Revenue Procedure 2006-44 |
October 30, 2006 |
Procedure Formally Establishing the
Appeals Arbitration Program
This revenue procedure formally establishes the Appeals arbitration
program, which is designed to improve tax administration, provide customer
service and reduce taxpayer burden. Arbitration is available for cases within
Appeals jurisdiction that meet the operational requirements of the program.
Generally, this program is available for cases in which a limited number
of factual issues remain unresolved following settlement discussions in Appeals.
Within Appeals, the Office of Tax Policy and Procedure will be responsible
for the management of the Appeals arbitration program.
.01 Section 7123(b)(2) of the Internal Revenue Code, as enacted by § 3465
of the Internal Revenue Service Restructuring and Reform Act of 1998, Pub.
L. No. 105-206, 112 Stat. 685, provides that the Secretary shall establish
a pilot program under which a taxpayer and Appeals may jointly request binding
arbitration on certain unresolved issues. On January 18, 2000, Appeals began
a two-year test of an initial arbitration procedure. See Announcement
2000-4, 2000-1 C.B. 317. On July 1, 2003, Appeals completed an additional
one-year test of its arbitration procedure. See Announcement
2002-60, 2002-2 C.B. 28. During these test periods, the IRS allowed taxpayers
to request arbitration for certain factual issues that were already subject
to the Appeals administrative process.
.02 This revenue procedure supersedes Announcements 2000-4 and 2002-60.
SECTION 3. SCOPE OF ARBITRATION
.01 The arbitration procedure may be used to resolve issues while a
case is in Appeals, after settlement discussions are unsuccessful and, generally,
when all other issues are resolved but for the specific factual issue(s) for
which arbitration is being requested.
.02 The arbitration procedure does not create any special authority
for settlement by Appeals. During the arbitration process, Appeals is still
subject to the procedures that would be applicable if the issue were being
considered by Appeals, including procedures in the Internal Revenue Manual
and existing published guidance.
.03 Arbitration is available:
(1) Only for factual issues;
(2) For factual issues for which a request for competent authority assistance
has not yet been filed. Taxpayers are cautioned that if they enter into a
settlement with Appeals (including an Appeals settlement through the arbitration
process), and then request competent authority assistance, the U.S. competent
authority will endeavor only to obtain a correlative adjustment with the treaty
country and will not take any actions that would otherwise change the settlement.
See section 7.05 of Rev. Proc. 2002-52, 2002-2 C.B.
242, or the corresponding provision of any successor guidance. If a taxpayer
enters into the Appeals arbitration program, the taxpayer may not request
competent authority assistance until the arbitration process is completed,
unless the taxpayer demonstrates that a request for competent authority assistance
is necessary to keep open a statute of limitations in the treaty country.
If so, competent authority assistance may be requested while arbitration
is pending and the U.S. competent authority will suspend action on the case
until arbitration is completed; and
(3) For factual issues unresolved at the conclusion of unsuccessful
attempts to enter into a closing agreement under I.R.C. § 7121.
.04 Arbitration will not be available for:
(1) Legal issues;
(2) Cases in which arbitration is not appropriate under either 5 U.S.C.
§ 572 or 5 U.S.C. § 575, which provide the general authority
and guidelines for the use of alternative of dispute resolution in the administrative
process.
(3) Issues docketed in any court;
(4) Issues in a taxpayer’s case designated for litigation;
(5) Compliance Coordinated (formerly Industry Specialization Program)
Issues (CCI) or Appeals Coordinated Issues (ACI) listed at http://www.irs.gov/irs/article/0,,id=128327,00.html; see §§ 8.7.3.2.1 and 8.7.3.2.2 of the Internal Revenue Manual,
found at http://www.irs.gov/irm/index.html;
(6) Issues for which a request for competent authority assistance has
been filed under the provisions of Rev. Proc. 2002-52, or any successor guidance,
including issues in cases submitted to the competent authority under the simultaneous
appeals procedure. If the competent authority declines assistance, the competent
authorities fail to agree, or if the taxpayer does not accept the mutual agreement
reached by the competent authorities, the taxpayer is permitted to refer the
unresolved issues to Appeals for further consideration and may submit a request
to arbitrate unresolved factual issues under this revenue procedure;
(7) Collection cases, except for those involving: (i) an unsuccessful
attempt to enter into a compromise under I.R.C. § 7122; and (ii)
trust fund recovery penalty (TFRP) cases that involve whether a person: (a)
was required to collect, truthfully account for, and pay over income, employment,
or excise taxes; (b) was willful in attempting in any manner to evade or defeat
any aforementioned tax or the payment thereof; and (c) is liable for the TFRP
under I.R.C. § 6672; as provided for in any subsequent guidance
issued by the Service;
(8) Issues for which arbitration would not be consistent with sound
tax administration, e.g., issues governed by closing
agreements, by res judicata, or controlling Supreme Court
precedent;
(9) “Whipsaw” issues, i.e., issues
for which resolution with respect to one party might result in inconsistent
treatment in the absence of the participation of another party;
(10) Frivolous issues, such as, but not limited to, those identified
in Rev. Proc. 2001-41, 2001-2 C.B. 173, which defines frivolous issues and
sets forth the Service’s policy against making technical rulings on
such issues.
(11) Cases in which the taxpayer did not act in good faith during Appeals
settlement negotiations, e.g., failure to respond to
document requests, failure to respond timely to offers to settle, failure
to address arguments and precedents raised by Appeals; or
(12) Issues that have been otherwise identified as excluded from the
arbitration program.
SECTION 4. APPLICATION PROCESS
.01 Arbitration is optional for both the taxpayer and Appeals. Either
the taxpayer or Appeals may submit a request to arbitrate after consulting
with the other party.
.02 A taxpayer may submit a request to arbitrate by sending a written
request to the appropriate Appeals Team Manager and a copy to the Chief, Appeals,
1099 14th Street, NW, Suite 4200 East, Washington,
DC 20005, Attn: Office of Tax Policy and Procedure. The request to arbitrate
should:
(1) Provide the taxpayer’s name, TIN, address, and the name,
title, address and telephone number of a person to contact;
(2) Provide the Appeals Team Case Leader’s, Appeals Officer’s,
or Settlement Officer’s name;
(3) Identify the taxable period(s) involved;
(4) Describe the issue for which the taxpayer is requesting arbitration,
including the dollar amount of the adjustment in dispute; and
(5) Contain a representation that the issue is not an excluded issue
listed in section 3.04, above.
.03 The Appeals Team Manager will respond to the taxpayer and the Appeals
Team Case Leader, Appeals Officer, or Settlement Officer, generally, within
two weeks after the Appeals Team Manager receives the taxpayer’s request
for arbitration. The Appeals Team Manager will secure the concurrence of
the Chief, Appeals — Office of Tax Policy and Procedure, prior to notifying
the taxpayer and the Appeals Team Case Leader, Appeals Officer, or Settlement
Officer of the decision.
(1) If Appeals approves the request to arbitrate, the Appeals Team Manager
will schedule a conference or conference call that will include a representative
from the Chief, Appeals — Office of Tax Policy and Procedure. This
representative will act as the Administrator to manage and supervise the arbitration
proceeding and to act as liaison between the taxpayer and Appeals (the Parties)
and between the Parties and the Arbitrator. At a later date, pursuant to
section 6.02, the Parties may select another Administrator, including non-IRS
persons.
(2) Although no formal appeal procedure exists for the denial of a request
to arbitrate, a taxpayer may request a conference with the Appeals Team Manager
to discuss the denial. The denial of a request to arbitrate is not subject
to judicial review.
SECTION 5. AGREEMENT TO ARBITRATE
.01 Upon approval of the request to arbitrate, the Parties will enter
into a written agreement to arbitrate. See Exhibit 1
of this revenue procedure for a model agreement to arbitrate. The attached
model agreement is designed to serve as a basic framework; if there is mutual
agreement, the Parties are free to eliminate or modify existing provisions
and add new provisions as necessary. Each Party enters an agreement to arbitrate
in reliance on the other Party’s agreement to be bound by the decision
of the Arbitrator. The agreement to arbitrate will, at minimum:
(1) Specify the issue(s) that the Parties have agreed to arbitrate;
(2) Assign to the Arbitrator the prescribed task of finding facts;
(3) Describe with precision the answer the Parties seek; e.g.,
a specific dollar amount, range of dollar values, a ‘yes’ or ‘no’
finding, etc.
(4) Describe and limit the kind of information the Arbitrator may consider, e.g.,
the Parties’ agreement as to any legal guidance the Arbitrator must
rely upon in reaching a decision;
(5) Contain an initial list of witnesses, attorneys, representatives,
and observers for each Party (collectively known as Participants);
(6) Provide that the time and place of any hearing will be determined
by mutual agreement of the Parties, and;
(7) Prohibit ex parte contacts between the Arbitrator
and the Parties.
.02 The agreement to arbitrate may limit the number, identity and participation
of Participants. In addition, the agreement may stipulate the subsequent
tax or other treatment resulting from the Arbitrator’s decision and
clarify any other issues that may result from the Arbitrator’s decision.
.03 The Appeals Team Manager, in consultation with the Appeals Team
Case Leader, Appeals Officer, or Settlement Officer, will sign the agreement
to arbitrate on behalf of Appeals.
.04 Generally, the Parties will complete the agreement to arbitrate
within four weeks after the taxpayer is notified that Appeals has approved
the request to arbitrate, and proceed to arbitration within 90 days after
signing the agreement to arbitrate. A taxpayer’s inability to adhere
to these timeframes, without reasonable cause, may result in Appeals’
withdrawal from the arbitration process.
.05 In executing the agreement to arbitrate, the taxpayer consents to
the disclosure by the IRS of the taxpayer’s returns and return information
incident to the arbitration to any Participant for the taxpayer identified
in the initial list of Participants and to any Participants for the taxpayer
identified in writing by the taxpayer subsequent to execution of the agreement
to arbitrate. If the agreement to arbitrate is executed by a person pursuant
to a power of attorney executed by the taxpayer, that power of attorney must
clearly express the taxpayer’s grant of authority to consent to disclose
the taxpayer’s returns and return information by the IRS to third parties,
and a copy of that power of attorney must be attached to the agreement.
SECTION 6. ARBITRATION PROCESS
.01 A Party must notify the other Party and the Administrator, in a
signed writing, not later than thirty (30) days before the arbitration session,
of any change to the initial list of Participants contained in the agreement
to arbitrate. The Parties, by mutual agreement, may modify the list of Participants
at any time up to and including the date of the arbitration session. The
Administrator will forward each Party’s list(s) to the Arbitrator.
Appeals reserves the right to have an observer attend any arbitration. If
a taxpayer does not accept observers, the taxpayer’s request for arbitration
may be denied. Taxpayers may also have an observer attend any arbitration
session. The identity and affiliation of all observers will be established
in the agreement to arbitrate signed prior to the arbitration session. See section
5.01(5); section 2 of Exhibit 1. All observers affiliated with Appeals will
be bound by the confidentiality provisions of the Internal Revenue Code. See section
9.01. Appeals also reserves the right to have the Office of Chief Counsel
assist and participate in the arbitration proceeding.
.02 The Parties, by mutual agreement, may select an Arbitrator from
Appeals, or from any local or national organization that provides a roster
of neutrals. In the event such local or national organization provides an
Arbitrator, this organization may also provide the Administrator for the arbitration,
in lieu of the Administrator from the Chief, Appeals — Office of Tax
Policy and Procedure. In obtaining the services of a non-IRS Arbitrator,
the IRS will follow all applicable provisions of the Federal Acquisition Regulation.
An Arbitrator shall have no official, financial, or personal conflict of
interest with respect to the Parties, unless such interest is fully disclosed
in writing to the taxpayer and the Appeals Team Manager and they agree that
the Arbitrator may serve. See 5 U.S.C. § 573.
.03 If the Parties select a non-IRS Arbitrator, the Parties will share
equally the compensation, expenses, and related fees and costs of the Arbitrator,
as well as any reasonable costs for the services of a non-IRS Administrator
subject to applicable rules and regulations for Government procurement. The
non-IRS Arbitrator and non-IRS Administrator will be contractors subject to
the disclosure restrictions of I.R.C. § 6103(n).
.04 If the Parties select an Appeals Arbitrator, the Arbitrator shall
be from another Appeals office, or from the office of the Chief, Appeals.
Appeals will pay all expenses associated with an Appeals Arbitrator. Due
to the inherent conflict that results because the Appeals Arbitrator is an
employee of the IRS, the Appeals Arbitrator will provide to the taxpayer a
statement confirming the proposed service as an Arbitrator and status as a
current employee of the IRS, and that a conflict results from the continued
status as an IRS employee.
.05 Criteria for selecting an Arbitrator may include some or all of
the following: completion of arbitration training, previous arbitration experience,
a substantive knowledge of tax law and knowledge of industry practices. The
Arbitrator’s qualifications and potential conflicts of interest should
be thoroughly reviewed prior to selection. The projected travel costs, hourly
fees and other expenses of a non-IRS Arbitrator are subject to the applicable
rules and regulations for Government procurement. The non-IRS Arbitrator
shall look solely to each Party for one-half of the compensation, expenses
and related reasonable fees and costs.
SECTION 7. ARBITRATION SESSION
.01 Each Party will prepare a summary of its position for consideration
by the Arbitrator. The Parties should submit their summaries to the Administrator
no later than thirty (30) days before the scheduled arbitration session.
.02 The Arbitrator will look solely to the legal guidance identified
by the Parties. If the Arbitrator desires further legal guidance, both Parties
must agree to provide the guidance and the manner in which it is to be communicated
to the Arbitrator.
.03 The arbitration process is confidential. Therefore, all information
concerning any dispute resolution communication related to the arbitration
proceeding is confidential and may not be disclosed by any Party, Participant,
or Arbitrator, except as provided under 5 U.S.C § 574. A dispute
resolution communication includes all oral or written communications prepared
for purposes of a dispute resolution proceeding. See 5
U.S.C. § 571(5).
.04 The Parties agree that there shall be no ex parte communications
between the Arbitrator and either Party or agent for a Party. In addition,
the Arbitrator may not have contact with any other individuals, including
Participants, outside the arbitration session, concerning the arbitration
matter without the express approval of the Parties. Any contact with the
Arbitrator by either Party must be in the presence of the other Party and
the Administrator. Written submissions should be sent simultaneously to the
Administrator and the other Party. The Administrator will in turn send the
submissions to the Arbitrator. See section 6 of Exhibit
1. Should the Parties require additional information or clarification regarding
the arbitration process, they shall contact the Administrator.
.05 By mutual agreement, the Parties may withdraw from the arbitration
process to reach a final Appeals settlement at any time prior to the date
of the arbitration session. Postponements for good cause shall be determined
by agreement between the Parties.
SECTION 8. POST-SESSION PROCEDURE
.01 Generally, no later than thirty (30) days after completion of the
arbitration proceeding, the Arbitrator will prepare a written report and submit
a copy to the Administrator. Because the Arbitrator is limited to the task
of finding facts, the report will not provide any decision or reasoning that
represents an interpretation of the law. Neither Party may appeal the decision
of the Arbitrator or contest the decision in any judicial proceeding, including,
but not limited to, the Tax Court, United States Court of Federal Claims or
a federal district or appellate court.
.02 Once the Arbitrator renders a decision on all or some issues through
the arbitration process, Appeals will use established procedures to close
the case, including preparation of a specific matters closing agreement (Form
906). Delegation Order 236 (Rev. 3), or any successor delegation order, may
apply to settlements resulting from the arbitration process.
.03 If applicable, Appeals will report a settlement reached as a result
of the arbitration process to the Joint Committee on Taxation in accordance
with I.R.C. § 6405.
SECTION 9. GENERAL PROVISIONS
.01 All IRS and Treasury employees, including the Appeals Administrator,
who participate in or observe in any way the arbitration process and any person
under contract to the IRS as described in I.R.C. § 6103(n), including
the non-IRS Arbitrator and non-IRS Administrator will be subject to the confidentiality
and disclosure provisions of the Internal Revenue Code, including I.R.C. §§ 6103,
7213, and 7431.
.02 Under I.R.C. § 7214(a)(8), IRS employees who have knowledge
or information of the violation of any revenue law of the United States must
report in writing such knowledge or information to the Secretary. The agreement
to arbitrate will state this duty and the Parties will acknowledge it.
.03 The Arbitrator will be disqualified from representing the taxpayer
in any pending or future action that involves the transactions or issues that
are the particular subject matter of the arbitration. This disqualification
extends to representing any other parties involved in the transactions or
issues that are the particular subject matter of the arbitration. Moreover,
the Arbitrator’s firm will be disqualified from representing the taxpayer
or any other parties involved in the transactions or issues that are the particular
subject matter of the arbitration in an action that involves the transactions
or issues that are the particular subject matter of the arbitration. The
Arbitrator’s firm will not be disqualified from representing the taxpayer
or any other parties in any future action that involves the same transactions
or issues that are the particular subject matter of the arbitration, provided
that: (i) the Arbitrator disclosed the potential of such representation prior
to the Parties’ acceptance of the Arbitrator; (ii) such action relates
to a taxable year that is different from the taxable year under arbitration;
(iii) the firm’s internal controls preclude the Arbitrator from any
form of participation in the matter; and (iv) the firm does not allocate
to the Arbitrator any part of the fee therefrom. In the event the Arbitrator
has been selected prior to learning the identity of any Party involved in
the arbitration, requirement (i) will be deemed satisfied if the Arbitrator
promptly notifies the Parties of the potential representation.
.04 Although the Arbitrator may not receive a direct allocation of the
fee from the taxpayer (or other party) in the matter for which the internal
controls are in effect, the Arbitrator will not be prohibited from receiving
a salary, partnership share, or corporate distribution established by prior
independent agreement. The Arbitrator and the firm are not disqualified from
representing the taxpayer or any other parties involved in the arbitration
in any matters unrelated to the transactions or issues that are the particular
subject matter of the arbitration.
.05 The disqualifications described in sections 9.03 and 9.04 only apply
to representations on matters before the IRS. The provisions of these sections
are in addition to any other applicable disqualification provisions including,
for example, the rules of the American Bar Association Model Code of Professional
Conduct and the applicable canons of ethics.
.06 The decision by the Arbitrator will neither be binding on nor otherwise
control, the Parties for taxable years not covered by the arbitration. Except
as provided in the agreement to arbitrate, no Party may use the arbitration
findings as precedent.
SECTION 10. EFFECTIVE DATE
This revenue procedure is effective October 30, 2006.
SECTION 11. CONTACT INFORMATION
For further information concerning the drafting of this revenue procedure,
please contact Wendy Ryan, from the Chief, Appeals — Office of Tax Policy
and Procedure, (202) 435-5671 (not a toll-free number) or Jason Spitzer, from
the Office of Chief Counsel, Procedure and Administration, Administrative
Provisions and Judicial Practice, (202) 622-7950 (not a toll-free number).
For further information about the operation of the Appeals Arbitration program,
contact Sandy Cohen, listed above.
Internal Revenue Bulletin 2006-44
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