I do this because while I can fully affirm the frivolous nature of each of the IRS's enumerated positions, there are at least two cases in which I believe Dan has represented the law inaccurately, and I would like to refer others to his FAQ as a sound compilation of frivolous positions as well, which I could do if the occasional questionables were better worded. I am proposing wording which I trust Dan would not find disagreeable; he would only question the need for such change. I can only appeal to his desire to improve the FAQ, which would specifically include at least replacing weak statements, easily picked apart, with ironclad explications. I'm holding out hope that Dan might acknowledge that at minimum there is no harm in using the more legally accurate statements and that, in the interests of more appropriately reflecting the IRS presentation of the law, the amendments are worthy of making in his next update.
(For anyone who believes that I would ever espouse a frivolous position identified by the IRS as contrary to law, please recall that my purpose is rather to uphold the law. So it should not be surprising that I wish to contribute to Dan's unstinting work in clarifying the IRS's frivolous position list. Those who still cannot tell the difference between the frivolous positions I identify below and my own positions, which are often misrepresented, may ask for any clarification.)
I would replace this first subpoint with the accurate statement:
In general, the word "State" should be capitalized whenever clear reference to the IRC term under consideration is intended. Further, after the second subpoint:John wrote:All the States of the United States, not counting the District of Columbia, are within the normal meaning of the word “State,” and so a definition that says that “State” shall be construed to include the District of Columbia does not exclude the other existing States of the United States from the meaning of “State.”
(which is an excellent observation, especially considering 7651), I would add:Dan wrote:A definition of “State” that equates “State” with “District of Columbia” turns the definition of “United States” into gibberish, because the definition then becomes a statement that “United States” “includes only the District of Columbia and the District of Columbia.”
After the third subpoint I would add:John wrote:Clearly the term “States” in the definition of “United States” means the other States of the United States and not the District of Columbia.
These statements make clear that there are by definition more States than the District of Columbia (as the IRC does state explicitly), which point is not explicit in Dan's version; and they also make clear that the similar frivolous argument based on 3121(e) is equally answered. If these statements are omitted, Dan's argument against "'State' means only DC" is much weaker, especially in the first subpoint.John wrote:The same argument applies to parallel definitions in I.R.C. section 3121(e).
I would expand this to:
This does not leave the definition of "employee" to the reader's own imagination, but provides the regulatory context for both the legal and general definitions of "employee". Omitting these regulations leaves a weaker argument because the reader might still attempt to define "employee" independently of the law and regulations.John wrote:As defined by I.R.C. section 7701(c), the use of “includes” does not exclude anything otherwise within the meaning of “employee,” so “the term employee includes every individual performing services if the relationship between him and the person for whom he performs such services is the legal relationship of employer and employee”, and “generally the relationship of employer and employee exists when the person for whom services are performed has the right to control and direct the individual who performs the services” (26 CFR 31.3401(c)-1(a)-(b)). “Employee” includes everyone who performs services in a legal employer-employee relationship, as well as some people you might not ordinarily think of as employees, such as elected officials of state and local governments.
Dan, would you moderately answer whether my suggested quotes are accurate representations of the law? Thanks for your consideration.