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IRS eases rules for accounting-method changes.


The IRS An abbreviation for the Internal Revenue Service, a federal agency charged with the responsibility of administering and enforcing internal revenue laws.  released Rev REV Revolution
REV Reverse
REV Reverend
REV Revision
REV Review
REV Revised
REV Revelations (bible)
REV Reversal
REV Revolver (Beatles album)
REV Reverendo
. Proc. 2002-19, which makes two significant modifications to Rev. Procs. 2002-9 and 97-27. Taxpayers receive much more favorable fa·vor·a·ble  
adj.
1. Advantageous; helpful: favorable winds.

2. Encouraging; propitious: a favorable diagnosis.

3.
 terms and conditions for changing an accounting method, and the rules governing gov·ern  
v. gov·erned, gov·ern·ing, gov·erns

v.tr.
1. To make and administer the public policy and affairs of; exercise sovereign authority in.

2.
 taxpayers under examination, before an Appeals office or a Federal court are liberalized. Taxpayers may now deduct de·duct  
v. de·duct·ed, de·duct·ing, de·ducts

v.tr.
1. To take away (a quantity) from another; subtract.

2. To derive by deduction; deduce.

v.intr.
 the entire amount of negative Sec. 481(a) adjustments (i.e., favorable adjustments that reduce taxable income Under the federal tax law, gross income reduced by adjustments and allowable deductions. It is the income against which tax rates are applied to compute an individual or entity's tax liability. The essence of taxable income is the accrual of some gain, profit, or benefit to a taxpayer. ) in one tax year, while previously they generally had to spread all their Sec. 481(a) adjustments over four tax years.

The IRS still permits taxpayers to spread positive Sec. 481(a) adjustments (i.e., unfavorable adjustments that increase taxable income) ratably over four tax years. Also, taxpayers currently under examination, before an Appeals office or a Federal court, that have an "issue pending" can now make accounting-method changes, but only on a prospective basis and without any audit protection. Pursuant to Rev. Proc. 2002-19, an issue is pending if the IRS has given the taxpayer written notification that an adjustment is being made or that an adjustment will be processed, even though the IRS has not yet determined the amount of the adjustment.

Effective Date

Rev. Proc. 2002-19 generally is effective for tax years ending on or after Dec. 31, 2001. However, for changes involving the elimination of the scope restrictions for pending issues, the revenue procedure is effective for tax years ending on or after March 14, 2002, if the change is made under Rev. Proc. 97-27's nonautomatic procedures.

To the credit of the IRS National Office, the IRS is expected to publish a notice clarifying clar·i·fy  
v. clar·i·fied, clar·i·fy·ing, clar·i·fies

v.tr.
1. To make clear or easier to understand; elucidate: clarified her intentions.

2.
 that a taxpayer that has a Form 3115, Application for Change in Accounting Method, for a favorable method change pending on March 14, 2002, which was filed under Rev. Proc. 97-27 (but not under Rev. Proc. 99-49) for a tax year that ended prior to Dec. 31, 2001, will be permitted to "roll" the year of change forward so it may benefit from the one-year adj. 1. completing its life cycle within a year.

Adj. 1. one-year - completing its life cycle within a year; "a border of annual flowering plants"
annual

phytology, botany - the branch of biology that studies plants
 spread of the Sec. 481(a) adjustment provided in Rev. Proc. 2002-19. To obtain this treatment, it is expected that a taxpayer would merely need to notify the IRS individual processing the taxpayer's Form 3115 that it wants to roll forward the year of change.

In addition, it is expected that the IRS notice will permit a taxpayer that filed a Form 3115 for a favorable method change under Rev. Proc. 97-27 (but not under Rev. Proc. 99-49) for a tax year that ended on or after Dec. 31, 2001, to take the entire amount of the negative Sec. 481(a) adjustment in one year, even if the IRS consent letter has already been issued to the taxpayer. It is expected that despite the four-year-spread period provided for in the ruling granting the method change, the taxpayer would simply take the entire amount of the Sec. 481(a) adjustment into account on its return for the year of change.

Background

Rev. Procs. 2002-9 and 97-27, respectively, provide automatic and nonautomatic procedures by which taxpayers make voluntary accounting-method changes. Under these revenue procedures Revenue procedures are published statements of the Internal Revenue Service practices and procedures. Revenue procedures are published in the Internal Revenue Bulletin. , generally all positive and negative Sec. 481(a) adjustments that result from accounting-method changes were required to be spread over four tax years. Additionally, tax-payers under examination, before an Appeals office or a Federal court, were generally not permitted to change an accounting method for a pending issue.

One-Year-Spread Transition Rules

When a taxpayer has already filed Form 3115 with the IRS National Office, filed its return for the year of change or both, it must satisfy certain requirements to benefit from the one year-spread period for a net negative Sec. 481(a) adjustment:

Form 3115 already filed under Rev. Proc. 2002-9/return filed before April 15, 2002. A taxpayer that has filed a Form 3115 with its return for a tax year ending on or after Dec. 31, 2001, that resulted in a net negative Sec. 481(a) adjustment, had to, on or before April 15, 2002:

1. Complete and file a revised Form 3115 in duplicate DUPLICATE. The double of anything.
     2. It is usually applied to agreements, letters, receipts, and the like, when two originals are made of either of them. Each copy has the same effect.
, reflecting the one-year Sec. 481(a) adjustment period;

2. Attach TO ATTACH, crim. law, practice. To an attachment for contempt for the non- take or apprehend by virtue of the order of a writ or precept, commonly called an attachment. It differs from an arrest in this, that he who arrests a man, takes him to a person of higher power to be disposed of;  the original form to the amended return Amended Return

A return filed in order to make corrections to a tax return from a previous year. It can be used to correct errors and claim a more advantageous filing.

Notes:
An amended return is filed using Form 1040X.
, which must be filed no later than Sept. 10, 2002;

3. File the copy of the revised Form 3115 with the IRS National Office no later than when it files the amended return; and

4. Label both the original Form 3115 (attached to the amended return) and the copy (filed with the IRS National Office) with "Substitute Application under Rev. Proc. 2002-19."

If the taxpayer does not file a revised Form 3115, the four-year adjustment period will apply to the net negative Sec. 481(a) adjustment.

Form 3115 filed under Rev. Proc. 2002-9/return not yet filed. A taxpayer that has filed a Form 3115 with the IRS National Office for a tax year ending on or after Dec. 31, 2001, that resulted in a net negative Sec. 481(a) adjustment, and had not filed its return by April 15, 2002, must:

1. Complete and file a revised Form 3115 in duplicate, reflecting the one-year Sec. 481(a) adjustment period;

2. Attach the revised original Form 3115 to its timely filed original return for the year of change;

3. File the copy of the revised Form 3115 with the IRS National Office no later than when it fries its original return; and

4. Label the copy of the revised Form 3115 filed with the IRS National Office with "Substitute Application under Rev. Proc. 2002-19."

If the taxpayer does not file a revised Form 3115, the four-year adjustment period will apply to the net negative Sec. 481(a) adjustment.

Form 3115 filed under Rev. Proc. 97-27. A taxpayer that filed a Form 3115 with the IRS National Office for a tax year ending on or after Dec. 31, 2001, which resulted in a net negative Sec. 481(a) adjustment that is still pending on March 14, 2002, must:

1. Take the entire net negative Sec. 481(a) adjustment into account in the year of change, unless it notifies the IRS National Office before the later of April 30, 2002, or the IRS's issuance of a letter ruling granting consent to the method change; and

2. Make appropriate modifications to the Form 3115 application to comply with Rev. Proc. 2002-19.

Prospective Change Transition Rules

Form 3115 not yet filed under Rev. Proc. 2002-9/return filed. A taxpayer under examination, before an Appeals office or a Federal court, that has filed its return on or before April 15, 2002, for a tax year ending on or after Dec. 31, 2001, that wants to change its accounting method for a pending issue must:

1 Complete and file a Form 3115 in duplicate;

2. Attach the original Form 3115 to its amended return for the year of change, which it must file no later than Sept. 10, 2002; and

3. File the copy of Form 3115 with the IRS National Office no later than when it files its amended return.

Observations.

Transition rule for 90-day or 120-day window filers or taxpayers subsequently contacted for examination: Rev. Proc. 2002-19 does not expressly address a situation in which a taxpayer filed Form 3115 either in a 90-day or 120-day window period and the taxpayer is not in a window period when it files a revised Form 3115 under the transition rules of Rev. Proc. 2002-19. Since the procedure does not expressly require the taxpayer to be in a window period when it files the revised Form 3115, it implicitly im·plic·it  
adj.
1. Implied or understood though not directly expressed: an implicit agreement not to raise the touchy subject.

2.
 allows the taxpayer to file the form without regard to the taxpayer's current status, as long as the taxpayer was in a window period when it filed the original.

Similarly, the procedure does not expressly address the situation in which the taxpayer was not under examination when it originally filed Form 3115, but has since been contacted for examination. As such, the procedure implicitly allows the taxpayer to file a revised Form 3115 without regard to the taxpayer's current status, as long as the taxpayer was not under examination when it filed the original.

Estimated tax Federal and state tax laws require a quarterly payment of estimated taxes due from corporations, trusts, estates, non-wage employees, and wage employees with income not subject to withholding.  payments: Because Rev. Proc. 2002-19 permits taxpayers to take net negative Sec. 481(a) adjustments into account in one tax year, a taxpayer that reduces its 2001 taxable income on account of the Sec. 481(a) one-year-spread-period adjustment may have overpaid o·ver·pay  
v. o·ver·paid , o·ver·pay·ing, o·ver·pays

v.tr.
1. To pay (a party) too much.

2. To pay an amount in excess of (a sum due).

v.intr.
To pay too much.
 its 2001 estimated taxes. The time for filing expedited estimated tax refunds has expired ex·pire  
v. ex·pired, ex·pir·ing, ex·pires

v.intr.
1. To come to an end; terminate: My membership in the club has expired.

2.
 for calendar-year taxpayers; taxpayers had to have filed the claim no later than March 15, 2002 (the return's original due date (without extensions)). However, taxpayers with fiscal years ending in 2002 are still eligible to file for an expedited refund TO REFUND. To pay back by the party who has received it, to the party who has paid it, money which ought not to have been paid.
     2. On a deficiency of assets, executors and administrators cum testamento annexo, are entitled to have refunded to them legacies
 of estimated taxes if the original due date of the return (without extensions) has not yet passed.

In addition, as a result of the new one-year spread for net negative Sec. 481(a) adjustments, calendar-year taxpayers that filed an extension for their 2001 returns had only until March 15, 2002, to adjust any payment of tax due for 2001. These taxpayers may have overpaid, and Rev. Proc. 2002-19 does not appear to provide any relief for them.

Other considerations: Taxpayers with a tax year that ended before Dec. 31, 2001 and that filed a Form 3115 under Rev. Proc. 97-27's nonautomatic procedures for a favorable method change that (1) received the ruling letter before March 14, 2002 and (2) have not yet filed their return, should consider postponing the year in which they make the change to their first tax year ending on or after Dec. 31, 2001. Taxpayers may receive more net-time-value benefit by making the change in the later tax year because of the ability to deduct the entire Sec. 481(a) adjustment in the year of change, rather than spreading it over a four-year period beginning one tax year earlier. Because a method change is not effective unless the taxpayer actually makes the change on its return, taxpayers in this situation can file their return for the year of change under the "old" method, and then file a new Form 3115 for their first tax year ending on or after Dec. 31, 2001. Arguably ar·gu·a·ble  
adj.
1. Open to argument: an arguable question, still unresolved.

2. That can be argued plausibly; defensible in argument: three arguable points of law.
, taxpayers that have already filed their return for the year of change that are still within the period for timely filing the return (including extensions) could also timely file a substitute original return without making the method change. Taxpayers who receive a consent letter that do not make the change may have to show unusual or compelling reasons why the IRS should consider granting the request for the later tax year. There is no guarantee that the IRS National Office will agree; however, it would appear that the expected IRS notice clarifying the transition rules and scope requirements of Rev. Proc. 2002-19 may resolve this issue.

Taxpayers with a tax year that ended before Dec. 31,2001, that were considering filing a Form 3115 under Rev. Proc. 99-49'S automatic procedures for a favorable method change, but have not yet done so, should also consider making the change for the following year, to take advantage of the one-year Sec. 481(a) adjustment period. Taxpayers that have already filed a copy of the Form 3115 with the IRS National Office under Rev. Proc. 99-49 may also be able to postpone post·pone  
tr.v. post·poned, post·pon·ing, post·pones
1. To delay until a future time; put off. See Synonyms at defer1.

2. To place after in importance; subordinate.
 the year of change to their first tax year ending on or after Dec. 31, 2001 (provided the return's extended due date has not passed). However, taxpayers in this situation would have to file Form 3115 under the Rev. Proc. 97-27 nonautomatic procedures and may have to show unusual or compelling reasons why the IRS should consider granting the request for the later tax year. There is no guarantee that the IRS National Office will agree; however, it would appear that the expected IRS notice clarifying the transition rules and scope requirements of Rev. Proc. 2002-19 may resolve this issue. Arguably, taxpayers in this situation will not be using hindsight hind·sight  
n.
1. Perception of the significance and nature of events after they have occurred.

2. The rear sight of a firearm.
, because they have not yet filed a return and should not be put in a less favorable position Noun 1. favorable position - the quality of being at a competitive advantage
favourable position, superiority

advantage, vantage - the quality of having a superior or more favorable position; "the experience gave him the advantage over me"
 than similarly situated similarly situated adj. with the same problems and circumstances, referring to the people represented by a plaintiff in a "class action," brought for the benefit of the party filing the suit as well as all those "similarly situated.  taxpayers that have not yet filed a copy of Form 3115 with the IRS National Office.

Taxpayers currently under examination that merely have an issue under consideration (as defined in Rev. Procs. 2002-9 and 97-27) now appear to be in a less favorable position than taxpayers that have an issue pending, and would not be permitted to make accounting-method changes on a prospective basis without any audit protection under Rev. Proc. 2002-19. Again, the expected IRS notice clarifying the transition rules and scope requirements of Rev. Proc. 2002-19 may resolve this incongruous in·con·gru·ous  
adj.
1. Lacking in harmony; incompatible: a joke that was incongruous with polite conversation.

2.
 result.

FROM PAUL K. GIBBS Gibbs   , Josiah Willard 1839-1903.

American mathematician and physicist who formulated the theoretical foundation of physical chemistry, developed vector analysis, and conducted optical and thermodynamic research.

Noun 1.
, CPA (Computer Press Association, Landing, NJ) An earlier membership organization founded in 1983 that promoted excellence in computer journalism. Its annual awards honored outstanding examples in print, broadcast and electronic media. The CPA disbanded in 2000. , AND CAROLYN
See Carl (name) or Sue for information about the name.


Carolyn is a female name in English speaking countries, originally an alteration of the more ancient name Caroline.
 OSSEN, J.D., WASHINGTON Washington, town, England
Washington, town (1991 pop. 48,856), Sunderland metropolitan district, NE England. Washington was designated one of the new towns in 1964 to alleviate overpopulation in the Tyneside-Wearside area.
, DC
COPYRIGHT 2002 American Institute of CPA's
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2002, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Ossen, Carolyn
Publication:The Tax Adviser
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jun 1, 2002
Words:2112
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