Volume 12 Issue 2 |
 |
Mar/Apr 2000 |
Nailing Jell-O® to the Wall?
© by Tax & Business Professionals
Nailing Jell-O® to the wall may be
a challenge, but it is no more difficult than getting records and information
from the IRS! Through our associate law firm, Newland & Associates, PLC, we
regularly deal with the IRS Service Centers and various other IRS offices.
The responses we routinely receive from the IRS to our
requests for documents and information are alarmingly inconsistent. For example,
consider the difficulties encountered when trying to obtain taxpayer
transcripts.
How do you determine if your client has tax credits stemming
from withholding or estimated tax payments?
You could ask your client and get the inevitable forlorn look
indicating the chances of his having such records are as remote as successfully
nailing you know what to the wall. In some cases, clients do not even
remember if they filed returns for particular years.
Often, the only way to determine if returns were filed, or
estimated credits paid, is to get a transcript from the IRS. A transcript
is a computerized record of when returns were filed, by whom, filing status,
dates of filing, assessments, payments, credits, and other information.
In other words, a transcript is a chronology of tax
events, or non-events, for a taxpayer arranged by year. The IRS usually
maintains transcripts for most open years where there are unfiled returns
or unpaid taxes.
So How Do You Get Transcripts?
There is a one-page IRS Form 4506 called Request for Copy
or Transcript of Tax Form. Item 8 instructs you to "Check only one box
to show what you want. There is no charge for items 8a [transcript], b [verification
of nonfiling], or c [W-2 information]." The only charge is for
copies of returns [Item 8d ], which cost $23 each.
Despite the simplicity of Form 4506, requests for transcripts
[option 8a], have repeatedly been returned, boldly stamped "REJECTED"
for lack of payment B when no payment is required! Usually the attachments to
the response indicate that the IRS employee processing the request did not read
the form.
For example, in December, 1999, we filed a Form 4506 and
received a response in March, 2000, informing us, as usual, that a request for a
transcript was rejected because payment was not enclosed. In a subsequent
telephone call to the IRS Service Center concerning the requested transcript, we
were informed there were no transcripts for that year.
Luckily, in January, 2000, we had called the local revenue
officer (with whom the taxpayer's installment payment agreement had been
negotiated) and asked for the transcript. It was furnished to us in about a
week, without charge!
When we complained to the District Director's office about
the confusing responses, we were told NOT to use the Form 4506 to
request transcripts! Instead, we were told to fax (don't write or call) a
request to the IRS Practitioner Hotline!
The suggestion by the District Director’s office not to
mail Form 4506 is in direct contradiction to the instructions on the back of the
Form. A few days later, when I talked with a Supervisor at the Philadelphia
Service Center, I was advised to follow yet a different procedure!
In another non-filing matter, after we requested transcripts
from the Service Center, we received a written response that no transcripts were
available for 1993 and 1994. For the years, 1995 and 1996, we received an
unrequested summary of what the non-filed returns reflected, which was, of
course, all "zeros!"
Responses from the IRS Service Center often generate
bewildering and inconsistent responses. Some IRS employees resolutely state that
there are no transcripts available prior to 1995, while others claim there are
always transcripts for all years where tax is due or returns are not yet filed.
It seems communication among the Service Centers, regional offices, and the
public is woeful.
While it is easy to launch diatribes about IRS blunders and
inconsistencies, this accomplishes little. What are practitioners to do? Don't
take an initial "no" for an answer when you are trying to obtain essential
records. If the matter warrants further effort, try different IRS offices and
employees.
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Published jointly by The Tax & Business Professionals, Inc. and the law firm of Newland & Associates as a service to their clients.
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, or visit our web site at http://www.tax-business.com.
For a full range of business law and tax-related services, call the law firm of Newland & Associates at (703) 330-0000.
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While designed to be accurate, this publication is not intended to constitute the rendering of legal, accounting, or other professional services or to serve as a substitute for such services.
Redistribution or other commercial use of the material contained in Tax & Business Insights is expressly prohibited without the written permission of Tax and Business Professionals, Inc.
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