Fees Charged for Exempt Purpose Related Services to Other Organizations Did Not Create an Unrelated Trade or Business

In response to a letter ruling request, the IRS ruled in PLR 201701002 that the income to be received by a private operating foundation were related to the organization’s exempt purpose.  Thus, the foundation would not be subject to either the unrelated business income tax nor the excess business holdings tax.

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Transcripts Can Serve As Equivalent of Estate Closing Letters per IRS

The IRS continues its apparent push to get out of the business of issuing closing letters for estates by issuing guidance in Notice 2017-12 that states that estates and their authorized representatives can request an account transcript in lieu of a closing to confirm that an IRS examination of the estate is completed and closed.

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FinCEN Announces Grant of Automatic Six Month Extension to October 15 for FBAR Reports

The United States Department of the Treasury Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) announced on the news portion of their website that the agency will grant automatic extensions for filing the FBAR reports (FINCEN Report 114) beginning with those due in 2016.

The Surface Transportation and Veterans Health Care Choice Improvement Act of 2015 provided that the due date for the report will be set to April 15 and that a maximum sixth month extension could be requested by filers.

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List of Expired and Expiring Federal Tax Provisions from 2016-2025 Released by Joint Committee on Taxation

The Joint Committee on Taxation has issued its annual report on expiring tax provisions (List of Expiring Federal Tax Provisions 2016-2025, JCX-1-16). 

Although 2015’s Protecting Americans from Tax Hikes Act of 2015 made a permanent a number of provisions that previously had been set to expire, other provisions had only temporary extensions.

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Initial Guidance Issued on Rules Governing De Minimis Error Relief From Filing Corrected Information Returns

The IRS has provided information on the de minimis error safe harbor information reporting provisions added by the PATH Act in 2015 in Notice 2017-9

The PATH Act added provisions (found in IRC §§6721 and 6722) that remove penalties for not providing revised returns to the IRS and taxpayers.

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Procedures to Maintain CPEO Status Released by IRS

Just in time for the program to get underway, the IRS provided details on the rules for maintaining Certified Professional Employer Organization (CPEO) status under IRC §7705 in Revenue Procedure 2017-14.

If a business uses a CPEO to handle its payroll for a qualifying worksite, the business will not be held liable for the unpaid payroll taxes (including trust fund taxes) should the CPEO fail to properly make the payments when due.  That is an exception to the general rule that continued to hold the employer liable for such taxes even if, unbeknownst to the employer, the payroll service had not paid the taxes—even if the payroll had been involved in a scheme to simply steal the funds from the employer.

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Lack of Cash to Pay a Dividend Does Not Exempt Corporation from Accumulated Earnings Tax

A tax that many CPAs in practice may not have run into recently was the subject of Chief Counsel Advice 201653017—the accumulated earnings tax imposed by IRC §531.  While the tax technically applies to any C corporation, in reality it is only asserted against small privately held C corporations.  Since small, privately held C corporations have been rarely seen in most practices since the passage of the Tax Reform Act of 1986 and the repeal of the General Utilities doctrine, the IRS has not had many chances to assert this tax and many CPAs have never seen the tax asserted.

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Income Earned by Financial Adviser and Not S Corporation, Net Earnings Subject to Self-Employment Tax

Nontax rules often require that those performing certain services (such as selling investment products) be licensed to do so.  Quite often that license is held in the name of an individual.  In the case of Fleischer v. Commissioner, TC Memo 2016-238 a person in just such a position wanted to form an S corporation in which to conduct his investment advisory business in order to reduce his exposure to self-employment taxes.

When he did so he did not attempt to have the corporation he formed become licensed to perform the services in question.  He already had entered into an agreement with Linsco/Private Ledger Financial Services (LPL) as a representative prior to forming the corporation.  He did not have his contract with LPL revised to recognize his S corporation, Fleischer Wealth Plan (FWP), although he began treating the income he received from LPL as corporate income.

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Final Regulations Published Related to Determining Ownership of PFICs and Reporting Requirements

The IRS adopted final regulations (TD 9806) on determining the ownership of a passive foreign investment company (PFIC), reporting requirements for shareholders of PFICs to file Form 8621, Information Return by a Shareholder of a Passive Foreign Investment Company or Qualified Electing Fund and on an exception to the requirement for certain shareholders to file Form 5471, Information Return of U.S. Persons with Respect to Certain Foreign Corporations.

These regulations adopt proposed regulations that were issued in December of 2013 with certain changes.  As well, the related temporary regulations are removed.  The changes are effective December 28, 2016.

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Use of Wrong Form Did Not Invalidate Consent to Extend Statute, But Since Only Husband Signed Extension Only Valid for Him

Sometimes things just aren’t quite handled as they should be, even by the IRS in attempting to obtain a consent to extend the statute of limitations under IRC §6501(c)(4).  In Chief Counsel Email 201652023 an attorney in the IRS National Office outlined what she saw as the impact of the failure to use the proper form to obtain the consent.

As most advisers are aware, it’s not unusual for an examination of a taxpayer’s return to take considerable time and, in many cases, the exam is not near begin completed as the deadline for the IRS to assess tax under IRC §6501 approaches.  When that happens, the IRS will ask a taxpayer to agree to extend the time to assess tax under the provisions of §6501(e)(4).

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Narrow Scholarship Criteria Found to Limit Benefits to Founder's Son, Exempt Status Denied

In PLR 201652029 the IRS was asked to grant an organization a tax exemption under §501(c)(3).  The organization was one formed to grant annual scholarships to graduating seniors of a particular high school who met certain criteria.

Initially this seems like a reasonable request since the organization’s purpose was to further education, and it was going to grant scholarships based on merit-based criteria.  But it turns out that criteria caught the IRS’s attention when the IRS looked at applying those criteria to what had actually taken place in the past.

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Partner Did Not Produce Calculation of Her Share of Partnership Debt, Thus Found to Lack Basis to Claim a Loss

Merely being a guarantor of a rather large outstanding partnership debt was not sufficient to allow a deduction for losses flowing through from a partnership in the case of Hargis v. Commissioner, TC Memo 2016-232.

The case involved a question of proving basis both in S corporations in which the husband was a shareholder and basis in LLCs taxed as partnerships in which the wife was a partner.  The S corporation issue was fairly simple—the debts did not flow directly from the husband to the S corporation, so there was no basis provided by the debt.

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Relief Extended By One Year to Make Certain Accounting Method Change Requests Under Automatic Procedures to Comply with Tangible Property Regulations

The IRS has extended a special eligibility rule for taxpayers making an automatic change of accounting method by one year in Notice 2017-6

Taxpayers were required to make various changes in their accounting methods to comply with the revised tangible property regulations that took effect in 2014.  However, some of these taxpayers have discovered they need to make additional changes to comply with those regulations they had not noticed previously.

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Partner Must Pay Tax on Full Amount of Flow Through Income Even If the Result is Unfair

The tax law may be “unfair and unjust” but that doesn’t allow a taxpayer to ignore the law to arrive at what he may believe is a more just result.  That’s the key lesson the case of Walter S. Mack Jr. et ux. v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2016-229 provides.

Mr. Mack was a partner in a law firm.  He received K-1s from two law firm related partnerships for 2011 that showed total income of $479,473.  However, he only reported income of $75,000 from the partnerships on his Form 1040 for that year. 

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Organization Where 50% of Funds Raised to Be Used to Benefit Specific Cancer Patient Denied Exempt Status

Organizations that wish to qualify as a tax-exempt organization under IRC §501(c)(3) must serve a public rather than private interest pursuant to Reg. §1.501(c)(3)-1(d)(ii).  That issue tripped the application of the organization that is the subject of PLR 201651016.

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Extended Statute Enacted to Claim Refund Related to Non-Taxable Severance Payments Made to Veterans

It has taken awhile (twenty-four years to be exact), but Congress enacted a relief provision to deal with the fact that the Department of Defense had been withholding taxes on lump-sum severance payments to combat-injured veterans despite that income being found to be excludable from taxable income under IRC §104(b)(3).  The bill, the “Combat-Injured Veterans Tax Fairness Act of 2016” H.R. 5015 was signed into law on December 16.

In the case of St. Clair v. United States, 778 F. Supp. 894 (E.D. Va 1991) these one-time lump sum severance payments were held to be excludable from taxable income.  However, per a Tax Analysts news article describing the bill, the Defense Finance and Accounting Service said an error with its payment system caused taxes to be improperly withheld from 14,000 veterans receiving these payments.

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Auto Mileage Rates for 2017 Published by IRS

The IRS released the mileage rates for 2017 in Notice 2016-79.  The standard business rate is set at 53.5¢ per mile (down from 54¢ per mile for 2016).   The charitable mileage rate is set at 14¢ per mile (unchanged from 2016).  The standard mileage rate for medical care under §213 or for moving under §217 is set at 17¢ per mile (down from 19¢ for 2016).

The portion of the standard mileage rate treated as depreciation for an automobile used for business is 23 cents for 2013, 22 cents for 2014, 24 cents for 2015, 24 cents for 2016 and 25 cents for 2017.

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