Inauguration Day is a Holiday for Tax Related Due Dates

January 20, 2017 will be the date on which the new President is to be inaugurated—and in emailed advice the IRS Chief Counsel’s office noted that this date will be considered “holiday” for tax purposes.  Thus, any deadlines that fall on January 20, 2017 (a Friday) will instead be treated as actually having a deadline of the following Monday (January 21, 2017).

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IRS Allows Retirement Plans to Allow Those Affected by Hurricane Matthew to Receive Loans and/or Hardship Distributions Under Simplified Procedures

In response to Hurricane Matthew the IRS in Announcement 2016-39 granted the option to qualified plans to give access to retirement funds to individuals impacted by the disaster without requiring certain the plans to go through certain verification procedures required of such plans when making loans or hardship distributions.

Employer retirement plans of various sorts (§§401(k), 403(b) and 457) must follow certain procedures in order to make distributions or loans to account holders.  Distributions can only be made upon the occurrence of certain events that the IRC allows, and then only if the plan itself allows for such a distribution. As well, distributions will generally be subject to tax except to the extent the distribution consists of already taxed amounts.

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Liens Could Be Foreclosed to Collect Former Spouse's Taxes on Property Previously Held as Community Property

In the case of United States v. McGrew, et. al, CA9, 118 AFTR 2d ¶2016-5319, the Ninth Circuit looked at whether the IRS could foreclose liens on property that the taxpayer had previously owned as community property with her former husband.  The liens were being forceclosed against the taxpayer’s former husband. 

Ms. McGrew had received the residence in question as part of the division of community property at the termination of her marriage to Kenneth McGrew.  Ms. McGrew argued that because the liens were against her former husband that the IRS did not have the right to foreclose the liens against the property that was now solely.

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North Carolina Victims of Hurricane Matthew Granted Additional Time to Perform Certain Tax Related Actions

The IRS has announced relief for victims of Hurricane Matthew in North Carolina from certain date related deadlines in IR-2016-19.  The IRS has continued to expand the list of affected counties over time, with the most recent update coming Monday, October 17.

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Court Found No Latent Ambiguity in Terms of Will To Authorize Trusts to Make Charitable Contributions

In the case of Harvey C. Hubbell Trust et al. v. Commissioner; T.C. Summary Opinion 2016-67 the IRS was disallowing all of the charitable contributions claimed by the trust for 2009.  The IRS did not deny that the contributions were made.  The agency also did not claim the recipients were not qualified charitable organizations. Rather, the IRS claimed the contributions were not made according to the terms of the will that established the trust.

The trust in question had been making charitable contributions for many years (going back to 1985) and in quite substantial amounts.  For instance, in 1985 the trust made (and deducted) charitable contributions of $384,976, and had made contributions, often in excess of $100,000, for many years between 1985 and 2008.  Apparently the IRS had never raised any issue with regard to these contributions—likely because the IRS had never examined the trust.

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Method of Electing to Claim Disaster Loss Arising from Federally Declared Disaster in Prior Year Issued by IRS

IRC §165(i) provides for a taxpayer to electively claim a loss on a federally declared disaster on the return for the year prior to when the disaster occurred.  The IRS has issued Revenue Procedure 2016-53 and proposed regulations (REG-150992-13) for taxpayers who wish to take advantage of this election.

The proposed regulations would set the deadline for both making the election (six months after the due date of the tax return for the year of the disaster excluding any extensions) and for revoking a previous election (90 days after the due date for making the election).

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Tax Shown on Original Return, Not Amount Computed on Amended Return, Used to Compute Limitation on §6707A Disclosure Penalty

How to calculate the penalty for failing to disclose a listed transaction under IRC §6707A when the taxpayer erroneously overreported other income on the return is the issue the Tax Court was asked to decide in the case of Yari v. Commissioner, 143 TC No. 7.  And the Tax Court’s answer (sustained on appeal by the Ninth Circuit) was not the one the taxpayer liked.

The case in question involved a Roth IRA “stuffing” transaction where the taxpayer had a Roth IRA acquire 100% of the interest in a management S corporation.  That corporation then charged management fees to the taxpayer’s controlled business (a disregarded entity LLC), receiving $1,221,778 in such fees over the years from 2002 to 2007.

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IRS Announces Plan to Require Secure Access Registration to Use e-Services, Follows Up with Indefinite Delay

The IRS looked to expand their “Secure Access” to e-Services used by tax professionals, but on October 14 the agency announced an indefinite delay in implementing that requirement.  The announcement of the delay did not provide any details on when the program would begin operations or what changes, if any, might be made to the program.

On September 22 the IRS announced it was going to expand the secure access program to cover access to e-Services (Questions and Answers Related to e-Services Migration to Secure Access).  However, as has been discussed regarding the roll-out of this program to other services (like the online transcript system), there is a far from insignificant number of individuals who generally cannot complete the process online.

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IRS Publishes Revised Special Per Diem Rates for Period from October 1, 2016 to September 30, 2017

The IRS in Notice 2016-58 provided updated special per diem effective for the period from October 1, 2016 to September 30, 2017.  These special rates include the rate for the special transportation industry meals and incidental expenses (M&IE) rate, the rate for the incidentals-only deduction and the rates and list of high-cost localities for purposes of the high-low substantiation method.

The special transportation industry rates for 2016-2017 are $63 for any locality of travel in the continental United States and $68 for any locality of travel outside the continental United States.  The general rules for qualifying to use these rates and how to use them are found in Section 4.04 of Revenue Procedure 2011-47.

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IRS Revises Unnecessary QTIP Election Revenue Procedure to Allow for Portability Planning

The IRS, as promised in the regulations issued to implement the portability election under IRC §2010, has now issued a revised Revenue Procedure (Revenue Procedure 2016-49) which modifies the conditions under which a QTIP election will be deemed invalid that were contained in Revenue Procedure 2001-38.

The qualified terminable interest property (QTIP) election under IRC §2056(b)(7) is designed to allow a trust to be created to hold property passing to a surviving spouse with an interest that terminates at his/her death, with ultimate disposition controlled by the trust document itself.  When the election is made, the surviving spouse agrees to treat the property as part of his/her estate despite having an interest that normally would be considered solely a life estate.  With that election in place, the property qualifies for the unlimited marital exclusion at the first death.

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IRS Announces Beginning of Congressionally Mandated Use of Private Collection Agencies in Spring 2017

The IRS in News Release IR-2016-125 provided information regarding the use of private debt collectors to pursue unpaid taxes mandated by Congress in the Protecting Americans from Tax Hikes Act of 2015.

The IRS had been mandated to begin using the private agencies earlier this year, but the IRS has delayed the beginning of the program and will, per the announcement, begin using the agencies in the spring of 2017, though an exact date for the start was not announced.

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Sixth Circuit Agrees That Attorney's Failures Did Not Excuse Estate From Being Penalized for Late Filing

In early 2015, we wrote a post in this blog regarding the case of Specht v. Commissioner and the executor's argument that the estate had reasonable cause for late filing of its estate tax return due to failures of the estate's legal counsel to perform her duties, along with statements the attorney made to mislead the executor regarding her failures to perform those duties.

The U.S. District Court found in that case that, regardless of the attorney's failures and the executor's lack of sophistication, the executor could not delegate her duty to insure that returns were filed by the due date.  Thus, the Court sustained penalties and interest of nearly $1.2 million against the estate.

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Failure of Employers to Follow Terms of Supplemental Unemployment Benefit Plan Caused Payments to Be Subject to FICA

Sometimes taxpayers may adopt a plan on paper that would create tax savings, but then turn a blind eye with regard to actual compliance with the plan.  That was the issue in the email advice discussed below

Despite the fact that a SUB Trust plan summary description indicated that benefits it would pay would be limited to those who qualified for state unemployment benefits, the failure of the employers submitting lists of employees to be paid under the plan to confirm the employees had received stated unemployment meant the payments were not treated as FICA-exempt supplementation unemployment benefits (Chief Counsel Email 201639015).

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Payments Received Both From Charities and Individuals by Victims of Orlando Shootings Are Nontaxable Gifts to the Recipient

In a letter to Representative Patrick Murphy dated September 23, 2016 the IRS Commissioner stated to payments made to victims of the Orlando mass shootings at the Pulse nightclub in June by charities do not represent taxable income to those victims.

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Payment Not Made Under §105 Accident and Health Plan, Rather Represented Deferred Compensation

An unusual arrangement that provided disability benefits was at issue in the case of Estate of Barnhorst v. Commissioner, TC Memo 2016-177.  The key issue was whether the benefit paid by the program in 2010 represented payments under an accident or health plan under IRC §105(a) and, if so, did the benefits received represent payments not related to the absence from work under IRC §105(c).  The IRS claimed that, in reality, this was simply a deferred compensation plan and should be taxed as such.

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Taxpayer Denied §1031 Treatment for SILO Transaction

The taxpayer in the case of Exelon Corp. et al. v. Commissioner, 147 T.C. No. 9 had a major gain that it did not want to pay current tax on—almost $1.6 billion.  The gain would occur when an acquired entity disposed of its fossil fuel power plants. 

The taxpayer was approached with a potential solution—engage in a purported §1031 exchange.  The taxpayer acquired power plants from tax exempt public utility companies as the claimed replacement property, plants which they then leased back to those entities.  Referred to as a “sale in, lease out” (SILO) transaction, it was a packaged transaction sold to the taxpayer.

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