Treasury
Inspector General for Tax Administration
Office of Audit
FISCAL YEAR 2010 STATUTORY AUDIT OF COMPLIANCE WITH NOTIFYING TAXPAYERS
OF THEIR RIGHTS WHEN REQUESTED TO EXTEND THE ASSESSMENT STATUTE
Issued on August 25, 2010
Highlights
Highlights of Report Number: 2010-30-103 to the Internal Revenue Service Deputy
Commissioner for Services and Enforcement.
IMPACT ON TAXPAYERS
The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) is required to notify
taxpayers of their rights when requesting an extension of the statute of
limitations for assessing additional taxes and penalties. In passing this law, Congress expressed
concern that taxpayers were not being advised adequately of their rights to
refuse to extend the statute of limitations or to request that a statute
extension be limited to specific issues or a specific period. Based on the results of our review, TIGTA
believes the IRS is complying with the intent of the statute. However, there were still some instances in
which IRS employees did not document whether taxpayers or their representatives
were advised of these rights. Taxpayers
might be adversely affected if the IRS does not follow requirements to notify
both the taxpayers and their representatives of the taxpayers’ rights related
to statute extensions.
WHY TIGTA DID THE AUDIT
TIGTA is required by law to
annually determine whether the IRS complied with Internal Revenue Code Section
6501(c)(4)(B). This requires the IRS to
notify taxpayers of their rights to decline to extend the assessment statute of
limitations or to request that any extension be limited to specific issues or a
specific period of time.
WHAT TIGTA FOUND
Over the past five fiscal years, the IRS has improved
its compliance with requirements for documenting that taxpayers were informed
of their rights to refuse to extend the period of limitations or to limit such
extension to a particular issue or to a particular period of time. The percentage of case files without
documentation decreased from Fiscal Year 2006 to Fiscal Year 2010.
For Fiscal Year 2010, taxpayer
files for five (five percent) of the 111 taxpayers in our statistical sample
did not contain sufficient documentation to indicate whether taxpayers were
advised of their rights before consenting to extend the time to assess
tax. In all five taxpayer cases, the
taxpayer’s representative signed Consent
to Extend the Time to Assess Tax (Form 872) or Consent to Extend the Time to Assess Employment Taxes (Form
SS-10), both of which contain a statement detailing the taxpayer’s rights
regarding extending the assessment statute of limitation. However, there was no evidence in the case
files that the taxpayers themselves were advised of their rights, as required
by IRS procedures.
In addition, our sample included
taxpayers’ files containing authorizations for third-party representation. Our review found that 2.67 percent of
the taxpayers’ files did not contain sufficient documentation that the
taxpayers’ representatives were provided with the required notifications. For these taxpayers, IRS management officials
informed us that some employees may have overlooked the fact that the required
information was not documented in the case file or the documents were separated
from the case files.
WHAT TIGTA RECOMMENDED
TIGTA did not make any recommendations in this
report. However, a draft of the report
was provided to the IRS for review and comment. The IRS did not have any written comments in
response to the report.
READ THE
FULL REPORT
To view the report, including
the scope, methodology, and full IRS response, go to:
http://www.treas.gov/tigta/auditreports/2010reports/201030103fr.html.
Email Address: inquiries@tigta.treas.gov
Phone Number: 202-622-6500
Web Site:
http://www.tigta.gov