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Tax Developements

Letter to All My Clients and Potential Clients:

 

Recap of the First Quarter 2011 Tax Developments

 

Dear Client:

The following is a summary of the most important tax developments that have occurred in the past three

months that may affect you, your family, your investments, and your livelihood. Please call us for more

information about any of these developments and what steps you should implement to take advantage of

favorable developments and to minimize the impact of those that are unfavorable.

 

Detailed guidance on new law's 100% bonus depreciation allowance. The IRS has issued detailed

guidance on the 2010 Tax Relief Act's 100% bonus depreciation rules for qualifying new property

generally acquired and placed in service after Sept. 8, 2010 and before Jan. 1, 2012. Overall, the rules

are quite generous. For example, they permit 100% bonus depreciation for components where work on a

larger self-constructed property began before Sept. 9, 2010, allow a taxpayer to elect to “step down” from

100% to 50% bonus depreciation for property placed in service in a tax year that includes Sept. 9, 2010,

permit 100% bonus depreciation for qualified restaurant property or qualified retail improvement property

that also meets the definition of qualified leasehold improvement property, and provide an escape hatch

for some business car owners who would otherwise be subject to a draconian depreciation result.

 

New law creates a 100% write-off for heavy SUVs used entirely for business. Under the 2010 Tax

Relief Act, a taxpayer that buys and places in service a new heavy SUV after Sept. 8, 2010 and before

Jan. 1, 2012, and uses it 100% for business, may write off its entire cost in the placed-in-service year. A

heavy SUV is one with a GVW rating of more than 6,000 pounds.

 

IRS further delays health insurance coverage information reporting for small employers. The new

health reform legislation generally requires employers to report the cost of health insurance they provide

to employees on their W-2 forms. Last fall, the IRS made this new reporting requirement optional for all

employers for the 2011 Forms W-2. More recently, the IRS announced that the reporting requirement will

continue to be voluntary for small employers at least through 2012.

 

New settlement offer for those voluntarily disclosing unreported offshore income. The IRS has

announced a second voluntary disclosure initiative designed to bring offshore money back into the U.S.

tax system and help people with undisclosed income from hidden offshore accounts get current with their

taxes. It will be available through Aug. 31, 2011. The IRS released details of the new voluntary offer,

called the 2011 Offshore Voluntary Disclosure Initiative (OVDI), in the form of 53 frequently asked

questions (FAQs). As with the first offer, participants have to pay back taxes and penalties but will avoid

criminal prosecution. The offshore penalty is different under the new offer. The general rule is that the

penalty is 25% based on amounts in foreign bank accounts, but can be as low as 12.5% or 5% for some

taxpayers.

 

IRS eases lien procedures. The IRS has announced new policies and programs to help taxpayers pay

back taxes and avoid tax liens. Its goal is to help individuals and small businesses meet their tax

obligations, without adding an unnecessary burden to taxpayers. Specifically, the IRS is:

  • Significantly increasing the dollar threshold when liens are generally issued, resulting in fewer taxliens.
    • Making it easier for taxpayers to obtain lien withdrawals after paying a tax bill.
    •  
      Withdrawing liens in most cases where a taxpayer enters into a Direct Debit InstallmentAgreement.
    • Creating easier access to Installment Agreements for more struggling small businesses; and
    • Expanding a streamlined Offer in Compromise program to cover more taxpayers.

 

Lactation expenses now qualify as deductible medical expenses. Reversing its prior position, the IRS

has announced that expenses paid for breast pumps and supplies that assist lactation qualify as

deductible medical expenses. Amounts reimbursed for these expenses under FSAs (flexible spending

accounts), Archer MSAs (medical savings accounts), HRAs (health reimbursement arrangements), or

HSAs (health savings accounts) are accordingly not income to the taxpayer.

 

Tax consequences of governmental homeowner-assistance payments. The IRS has explained the

income tax and information return consequences of payments made to or on behalf of homeowners under

various government programs designed to prevent avoidable foreclosures of homeowners' homes and

stabilize housing markets. In general, homeowners may exclude the payments from income, and may

deduct all payments they actually make during 2010–2012 to the mortgage servicer, HUD (the

Department of Housing and Urban Development), or the State HFA (housing finance agency) on the

home mortgage. The aid payments aren't subject to information reporting, and there are transition rules

for payments that are incorrectly reported.

 

Courts differ over whether basis overstatement can trigger 6-year limitations period under new

regulations. Late last year, the IRS issued final regulations under which an understated amount of gross

income reported on a return resulting from an overstatement of unrecovered cost or other basis is an

omission of gross income for purposes of the 6-year period for assessing tax and the minimum period for

assessment of tax attributable to partnership items. The 6-year limitations period applies when a taxpayer

omits from gross income an amount that's greater than 25% of the amount of gross income stated in the

return. Several courts had held that a basis overstatement is not an omission of gross income for this

purpose. In response to these decisions, the IRS issued the new regulations to clarify that an omission

can arise in that fashion. Now, some Courts have addressed the regulations. The Court of Appeals for the

Fourth Circuit and the Tax Court have rejected the regulations. On the other hand, the Federal Circuit has

upheld them and the Seventh Circuit has viewed them favorably. As a result, it looks like the Supreme

Court will ultimately have to resolve the issue.

 

New deadline for electing modified carryover basis rules. Estates of decedents dying in 2010 can

choose zero estate tax, but at the price of beneficiaries being limited to the decedents' basis plus certain

increases. The IRS has announced that Form 8939, Allocation of Increase in Basis for Property Acquired

From a Decedent, is not due Apr. 18, 2011 and should not be filed with the final Form 1040 of persons

who died in 2010. The IRS says the due date will be set in forthcoming guidance but does not indicate

when that guidance may be issued. The forthcoming guidance will also explain the manner in which an

executor of an estate may elect to have the estate tax not apply for a decedent dying in 2010.

 

Another Appeals Court upholds IRS's time limit on spousal relief requests. Married joint return filers

are jointly and severally liable for the tax arising from their returns. Innocent spouses may request relief

from this liability in certain circumstances. An IRS regulation states that a request for equitable innocent

spouse relief must be no later than two years from the first collection activity against the spouse. The Tax

Court had found this regulation invalidly imposed a time limit. However, the Court of Appeals for the Third

Circuit has reversed the Tax Court and upheld the regulation (so has the Court of Appeals for the Seventh

Circuit).

 

Business expenses of professional gamblers not limited. Gambling losses may be deducted only to

the extent of gambling winnings, even in the case of an individual engaged in the trade or business of

gambling. Previously, the Tax Court had held that losses for purposes of the limitation included both the

cost of wagers and business expenses. Earlier this year, the Court overruled its prior position and now

says that a professional gambler's business expenses are not subject to the loss limitation.

 

Physician statement alone doesn't establish financial disability to toll limitations period. In

general, a taxpayer must file a claim for credit or refund of tax within three years after filing the return or

two years after paying the tax, whichever period expires later. (Code Sec. 6511(a)) However, the statute

of limitations is suspended for certain taxpayers who are unable to manage their financial affairs because

of a medically determinable mental or physical impairment. A physician's statement must be submitted to

claim this relief, but a Court has made clear that the statement alone doesn't establish that the taxpayer

was financially disabled. Thus, it allowed the IRS to seek additional proof of the taxpayer's condition.

 

Sincerely,

Wilson E Barnes / American Tax & Bookkeeping