California Single-Payer Health Plan Shelved

As Samuel Johnson said, “Whatever you have, spend less.” Apparently some Democrats in the California legislature have realized the virtue of this quote.

Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon shelved the single-payer measure, calling it “woefully incomplete.” The California Senate Appropriations Committee estimated that it would cost only $400 Billion; that’s double California’s current total budget. While progressives (aka the far left) in California still support the measure, apparently Speaker Rendon realized that California can’t print money. Additionally, the gasoline tax increase in California is horribly unpopular; adding a new 15% payroll tax and/or a 2.3% gross receipts tax would not help matters.

While the bill has apparently been tabled for 2016, the California legislative session lasts two years; thus, it is possible that the bill could rise like a phoenix next summer.

Posted in California | Comments Off on California Single-Payer Health Plan Shelved

“celebritytaxguy” Soon to be at ClubFed

Michael Joseph Calalang Cabuhat had been living the good life. He had a nice house in the Hollywood Hills (of Los Angeles) and drove a Ferrari 360 Spider. Mr. Cabuhat owned a tax practice in Glendale (near Los Angeles) and called himself “celebritytaxguy.”

I will be the first to state that you can make a nice living from a tax practice. Mr. Cabuhat’s methods, though, were on the illegal side. He pleaded guilty to defrauding clients of more than $1.2 million, and will have 46 months at ClubFed to think that over. He also must make restitution of $1,496,416 and will be sending the government just over $426,000 from the sale of his home (and the car).

What did Mr. Cabuhat do? He had two methods of bilking clients but they all had a basis in preparing two returns for each client (and I’m not talking about state returns). In some cases Mr. Cabuhat prepared a return showing a small refund, and gave that return to the client. The small refund amount was duly deposited into the client’s account. However, the actual return filed with the IRS showed a larger refund, with that extra amount being deposited into a bank account controlled by Mr. Cabuhat.

His other method was to prepare a return showing an amount due; however, the return filed with the IRS showed a refund (with that refund being deposited into his account). He also had the clients make the tax payment to him, so that those funds, too, would be absconded.

And of course, Mr. Cabuhat didn’t report the $1.2 million he pocketed from the fraud on his own tax return. And, yes, Mr. Cabuhat had a license from the California Tax Education Council (all California tax professionals are required to have a license, either be an EA, CPA, attorney, or obtain the license from CTEC). As I’ve said before, having a license won’t stop tax preparers from committing crimes.

As for the crime itself, it was guaranteed to be discovered in the long run. Sooner or later a client would be audited or obtain a transcript of his return, and it wouldn’t match the return copy that the client had. Or even the IRS might wonder why 150 tax refunds were all deposited into the same bank account.

As noted in the press release from the Department of Justice,

…Judge Walter said Cabuhat’s scheme was “vicious” because it led to both financial and emotional harm to his victim-clients. Judge Walter noted that the stolen money was used simply to enhance Cabuhat’s lifestyle, allowing him to obtain a big house and a fancy car “all on the backs of these individuals who placed their trust” in Cabuhat.

Mr. Cabuhat will have nearly four years to think this all over.

Posted in Tax Fraud | Tagged | 1 Comment

Office Closed on June 16th

Two idiot drivers raced down Jones Blvd in front of our office this morning driving an estimated 80mph in a 35 zone. They hit an innocent SUV which flipped, caught on fire, and landed on top of a transformer. The driver escaped with minor injuries. While power has been restored, it will be late afternoon before phone and internet come up. Thus, our office will be closed today and reopen on Monday, June 19th.

Posted in Taxable Talk | Comments Off on Office Closed on June 16th

IRS Not Moving e-Services to a New Platform this Week

The IRS had planned on moving e-Services to a new platform on Thursday, June 15th. However, today I received an email stating it has been postponed until later this summer:

The planned move of IRS e-Services to a different platform has been pushed to later this summer. This delay changes previous announcements to e-Services users.

1. The planned e-Services outage for June 15-19 has been cancelled.
2. State users will be able to submit new or update existing state e-file coordinator applications and TDS applications until the upgrade begins later this summer.

IRS will communicate the schedule for the e-Services platform upgrade and provide updates on user impact well in advance of any changes.

Posted in IRS | Tagged | Comments Off on IRS Not Moving e-Services to a New Platform this Week

IRS Interest Rates Unchanged for Third Quarter 2017

The IRS announced today that third quarter interest rates will remain unchanged:

The Internal Revenue Service today announced that interest rates will remain the same for the calendar quarter beginning July 1, 2017. The rates will be:
• four (4) percent for overpayments (three (3) percent in the case of a corporation);
• 1 and one-half (1.5) percent for the portion of a corporate overpayment exceeding $10,000;
• four (4) percent for underpayments; and
• six (6) percent for large corporate underpayments.

Posted in IRS | Tagged | Comments Off on IRS Interest Rates Unchanged for Third Quarter 2017

I See $25,000 In Your Future

When I start reading a Tax Court decision and see the sentence, “Petitioner and her husband derived considerable income from peddling this scheme to gullible individuals,” you know it’s not going to be a good day for petitioners. But I’m getting ahead of myself.

Three years ago Ms. G had a Tax Court case on their 2004 income taxes which she lost. She appealed that decision and lost. The IRS wanted to collect the money, but the petitioner asked for a Collection Due Process (CDP) hearing with IRS Appeals. She had it, and lost that. She then appealed that result to the Tax Court. Based on income of $235,542 (of which no tax was paid), she owed $99,261 plus penalties and interest.

First, a little background on petitioner:

Petitioner and her husband are well-known tax shelter promoters with a lengthy history of litigation in this and other courts. Their speciality [sic] is the “corporation sole” tax shelter, whereby a taxpayer takes a fictitious “vow of poverty” in connection with a purported “church” and declares herself thenceforth immune from Federal income tax. Petitioner promoted this scheme by writing several books, including How to Protect Everything You Own in This Life and After and Corporation Sole vs. 501(c)(3) Corporation. Petitioner also practiced what she
preached: She and her husband established “Bethel Aram Ministries” in 1993, took fictitious “vows of poverty,” and have not filed a Federal income tax return since. [footnote omitted]

That’s not a good start. I’d like to pay no tax, but you need to be a real minister with a real vow of poverty to do so; imitations don’t work. At the CDP hearing, the IRS Appeals Officer noted that the law had been followed, and shockingly (not) that the taxpayer had still not submitted copies of 2005 to 2014 tax returns.

Well, her streak of non-filing is a bit more lengthy:

Petitioner did not request a collection alternative, and she did not supply the SO with the financial information necessary to enable him to consider one. Far from being in compliance with her ongoing tax filing obligations, she has not filed a Federal income tax return since 1993. The SO did not abuse his discretion in declining to consider a collection alternative under these circumstances…Finding no abuse of discretion in this or in any other respect, we will grant summary judgment for respondent and affirm the proposed collection action.

But the Tax Court wasn’t happy with the petitioner.

It is clear to us that petitioner has maintained this suit “primarily for delay” as part of her 25-year campaign to avoid or defer indefinitely the collection of her Federal income tax liabilities. Because our decision establishing her 2004 income tax liability became final more than three years ago, she had no plausible basis for challenging that liability through the CDP process. Her 30-page response to the motion for summary judgment includes only two paragraphs that bear any rational relationship to the issues this case presents. The vast bulk of that document is directed toward relitigation of the trial court and appellate decisions previously rendered against her. In that connection she advances numerous frivolous arguments, including assertions that the IRS “continues to lie and defame Petitioner” and that the Commissioner and the courts have conspired to deny her First Amendment rights to freedom of speech and religion.

The Tax Court assessed a Frivolous Position Penalty of $10,000.

Petitioner has wasted the resources of respondent’s counsel and this Court. We will accordingly require that she pay to the United States under section 6673(a) a penalty of $10,000. This opinion will serve as a warning that she risks a much larger penalty if she engages in similar tactics in the future.

Tax Court exists so that legitimate disputes between taxpayers and the IRS get resolved. The Tax Court has little sense of humor about frivolity. Given Ms. G’s consistent non-filing and delaying tactics, I suspect we will see her name in a future case with a section 6673(a) penalty of $25,000.

Case: Gardner v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo 2017-107

Posted in Tax Court | Comments Off on I See $25,000 In Your Future

Court Rules IRS Cannot Charge for PTINs

Back in 2010 to 2011 the IRS ordered all tax professionals to obtain a PTIN–a Preparer Tax Identification Number. The IRS stated this was necessary to track tax professionals, and would help in regulating the tax professional community. There is a fee to obtain a PTIN (now $50 initially, with a renewal costing the same $50). A group of tax professionals challenged the PTIN regulation and the fee in a class action suit. Can the IRS force tax professionals to obtain a PTIN? And can the IRS charge for PTINs?

The PTIN regulations came about at the same time as the IRS’s ill-fated efforts to regulate tax professionals. The IRS was challenged on the ability to regulate tax preparation professionals (see Loving v. IRS); the IRS lost the ability to regulate tax preparers. These regulations happen to also contain the IRS’s justification for charging a user fee to obtain a PTIN: As the Court yesterday noted,

As authority for requiring these fees, the IRS relied on the Independent Offices Appropriations Act of 1952 (“IOAA”). The IOAA provides that agencies “may prescribe regulations establishing the charge for a service or thing of value provided by the agency.” The IRS stated that a PTIN is a “service or thing of value” because without a PTIN “a tax return preparer could not receive compensation for preparing all or substantially all of a federal tax return or claim for refund,” and “[b]ecause only attorneys, certified public accountants, enrolled agents, and registered tax return preparers are eligible to obtain a PTIN, only a subset of the general public is entitled to a PTIN and the special benefit of receiving compensation for the preparation of a return that it confers.” [citations omitted]

The first part of the case was whether the IRS can mandate tax preparers use a PTIN. The Court ruled that the IRS can do so.

[P]laintiffs’ arguments fail step one of Chevron. Chevron states that “if Congress has directly spoken to the precise question at issue … that is the end of the matter; for the court, as well as the agency, must give effect to the unambiguously expressed intent of Congress.” The statute specifically says that the Secretary has the authority to specify the required identifying number to be used on prepared tax returns. (“The social security account number issued to an individual for purposes of section 205(c)(2)(A) of the Social Security Act shall, except as shall otherwise be specified under regulations of the Secretary, be used as the identifying number for such individual for purposes of this title.” (emphasis added)). The Court must give effect to the unambiguous intent of Congress that the Secretary may require the use of such a number. [citations omitted]

The second part of the case is whether the IRS has justification for charging a fee for obtaining PTINs. The plaintiffs had two arguments: That because of the decision in Loving the IRS no longer had a rationale for charging PTIN fees, and thus charging such fees was arbitrary and capricious. Second, because Congress did not grant the IRS licensing authority (confirmed by Loving), tax return preparers don’t receive a benefit in exchange for the fees; thus, they are unlawful under the IOAA. The government disagreed:

The government argues that the PTIN and user fee regulations are separate from the regulations imposing eligibility requirements on registered tax return preparers. It argues that the PTIN requirements are not arbitrary and capricious because they make it easier to identify tax return preparers and the returns they prepare, which is a critical step in tax administration, and because PTINs protect social security numbers from disclosure. In support of its position that it may charge fees for PTINs, the IRS states that PTINs are a service or thing of value because the ability to prepare tax returns for compensation is a special benefit provided only to those people who obtain PTINs, who are distinct from the general public. Individuals without PTINs cannot prepare tax returns for compensation. In addition, the IRS argues that PTINs protect the confidentiality of tax return preparers’ social security numbers, and that protection itself is a service or thing of value.

The court found that PTINs are not a “service or thing of value.”

First, the argument that the registered tax return preparer regulations regarding testing and eligibility requirements and the PTIN regulations are completely separate and distinct is a stretch at best. While it is true that they were issued separately and at different times, they are clearly interrelated. The RTRP regulations specifically mention the PTIN requirements and state that PTINs are part of the eligibility requirements for becoming a registered tax return preparer…Furthermore, the overarching objectives named in the PTIN regulations indicate a connection to the RTRP regulations. They were 1) “to provide some assurance to taxpayers that a tax return was prepared by an individual who has passed a minimum competency examination to practice before the IRS as a tax return preparer, has undergone certain suitability checks, and is subject to enforceable rules of practice;” and 2) “to further the interests of tax administration by improving the accuracy of tax returns and claims for refund and by increasing overall tax compliance.” The first objective clearly relates to the RTRP regulations regarding eligibility requirements for tax return preparers. The second objective is less explicit, but it does not stretch common sense to conclude that the accuracy of tax returns would be improved by requiring tax return preparers to meet certain education requirements. [citation omitted]

This results in a problem: What’s justifying the user fee?

The Loving court concluded that the IRS does not have the authority to regulate tax return preparers. It cannot impose a licensing regime with eligibility requirements on such people as it tried to do in the regulations at issue. Although the IRS may require the use of PTINs, it may not charge fees for PTINs because this would be equivalent to imposing a regulatory licensing scheme and the IRS does not have such regulatory authority. Granting the ability to prepare tax return for others for compensation—the IRS’s proposed special benefit—is functionally equivalent to ranting the ability to practice before the IRS. The D.C. Circuit has already held, however, that the IRS does not have the authority to regulate the practice of tax return preparers. In coming to its conclusion, the Circuit considered the statutory language that the Secretary may “regulate the practice of representatives of persons before the Department of the Treasury.” The court found that the IRS improperly expanded the definition of “practice . . . before the Department of Treasury” to include “preparing and signing tax returns” because to “practice before” an agency “ordinarily refers to practice during an investigation, adversarial hearing, or other adjudicative proceeding.” The Loving court concluded that “[t]hat is quite different from the process of filing a tax return” in which “the tax-return preparer is not invited to present any arguments or advocacy in support of the taxpayer’s position . . . [and] the IRS conducts its own ex parte, non-adversarial assessment of the taxpayer’s liability.” The ability to prepare tax returns is the “practice” identified by the IRS in Loving, but the court found that such an activity does not qualify as practicing before the IRS. Therefore, it appears to this Court that the IRS is attempting to grant a benefit that it is not allowed to grant, and charge fees for granting such a benefit.

This ruling disagrees with another case (Brannen v United States), but that was pre-Loving (as the Court notes). The Court also noted that if the IRS were allowed to regulate tax professionals, the ruling might be quite different. Additionally,

The Court is unaware of similar cases in which an agency has been allowed to charge fees under the IOAA for issuing some sort of identifier when that agency is not allowed to regulate those to whom the identifier is issued, and the government has not pointed to any.

Thus, the Court ruled that the IRS can require PTINs but cannot charge for them. I do expect the ruling to be appealed, so it’s likely nothing will change for several months.

Case: Steele v United States

UPDATE: The court also ordered that the IRS refund all PTIN fees to all class members.

Again, I expect this ruling to be appealed, so any refunds are many months in the future.

Posted in IRS, Tax Preparation | Tagged , | 2 Comments

Thank You, Joe Kristan

Most mornings I begin my day by reading a few tax blogs. This has helped me learn what’s happening in the tax world. After all, there’s one of me so the more sets of eyes, the better. Joe Kristan had been publishing Roth Tax Updates for a long time–since 2002. Joe’s firm is merging into Eide Bailly in June, so, “As we begin a new adventure, I will need to spend extra time working to make our transition successful, so it’s time to bring the Tax Update to a close.”

Best of luck Joe, and perhaps there’s an Eide Bailly Tax Updates in the future. (I can always hope.)

Posted in Taxable Talk | Tagged | 1 Comment

Illinois and California Race for the Bottom

It appears that Illinois and California are in a race to see which can impose the worst tax policies. The Illinois legislature is debating a “Privilege Tax;” California is debating single-payer health care. Neighboring states to each are likely envisioning plenty of businesses relocating if these measures pass.

The Illinois Privilege Tax is a proposed 20% tax on investment advisors. Let’s say I’m a hedge fund manager in Chicago and I have the Russ Fox Fund. I charge a fee for running this fund; under this proposal, 20% of the fee would be taxable to Illinois. What would prevent me from moving to Des Moines (Iowa), Indianapolis (Indiana), or Nashville (Tennessee) and running the same fund? Absolutely nothing. If this proposal passes, the financial services sector will join lots of others in fleeing the Land of Lincoln.

Meanwhile, the Bronze Golden State is debating single-payer health care. It passed a Senate Committee, but there’s a major issue: The plan would cost $400 billion (that’s “billion” with a b, not million), far more than the state’s current budget. While $200 billion of it could come from repurposing current expenditures, $200 billion would need to be raised. How about a 15% payroll tax and self-employment tax on the state level? That would make California’s tax rate 28.3% on the highest earners! The proposal would cover anyone and everyone living in California, including those here illegally.

If this passes, there’s no doubt in my mind that businesses that could would relocate to neighboring states while any freeloaders who could would move to California. The self-employed who could move would do so immediately: Live in California, pay an additional 28% in tax, or live in Las Vegas and pay 0%? Or Arizona and pay 4%? Or, well, I think you get the picture.

There aren’t many good answers on healthcare, but there are plenty of bad ones. California appears to have chosen one of those. (Yes, single-payer can work but it would have to be implemented nationally to work, not in one state.)

Posted in California, Illinois | Comments Off on Illinois and California Race for the Bottom

Exchanging One Cryptocurrency for Another Is a Taxable Event

Let’s assume I own some Bitcoins and you own some Ethereum; these are two cryptocurrencies. We think they’re each worth $5,000 and we agree to swap them. Do we have a taxable event?

The IRS consideres cryptocurrencies to be akin to stocks and bonds. That means any time I sell or otherwise dispose of cryptocurrency I have a realized capital gain or loss. A client was told by a cryptocurrency trader that exchanging one cryptocurrency for another is not a taxable event. That individual is mistaken.

Let’s look at an analogous situation: You and I each own $5,000 worth of a stock (say General Motors and Ford). We swap stocks. I no longer own Ford, so I have a gain (or loss) on my Ford stock; you have a gain or loss on your General Motors stock. No one can successfully argue that this swap doesn’t result in a taxable event for each of us.

As I said swapping one cryptocurrency for another is analogous. Is a Bitcoin identical to an Ethereum? No; they’re each different cryptocurrencies. If you sell or dispose of a cryptocurrency, you have a taxable event. It’s very clear that such swaps absolutely must be reported on Schedule D.

Posted in Cryptocurrencies, IRS | Tagged | Comments Off on Exchanging One Cryptocurrency for Another Is a Taxable Event