
Treasury
Decision 9086
Internal
Revenue Service
2003-41
I.R.B. 817
Section
7122.—Compromises
26
CFR
300.3: Offer to compromise fee.
T.D.
9086
DEPARTMENT
OF THE TREASURY
Internal
Revenue Service
26
CFR
Part 300
User
Fees for Processing Offers to Compromise
AGENCY:
Internal Revenue Service (
IRS
), Treasury.
ACTION:
Final regulations.
SUMMARY:
This document contains amendments to the regulations
relating to user fees to provide for the imposition
of user fees for the processing of offers to
compromise. The charging of user fees implements the
Independent Offices Appropriations Act.
EFFECTIVE
DATE: NOVEMBER 1, 2003.
FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Concerning cost
methodology, Eva Williams, 301–492–5395;
concerning the regulations, G. William Beard,
202–622–3620 (not toll-free numbers).
SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION:
Background
This
document amends the regulations relating to user
fees to provide for the imposition of user fees for
the processing of offers to compromise. The charging
of user fees implements the Independent Offices
Appropriations Act (IOAA), which is codified at 31
U.S.C. 9701. On November 6, 2002, a notice of
proposed rulemaking (
REG
–103777–02, 2002–2 C.B. 889) was published in
the Federal Register . Approximately 149
comments were received. A public hearing on the
regulations was held on February 13, 2003. The final
regulations adopt the rules of the proposed
regulations.
Offers
to Compromise
Section
7122 of the Internal Revenue Code (Code) gives the
IRS
the authority to compromise any civil or criminal
case arising under the internal revenue laws, prior
to the referral of that case to the Department of
Justice. Section 7122 also directs the
IRS
to prescribe guidelines for officers and employees
of the
IRS
to determine whether an offer to compromise is
adequate and should be accepted. Guidelines are
contained in §301.7122–1. Pursuant to §301.7122–1(b),
an offer may be accepted if there is doubt as to
liability, if there is doubt as to collectibility,
or if acceptance will promote effective tax
administration. Pursuant to §301.7122–1(b)(3),
offers may be accepted to promote effective tax
administration if either: (1) the
IRS
determines that, although collection in full could
be achieved, collection of the full liability would
cause the taxpayer economic hardship within the
meaning of §301.6343–1, or (2) there are no other
grounds for compromise and there are compelling
public policy or equity considerations.
When
an offer to compromise is received, an initial
determination is made as to whether the offer is
processable. Currently, an offer is returned as
nonprocessable if the taxpayer is in bankruptcy, has
not filed required tax returns, or has not submitted
the offer to compromise on the proper form. Absent
these conditions, the offer is accepted for
processing and cannot be rejected without an
independent administrative review of the decision to
reject and, if the taxpayer chooses to appeal the
rejection, independent review by the Office of
Appeals. Even though an offer accepted for
processing may later be returned to the taxpayer if
the taxpayer fails to provide requested information
or the
IRS
determines that the offer was submitted solely to
delay collection, such an offer may not be returned
before a managerial review of the proposed return is
completed pursuant to §301.7122–1(f)(5)(ii).
Explanation
of Provisions
The
final regulations establish a $150 user fee for the
processing of certain offers to compromise tax
liabilities pursuant to §301.7122–1. The user fee
will not apply to offers based solely on doubt as to
liability and offers made by low income taxpayers
whose incomes are at or below the poverty guidelines
set by the Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS),
or such other measure the
IRS
may adopt.
Offers
based on doubt as to liability are excepted from the
user fee based on the inequity of the
IRS
charging a fee to compromise an uncertain liability
when a compromise is based upon a redetermination or
reevaluation of the taxpayer’s liability for a tax
(and the agreed upon amount may, in fact, provide
for the full payment of the amount actually owed).
Offers
from low income taxpayers are excepted from the fee
in light of section 7122(c)(3)(A), which prohibits
the
IRS
from rejecting an offer from a low income taxpayer
solely on the basis of the amount offered. Section
7122(c)(3)(A) literally applies to the rejection of
an offer, rather than the return of an offer for
failure to pay a user fee. Requiring payment of a
user fee from a low income taxpayer would undermine
section 7122(c)(3)(A) in cases where the taxpayer
does not have the ability to pay the fee. Offers
from low income taxpayers are therefore excepted.
Taxpayers
with offers that do not fall within the doubt as to
liability or low income exceptions will submit the
user fee along with the offer to compromise. If the
offer is accepted to promote effective tax
administration or is accepted based on doubt as to
collectibility and a determination that collecting
more than the amount offered would create economic
hardship within the meaning of §§301.6343–1, the
fee will be applied to the amount of the offer or,
if the taxpayer requests, refunded to the taxpayer.
In other cases, the payment of the fee will be taken
into account in determining the acceptable amount of
the offer and therefore the taxpayer in total will
pay no more than the taxpayer would have paid
without the fee. While the fee will not be refunded
if an offer is withdrawn, rejected, or returned as
nonprocessable after acceptance for processing, no
additional fee will be charged if a taxpayer
resubmits an offer the
IRS
determines to have been rejected or returned in
error.
Comments
on the Proposed Regulation
Most
of the comments on the proposed regulations did not
favor the fee. The comments focused on three
concerns: the fee would create an additional
financial hard-ship on taxpayers who are already
experiencing hardship; the income level for the low
income exception to the fee was too low; and the fee
should not be imposed until the offer to compromise
is administered more effectively and efficiently.
For the following reasons, these final regulations
follow the proposed regulations without change.
The
most frequent concern in the comments was that the
fee would cause additional financial hardship for
taxpayers who are already experiencing financial
hardship. The exception for low income taxpayers,
however, excludes those taxpayers most likely to be
disadvantaged by the user fee. Further, the
imposition of the fee on other taxpayers will not
change the net amount paid by the taxpayer to reach
a compromise; the fee will be taken into account
when considering whether the amount offered is
acceptable. Although taxpayers who must pay the fee
will not receive a refund if the offer is withdrawn,
rejected, or returned after being accepted for
processing, the
IRS
will work closely with taxpayers to perfect
incomplete or inadequate offers before returning or
rejecting them.
A
number of commentators were concerned that the DHHS
poverty guidelines used for purposes of the low
income exception are too low and recommended that
the exception for low income taxpayers should be
extended to 250% of the DHHS guidelines. The 250%
level corresponds to one of the criteria used for
funding low income taxpayer clinics: in order to
receive funding pursuant to section 7526 of the
Code, 90% of a clinic’s clients must fall below
250% of the DHHS poverty level. The commentators
pointed to the relationship between section 7526 and
offers to compromise. Section 7526 was enacted
contemporaneously with section 7122(c)(3), which
prohibits the
IRS
from rejecting an offer from a low income taxpayer
based on the amount of the offer. Commentators
argued that imposing a user fee on taxpayers whose
incomes are within 250% of the poverty level thwarts
the objective of section 7526 to assist such
taxpayers.
The
DHHS poverty guidelines are retained as the measure
of the exception for the low income taxpayer. The
250% criteria in section 7526 only applies for
purposes of that section; it does not extend to
offers to compromise under section 7122. Had
Congress intended to extend the 250% criteria to
offers in compromise under section 7122, it could
have done so. The DHHS poverty guidelines are a
reasonable standard for offers to compromise in
light of the fact that the amount of the fee will be
reflected in the amount of the offer. Although some
taxpayers may not be able to pay the fee because the
fee exceeds their collectible assets and income, the
DHHS standard will generally cover such taxpayers.
Further, the
IRS
retains the authority under the final regulations to
adjust the definition of low income taxpayer. The
IRS
could, therefore, change the low income standard if,
in practice, there are a significant number of
taxpayers with incomes above the DHHS standard who
are experiencing hardship as a result of the fee.
A
number of commentators urged that the fee should not
be imposed until inefficiencies and errors in the
processing of offers to compromise are eliminated.
In the past year, however, the
IRS
made substantial improvements to its offer in
compromise program and is now able to process offers
to compromise much more accurately, effectively and
efficiently. The
IRS
acknowledges that further improvements are needed
and is taking steps to achieve greater accuracy and
efficiency, but the user fee is an integral part of
that effort. The user fee should help reduce the
number of frivolous offers and the number of offers
that are either withdrawn, returned, or rejected
because the offeror would not provide adequate
information for the
IRS
to process the offer or would not offer an amount
that reflects the taxpayer’s ability to pay.
Limiting the number of offers that will be
withdrawn, returned, or rejected will enable the
IRS
to direct its resources towards the timely and
efficient processing of acceptable offers. In
addition, the final regulation was amended to make
clear that no additional fee will be charged if a
taxpayer resubmits an offer the
IRS
determines to have been rejected or returned in
error after acceptance for processing.
Authority
The
IOAA authorizes agencies to prescribe regulations
that establish charges for services provided by the
agency (user fees). The charges must be fair and be
based on the costs to the Government, the value of
the service to the recipient, the public policy or
interest served, and other relevant facts. The IOAA
provides that regulations implementing user fees are
subject to policies prescribed by the President,
which are currently set forth in OMB Circular
A–25, 58 FR 38142 (July 15, 1993).
The
OMB Circular encourages user fees for
Government-provided services that confer benefits on
identifiable recipients over and above those
benefits received by the general public. Under the
OMB Circular, an agency that seeks to impose a user
fee for Government-provided services must calculate
its full cost of providing those services. In
general, the amount of a user fee should recover the
cost of providing the special service, unless the
Office of Management and Budget grants an exception.
Pursuant to the guidelines in the OMB Circular, the
IRS
calculated its cost of providing services under the
offer in compromise program. The
IRS
determined that the full cost of investigating doubt
as to collectibility and effective tax
administration offers averages $471 when streamlined
procedures are used to investigate the financial
condition of the taxpayer, and $3,983 when more
detailed investigations are used. The
IRS
estimates that 70% of offers are processed under
streamlined procedures. OMB granted an exception to
the "full cost" requirement of the OMB
Circular.
The
Treasury, Postal Service, and General Government
Appropriations Act of 1995, Public Law 103–329
(108 Stat. 2382) (the 1995 Appropriations Act)
provides that the Secretary may establish new fees
for services provided by the
IRS
where such fees are authorized by another law, such
as the IOAA.
The
user fees are implemented under the authority of the
IOAA, the OMB Circular, and the 1995 Appropriations
Act.
Special
Analysis
It
has been determined that this Treasury decision is
not a significant regulatory action as defined in
Executive Order 12866. Therefore, a regulatory
assessment is not required. It is hereby certified
that these regulations will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial number of small
entities. Accordingly, a regulatory flexibility
analysis is not required. This certification is
based on the information that follows. The economic
impact of these regulations on any small entity will
result from the entity being required to pay a fee
prescribed by these regulations in order to obtain a
particular service. The dollar amount of the fee is
not, however, substantial enough to have a
significant economic impact on any entity subject to
the fee. Pursuant to section 7805(f) of the Code,
the preceding notice of proposed rulemaking was
submitted to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the
Small Business Administration for comment on its
impact on small business.
Drafting
Information
The
principal author of these regulations is G. William
Beard, Office of Associate Chief Counsel (Procedure
and Administration), Collection, Bankruptcy and
Summonses Division.
*****
Adoption
of Amendments to the Regulations
Accordingly,
26
CFR
part 300 is amended as follows:
PART
300—USER FEES
Paragraph
1. The authority citation for part 300 continues to
read as follows:
Authority:
31 U.S.C. 9701.
Par.
2. Section 300.0 is amended as follows:
1.
Paragraph (b)(3) is added.
2.
Paragraph (c) is revised.
The
addition and revision read as follows:
§300.0
User fees; in general.
*****
(b)
* * *
(3)
Processing an offer to compromise.
(c)
Effective Date . This part 300 is applicable
March 16, 1995, except that the user fee for
processing offers to compromise is applicable NOVEMBER
1, 2003 .
Par.
3. Section 300.3 is added to read as follows:
§300.3
Offer to compromise fee.
(a)
Applicability . This section applies to the
processing of offers to compromise tax liabilities
pursuant to §301.7122–1 of this chapter. Except
as provided in this section, this fee applies to all
offers to compromise accepted for processing.
(b)
Fee . (1) The fee for processing an offer to
compromise is $150.00, except that no fee will be
charged if an offer is—
(i)
Based solely on doubt as to liability as defined in
§301.7122–1(b)(1) of this chapter; or
(ii)
Made by a low income taxpayer, that is, an
individual who falls at or below the dollar criteria
established by the poverty guidelines updated
annually in the Federal Register by the U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services under
authority of section 673(2) of the Omnibus Budget
Reconciliation Act of 1981 (95 Stat. 357, 511) or
such other measure that is adopted by the Secretary.
(2)
The fee will be applied against the amount of the
offer, unless the taxpayer requests that it be
refunded, if the offer is—
(i)
Accepted to promote effective tax administration
pursuant to §301.7122–1(b)(3) of this chapter; or
(ii)
Accepted based on doubt as to collectibility and a
determination that collection of an amount greater
than the amount offered would create economic
hardship within the meaning of §301.6343–1 of
this chapter.
(3)
Except as otherwise provided in this paragraph (b),
the fee will not be refunded to the taxpayer if the
offer is accepted, rejected, withdrawn, or returned
as nonprocessable after acceptance for processing.
(4)
No additional fee will be charged if a taxpayer
resubmits an offer the Secretary determines to have
been rejected in error or returned in error after
acceptance for processing.
(c)
Person liable for the fee . The person liable
for the processing fee is the taxpayer whose tax
liabilities are the subject of the offer.
Robert
E. Wenzel,
Deputy
Commissioner
for
Services and Enforcement .
Approved
July 17, 2003.
Pamela
F. Olson,
Assistant
Secretary of the
Treasury
(Tax Policy) .
(Filed
by the Office of the Federal Register on August 14,
2003, 8:45 a.m., and published in the issue of the
Federal Register for August 15, 2003, 68 F.R. 48785)