So far, not bad. But now watch Pete run off into the weeds:A Few Words About "Deficiencies"
When someone submits information returns to the Internal Revenue Service asserting the payment of “income” to me, such as W-2s or 1099s, the law requires that person to also send copies to me. The reason for that requirement is to afford me notice-- so that I can affirm, dispute, and/or correct, such assertions in my own annual filing. If I do not do one of these things, the IRS will act according to those unchallenged assertions (since they are the only evidence on the record), treat them as correct, and send me a prospective bill for what it calculates the proper resulting tax to be.
There are at least two mechanisms by which this "billing" can happen: One involves the ‘service’ creating and signing a return, based on the assertion that a required return was not filed, or, if it is undeniable that a return was submitted, the assertion that it met the statutory definition of "frivolous", and thus can be treated as "unfiled". However, such service-created returns are only prima facie good and sufficient-- meaning that they can be rebutted.
Wrong. Without quibbling about the use of the term "1040," I would say that the IRS is authorized under section 6020(a) to prepare federal income tax returns for a taxpayer (individual, corporate, or otherwise), to be signed by that taxpayer.In addition (and more significantly), only a limited list of return types can be created this way under the current regulatory regime, and 1040s are not among them.
Further, the IRS is separately authorized under section 6020(b) to prepare federal income tax returns for a taxpayer without regard to a taxpayer signature (such as in cases where the taxpayer apparently is not showing any signs of ever making a return). Of course, neither a 6020(a) return nor a 6020(b) return is required in order for the IRS to assert a deficiency -- but that's a different story.
Pete continues:
Wrong again. The statute does not limit the information that may be used by the Secretary to information that is within the "personal knowledge" of the Secretary in the sense in which you are using the term. The statute is very liberal about the kind of "knowledge" the Secretary may use. The law says that "the Secretary [of the Treasury or his delegate] shall make such return from his own knowledge and from such information as he can obtain through testimony or otherwise."(Furthermore, no one in the ‘service’ is equipped with the personal knowledge needed for executing such a return about a private-sector individual, even if 1040s could be created in this way.)
See 26 USC section 6020(b)(1).
Pete continues:
Other Quatloos regulars may correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't the term "SFR" actually used within the Service to mean a 6020(b) return? If so, then what Pete is describing is not "another way," it's the "same way." I think what Pete may be driving at is that the IRS can get down to issuing a statutory notice of deficiency either WITH or WITHOUT having to "prepare" a 6020(b) return or a "substitute for return." If that's what Pete meant, then I agree. Again, other Quatloos regulars may be able to steer me in the right direction here.The other way is the creation of a "shadow return"-- unsigned, with no independent legal standing; just a form, or ‘module’ on which the assertions made on the information returns can be entered (that is, amounts of “income” received and amounts withheld). Such a module is known as a "Substitute For Return", or "SFR", and its use is also predicated on the failure of the targeted individual having filed a real return (or the pretense that no real return has been filed).
Anyway, Pete goes on:
[ . . . .] Once created, the module is then used as the basis for calculating a prospective “deficiency”-- that is, the difference between the correct amount of tax that would be due if the "income" assertions on the module are taken as correct, and the amount shown on the module as paid-in. [ . . . .] The “deficiency” is then “billed” by way of a scary-sounding ‘Notice of Deficiency’. [ . . . ]
http://www.losthorizons.com/appendix.htm
(bolding added).
Wrong, Pete. The amount "billed", as you put it, on Statutory Notice of Deficiency is not computed that way, or at least it should not be computed that way. Let's illustrate. Multiple choice problem:
Tom Taxpayer files his Form 1040 tax return showing his tax liability as being $10,000, but has paid in only $8,000 (through W-2 withholding and some interim estimated payments). Tom shows on the return that he understands that he still owes $2,000, and includes a statement saying that he just does not have the money to pay it yet. The IRS comes in for some reason (possibly unrelated to Tom's lack of funds) and examines the return. Upon completion of the examination, the IRS contends that, based on various understatements in the amount of income Tom reported, the correct amount of tax is $15,000, and that Tom actually owes $7,000 (i.e., $15,000 minus $8,000). The IRS issues a statutory notice of deficiency. The "deficiency" amount for purposes of the statute covering the statutory notice of deficiency to be issued by the IRS is:
A. $2,000
B. $6,000
C. $7,000
D. none of the above.
The correct answer is D, none of the above. The "deficiency" amount under the statutory definition is $5,000 (the $15,000 that the IRS contends is the correct tax, less the $10,000 that Tom showed as tax on the return, without deducting the amounts paid and credited). The $8,000 that Tom has paid is not part of this computation. See Internal Revenue Code section 6211(a) and section 6211(b)(1).
As I stated in another Quatloos thread:
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=3716&p=57736&hilit= ... ncy#p57736[ . . . . ] the "deficiency" [for purposes of the Statutory Notice of Deficiency] is generally the excess of what the IRS CLAIMS is the correct amount of tax over the amount that the taxpayer claimed ON THE RETURN to be the correct tax amount -- with both amounts generally computed without regard to how much has actually been "paid" or "unpaid" (i.e., an "apples to apples" comparison). This is a different meaning from the term "deficiency" as used in the case law on tax evasion and other criminal tax statutes, where the term "deficiency" has its more normal, simple, everyday meaning of "unpaid" amount.
Comments?