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- From the Tax Adviser
Innocent spouse provisions.
Please note: This item is from our archives and was published in 1999. It is provided for historical reference. The content may be out of date and links may no longer function.
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TOPICS
New liberalized rules.
From The Tax Adviser:
In 1998, Congress enacted IRC section 6015. The new provisions relax the eligibility requirements for innocent spouse status, eliminating the dollar understatement thresholds and changing the standard to “erroneous” understatements rather than “grossly” erroneous ones; in addition, the new provisions expressly make “partial relief” available. The new law also allows an individual no longer married to, separated from or no longer living with a spouse to elect separate liability for any deficiency. And the new law allows the IRS to grant relief when these provisions may not apply.
INNOCENT SPOUSE ELECTION
For the innocent spouse to take advantage of the new law (that is, to seek relief from joint and several liability), the following requirements must be met:
- A joint return must be filed.
- An understatement of tax on that return must be attributable to erroneous items of the other spouse.
- The innocent spouse must establish that, in signing the return, he or she did not know (and had no reason to know) of the understatement. To qualify for partial relief, that spouse must establish that he or she knew (or had reason to know) of the understatement but did not know (or have reason to know) of the extent of the understatement . In that way, the innocent spouse can be relieved of liability for taxes, interest and penalties attributable to the portion of the understatement not known.
- Considering the entire situation, it must be unfair to hold the spouse liable for the deficiency attributable to the understatement.
- The innocent spouse must elect this relief—by filing Form 8857, Request for Innocent Spouse Relief (And Separation of Liability and Equitable Relief)— no later than two years after the IRS has begun collection activities against that spouse.
SEPARATE LIABILITY ELECTION
In addition to the innocent spouse election, some taxpayers also may be eligible for a separate liability election if
- At the time the election is filed, the innocent spouse is no longer married to, or is legally separated from, the spouse with whom a joint return was filed.
- The innocent spouse was not a member of the same household as the spouse with whom the joint return was filed at any time during the 12-month period ending on the date the election was filed.
- That election was made no later than two years after the date the IRS began the collection activities giving the innocent spouse notice of the IRS’s intention to collect the joint liability (such as garnishment of wages or a notice of intent to levy against property). Note that mailing a deficiency notice and demand for payment, addressed to both spouses, to the electing spouse’s last known address does not start this two-year period.
EQUITABLE RELIEF
If, after taking into account all the facts and circumstances, it is not fair to hold a spouse liable for any portion of the unpaid tax or deficiency and he or she is not eligible for either the innocent spouse or separate liability election, the IRS still may relieve that spouse of liability.
For a discussion of some of the developments in this (and other) areas, see the Tax Clinic, edited by Philip Moore, in the October 1999 issue of The Tax Adviser .
—Nicholas Fiore, editor
The Tax Adviser