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The tax policy for Offers in
Compromise is stated in 57(10)1 of the IRS Manual. It
states that the compromise process is available "to provide delinquent
taxpayers with a fresh start toward future compliance with the tax
laws."
Section 57(10)1 IRS Manual states:
Policy Statement P-5-100 sets forth the Service’s position
on using compromises.
The Service will accept an Offer in Compromise when it is
unlikely that the tax liability can be collected in full and the
amount offered reasonably reflects collection potential. An offer in
compromise is a legitimate alternative to declaring a case as
currently not collectible or to a protracted installment agreement.
The goal is to achieve collection of what is potentially collectible
at the earliest possible time and at the least cost to the government.
The success of the compromise program will be assured only if
taxpayers make adequate compromise proposals consistent with their
ability to pay and the Service makes prompt and reasonable decisions.
Taxpayers are expected to provide reasonable documentation to verify
their ability to pay. The ultimate goal is a compromise which is in
the best interest of both the taxpayer and the Service. Acceptance of
an adequate offer will also result in creating, for the taxpayer, an
expectation of and a fresh start toward compliance with all future
filing and payment requirements.
Section 57(1)1.2 of the IRS Manual deals with the IRS
Compromise Objectives:
To resolve accounts receivable which cannot be collected in
full or on which there is a legitimate dispute as to what is owed.
To effect collection of what could reasonably be collected
at the earliest time possible at the least cost to the government.
To give taxpayers a fresh start to enable them to
voluntarily comply with the tax law.
To collect funds which may not be collectible through any
other means.
Section 7122(a) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986
authorizes the Secretary of the Treasury to "compromise any civil or
criminal case arising under the internal revenue laws."
Section 301.7122-1(a) of the regulations states that the IRS
may compromise a civil case only upon one or both of the following two
grounds:
Doubt as to liability; or
Doubt as to collectibility.
The regulations authorize a compromise to the extent the Government
cannot collect the amounts owed.
An offer in compromise relates to the entire tax liability
of the taxpayer and all question of that liability will be
conclusively settled in that agreement.
H.R. 2676, The Internal Revenue Service Restructuring and Reform
Act of 1998, signed by the President on July 22, 1998, Adds
subsection © to section 7122, as follows:
© STANDARD for EVALUATION of OFFERS
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In General — The Secretary shall prescribe guidelines for
officers and employees of the Internal Revenue Service to determine
whether an offer-in-compromise is adequate and should be accepted to
resolve a dispute.
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Allowances for Basic Living Expenses
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In General — In prescribing guidelines under paragraph
(1), the Secretary develop and publish schedules of national and
local allowances designed to provide that taxpayers entering into
a compromise have an adequate means to provide for basic living
expenses. |
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Use of Schedules — The guidelines shall provide that
officers and employees of the Internal Revenue Service shall
determine, on the basis of the facts and circumstances of each
taxpayer, whether the use of the schedules published under
subparagraph (A) is appropriate and shall not use the schedules to
the extent such use would result in the taxpayer not having
adequate means to provide for basic living expenses. |
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Special Rules Relating to Treatment of Offers
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An officer or employee of the Internal Revenue Service
shall not reject an offer-in-compromise from a low-income taxpayer
solely on the basis of the amount of the offer, and |
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In the case of an offer-in-compromise which relates only
to issues of liability of the taxpayer—
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Such offer shall not be rejected solely because the
Secretary is unable to locate the taxpayer’s return or return
information for verification of such liability and |
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The taxpayer shall not be required to provide a
financial statement." |
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The Conference Report to H.R. 2676 states:
The Code permits the IRS to compromise a taxpayer’s tax liability.
An offer-in-compromise is an offer by the taxpayer to settle unpaid
tax accounts for less than the full amount of the assessed balance
due. An offer-in-compromise may be submitted for all types of taxes,
as well as interest and penalties, arising under the Internal Revenue
Code.
There are two bases on which an offer can be made: doubt as to
liability for the amount owed and doubts as to the ability to pay the
amount owed.
A compromise agreement based on doubt as to ability to pay requires
the taxpayer to file returns and pay taxes for five years from the
date the IRS accepts the offer. Failure to do so permits the IRS to
begin immediate collection actions for the original amount of the
liability. The Internal Revenue Manual provides guidelines for revenue
officers to determine whether an offer-in-compromise is adequate. An
offer is adequate if it reasonably reflects collection potential.
Although the revenue office is instructed to consider the taxpayer'’
assets and future and present income, the IRS advises that rejection
of an offer solely based on narrow assets and income evaluations
should be avoided.
Pursuant to the IRS, Collection normally is withheld during the
period an offer-in-compromise is pending, unless it is determined that
the offer is a delaying tactic and collection is in jeopardy.
The Conference Report explanation notes (page 288)
that under the Senate amendment to H.R. 2676 the IRS is:
"required to consider the facts and circumstances of a particular
taxpayer’s case in determining whether the national and local
schedules are inadequate for that particular taxpayer. If the facts
indicate that the use of scheduled allowances would be inadequate
under the circumstances, the taxpayer is not limited by the national
or local allowances."
The Conference Report also notes (page 288) the
following:
Liberal acceptance policy — The Senate amendment provides
that the IRS will adopt a liberal acceptance policy for
offers-in-compromise to provide an incentive for taxpayers to continue
to file tax returns and continue to pay their taxes.
The Conference Agreement also states (page 289) that the
Secretary is authorized to prescribe guidelines for the IRS to
determine whether an offer-in-compromise is adequate and "should be
accepted to resolve a dispute." The Conferees expect that the present
regulations will be expanded so as to permit the IRS, in certain
circumstances, to consider:
Additional factors (i.e., factors other than doubt as to liability
or collectibility) in determining whether to compromise the income tax
liabilities of individual taxpayers. For example, the conferees
anticipate that the IRS will take into account factors such as equity,
hardship, and public policy where a compromise of an individual
taxpayer’s income tax liability would promote effective tax
administration. The conferees anticipate that, among other situations,
the IRS may utilize this new authority to resolve long-standing cases
by foregoing penalties and interest which have accumulated as a result
of delay in determining the taxpayer’s liability. The conferees
believe that the ability to compromise tax liability and to make
payments of tax liability by installment enhances taxpayer compliance.
In addition, the conferees believe that the IRS should be flexible in
finding ways to work with taxpayers who are sincerely trying to meet
their obligations and remain in the tax system. Accordingly, the
conferees believe that the IRS should make it easier for taxpayers to
enter into offer-in-compromise agreements, and should do more to
educate the taxpaying public about the availability of such
agreements.
The report states that its provisions are generally effective for
offers-in-compromise submitted after the date of enactment. The date
of enactment is June 22, 1998.
IRS Restructuring and Reform Act of 1998, the IRS has
published its comments on section 3462 as follows:
Section 3462
A. Provision covered: R.R.A. § 3462. Offers-In-Compromise.
I.R.C. §§ 6159, 6331, and 7122
B. Background: Section 7122 of the Internal Revenue Code
generally provides that the Service may compromise any case arising
under the internal revenue laws, prior to referring that case to the
Department of Justice for defense or prosecution. Current regulations
provide two bases for compromise: doubt as to collectibility and doubt
as to liability. The internal revenue manual provides guidance for
determining an adequate doubt as to collectibility offer. Congress
believes that the Service should be more flexible in working with
taxpayers who are sincerely trying to satisfy their tax obligations
and, thus, the Service should make it easier for taxpayers to enter
into offers-in-compromise. The tax writing committees have indicated
that taxpayer compliance is enhanced by the ability to compromise and
to make payments via an installment agreement.
C. Change(s): The following changes have been made with
regard to the offer in compromise procedures:
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The applicability of the allowable expense procedures will
be determined on the facts and circumstances of each taxpayer's
case. |
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Offers from low income taxpayers cannot be rejected solely
on the basis of the amount of the offer. |
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Taxpayers will no longer be required to waive the statute of
limitations on collection. |
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Regulations will be expanded to provide additional bases for
compromise, other than doubt as to liability and doubt as to
collectibility. |
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Compromise of a joint liability that is defaulted because of
the actions of one spouse, can be reinstated as to the nondefaulting
spouse, upon application. |
D. Impact: This provision expands the authority for the
Service to accept offers in compromise. The current offer in
compromise program will, thus, be substantially revised with the
drafting of the new regulations. In the interim, however, most of the
changes are directed at providing greater consideration to the
taxpayer in resolving collection issues through compromise. For
example, all the facts and circumstances of the taxpayer’s condition
must be considered in determining the applicability of the allowable
expense procedures. Because the offer in compromise program will be
administered with more flexibility, offer receipts will likely
increase.
E. Necessary Actions:
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Actions/Procedures
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Notice/instructions to the field regarding deviations from
allowable expense standards. Determinations of when to deviate
will be in the discretion of the offer examiner/RO/group manager.
Procedures will be forthcoming. |
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Determination of what is a "low income" taxpayer and
creation of supplemental procedures based on that designation.
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Define what is a "pending" installment agreement and
create procedures/transaction codes to ensure that levies are not
issued while such agreements are pending. |
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Modify Form 656 to eliminate statutory waiver
provisions; to provide for severability in the event of default by
jointly liable taxpayers with joint offers. |
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Preparation of statement regarding the rights of taxpayers
and the obligations of the Service in the offer in compromise
process; and an instruction to taxpayers with offers of the
advantage of notifying the Service of any change in address or
marital status. |
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Define/clarify "independent administrative review" for
purposes of proposed offer in compromise and installment agreement
rejections. |
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Draft regulations providing additional bases for the
compromise of individual income tax liabilities, which include
considerations such as equity, hardship, and public policy. |
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Things we can do:
The Service can continue to use current Form 656 for offers in
compromise until the form can be modified. However, the waiver
provided in the current form will expire as of December 31, 2002. If
the ten year collection statute is still open on that date for the
liabilities contained in the offer agreement, the offer agreement
may remain viable. For offers entered into after December 31, 1999,
or pending on that date, the statute will be suspended because of
the Service’s inability to collect by levy. [For taxpayers who
submit offers between the date of enactment and December 31, 2002,
where the CSED for the periods contained in the offer expire on or
before December 31, 2002, collection action must stop as of that
date.] |
An addendum to Form 656 should be created that provides for
severability of a joint offer after the payments required under the
offer are satisfied, so that in the event of a default relating to the
compliance provisions, the compromise will only default as to the
noncompliant party. The addendum will be in use until Form 656 can be
modified. Because the Service can no longer condition the acceptance
of an installment agreement on the taxpayer’s waiver of the right to
receive a state income tax refund, any language on an installment
agreement form authorizing the Service to levy on state income tax
refunds as a condition of the agreement should be eliminated. |