Accountant by Day, Game Winning Goaltender By Night

This time of year, those of us in tax often dream of doing something else.  For one accountant (though, it appears, not a tax accountant) that dream came true in an unexpected manner.  Scott Foster, a 36-year-old accountant, was pressed into service as the goaltender for the Chicago Blackhawks on March 29.

Foster’s way into the hockey and accounting lore can be taken in at, among other places, this story on the NPR website:

36-Year-Old Accountant Called In As Emergency NHL Goalie — And He Crushed It

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Exams and Phone Wait Times Down per IRS 2017 Data Book

The IRS released 2017 IRS Data Book, an 86 page compendium of various statistics related to the IRS’s operations.

One of the key facts that has created a lot of discussion in the tax press is the fact that the audit rate in 2017 dropped to its lowest level since 2003.  Less than 1,000,000 examinations took place in 2017. 

The report also noted that collection activities were also down in 2017.  Levies were down by 32% and liens dropped by 5% over the prior year levels.

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IRS Reminds Taxpayers About Agency's Position on Taxation of Virtual Currencies Published in 2014

In News Release IR-2018-71 the IRS reminded taxpayers that transactions in crypto-currency are taxable transactions and have to be reported on their income tax returns for the years involved.

In Notice 2014-21 the IRS had issued specific guidance on the taxation of crypto-currency.  However, the crypto-currency environment experienced a boom in the latter half of 2017 that likely created a significant number of taxable gains as taxpayers got into the market as it was hot.  A key holding of that notice was that virtual currencies are treated as property and not currency.

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Grain Glitch Fixed and Partnership Audit Rules Modified in Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2018

Congress passed and the President has signed the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2018 which contained the much discussed fix the for “grain glitch,” technical corrections related to the consolidated partnership audit regime and various other technical corrections in its 2,232 pages.

For those who don’t want to read the entire thing, the tax provisions begin on page 2,033, the technical corrections begin at page 2,057 and the corrections to the partnership audit rules begin at page 2,089.

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IRS Notes Increase in Data Breaches from Tax Professional's Offices

In News Release IR-2018-68 the IRS warned tax professionals that this year a larger number than in the past have had their systems compromised.  The guidance warns professionals about the need to take steps to avoid having their own systems compromised.

The IRS describes a scam that I and many other CPAs I know have seen—the “New Client” scam, which appears to be ramping up once again as we hit the end of tax season.  As most of us are aware, these emails come with attachments purporting to be tax documents, but which are loaded up in various forms to deliver malware to the CPA’s systems if they are opened.

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Business 8453 Series Forms Must Be Manually Signed

In Program Manager Technical Advice PMTA 2018-008 the IRS discusses what are acceptable signatures for the business versions of Form 8453 (such as Form 8453C, 8453S, etc.).

In Notice 2007-79 the IRS allowed electronic return originators (EROs) to sign Form 8453, Form 8878, U.S. Individual Income Tax Declaration for an IRS e-file Return, Form 8878, IRS e-file Signature Authorization for Form 4868 or Form 2350; and Form 8879, IRS e-file Signature Authorization by specified alternative means.  These means were:

  • Rubber stamp,
  • Mechanical device (such as signature pen), or
  • Computer software program.

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Government Must Show Intent to Obstruct Specific IRS Actions Beyond Return Processing

Under IRC §7212(a) it is a felony for an individual to “corruptly or by force” to “endeavo[r] to obstruct or imped[e] the due administration of this title.”   The United States Supreme Court in the case of Marinello v. United States, Docket No. 16-1144 was to rule on how broadly the “due administration” of the IRC applied—did such administration cover all acts of the government, or was it only applicable to a more limited set of acts.

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Mansion Property Was Never Actually Used in a Rental Activity, Loss Was Capital

The question of whether real estate was or was not a capital asset in the hands of the taxpayer became an issue in the case of Keefe v. Commissioner, TC Memo 2018-28.  While the issue can arise with other assets, real estate investments are generally large enough that the question of whether a gain or loss on sale is capital, §1231 or ordinary is often a very significant issue, with high stakes involved.

In this case, the taxpayer was looking at a seven-figure loss on the sale of a historic waterfront mansion they had acquired to restore and attempt to rent in Newport, Rhode Island.  The restoration ended up taking much longer than anticipated and was far costlier.  Although they talked with a real estate agent about renting out the property to wealthy individuals who were expected to pay $75,000 a month for the property during peak season, it was never actually rented out.

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Tax Court Resolves a "Kind of Conundrum Only Tax Lawyers Love" in Sale of Rental

In the case of Simonsen v. Commissioner, 150 TC No. 8, the Tax Court reaffirmed its previously stated position regarding a short sale when a nonrecourse debt is involved.  As well, for the first time the Court also addressed the reportable gain/loss on a property converted to rental use that was sold for less than its original cost but more than its date of conversion fair market value.

The couple in question had purchased a townhouse in San Jose in 2005 for $695,000.  They lived in that home for five years, during which the real estate crisis hit.  In 2010 they relocated to Southern California and began renting the townhouse.  At the time it was converted to a rental the fair value had declined to $495,000.

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Set of Questions and Answers Released on Reporting and Paying Section 965 Transition Tax for 2017

The IRS announced the publication of a set of questions and answers related to the tax imposed under IRC §965 under changes made by the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act in News Release IR-2018-53.  The questions and answers are published in the form of a frequently asked question document (FAQ) on the IRS website at:

https://www.irs.gov/newsroom/questions-and-answers-about-reporting-related-to-section-965-on-2017-tax-returns

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Offshore Voluntary Disclosure Program to End on September 28, 2018

The Offshore Voluntarily Disclosure Program (OVDP) will end on September 28, 2018 the IRS announced in News Release IR-2018-52.  The program offers an option for taxpayers with undisclosed foreign assets to report those assets with a reduced penalty.

The IRS has offered three OVDP programs since 2009, though the program has become less generous following the revisions in 2011 and 2014.  Over that time the agency reported that 56,000 taxpayers used one of the programs and that the programs collected over $11.1 billion in back taxes, interest and penalties.

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Employees Wages Included Fees Charged by International CPA Firm to Prepare U.S. and Foreign Tax Returns

How much should an employee recognize as income when his/her employer provides the employee with tax preparation services?  That was the question addressed by Chief Counsel Advice 201810007.

The employer in this case had U.S. citizens that were given work assignments in various other countries, with employees also being relocated from time to time.  As is often the case in such situations, the employer decided to provide a “tax equalization” program.  Under such a program, the employer agrees to compensation employees in such a fashion that their after-tax income will not fluctuate as they move from taxing regime to taxing regime.

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Tax Court Rejects Taxpayer's Reconstruction of Real Estate Hours

When taxpayers attempt to reconstruct their hours in activities from memory when they receive an exam notice to sustain their burden of proving qualification as a real estate professional, the result is rarely a successful defense of that assertion.  Many of the problems are illustrated in the case of Pourmirzaie v. Commissioner, TC Memo 2018-26.

The taxpayers did have several rental properties.  The Court listed them as follows:

  • A four-unit residential property in San Jose, California (San Jose property);
  • A single-family condominium in San Diego, California, in which petitioners owned a partial interest (San Diego property);
  • A single-family residence in Tucson, Arizona (Tucson property);
  • A single-family condominium in Bremerton, Washington (Bremerton property); and
  • A single-family residence in Discovery Bay, California (Discovery Bay property).

The taxpayers did not maintain any sort of log or calendar of the work performed on these properties during the years in question.  Nevertheless, on their tax returns for the year in question they took the position that Mrs. Pourmirzaie was a real estate professional. 

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Tenants' Inability to Handle Trash Matters Helped Architect Qualify as Real Estate Professional

His tenants’ inability to deal with taking out the trash appears to have been a key factor in allowing the taxpayer in Franco v. Commissioner, TC Summary Opinion 2018-9 to qualify as a real estate professional.

Jose Franco is a licensed architect and he ran a small architectural business for the year in question.  Normally this would create a significant issue for Mr. Franco to be classified as a real estate professional, since Mr. Franco was not contending that his architectural work was a real property trade or business. 

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Tax Court Rules Roth IRA Did Not Actually Own the Stock of FSC

The Tax Court took a different approach in their attempt to dismantle a Roth IRA based tax shelter in the case of Mazzei v. Commissioner, 150 TC No. 7 than the approach the Sixth Circuit turned thumbs down on in the case of Summa Holdings Inc. v. Commissioner, 848 F.3d 779 (6th Cir. 2017).

In this case the taxpayers’ Roth IRAs had formed a Foreign Sales Corporation (FSC), a mechanism that Congress created for a period of time to attempt to give a tax break to taxpayers selling products overseas.  Under the provisions of the law applicable to FSCs, it could receive commissions from a manufacturer exporting goods even if it performed no services.  These commissions were subject to a significantly lower rate of tax than applied on regular corporations.

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Male Sterilization/Contraception Coverage Not Covered by Preventive Care Exception for HDHP Policies

The IRS issued guidance that may put at risk the ability of individuals in certain states to participate in health savings accounts (HSAs) beginning in 2020 in Notice 2018-12.

As Tax Analysts reported in covering this Notice, several states, including California, Illinois, Maryland, and Vermont, prohibit cost-sharing for insurance coverage of male sterilization and contraception services.  But only Vermont has a “carve-out” for HSA-qualified high deductible health plans (HDHPs).

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Battery Added in Later Year to Solar Energy System Ruled to Qualify for Credit

In Private Letter Ruling 201809003 the IRS ruled that a taxpayer who added a storage battery to an existing solar energy system for which a credit had been claimed in a prior year qualified for the solar device credit under IRC §25D(a)(1).  But the IRS noted that there was an important factor in the facts the taxpayer provided that allowed for the credit.In Private Letter Ruling 201809003 the IRS ruled that a taxpayer who added a storage battery to an existing solar energy system for which a credit had been claimed in a prior year qualified for the solar device credit under IRC §25D(a)(1).  But the IRS noted that there was an important factor in the facts the taxpayer provided that allowed for the credit.

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Tax Court Disagrees With US District Court Over Potential Tax Exemption for Sale of Gravel

The Tax Court and U.S. District Court were considering the same basic issue for different years for the same taxpayers.  The courts came to opposite conclusions in the issue.  The United States District Court for the Western District of New York ruled in 2017 that the taxpayers in Perkins v. United States, No. 1:16-cv-00495, plausibly stated a claim for exemption from taxation for the 2010 sale of gravel based on two treaties between the United States and the Seneca Nation.  But in a case looking at the same two cases, the Tax Court decided in the case of Perkins v. Commissioner, 150 T.C. No. 6 that no exemption was available to the taxpayers under those treaties for sales of gravel in other years.

Alice Perkins is an enrolled member of the Seneca Nation and had received permission from the Seneca Nation to remove and sell gravel from lands held by Nation.  She and her husband lived on Seneca property.  For the years in question they sold gravel which they had mined from Seneca lands.

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S Corporations Not Exempted from Applicable Partnership Interest Rule of IRC §1061

The IRS issued guidance promised by Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin in his testimony in February before the Senate Finance Committee regarding the carried interest rules added in IRC §1061 by the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act.  Notice 2018-18 provides guidance on regulations the IRS plans to issue in this area.

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