| PI ONLINE: 9-12-03 | |
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Fast to Settle for Less BY GREG MERMEL C.P.A. Businesses
that extend credit to their customers know that some bills will never
be fully paid. Some customers are fundamentally honest and perfectly willing
to pay, but unexpectedly do not have the money when the bill comes due.
Others are less honest, and simply won't pay even though they can. Some
of the 'can't pay' group were unrealistic in their expectations, but many
have simply seen their lives unravel: unemployment, divorce, illness.
Of the 'won't pay' group, only a small part are deliberate thieves. Most
somehow rationalize their behavior on the grounds that the product was
overpriced, or a big company owes something to its customers, or that
because they are able negotiators, they should get a better price. A practical
approach to collection requires knowing which customers are in each group.
Businesses will generally settle with the 'can't pay' ones (even for zero),
if only because doing anything else is futile. But the 'won't pay' group
requires a decision for which the likely anger and sense of feeling cheated
must be set aside for a cool analysis: How much can you collect at what
cost of both time and money? 'A good settlement is better than a bad victory
in court,' says a lawyer with whom I often work. When
the unpaid bills are taxes, the decisions involve additional factors.
A business can choose its customers and decide to whom credit should be
offered. The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) and the Illinois Department
of Revenue have no discretion in the matter and, indeed, do not even know
to whom they are extending credit until that tax return is submitted showing
a balance due. When a businessman makes a decision to settle, or to sue,
or to write off a debt, only his banker is potentially in a position to
question that choice. Tax collectors, however, are likely to be second-guessed
not only by the legislative bodies that appropriate their funds, but individual
members of those bodies, the press, voters, radio call-in show hosts,
and authors of books pushing crackpot legal theories. Many of these critics
have agendas that gain little if tax collection is fair, reasonable and
effective and that gain much if tax collection is seen as bumbling or
heavy-handed or soft-hearted or biased for/against some favored/unfavored
group. Tax authorities, therefore, tend to be extraordinarily cautious
when it comes to negotiating settlements. The
State of Affairs The
Illinois Department of Revenue has had for more than 30 years, a program
comparable to the IRS's offer in compromise program, but it is not very
useful. Unlike the federal program, the Illinois program has no published
guidelines or rules, and they will not negotiate. Any request is heard
by a politically appointed Board of Appeals, which is not bound by precedent
and does not state its reasons. Most practitioners regard it as a waste
of time unless large sums of money are involved'that is, when the cost
of hiring well-connected lawyers can be justified. The
State of Illinois badly needs money right now. A retail business in similar
distress might run a huge sale, heavily discounting its merchandise to
raise money. And that is exactly what the Illinois Department of Revenue
is doing: they are offering a clearance sale on back taxes, only they
call it a Tax Amnesty program. Pay your eligible back taxes paid Oct.
1 and Nov. 17, 2003, and all penalties and interest are forgiven. Wait
until Nov. 18, and the penalties and interest double. To
be eligible, taxes must be for the years 1984 through 2001, and you must
have filed a return for those taxes by the end of the amnesty period.
So, all of you who haven't filed those old tax returns, get to work now.
November 17 is only nine weeks off, and this is a one-time-only program. About
those Federal Taxes The
IRS's offer in compromise program does have written guidelines and formulas
to help you calculate an acceptable amount. To be approved, the taxpayer
must clearly be a 'can't pay' rather than a 'won't pay,' and the taxpayer
must be demonstrably paying his current taxes on time. Beyond these basic
considerations, though, the Revenue Officers who handle these cases are
given much discretion, and there is no certainty that even an offer fully
meeting these criteria will be approved. The
IRS's willingness to approve offers in compromise shifts with the political
winds (both internal and external), rarely striking what I consider an
appropriate balance. They now seem to be moving towards a period in which
many fewer offers are approved. That alone should be an incentive for
those with old tax debts to apply now, before the climate reaches an Ice
Age. But here's an added incentive: Effective Nov. 1, they will charge
a $150 fee to submit an offer in compromise. Supposedly, it's to defray
the cost of the program in a time of budgetary constraints (right) and
to discourage frivolous applications. What it really will mean, I fear,
is that the really impecunious'those who most need and deserve to have
tax debts wiped out'will be shut out. Warm
or cold, the offer in compromise program is just about the only official
option for those with federal tax bills they cannot pay, since bankruptcy
will not generally wipe out federal tax debts. IRS collectors can temporarily
put accounts into a 'currently not collectible' classification for a period
of time, and if that persists through enough renewals, the debt will eventually
be too old to be legally enforceable. But who wants that sitting out there
on their credit reports for a decade or more?
Are
there money or tax questions you would like to see discussed in this column?
Let me know, at 2835 N. Sheffield, Suite 311, Chicago, IL 60657, or call
773/525-1778 (888/525-1778 toll-free outside the Chicago area) or e-mail
greg@gregmermel.com. Greg Mermel is a certified public accountant whose clients in the arts range from individual performers to major theatre companies and suppliers. He also sometimes produces theatre.
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