Penalty Abatement
The Challenge
The treasurer discovered that their payroll clerk had forgotten to make
one of the required payroll tax deposits on time and was penalized $6,122
by the IRS and $2,472 by the State. The treasurer had written letters
requesting that the penalty be waived because this was their first late
deposit and the payroll clerk had been having personal problems affecting
job performance. The IRS and the State had both rejected the treasurer's
requests.
Tax Solutions, P.C.’s Action Plan
- Fully describe the surrounding circumstances
- We asked the treasurer to write a detailed description
of anything out of the ordinary that was going on during the period
when the taxes should have been deposited:
- At the office
- In the life of the payroll clerk
- In the life of treasurer
- Appeal the IRS' denial of the treasurer's request
- Tax Solutions used the treasurer's description of the
surrounding circumstances to write letters requesting reconsideration
of the penalty abatement request in by an appeals officer and sent these
letters to:
- The IRS
- The State
- Discuss the abatement request with the appeals officers by telephone
The Results
 |
 |
 |
| Decreased IRS Penalty by |
$3,122 |
|
| State Penalty Abated |
2,472 |
|
| State Interest on late payment Abated |
184 |
|
| Total Savings |
$5,778 |
|
| Cost of Service |
300 |
|
| Net Savings |
$5,478 |
|
Wage Levy Removal or Reduction
The Challenge
The taxpayer received a series of notices from the IRS requesting payment,
requiring payment, and then threatening Lien, Levy, or Seizure. He did
not respond to these notices because he did not have the money with which
to pay the amount demanded and did not know where to turn. Next, he received
Notice of Levy telling him that his employer was being instructed to pay
to the IRS all available amounts except $296.15 out of his bi-weekly pay.
The taxpayer would not have been able to meet his monthly living expenses
(rent, car payment, utilities, etc.) on that amount.
Tax Solutions, P.C.’s Action Plan
- Gather the necessary information from the taxpayer
- Obtain recent pay stubs showing current and year to date income
and deductions
- Have the taxpayer complete a worksheet listing all his monthly
expenses (rent, utilities, insurance, medical expenses, vehicle expenses,
child support, etc.)
- Summarize the monthly expenses on the required IRS form
- Obtain a contact name and numbers (telephone and fax) for the taxpayer's
employer's payroll department
- Compare the taxpayer's expenses to the IRS Allowable Expense Listing
- Determine what expenses the IRS will not allow
- Calculate what the IRS will say the taxpayer has left over to pay
their taxes (if any)
- Contact the IRS Collection Division
- Request a Release of Levy and placement of the account in temporarily
uncollectible status, if the taxpayer's allowable expenses equal or
exceed his monthly income
- Request a Reduction of Levy to the amount the taxpayer can afford
to pay, if the taxpayer's monthly income exceeds his monthly expenses
- Request that the IRS notify the employer's payroll department by
fax of the Levy Release or Reduction (with a copy to Tax Solutions,
P.C.)
The Results
 |
 |
 |
 |
| |
Bi-Weekly |
Annually |
|
| Original IRS Levy |
$1,084 |
$28,184 |
|
| Revised IRS Levy |
$245 |
$6,370 |
|
| Total Levy Reduction |
$839 |
$21,814 |
|
| Cost of Service |
|
$1,125 |
|
| Additional Payroll Released to the Taxpayer |
|
$20,689 |
|
Action was taken quickly enough that the taxpayer did not have the original
Levy amount taken from any of his checks.
Replacing a Substitute for Return
The Challenge
Since the taxpayer had not filed his 1993 return, the Internal Revenue
Service prepared a Substitute for Return (SFR) and assessed tax based
on the income information reported to the IRS by the individuals and companies
who made payments to the taxpayer. (When the IRS prepares an SFR they
give the taxpayer only one exemption, the standard deduction, and the
least favorable filing status that might apply, treating them as either
single or married filing separately.) The result was that the IRS said
the taxpayer owed $38,840 in tax, penalties, and interest. If an SFR is
not challenged, it isn’t long before the State receives a report
from the IRS and issues a State delinquency notice for additional tax,
penalties, and interest.
Tax Solutions, P.C.’s Action Plan
- Obtain IRS computer listings showing:
- All income reportedly received by the taxpayer (from W-2s, 1099s,
K-1s, etc.)
- The details of the IRS' calculation of the tax, penalties, and interest
- Determine if the reported income is actually attributable to
the taxpayer
- Obtain proof of any unreimbursed expenses the taxpayer incurred
in earning the reported income
- Prepare an original return (to replace the SFR) claiming the
correct filing status and all the taxpayer's allowable expenses, deductions,
and exemptions
The Results
 |
 |
 |
| Decreased Income Tax |
$15,212 |
|
| Decreased Penalties |
$14,854 |
|
| Decreased Interest |
$6,674 |
|
| Total Savings |
$36,740 |
|
| Cost of Service |
$-494 |
|
| Net Savings |
$36,246 |
|
Installment Payment Agreement
The Challenge
The taxpayers owed $95,000 tax for a number of years' unpaid return
balances. They had significant equity in assets (their home, business,
and automobiles) but not enough available cash to pay what they owed the
IRS. The IRS was threatening to place a Lien on their property, Levy against
their bank account, and Levy against (garnish) their wages. Any of these
actions could have had a negative impact on their ability to maintain
the financing needed to run their business.
Tax Solutions, P.C.’s Action Plan
- Determine what the taxpayers could actually afford to pay (how much
available cash they had and how much they could afford in monthly payments)
- Calculate that their monthly payments could pay off $70,000 over
36 months
- Determine that the taxpayers could manage a $25,000 downpayment of
the difference to the IRS
- Research what methods are available to a taxpayer to get the IRS
to agree not to issue a Lien
- Contact the IRS Collection Division to explain the taxpayers' situation.
Offer to put up a performance bond or letter of credit guaranteeing
payment to the U.S. Treasury and, when told it can not be done, ask
for a supervisor, and then an area manager
- Obtain an informal Installment Payment Agreement for $2,250 per month
after offering to make a $25,000 downpayment (without being required
to provide a performance bond or letter of credit)
The Results
- The taxpayer were able to avoid the filing of a Lien
- The IRS did not Levy against their bank accounts or wages
- The taxpayers were able maintain the financing for their business
Cost of Service $558
Offer in Compromise
The Challenge
The taxpayers owed $200,000 for a number of years' unpaid return balances.
They did not have much equity in their residence or other significant
assets and their monthly living expenses consumed most of their monthly
income. They had attempted to do an Offer in Compromise on their own,
but it was rejected.
Tax Solutions, P.C.’s Action Plan
- Have the taxpayers complete an information and financial questionnaire
listing their assets, liabilities, monthly income, and monthly expenses
- Determine that the taxpayers could actually afford to pay $100 per
month (the amount left each month after paying their living expenses)
- Determine that the taxpayers' actual Quick Sale Net Equity (80%
of the fair market value of their assets minus any related debt) was
$0
- Obtain documents proving the taxpayers' assets' values, debts, income,
and expenses already determined
- Submit those documents along with a $4,800 Offer in Compromise to
the IRS.
- Negotiate with an IRS Offer in Compromise Specialist based on the
taxpayers' somewhat different situation 12 months later (when the IRS
finally began reviewing the Offer)
The Results
- The taxpayers' Offer of $4,800 was accepted in full payment of the
$200,000 liability.
- The taxpayers no longer needed to worry that it might be the IRS every time
the telephone rang or they went to get the mail
 |
 |
 |
| Original Balance Due |
$200,000 |
|
| Offer Accepted |
$4,800 |
|
| Savings |
$195,200 |
|
| Cost of Service |
$1,240 |
|
| Net Savings |
$193,960 |
|
|