IRS Releases Instructions on Reporting ARPA Unemployment Exclusion

On March 12, 2021, the IRS provided updated instructions on their website for preparing returns that have excludable unemployment compensation.[1] The IRS notice and modified Form 1040 instructions read as follows:

If your modified adjusted gross income (AGI) is less than $150,000, the American Rescue Plan enacted on March 11, 2021, excludes from income up to $10,200 of unemployment compensation paid in 2020, which means you don’t have to pay tax on unemployment compensation of up to $10,200. If you are married, each spouse receiving unemployment compensation doesn’t have to pay tax on unemployment compensation of up to $10,200. Amounts over $10,200 for each individual are still taxable. If your modified AGI is $150,000 or more, you can’t exclude any unemployment compensation.

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Ways and Means Chair Joins In Calling for the IRS to Push Back the April 15 Due Date

In a press release, Chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee Richard Neal (D-MA) has joined in the call for the IRS to extend the 2021 filing season past the scheduled April 15 deadline.[1] The call came in a joint press release with Oversight Subcommittee Chair Bill Pascrell, Jr. (D-NJ). Rep. Pascrell had previously been part of a letter from a number of Committee Democratic Party members calling for such relief, but which had not included the Committee Chairman.

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Text of Revision to Taxation of Unemployment Compensation Posted to Congress.gov

The Senate version of the American Rescue Plan of 2021 added a special rule that applies to unemployment compensation for taxable years beginning in 2020. The taxpayer may exclude up to $10,200 of unemployment compensation from income if the adjusted gross income of the taxpayer (as computed under the rules for this provision) is less than $150,000. If a joint return is filed, then each spouse can exclude up to $10,200 of their own unemployment compensation—but note that the adjusted gross income cut-off does not go up for the married couple.[1]

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IRS Updates FAQ on Virtual Currency Regarding Taxpayers Who Only Purchased Virtual Currency for Cash in 2020

The IRS has continued with their system of guidance by FAQ, this time effectively overriding the plain language of a question on page one of Form 1040 by adding a new question to the frequently asked questions (FAQ) page on the IRS website dealing with virtual currencies.[1]

The IRS added a question to the front page of Form 1040 that asked “At any time during 2020, did you receive, sell, send, exchange, or otherwise acquire any financial interest in any virtual currency?” The initial draft of the instructions for Form 1040 indicated that a purchase of a virtual currency during the year would require a yes answer—which seems like the correct answer given that trading cash for a virtual currency would seem to be the textbook case for obtaining a financial interest in the virtual currency.

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IRS Notice Indicates How to Determine ERC Eligible Wages Deemed Used to Obtain PPP Loan Forgiveness in 2020

The IRS issued updated guidance for the 2020 version of the employee retention credit in Notice 2021-20,[1] taking into account modifications made to the program by the Taxpayer Certainty and Disaster Tax Relief Act of 2020 signed into law on December 27, 2020.

This guidance is limited to the 2020 version of the ERC, and does not take into account changes that took effect on January 1, 2021. The Notice provides:

The guidance provided in this notice addresses the employee retention credit as it applies to qualified wages paid after March 12, 2020, and before January 1, 2021. This notice does not address the changes made by section 207 of the Relief Act that apply to the employee retention credit for qualified wages paid after December 31, 2020. The Department of the Treasury (Treasury) and the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) will address the modifications made by section 207 of the Relief Act applicable to calendar quarters in 2021 in future guidance.[2]

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House Passes COVID-19 Relief Package With Tax and Other Provisions

The bill must still clear the Senate and be signed into law, but the House has now passed the American Rescue Plan of 2021.[1] The bill has 592 pages of material which, while far shorter than the year end Comprehensive Appropriations Act, 2021, is still a very substantial bill with a number of tax and non-tax provisions.

The Journal of Accountancy published two articles on the bill as passed by the House, one discussing tax-related provisions in the bill[2] and the other discussing other business related provisions.[3]

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Taxpayer Escapes Paying Tax on Nearly $300,000 of Credit Card Rewards Achieved by Buying Gift Cards

A taxpayer found a way to maximize benefits in an extreme way in an American Express credit card rewards program, so much so that the IRS looked to impose a tax on the gains in the case of Anikeev v. Commissioner, TC Memo 2021-23.[1] But the Tax Court found that the IRS’s years of informal guidance created a situation where most of the benefits were not taxable—at least not in the way the IRS was attempting to tax the benefits in the case.

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Attorney Malpractice Settlement Related to Claimed Failures in Representing Taxpayer in a Physical Injury Case Not Excludable from Income

Debra Jean Blum filed a lawsuit that clearly dealt with physical injuries she sustained, but which she claimed her attorneys had bungled—so she then filed suit against the law firm. This dispute was settled out of court, and Debra sought to claim that this settlement was excludable from income as damages received on account of personal physical injuries under IRC §104(a)(2).[1]

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Charitable Contributions and Depreciation Deductions Both Are Barred by §280E - But for Reasons That May Impact Other Taxpayers

In the case of San Jose Wellness v. Commissioner, 156 TC No. 4[1] the Tax Court again looked at the question of whether the bar on deductions other than cost of sales for marijuana dispensaries goes beyond just those allowed by IRC §162, and extends to deductions allowed under IRC §171 (charitable contributions) and §167 (depreciation). But the opinion looks at some interesting interpretations of language that may find application outside of cannabis industry cases.

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IRS Posts Release Stating It Had Sent Out 260,000 You Have Failed to File a 2019 Tax Return Letter Before Processing All Timely Filed 2019 Returns

A number of tax professionals had been reporting in early February that clients had been receiving notices from the IRS that the agency did not show that they had filed a 2019 tax return. In such cases a return had been filed, with most reporting the return had been filed electronically and accepted by the IRS.

The IRS has now come forward with a release on their website[1] that indicates that these erroneous notices should be ignored if a taxpayer actually filed their 2019 tax return.

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Willful Failure to File FBAR Penalties Were Not Excessive

Another taxpayer had a bad experience with his failure to properly report all of his foreign accounts on his annual FBAR filing in the case of United States v. Collins.[1] The Court found no issue with the IRS’s assessment of penalties on the willful failure to file reports on these accounts for 2007 and 2008, despite the taxpayer’s attempt to argue that he had acted reasonably in failing to report these accounts and the amounts of the penalty were excessive.

Penalties the IRS Sought to Impose

The IRS was proposing civil penalties of $154,032 for 2007 and the same amount for 2008 for willful failure to report these accounts on the FBAR filings for the years in question. The IRS did not impose the maximum penalties (50% of the highest balance for each year) nor even an amount as high as their internal mitigation document suggested Mr. Collins would qualify for. As the opinion notes:

20. Under this internal mitigation guidance, the IRS would have assessed civil FBAR penalties against Mr. Collins of: (a) $382,666 for his willful failure to report his foreign accounts on an FBAR for 2007; and (b) $233,462 for his willful failure to report his foreign accounts on an FBAR for 2008. (Pl.'s Ex. P42; Trial Tr. at 49:15–50:12.)

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Tax Court Explains When a Taxpayer Can Assert Substance Over Form

The Tax Court in the case of Complex Media Inc v. Commissioner[1] attempted to explain how it views the opportunity for a taxpayer to raise a substance over form argument in a tax matter.

The Doctrine and Why a Taxpayer Raising the Issue is Different

The substance over form claim argues that the transaction in question should not be evaluated based on the formal legal structure of the transaction, but rather the tax impact should be driven by the underlying substance of the transaction. The IRS raises this argument often when the government believes the transaction was structured in a manner that lacked any real economic substance, but was specifically chosen to achieve a specific tax objective.

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Employee May Not Receive Refund of Unused Dependent Care FSA Funds as Pandemic Relief Does Not Allow Giving a Refund

While the IRS published relief that sponsors could give to participants in their cafeteria plans in Notice 2020-29 for 2020 plan years, and the Congress provided additional relief in §214 of the Taxpayer Certainty and Disaster Relief Act of 2020, not all situations are eligible for relief that will make the participant whole. One such situation was discussed in IRS Information Letter 2020-0027.[1]

The letter was written to respond to a constituent of Rep. Madeleine Dean of Pennsylvania who found themselves out funds that had been directed by them into a dependent care flexible spending account in their employer’s cafeteria plan.

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IRS Revises Instructions to Virtual Currency Question, but Not Actual Question, Creating Uncertainty on What Answer is Appropriate in Some Cases

The final 1040 instructions seem to suggest that an “acquisition of a financial interest in a virtual currency” may not be an “acquisition of an interest in a virtual currency” in some cases for purposes of answering the first question to be answered on Form 1040 after the taxpayer’s identifying information and address. But the instructions don’t provide any information on how such non-acquisition acquisitions are to be identified.

In the final version of the Form 1040 Instructions[1] the IRS modified the list of reportable virtual currency transactions, eliminating certain items found in the December 31, 2020 draft version, but the question on the Form 1040 remained unchanged—and still suggests, at least to some, that the deleted items would still be reportable.

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Safe Harbor Provided for Educator's COVID-19 Protective Items Eligible for an Above-the-Line Deduction

The COVID-related Tax Relief Act of 2020 Section 275 required the IRS to “clarify” that COVID-19 Protective Items used by an educator for the prevention of the spread of COVID-19 will qualify as an item allowed to be treated as an expense in calculating the above the line deduction (not in excess of $250) for qualified educators under IRC §62(a)(2)(D). In Revenue Procedure 2021-15[1] provides a safe harbor educators may use to claim these expenses.

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