The following are selected highlights of the 2007 Small Business
and Work Opportunity Tax Act (P.L. 110-28), signed into law May 25,
2007.
Preparer Penalties Expanded and Increased
Old Law: An income tax return preparer was defined as any person
who prepared for compensation, or who employs other people to prepare
for compensation, all or a substantial portion of an income tax return
or refund claim. Therefore, this definition excluded non-income tax
return preparers, such as gift, estate, excise or employment tax return
preparers.
An income tax return preparer who prepared a return or refund
claim, with respect to which there was an income tax understatement that
was due to an undisclosed position for which there was not a realistic
possibility of being sustained on its merits, or was a frivolous
position (even if adequately disclosed), was liable for a $250
first-tier penalty--if the preparer knew, or reasonably should have
known, of the position.
A preparer who prepared an income tax return or refund claim and
engaged in specified willful or reckless conduct in preparing that
return or claim was liable for $1,000 second-tier penalty.
Under Regs. Sec. 1.6694-2(b)(1), a position was considered to have
a realistic possibility of being sustained on its merits if a reasonable
and well-informed analysis by a person knowledgeable in the tax law
would lead such a person to conclude that the position had approximately
a one in three, or greater, likelihood of being sustained on its merits
(realistic possibility standard).
A frivolous position "was one that was patently improper"
[Regs. Sec. 1.6694-2(c)(2)].
New Law: The definition of "preparer" is broadened to
include preparers of gift, estate, employment, excise and exempt
organization returns.
The new law also alters the standards of conduct that must be met
to avoid penalties for preparing a return which has a tax
understatement. The realistic possibility standard for undisclosed
positions is replaced with a requirement that there be a
"reasonable belief" that the tax treatment of the position was
more likely than not the proper treatment.
Note: Existing Regs. Sec. 1.6662-4(g)(4), pertaining to tax shelter
items of noncorporate taxpayers, states that a taxpayer is considered
reasonably to believe that an item's tax treatment is more likely
than not the proper treatment if:
* The taxpayer analyzes the pertinent facts and authorities in the
manner described in Regs. Sec. 1.6662-4(d)(3)(ii), regarding the nature
of analysis for determining whether substantial authority is present,
and in reliance upon that analysis, reasonably concludes in good faith
that there is a greater than 50 percent likelihood that the item's
tax treatment will be upheld if challenged by the IRS, or
* The taxpayer reasonably relies in good faith on a professional
tax adviser's opinion--if that opinion is based on the
adviser's analysis of the pertinent facts and authorities in the
manner described in the preceding "bullet" and unambiguously
states that the adviser concludes that there is a greater than 50
percent likelihood that the item's tax treatment will be upheld if
challenged by the IRS.
The "not-frivolous" standard, accompanied by disclosure,
is replaced with the requirement that there must be a "reasonable
basis" for the position's tax treatment accompanied by
disclosure.
Note: Existing Regs. Sec. 1.6662-3(b)(3), concerning negligence or
disregard of rules or regulations, states that reasonable basis is a
relatively high standard of tax reporting, that is significantly higher
than "not frivolous" or "not patently improper." The
reasonable basis standard is not satisfied by a return position that is
merely arguable or that is merely a colorable claim. If a return
position is reasonably based on one or more of the authorities set forth
in Regs. Sec. 1.6662-4(d)(3)(iii) (taking into account the relevance and
persuasiveness of the authorities and subsequent developments), the
return position will generally satisfy the reasonable basis standard
even though it may not satisfy the substantial authority standard as
defined in Regs. Sec. 1.6662-4(d)(2).
In addition, the first-tier penalty is increased from $250 to the
greater of $1,000 or 50 percent of the income derived, or to be derived,
by the preparer from preparing the return or claim with respect to which
the penalty is imposed.
The second-tier penalty also is increased from $1,000 to the
greater of $5,000 or 50 percent of the income derived, or to be derived,
by the preparer.
Effective Date: Under the 2007 Act's Section 8246(c), these
new rules are effective for tax returns prepared after May 25, 2007.
Transitional Relief: IRS Notice 2007-54 (IRB-27, 7/2/07) relaxes
this effective date for:
(1) All returns, amended returns, and refund claims due (with
extensions) before 2008;
(2) 2007 estimated tax returns (vouchers) due by Jan. 15, 2008; and
(3) 2007 employment and excise tax returns due by Jan. 31, 2008.
Notice 2007-54 states:
* For income tax returns, amended returns, and refund claims, the
standards set forth under the previous law and current regulations under
IRC Sec. 6694 will be applied in determining whether the IRS will impose
a penalty under Sec. 6694(a). Generally, in applying transitional relief
for income tax returns, amended returns or refund claims, disclosure
would be adequate if made on Form 8275, Disclosure Statement, or Form
8275-R, Regulation Disclosure Statement, attached to the return, amended
return or refund claim, or pursuant to the annual revenue procedure
authorized in Regs. Secs. 1.6694-2(c)(3) and 1.6662-4(f)(2).
* For all other returns, amended returns and refund claims,
including gift, estate and generation-skipping transfer tax returns and
employment and excise tax returns, the reasonable basis standard set
forth in the Sec. 6662 regulations, without regard to the disclosure
requirements contained therein, will be applied in determining whether
the IRS will impose a penalty under Sec. 6694(a).
* No transitional relief is available under Sec. 6694(b) as
transitional relief is not appropriate for return preparers who exhibit
willful or reckless conduct, regardless of the type of return prepared.
Erroneous Refund Claims
Old Law: There was no separate penalty for filing refund claims
that had no basis in fact or law. If a taxpayer erroneously claimed a
refund, there could be no penalty if there was no additional tax
attributable to that claim.
New Law: A new penalty is imposed on any taxpayer filing an
erroneous claim for refund or credit. This penalty is 20 percent of the
disallowed portion of the claim if there is no reasonable basis for the
claimed tax treatment.
The penalty does not apply to the earned income credit (which has
its own compliance rules). It also does not apply to any part of the
disallowed portion of the claim that is subject to accuracy related or
fraud penalties.
Effective Date: Claims filed after May 25, 2007.
Kiddie Tax
Old Law: Special rules (known as the "kiddie tax")
applied to the net unearned income (i.e., investment income) of certain
children.
Generally, the kiddie tax applied to a child if:
(1) The child had not reached age 18 by the close of the tax year
and either parent was alive at that time;
(2) The child's unearned income exceeded $1,700 (for 2007);
and
(3) The child didn't file a joint return.
The kiddie tax applied regardless of whether the child may be
claimed as a dependent by either or both parents.
New Law: The kiddie tax is expanded to apply to children who are 18
years old or who are full-time students over age 18, but under age 24.
The expanded provision applies only to children whose earned income does
not exceed one-half of the amount of their support.
Effective Date: Tax years beginning after May 25, 2007 (e.g.,
calendar year 2008).
Increased and Extended Sec. 179 Deduction for Small Business
Old Law: Generally, the maximum amount that a taxpayer may elect to
expense for tax years 2003-2009 was $100,000 of the cost of qualifying
property placed in service during the tax year.
Qualifying property was generally defined as new or used
depreciable tangible personal property purchased for use in the active
conduct of a trade or business. Off-the-shelf computer software placed
in service in tax years beginning before 2010 was treated as qualifying
property.
The $100,000 amount was reduced (but not below zero) by the amount
by which the cost of qualifying property placed in service during the
tax year exceeded $400,000.
The $100,000 and $400,000 amounts were indexed for inflation for
tax years beginning after 2003 and before 2010. For tax years beginning
in 2007, the inflation adjusted amounts were $112,000 and $450,000,
respectively.
Taxpayers could make or revoke Sec. 179 expense deduction elections
on amended returns without IRS consent for tax years beginning after
2002 and before 2010. Any such revocation was irrevocable.
New Law: The $100,000 and $400,000 amounts are increased to
$125,000 and $500,000, respectively, for tax years 2007-2010. These
amounts will be indexed for inflation in tax years beginning after 2007
and before 2011.
In addition, the new law extends for one year the increased amount
that a taxpayer may deduct and the other Sec. 179 rules applicable in
tax years beginning before 2010. Thus, these rules continue in effect
for tax years beginning after 2009 and before 2011.
Effective Date: Tax years beginning after 2006.
Partner-Spouses May Elect Non-Partnership Treatment
Old Law: A partnership was defined to include a syndicate, group,
pool, joint venture or other unincorporated organization through or by
means of which any business, financial operation or venture was carried
on--and which was not a trust, estate or corporation. The income of a
partnership and its partners was determined under Subchapter K of the
Internal Revenue Code.
An election not to be subject to Subchapter K was provided for
certain partnerships meeting specified criteria. Otherwise, Subchapter K
applied to a venture treated as a partnership for federal tax purposes.
If an individual was a partner in a partnership, net earnings from
self-employment, which was subject to the self-employment tax, generally
included his or her distributive share (whether or not distributed) of
income or loss from any trade or business carried on by the partnership.
New Law: A "Qualified Joint Venture" (QJV), whose only
members are a husband and wife filing a joint return, is permitted not
to be treated as a partnership for federal tax purposes.
A QJV is a joint venture involving the conduct of a trade or
business if:
(1) The joint venture's only members are a husband and wife;
(2) Both spouses materially participate in the trade or business;
and
(3) Both spouses elect to have new Sec. 761(f) apply.
Pursuant to this election, a QJV conducted by a husband and wife
who file a joint return is not treated as a partnership for federal tax
purposes. All items of income, gain, loss, deduction and credit are
divided between the spouses according to their respective interests in
the venture. Each spouse takes into account his or her share of these
items as a sole proprietor. Thus, it is anticipated that each spouse
would account for his or her respective share on the appropriate form,
such as Schedule C.
This new provision is not intended to change the determination
under the old (and continuing) law of whether an entity is a partnership
for federal tax purposes (without regard to this new election).
For determining net earnings from self-employment, each
spouse's share of income or loss from a QJV also is taken into
account according to their respective interests in the venture.
The new law is not intended to prevent allocations or
reallocations, to the extent permitted under existing law, by the courts
or by the Social Security Administration of net earnings from
self-employment for purposes of determining an individual's Social
Security benefits.
Effective Date: Tax years beginning after 2006.
S Corporation's Capital Gains No Longer Passive Investment
Income
Old Law: An S corporation was subject to corporate level tax, at
the highest corporate tax rate, on its excess net passive income if the
corporation had:
* Accumulated earnings and profits (AE & P) at the end of the
tax year; and
* Gross receipts more than 25 percent of which were passive
investment income.
Also, an S election was terminated if the corporation had AE &
P at the close of each of three consecutive tax years and had gross
receipts for each of those years, more than 25 percent of which were
passive investment income.
Excess net passive income was the net passive income for a tax year
multiplied by the following fraction: Passive investment income
exceeding 25 percent of gross receipts divided by total passive
investment income for the year.
Net passive income was passive investment income reduced by
allowable deductions directly connected with producing that income.
Passive investment income generally included gains from sales or
exchanges of stock or securities.
New Law: Gains from sales or exchanges of stock or securities are
eliminated as items of passive investment income.
Effective Date: Tax years beginning after May 25, 2007.
Partial Sale of QSub
Old Law: An S corp that owned all the stock of another corporation
may elect to treat that subsidiary as a "Qualified Subchapter S
Subsidiary" (QSub), which was disregarded as a separate entity for
federal tax purposes. Its items of income, deductions, losses and
credits were treated as the S corp's items.
If the subsidiary ceased to be a QSub (e.g., failed to meet the
wholly-owned requirement), it was treated as a new corporation acquiring
all its assets and assuming all its liabilities immediately before such
cessation from the parent S corp in exchange for its stock.
Under Regs. Sec. 1.1361-5(b), the tax treatment of the termination
of the QSub election was determined under general tax law
principles--including the step transaction doctrine.
In Regs. Sec. 1.1361-5(b)(3), Example (1), an S corp sold 21
percent of its QSub stock to an unrelated party. This example treated
the deemed transfer of all the QSub's assets as a taxable sale
because the S corp was not in control of the QSub immediately after the
transfer by reason of the sale. Thus, the transfer did not qualify for
nonrecognition treatment under Sec. 351.
New Law: If the sale of QSub stock results in termination of the
QSub election, the sale is treated as a sale of an undivided interest in
the QSub's assets (based on the percentage of stock sold) followed
by a deemed transfer to the QSub in a Sec. 351 transaction.
Thus, in the above example, the S corp will be treated as selling a
21 percent interest in the QSub's assets to the unrelated party,
followed by a transfer of all its assets to a new corporation in a Sec.
351 transaction. Consequently, the S corp will recognize only 21 percent
of the gain or loss on the QSub's assets.
This new law is not intended to change the current law treatment of
the disposition of QSub stock by an S corporation in connection with an
otherwise nontaxable transaction. For instance, the transfer of QSub
stock by an S corp pro rata to its shareholders can qualify as a
distribution to which Secs. 368(a)(1)(D) and 355 apply if that
transaction otherwise satisfies the requirements of those sections. [See
Regs. Sec. 1.1361-5(b)(3), Example (4).]
Effective Date: Tax years beginning after 2006.
ESBT's Deduction for Interest on Debt Incurred to Acquire S
Corporation Stock
Old Law: An Electing Small Business Trust (ESBT) was subject to tax
at the highest individual income tax rate (currently 35 percent) on the
portion of the trust which consisted of stock in one or more S corps
(the S portion). The S portion's income was not included in the
beneficiaries income.
The only items of income, loss or deduction taken into account in
computing the S portion's taxable income were:
(1) The items of income, loss or deduction allocated to the ESBT as
an S corp shareholder;
(2) Gain or loss from the sale of the S corp stock; and
(3) To the extent provided in regulations, any state or local
income taxes or administrative expenses of the ESBT allocable to the S
corp stock.
Under Regs. Sec. 1.641(c)-1(d)(4)(ii), interest paid by an ESBT to
purchase S corp stock was allocated to the S portion but was not a
deductible administrative expense in computing the S portion's
taxable income.
In determining the tax liability of the remaining portion of the
trust, the items taken into account by the S portion were disregarded.
New Law: A deduction for interest paid or accrued on debt to
acquire S corp stock can be taken into account in computing the S
portion's taxable income.
Effective Date: Tax years beginning after 2006.
S Corporations with Earnings and Profits
Old Law: The 1996 Small Business Jobs Protection Act provided that
if a corporation was an S corp for its first tax year beginning after
1996, the corporation's AE & P at the beginning of that year
were reduced by the earnings and profits (if any) accumulated in a tax
year beginning before 1983, for which the corporation was an S corp.
New Law: In the case of any corporation which was not an S corp for
its first tax year beginning after 1996, the corporation's AE &
P as of the beginning of the first tax year beginning after May 25,
2007, is reduced by the earnings and profits (if any) accumulated in a
tax year beginning before 1983, for which the corporation was an S corp.
Effective Date: Tax years beginning after May 25, 2007.
Suspension of Interest and Penalties
Old Law: Generally, interest and penalties accrued on unpaid taxes
even though the taxpayer was unaware that there was tax due. However, if
an individual filed an income tax return for a tax year by its due date
(including extensions), the accrual of interest and penalties was
suspended unless the IRS provided the taxpayer a notice specifically
stating the taxpayer's liability and the basis for that liability
within 18 months following the later of:
(1) The return's original due date (without extensions); or
(2) The date on which a timely return was filed.
The suspension period began on the day after the close of this
18-month period and ended on the day that was 21 days after the date on
which the required notice was provided by the IRS.
This treatment was applied separately with respect to each item or
adjustment. It did not apply to:
* Penalties imposed under Sec. 6651 (for failures to timely file
returns or pay tax);
* Any interest or penalties in a case involving fraud;
* Any interest or penalties with respect to any tax liability shown
on the return;
* Any criminal penalty; and
* Any interest or penalty with respect to a gross misstatement
which is any substantial omission of items to which the six-year statute
of limitations applies [Sec. 6501(e)]; gross valuation misstatement
[Sec. 6662(h)]; or similar provision.
This treatment also did not apply, generally, to interest or
penalties accruing on underpayments resulting from listed transactions
or undisclosed reportable transactions.
Note: Under Rev. Rul. 2005-4, if an individual filed an amended
income tax return reporting additional tax more than 18 months after the
later of (1) the original return's due date (without extensions) or
(2) the date the original return was timely filed, the suspension rules
applied to interest on that additional tax. The suspension period began
on the day after the close of this 18-month period and ended:
* On the date the amended return was filed if the additional tax
was paid with this return; or
* 21 days after the date the amended return was filed if the
additional tax was not paid with the return.
New Law: The 18-month period is increased to 36 months.
Consequently, the accrual of interest and certain penalties will be
suspended starting 36 months after an income tax return is filed if the
IRS has not sent the taxpayer a notice specifically stating the
taxpayer's liability and the basis for that liability.
Effective Date: IRS notices issued after Nov. 25, 2007.
Employment Tax Levies
Old Law: The IRS was required, generally, to notify taxpayers that
they had a right to a fair and impartial Collection Due Process (CDP)
hearing before a levy may be made on any property or right to property.
Similar rules applied for tax liens notices, although the right to a
hearing arose only on the filing of the notice.
The CDP hearing was held by an impartial IRS Appeals officer, who
was required to issue a determination with respect to the issues raised
by the taxpayer at the hearing. The taxpayer could appeal that
determination to a court.
Taxpayers were not entitled to a pre-levy CDP hearing if a levy was
issued to collect a federal tax liability from a state tax refund or if
collection of the federal tax was in jeopardy. However, levies related
to state tax refunds or jeopardy determinations were subject to
post-levy review through the CDP hearing process.
New Law: A levy issued to collect federal employment taxes will be
excepted from the pre-levy CDP hearing requirement if the taxpayer,
subject to the levy, requested a CDP hearing with respect to unpaid
employment taxes arising in the two-year period before the beginning of
the taxable period with respect to which the employment tax levy is
served.
However, the taxpayer will be provided an opportunity for a hearing
within a reasonable period of time after the levy.
As the IRC provides for state tax refunds or jeopardy
determinations, collection by levy of employment tax liabilities will be
permitted to continue during the CDP proceedings.
Effective Date: Levies issued after Sep. 21, 2007.
Increased Penalty for Bad Checks or Money Orders
Old Law: Sec. 6657 imposed a penalty on persons tendering bad
checks or money orders, equal to 2 percent of the amount of the bad
check or money order. For checks or money orders that were less than
$750, the minimum penalty was $15 (or, if less, the amount of the check
or money order).
This penalty did not apply if the person tendered the check (or
money order) in good faith and with reasonable cause to believe that it
would be duly paid.
New Law: The minimum penalty is increased to $25 (or, if less, the
amount of the check or money), applicable to checks or money orders that
are less than $1,250.
Effective Date: Checks or money orders received after May 25, 2007.
Stuart R. Josephs, CPA has a San Diego-based Tax Assistance
Practice (TAP) that specializes in assisting practitioners in resolving
their clients' tax questions and problems. Josephs, chair of the
Federal Subcommittee of CalCPA's Committee on Taxation, can be
reached at (619) 469-6999 or stuartrjosephs@yahoo.com.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
By Stuart R. Josephs, CPA
COPYRIGHT 2007 California Society of Certified
Public Accountants Reproduced with permission of the copyright holder. Further reproduction or distribution is prohibited without permission.
Copyright 2007, Gale Group. All rights
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