Tax

  • The Supreme Court has agreed to decide whether an exception in the Internal Revenue Code allows a trustee to deduct the full amount of fees paid to an investment advisor. The case of Knight v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, U.S., No. 06-1286, centers on trustee Michael J. Knight, who paid an investment advisor to manage the assets of a trust. When the trust filed its tax return, Knight sought to deduct the full amount of the fees under 26 U.S.C. Section 67(e)(1). However, the IRS said the fees are subject to the 2 percent rule. The U.S. Tax Court agreed with the IRS, as did the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, which ruled against Knight in October. But Knight argued the fees fall under an exception to the general rule because they were paid in connection with the administration of the trust, and because they would not have been paid unless the assets were held in trust. In May, both the New York Bankers Association and the American Bankers Association May 22 filed a brief in support of the trustee, urging the U.S. Supreme Court to hear the case.

    June 26
  • Tax and news publisher BNA has named Robert P. Ambrosini to the post of vice president and chief financial officer. Ambrosini, who officially began with BNA June 18, has held CFO posts at such organizations as Black Entertainment Television and Texfi Industries. He also was senior vice president finance and accounting for the National Geographic Channel. Ambrosini also serves on the board of the Washington Hospital Center Foundation.

    June 26
  • Prosecutors are urging a U.S. district Judge to dismiss indictments against 13 of executives of Big Four firm KPMG on charges of marketing illegal tax shelters. According to The Wall Street Journal U.S. District Judge Lewis A. Kaplan had previously ruled that the government had overreached in its years-long investigation, violating the defendants' constitutional rights to counsel and due process. In a June 22 filing in federal court in Manhattan, prosecutors said that Kaplan's decision showed that there was a fundamental flaw in the proceedings and that he must dismiss the indictments. As a result, 13 of the 18 defendants may now never stand trial, including the accounting giant's former vice chairman, Jeffrey Stein, the highest-ranking executive named in the indictment. However, legal experts opined the petition was a strategy to allow allowing prosecutors to appeal Kaplan's ruling, a maneuver that may yet allow prosecutors to resume the proceedings against all 18 of the defendants. The indictments were initially handed down in 2005 accusing the defendants of selling fraudulent tax shelters from 1996 through 2002, that cost the government some $2.5 billion in revenues. In striking an agreement to escape a potentially fatal criminal indictment that could have shuttered the firm, KPMG agreed to pay a $456 million fine to the federal government and spend the next 16 months on probation overseen by a federal monitor. The firm also agreed to close its tax business for high-net-worth individuals. Kaplan has scheduled a hearing July 2. A decision regarding the government's argument, as well as the motions to dismiss the indictments, could be issued this summer.

    June 25
  • Taxes have overtaken health care as the leading concern for small business owners, according to the latest Small Business Research Board study. Taxes were the leading concern of business owners during the second quarter of 2007, replacing health care, which previously was cited as being the single greatest issue impacting small businesses. Some 770 small business owners in the U.S. who responded to the nationwide poll, co-sponsored by International Profit Associates, indicated that taxes were tops among key concerns of small business owners followed closely by overall economic conditions and energy/fuel costs. Health care was fifth on the list of concerns. The quarterly poll of small business owners and managers also indicated that taxes were the leading concern in two of the four U.S.. regions -- ranking number one in the South/Southeast and in the Western states. Taxes were ranked second in the Midwest and fourth in the Northeast. Meanwhile, economic conditions were identified as the leading concern by business owners in the both the Northeast and Midwest. However, neither energy and fuel nor health care finished in the top five in the Western U.S., where taxes and economic conditions were followed by foreign competition, the cost of materials and finding quality employees as the leading concerns.

    June 25
  • The Joint Committee on Taxation has issued a report on the individual alternative minimum tax in advance of a Senate Finance Committee hearing scheduled for Wed., June 27. The JCT report listed several selected reform options, which include: indexing or increasing the exemption amounts; allowing the deduction for personal exemptions and standard deductions to be used when computing the AMT; permitting state and local taxes against the AMT; reducing the minimum tax rates; eliminating the phase-out of the minimum tax exemption; allowing nonrefundable personal credits to offset the minimum tax after 2006; and repealing the AMT. The report is available at: http://www.house.gov/jct/x-38-07.pdf.

    June 25
  • Struggles at its subprime lending unit have resulted in tax-prep giant H&R Block Inc. posting a fourth-quarter loss of $85.5 million and a full-year loss of $433.6 million for the period ended April 30. The company said its latest quarter included roughly $677 million in losses from discontinued operations - the majority of that stemming from its Option One mortgage subsidiary.

    June 24
  • The LexisNexis Tax Center platform will now include exclusive content from Ernst & Young's International GAAP Online. Written by the International Financial Reporting Group of Ernst & Young, International GAAP Online includes the full text of every International Financial Reporting Standard and a set of model IFRS financial statements. LexisNexis has also paired with Danielle Rolfes, tax attorney and CPA with Ivins, Phillips & Barker, to present information on FIN 48. "There's a sea change that's less about the mechanics of FIN 48 and more abut rigorous accounting to give investors enhanced insight into companies' overall income tax positions and the consequent ability to scrutinize and compare," said Rolfes. LexisNexis launched its Tax Center last year to help streamline analysis of tax strategies across the broadest array of tax publishers available on a single platform, including LexisNexis, CCH, BNA, Tax Analysts, the ABA Section of Taxation and Matthew Bender.

    June 24
  • The Internal Revenue Service is expanding an outreach effort to ensure that public schools throughout the United States are complying with the universal availability requirement for retirement annuities they may offer.Some schools and school districts may be overlooking offering employees the opportunity to participate in these retirement plans. To assess the level of compliance, the IRS's Employee Plans Compliance Unit has started sending questionnaires to public school districts in all 50 states under the 403(b) Universal Availability project. A 403(b) plan is a retirement plan for certain employees of public schools, employees of certain tax-exempt organizations, and certain ministers. "Our pilot project in three states showed fairly widespread noncompliance by schools with the universal availability requirement for 403(b) plans," said Joseph Grant, director of the IRS Employee Plans Division. "But we believe most of it was due to a lack of understanding about what the law requires, not a deliberate failure to comply." "We know from our pilot project and from talking to representatives from schools and districts across the country that most of the problems stem from either misunderstanding the law or from confusion because of differing rules in various states," said Grant. "The project will give schools the chance to identify problems with their plans and to correct them on their own."

    June 21
  • The Internal Revenue Service recommends that employers, payers and their agents begin using a new, improved version of the agent-appointment form immediately, to avoid delays in having the IRS approve the agent appointments. All versions prior to the May 2007 form are now obsolete. Form 2678, Employer/Payer Appointment of Agent, authorizes an agent to file tax returns and deposit and pay employment or other withholding taxes on an employer or payer's behalf. However, the employer retains responsibility for filing Form 940, Employer's Annual Federal Unemployment Tax Return, and depositing and paying FUTA tax. The IRS recently redesigned Form 2678 to make it clearer and more user-friendly. The redesign resulted from an initiative led by the IRS Office of Taxpayer Burden Reduction. The IRS will return any obsolete versions of Forms 2678 that are filed and ask senders to submit the May 2007 revision instead. When the IRS approves Form 2678, both the employer or payer and the agent are liable for the employer's employment tax.

    June 20
  • Rep. Charles Rangel, D-N.Y., chairman of the House Ways & Means Committee, said House lawmakers might consider legislation that would raise taxes on the income of private equity and hedge fund managers. Under the current tax laws, private-equity companies can go public by paying a partnership tax rate of 15 percent versus the corporate tax rate of 35 percent. Rangel's proposal follows a Senate measure introduced last week requiring private-equity partnerships that go public after June 14 to pay corporate taxes.

    June 20