gottago wrote:
Trouble is, the levies already occurred in August and October of 2006 and the IRS received all the money at that time. Is there a procedure I can do to request return of the money that was levied while the CDPH was pending since the levy action was not sustained?
It further states that the OIC filed in September of 2006 is currently under review, waiting for the processing of returns filed with the "underreporter" unit in Ogden in late June of 2007 but that it "may" be rejected since the offer does not equal the "reasonable collection potential" determined by the IRS based on my previous earnings since I do not have a job.
However, the "currently not collectible" status will remain in effect until the time I am able to pay the liability or the collection statute expires.
Attorney says he has done all he can for us in terms of the OIC and if they reject it I am SOOL and will remain uncollectible until my employment situation changes. Spouse does not make enough for us to afford any monthly payments at this time.
If the OIC is ultimately rejected and I can not find a job I am unsure what the next step is.
I just want to ask if there is a procedure to request the return of the money levied that I can do on my own since I can not afford to pay any more money for an attorney.
As far as asking for a return of already-levied funds, I'm not sure - I think that Appeals determination will merely ensure that a levy is stopped, not guarantee that funds already levied will be returned - after all, they have been applied to a debt that you DO owe. Bad news for you, the levy is already stopped because you no longer have a job. This wasn't my department when I worked for the IRS. Anybody know better than me?
As far as being SOOL if the OIC is rejected goes: not necessarily. If you are placed on CNC, the lien will remain in place, any future refunds will be applied to the debt, but no other collection activity will take place. Payments are not required, and any payments you DO make will not cause the CNC status to be removed. Basically, the IRS has decided that, at this time, you can't pay them, and it isn't worth their time to try to squeeze blood from a rock.
This can change if your income increases. This is based on future tax return filings.
If your income remains approximately the same, then you'll probably never hear from the IRS again, save a letter they send once a year reminding you that you owe them money but can't pay.
Once the collection statute expires, the debt will go away and the liens will release. This should, but does not always, happen automatically.
Make sure to check with the IRS to ensure that the OIC was rejected, and that your account was changed from "pending OIC" to "Currently Not Collectible" status - because an OIC pauses the statute clock, and you want it to start running again ASAP. The sooner it expires, the sooner this all goes away.