In lieu of the accountant can be provided with a short summary letter that:
- notes that the lawyer was engaged by the client to render a tax opinion on a particular issue;
- states that the opinion is protected by attorney client privilege, which is not waived by the short summary;
- notes that the accountant is the return preparer for the client and that the opinion concludes there is substantial authority (or another standard) for the return position;
- instructs the return preparer to rely on the lawyer for this return position;
- instructs the return preparer to disclose the item (if appropriate) and suggests exactly how to do it; and if desired, requests the accountant to send the lawyer a draft of the return so the lawyer can verify these points before the return is filed.
When does the attorney drafting the opinion become the tax preparer?
The statutory definition of a tax return preparer (section 6694 and 7701(a)(36)) is "any person who prepares . for compensation . all or a substantial portion of any return . "
This includes: (1) signing tax return preparers, who have primary responsibility for the overall substantive accuracy of a return; and (2) non-signing preparer is any tax return preparer who prepares all or a substantial portion of a return with respect to events that have occurred at the time the advice is rendered.
Substantial portion of the return is based on whether the potential preparer knows or reasonably should know that the tax attributable to such item is a substantial portion of the total tax required to be shown on such return. A safe harbor provides that an item is not substantial if it involves an amount of gross income, a deduction, or an amount on the basis of which a credit is determined that is (1) less than $10,000, or (2) less than (a) $400,000 and (b) 20% of the gross income item on the return.
Private Letter Rulings
A taxpayer may request an advance ruling, based a certain set of facts, from the IRS, which, once secured binds both the taxpayer and the IRS on those certain transaction and tax consequences.
- A favorable ruling will provide taxpayers with a measure of certainty as to the tax consequences of a particular transaction, unless, of course, the facts surrounding the transaction turn out to be materially different from those previously stated in the ruling request.
- A typical ruling request may involve a 9100 Relief where the taxpayer is requesting the IRS to excuse the failure to act on a timely basis, such as the failure to file an election or a similar matter.
- Our firm has requested and received numerous favorable private letter rulings.
- In addition to the benefit of a favorable ruling, the ruling process itself may prove advantageous to a taxpayer, where the Service may recommend changes in a proposed transaction to assist the taxpayer in reaching the desired tax result.
- Negative reasons to apply for a ruling request.
- The IRS has significantly increased the user fee to process a private letter ruling from a modest fee any taxpayer could afford to approximately $ 26,000.00 (2015).
- Professional fees have to be paid in obtaining a ruling.
- With fewer Service personnel, there may be a substantial delay to obtain a ruling.
- The response to requesting a ruling may be unfavorable.
- If the ruling request is withdrawn, it should be anticipated that the National Office will notify the field office and, as a consequence, there will be a greater likelihood of an audit or examination of the transaction than if no ruling request had been filed.
- The National Office attorney or technical personnel may raise collateral issues in the course of the ruling request process that may not be easily answered or dealt with.
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