Procedures for Electing Options for Net Operating Loss Treatments Added by CARES Act Released

The CARES Act restored the ability to carryback net operating losses temporarily. The loss carrybacks were restored for 2018, 2019 and 2020, with special provisions provided for electing to carry losses from 2018 and/or 2019 forward to take care of the problem that it was too late in many cases to timely elect to forego the carryback period. In Revenue Procedure 2020-24[1] the IRS has provided procedures for actions related to these net operating losses.

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IRS Greatly Expands List of Returns, Payments and Actions That Can Be Delayed Until July 15

The IRS has again expanded due date relief in Notice 2020-23,[1] explicitly providing relief for forms that are filed with the Form 1040 (such as Schedule H) and more general relief for certain time sensitive acts that occur between April 1, 2020 and July 15, 2020.

The Notice provides the following relief:

The Secretary of the Treasury has determined that any person (as defined in section 7701(a)(1) of the Code) with a Federal taxpayment obligation specified in this section III.A (Specified Payment), or a Federal tax return or other form filing obligation specified in this section III.A (Specified Form), which is due to be performed(originally or pursuant to a valid extension) on or after April1, 2020,and before July 15, 2020,is affected by the COVID-19 emergency for purposes of the relief described in this section III (Affected Taxpayer).

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Two New Questions and Answers Added to SBA PPP FAQ, Holds That Borrowers Cannot Ask Lender to Delay Disbursing Funds for an Extended Time

The Small Business Administration has added two additional questions to the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) Loans Frequently Asked Questions[1] page originally posted on April 6. The new version, dated April 8, discusses the use of a lender’s own promissory note and issues related to the beginning of the 8-week forgiveness period and the timing of funding the loan.

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Partnerships Covered by BBA CPAR Audit Regime Temporarily Allowed to File Amended Returns and K-1s

The Centralized Partnership Audit Regime (CPAR) added by the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2015 effectively barred partnerships that did not opt out of the regime from filing an amended return and sending out amended K-1s for prior years. Since many partnerships do not qualify to opt-out of the CPAR regime, a large number of partnerships had no ability to change a previously filed return once the period for filing a superseding return had passed.

This feature of the CPAR regime has now proved a major impediment to partners receiving the sort of retroactive benefits Congress added in the CARES Act, such as the use of bonus depreciation or a 15-year life on qualified improvement property. Recognizing the problem, the IRS has issued a Revenue Procedure allowing CPAR partnerships to temporarily file an amended Form 1065 and issue amended K-1s to partners (Revenue Procedure 2020-23).

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SBA Issues Revised Version of PPP Loan FAQ, Clarifying a Number of Issues

Photo by Precondo CA on Unsplash

Some key additional information related to the Payroll Protection Program loans has been provided by the Small Business Administration in the evening of April 6, 2020. The agency posted an updated “Paycheck Protection Program Loans Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)”[1] that addressed some questions that had been left unanswered by the original guidance.

This article looks at most of the items, but not all, contained in the FAQ. Most notably, the article doesn’t look at the special rules that may apply to some businesses that may expand this program to cover an employer that otherwise would seem excluded either under the 500 employee test or more general qualifications for participation in SBA programs. Those are found in the FAQ in questions 2 and 3.

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After First Holding to April 15 Due Date, IRS Now Pushes Form 709 Due Date to July 15

The IRS continued to expand the return filings that will have a delayed due date due to the national emergency declared by the President under the Stafford Act. Gift and generation skipping transfer tax returns originally due on April 15, 2020 will now be due on July 15, 2020, per Notice 2020-20.[1] Originally the IRS had indicated in the FAQ related to the extended filings that gift tax returns would not be granted the extended time to file.

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April 1 is the Start Date for the Payroll Tax Credit Under the Sick Leave Rules of FFCRA

The IRS, lining up with the Department of Labor’s start date for the mandatory sick time related to COVID-19 that was enacted in the Families First Coronavirus Response Act, has announced in Notice 2020-21[1] that the effective date for the refundable payroll tax credit is April 1.

Thus, employers will first qualify for the payroll tax credits, and self-employed individuals for the credit for self-employment taxes, for leave beginning April 1, 2020. No credit will be allowed for any such leave taken before that date.

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IRS Expands on April 15, 2020 Tax Day Delay Relief

The IRS released a set of frequently asked questions that provide additional details regarding the relief initially granted in Notice 2020-18 for the extension of time to file income tax returns due on April 15, 2020 and related income tax payments due on that date.[1]

In Notice 2020-18 the IRS provided for an extension of time to file the 2019 individual income tax return and first estimated tax payment for 2020, using Treasury’s authority granted under IRC §7508A due to the emergency under the Stafford Act declared by the President. But there were a number of questions about other acts that are also tied to that date and whether there was additional time for them.

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Congress Enacts Small Employer Mandatory Paid Sick Time Rules and Related Refundable Payroll Tax Credit

As part of the Families First Coronavirus Response Act (HR 6201),[1] employers of less than 500 employees face mandatory provision of sick time[2] and paid family leave[3] but are eligible for a refundable payroll tax credit to offset the costs. The bill was signed into law by the President on March 18, 2020.

The analysis below is based on a review of the provisions written immediately after the law was enacted. Readers should confirm all details independently. As well, the Department of Labor and other agencies will be issuing guidance in the application and interpretation of these provisions. Readers need to watch for such developments as they occur.

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No Automatic Extension for Returns Due on April 15, But Tax Payments Due on That Date Can Be Deferred 90 Days

Following the announcement of planned relief related to April 15 tax filings by the Treasury Secretary over a week ago, the IRS has now formally released the details of such relief in Notice 2020-17.[1]

In the daily session discussing COVID-19 developments given each day by the Vice-President’s task force on March 17, 2020, Treasury Secretary Mnuchin announced that the government was going to allow taxpayers to defer the payment of taxes due on April 15 by 90-days, with a $1 million cap for individuals and a $10 million cap on such deferred payments by corporations. The Secretary did not address whether there would be any automatic extensions also granted for filing income tax returns due on that day, even though the tax potentially would not be required to be paid on that date.

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USPS Postmark Takes Precedence Over Private Postmark

In the case of Thomas v. Commissioner, TC Memo 2020-33[1] the taxpayers discovered the risk of dropping a tax related document in a mailbox that you think will be picked up and postmarked that day. In this case the document in question was their Tax Court petition.

The last day for Sara and David Thomas to file their petition with the Tax Court to challenge the IRS’s notice of deficiency was March 5, 2018.[2]

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AICPA Raises Questions About IRS Informal §199A Guidance

The AICPA Tax Executive Committee wrote the IRS seeking clarification regarding the informal guidance on IRC §199A issues found in the IRS’s frequently asked questions (FAQ)[1] and various form instructions.[2]

The IRS has surprised many tax professionals with some of the positions taken by the agency in the FAQ and in certain 2020 form instructions issued after the final regulations for most of §199A were issued in January 2019. This letter deals with issues in two broad areas, those of self-employed deductions and charitable contributions.

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HDHPs May Pay for COVID-19 Testing and Treatment Without Regard to Deductibles

High deductible health plans (HDHPs) will be allowed to pay for COVID-19 related testing and treatment without regard to whether the insured has met their deductible under relief announced by the IRS in Notice 2020-15.[1] Such payments will not impact the plan’s qualification as HDHPs, nor the ability of taxpayers covered by such plans to make contributions to health savings accounts (HSAs).

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IRS Provides Relief from Filing Forms 3520 and/or 3520A for Certain Tax-Favored Foreign Trusts

In Revenue Procedure 2020-17[1] the IRS provided an exemption from information reporting rules under IRC §6048 for transactions with or ownership of certain specified tax-favored foreign trusts.

Under IRC §6048, U.S. persons are required to file annual reports for:

  • Transfers of money or other property to a foreign trust;

  • Ownership of a foreign trust; or

  • Distributions from a foreign trust.

The information reporting for §6408 is provided for on:

  • Form 3520, Annual Return To Report Transactions With Foreign Trusts and Receipt of Certain Foreign Gifts, and

  • Form 3520-A, Annual Information Return of Foreign Trust With a U.S. Owner (Under section 6048(b)).

IRC §6077 imposes significant penalties on taxpayers who fail to file these reports.

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IRS Not Willing to Grant Relief to Taxpayer Who Attempted to Make a Late §475(f) Election

Practitioners from time to time will encounter traders in securities in their practice. Such traders hold investments for a very short period of time, often no more than minutes, looking to make money from short term movements in the price of the securities in question.

Unfortunately, doing this successfully is far from simple, and quite a few new traders find their new business is the perfect vehicle to turn a large fortune into a small one—or none. The sale of securities normally is considered a sale of a capital asset—so if they are unsuccessful, they quickly have losses far in excess of the $3,000 per year limit on an individual claiming capital losses in excess of capital gains.

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Taxpayer Gets Hit With Willful Failure to File FBAR Penalties After Voluntarily Withdrawing from OVDI Program

A taxpayer’s decision to voluntarily withdraw from the IRS’s Offshore Voluntary Disclosure Initiative (OVDI) program and instead argue a reasonable cause defense for the failure to file Foreign Bank Account Reporting forms did not end well. In the case of United States v. Ott, US DC SD Michigan, Case No. 2:18-cv-12174 the taxpayer ended up with almost $1 million in penalties when the Court determined that he had acted willfully in failing to file annual FBAR reports on his Canadian accounts.

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Illnesses of Corporate Officers Did Not Provide Reasonable Cause for Late Filing of S Corporation Returns

An S corporation argued that it had reasonable cause for late filing its Forms 1120S for multiple years due to both its CEO and CFO having serious illnesses that in both cases led to their deaths. However, the corporation was not successful in the case of Hunter Maintenance and Leasing Corp. Inc. v. United States, US District Court ND Ill., Case No. 1:18-cv-06585 in obtaining an abatement of the penalties.

Victor Cacciatore had founded the company, along with a number of others, and was treated as CEO and Chairman of the Board of the Company, controlling and exercising final decision-making authority over all financial and tax matters.

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Supreme Court Declines to Hear Case Regarding Mailbox Rule to Prove Timely Filing

The U.S. Supreme Court has decided not to hear the appeal from the Ninth Circuit in the case of Baldwin v. United States, Case No. 19-402.[1] The denial leaves standing the Ninth Circuit’s ruling that Reg. §301.7502-1(e)(2) rendered irrelevant a prior Ninth Circuit decision in the case of Anderson v. United States, 966 F.2d 487 (9th Cir. 1992).

We previously wrote about this case when it was first decided by the Ninth Circuit in April 2019.[2]

The issue involved whether a taxpayer could only show timely mailing of their document by producing a certified or registered mail receipt stamped by a U.S. Postal Service employee or whether they could resort to other evidence showing the document had been timely mailed. In 1992 the Ninth Circuit had ruled that other evidence could be considered in the Anderson case. Other circuits had held that provisions Congress enacted in IRC §7502 for proof of timely filing of documents were meant to be the sole method of proving such timely mailing.

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