Tax-strategy patents and the tax gap.Two tax policy topics have recently been getting increased attention: tax-strategy patents and the tax gap. The AICPA AICPA See American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA). has been taking an active role in the debate on each topic. This column summarizes the issues and the AICPA's involvement. Tax-Strategy Patents The patentability of tax strategies is a growing concern among tax practitioners and taxpayers. The AICPA believes that such patents undermine the integrity, fairness and administration of the tax system and are contrary to sound public policy. Under the law, patents may be g-ranted for innovations that are useful, novel and nonobvious; see 35 USC An abbreviation for U.S. Code. Sections 101-103 and 112. Under 35 USC Section 271, a patent gives the holder the exclusive right to make, use and sell the patented invention. The consequences of infringing a patent can be substantial. Issued patents are presumed valid; an accuser must overcome this presumption with clear and convincing evidence clear and convincing evidence n. evidence that proves a matter by the "preponderance of evidence" required in civil cases and beyond the "reasonable doubt" needed to convict in a criminal case. (See: beyond a reasonable doubt) to invalidate in·val·i·date tr.v. in·val·i·dat·ed, in·val·i·dat·ing, in·val·i·dates To make invalid; nullify. in·val a patent; see 35 USC Section 282. Even if an accused infringer is not found liable, defending a lawsuit can be costly. The total cost to litigate a patent infringement patent infringement n. the manufacture and/or use of an invention or improvement for which someone else owns a patent issued by the government, without obtaining permission of the owner of the patent by contract, license or waiver. suit with $1 million-$25 million at risk ranges from $1.25-$3.5 million (from $3.1-$9.4 million when more than $25 million is at risk); see American Intellectual Property Law Association Headquartered in Arlington, Virginia, the American Intellectual Property Law Association (AIPLA) is a national bar association that was formed in 1897 to improve intellectual property laws and educate the public about such issues. , Law Practice Management Committee, "Report of the Economic Survey 2005," pp. 23 and 1-109-110, available at www.aipla.org/Content/ NavigationMenu/Publications/Publica tions_Available_for_Viewing/Publica tions_Available_for_Viewing.htm. These costs cover a "typical case with no unusual complications" involving only one patent; see id. at pp. 2-3. Number issued: In 1998, the Federal Circuit, in State Street Bank & Trust v. Signature Financial Group, Inc., 149 F3d 1368, held that business methods could be patented. (Business methods include business practices in many fields, including healthcare management, insurance and insurance processing, reservation and booking systems, financial market analyses, point-of-sale systems, tax processing and inventory and accounting and financial management.) The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office now classifies tax-strategy patents as subclass In programming, to add custom processing to an existing function or subroutine by hooking into the routine at a predefined point and adding additional lines of code. subclass - derived class 36T in Class 705, " Data Processing data processing or information processing, operations (e.g., handling, merging, sorting, and computing) performed upon data in accordance with strictly defined procedures, such as recording and summarizing the financial transactions of a : Financial, Business Practice, Management, or Cost/Price Determination"; see www.uspto.gov/ go/classification/uspc705/sched705. htm.As of Jan. 3, 2007, its website lists 51 patents issued in that subclass, and 83 such applications are pending (published applications are those not yet examined/granted); see http://patft.uspto.gov/netacgi/nph-Parser?Sect1=PTO PTO abbr. 1. Parent Teacher Organization 2. or p.t.o. please turn over 3. power takeoff PTO or pto please turn over Noun 1. 2&Sect2=HITOFF&u=/netahtml/ PTO/searchadv.htm&r=0&p=1&f=S&1=50&Query=ccl/705/36T&d=PTXT and http://appft1.uspto.gov/netacgi/nphParser?Sect1=PTO2&Sect2=HITOFF&u=%2 Fnetahmal%2FPTO%2Fsearchadv.html&r=0&f=S&1=50&d=PG01&OS=ccl%2F&RS=CCL%2F705% 2F36T&PrevList1=Prev.+50+Hits&TD=81&Srch1=705%252F36T.CCLS CCLS Certified Child Life Specialist CCLS Canadian Council of Land Surveyors CCLS Cultural Center for Language Studies (Brazilian language school Centro de Cultura Anglo Americana, CCAA in the USA) .&StartNum=&Query= ccl%2F. Tax-strategy patents have already been granted in a variety of areas, including the use of financial products, charitable giving, estate and gift taxes A combined federal tax on transfers by gift or death. When property interests are given away during life or at death, taxes are imposed on the transfer. These taxes, known as estate and gift taxes, apply to the total transfers that an individual may make over a lifetime. , pension plans, tax-deferred exchanges and deferred compensation. Many more such patents will likely be issued, directly targeting average taxpayers in a host of areas, including income tax, alternative minimum tax and itemized-deduction maximization. Concern: A primary catalyst for the AICPA's concern, and the concern of other tax advisers, was an infringement suit over "the SOGRAT patent." On Jan. 6, 2006, Wealth Transfer Group L.L.C. filed a complaint in a Federal district court in Connecticut against John W. Rowe, alleging that he infringed its SOGRAT patent for establishing and managing grantor An individual who conveys or transfers ownership of property. In real property law, an individual who sells land is known as the grantor. grantor n. retained annuity trusts (GRATs) funded with nonqualified stock options (see Wealth Transfer Group L.L.C. v. John W. Rowe, Dkt. No. 3:06-cv-00024-AWT). Wealth Transfer Group L.L.C. sought an injunction and damages. On Feb. 6, 2007, the parties filed a joint motion to stay the case, stating that they have agreed in principle to resolve the matter and are negotiating a formal settlement agreement. Tax professionals were surprised that a patent could be granted for a variation of such a common transfer-tax-planning technique. Congressional tax writers have also become concerned with patenting tax strategies. On July 13, 2006, the Subcommittee on Select Revenue Measures of the House Ways and Means WAYS AND MEANS. In legislative assemblies there is usually appointed a committee whose duties are to inquire into, and propose to the house, the ways and means to be adopted to raise funds for the use of the government. This body is called the committee of ways and means. Committee (subcommittee) held a hearing on the topic. The AICPA voiced its concerns about tax-strategy patents to Congressional staff prior to the hearing. It also generally concurred with the statements and reasoning against tax-strategy patents of IRS An abbreviation for the Internal Revenue Service, a federal agency charged with the responsibility of administering and enforcing internal revenue laws. Commissioner Mark Everson, Ellen Aprill and Dennis Belcher, who testified at the July 13, 2006 subcommittee hearing, and with the New York State Bar Association The New York State Bar Association (NYSBA), with about 72,000 members, is the largest voluntary association of lawyers in the United States. The NYSBA was founded in Albany on November 21 1876. New York lacks an integrated bar, and the NYSBA does not license lawyers in the state. Tax Section's Aug. 17, 2006 letter to the leadership of the tax-writing committees and subcommittee (available at http://waysandmeans.house.gov/hearings.asp?formmode=detail&hearing=492 and www.nysba.org/Content/ContentGroups/Secrion_Information1/Tax_Section_ Reports/1115rpt.PDF (Portable Document Format) The de facto standard for document publishing from Adobe. On the Web, there are countless brochures, data sheets, white papers and technical manuals in the PDF format. ). Position: Recently, the AICPA's Tax Patent Task Force, chaired by Justin Ransome, issued a paper opposing tax-strategy patents (available at http://tax.aicpa.org/Resources/Tax+Patents/AICPA+Urges+Congress+to+Address+ Tax+Strategy+Patents.htm), stating that they: * Limit taxpayers' ability to use fully tax law interpretations intended by Congress; * May cause some taxpayers to pay more tax than Congress intended, or more than others 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. ; * Complicate the provision of tax advice by professionals; * Hinder compliance; * Mislead taxpayers into believing that a patented strategy is valid under the tax law; and * Preclude tax professionals from challenging the validity of tax-strategy patents. The paper concludes that administrative solutions are not sufficient to solve these problems, and encourages Congress's tax-writing and judiciary committees to develop legislation to eliminate the harmful consequences of such patents, by either (1) restricting their issuance or (2) providing immunity from patent-infringement liability for taxpayers and tax practitioners. The AICPA sent its paper to the chairs of these committees, along with an offer to work with Congress on this issue. The Tax Gap The tax gap has been generally viewed as the difference between the amount taxpayers should legitimately pay under the tax law and the amount the IRS ultimately collects. While estimates of the gap vary, it is generally thought to be around $300 billion. The causes of the tax gap are debatable and include ignorance of the law, income underreporting by individuals and small businesses and use of aggressive tax shelters tax shelter: see tax exemption. . What is not debatable is that the tax gap is too large and unfair to the majority of taxpayers who are responsible in paying their tax. Participation: Recently, the AICPA participated in two government forums on this issue. The first was an IRS Oversight Board public meeting on the role of stakeholders Stakeholders All parties that have an interest, financial or otherwise, in a firm-stockholders, creditors, bondholders, employees, customers, management, the community, and the government. in reducing the tax gap. The second was a joint Treasury-IRS roundtable discussion. These forums focused on several possible solutions, including: * Reducing opportunities for evasion; * Funding additional research; * Improving computer technology; * Improving compliance and enforcement; * Increasing taxpayer services; * Simplifying the tax law; and * Coordinating with partners and stakeholders. Comments: The AICPA's submitted comments to both of these forums are available at http://tax.aicpa.org/ Resources/Tax+Advocacy+for+Mem bers/IRS+Regulation+and+Adminis tration/AICPA+Offers+Congress+Co mments+on+the+Tax+Gap.htm. The comments reiterated its position that Congress should fully fund the Service's budget request. This would give the IRS the opportunity to obtain the personnel and technology it needs to focus on the problem areas. The AICPA also committed to surveying its Tax Section members to get their views on practical ways to close the tax gap. Conference: The AICPA is cosponsoring a national conference on the tax gap in June 2007 in Washington, DC, with the American Bar Association American Bar Association (ABA), voluntary organization of lawyers admitted to the bar of any state. Founded (1878) largely through the efforts of the Connecticut Bar Association, it is devoted to improving the administration of justice, seeking uniformity of law , the Tax Executives Institute, the American Tax Policy Institute and the American College American College is the name of:
Get Involved! As a senior technical committee of the AICPA, the Tax Executive Committee (TEC) is authorized to speak for the AICPA on tax matters, and is also designated by governing Council as a standard-setting body. However, numerous other committees, technical resource panels (TRPs) and task forces initiate and develop proposed solutions to policy issues and technical and tax administration problems, for consideration and approval by the TEC. They also initiate proposals for valuable products and services for members in tax practice, and administer the AICPA's tax ethics program (Statements on Standards for Tax Services). Through its various task forces, TRPs and committees, the TEC continues to monitor numerous projects. The Tax Division is committed to providing the best service possible to AICPA members. Leadership and membership appointments for committees and TRPs for the current committee year, which started October 2006, have been completed. However, members who would like to volunteer to assist in Tax Division activities should contact Ed Karl at (202) 434-9228 or ekarl@oicpa.org. Members having suggestions for new services or products should contact Bill Stromsem at (202) 434-9227 or wstromsem@aicpa.org. Editor and Author: Jeffrey R. Hoops, 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. Partner Ernst & Young LLP LLP - Lower Layer Protocol New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of , NY Mr. Hoops chairs the AICPA Tax Division's Tax Executive Committee. DC Currents heightens awareness of the Tax Division's activities and apprises readers of tax policy, technical issues and other practice support matters. |
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