IRS Announces Business E-Filing Start Date, Individual Return Remains to Be Announced

The IRS has posted on their website that the agency will begin accepting electronically filed business returns on Tuesday, January 7, 2020.[1]  CPAs will need to watch their tax software to determine when their vendor has updated their software to be able to handle the filings.

The site still lists the beginning date for individual returns as to be determined early in 2020. Very likely the problem for individual returns involves modifications that will need to be taken into account due to the law changes made by Congress late in 2019.

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Five Years of Current Federal Tax Developments, the Website

It’s now been five years since this website was created, publishing its first article on December 29, 2014 (Memo Analyzes Proper Deduction of Mortgage Interest Where There are Multiple Obligors on the Note).  At the time I was writing the site for Nichols Patrick CPE, Inc., using material I was writing for the database I was in charge of managing to create our annual tax update course.

The course, originated by Lynn Nichols many years back, has always been called Current Federal Tax Developments, so that became the website’s name once I confirmed the URL was available. 

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A Tale from the Past: Successful Attorney Found to Have Profit Motive in Making Film Documenting History of Organization Her Husband Had Previously Been Involved In

This particular case was one mentioned by Tony Nitti in the over two hour BKD Simply Tax podcast with Damien Martin that was released on December 26, 2019[1] where Tony discussed his top 10 tax cases for 2019.  If you haven’t listened to this two hour discussion of cases, their importance in learning tax law, and how Tony deals with reading the number of cases he does, be sure to listen to the program.  You won’t be disappointed.

I had written on the topic, a case that involved a local attorney here in Phoenix, for Nichols Patrick in April of 2012 prior to the establishment of this website.  Because, as Tony notes, this is an especially useful case to understand hobby loss rules and we don’t have a lot going on at the end of the year, I’ve decided to publish this on the website here at year end.

The IRS decided that an attorney who was claiming deductions relating to a documentary she was filming was not engaged in the activity for a profit, and sought to disallow her losses.  Fortunately for the taxpayer, the Tax Court, in the case of Storey v. Commissioner, TC Memo 2012-115,[2] decided that in fact, her large losses did not indicate that she did not intend to eventually make a profit from the activity

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Taxpayer Not Allowed to Assert Substance Over Form, No Debt Basis for Loans from Related Corporation

The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed the Tax Court’s 2017 decision in the case of Messina et ux. et al. v. Commissioner.[1] The appellate decision explains why the IRS is allowed to argue substance over form for a transaction, but that argument will not generally be helpful for the taxpayer—as it failed to be in this case.

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Final Regulations on Qualified Opportunity Zone Funds Released by IRS

The final regulations dealing with Qualified Opportunity Zone Funds have been released by the IRS.[1]  Note that the copy released by the IRS has the following caveat:

This document will be submitted to the Office of the Federal Register (OFR) for publication. The version of the final rule released today may vary slightly from the published document if minor editorial changes are made during the OFR review process. The document published in the Federal Register will be the official document.[2]

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SECURE Act, Extenders and Repeal of Certain ACA Taxes Enacted as Part of Year End Appropriations Act

In the last few weeks of 2019 Congress produced its most significant tax package of the year as part of the Further Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2020 (HR 1865).[1]  The President signed the Act into law on December 20, 2019.  The Act includes primarily appropriations provisions for various federal agencies, but it has significant tax provisions in the following Divisions:

  • Division N – Health and Human Services Extenders, Title I-Health and Human Services Extenders, Subtitle E – Revenue Provisions: This portion of the Act repeals three taxes originally enacted as part of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act but which had not yet gone into force.

  • Division O – Setting Every Community Up for Retirement Enhancement (SECURE): The bill that passed the House earlier this year dealing with various retirement provisions, including major changes to required distributions for inherited IRAs, delayed required beginning date for required minimum distributions, other provisions affecting qualified retirement plans, expansion of items §529 plan distributions can be used for as education expenses and returning to the pre-TCJA version of the Kiddie Tax.

  • Division Q – Revenue Provisions (Taxpayer Certainty and Disaster Tax Relief Act of 2019):  The largest portion of this section of the Act contains extenders, some retroactive, of various provisions that had expired or were scheduled to expire, including the ability to treat certain private mortgage insurance as interest on acquisition debt, the nonbusiness energy credit and many others.  As well the bill adds disaster relief provisions for disasters taking place in 2018, 2019 and the very early portion of 2020 and retroactively repeals the rule treating transportation benefits provided to employees of a tax exempt entity as unrelated business income (a portion of the “parking lot tax” provision added by the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act).

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IRS Issues Proposed Regulations on State Tax Workarounds, But Still No Comment on Passthrough Tax Workaround System

The IRS has released a new set of proposed regulations on charitable contributions, quid pro quo issues and state tax deductions.[1]  But, most interestingly, these regulations omit any discussion of IRS actions to deal with state passthrough tax workarounds to the $10,000 limit on the deduction of most state and local taxes by individuals.

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IRS Delays Requirement to Report Tax Basis Capital Accounts on Partnership K-1s

The IRS has decided to push back by one year the requirement that all partnerships report partners’ capital on Schedules K-1 on the tax basis of accounting in Notice 2019-66.[1]  The IRS had originally only provided the option to report capital on the tax basis of accounting on the draft Form 1065 for 2019.

The IRS received a number of comments on that requirement that indicated both that there was not a clear definition of the tax basis of accounting for these purposes and that many taxpayers would be unable to prepare such returns either at all for 2019 or at least not until much later than their partners expected to receive the K-1s.

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Reimbursing an Employee When Transit Card Malfunctions Requires Including Reimbursement in Employee's Wages

In Revenue Ruling 2014-32, the IRS provided guidance on the use of smartcard, debit or credit cards, or other electronic media to provide transportation fringe benefits to employees.  Such programs qualify under IRC §132 to be excluded from the income of the employee.

But what happens if, when the employee goes to use the card or device, it malfunctions, not allowing them to board the train or bus?  Quite often an employee, not wanting to be late, will simply pay for the ticket him/herself rather than attempting to resolve the matter with customer service for the transit authority, assuming that is even a possibility.  If the employee asks the employer to reimburse him/her for the fare, can that be excluded from the employee’s income?

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Executive Order Does Not Permit the IRS to Ignore Lump Sum Social Security Payment in Computing Repayment of Premium Tax Credit

In CCA 201949001[1] the IRS looked at whether Executive Order 13765, which related to minimizing the burden of the Affordable Care Act, allowed the IRS to ignore a social security lump sum payment that was not considered by the Health Care Marketplace when the taxpayer received an advanced premium tax credit under §36B.  The advance credit reduces the premium the taxpayer is required to pay for the health care policy during the year.

But the taxpayer may be required to pay back some or all of the advance credit if, when the taxpayer’s return is prepared for the year in question, household income turns out to be different than expected when the advance credit was computed.

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Virtual Currency Question Remains on Final Version of 2019 Schedule 1

A question regarding virtual currencies will be part of the Form 1040 package for 2019, as the IRS has now released the final version of Schedule 1 (Form 1040 and Form 1040-SR)[1] and the question added in the second draft version about virtual currencies remains on the final form.

The Schedule can be downloaded at https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/f1040s1.pdf.

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IRS Releases Final Version of Form W-4 for 2020

The IRS has issued the final version of the revised Form W-4 for 2020.[1]  The new Form W-4 is meant to more accurately estimate the proper amount of withholdings from an employee’s paycheck following the changes made by 2017’s Tax Cuts and Jobs Act.  

Note that the form is significantly different from its predecessor, which will likely lead to some confusion on the part of employees regarding how they should fill out the form. The new form eliminates the concept of withholding allowances.

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IRS Releases Final Versions of Forms 1040 and Two of Three Supporting Schedules

The IRS has released the final versions of Form 1040 and Form 1040-SR just before Thanksgiving 2019, along with final versions of two of the three schedules that go along with the two forms.

Form 1040 is the first update of the Form 1040 since the postcard version debuted in 2018.  This version no longer meets what Treasury had apparently used to define a postcard, as the 2019 version takes up more than half of each page.  Good news for most CPAs is that the form now is mathematically complete—the adjustments now actually flow from Schedule 1 to a line on the front of the return.

Final version Form 1040 (2019)

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IRS Updates Per Diem Rules to Take Into Account TCJA Changes

With Revenue Procedure 2019-48[1] the IRS has updated the rules regarding the use of per diem rates to substantiate, under IRC §274(d) and Reg. §1.274-5, the amount of ordinary and necessary business expenses paid or incurred while traveling away from home.  The update incorporates the revisions made as part of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA), including the temporary suspension of the deduction for miscellaneous itemized deductions under IRC §67(g).

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