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Computerized travel and expenses.


Travel and expenses recordkeeping requirements under Internal Revenue Code section 1.62-2(c)(2)(I) can be burdensome and time-consuming for employees and employers. According to private letter ruling 9706018, a company tried to reduce the paperwork burden by giving its employees a credit card that could be used only for business purposes. Each employee submitted an expense report on all charges and cash advances within one week after the expenses were incurred. The employer then paid the credit card company for all the substantiated charges.

The company requested the Internal Revenue Service to approve a new program that would eliminate most of the employee's paperwork by allowing the company to receive its documentary evidence electronically from the credit card company instead of from the employee. Because the expenses billed to the credit card constituted the bulk of the employees' travel and entertainment charges, most employees have to keep paper receipts only for expenses paid with cash advances or with their own funds or for those the company considers unjustified business expenses.

The IRS said the new program met the accountable-plan recordkeeping requirements of the IRC and therefore approved it. As such, the reimbursements were not included in the individual employee's gross income, reported on form W-2 or subject to withholding or employment taxes.

Observation: The IRS agreed to allow the company to use a new system on the condition the company conform to the requirements of revenue procedure 91-59. Companies that use automated data processing (ADP) should review the guidelines in 91-59 to ensure the accuracy and safety of the recorded information. Revenue Procedure 91-59 also includes information on how long records must be retained to satisfy the electronic recordkeeping retention rules. --Michael Lynch, CPA, Esq., associate professor of accounting at Bryant College, Smithfield, Rhode Island.

LINE ITEMS

* Parents can claim a dependency exemption or a child care credit for an eligible child in their care pending adoption, even if they don't have a Social Security number for the child. By law, parents cannot get a child a Social Security number until after an adoption is final. According to Internal Revenue Service informational release 97-6, parents in the process of a domestic adoption need only write "U.S. adoption pending" in place of a Social Security number on their return and attach proof that the child is in their home awaiting a legal adoption. For foreign adoptions, parents must use form W-7 to obtain an individual taxpayer identification number from the IRS for the child.

* Effective May 1, the fee the IRS charges for a copy of a tax return and related documents will increase from $14 to $23. Payment is due in advance using Form 4506, Request for Copy or Transcript of Tax Form. The charge for employee plans and exempt organization returns remains at $1 for the first page and $0.15 for each additional page.

* The Eighth Circuit ruled the IRS can disclose tax information to a state if the state intends to use the information to prosecute an individual for failure to file returns and pay taxes. The information can only be disclosed under a tax coordination agreement between the state and the IRS under Internal Revenue Code section 6103(d). In a recent case (Frank J. Taylor v. United States, 8th Cir. Feb. 10, 1997), the court rejected Taylor's argument that financial privacy is a fundamental right.

* A new form allows taxpayers to request federal income tax be withheld for specified federal payments that are not subject to mandatory withholding. The new Form W-4V, Voluntary Withholding Request, requests an automatic 15% withholding of unemployment compensation or a 70 15%, 28% or 31% withholding from Social Security and other specified federal payments.

* According to private letter ruling
Private letter ruling
A ruling by the IRS in response to a request for interpretation of a tax law.
 9705033, a small miscalculation can cost a taxpayer a lot of money. In 1995 a taxpayer took early retirement and received a $30,000 distribution from his individual retirement account. The taxpayer wanted this distribution to be the first of a series of substantially equal annual payments. The distribution, which was computed by an independent financial adviser, should have been $34,141. As a result the rest of the distributions had to be adjusted. Because of the disparity of distribution amounts, the IRS did not consider the periodic payments to be substantially equal and the entire distribution was subject to an additional 10% tax on early distributions.

--Michael Lynch, CPA, Esq., associate professor of accounting at Bryant College, Smithfield, Rhode Island.
COPYRIGHT 1997 American Institute of CPA's
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1997, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Author:Lynch, Michael
Publication:Journal of Accountancy
Article Type:Brief Article
Date:May 1, 1997
Words:743
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