GAO Reports  
GGD-97-34 March 12, 1997

Tax Policy: Information on the Joint &
Several Liability Standard

Pursuant to a legislative requirement, GAO reported on several issues related to the joint and several liability standard that applies to jointly filed federal income tax returns, focusing on: (1) the potential universe of taxpayers that may be eligible for innocent spouse relief; (2) the Internal Revenue Service's (IRS) practices and procedures for handling requests for innocent spouse relief; (3) whether the innocent spouse provisions provide the same treatment for all taxpayers; (4) the potential effects of replacing the joint and several liability standard with a proportionate liability standard; (5) the potential effects on IRS of requiring it to abide by the terms of divorce decrees when those decrees allocate tax liabilities; and (6) the potential effects on IRS of changing the law so that community income of one spouse cannot be seized to satisfy tax liabilities incurred by the other spouse before their marriage.

GAO noted that: (1) it estimated that about 587,000 of the 48 million couples who filed joint returns in 1992 had additional tax assessments of more than $500; (2) this estimate represents the maximum number of taxpayers potentially eligible for innocent spouse relief, however, fewer would probably actually qualify; (3) although any taxpayer signing a joint return may seek innocent spouse relief, according to IRS officials, divorced taxpayers are more likely to face the most egregious problems; (4) the limited information that was available indicated that IRS received few requests for innocent spouse relief and denied most of them; (5) GAO observed that IRS publications provide little information on how to request innocent spouse relief and that the publications covering procedures related to the need for relief have no information on relief; (6) critics of the innocent spouse provisions contend that the current provisions do not ensure that all deserving taxpayers receive equivalent relief; (7) GAO estimated that for tax year 1992, an additional 42,600 divorced taxpayers might have been eligible for innocent spouse relief if the dollar thresholds had been eliminated; (8) an alternative way to ensure that taxpayers are not held liable for their spouses' taxes would be to replace the joint and several liability standard with a proportionate liability standard; (9) under such a standard, taxpayers would be responsible only for the taxes generated by their individual incomes and assets or, for taxpayers living in community property states, for the tax associated with one-half of the community income; (10) divorcing couples may specify in their divorce decrees how future liabilities resulting from their prior joint returns are handled; (11) requiring IRS to be bound by divorce decrees is impractical for two major reasons; (12) federal tax matters are the exclusive jurisdiction of certain federal courts, while divorce matters are generally handled by state courts; (13) IRS officials also raised related concerns, such as whether their interpretation of lengthy and complex divorce decrees would increase the number of appeals and whether divorce decrees would be manipulated to reduce tax liabilities (14) IRS can treat taxpayers living in community property states differently from taxpayers living in common law states when collecting taxes; and (15) since IRS does not maintain data on how often these levy actions occur,*

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