For Immediate ReleaseContact:
Peter Reilly
http://riles52.blogspot.com/
*Deadline Looms for Same Sex Couples 2007 Amended Returns *
There have been major developments in the tax law affecting same sex couples in the last year. The attitude that I have as a tax advisor is "It is what it is. Deal with it." Whether its fair or makes sense is an interesting question, but not a practical one. When I look at the developments my thought is "What should Robin and Terry do ?" Robin and Terry are a couple of indeterminate gender and relationship status whose role in life is to help me avoid awkward pronoun problems. It's been a big year for Robin and Terry. I've decided that for this post I need to introduce some of their friends. One couple is Alex and Marty. The other is Blynn and Ashley. They are going to be busy this week because despite my advice they put off looking at their 2007 returns to see if they should amend.
Robin and Terry, at least for now, are of the same gender and were married
in Massachusetts in 2007. Alex and Marty are of the same gender and are
California registered domestic partners. Blynn and Ashley, who know how to
act quickly when opportunity arises, are a California same sex married
couple. They were married in San Francisco in 2004. Same sex marriage in
California has a fairly convoluted legal
history
The development that affects Robin and Terry is the decision in Gill v
OPM
For 2007, Robin and Terry filed their returns as single. It may be that
they would have paid less tax if they had been able to do a married filing
joint return. I discussed the question of whether a joint return is better
in a recent
post
The short answer is that there are enough potential complications that you
really need to do the return in order to tell. Now, Robin and Terry were
required to file a joint Massachusetts return so it may be that somebody
already prepared a pro-forma federal joint return for them. That's how we
would have done it anyway. So one way or another Robin and Terry should
compute a joint return and see if it would save them money. It's not a sure
bet that Gill v OPM will ultimately be upheld, but there is quite a good
chance. Unless there is a timely claim for refund, though, it won't do them
any good for their 2007 return.
Alex and Marty have a situation that is more complicated, but not as
uncertain. CCA
201021050
There are a host of phase-outs and thresholds and offsets such that it is
really impossible to say with certainty what will happen when you start
moving income from one return to another. You have to look at each return.
Let's say however that Alex and Marty don't have much other than their jobs
and that Alex gets paid a ton of money by Microsoft as an independent
contractor and Marty works at Starbucks. Most likely if they prepare
amended returns for 2007 Alex will get a big refund and Marty will owe a lot
of money. They will, however, net positive, at least on tax, if not on
interest.
I did come up with a nasty idea. I've only found one other commentator that
has made a similar observation:
*Observation: The CCA doesn't say that if one partner amends his or her
return, the other must do so as well. So, feasibly the higher income partner
could amend his or her return to claim only 50% of his or her earnings while
the lower income partner does nothing (i.e., doesn't file an amended return
to pick up his or her 50% share). However, as withholding must also be split
50/50, it may be necessary to file both returns to get the full benefit of
any savings. Also, the IRS may well require both partners to amend under
these circumstances*.
That comes from William Bischoff from a National Tax Advisory (NTA-743) (I
can't track down a free link to it. I got it from my RIA
Checkpoint
I have not found anything to indicate that the IRS has done something to
prevent being whipsawed on this issue. So if Alex hurries out and amends
for 2007, maybe kind of forgetting to mention it to Marty, it may well be
that Marty will be protected by the statute of limitations. I doubt that
there is a SWAT team sitting in the service centers ready to issue timely
notices of deficiency to the registered domestic partners of people filing
refund claims under CCA 201021050, but I never, ever, give advice even to
hypothetical clients based on the audit lottery. This particular
observation is why I titled my first post on this topic Windfall for
"Unmarried"
Taxpayers
I won't spend much time on Blynn and Ashley. They do not represent a very
large group of people. San Francisco issued same sex couples marriage
licences for a brief period in 2004. That was shut down, but the law that
declared it illegal was declared unconstitutional in 2008 opening a state
wide window, which was closed in November 2008 by Proposition 8. So of the
approximately 18,000 legally married same sex couples in California only a
small number would have been arguably married in 2007 (at least in
retrospect). What is interesting about them is they can either filed an
amended joint 2007 return like Robin and Terry or amended 2007 community
returns like Alex and Marty. The Alex and Marty option will probably work
out better, but I find their situation particularly interesting so I thought
I would mention it.
There is another point, which I cannot emphasize enough. If you might
benefit from amending your 2007 return and you did not put it on
extension,get the amended return done *NOW. *In CCA
201052003
P.S.
Patricia Cain of the Santa Clara Same Sex Tax
Blog
Ms. Cain does not like the idea of the high income partners amending and the
other partner letting it slide. It's not my all time favorite idea either, I
just haven't figured out why it doesn't work. You really need to go to the
Santa Clara blog for a thorough treatment of same sex tax issues. They
are very focused on the issue and don't get distracted by
mercenaries
Another point that I also picked up from Ms. Cain that I should have thought
of myself is that the lower earning partner might be subject to a six year
statute of limitations if his or her share of community income would be 25%
greater than the income he or she reported...
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