under the prior law.

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Kansas Adopts Remote Seller Rule Without Any De Minimus Level of Sales

Wayfair related state sales tax developments have continued since the ruling came down last summer, with virtually every state with a sales tax making changes over the past year in how they handle out of state sellers.  But the state of Kansas has decided to go where no one else has dared to tread, issuing Notice 19-04, Sales Tax Requirements for Retailers Doing Business in Kansas.[1]

As you read the document you’ll note one key item is missing—the minimum amount of sales (either in dollar volume or number of transactions) necessary to trigger the need to register and collect Kansas sales tax.  That is because, in the view of the Kansas Department of Revenue, any amount of sales into Kansas is enough to trigger the requirement to collect and pay over the tax

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IRS Issues PLR Holding a Portion of DNA Test Kit Represents Deductible Medical Expense

The Wall Street Journal reported that genetic testing service 23andMe has received a private letter ruling from the IRS that allows a portion of the payment made to the entity to be treated as a medical expense.[1]  A redacted copy of the ruling has been posted by the company on its website.[2]  The Wall Street Journal article noted that the IRS will publish the standard redacted PLR in August.[3]

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IRS Allows for Late Change of Bonus Depreciation Elections for Tax Years Containing September 28, 2017

The IRS has granted relief related to last minute decisions taxpayers had to make regarding bonus depreciation following the passage of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act.  For the tax year that contained September 28, 2017 (the first day the new 100% bonus depreciation applied), the IRS will allow taxpayers to make or revoke elections related the various bonus depreciation issues.  The relief is provided in Revenue Procedure 2019-33.

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Organization Operated for Significant Purpose to Benefit For Profit Business, Exempt Status Retroactively Lost

To retain status as a §501(c)(3) charitable organization, an entity must not only have been organized for charitable purposes (a requirement for initial qualification), it must also be operated exclusively for charitable purposes in order to retain that status.  A failure on the second test caused the organization in the case of Giving Hearts, Inc. v. Commissioner, TC Memo 2019-94[1] to retroactively have its status revoked by the IRS.

The case involves an attempt by a business that was negatively impacted by the National Do Not Call Registry, a program conducted jointly by the Federal Trade Commission and the Federal Communications Commission, to blunt the impact of that program.  The business, Windows Plus, relied primarily upon telemarketing calls to sell replacement windows and other home improvement services to homeowners.

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IRS Sends Out 10,000 Letters to Virtual Currency Investors, Some of Which Demand a Response

The IRS has announced a program to send letters to taxpayers it believes had virtual currency transactions which the taxpayers have failed to report on their tax returns.[1]  The news release contains the following comments from the Commissioner:

“Taxpayers should take these letters very seriously by reviewing their tax filings and when appropriate, amend past returns and pay back taxes, interest and penalties,” said IRS Commissioner Chuck Rettig. “The IRS is expanding our efforts involving virtual currency, including increased use of data analytics. We are focused on enforcing the law and helping taxpayers fully understand and meet their obligations.”

The news release indicates the IRS began sending these letters out the week before the news release came out (July 26, 2019) and more than 10,000 taxpayers will receive these letters.  The release indicates the names were obtained via “various compliance efforts.”

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IRS Grants Relief to CPAR Partnerships That Did Not Apply for an Extension and Now Wish to File a Superseding Return

One of the features of the new centralized partnership audit regime that was enacted as part of the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2015 is that once a partnership return is filed that is covered by the program, any later change does not lead to the partners amending their return for the year of change.  Rather, after the return is filed the partnership files an administrative adjustment request (AAR) and either:

  • Pays tax with the request, computed under the CPAR rules to compute tax due on the imputed adjustment or

  • If the partnership elects the alternative to the imputed adjustment, the partners report the additional tax, penalties and interest on their return for the year the AAR is filed.

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Refunds Going Back to 2009 May Be Available to Certain Taxpayers Who Paid French Taxes

The IRS posted a clarification on its website that the IRS has changed its position with regard to certain taxes paid to France, holding that these taxes are not covered by the Agreement on Social Security between the two countries.[1]  Thus, these taxes will be retroactively treated as income taxes for which a foreign tax credit is available.

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LB&I Announces 6 New Compliance Campaigns, Including S Corporation Built-In Gain and Compliance Among OVDP Participants

The IRS Large Business and International Division has approved six new compliance initiatives, bringing the total number of approved campaigns to 59.[1]

Note that the IRS is concerned those who “came in from the cold” under the Offshore Voluntary Disclosure Program are falling back in their old habits, likely feeling the heat is now off—so a new program is addressed at that group.

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Despite Finally Obtaining Signed Form 8332, Noncustodial Parent Denied Dependent Exemption

Although it’s an issue we’ve discussed before, it’s important to remember to remind noncustodial parents of the requirement to submit a signed Form 8332, Release/Revocation of Release of Claim to Exemption for Child by Custodial Parent with their tax return to claim the child as a dependent.  In the case of DeMar v. Commissioner, TC Memo 2019-91,[1] the taxpayer was denied such benefits due to his failure to submit the form.  And even though the taxpayer did eventually obtain a signed form, he failed to prove that his former spouse had filed an amended return to give up her tax benefit—a condition imposed in proposed regulations when taxpayers attempts to submit Form 8332 after initially filing a return for the year.

Divorces often leave the parties with hard feelings, and the issues surrounding children can be especially sensitive.  To keep the Tax Court from getting into the middle of such squabbles between former spouses, the law provides a very mechanical test for which of the divorced parents will be able to claim the child as a dependent.

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More Preventive Care Items Added to List of Items Allowed to Be Paid from High Deductible Health Plan

In Notice 2019-45[1] the IRS expanded the list of preventive care items that can be paid for under a high deductible health plan (HDHP) for taxpayers with health savings accounts.

Under IRC §223, for a taxpayer to be eligible to contribute to a health savings account, the taxpayer must be covered by a qualified HDHP program and have no disqualifying coverage.  Aside from payments for certain preventive care, an HDHP cannot provide reimbursement to the taxpayer until the taxpayer has paid for care equal to the deductible.

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Farewell 1040 Postcard, We Hardly Knew Ye

“Friends, Romans, countrymen, lend me your ears; I come to bury Caesar, not to praise him.” (William Shakespeare, Julius Caesar, spoken by Mark Anthony)

The IRS has now moved to update yet again the Form 1040, adding the Form 1040-SR that was mandated in the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2018 and updating the regular Form 1040, at least partially abandoning the much maligned postcard 1040 that was introduced for 2018 tax returns.

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31 Years Later, Treasury Notices Typo Fix Did Not Make It Into Code of Federal Regulations

Although it took 30 years, the IRS has issued a correction to a regulation dealing with attribution rules for purposes of determining a “brother-sister group” under IRC §52.  In TD 8179 the IRS changes a reference from “Reg. §1.414(c)-4(b)(1)” to “Reg. §1.414-4.”  And it’s the sort of quirky flaw that only tax geeks can love—and potentially exploit for the (temporary) benefit of eligible clients.

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IRS Releases FAQ Dealing with TCJA Limitations Imposed on Tax Benefits from Charitable Contributions and Foreign Taxes for a Partner with Insufficient Basis

The IRS has issued a frequently asked questions document related to changes made by the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 (TCJA) in the computation of a partner’s outside basis limitations due to the payment of foreign taxes and certain charitable contributions.[1]

The IRS outlines the changes in a set of three examples discussing how a partner computes his/her limitations on claiming a tax benefit from charitable contributions and payment of foreign taxes dependent on basis in the partnership under IRC §704(d).

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Recklessness Does Not Amount to Willfully Understating Tax By a Preparer

In the case of Rodgers v. United States, 123 AFTR 2d 2019-2294[1], the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals agreed that the District Court had applied the wrong standard in determining if a preparer penalty applied.  But, as will become clear, that doesn’t mean the preparer will fare any better when the case goes back to the District Court to have the proper standard applied.

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