Federal
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March 21, 2023
IRS Plans To Float Guidance Treating NFTs As Collectibles
The Internal Revenue Service and U.S. Department of the Treasury are looking to issue guidance that would treat some nonfungible tokens as collectibles for tax purposes, which could subject NFTs to a higher capital gains tax rate, the agencies said Tuesday.
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March 21, 2023
Firms Urge Justices To Nix 6th Circ. OK Of IRS Summonses
The U.S. Supreme Court should reverse a Sixth Circuit decision permitting the IRS to go ahead with summonses for the banking records of two law firms and the wife of a man owing $2 million in taxes, the firms and the woman told the justices.
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March 21, 2023
9th Circ. Says Couple's Biz Losses Correctly Denied
The U.S. Tax Court correctly denied a California couple who sold cruises the business-loss deductions they claimed in 2017 and 2018 because they couldn't substantiate their expenses, the Ninth Circuit said Tuesday.
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March 21, 2023
Calif. Restaurateur Sues To Keep Bank Records From IRS
A California developer and former restaurateur who was sentenced to prison for defrauding banks of $22 million in commercial loans asked a federal court to block an IRS summons for his bank account information, saying the agency was improperly investigating his tax history.
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March 21, 2023
IRS To Focus On Speed, Access, Enforcement, Official Says
The Internal Revenue Service wants to improve taxpayers' digital access to information and speed up processing of amended returns while also increasing enforcement attention on high-net-worth individuals and businesses, a top agency official said Tuesday.
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March 21, 2023
Ohio Trucking Co. On Hook For $1.1M Employment Tax Bill
A couple who ran an Ohio trucking company owe nearly $1.1 million in unpaid federal employment tax liabilities for 2008 through 2015, the U.S. government said in a complaint seeking summary judgment against the couple.
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March 21, 2023
Justices Won't Consider Neurosurgeon's $1.9M Tax Loss Bid
The U.S. Supreme Court won't weigh in on a neurosurgeon's bid for a $1.9 million tax loss attributable to alleged patent infringement on an imaging technique after the Ninth Circuit declined to revisit it, the justices said Monday.
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March 21, 2023
Fed. Circ. Urged To Upend Actavis' $12M Legal Fee Deduction
The Federal Circuit should reverse a decision allowing drugmaker Actavis to deduct as regular business expenses $12 million it spent fighting lawsuits as it tried to secure approval to sell generic birth control and other drugs, the government argued.
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March 21, 2023
Nurse Owes Tax, Frivolous Argument Penalty, Tax Court Says
A nurse has to pay taxes on around $56,000 in income after the U.S. Tax Court found that her challenges to the tax treatment of her wages were groundless and held her liable for a penalty for making frivolous arguments.
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March 20, 2023
Offshore Oil Co. Seeks $817K In Foreign Tax Credit Case
A Houston oil driller asked the U.S. to refund $817,000 in foreign tax the company paid to the Mexican government after the company submitted its request on the day it claims the statute of limitations expired, according to a complaint filed in Texas federal court.
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March 20, 2023
House Tax Chair Wants Child Credit With Work Provision
The chair of the House Ways and Means Committee said during House Republicans' annual issues conference Monday that he would support an expanded child tax credit but would like to see the expansion paired with work requirements.
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March 20, 2023
More Guidance Coming On Corp. AMT, Treasury Official Says
A U.S. Treasury Department official acknowledged Monday that the agency has thus far put forth only limited guidance on carrying out the new corporate alternative minimum tax but said officials are working to come up with a comprehensive set of rules.
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March 20, 2023
Couple, IRS Agree To End Suit Over Tax Records
A former insurance broker and his wife agreed to dismiss their case against the IRS seeking copies of their tax returns, foreign bank account reporting forms and other documents, the couple and the agency said in federal court.
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March 20, 2023
US House Bill Would Repeal Excise Tax On Wagering
The federal excise tax on wagering would be repealed under a bill introduced in the U.S. House of Representatives.
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March 20, 2023
IRS Urges Court To Reject FOIA Demands From Exec's Widow
A D.C. federal court shouldn't force the IRS to process 10,000 pages of documents per month while responding to a request from a now-deceased former software executive for records on liens and assessments made against him, the government argued, saying such a schedule would be resource-intensive.
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March 20, 2023
Calif. Attorney, Husband Convicted Of Tax Crimes
A California attorney and her husband were found guilty of trying to block an IRS audit of their tax returns, on which the lawyer's husband, a mortgage broker, fabricated $800,000 in business expenses, according to a California federal court.
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March 20, 2023
IRS Official Signals Flexibility For Foreign Credit Exception
U.S. companies' intangible property licensing agreements may not necessarily need "the magical word 'royalty'" to qualify for an exception under proposed rules that would otherwise deny credits for certain foreign withholding taxes on royalty payments, an IRS official said Monday.
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March 20, 2023
Settlement OK'd In $3B Conservation Easement Case
A Georgia federal judge approved a settlement Monday permanently barring EcoVest Capital from making deals involving deductions for qualified conservation easement contributions, ending a government lawsuit that had accused the company of running a $3 billion tax scheme.
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March 17, 2023
Senate Bill Would Hike SALT Deduction Cap For Joint Filers
The federal cap on state and local tax deductions for joint returns would increase to $20,000 under a bill introduced in the U.S. Senate.
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March 17, 2023
Expat Atty Asks Supreme Court To Hear Transition Tax Appeal
An American expat asked the U.S. Supreme Court to hear his case against regulations implementing the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act's transition tax for overseas profits.
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March 17, 2023
Ohio Asks Supreme Court To Review ARPA Tax Cut Limit Case
Ohio asked the U.S. Supreme Court to review the Sixth Circuit's ruling throwing out its challenge to the provision in the American Rescue Plan Act that prohibits states from using the funding in the act to offset tax cuts.
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March 17, 2023
IRS Says Late Refund Requires Timely Protective Claim
The Internal Revenue Service can't offer a refund on a tax overpayment outside the claim window if an earlier request for a nominal amount came on time but lacked the elements of a protective claim, the agency said in a program manager technical advice memorandum.
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March 17, 2023
Tax Return Preparers Sentenced In $1.8M False Filing Scheme
Five Texas tax return preparers were sentenced to prison for filing false returns and generating sham refunds for clients in a scheme that cost the U.S. government $1.8 million, prosecutors said.
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March 17, 2023
Tax Court Backs IRS' Denial Of Collection Alternative
The Internal Revenue Service did no wrong in denying a Texan's proposed collection alternative, the U.S. Tax Court said in a decision released Friday.
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March 17, 2023
Senators Call FinCEN Beneficial Ownership Rule Too Onerous
The Financial Crimes Enforcement Network ran astray of Congress in a proposal that would limit access to beneficial ownership information through onerous safeguards such as requiring law enforcement to obtain a judge's order, a bipartisan group of senators said in a letter.
Expert Analysis
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Stock Buyback Excise Tax Guidance A Mixed Bag For SPACs
Recent IRS guidance on the new stock repurchase excise tax includes a welcome exception for publicly traded special-purpose acquisition companies but does not exclude redemptions in connection with a de-SPAC transaction, and further guidance is needed to clarify ambiguities around the exception's application, say Olga Bogush and Evgeny Magidenko at ArentFox Schiff.
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Crypto Coverage After FTX Fall: Accountant And Atty Liability
The recent fall of cryptocurrency firm FTX highlights complexities regarding accounting and tax reporting for digital assets, and reveals lawyers’ potential liability exposure when providing services to crypto firms — as a result, insurers may face unintended vulnerabilities related to this nebulous landscape, say Anjali Das and Farzana Ahmed at Wilson Elser.
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The Forces Defining Sales Tax Policy And Compliance In 2023
In the coming year, expect to see tax policymakers grapple with the complexity of state and local tax compliance, cryptocurrency, metaverse transactions, and more, says Scott Peterson at Avalara.
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Inflation Reduction Act's Methane Tax May Be Unenforceable
Recent legislation directs the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to impose a first-ever direct charge on methane emissions from oil and gas operations — but two fundamental problems with the formula for calculating this tax could make it impossible for the EPA to implement, say Poe Leggette and Bailey Bridges at BakerHostetler.
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Atty-Client Privilege Arguments Give Justices A Moving Target
Recent oral arguments before the U.S. Supreme Court in a case regarding the scope of the attorney-client privilege appeared to raise more questions about multipurpose counsel communications than they answered, as the parties presented shifting iterations of a predictable, easily applied test for evaluating the communications' purpose, say Trey Bourn and Thomas DiStanislao at Butler Snow.
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Industry Takeaways From IRS Guidance On EV Tax Credits
The IRS and U.S. Department of the Treasury’s recently issued documents on tax credit eligibility for clean vehicle purchases showcases three important points for the electric vehicle industry, including emphasis on the importance of in-service dates, guidance on how leased vehicles could be evaluated, and insight into manufacturing requirements, says Levi McAllister at Morgan Lewis.
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States Must Align Distribution Age Rules With Secure 2.0
To prevent unintended escheatment of retirement benefits, states will need to undertake legislative efforts to amend unclaimed property standards that conflict with the Secure 2.0 Act's required minimum distribution age increases, says Michael Giovannini at Alston & Bird.
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The IRS' APA Rulemaking Journey: There And Back Again
Attorneys at Dentons examine recent challenges in which taxpayers successfully argued Internal Revenue Service rulemaking was invalid under the Administrative Procedure Act, how tax exceptionalism and U.S. Supreme Court regulatory deference prompted such challenges, and similar challenges the agency will likely face following this line of cases.
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Tax Court Ruling Should Allay Post-Boechler Concerns
An unusually long U.S. Tax Court ruling in Hallmark Research Collective v. Commissioner, confirming that deficiency deadlines are jurisdictional, should reassure practitioners concerned about the statutory time limit implications of last year's U.S. Supreme Court Boechler v. Commissioner ruling and reaffirm the vital role of the Tax Court itself, says James Creech at Baker Tilly.
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Unpacking The Interim Guidance On New Stock Buyback Tax
The U.S. Department of the Treasury and Internal Revenue Service's recent notice on applying the newly effective excise tax on stock repurchases provides much-needed clarity on the tax's scope, which is much broader than anticipated given its underlying policy rationale, say attorneys at Eversheds Sutherland.
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The Cryptocurrency Law And Policy Outlook For 2023
The digital asset sector saw significant losses in 2022, amid a continuing lack of guidance about how such assets should be taxed, but new government regulation, growing participation by traditional financial players and other factors should spur recovery in the coming year, says Joshua Smeltzer at Gray Reed.
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IRS Will Use New Resources To Increase Scrutiny In 2023
The new year promises to be a busy one for the Internal Revenue Service, which is poised to apply the boost in funding provided by the Inflation Reduction Act to bolster and expand its enforcement capability, and there are four areas to watch, say attorneys at Skadden.
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How Cos. Can Prep For Alcohol Beverage Excise Tax Changes
The Craft Beverage Modernization Act will soon undergo a transition in administration to the Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau, and importers or producers should address any issues that may arise under the act, such as foreign producers not being familiar with the mechanics of the TTB, say Louis Terminello and Bradley Berkman at Greenspoon Marder.