Abusive Tax SheltersAbusive tax shelters are marketing schemes that involve artificial transactions with little or no economic reality. They often make use of unrealistic allocations, inflated appraisals, losses in connection with nonrecourse loans, mismatching of income and deductions, financing techniques that do not conform to standard commercial business practices, or the mischaracterization of the substance of the transaction. Despite appearances to the contrary, the taxpayer generally risks little. Abusive tax shelters commonly involve package deals that are designed from the start to generate losses, deductions, or credits that will be far more than present or future investment. Or, they may promise investors from the start that future inflated appraisals will enable them, for example, to reap charitable contribution deductions based on those appraisals. (But see the appraisal requirements discussed under Curbing Abusive Tax Shelters.) They are commonly marketed in terms of the ratio of tax deductions allegedly available to each dollar invested. This ratio (or "write-off") is frequently said to be several times greater than one-to-one. Since there are many abusive tax shelters, it is not possible to list all the factors you should consider in determining whether an offering is an abusive tax shelter. However, you should ask the following questions, which might provide a clue to the abusive nature of the plan.
Curbing Abusive Tax SheltersCongress has enacted a series of income tax laws designed to halt the growth of abusive tax shelters. These provisions include the following.
Projected income investment. Special rules apply to a projected income investment. To qualify as a projected income investment, a tax shelter must not be expected to reduce the cumulative tax liability of any investor during any year of the first 5 years ending after the date the investment was offered for sale. In addition, the assets of a projected income investment must not include or relate to more than an incidental interest in:
Tax shelters that qualify as projected income investments are not subject to the registration rules for tax shelters, described earlier. However, the requirement to maintain a list of investors that is in effect for tax shelters also applies to any projected income investment, except for one an investor later transfers. See Transfer of interests in a tax shelter, later. A tax shelter that previously qualified as a projected income investment may later be disqualified if, in one of its first 5 years, it reduces the cumulative tax liability of any investor. In that case, the tax shelter becomes subject to the registration rules for tax shelters, described earlier. Pre-filing notification letter. If you are an investor in an abusive tax shelter promotion, the IRS may send you a "pre-filing notification letter" if it determines that it is highly likely that there is:
You also may receive a notification letter after you file your tax return. If you have already claimed the benefits on your tax return, you will be advised that you can file an amended return. However, any penalties that apply still can be asserted. If you claim the benefits after receiving the pre-filing notification or if you fail to amend your return, you will be notified that your tax return is being examined. Normal audit and appeal procedures will be followed during the examination, and accuracy-related, civil or criminal fraud, and other penalties will be considered and, when appropriate, asserted. For information on the examination of returns, see Publication 556. Revenue rulings. The IRS has published numerous revenue rulings concluding that the claimed tax benefits of various abusive tax shelters should be disallowed. A revenue ruling is the conclusion of the IRS on how the law is applied to a particular set of facts. Revenue rulings are published in the Internal Revenue Bulletin for taxpayers' guidance and information and also for use by IRS officials. So, if your return is examined and an abusive tax shelter is identified and challenged, a published revenue ruling dealing with that type of shelter, which disallows certain claimed tax shelter benefits, could serve as the basis for the examining official's challenge of the tax benefits that you claimed. In such a case, the examiner will not compromise even if you or your representative believe that you have authority for the positions taken on your tax return.
Investor ReportingIf you include on your tax return any deduction, loss, credit or other tax benefit, or any income, from an interest in a tax shelter required to be registered, you must report the registration number that the tax shelter provided to you. (See Registration of tax shelters, earlier.) Complete and attach Form 8271 to your return to report the number and to provide other information about the tax shelter and its benefits. You must also attach Form 8271 to any application for tentative refund (Form 1045) and to any amended return (Form 1040X) on which these benefits are claimed or income is reported. If you do not include the registration number with your return, you will be subject to a penalty of $250 for each such failure, unless the failure is due to reasonable cause. Transfer of interests in a tax shelter. If you hold an investment interest in a tax shelter and later transfer that interest to another person, you must provide the tax shelter's registration number to each person to whom you transferred your interest. (However, this does not apply if your interest is in a projected income investment, described earlier.) You must also provide a notice substantially in the following form:
You have acquired an interest in [name and address of tax shelter] whose taxpayer identification number is [if any]. The Internal Revenue Service has issued [name of tax shelter] the following tax shelter registration number: [number]. You must report this registration number to the Internal Revenue Service, if you claim any deduction, loss, credit, or other tax benefit or report any income by reason of your investment in [name of tax shelter]. You must report the registration number (as well as the name and taxpayer identification number of [name of tax shelter]) on Form 8271. Form 8271 must be attached to the return on which you claim the deduction, loss, credit, or other tax benefit or report any income. Issuance of a registration number does not indicate that this investment or the claimed tax benefits have been reviewed, examined, or approved by the Internal Revenue Service.
The following requirements also apply.
If you do not maintain the required list of investors, or do not delegate a designated person or seller to maintain the list, you will be subject to a penalty of $50 for each person required to be on the list. But, you will not have to pay the penalty if you can show that the failure to comply with this requirement was due to reasonable cause and not willful neglect. The maximum penalty under this provision is $100,000 for each tax shelter in each calendar year. Special rule for projected income investment. If you are an investor who later transfers an interest in a projected income investment, described earlier, you are not required to maintain a list of investors unless the tax shelter was no longer a projected income investment, or otherwise became subject to the registration requirements, before the transfer. PenaltiesInvesting in an abusive tax shelter may be an expensive proposition when you consider all of the consequences. First, the promoter generally charges a substantial fee. If your return is examined by the IRS and a tax deficiency is determined, you will be faced with payment of more tax, interest on the underpayment, possibly a 20% accuracy-related penalty, or a 75% civil fraud penalty. You may also be subject to the penalty for failure to pay tax. These penalties are explained in the following paragraphs. Accuracy-related penalties. An accuracy- related penalty of 20% can be imposed for underpayments of tax due to:
If you are charged an accuracy-related penalty, interest will be imposed on the amount of the penalty from the due date of the return (including extensions) to the date you pay the penalty. Negligence or disregard of rules or regulations. The penalty for negligence or disregard of rules or regulations is imposed only on the part of the underpayment that is due to negligence or disregard of rules or regulations. The penalty will not be charged if you can show that you had reasonable cause for understating your tax and that you acted in good faith. Negligence includes any failure to make a reasonable attempt to comply with the provisions of the Internal Revenue Code. Disregard includes any careless, reckless, or intentional disregard. The penalty for disregard of rules and regulations can be avoided if both of the following are true.
Substantial understatement of tax. An understatement is considered to be substantial if it is more than the greater of:
Two special rules apply in the case of an understatement due to a tax shelter.
Also, the understatement penalty will not be imposed if you can show that there was reasonable cause for the underpayment caused by the understatement and that you acted in good faith. An important factor in establishing reasonable cause and good faith will be the extent of your effort to determine your proper tax liability under the law. Valuation misstatement. In general, you are liable for a 20% penalty for a substantial valuation misstatement if all of the following are true.
You may be assessed a penalty of 40% for a gross valuation misstatement. If you misstate the value or the adjusted basis of property by 400% or more of the amount determined to be correct, you will be assessed a penalty of 40%, instead of 20%, of the amount you underpaid because of the gross valuation misstatement. The penalty rate is also 40% if the property's correct value or adjusted basis is zero. Civil fraud penalty. If there is any underpayment of tax on your return due to fraud, a penalty of 75% of the underpayment will be added to your tax. Joint return. The fraud penalty on a joint return applies to a spouse only if some part of the underpayment is due to the fraud of that spouse. Failure to pay tax. If a deficiency is assessed and is not paid within 10 days of the demand for payment, an investor can be penalized with up to a 25% addition to tax if the failure to pay continues. Whether To InvestIn light of the adverse tax consequences and the substantial amount of penalties and interest that will result if the claimed tax benefits are disallowed, you should consider tax shelter investments carefully and seek competent legal and financial advice. |