Sale of S Corporation Appears to Have Been Put in Hold Until IRS Rules Ineffective S Election Was Inadvertant, S Status Recognized

I’ve often run into CPAs when discussing S corporations and the various ways they can lose their S status who remark that, while that may be true, they’ve never seen the IRS actually revoke the corporation’s status on an exam, or even question the issue.  While that may be true, the author notes that a lot of private letter ruling requests are paid for to correct issues that would have terminated the S status, but which the IRS had not become aware.

A major reason for this is noted explicitly in PLR 201935010.[1]  The problem often arises when a buyer is interested in acquiring the business and during the review of the organization, the potential liability for taxes for prior years comes to light due to an issue that rendered the organization ineligible to have received or to have continued with S corporation status.

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IRS Grants Relief to Allow Late Filing of Copy of Form 3115 for Accounting Method Change-But At a Cost

Filing a Form 3115 to request an automatic change of accounting methods is something almost every CPA eventually has to do, but it’s also an rather unusual process that isn’t like a normal tax return filing.  Not surprisingly, this is just the sort of thing where steps get missed by accident—resulting in the taxpayer failing to obtain the required permission to change its accounting method, a failure that can be both costly to the client and embarrassing to the CPA firm.

PLR 201935002[1] reminds us that the problem can be corrected—but also that the way to do so requires the formal process of requesting a private letter ruling and the user fee related to the application (currently set at $11,800 per Appendix A(3)(ii) of Revenue Procedure 2019-01).

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IRS Sent Notice of Deficiency to Last Address Clearly Communicated to the Agency

The taxpayers in the case of Chapman v. Commissioner, TC Memo 2019-110[1] argued that the IRS had failed to send the notice of deficiency to their last known address.  They stated they had failed to receive the document and, as such, were not aware of the deadline by which they had to file a Tax Court petition.

The case involved Duane Chapman and his recently deceased wife, Alice Smith.  The couple had been featured on a pair of TV series, eight seasons of Dog the Bounty Hunter on A&E and three seasons of Dog and Beth: On the Hunt on CMT.  The series chronicled their experiences as a bounty hunter in both Hawaii and Colorado.

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Recipient of Gifted Partnership Interest Treats Pre-Existing Debt-Related Interest as Interest Related to Acquisition of Passthrough Interest

Published Tax Court decisions look at new and novel issues that have not previously been decided by the Court—and, in the case of Lipnick v. Commissioner, 153 TC No. 1,[1] the Court was looking at just such case. 

The issue was fairly simple.  A partner received a debt-financed distribution from a partnership.  He used those funds to buy investment assets and, under Reg. §1.163-8T and Notice 89-35, he treated the debt-financed distribution interest expense reported to him by the partnership as investment interest.  However, later he gifted a portion of his interest in the partnership to his son who, of course, was now seeing such debt-financed distribution interest show up on his K-1. 

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Coffeehouse Could Not Qualify as a §501(c)(3) Organization

In 2016 we noted an unsuccessful attempt by a religious order to get a coffeehouse the organization planned to operate treated as a §501(c)(3) exempt organization.[1]  Now, in PLR 201934008,[2] we have another attempt, this time for a coffeehouse that “will act as both a fundraising organization for nonprofits that serve your community and act as a community launch point and gathering venue featuring local art and music.”[3]

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Taxpayer's Lack of a Horse, Along with Other Issues, Found to Bar a Deduction for a Horse Business

In the case of McMillan v. Commissioner, TC Memo 2019-108,[1] the taxpayer was arguing that her loss from her horse business.  The IRS had challenged Ms. McMillan regarding this business in five prior Tax Court cases, but this time, she faced a unique challenge—her last horse had died two years previously.[2]  So she was arguing for the unique proposition that a horse breeding/showing business did not require a horse.

Unfortunately, the Tax Court did not accept this view.

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Surviving Spouse Who Was Designed Beneficiary of IRA by State Court Allowed to Treat IRA as Her Own

In PLR 201934006[1] the IRS granted the taxpayer’s request to allow her to roll the amounts from her deceased husband’s IRA to an IRA in her own name.

The IRA had listed the couple’s children as the beneficiaries of the decedent’s IRA.  Later a state court named the spouse as the sole beneficiary of her husband’s IRA.

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OIRA Completes Review of Proposed Regulations for TCJA Changes to §451

We are getting close to our first look at the IRS’s proposed regulations to implement the revenue recognition conformity and advance payment provisions added to IRC §451 by the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act. Tax NotesToday Federal reported on August 22, 2019, that the IRS’s proposed regulations related to both issues have now completed their review at the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs of the Office of Management and Budget.[1]

The revenue conformity rules of IRC §451(b) apply to any taxpayer who reports on the accrual method of accounting for tax purposes[2] that has an applicable financial statement (AFR) as defined in IRC §451(b)(3).  Under these rules, the taxpayer must generally recognize revenue for tax purposes no later than the date on which the revenue is recognized in the AFR.

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Court Find Taxpayer's Log of Participation Time for Rentals Inflated by 150 Hours, Did Not Meet Tests for Real Estate Professional

In what has happened quite often over the past few years, the Tax Court found in the case of Hairston v. Commissioner, TC Memo 2019-104[1] that the taxpayers had failed to show that either was a real estate professional.  Thus, losses of just under $55,000 over three years were treated as passive activity losses.

IRC §469(c)(2) provides a blanket rule that a rental activity is automatically treated as a passive activity.  However, IRC §469(c)(7) was added to the law to grant relief from this automatic treatment to individuals who are real estate professionals.

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Memorandum Issued Confirming Two French Taxes Eligible for Foreign Tax Credit

Formalizing a change of view by the agency noted on its website in July,[1] the IRS has issued an LB&I, SB/SE directive on the ability of taxpayers who pay two French taxes to claim a foreign tax credit.[2]

The taxes imposed by France that the IRS now agrees are eligible for foreign tax credit treatment are:

  • Contribution sociale généralisée (CSG) and

  • Contribution pour le remboursement de la dette sociale (CRDS).

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Taxpayer Both Required to Use Accrual Method and Had Been Using the Method for Tax Purposes

In the case of King Solarman, Inc. v. Commissioner, TC Memo 2019-103[1] the key issue was whether the taxpayer was reporting on the cash or accrual overall method of accounting and, even if the business was on the cash method of accounting, it was nevertheless required to use the overall accrual method of accounting for tax purposes.

Taxpayers are generally eligible to use the overall cash or accrual method of accounting or another method permitted under the Code or regulations.[2]  However, once a taxpayer has chosen an overall method of accounting, the taxpayer must obtain the IRS’s permission to change that method.[3]

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Willful Failure to File FBAR Found by Magistrate Where Taxpayer Signed Return Returns With Schedule B Indicating No Foreign Accounts

A U.S. magistrate judge has recommended that the government be granted summary judgment in a suit to collect a willful failure to file FBAR reports penalty in the case of United States v. Said, USDC Middle District Florida, Case No. 8:17-cv-00826.[1]

The Court outlined the standard to be used to determine if there was willfulness in the context of failure to file the FBAR reports:

In the FBAR context, willfulness “may be proven ‘through inference from conduct meant to conceal or mislead sources of income or other financial information,’ and it ‘can be inferred from a conscious effort to avoid learning about reporting requirements.’” Williams, 489 Fed. App’x at 658 (quoting United States v. Sturman, 951 F.2d 1466, 1476 (6th Cir. 1991))...[2]

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IRS Publishes Redacted Version of DNA Testing Private Letter Ruling

In a story posted on August 1, 2019 we noted that DNA testing firm 23andMe had reported receiving a private letter ruling from the IRS that allows for a portion of a DNA test kit fee paid for ancestry and health testing qualified as a deductible medical expense under IRC §213. The ruling (PLR 201933005) has been posted by IRS.

While most taxpayers do not itemize, and even those that do often have not incurred the necessary amount of medical expenses to begin to deduct them on Schedule A, the ruling clears the way to use HSA funds to reimburse the taxpayer for the medical portion of the fee. As well, flexible spending accounts also should be able to reimburse such amounts as well.

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IRS to Send Refunds of Underpayment Penalties to 400,000 Taxpayers

The IRS has announced that the agency will be sending out refunds to over 400,000 taxpayers who are eligible for relief previously announced from the IRS related to estimated tax penalties in IRS News Release IR-2019-144.[1] The checks will be issued to taxpayers who were eligible for relief the IRS announced on January 16 and March 22 but who either did not take advantage on that relief on their return or filed their return before the relief was announced and have not filed a claim for refund.

The IRS lowered the threshold for the application of the penalty for underpayment of estimated income taxes from its standard 90% of the current year’s tax to 80% of the tax being paid in via withholdings and estimated taxes.

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Estates Cannot Make Use of the Financial Disability Relief Rule to Extend the Statute for Filing a Refund Claim

The tolling of the statute of limitations for filing a claim for refund due to financial disability under IRC §6511(h) does not apply to estates, per a ruling from the US District Court for the Northern District of Alabama in the case of Carter v. United States, US DC ND Alabama, Case No. 5:18-cv-01380.[1]

IRC §6511(h) was enacted by Congress to provide relief for a case where a taxpayer fails to file a claim for refund within the time period provided otherwise by that section due to a financial disability. The provision provides “an individual is financially disabled if such individual is unable to manage his financial affairs by reason of a medically determinable physical or mental impairment of the individual which can be expected to result in death or which has lasted or can be expected to last for a continuous period of not less than 12 months.”[2]

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Even Under E-Filing, Taxpayer Cannot Reasonably Rely on Preparer to Escape Late Filing Penalties

The Fifth Circuit in March 2019 raised, but did not answer, the question of whether it was still appropriate to hold that taxpayers could not reasonably rely on a return preparer for timely filing of a return in the age of electronic filing.[1]  A U.S. District in Court in Tennessee decided that, since taxpayers could prepare their own paper return or obtain paper returns from the preparer, the prior rule should continue to apply.[2]  The Court also held that the taxpayer could not seek first-time abatement (FTA) relief in Court—rather, that is fully under the IRS’s control.

The US Supreme Court held in the Boyle case[3] that a taxpayer could not establish reasonable cause for failing to file a tax return by claiming he/she relied upon a tax preparer to timely file the return.  The Court found that the duty required no special knowledge or skill to file a return (a trip to the Post Office or local IRS office) and, as such, could not be delegated to a third party—the taxpayer had a duty to insure the third party actually took the desired action.

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