| EXECUTIVE
SUMMARY |
THE IRS
WORKLOAD IS INCREASING AS A RESULT OF
MORE innocent spouse claims. A
1998 change in the law is also bringing
more work to the Tax Court, which is
considering a wide range of domestic
issues that previously were the purview
of the divorce courts. THE 1998
INNOCENT SPOUSE LAW MAKES IT EASIER for
an innocent spouse who files a joint
return to avoid responsibility for the
total tax on the return. IRC section 6015
provides for Tax Court jurisdiction in
innocent spouse cases, although the IRS
disagrees with the extent of this
jurisdiction.
A JOINT
RETURN IS TYPICALLY REQUIRED to
be eligible for innocent spouse relief.
Sections 6015(b) and 6015(c) specifically
require it. In Raymond, the Tax
Court found that a joint return was
required for all 6015 claims, even though
section 6015(f) does not explicitly
require one. Wenner suggests to
CPAs the Tax Court is willing to consider
section 6015(f) equity claims without
accompanying 6015(b) and 6015(c)
elections.
FOLLOWING
TAX COURT ACTION IN BUTLER
AND in Fernandez, the
IRS acquiesced in the latter case and
said it would not object to Tax Court
review of IRS equitable relief decisions
under section 6015(f).
CPAs HAVE
AN INCREASING NUMBER OF WAYS to
help clients get relief under section
6015. The Tax Court can review section
6015 claims as part of collection
due-process procedures under 6320
involving tax lien notices and 6330
involving tax levies.
THE TAX
COURTS MEDIATION ROLE IN INNOCENT
SPOUSE claims is likely to grow
more if the IRS considers refund claim
cases and as practitioners become more
familiar with the requirements.
|
| LARRY A. COZORT, JD, PhD, is
associate professor of accounting at
Tennessee State University in Nashville.
His e-mail address is cozort@yahoo.com. |
he IRS is experiencing a dramatic workload
increase as more and more taxpayers claim
innocent spouse relief to avoid liability on a
joint tax return. For 1999 to 2001, it received a
staggering 152,942 relief requests, and in 2001,
the average claim processing time was 363 days.
The increase in claims has also resulted in more
litigation. In fact, Tax Court cases interpreting
the 1998 innocent spouse law revision have
expanded the courts jurisdiction. The court
now considers a wide range of domestic issues
that typically were within the purview of divorce
courts. To help CPAs better advise spouses
seeking relief, this article reviews the innocent
spouse rules and some of the many Tax Court cases
that have resulted.
THE
INNOCENT SPOUSE LAW
The 1998 Internal
Revenue Service and Reform Act made it easier for
an innocent spouse who signed a joint return to
avoid responsibility for the total tax due. The
law covers federal income and self-employment
taxes including penalties, additions to tax and
interest. Employment taxes on household employees
are not eligible.
Because the IRS was swamped by
relief requests even before it took any action to
collect a tax, the agency now accepts requests
only after a taxpayer receives notice of an audit
or other notification of a potential liability. A
taxpayer must file a relief request no later than
two years after collection begins. If the IRS
denies the request, the taxpayer has 90 days to
petition the Tax Court.
| The 1998 law replaced and
expanded former section 6013(e), making
partial relief possible. Section 6013(e)
previously covered only substantial
understatements attributable to grossly
erroneous items; section 6015(b) now
covers any understatement. In addition,
the new law expanded innocent spouse
relief by adding a separation of
liability remedy and equitable
relief. CPAs
should be aware of these provisions of
the act:
|
The
Age of Innocents
IRS innocent spouse
claims have ballooned to 4,800 a
month (with a backlog of 11,295
cases) from the 750 a month
before Congress revised the law
in 1998.Source: GAO Report
on the IRSs Innocent Spouse
Program, www.gao.gov/news.items/d02558.pdf.
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IRC
section 6015(b), innocent spouse relief. Provides
that a spouse will be relieved of an understated
tax liability on a joint return (but not a tax
underpayment) when he or she did not know or have
reason to know of the understatement and it would
be inequitable to hold the spouse responsible. An
understatement occurs when income is omitted or
expenses are overstated, resulting in a reported
tax that is less than actually owed. An
underpayment occurs when the reported tax is not
paid in full.
IRC section 6015(c),
separation of liability. Applies to
taxpayers who file a joint return but who are no
longer married, are legally separated or not
living together for at least 12 months. The
section allows the IRS to allocate the liability
between the spouses as if they had filed separate
returns in cases of a tax understatement (but not
for a tax underpayment). The taxpayer must not
have had actual knowledge of the item creating
the underpayment. Equitable considerations do not
apply.
IRC section 6015(e). Provides
for Tax Court jurisdiction over section 6015
claims; however, the interpretation of the
provision is the subject of disagreement, as
discussed below.
IRC section 6015(e)(4).
Provides that the spouse not making a
section 6015 electionthe nonrequesting
partycan join in a Tax Court proceeding.
IRC section 6015(f),
equitable relief. Provides that someone can
be relieved of tax liability if the facts
indicate such relief would be an equitable (fair)
result. This section applies to both tax
understatements and underpayments.
For more information see How
Innocent Spouses Spell Relief, JofA, Mar.00, page 63.
A taxpayer is eligible for
section 6015(f) relief only if sections 6015(b)
and 6015(c) do not apply. Under IRS regulations,
if a taxpayer asks for equitable relief under
section 6015(f) without electing sections 6015(b)
or 6015(c), the IRS cannot automatically grant it
under those sections. The IRS rejected the
suggestion that a section 6015(f) election should
trigger the other two provisions because sections
6015(b) or 6015(c) suspend the statute of
limitation; a section 6015(f) request does not.
However, if the IRS determines the requesting
party may be eligible for sections 6015(b) or
6015(c) relief, it will contact the taxpayer to
see if he or she wants to elect the additional
provision. Under IRS regulations the amended
claim will relate back to the original one for
purposes of determining its timeliness.
The IRS rejects about 40% of
all claims for innocent spouse relief because the
requesting party is ineligible. Innocent spouse
relief is designed for cases where the taxpayer
underpaid or understated tax. With few exceptions
it is not for cases where the taxpayer paid in
full. Of the IRS rejections in 1999 to 2001, 19%
were because there was no tax underpayment or
understatementthe tax had been paid in
full. In 7% of the requests, the requesting party
confused injured spouse status with
innocent spouse status and asked for injured
spouse relief. (See the exhibit on page 38 for
other statistics.)
CPAs should distinguish the
innocent spouse provisions of section 6015 from
injured spouse claims arising when the IRS
offsets a refund on a joint tax return to collect
tax one spouse owes. An injured spouse may seek
relief by filing Form 8379, Injured Spouse
Claim and Allocation, while using Form 8857,
Innocent Spouse Relief, to seek section
6015 relief.
The IRS Web site, www.irs.gov, can help CPAs determine whether
innocent spouse relief is available. Click on
Individuals, then on Innocent
Spouses to review relevant information,
including the recently revised Publication 971, Innocent
Spouse Relief, and an interactive link
titled Explore if you are an eligible
innocent spouse.
COMPARING
THE PROVISIONS
The IRS and the
courts can grant section 6015(b) innocent spouse
relief and section 6015(f) equitable relief only
when all facts and circumstances indicate relief
would be equitable. An equitable remedy requires
the court to reach a fair result
after considering all of the facts. Section
6015(c) separate liability relief does not
involve equitable considerations.
Frequently, taxpayers are
forced to file separate returns because their
spouse is not available to sign a joint return.
These taxpayers then ask the IRS for innocent
spouse relief. This is the most common reason the
IRS denies a relief requestno joint return
had been filed. In Raymond (119 TC No.
11), Ms. Raymond filed a separate return
including income for which she claimed no
responsibility. She did not pay any tax but
rather used this mechanism to resolve her
responsibility for the reported income under the
innocent spouse provisions. While sections
6015(b) and 6015(c) specifically require a joint
return, section 6015(f) does not; however, the Raymond
court found a joint return was required for all
6015 claims and refused to consider the merits of
Ms. Raymonds relief request.
IRS regulations interpret
section 6015(b) as requiring that the requesting
party have no reason to know of the
understatement at the time the return is filed
and section 6015(c) as requiring that party to
have no actual knowledge of the item that created
the understatement. Thus, the regulations impose
a different standard on the requesting party
under section 6015(b) when contrasted with
section 6015(c). Reason to know is
easier to prove than actual knowledge but
knowledge of the item causing the understatement
is easier to prove than knowledge of the return
misstatement. Court decisions reached before the
July 2002 IRS regulations interpreting section
6015 contain a different interpretation of reason
to know.
| The Fifth Circuit Court of
Appeals, in Cheshire (282 F3d 326), and
the District of Columbia Court of
Appeals, in Mitchell (292 F3d
800), affirmed Tax Court decisions that
said for both sections 6015(b) and
6015(c), what is required to prevent
relief is knowing the tax item creating
the understatement existednot that
it was incorrectly reported on the
return. In Cheshire the spouse
seeking relief knew her husband had
received a retirement plan distribution;
however, the court found it was not
necessary to prove she knew the
couples joint tax return reported
the proceeds incorrectly. In Cheshire
the Tax Court distinguished between
sections 6015(b) and 6015(c) by saying
the latter requires more awareness of the
item creating the
understatementactual knowledge as
opposed to reason to know. The U.S.
Supreme Court recently refused to
consider an appeal of Cheshire. Generally, if a spouse has
actual knowledge of an items
treatment on a return, he or she will not
be allowed relief under section 6015(c).
However, if the requesting party was a
domestic-abuse victim and because of that
did not challenge the treatment of any
items on the return for fear of
retaliation, the actual knowledge
limitation in section 6015(c) will not
apply. This means the IRS and the courts
may still grant relief under that
provision.
|
Innocent
Spouse Scorecard
Reasons the IRS
would not consider relief request
(March 1999 to September 2001)
| |
Number |
Percentage |
| Incorrect
filing statusno
joint return |
18,456 |
30.6 |
| Collection
stature expired |
8,004 |
13.3 |
| Tax paid in
fullno refund
requested at filing |
6,882 |
11.4 |
| Tax paid in
fullno refund
requested while claim
pending |
4,839 |
8.0 |
| No return
filed |
4.808 |
8.0 |
| Unable to
process |
4,716 |
7.8 |
| Claim
withdrawn |
4,074 |
6.7 |
| Injured
spouse |
3,971 |
6.6 |
| Subtotal |
55,750 |
92.5 |
| All other
reasons |
4,522 |
7.5 |
| Total |
60,272 |
100.0 |
Source: GAO Report
on the IRSs Innocent Spouse
Program, www.gao.gov/nw.items/d02558.pdf.
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NEW TAX COURT JURISDICTION
The Tax Court has
only the jurisdiction Congress authorized. In
each case the court must determine whether it has
jurisdiction as a threshold question. For
example, in IRC section 6213, Congress gave the
Tax Court jurisdiction over tax deficiency
proceedingswhere the IRS determines a
taxpayer has understated taxable income. The Tax
Court considers all facts and circumstances
related to a deficiency, including a
taxpayers innocent spouse claim. In
response to the number of innocent spouse cases
it was hearing, the Tax Court issued new
procedures (see www.ustaxcourt.gov/rules/New.pdf.)
The Tax Court decided the 1998
innocent spouse legislation expanded its
jurisdiction. In Butler (114 TC 276) the
IRS issued a deficiency notice to a married
couple. The husband had received a substantial
settlement for damages relating to his nursery
business; however, he omitted the damages as
income in the couples joint tax return. The
wife asserted innocent spouse status under
section 6015(b) and the court denied relief. The
IRS previously had denied section 6015(b) relief
and refused equitable relief under section
6015(f). It argued the Tax Court did not have
jurisdiction to consider an IRS denial of a
section 6015(f) claim because section 6015(e)
specifically prohibits such jurisdiction.
The Tax Court found the 1998
acts legislative history strongly supported
its jurisdiction over 6015(f) equitable claims.
In addition the court noted a strong presumption
that an administrative agencys actions were
subject to judicial review. Such review is
exempted only when a statute specifically
prohibits it or the law permits the action within
the agencys discretion. The Tax Court found
no such restrictions. However, the IRS argued the
Tax Court had no standards for adjudicating an
equitable relief remedy. The court noted that
section 6015(e) required it to consider all facts
and circumstances, a common judicial standard.
Thus, the Tax Court concluded it had jurisdiction
over section 6015(f) equitable relief claims when
the case arose under a section 6213 deficiency
proceeding.
Fernandez (114 TC 324)
involved a standalone
actionmeaning the IRS had not made a
section 6213 deficiency determination. A couple
omitted capital gains from the sale of a house
from a joint return. The wife requested relief
under sections 6015(b), 6015(c) or 6015(f). The
IRS denied her request. Because there was no
deficiency determinationit was a standalone
actionthe Tax Court had no jurisdiction
under the section 6213 deficiency provisions. As
a result section 6015 was the only basis for
jurisdiction.
As it had in Butler,
the IRS argued the Tax Court had no jurisdiction
based on its interpretation of section 6015(e).
In this case the Tax Court ruled it had
jurisdiction over 6015(f) complaints based on a
clear reading of section 6015(e). It said the
statute required the taxpayer to make an
affirmative election for relief under sections
6015(b) or 6015(c) before the court could
consider a section 6015(f) claim. Fernandez
suggests to CPAs that even if section 6015(b) or
6015(c) relief is not appropriate, such as for
tax underpayments, IRS denial of relief under
these provisions will trigger Tax Court
jurisdiction under section 6015(f).
Following Butler and Fernandez,
the IRS acquiesced (AOD CC-2000-06) in Fernandez
and said it would not object to Tax Court review
of IRS decisions under section 6015(f). More
recently, the IRS again acquiesced in Beck (TC
Memo 2001-198) where the Tax Court determined it
had jurisdiction over IRC section 66(c) community
income cases using an equitable remedy similar to
section 6015(f). Under section 66(c), an innocent
spouse may get equitable relief from income tax
liability on unreported community
incomeincome from a couples community
property.
AVENUES
TO 6015 RELIEF
CPAs have an
increasing number of ways to help clients get
help under section 6015. In addition to section
6015 standalone actions and section 6213(a)
deficiency proceedings, the Tax Court can review
section 6015 claims as part of collection
due-process procedures under section 6320
involving tax lien notices and section 6330
involving tax levies.
Wenner (116 TC 284)
opened another avenue for taxpayers. A widow
objected to an interest assessment following an
IRS audit that increased income on returns filed
during her husbands life. The Tax Court
confirmed that a taxpayer could raise a section
6015 claim in a request to abate interest under
IRC section 6404. The IRS argued section 6015
wasnt appropriate because the petitioner
had not filed a claim under sections 6015(b) or
6015(c). The Tax Court ignored the IRS argument
and permitted section 6015 as a defense. Wenner
suggests to CPAs and their clients that the Tax
Court is willing to consider section 6015(f)
equity claims without accompanying 6015(b) and
6015(c) elections in a variety of circumstances.
NONELECTING
SPOUSE INTERVENTION
The new Tax Court
rules (noted previously) require the IRS to
notify the nonrequesting party of his or her
right to intervene in court proceedings. Treasury
regulations section 1.6015-6 requires the
nonrequesting party to have the opportunity to
participate in administrative proceedings. If a
taxpayer has been a victim of domestic violence
and fears that filing an innocent spouse claim
will result in retaliation, CPAs should write
Potential Domestic Abuse Case at the
top of form 8857. This will alert the IRS to the
taxpayers situation. Taxpayers should also
explain their concerns in a statement attached to
the claim. The IRS will not release to a
taxpayers nonrequesting spouse (or former
spouse) a new name, address, employer
information, phone or fax number or other details
not related to deciding the innocent spouse
claim.
The Tax Court has been
aggressive in allowing the nonrequesting party to
participate in the proceedings. In Corson
(114 TC 354) the IRS issued a deficiency notice
to the taxpayers, who had petitioned the Tax
Court to review the dispute. After the case
began, the IRS approved section 6015(c) relief
for the requesting spouse. The nonrequesting
spouse objected and asked the Tax Court for the
right to intervene (prohibited under prior law).
The IRS argued a nonrequesting party had no right
to intervene in a section 6015 request where the
IRS grants relief. The IRS considered irrelevant
the fact the agreement occurred after litigation
had begun.
The Tax Court decided that
because section 6015(e)(4) provided for a
nonrequesting party to be part of a section 6015
determination, a similar provision should be
added to traditional jurisdiction rules under
section 6213 deficiency proceedings. The court
ruled the process that brought the section 6015
claim before it should not result in different
rules. Thus, just as Congress extended
participatory rights to the nonrequesting party,
the Tax Court decided Congress intended the same
rights to exist under section 6213even
after the IRS has granted relief.
In King (115 TC 118) a
spouse asked for innocent spouse relief under old
section 6013(c) following a deficiency
determination. The IRS denied the request. After
Congress passed section 6015 and litigation had
begun, the IRS determined the spouse was entitled
to section 6015 relief. The nonrequesting party
was not a petitioner, as in Corson.
Thus, the King court allowed the nonrequesting
party to enter the litigation to contest the
section 6015 claim. The court upheld electing
spouse relief under 6015(c). Whether a
nonrequesting party can successfully petition the
Tax Court for review after the IRS grants section
6015 relief to a requesting spouse is uncertain. King
indicates to CPAs that the answer is probably no,
and Corson indicates maybe yes.
Because the nonrequesting party
can intervene in both the IRS and Tax Court
proceedings, the process can take on the tone of
a divorce hearing. The issues the nonrequesting
party may address include anything that may have
a bearing on innocent spouse relief.
For example, the requesting
party may claim the nonrequesting partys
conduct constituted duress. If a requesting
spouse had signed a return under duress, it is
not a joint return and the taxpayer is not liable
for the tax shown or any deficiency. The IRS
adjusts the return to reflect only the tax
liability of the individual who voluntarily had
signed the return; the liability is determined as
though the married individual had filed a
separate return.
In Hinckley, (256 Br.
814), the requesting party had no chance to
review the return. However, she conceded she did
have actual knowledge of the understatement. Her
defense focused on alleged duress from her
ex-husbands coercing her to sign the
return. The IRS claimed there had been no duress
because she offered no evidence of specific
threats or intimidation. The court disagreed,
using a two-pronged analysis to reach its verdict
that the ex-wife was not liable. It determined
she had been unable to resist her husbands
belligerent demands to sign the return. The court
also found she would not have signed except for
having been constrained to do so.
EQUITABLE
RELIEF
The IRS issued
revenue procedure 2000-15 which outlines the
factors that will support an equitable relief
application. IRS regulations indicate to CPAs it
will consider the same factors in making the
equitable determination required under section
6015(b). The list of factors is not exhaustive
because the IRS can consider any relevant
information. The factors that support equitable
relief are:
Economic hardship. This
consideration involves the requesting
partys inability to pay basic living
expenses.
Abuse. Ask the
question: Was the taxpayer subject to abuse by
the nonrequesting party?
Lack of knowledge or
reason to know. It will be helpful if the
requesting party did not know and had no reason
to know of the items resulting in the additional
tax.
Nonrequesting
partys legal obligation. He or she may
have a legal obligation created by agreement or
divorce decree to pay the tax.
Attribution. The
tax item at issue is attributable to the
nonrequesting party. For example, the tax
deficiency arose from the nonrequesting spouse
failing to report business income received in
cash.
No benefit. The
individual did not significantly benefit (beyond
normal support) from the unpaid liability or
items giving rise to the deficiency.
In Kalinowski (TC Memo
2001-21), the Tax Court considered the equity
requirement under section 6015(b). The factors it
used to deny relief included: no present
financial hardship because of the continuing
marriage, financial benefit from the electing
spouses understatement and no
overreaching by the nonrequesting
spouse using unscrupulous methods.
Based on litigation under the
pre-1998 innocent spouse law, the court does not
consider personal tragedies in making its
decisions. Medical problems such as chronic
ailments and alcohol addiction, for example, are
not relevant while mental illness is.
Misunderstanding the law is no defense unless
there is overreaching by the other spouse.
Involvement in financial affairs weakens a relief
claim.
In Cheshire (166 TC
183) the court said the most important factor in
determining equity was whether the spouse seeking
relief significantly benefited from the
understatement. This benefit can be indirect,
such as a spouses receiving more than he or
she otherwise would have gotten as part of a
divorce settlement. The requesting party in Cheshire
receivedas part of a divorce
settlementthe marital residence, its value
enhanced by the use of untaxed retirement
distributions to repay the mortgage. The
requesting party also received the family car
purchased with retirement distributions. In Gurr
(TC Summary Opinion 2002-7) the wife had received
real estate transfers related to denied losses;
thus, she was not granted relief.
WORK,
WORK, WORK
Although the
innocent spouse law has already increased the
workload of the IRS and Tax Court, this mediation
role has the potential to grow even more.
Currently, the IRS refuses to process a section
6015 election where there is no additional tax
liability or underpayment. However, as other
responsibilities decline, the IRS and Tax Court
may be more aggressive in processing such claims.
CPAs will find their familiarity with innocent
spouse rules will increase a success rate that
has historically been relatively low. The IRS has
denied 40% of section 6015 claims because they
failed to meet its eligibility requirements. It
has granted full or partial relief for 45% of
claims that have passed initial muster. From 1999
to 2002, the U.S. Tax Court heard 33 innocent
spouse cases and upheld the IRS in 20 of them. In
light of this, practitioners should pay close
attention to section 6015 claims to increase the
chances clients will succeed in gaining relief. 
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