IRS Grants Late Portability Election Conditioned on Representation That No Form 706 Was Required

In Private Letter Ruling 201536005 the IRS granted an executrix, who was also the surviving spouse of the decedent,  the right to make a late portability election under IRC §2010.  By making that election, the estate of the surviving spouse will be able to take into account the decedent’s deceased spousal unused exclusion amount (DSUE).

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Seventh Circuit Agrees There Is No Capital Gain Treatment for Reward Received under False Claims Act Since There Was No Sale or Exchange of a Capital Asset

Taxpayers were again beaten back in an attempt to broadly define a “capital asset” and a “sale of a capital asset” in order to gain access to the preferential capital gain tax rates in the case of Patrick v. Commissioner, 142 TC No. 5, affirmed on appeal by the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals, Case No. 14-2190.

In this case the taxpayers were looking to get capital gain treatment for an amount they received as a reward for, effectively, turning in the husband’s employer through a qui tam complaint filed under the False Claims Act.

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IRS Concludes One Paragraph Was Inadequate Disclosure of Gift, Statute Remains Open Indefinitely

In Legal Advice Issued by Field Attorneys 20152201F the IRS conclude disclosures related to a gift were inadequate on the gift tax return that was filed by the taxpayer.  That is important because, under IRC §6501(c)(9) if there is inadequate disclosure of a gift on a gift tax return the statute of limitations stays open indefinitely.

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Proposed Regulations Issued on Failure to Disclose Reportable Transaction Penalty Taking Into Account 2010 Law Change

The IRS has issued proposed regulations (REG-103033-11) that would provide guidance on the application of the failure to disclose a reportable transaction penalty found in IRC §6707A. 

Generally a taxpayer who participates in a reportable transaction must disclose such participation on any return affected by the transaction in question under IRC §6011.  A taxpayer who fails to make such a required disclosure (generally on a Form 8886) is subject to a penalty.

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Plans that Fail to Offer Significant In-Patient Hospitalization and/or Physician Coverage Will Not Offer Minimum Value

In Notice 2014-69 the IRS has issued a warning regarding certain employer health plans it has learned about that have been designed to provide no, or extremely limited, in-patient hospitalization and/or physician coverage but still, due to quirks in the online minimum value calculator, be found to provide “minimum value” for health insurance.

The notice provides that plans that fail to provide significant in-patient hospitalization and/or physician coverage do provide minimum value and that regulations will shortly be issued to that effect. 

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Gain on Repossession of Prior Residence Computed Under §1038 Not Eligible for §121 Exclusion, Taxpayer Taxed on All Cash Received

By repossessing a personal residence the taxpayer had sold by taking an installment note, the taxpayer ended up losing access to the IRC §121 $500,000 exclusion of gain on the sale of a principal residence in the case of Debough v. Commissioner, 141 TC No. 17, affd CA8, 2015 TNT 168-11, No. 14-3036.

The case deals with the interplay of IRC §121 (the exclusion for the gain on the sale of a qualifying residence) and IRC §1038 (a provision that is meant to offer relief when a taxpayer repossesses real property).  Effectively the Tax Court concluded that IRC §1038’s provisions trump the relief provision of IRC §121 in this fact pattern.

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Partial Bad Debt Deduction Not to Be Allowed Where Taxpayer Established Reserve for Expected Collection

Taxpayers operating a trade or business are authorized to deduct partially worthless bad debts under Internal Revenue Code §166(a)(2). But to do so the taxpayers must be able to show that they are writing off a debt that already has gone bad, rather than simply reserving against a potentially bad debt in the future.

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IRS Issues Proposed Regulations Upon Which Taxpayers May Rely Expanding Constructive Presence Days for Bona Fide Resident U.S. Territory Test

The IRS has issued proposed regulations (REG-109813-11) on which taxpayers may rely for new tax years that would allow additional days to count toward establishing bona fide residency for certain taxpayers in a U.S. territory.

Those qualifying as a bona fide resident of the following U.S. territories under IRC §937 are treated differently under a number of tax provisions:

  • Guam
  • American Samoa
  • The Northern Mariana Islands
  • Puerto Rico
  • The Virgin Islands [IRC §937(a)]
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IRS Issues Temporary Regulations Addressing W2 Wages in §199 Cases and Proposed Regulations Addressing a Number of Other §199 Issues

The IRS has issued temporary regulations dealing with allocation of W-2 wages for purposes of the domestic production activities deduction (DPAD) of IRC §199, along with proposed regulations dealing with that topic along with other issues related to DPAD.   The temporary regulations are found in TD 9731 while the proposed regulations were released in REG-136459-09.

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Cash Basis Taxpayer Who Has Not Elected Accrual Option for Foreign Tax Credit Reports Later Assessment for Credit Purposes in Year Paid

How taxpayers should deal with changes in the determination of foreign taxes due for purposes of the foreign tax credit was discussed in Chief Counsel Email 201534013.  Specifically, the question arose regarding a taxpayer on the cash basis of accounting who has not elected to report the foreign tax credit on the accrual basis that faced an additional assessment of foreign tax related to a prior year.

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IRS Regulation on Required Time to Make Foreign Earned Income Exclusion Election is Reasonable

An important fact in dealing with the foreign earned income exclusion is that, per Reg. §1.911-7(a)(2)(i)(D), a taxpayer who fails to file his/her return more than one year after the original due date is risking the loss of the ability to exclude that income if the IRS discovers the fact that no election was made.  In the case of McDonald v. Commissioner, TC Memo 2015-169 the taxpayer discovered she had made this costly mistake.

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Due Date for Basis Statement Required Under STVHCIA By Estates Filing Form 706 Delayed to February 29, 2016

One significant tax law change contained in the Surface Transportation and Veterans Health Care Improvement Act of 2015 (STVHCIA) was the uniform reporting of basis for inherited assets.  The act added IRC §6035 to require that an estate required to file an estate tax return must provide information to the IRS and beneficiaries regarding the basis reported. 

Generally, the information must be provided to the IRS no later than by the earlier of 30 days after the date the Form 706 was required to be filed (including extensions, if any are granted) or 30 days after the Form 706 is actually filed by the estate.  The law does authorize the IRS to move that date forward.  The requirement applied to any estate that filed a return after July 31, 2015—which was the day this bill was signed into law.

In Notice 2015-57 the IRS has pushed the due date forward to February 29, 2016 for statements that would be due prior to that date under the 30 day rule found in the new law.

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County Clerks Not Required to Issue Forms 1099s in Three Fact Circumstances

Does a county clerk need to issue a Form 1099MISC to attorneys when the clerk sends funds to an attorney in various circumstances?  For the situations considered in Chief Counsel Advice 201533012 the IRS’s answer was no.

Information returns must be issued by payors in certain situations when payments are made to various parties. 

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Taxpayer Finds Annuity Distribution Taxable Even Though He Claimed He Had Never Made Money On It

The tax law doesn’t often work the way we like it to, and in the case of Tobias v. Commissioner, TC Memo 2015-164 the taxpayer’s argument that, when viewed as a whole he hadn’t really seen income from a series of transactions was not availing.

The taxpayer in this case was an attorney who held an inactive CPA license.  In 2003 the taxpayers had purchased an annuity for $228,800.  In order to buy the annuity the taxpayer had sold securities at a loss of $158,000.  The taxpayers continued to make contributions to the annuity through 2006 of $346,154. 

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Rights of Mortgage Must Be Subordinated to Charity's Right to Protect Conservation Easement Before Gift is Made

The Ninth Circuit in the case of Minnick v. Commissioner, 116 AFTR 2d ¶ 2015-5137, CA9, affirming TC Memo 2012-345 agreed with the Tax Court’s conclusion that in order to claim a deduction for a conservation easement under the provisions of IRC §170, holding that Reg. §1.170A-14(g)(2)’s requirement that any mortgage must be subordinated at the time of the gift.

IRC §1.170(b)(5)(A) permits a deduction for a conservation easement only if that interest is protected in perpetuity.  The IRS regulation interpreting this rule holds that the protected in perpetuity rule may only be satisfied (and thus a deduction allowed) only if the mortgage holder subordinates its rights in the property to the rights of the donee organization to enforce the conservation easement.

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IRS Announces More Taxpayers Had Data Accessed By Unauthorized Parties

Sometimes things just won't go away, and in this case developments continue in the case of the unauthorized access to the IRS's Get Transcript electronic site.

As was previously noted on this blog, the IRS on May 26, 2015 announced in a statement published on the agency’s web page that criminals had obtained access to information about 100,000 taxpayers via unauthorized use of the IRS’s “Get Transcript” application.  In a similar number of cases the perpetrators had attempted to gain access but failed to do so.  The information accessed included Social Security information, date of birth and street address.

On August 17, 2015 the IRS announced the problem was larger than initially revealed, indicating that further research had found that the number of taxpayers who had information accessed was now found to be 330,000—and, a similarly larger number of taxpayer accounts had unsuccessful attempts to access the data.

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Cost of Marijuana Seized by DEA Not Deductible as Cost of Sale

The marijuana cases continue in the Tax Court as a consequence of various state laws allowing for state (though not federal) legal sales of marijuana.  In the case of Beck v. Comissioner, TC Memo 2015-149 another unique issue for such operations was addressed.

IRC §280E generally does allow deductions, aside from cost of sales, for a taxpayer selling a federally controlled substance such as marijuana, even if the that sale is deemed to be legal under state law.  In this case, one key issue was what was considered a cost of sale.

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Data Breech Victims Will Not Be Deemed to Have Taxable Income From Receipt of Identity Protection Services

In Announcement 2015-22 the IRS stated that it will not tax data breach victims on the value of the identity theft protection services provided by the organizations whose systems were compromised.

There have been a number of high data breech cases in the past few years, affecting major retailers like Target, insurers such as Anthem, and even the federal government’s own Office of Personnel Management.  Generally these entities and organizations have responded to the incident by offering those whose information was or may be been disclosed various identity theft protection services.

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IRS to Eliminate Automatic 30-Day Extension for Filing Forms W-2 for 2016, Other Information Returns May Be Affected for 2017

Identity theft is an increasingly significant issue in the tax arena.  As the preamble to TD 9730, discussed below:

Identity theft and refund fraud is a persistent and evolving threat to the nation's tax system. It places an enormous burden on the United States Government, with the most painful and immediate impact being on the victims whose personal information is used to commit the crime and the most pervasive impact being an erosion of public confidence in the tax system.

The tax refund fraud category of identity thieves most often make use of fictitious W-2’s to carry out the fraud.  The W-2s most often make use of the name and employer identification number of an actual employer, along with the name and social security number of a real taxpayer.  However, that taxpayer quite often has never worked for that employer or, if the taxpayer did, the amounts reported on the W-2 are not what was actually paid to the taxpayer.

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