How the IRS is taking a “formalistic approach” in
interpreting its own section 6011 regulations on disclosing reportable
transactions and not following its own rules on which tax years to assess the
Section 6707A penalty.
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The IRS is still assessing penalties under Code Section 6707A, the penalty provision applicable to failure to disclose Congress-enacted
reportable transactions taken since tax year 2004. Congress amended Section
6707A in 2010 to help alleviate its draconian consequences. They were fining
people $100,000 per year on the personal level, and then fining the same
parties $200,000 per year on the corporate level. I received phone calls from
people who had put under $100,000 into 419, 412i or other plans. Some of them
were being fined $600,000 or more under 6707A for failure to properly disclose
using form 8886. Under newly amended Section 6707A, applicable to all penalties
assessed after December 31, 2006, the penalty, subject to certain maximum and
minimum amounts, is equal to 75% of the decrease in reported tax as a result of
the reportable transaction. How the IRS is applying the Section 6707A penalty
can be described as “troubling.”
Accountants would call me when their clients got audited for
being in a 419, 412i, or other type of listed transaction. The client got
audited and settled. The accountant thought they were finished with the IRS.
When I told them that they were not they did not believe me. I have received
hundreds of these types of phone calls. When I would speak at national
accounting conventions, or legal conventions the people did not believe me.
When I would write articles for national accounting or other publications
people would call me and say it was not true. As an expert witness my side has
never lost a case. Enough of this and on to the story.
The following case shows how troubling the IRS position is.
In 2004 and 2005, a taxpayer took deductions for life
insurance premiums paid to a Code Section 419(e) plan (419(e) plan).
Transactions similar to the 419(e) plan were declared “listed transactions” in
Notice 2007-83 on October 17, 2007. Under the applicable version of Treasury
Regulation § 1.6011-4(e)(2)(i), the taxpayer was required to file Form 8886
with its “next filed tax return” after the transaction became a listed
transaction. Accordingly, the taxpayer was required to file Form 8886 with its
2007 tax return, which it filed on October 14, 2008. The taxpayer did not file
Form 8886 with its 2007 tax return. On October 14, 2008, the taxpayer was under
audit for its participation in the 419(e) plan.
An IRS letter dated January 15, 2008 informed the taxpayer
that it was under examination because of its participation in a widely marketed
419(e) plan. The taxpayer gave the IRS agent (the agent) all of the information
requested by the agent. On September 8, 2008, the agent asked the taxpayer to
extend until June 30, 2009 the statute of limitations regarding any deficiency
related to the 419(e) plan for the 2004 taxable year. The taxpayer agreed to
the extension. The agent issued Form 4549 showing the final deficiencies owed
by the taxpayer relating to the 419(e) plan on November 7, 2008. The agent
didn't include any penalties on the Form 4549 issued — neither a Section 6662
penalty nor a Section 6707A penalty. The taxpayer paid the deficiencies shown
on Form 4549 for its 2004 and 2005 tax years. On December 29, 2008, the group
manager informed the taxpayer that the examination report was accepted for 2004
and 2005.
On February 22, 2012, the taxpayer received notification
that the IRS was proposing to assess a Section 6707A penalty against the
taxpayer for the year 2007 because of the taxpayer’s failure to include Form
8886 with its 2007 income tax return. The IRS had requested that the taxpayer
extend the statute of limitations for the 2007 tax year until December 31,
2013, which the taxpayer did.
The first question is whether the IRS has asserted the
Section 6707A penalty for the correct taxable year. If a taxpayer fails to
include the information required under Section 6011 for a listed transaction,
Section 6501(c)(10), enacted in 2004 at the same time as Code Section 6707A,
operates to extend the statute of limitations by one year after the earlier of
(A) the date the Secretary is furnished the information, or (B) the date a
material advisor meets a Section 6112(b) request. However, Section 6501(c)(10)
cannot extend the statute of limitations if the tax years of participation in
the transaction are closed prior to the transaction becoming a listed
transaction. Proposed treasury regulation section 301.6501(c)-1(g)(3)(iii)
states that “if the taxable year in which the taxpayer participated in the
listed transaction is different from the taxable year in which the taxpayer is
required to disclose the listed transaction under section 6011, the taxable
year(s) to which the failure to disclose relates are each taxable year that the
taxpayer participated in the transaction.” The Preamble to the proposed
treasury regulation provides that “the taxable year(s) to which the failure to
disclose relates is not the taxable year in which the disclosure is required to
be filed, but each taxable year that the taxpayer participated in the listed
transaction.” Based upon proposed treasury regulation section 301.6501(c)-1(g),
the correct taxable years to assess the taxpayer a Section 6707A penalty are
2004 and 2005, the years the taxpayer participated in the listed transaction,
not in 2007, the year the taxpayer failed to report the listed transaction.
Under a formalistic interpretation of the Section 6011
treasury regulations, the IRS could assert that the taxpayer is subject to a
Code Section 6707A penalty in 2004 and 2005 because the taxpayer has never
filed Form 8886. Its argument would be that Section 6505(c)(10) operates to
keep the Statute open for those two years because those years were open when
the 419(e) plan became a listed transaction on October 17, 2007. If the IRS
were to assess the Section 6707A penalty in 2004 and 2005, its assessment in
this situation would ignore the purpose of enacting Section 6707A in 2004. That
legislative history clearly shows that Congress enacted the provision so that
taxpayers would face a severe penalty if they did not give information to the
IRS so that the IRS could effectively combat tax shelters. The point of the
penalty is to require taxpayers to divulge information. Through treasury
regulations issued under Code Section 6011, the IRS requires that the taxpayers
divulge information regarding tax shelter investments by filing Form
8886. Because the IRS has information about the listed transaction from
auditing the taxpayer, what does the IRS accomplish by penalizing the taxpayer
for failing to file Form 8886? If the IRS wanted to punish the taxpayer for
failing to file Form 8886, why didn’t the agent assess the section 6707A
penalty before she closed her examination on November 7, 2008? Why didn’t her
manager send the case back to the agent to assess the section 6707A penalty
after reviewing the case?
The facts of the this case are analogous to one issue
considered by the United States District Court for the Eastern District of
Texas in Bemont Investments, LLC v. United States decided on August 2,
2010, which is on appeal by the government to the Fifth Circuit. The Bemont
case involved a Son-of-Boss tax shelter, a listed transaction. In one part of
the case, the Court had to decide whether the extended statute of limitations
for listed transactions set forth in Code Section 6501(c)(10) had run. The
question depended upon whether the IRS had been supplied the required
information, which would cause the statute of limitations to commence running.
The government maintained that it had not received the relevant information
because it had not received a “list” under Section 6212 of the relevant
information; that is, it was not required to take into account the information
supplied to it because it was not in the proper form. The District Court held
against the government on this issue because the government, in fact, had the
information it needed to be aware that the plaintiffs had participated in a
Son-of-Boss tax shelter.
The IRS decision to assert a Section 6707A penalty against
the taxpayer is very troubling. Not only is the IRS taking a “formalistic approach”
in interpreting its own section 6011 regulations on disclosing reportable
transactions, it is not following its own rules on which tax years to assess
the Section 6707A penalty.
I continue to advise people in 419, 412i, captive insurance
or section 79 plans to file properly under IRS 6707A. Most still either do not
file, or use someone without the proper experience to file. Most get the fine
for either not filing or for filing wrong. I do know of two accountants who
have been successful in filing properly after the fact. That is hard to do as
the instructions for filing after the fact are very hard to follow. I also
think that they left out some information. I continue to get calls from people
who filed and still got the fines. In fact a 412i promoter helped his apx. 200
clients file 8886 forms. I then learned that they all get the fines for not
filing.
When I spoke at the AAACPA convention, lawyers who are CPAs
most did not respond to my speech. Within a few days many called me with these
8886 problems. Many do not want to admit that they got their clients in bad
trouble with the IRS. When that happens the result is usually a lawsuit.
It is not hard to currently file under IRS 6707A, although
most salespeople tell their clients that they don’t have to. Most of those
salespeople later get sued by their clients. To file at a later date is very
hard. The two people that do this properly tell me it sometimes takes over 20
hours to get the forms right. The accountants and lawyers without experience
usually tell me it did not take them long to do the forms. That is too bad for
their clients.
Accountants and salesmen also get fined under IRS 6707A.
Their fine is a minimum of $100,000 for being what the IRS calls a material
advisor. There forms are easy to do, and can be done in about two hours. They
are also telling on their clients. When a lawsuit starts this is a very
interesting matter. I will write another article on point, or just Google me
for more.
The fine under 6707A is for every year the business owner is
in the plan. Even if the person did not contribute in some years they still get
the fine for those years. Even if the business owner got out of the plan they
still get the fine. In addition if they do not properly file under 6707A there
is no statute of limitations. I have received phone calls in 2013 from people
being just fined under 6707A that went into the plans in 2006, for example.
Many of these people were already audited and fined for their contributions to
the 419, 412i, etc. plans.
This is a bad situation that most accountants, tax lawyers
etc. have no knowledge about. I have authored two bestselling AICPA books with
Sid Kess which has chapters on this. I have authored books for Bisk education
which has chapters on this. I have authored a book published by John Wiley and
sons with chapters on this. I have authored many articles for accounting and
other publications on point. I am not bragging. My point is people either do
not believe what is going on, or maybe they simply do not think the IRS could
be doing this. Believe it because the IRS is doing this to a lot of honest
people. Worst of all the IRS says that the fine cannot be appealed.
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