Par. 2. Section 301.6020-1 is removed.
Par. 3. Section 301.6020-1T is added to read as follows:
§ 301.6020-1T Returns prepared or executed by the
Commissioner or other internal revenue officers (temporary).
(a) Preparation of returns — (1) In
general. If any person required by the Code or by the regulations
prescribed thereunder to make a return fails to make such return, it may be
prepared by the Commissioner or other authorized internal revenue officer
or employee provided such person consents to disclose all information necessary
for the preparation of such return. The return upon being signed by the person
required to make it shall be received by the Commissioner as the return of
such person.
(2) Responsibility of person for whom return is prepared.
A person for whom a return is prepared in accordance with paragraph (a)(1)
of this section shall for all legal purposes remain responsible for the correctness
of the return to the same extent as if the return had been prepared by him.
(b) Execution of returns — (1) In
general. If any person required by the Code or by the regulations
prescribed thereunder to make a return (other than a declaration of estimated
tax required under section 6654 or 6655) fails to make such return at the
time prescribed therefor, or makes, willfully or otherwise, a false, fraudulent
or frivolous return, the Commissioner or other authorized internal revenue
officer or employee shall make such return from his own knowledge and from
such information as he can obtain through testimony or otherwise. The Commissioner
or other authorized internal revenue officer or employee may make the return
by gathering information and making computations through electronic, automated
or other means to make a determination of the taxpayer’s tax liability.
(2) Form of the return. A document (or set of documents)
signed by the Commissioner or other authorized internal revenue officer or
employee shall be a return for a person described in paragraph (b)(1) of this
section if the document (or set of documents) identifies the taxpayer by name
and taxpayer identification number, contains sufficient information from which
to compute the taxpayer’s tax liability, and the document (or set of
documents) purports to be a return. A Form 13496, “IRC Section
6020(b) Certification,” or any other form that an authorized
internal revenue officer or employee signs and uses to identify a set of documents
containing the information set forth above as a section 6020(b) return, and
the documents identified, constitute a return under section 6020(b). A return
may be signed by the name or title of an internal revenue officer or employee
being handwritten, stamped, typed, printed or otherwise mechanically affixed
to the return, so long as that name or title was placed on the document to
signify that the internal revenue officer or employee adopted the document
as a return for the taxpayer. The document and signature may be in written
or electronic form.
(3) Status of returns. Any return made in accordance
with paragraph (b)(1) of this section and signed by the Commissioner or other
authorized internal revenue officer or employee shall be prima facie good
and sufficient for all legal purposes. Furthermore, the return shall be treated
as the return filed by the taxpayer for purposes of determining the amount
of the addition to tax under section 6651(a)(2) and (3).
(4) Deficiency procedures. For deficiency procedures
in the case of income, estate, and gift taxes, see sections 6211 to 6216,
inclusive, and §§ 301.6211-1 to 301.6215-1, inclusive.
(5) Employment status procedures. For pre-assessment
procedures in employment taxes cases involving worker classification, see
section 7436 (proceedings for determination of employment status).
(6) Examples. The application of this paragraph
(b) is illustrated by the following examples:
Example 1. Individual A, a calendar-year taxpayer,
fails to file his 2003 return. Employee X, a Service employee, opens an examination
related to A’s 2003 taxable year. At the end of the examination, X completes
a Form 13496 and attaches to it the documents listed on the form. Those documents
explain examination changes and provide sufficient information to compute
A’s tax liability. The Form 13496 provides that the Service employee
identified on the Form certifies that the attached pages constitute a return
under section 6020(b). When X signs the certification package, the package
constitutes a return under paragraph (b) of this section because the package
identifies A by name, contains A’s taxpayer identifying number (TIN),
has sufficient information to compute A’s tax liability, and contains
a statement stating that it constitutes a return under section 6020(b). In
addition, the Service shall determine the amount of the additions to tax under
section 6651(a)(2) by treating the section 6020(b) return as the return filed
by the taxpayer. Likewise, the Service shall determine the amount of any addition
to tax under section 6651(a)(3), which arises only after notice and demand
for payment, by treating the section 6020(b) return as the return filed by
the taxpayer.
Example 2. Same facts as in Example 1,
except that, after performing the examination, X does not compile any examination
documents together as a related set of documents. X also does not sign and
complete the Form 13496 nor associate the forms explaining examination changes
with any other document. Because X did not sign any document stating that
it constitutes a return under section 6020(b) and the documents otherwise
do not purport to be a section 6020(b) return, the documents do not constitute
a return under section 6020(b). Therefore, the Service cannot determine the
section 6651(a)(2) addition to tax against nonfiler A for A’s 2003 taxable
year on the basis of those documents.
Example 3. Individual C, a calendar-year taxpayer,
fails to file his 2003 return. The Service determines through its automated
internal matching programs that C received reportable income and failed to
file a return. The Service, again through its automated systems, generates
a Letter 2566, “30 Day Proposed Assessment (SFR-01) 910 SC/CG.”
This letter contains C’s name, TIN, and has sufficient information to
compute C’s tax liability. Contemporaneous with the creation of the
Letter 2566, the Service, through its automated system, electronically creates
and stores a certification stating that the electronic data contained as part
of C’s account constitutes a valid return under section 6020(b) as of
that date. Further, the electronic data includes the signature of the Service
employee authorized to sign the section 6020(b) return upon its creation.
Although the signature is stored electronically, it can appear as a printed
name when the Service requests a paper copy of the certification. The electronically
created information, signature, and certification is a return under section
6020(b). The Service will treat that return as the return filed by the taxpayer
in determining the amount of the section 6651(a)(2) addition to tax with respect
to C’s 2003 taxable year. Likewise, the Service shall determine the
amount of any addition to tax under section 6651(a)(3), which arises only
after notice and demand for payment, by treating the section 6020(b) return
as the return filed by the taxpayer.
Example 4. Corporation M, a quarterly taxpayer,
fails to file a Form 941, “Employer’s Quarterly Federal
Tax Return,” for the second quarter of 2004. Q, a Service
employee authorized to sign returns under section 6020(b), prepares a Form
941 by hand, stating Corporation M’s name, address, and TIN. Q completes
the Form 941 by entering line item amounts, including the tax due, and then
signs the document. The Form 941 that Q prepared and signed constitutes a
section 6020(b) return because the Form 941 purports to be a return under
section 6020(b), the form contains M’s name and TIN, and it includes
sufficient information to compute M’s tax liability for the second quarter
of 2004.
(c) Cross references — (1) For provisions
that a return executed by the Commissioner or other authorized internal revenue
officer or employee will not start the running of the period of limitations
on assessment and collection, see section 6501(b)(3) and § 301.6501(b)-1(e).
(2) For determining the period of limitations on collection after assessment
of a liability on a return executed by the Commissioner or other authorized
internal revenue officer or employee, see section 6502 and § 301.6502-1.
(3) For additions to the tax and additional amounts for failure to file
returns, see sections 6651 and § 301.6651-1, and section 6652 and
§ 301.6652-1, respectively.
(4) For additions to the tax for failure to pay tax, see section 6651
and § 301.6651-1.
(5) For criminal penalties for willful failure to make returns, see
sections 7201, 7202, and 7203.
(6) For criminal penalties for willfully making false or fraudulent
returns, see sections 7206 and 7207.
(7) For civil penalties for filing frivolous income tax returns, see
section 6702.
(8) For authority to examine books and witnesses, see section 7602 and
§ 301.7602-1.
(d) Effective date. This section applies to returns
prepared under section 6020 after July 18, 2005. The applicability of this
section expires on July 14, 2008.
Mark E. Matthews,
Deputy
Commissioner for
Services and Enforcement.
Approved July 12, 2005.
Eric Solomon,
Acting
Deputy Assistant Secretary
(Tax Policy).
Note
(Filed by the Office of the Federal Register on July 15, 2005, 8:45
a.m., and published in the issue of the Federal Register for July 18, 2005,
70 F.R. 41144)