Recently, I wrote an article for the Hennepin County Lawyer addressing some of the kinds of tax questions that non-tax attorneys receive from their clients. The text of this article is included below: Tax touches almost everything. As a tax attorney, this keeps my job very interesting. This also means that even non-tax attorneys likely [...]
Appearing in the October of 2021 issue of ALI CLE’s The Practical Lawyer is an article by Kathleen E. (Splett) Pfutzenreuter and Benjamin A. Wagner addressing a variety of tax topics that small and solo firm lawyers should be ready to answer. The tax topics covered include: when to talk to a tax accountant or [...]
The American Rescue Plan Act established the Restaurant Revitalization Fund (RRF) to provide support to eligible entities that suffered revenue losses related to the COVID-19 pandemic. Specifically, the U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) will provide restaurants and other eligible entities with funding equal to their COVID-19 pandemic-related revenue loss up to $10 million per business [...]
The United States Department of Treasury (the Treasury) issued “The American Families Plan Tax Compliance Agenda,” detailing how the current administration intends to tackle the ever-looming noncompliance issue. This report was a follow up to the April of 2021 American Families Plan that included proposals that the administration announced to increase tax compliance. The Treasury [...]
The on-going COVID-19 pandemic has had a dramatic impact on the daily operations for the Internal Revenue Service (IRS). The IRS has appeared to have done its level best to provide taxpayers with options for securing vital documentation. Though, taxpayers attempting to obtain a lien release or certificate of discharge have experienced some delays in [...]
It is not uncommon for small businesses to rely on friends and family for loans to assist the business in meeting operating expenses. This is even more true given the on-going pandemic. Small businesses are scrambling to make sure they can meeting their operating expenses. Unfortunately, many of those small business owners are so focused [...]
The United States Tax Court (Court) recently issued a decision highlighting, yet again, the importance of clear drafting in settlement agreements. In Doyle v. Comm’r of Internal Revenue, T.C. Memo. 2019-8, the Court held that the taxpayer could not exclude amounts, pursuant to Internal Revenue Code § 104(a)(2), that he received from a settlement agreement. [...]
The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) can utilize its jeopardy levy function (i.e., taking a taxpayer’s assets) to pursue a taxpayer’s assets prior to issuing a jeopardy assessment (i.e., telling a taxpayer how much they owe). In Chief Counsel Advice (CCA) 201830013, the IRS clarified the circumstances in which it would take such drastic steps. In [...]
When an individual has outstanding federal tax liabilities, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) has a number of tools at its disposal to try to collect the liabilities from the individual, including levying the individual’s wages (I.R.C. § 6331(a)). When the IRS issues a wage levy notice to an employer, the employer must pay the IRS [...]
The Internal Revenue Service’s (IRS’s) Offshore Voluntary Disclosure Program (Program) has elements of the Program that will no longer be available to certain taxpayers on September 28, 2018. For more on those elements, please see our previous posts here and here. Following the IRS’s decision to eliminate elements of the Program, it also issued Technical [...]