NYC Tax Advocates

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Specializing in IRS and NYS Tax Representation. Workers Compensation Audits, Payroll, Sales and Income Tax representation for Businesses, Individuals, Restaurants and Construction Companies. Civil and Criminal Workers Comp Audit representation includes: NYSIF Examinations, Premium Disputes, Employee Misclassification, Underreporting, Unreported Income, and Failure to Keep Accurate Payroll Records.
Showing posts with label #Tax_help. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #Tax_help. Show all posts

Saturday, August 1, 2020

CRAPPY TAX RESOLUTION FIRMS and COLD HARD FACTS


Don’t be fooled by out of state companies that promise to “Settle Your Tax Debts for Pennies on the Dollar”. These companies are commonly called “Tax Resolution Firms” and in all likelihood, the person you spoke with is not an Accountant or Attorney, but rather, is a commissioned salesperson who found your name on a tax lien list. Federal Tax Liens are published and sold to the publicCommissioned salespeople are not bound by the regulations that govern practice before the Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”) Treasury Department Circular No. 230, Title 31 Code of Federal Regulations, Subtitle A, Part 10. (Rev. 6-2014)  Meaning, the silver-tongued charlatan that just told you everything you wanted to hear is full of malarkey (and you know what that means). Now here’s where things get difficult – in order to successfully reduce your tax debts and penalties, you must have legal standing. Moreover, you must simultaneously satisfy the burden of proof and burden of persuasion requirement. Said plainly, “hard luck stories may be good for your friends and family, but they won’t cut it with the IRS”. In reality, Tax Representation is deceptively complex, and a little knowledge is extremely dangerous. For example, an Offer in Compromise is easy to say – but difficult to achieve. That’s why smart people hire experienced Accountants and Attorneys.  But what about those grandiose claims that every Tax Resolution Firm makes, like: Joe Blow owed the IRS $100,000 and settled for $500 – well Sunshine, poor Joe Blow probably lives in a homeless shelter and has one foot in the grave and the other on a banana peel. What you should have taken away from this article:  
1.    The IRS is not altruistic and tax law [and the applicable rules of civil procedure] maybe more complicated than you think.  
2.    The best accountant and attorney isn’t always the most likable person you’ll meet (winning isn’t a popularity contest).

3.   If you don’t know what you’re doing, find someone that does.

IRS or NYS Offer in Compromise Prepared and Filed within 48 Hours  

Selig & Associates provides New Yorkers with the most aggressive tax representation allowed by law. Successfully defending individuals and businesses before the IRS and the New York State Department of Taxation and Finance since 2006. When you’re in trouble with the IRS, Selig & Associates is your best line of defense. For more information call (212) 974-3435 or contact us Online.

Income, Sales and Payroll Taxes   

We negotiate successful tax settlements, penalty abatements and affordable re-payment plans. Consistently solving the most challenging tax problems, including unpaid income, sales and payroll taxes. To discuss your case in confidence, call us directly.   

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We offer same day and emergency appointments in our New York City office (or by telephone). To schedule a Free Legally Privileged Consultation with a licensed Tax Accountant and Attorney call (212) 974-3435 or contact us Online. 

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Selig & Associates helps New Yorkers avoid criminal prosecution by preparing and filing up to 10 years of missing Federal and State tax returns within 48 hours of our being retained. For immediate assistance call or contact us now.  

Thursday, February 6, 2020

Manhattan Restaurateur Pleads Guilty to Tax Evasion – He Should have hired SELIG & Associates


He concealed more than $2 Million in Business Income; Used Funds on Luxury Cars, High End Shopping and other Personal Expenses

The owner of a former New York City restaurant pleaded guilty to tax evasion today, announced Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General Richard E. Zuckerman of the Justice Department’s Tax Division, U.S. Attorney Geoffrey S. Berman for the Southern District of New York, and Chief of Internal Revenue Service- Criminal Investigation (IRS-CI) Jonathan D. Larsen.
“The defendant funded his lavish lifestyle by failing to pay legally obligated taxes thus causing harm to all Americans,” said Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General Richard E. Zuckerman. “We remain committed to prosecuting tax criminals who refuse to pay their fair share.”
“As he admitted in court, restaurateur Adel Kellel cooked his books for years, skimming money from his restaurant and salting it away in personal accounts or using it for personal expenses,” said U.S. Attorney Geoffrey S. Berman for the Southern District of New York. “His scheme was a recipe for making millions in unreported income, but now he will have to pay for his gluttony.”
“When Mr. Kellel chose to hide millions of dollars from the IRS, he unfairly shifted the tax burden to honest American taxpayers,” said IRS-CI Chief Jonathan D. Larsen. “As we start the tax filing season, this is a stark reminder of the serious consequences of tax evasion, including potential imprisonment. IRS-CI will continue to be relentless in our mission to root out tax fraud.”
According to the Information and statements made in court, in 2011, Adel Kellel was the President and a minority owner of K&H Restaurant Inc. (K&H), which operated Raffles Bistro (Raffles), a restaurant located at a New York City-based hotel. From 2012 through 2015, Kellel was the sole owner of K&H. K&H’s gross receipts consisted primarily of: (1) credit card payments by Raffles customers; (2) cash payments by Raffles customers; and (3) check payments by the hotel for services that Raffles provided to hotel guests and patrons, including room service, banquets, and catering. 
From 2011 through 2015, Kellel concealed a substantial portion of K&H’s gross receipts by not fully reporting the cash received from Raffles’ customers. Kellel further hid the gross receipts by depositing cash into personal bank accounts, by spending funds directly on personal expenses, and by diverting checks paid by the hotel to K&H into non-business bank accounts that Kellel hid from his accountants. During this time, Kellel diverted more than 150 hotel checks, totaling more than $2 million, to more than a dozen bank accounts. 
Kellel used the diverted income for personal expenses, including: overseas transfers; condominium fees; rent for a high-end Manhattan apartment; college tuition payments from his children; shopping at luxury retailers, such as Hugo Boss and Saks Fifth Avenue; payments for luxury cars manufactured by Mercedes, Porsche, and Maserati; and to pay for domestic and international travel. 


Free Consultation Federal Tax Practitioner, CPCU and Attorney. Practicing before the Internal Revenue Service and New York State Department of Taxation and Finance. We provide our Clients with successful Tax Representation, Insurance Audit Advocacy and Tax Planning Services. Legally privileged consultations available Monday through Friday in our New York City offices. 

Tax Representation Specializing in unpaid Income, Sales and Payroll taxes. We negotiate excellent Payment Plans, Audits, Offers in Compromise, and all other tax matters. Expedited service. Missing Tax Returns prepared and filed within 48 hours. Proven results. Corporations, S-Corps and LLC’s. For immediate assistance call (212) 974-3435.  

Construction Company Owners We help Business Owners with NYSIF Premium Assessments and Workers Compensation Insurance Audits. Specializing in Employee Misclassification, Unreported Income, Application Fraud, Experience Rating, and other W/C violations. Schedule a Free legally privileged consultation today.

Tax Advisors Our strategic Tax Planning and Advisory services are designed to help Business Owners significantly reduce their income tax liability in 2020. Schedule a Free Consultation by calling or contacting us online.

Monday, January 27, 2020

UNDERSTANDING THE IRS TRUST FUND RECOVERY PENALTY - Another Great Article by Bryan Camp, Esq.




Sometimes we get so used to norms of practice that we forget the legal text governing that practice.  Last week the Tax Court taught that text is still important.  In David J. Chadwick v. Commissioner, 154 T.C. No 5. (Jan. 21, 2020) (Judge Lauber), the Court held that the IRS must comply with §6751(b)’ssupervisory approval requirements before assessing the §6672 Trust Fund Recovery Penalty.  That is because the text of §6751(b) says those requirements apply to any “penalty” and the text of §6672 permits the IRS to assess a “penalty.”
Some may laugh!  Some may snort “It’s so simple!”  But, truly I tell you, nothing is simple when you combine the Tax Code and lawyers.  While the lesson may seem simple, it’s more nuanced than you may realize.  And even though this is a reviewed opinion, it may be of surprisingly limited reach.  Details below the fold.
In Chadwick, the Tax Court continued its clean-up of the various legal issues created by its reinterpretation of §6751(b) in Graev v. Commissioner, 149 T.C. 485 (2017).  Readers will recall that §6751(b) requires supervisory approval of tax penalties at some point before those penalties are assessed.  About three weeks ago the Court decided that the required supervisory approval needed to be done before the IRS formally notified the taxpayer “that the Examination Division had completed its work and...had made a definite decision to assert penalties.”  Belair Woods, LLC v. Commissioner, 154 T.C. No. 1 at p. 16.  I blogged the case here Chadwick attempts to brings closure to another question created by Graev: whether assessments made under the authority of §6672 were “penalties” subject to §6751(b)’s supervisory approval requirement.  For reasons I explain below, that attempt may be futile.
The Law
“Trust Fund Taxes” are those taxes that are paid by the taxpayer to an intermediary who, after collecting the tax, is then supposed to forward it to the government.  These are known as "trust fund" taxes because  §7501(a) says that the money so collected is held in trust for the United States until it is paid over. 
Two of the most important trust fund taxes are collected by employers from their employees.  Section 3402(a) makes every employer responsible for withholding their employees' income taxes. Section 3102(a) imposes a withholding requirement for the employees’ share of social security taxes.  Employers are supposed to remit these withheld taxes on an ongoing basis and to account for the payments and withholding once each quarter on Form 941.
If the employer fails to properly pay over these withheld amounts to the government, then the Treasury suffers a loss, because §31(a) gives employees a credit for taxes withheld regardless of whether the money actually reaches the government's coffers.  I call this the “duh” credit because even though the government may not have received the money, you can just hear the employee saying, “well, duh, my employer withheld it.  It’s not my fault my employer failed to actually pay it!” 
Section 6672 is a penalty designed and administered to help ensure payment of trust fund taxes. It provides that if any “person required to collect, truthfully account for, and pay over any tax imposed by this title...willfully fails to collect such tax, or truthfully account for and pay over such tax" then that person is “liable to a penalty equal to the total amount of the tax evaded, or not collected, or not accounted for and paid over.”  The term “person” in the statute can include a corporate employer as well as individuals within the company who have sufficient control such that they should be held responsible for ensuring proper payment.  The short-hand term for such individuals is “responsible persons.” 
Though called a "penalty," the Service has a long established policy of using §6672 only as an additional tool to collect unpaid trust fund taxes.  In Policy Statement 5-14 (formerly P-5-60) the IRS says: “The withheld income and employment taxes or collected excise taxes will be collected only once, whether from the business, or from one or more of its responsible persons.”  This policy reads the statute’s purpose as recovering trust fund taxes that ought to have been paid, and not as imposing additional penalties on the responsible persons.  Thus, the IRS will cross-apply any payment of a trust fund tax against the accounts of all who have been assessed for purpose of collecting that trust fund tax.  See IRM 5.7.7 for the various payment application rules.
Over the decades, courts have acknowledged that this IRS policy is a valid legal interpretation of §6672.  This has sometimes worked to the government’s benefit and sometimes to its detriment.  Let’s look at one example of each.
On the one hand, the government has benefited in bankruptcy law.  Responsible persons would ask courts to enjoin collection of the TFRP until after the bankruptcy trustee made payments on the unpaid trust fund taxes through a liquidation or a plan of reorganization.  Responsible persons argued that because the penalty could only apply to unpaidtrust fund taxes, the IRS had to wait out the employer’s bankruptcy to see how much remained unpaid after distribution of the bankruptcy assets.  With multiple variations, the theme remained this: §6672 was a penalty, so the IRS should not be able to penalize a responsible person when there is, ultimately, no violation because the taxes get paid. 
Courts overwhelmingly rejected these kinds of arguments.  These courts held that §6672 was not really a penalty and that the IRS policy to treat the TFRP as an alternative source of collection accurately reflected the Congressional purpose behind the text of §6672.  For a really good example, go read In Re: Ribs-R-Us, 828 F.2d 199 (3rd Cir. 1987).  Here’s how the Ribs-R-Us court summed up its review of the case law: “These cases serve to reaffirm the continued vitality of section 6672 and the policy to protect government revenue that underlay its enactment, even in the context of a Chapter 11 reorganization.” Id. at 204. Thus, the IRS could collect the unpaid taxes from any available source at any time because the IRS was simply collecting the unpaid taxes once, with any payment from one source reducing the exposure of the other sources.  Id.  If you want even more detail on this exciting Bankruptcy-Code-Meets-Tax-Code fun, see Bryan Camp, Avoiding the Ex Post Facto Slippery Slope of Deer Park, 3 Am. Bankr. Inst. Law Rev. 329 (1995).
On the other hand, the government was hoist by its own petard in Lauckner v. United States, No. 93-1594, 1994 WL 837464 (D.N.J. May 4, 1994) (sorry, but I could not find a free link to the opinion).  There, the IRS assessed the TFRP against a taxpayer for over $1 million in unpaid trust fund taxes and did so three years and one day after the date the corporate Forms 941 which reported the unpaid taxes had been filed. 
The taxpayer argued that “it has long been settled that the § 6672 penalty is a collection device for the recovery of an employer’s delinquent trust fund employment taxes.”  Since it was NOT a penalty, but just an alternative source of payment for the trust fund taxes, the 3-year limitation period in §6501(a) applied. 
The government argued that gosh, yeah, it had indeedy long interpreted the statute as just a collection device to collect trust fund taxes, but gee willikers, it was not, actually, an assessment of the unpaid taxes reported on Form 941.  It was, by gosh, a separate liability, a penalty!  It required “willful” behavior and no one reports on Form 941 the “willful” failure to pay over the trust fund taxes!  The fact that §6672 could only be assessed when a responsible person “willfully” failed to withhold, account for, or turn over trust fund taxes meant that the employer’s returns would never report the “penalty.” Hence, those returns could not trigger the limitations period of §6501(a) because the period is only triggered when “the return” reporting the taxes was filed.
The district court (later affirmed by the Third Circuit in an unreported opinion you can find here) agreed with the taxpayer.  The gravamen of the district court’s reasoning was that the Service’s long-standing policy had, over the course of time, become embedded as the legal interpretation of the statute.  Here’s the court’s summation of its reasoning:
“It seems clear from this review of the case law that courts have long taken the view that a §6672 liability is “separate and distinct” only in the sense that it provides a collection device whereby the IRS may recover an employer's delinquent trust fund taxes from a “responsible person” at its discretion. Based on this reading, courts have imposed a low standard of “willful” behavior necessary to trigger the §6672 obligation. Although this reading may not be compelled by the wording of the tax code, it seems clear that courts have based the lower standard of conduct necessary to trigger §6672 liability on their understanding, unchallenged until now, that §6672 functions only as a collection device, not as a truly “separate and distinct” penalty."  (emphasis added)
Therefore, the court concluded, filing 941 returns that reported trust fund taxes triggered not only the 3-year limitation for assessing the taxes required to be reported on that return, but also triggered a 3-year limitation period for the IRS to assess a §6672 liability against any responsible person. 
As these two examples show, even though the text of §6672 says it is a “penalty,” both the IRS and the courts have long interpreted the statute as being something else: a separate and distinct tax liability imposed on responsible persons to help collect unpaid trust fund taxes. 
It is not surprising, then, that the IRS Office of Chief Counsel has taken the position that the IRS need not comply with §6751(b) when assessing the TFRP.  In June 2018 it released Chief Counsel Notice 2018-006 where it instructs attorneys to argue that in §6672 situations, the Service need not comply with supervisory approval requirement.  So far, one district court has agreed with the IRS.  United States v. Rozbruch, 28 F. Supp. 3d 256 (S.D.N.Y. 2014).
It is also not surprising that the Tax Court---a court which normally has little experience with §6672---would take the very straightforward reading of the statute and reject the government’s position.  Let’s look at the case because it is interesting how the taxpayer here was able to bring up the issue in the first place.
Facts
Mr. Chadwick was the sole member of two companies, each of which failed to pay employment taxes with respect to its employees’ wages.  The matter went to collection and each company’s failure was handled by a different revenue officer (ROs).  Each RO decided that Mr. Chadwick was liable for the TFRP.  Each RO completed the proper internal paperwork (Form 4183) and each RO’s supervisor signed off on the paperwork.  Before 1998, the IRS could have then simply assessed the penalty.  However, in 1998 Congress added §6672(b) which says that before it can assess, the IRS must offer the taxpayer an opportunity to protest the proposed assessment in Appeals.  Here, the Letter 1153 was sent out the same day that each RO’s supervisor signed off on the Form 4183.  Mr. Chadwick did not go to Appeals and so the IRS assessed the penalties. 
Typically, taxpayers in Mr. Chadwick’s situation will pay one quarter’s employment tax for one employee and then, after the IRS denies a claim for refund, will file a refund suit.  Typically, the government will counter-claim for the balance.  Therefore, disputes about §6672 typically get heard by federal district courts and not the Tax Court.  That is why the only precedent directly on point was Rozbruch, a district court case.
Mr. Chadwick did not follow the typical procedure.  Instead of going the refund route, Mr. Chadwick chose the CDP route.  He hired a representative, went to Appeals, and tried to pursue collection alternatives.  Ultimately he failed, and the Settlement Officer (SO) issued a Notice of Determination to proceed with collection.  Actually, it is not clear that Mr. Chadwick really made a choice as much as just reacted to circumstance.  Judge Lauber notes that after filing his Tax Court petition in response to the CDP Notice, Mr. Chadwick went into radio silence and gave the Court nothing more to work with. 
Regardless of Mr. Chadwick’s failure to pursue the case, the Tax Court was obliged to review the SO’s decision.  That is because the SO was supposed to confirm “that the requirements of any applicable law or administrative procedure have been met.” §6330(c)(1)  So that’s how we get to the issue.  If §6751(b) was “applicable law” then the SO had to have verified that the IRS had obeyed its command. 
Lesson
Judge Lauber took a very strong textualist approach to resolving the question.  First, he notes that the text of §6751(b) says “no penalty under this title shall be assessed” unless the IRS satisfies the supervisory approval requirement.  Section 6672, in turn, uses the word “penalty” right there in the text of the statute.  While §6751(c) carves out some exceptions to the supervisory requirement, none encompass §6672. 
Second, beyond text, Judge Lauber finds that the statutory context of §6672 supports reading it as a penalty.  Heck, it’s in Chapter 68, Subchapter B which is titled “Assessable Penalties.”  He writes: “It would be anomalous, in the absence of any textual justification, to exempt section 6672 penalties from the scope of these rules.” 
Third, Judge Lauber points out that even though the IRS treats the TFRP as a collection tool, the willfulness requirement makes it a penalty.  “Like penalties for failure to file returns and failre to disclose information, TFRPs are imposed as a sanction for failing to do something.  From the standpoint of the person sanctioned, they are ‘penalties’ both as denominated by the Cod and in the ordinary sense of the word.”
Three Comments
First, as to the basic question presented by the case, Judge Lauber’s interpretation is supported by more than textualist analysis.  To begin with the Service has actually used the TFRP as a true penalty in the past.  See e.g. United States v. Mr. Hamburg Bronx Corporation, 228 F. Supp. 115 (S.D.N.Y. 1964).  Yes, that case is really, really, old.  And the Service has a pretty strong set of procedures to cross-credit the various responsible persons when any one of them makes a payment.  But that just brings up another set of precedents supporting Judge Lauber’s reading:  the Service to this day reserves the right to refuse to make the cross-credit.  See e.g. Monday v. United States, 421 F.2d 1210 (7th Cir. 1970)("Here too, the separate nature of the tax liabilities imposed upon the Mondays precludes their assertion of any satisfaction of the Company's liability for withholding taxes as a satisfaction of their individual liability under Section 6672.").  And the Service certainly makes each responsible person remain liable for accrued but unpaid interest.  SeeIRM 5.7.7.3.  Thus, the Service’s very emphasis on the separate nature of the TFRP liability from the underlying liability for withholding and paying over (the §3401 liability) preserves its ability to impose the liability over and above the underlying trust fund liability it seeks to collect.
Second, this decision may not be anywhere near the last word on the issue presented in it, despite being a reviewed opinion with no dissents.  One reason is that Judge Lauber’s interpretation might be dicta.  That is, after deciding that §6751(b) applies to §6672 assessments, Judge Lauber goes on to find that the IRS obtained the required supervisory approval under the Belair Woods rule.  In future cases, the IRS could argue that the demonstrated compliance moots the initial question.  A holding is that which is necessary to the disposition of the case.  Dicta is that which is not necessary to the disposition of a case.  Here, because of Belair Woods, the IRS could argue that it was not necessary to the disposition of this case for the Court to find that §6672 is subject to §6751(b).  So while Judge Lauber’s reasoning is instructive, it is not binding.  Think about it: you cannot issue a ruling adverse to a party and then deny that party the opportunity to appeal.  If the Court had also found the IRS out of compliance with §6751, then the ruling would be a holding.  But the IRS won the case, so it cannot appeal Judge Lauber’s embedded adverse interpretation.  Put another way, because Judge Lauber found that the IRS complied with §6751, he really did not need to decide whether the compliance was required or not.  I doubt this argument has much traction within the Tax Court itself.  But it may have traction outside the Tax Court and that leads to a second reason for skepticism about Chadwick's impact.
Another reason why Chadwick may be more flash than bang is that most decisions regarding the TFRP are made in federal district courts, not the Tax Court.  Tax Court holdings are not binding on federal district courts and judges there may be more receptive to the Service’s non-trivial arguments for why §6672 is not subject to the §6751(b) supervisory approval requirement.  In short, Chadwick may not have legs to carry taxpayers in federal district courts.  Of course, to the extent that is true, savvy practitioners might now advise their clients to forgo the refund route and instead bite their nails in hopes of catching the CDP butterfly during its short 30-day lifespan!
My third observation is that Chadwick may be more molehill than mountain.  I do not see it affecting the settled interpretation of §6672 as not being a true penalty outside the narrow question presented in Chadwick: whether the term "penalty" in §6751(b) applies to TFRP determinations.  I do not think it will hurt the IRS in bankruptcy situations (the Ribs-R-Us line of cases) nor do I see it providing any basis for the IRS to resuscitate its losing position that the TFRP has no limitation period, the issue it lost in Lauckner.  In fact, now that the Tax Court has drawn the line in Belair Woods, it certainly would not surprise me to see the IRS accept the ruling in Chadwick.  As far as I can tell, obeying the ruling requires no changes in TFRP assessment procedures (I always worry that I’m overlooking something and I rely on the kindness of readers to point out when that happens).
Bryan Camp is the George H. Mahon Professor of Law at Texas Tech University School of Law


SELIG & Associates
IRS Tax Representation
Insurance Audits
Tax Planning

Free Consultation Federal Tax Practitioner, CPCU and Attorney. Practicing before the Internal Revenue Service and New York State Department of Taxation and Finance. We provide our Clients with successful Tax Representation, Insurance Advocacy and Tax Planning Services. Legally privileged consultations available Tuesday through Friday in our New York City offices. 

Tax Representation Specializing in unpaid Income, Sales and Payroll taxes. We negotiate excellent Payment Plans, Audits, Offers in Compromise, and all other tax matters. Expedited service. Missing Tax Returns prepared and filed within 48 hours. Proven results. Corporations, S-Corps and LLC’s. For immediate assistance call (212) 974-3435.  

Construction Company Owners We help Business Owners with NYSIF Premium Assessments and Workers Compensation Insurance Audits. Specializing in Employee Misclassification, Unreported Income, Application Fraud, Experience Rating, and other W/C violations. Schedule a Free legally privileged consultation today.

Tax Advisors Our strategic Tax Planning and Advisory services are designed to help Business Owners protect their assets and significantly reduce their income tax liability in 2020. Schedule a Free Consultation by calling or contacting us online.

Selig & Associates is a boutique Tax Representation and Risk Management Firm specializing in unpaid tax obligations and commercial insurance coverage

  Tax Advocacy      Federal Tax Practitioner, CPCU and Attorney. Practicing before the Internal Revenue Service and New York State Departmen...