Revenue Procedure 2007-02 |
January 2, 2007 |
Technical Advice and Technical Expedited Advice
SECTION 1. PURPOSE AND AUTHORITY
.01 Technical advice. This revenue procedure explains when and how
the Associate Chief Counsel (Corporate), the Associate Chief Counsel (Financial
Institutions and Products), the Associate Chief Counsel (Income Tax and Accounting),
the Associate Chief Counsel (International), the Associate Chief Counsel (Passthroughs
and Special Industries), the Associate Chief Counsel (Procedure and Administration),
and the Division Counsel/Associate Chief Counsel (Tax Exempt and Government
Entities) issue technical advice memoranda (TAMs) to a director or an appeals
area director. It also explains the rights that a taxpayer has when a field
office requests a TAM regarding a tax matter. Rev. Proc. 2006-2 superseded.
.02 This revenue procedure is updated annually as the second revenue
procedure of the year, but may be modified during the year.
.03 The provisions of this revenue procedure apply if the authority
normally exercised by the director has been properly delegated to another
official.
.01 The term “operating division” means the (1) Large
and Mid-Size Business Division (LMSB); (2) the Small Business/Self-Employed
Division (SB/SE); (3) the Wage and Investment Division (W&I); (4) the
Tax Exempt and Government Entities Division (TE/GE).
.02 The term “director” means (1) the Director, Field Operations
(LMSB) for the taxpayer’s industry; (2) a Territory Manager, Field Compliance
(SB/SE); (3) the Director, Compliance (W&I); (4) the Director, International
(LMSB); (5) the Director, Employee Plans Examinations; (6) the Director, Exempt
Organizations Examinations; (7) the Director, Federal, State & Local Governments;
(8) the Director, Tax Exempt Bonds; (9) the Director, Indian Tribal Governments;
(10) the Appeals Area Director; (11) any official to whom the authority normally
exercised by a director has properly been delegated.
.03 The term “territory manager” means (1) a territory
manager (LMSB); (2) a territory manager, examination (SB/SE); (3) a territory
manager, specialty (SB/SE); (4) the Director, Compliance (W&I); (5) the
Employee Plans Examinations Area manager; (6) the Exempt Organizations Examinations
Area manager; (7) the Employee Plans Determinations manager; (8) the Exempt
Organizations Determinations manager; (9) the group manager, Federal, State
& Local Governments; (10) the manager, field operations, Tax Exempt Bonds;
or (11) the group manager, Indian Tribal Governments.
.04 The term “Appeals officer” means the appeals officer
assigned to the taxpayer’s case and includes an Appeals Team Case Leader.
.05 The term “taxpayer” means any person subject to any
provision of the Internal Revenue Code, including an issuer of obligations
the interest on which is excluded from gross income under § 103,
and their representatives.
.06 The term “Associate office” means (1) the Office of
Associate Chief Counsel (Corporate); (2) the Office of Associate Chief Counsel
(Financial Institutions and Products); (3) the Office of Associate Chief Counsel
(Income Tax and Accounting); (4) the Office of Associate Chief Counsel (International);
(5) the Office of Associate Chief Counsel (Passthroughs and Special Industries);
(6) the Office of Associate Chief Counsel (Procedure and Administration);
or (7) the Office of Division Counsel/Associate Chief Counsel (Tax Exempt
and Government Entities).
.07 The term “field office” means personnel in any examination
or Appeals office.
.08 The term “field counsel” means any attorney assigned
to the Division Counsel for an operating division who is not a member of Division
Counsel Headquarters.
SECTION 3. THE NATURE OF TECHNICAL ADVICE
.01 Technical advice is advice furnished by an Associate office in
a memorandum that responds to any request, submitted under this revenue procedure,
for assistance on any technical or procedural question that develops during
any proceeding before the IRS. The field office may request a TAM when the
application of the law to the facts involved is unclear. The question must
be on the interpretation and proper application of tax laws, tax treaties,
regulations, revenue rulings, notices, or other precedents to a specific set
of facts that concerns the treatment of an item in a year under examination
or appeal. A TAM may not be requested for prospective or hypothetical transactions.
Proceedings include: (1) the examination of a taxpayer’s return; (2)
the consideration of a taxpayer’s claim for credit or refund; (3) any
matter under examination or in Appeals pertaining to tax-exempt bonds, tax
credit bonds, or mortgage credit certificates; and (4) any other matter involving
a specific taxpayer under the jurisdiction of a director. Technical advice
does not include any oral legal advice or any written legal advice furnished
to the field office that is not submitted and processed under this revenue
procedure.
TAM may be requested even if previous TAM on
same matter was issued
.02 A director may raise an issue in any tax period, even if a TAM
was requested and furnished for the same or similar issue for another tax
period. The field office may also request a TAM on an issue even if Appeals
disposed of the same or similar issue for another tax period of the same taxpayer.
.03 Taxpayers will be afforded an opportunity to participate in the
TAM process. Taxpayer participation is preferred but not required in order
to process a request for technical advice. A taxpayer’s failure to
participate in stages that are identified as “material”, however,
will constitute waiver of the right to the conference described in Section
9.
Under no circumstances will a taxpayer be treated as having waived its
right to see the issued TAM or to have waived its rights regarding disclosure
and deletions described in Section 10.
SECTION 4. TYPES OF ISSUES NOT SUBJECT TO THIS
PROCEDURE
Alcohol, tobacco, and firearms taxes
.01 The procedures for obtaining technical advice specifically applicable
to federal alcohol, tobacco, and firearms taxes under subtitle E of the Code
are currently under the jurisdiction of the Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade
Bureau of the Treasury Department.
Tax exempt and government entities
.02 The procedures for requesting technical advice on issues under
the jurisdiction of the Commissioner, Tax Exempt and Government Entities Division,
are found in Rev. Proc. 2007-5, this Bulletin. The procedures
under Rev. Proc. 2007-2, however, must be followed to request technical advice
on issues pertaining to tax-exempt bonds, Indian tribal governments, federal,
state, or local governments, mortgage credit certificates, and deferred compensation
plans under § 457.
.03 Even though the Associate Chief Counsel (Passthroughs and Special
Industries) has jurisdiction over issues arising under § 521, the
procedures under Rev. Proc. 2007-5 of this Bulletin and Rev. Proc. 90-27,
1990-1 C.B. 514, must be followed.
.04 A request for an extension of time for making an election or other
application for relief under § 301.9100-3 of the Procedure and
Administration Regulations is not submitted as a request for technical advice.
Instead, the request is submitted as a request for a letter ruling, even
if submitted after the examination of the taxpayer’s return has begun
or after the issues in the return are being considered in Appeals or a federal
court. Therefore, a request under § 301.9100 should be submitted
under Rev. Proc. 2007-1 (this Bulletin), and the payment of the applicable
user fee is determined under Appendix A of Rev. Proc. 2007-1.
.05 Associate offices will not issue a TAM on frivolous issues. The
field office will deny a taxpayer’s request for a TAM if it involves
frivolous issues. For purposes of this revenue procedure, a “frivolous
issue” is one without basis in fact or law or one espousing a position
held by revenue ruling, case law, or any court to be frivolous or groundless.
Examples of frivolous or groundless issues may be found in IRS publications
(including but not limited to Section 6.10 of Rev. Proc. 2007-1 and I.R.M.
Section 4.10.12.1.1) or guidance and are described on the IRS website at www.irs.gov/pub/irs-utl/friv_tax.pdf
Issues in a docketed case
.06 A field office may not request technical advice on an issue if
the same issue of the same taxpayer (or of a related taxpayer within the meaning
of § 267 or a member of an affiliated group of which the taxpayer
is also a member within the meaning of § 1504) is in a docketed
case for any taxable year. If a case is docketed for an estate tax issue
of a taxpayer while a request for technical advice on the same issue of the
same taxpayer is pending, the Associate office may issue the TAM only if the
appropriate Appeals officer and field counsel agree, by memorandum, to the
issuance of the TAM.
.07 The Associate Chief Counsel (Procedure and Administration) does
not provide technical advice on matters arising under the Internal Revenue
Code and related statutes and regulations that involve the collection of taxes
(including interest and penalties). With respect to such matters, the Associate
Chief Counsel (Procedure and Administration) may issue alternate forms of
advice.
SECTION 5. INITIATING A REQUEST FOR TECHNICAL
ADVICE
Initiating a request for technical advice
.01 Because technical advice is issued to assist field offices, it
is the field office that determines whether to request it. In determining
whether to request technical advice, the field office should consider whether
other forms of guidance, e.g., published guidance, generic
advice, or some other form of advice, would be more appropriate. Before requesting
technical advice, however, the field office must request assistance and a
recommendation from field counsel. If the field office disagrees with that
recommendation, the field office must seek reconciliation with field counsel
through their respective supervisors. Any request for technical advice must
be approved in writing by the director.
Taxpayer may request technical advice
.02 While a case is under the jurisdiction of a director, a taxpayer
may request that an issue be referred to the Associate office for technical
advice. The request may be oral or written and should be directed to the
field office. If the field office decides that a taxpayer’s request
for referral of an issue to the Associate office for a TAM is unwarranted,
the field office will notify the taxpayer. A taxpayer’s request for
referral of an issue for technical advice will not be denied merely because
the Associate office has already provided legal advice other than a TAM to
the field office on the matter.
Appeal of field office denial of TAM request
.03 The taxpayer may appeal the decision by submitting to the field
office, within 30 calendar days after notification that the request was denied,
a written statement of the reasons why the matter should be referred to the
Associate office. The statement should include a description of all pertinent
facts (including any facts in dispute); a statement of the issue that the
taxpayer would like to have addressed; a discussion of any relevant statutory
or administrative provision, tax treaties, case law, or other authority; and
an explanation of the taxpayer’s position and the need for technical
advice. Any extensions of the 30-day period must be requested in writing
and must be approved by the director or, for LMSB, the territory manager.
Decisions by the director or LMSB territory manager are final and may not
be appealed.
Upon receipt, the field office will refer the taxpayer’s written
statement, along with the field office’s statement of why the issue
should not be referred to the Associate office for technical advice, to the
director or, for LMSB, the territory manager, for decision. The director
or LMSB territory manager will determine whether the issue should be referred
for technical advice on the basis of the statements of the field office and
the taxpayer. No conference will be held with the taxpayer or the taxpayer’s
representative. If the director or LMSB territory manager determines that
a TAM is not warranted, the taxpayer will be informed in writing of the proposed
denial of the request and the reasons for the denial (unless doing so would
prejudice the Government’s best interests).
The director or LMSB territory manager’s
decision may be reviewed but not appealed
.04 The taxpayer may not appeal the decision of the director or LMSB
territory manager not to request a TAM. If the taxpayer does not agree with
the proposed denial, all data on the issue for which a TAM has been sought,
including the taxpayer’s written request and statements, will be submitted
for review to the director, LMSB; Examination Area Director, SB/SE; the Director,
Compliance, W&I; the Director, Federal, State & Local Governments;
the Director, Tax Exempt Bonds; the Director, Indian Tribal Governments or
Appeals Director, Tax Policy and Procedure (Exam). Review of the proposed
denial will be based solely on the written record; no conference will be held
with the taxpayer or the taxpayer’s representative. The person responsible
for review may consult with the Associate office, if necessary, and will notify
the field office whether the proposed denial of the taxpayer’s request
is approved or denied within 45 days of receiving all information. The field
office will then notify the taxpayer. While the matter is being reviewed,
the field office will suspend any final decision on the issue (except when
the delay would prejudice the Government’s interests). If the TAM has
been denied because the issue is frivolous as described in 4.05 above, this
review process is not available.
SECTION 6. PRE-SUBMISSION CONFERENCES
.01 A pre-submission conference helps the field office, field counsel,
the taxpayer, and the Associate office agree on the appropriate scope of the
request for technical advice and the factual information and documents that
must be included in the request. A pre-submission conference is not an alternative
procedure for addressing the merits of the substantive positions advanced
by the field office or by the taxpayer. During the pre-submission conference,
the parties should discuss the framing of the issues and the background information
and documents that should be included in the formal submission of the request
for technical advice.
Pre-submission conferences are mandatory
.02 Pre-submission conferences include the taxpayer and representatives
from the field office, field counsel, and the Associate office. These conferences
are mandatory because they promote expeditious processing of requests for
technical advice. If a request for technical advice is submitted without
first holding a pre-submission conference, the Associate office will return
the request for advice. Requests for technical advice can proceed even if
a taxpayer declines to participate in a pre-submission conference.
Actions before a pre-submission conference
.03 Before requesting a pre-submission conference, the field office
and the taxpayer must exchange proposed statements of the pertinent facts
and issues. The proposed statements should include any facts in dispute,
the issues that the parties intend to discuss, any legal analysis and supporting
authorities, and any background documents that the parties believe would facilitate
the Associate office’s understanding of the issues to be discussed during
the conference. Prior to the scheduled pre-submission conference, the field
office and the taxpayer must submit to the Associate office their respective
statements of pertinent facts and issues. The legal analysis provided in
the parties’ statements should be sufficient to enable the Associate
office to become reasonably informed about the subject matter. The field
office or the taxpayer must ensure that the Associate office receives a copy
of any required power of attorney, preferably on Form 2848, Power
of Attorney and Declaration of Representative (Rev. March 2004).
The assigned branch of the Associate office must receive the pre-submission
materials at least 10 business days before the conference is held.
Initiating a pre-submission conference
.04 A request for a pre-submission conference must be submitted in
writing by the field office, with the assistance of field counsel. The request
should identify the Associate office expected to have jurisdiction over the
request for a TAM and should include a brief explanation of the primary issue
so that an assignment to the appropriate branch of an Associate can be made.
If the request is submitted by Appeals, field counsel assignments will be
subject to the ex parte rules set forth in section 1001(a)(4)
of the Internal Revenue Service Restructuring and Reform Act of 1998, Pub.
L. No. 105-206, and Rev. Proc. 2000-43, 2000-2 C.B. 404. If the request involves
an issue under the office of the Director, ATAT Examination, SB/SE, an issue
under the office of the Director, OTSA, LMSB, or an industry issue under the
Office of Pre-Filing and Technical Guidance, LMSB, then the field office and
field counsel should coordinate with the technical advisor and field counsel
contact. If the request is from Appeals and involves a coordinated issue
or emerging issue under the Appeals Technical Guidance or Appeals Coordinated
Issue (ACI) Program, the Appeals officer must coordinate with the Appeals
Technical Guidance Coordinator/Specialist.
Manner of transmitting pre-submission materials
.05 To obtain the protection of taxpayer information offered by the
Chief Counsel Intranet firewall, the pre-submission materials must be electronically
transmitted by field counsel to the Technical Services Support Branch (TSS4510).
TSS4510 will ensure delivery of the pre-submission materials to the appropriate
Associate office. The TSS4510 email box cannot accept encrypted mail.
If documents are not electronically available, or if documents cannot
reasonably be transmitted electronically, the request may be sent by fax to
TSS4510 at 202-622-4817. If the documents are sent by fax, the director must
also confirm the request in writing. Email or fax may be used to confirm
the request. The Associate office will confirm receipt of the fax within
one business day after receipt by the Associate office. Copies of the taxpayer’s
statement of deletions, penalties of perjury statement, and Form 2848, Power
of Attorney and Declaration of Representative (Rev. March 2004)
should be transmitted by fax to the Associate office attorney assigned to
the case.
The field office should send the original of the materials sent by fax,
and any supporting materials, to the Associate office attorney assigned to
the case by express mail or private delivery service in order to avoid any
delays in regular mail.
Scheduling the pre-submission conference
.06 After the materials have been received, the branch of the Associate
office responsible for conducting the pre-submission conference will contact
the taxpayer, the field office, and field counsel to arrange a mutually convenient
time for the parties to participate in the conference. The conference generally
should be held within 15, but not more than 30, calendar days after the field
office is contacted.
Pre-submission Conferences may be conducted in
person
.07 Although pre-submission conferences are generally conducted by
telephone, the parties may also choose to conduct the conference in person.
Pre-submission conference may not be taped
.08No tape, stenographic, or other verbatim recording of a conference
may be made by any party.
Discussion of substantive issues is not binding
on the Service
.09 Any discussion of substantive issues at a pre-submission conference
is advisory only, is not binding on the Service or on the Office of Chief
Counsel, and cannot be relied upon as a basis for obtaining retroactive relief
under the provisions of § 7805(b).
New issues may be raised at pre-submission conference
.10 During the pre-submission conference, the Office of Chief Counsel
may raise new issues in addition to those submitted by the field office and
the taxpayer.
SECTION 7. SUBMITTING THE REQUEST FOR TECHNICAL
ADVICE
Memorandum of issues, facts, law, and arguments;
submission of relevant foreign laws and documents in a language other than
English; statement regarding interpretation of an income or estate tax treaty;
deletions statement
.01 Every request for technical advice must include a memorandum that
describes the facts, issues, applicable law, and arguments supporting the
taxpayer’s position on the issues and the field office’s position
on the issues. The field office will prepare this statement with the assistance
of field counsel. The memorandum must include a statement of all the facts
and the issues. If the taxpayer and the field office disagree about ultimate
findings of fact or about the relevance of facts, all of the facts should
be included with an explanation that highlights the areas of disagreement.
The memorandum must include an explanation of the taxpayer’s position.
This explanation must include a discussion of any relevant statutory provisions,
tax treaties, court decisions, regulations, revenue rulings, revenue procedures,
notices, and any other authority supporting the taxpayer’s position.
The memorandum must also include a similar explanation of the field office’s
position. Both the field office and the taxpayer should comment on any existing
or pending legislation, tax treaties, regulations, revenue rulings, revenue
procedures, or court decisions contrary to their respective positions. If
either party determines that there are no authorities contrary to its position,
that statement should be noted in the memorandum.
Transaction involving multiple taxpayers
.02 If the subject matter of the request involves a transaction among
multiple taxpayers, the Associate office may issue a single TAM, but only
if each taxpayer agrees to participate in the process.
Foreign laws and documents
.03 If applicable, the request for technical advice must include a
copy of the relevant parts of all foreign laws, including statutes, regulations,
administrative pronouncements, and any other relevant legal authority. This
copy must be in the official language of the country involved and must be
produced from an official publication of the foreign government or another
widely available, generally accepted publication. If English is not the official
language of the country involved, the submission must also include a copy
of an English translation of the relevant parts of all foreign laws. The
translation must be from an official publication of the foreign government
or another widely available, generally accepted publication or from a certified
English translation submitted in accordance with Section 7.03(2) of this revenue
procedure. The taxpayer or the field office must identify the title and date
of publication, including updates, of any widely available, generally accepted
publication used by the taxpayer or its qualified translator as a source for
the relevant parts of the foreign law. The taxpayer and the field office
must inform the Associate office of the implications of any authority believed
to interpret the foreign law, such as pending legislation, treaties, court
decisions, notices, and administrative decisions.
(1) If the interpretation of a foreign law or foreign document is a
material fact, the Associate office, at its discretion, may refuse to issue
a TAM. This section applies whether or not the field office and the taxpayer
dispute the interpretation of a foreign law or foreign document. The interpretation
of a foreign law or foreign document means making a judgment about the import
or effect of the foreign law or document that goes beyond its plain meaning.
(2) If applicable, a request for technical advice must include an accurate
and complete certified English translation of the relevant parts of all contracts,
wills, deeds, agreements, instruments, trust documents, proposed disclaimers,
or other documents in a language other than English. If the taxpayer or the
field office chooses to submit certified English translations of foreign laws,
those translations must be based on an official publication of the foreign
government or another widely available, generally accepted publication. In
either case, the translation must be that of a qualified translator and must
be attested to by the translator. The attestation must contain: (1) the attestant’s
name and address; (2) a statement that the translation submitted is a true
and accurate translation of the foreign language document or law; and (3)
a statement about the attestant’s qualifications as a translator and
that attestant’s qualifications and knowledge regarding tax matters
or any foreign law translated if the law is not a tax law.
(3) A request for technical advice involving the interpretation of a
substantive provision of an income or estate tax treaty must include a written
statement addressing whether: (1) the tax authority of the treaty jurisdiction
has issued a ruling on the same or similar issue for the taxpayer, a related
taxpayer (within the meaning of § 267 or a member of an affiliated
group of which the taxpayer is also a member within the meaning of § 1504
(related taxpayer)), or any predecessor; (2) the same or similar issue for
the taxpayer, a related taxpayer, or any predecessor is being examined, or
has been settled, by the tax authority of the treaty jurisdiction or is otherwise
the subject of a closing agreement in that jurisdiction; and (3) the same
or similar issue for the taxpayer, a related taxpayer, or any predecessor
is being considered by the competent authority of the treaty jurisdiction.
Statement recommending information to be deleted
from public inspection
.04 Every request for technical advice must include a statement of
proposed deletions from public inspection. The text of TAMs are open to public
inspection under § 6110(a). The Service deletes certain information
from the text before it is made available to the public in order to protect
the privacy of taxpayers. To help the Service make the necessary deletions,
the taxpayer must provide a statement indicating the deletions desired. A
taxpayer who wants only names, addresses, and identifying numbers deleted
should state this in the deletion statement. A taxpayer who wants more information
deleted must provide a copy of the TAM request and supporting documents on
which the taxpayer has placed brackets around the material to be deleted plus
a statement indicating the statutory basis under § 6110(c) for each
proposed deletion. The deletion statement must not appear in the memorandum
described in Section 7.01 of this revenue procedure. Instead, the deletion
statement must be made in a separate document that is signed and dated by
the taxpayer or the taxpayer’s authorized representative. A stamped
signature or faxed signature is not permitted. If the deletion statement
is not submitted, the taxpayer will be notified and advised by the field office
that the statement is required. If the deletion statement is not received
within 10 calendar days after the notification, the field office will use
its best effort to provide the Associate office with an appropriate deletion
statement. The taxpayer should follow this same process to propose deletions
from any additional information submitted after the initial request for a
TAM. An additional deletion statement is not required with each submission
of additional information if the taxpayer’s initial deletion statement
requests that only names, addresses, and identifying numbers are to be deleted
and the taxpayer wants only the same information deleted from the additional
information.
Preparation of the memorandum; resolution of
disagreements
.05 The field office prepares the memorandum described in Section
7.01 of this revenue procedure with the assistance of field counsel and sends
it to the taxpayer by mail or fax transmission. The taxpayer then will have
5 calendar days from the date of mailing or fax transmission to respond by
providing a written statement specifying any disagreement on the facts and
issues. A taxpayer who needs more than 5 calendar days must submit a written
request for an extension of time, subject to the approval of the director.
The director shall make a determination on the request for extension as soon
as reasonably possible. The request for extension shall be considered denied
unless the director informs the taxpayer otherwise. The decision of the director
on whether to approve an extension, and the length of any extension granted,
is final and may not be appealed. After the taxpayer’s response has
been received by the field office, the parties will have 10 calendar days
to resolve remaining disagreements. If all disagreements about the statement
of facts and issues are resolved, then the field office will prepare a single
statement of those agreed facts and issues. If disagreements continue, both
the taxpayer’s set of facts and issues and the field’s sets of
facts and issues will be forwarded to the Associate office. The field office,
with the assistance of field counsel, will prepare a memorandum for the Associate
office highlighting the material factual differences, and provide a copy to
the taxpayer. This memorandum will be forwarded with the initial request
for technical advice. The taxpayer’s statement of facts and issues
must be accompanied by the following declaration: “Under penalties of
perjury, I declare that I have examined this information, including accompanying
documents, and, to the best of my knowledge and belief, the information contains
all the relevant facts relating to the request for technical advice, and such
facts are true, correct, and complete.” This declaration must be signed
in accordance with the requirements in section 7.01(15)(b) of Rev. Proc. 2007-1.
The field office must submit this declaration with the initial request for
technical advice. If no agreement is reached regarding the facts, the Associate
office may rely on the facts presented by the field office.
The field office will offer the taxpayer an opportunity to participate
in the development of the TAM. If the taxpayer participates in the process,
the field office will continue to offer the taxpayer the opportunity to participate.
If the taxpayer does not participate in a material stage of the process after
being offered an opportunity, the Associate office will nonetheless process
the request, and the taxpayer will have waived the right to participate in
the development and issuance of the TAM, including the right to the conference
described in section 9.
Under no circumstances will a taxpayer be treated as having waived its
right to see the issued TAM or to have waived its rights regarding disclosure
and deletions described in Section 10.
A taxpayer’s failure to participate in the development of the
memorandum will be considered a failure to participate in a material stage
of the TAM process and result in a waiver of the right to the conference discussed
in Section 9.
Transmittal Form 4463, Request
for Technical Advice
.06 The field counsel, with whom the TAM request was coordinated,
must use Form 4463, Request for Technical Advice, for
submitting a request for a TAM through TSS4510 to the Associate office. While
the field office is responsible for preparing Form 4463, field counsel must
submit the Form 4463 for a TAM request to the TSS4510 email address. To the
extent feasible, the accompanying documents should also be submitted to the
TSS4510 email address, followed by hard copy upon the request of the assigned
branch of the Associate office.
All supporting and additional documents
.07 Field counsel should send additional or supporting documents that
are not available in electronic form by fax to TSS4510 at 202-622-4817 or
by express mail or private delivery service to the following address to avoid
any delays in regular mail:
Internal Revenue Service Attn: CC:PA:LPD:TSS, Room
5329 1111 Constitution Avenue, NW Washington,
DC 20224
Whenever possible, all documents should contain the case number and
name of the Associate office attorney assigned to the pre-submission conference
for the TAM request.
The field office must indicate on the Form 4463 the proper mailing address
of the director to whom the Associate office should mail a copy of its reply
to the TAM request under Section 10.06 of this revenue procedure.
Number of copies of request to be submitted
.08 The field office must submit three paper copies of the request
for a TAM to the address in Section 7.07 of this revenue procedure, one paper
copy to the Division Counsel of the operating division that has jurisdiction
of the taxpayer’s tax return, and if the request is from an Appeals
office, one paper copy to the Appeals Director, Technical Services.
.09 Any authorized representative, as described in section 7.01(13)
of Rev. Proc. 2007-1, whether or not enrolled to practice, must comply with
Treasury Department Circular No. 230 (31 C.F.R. part 10 (2002)) and with the
conference and practice requirements of the Statement of Procedural Rules
(26 C.F.R. §§ 601.501-601.509 (2002)). Form 2848, Power
of Attorney and Declaration of Representative (Rev. March 2004),
should be used. An original, a copy, or a fax transmission of the power of
attorney is acceptable if its authenticity is not reasonably disputed.
Service not barred from issuing 30-day letter
while a TAM request is pending.
.10 After consultation with Appeals, the Service may send the taxpayer
a letter (Letter 950 (DO) or other letter from the 950 series, also known
as a 30-day letter) notifying the taxpayer of the right to appeal the proposed
changes within 30 days, while a request for technical advice is pending.
SECTION 8. INITIAL PROCESSING OF THE REQUEST
FOR TECHNICAL ADVICE BY THE ASSOCIATE OFFICE
Assignment and initial review by Associate office
attorney
.01 After a request for technical advice has been received by the
appropriate Associate office, it will be assigned to an Associate office attorney
within a branch. The Associate office attorney determines whether the request
meets all procedural requirements of sections 4, 5, 6, and 7 of this revenue
procedure and whether it raises issues that are appropriately addressed in
a TAM.
.02 If the assigned reviewer in the Associate office determines that
guidance other than a TAM should be provided, the reviewer will immediately
notify the Associate Chief Counsel. This other form of guidance may be published
guidance, generic advice, or case-specific advice. Although the reviewer
should make this determination as soon as possible, it may be made at any
time during the processing of the request for advice. To make this determination,
the reviewer should consider whether the issue has a broad application to
similarly situated taxpayers or an industry and whether resolution of the
issue is important to a clear understanding of the tax laws. The Associate
Chief Counsel, after consultation with Division Counsel Headquarters and the
Operating Division, will decide whether to issue the TAM or issue guidance
in another form. The Associate Chief Counsel may decide to issue the TAM
as well as another type of guidance, if doing so would promote sound tax administration.
Initial acknowledgment and processing
.03 Upon receipt of a request for technical advice, the Associate office
attorney who has been assigned as the primary attorney on the request should
immediately contact the field office. The purpose of this contact is only
to acknowledge receipt of the request. Unless otherwise indicated, all references
in this section to the Associate office or Associate office attorney are to
the Associate office and attorney with primary responsibility for the TAM
request.
Deficiencies in request leading to return
.04 Within 7 calendar days after assignment, the Associate office
attorney will contact the field office and field counsel to discuss any deficiencies
in the request and will work with the field office and field counsel to correct
them. If they cannot be corrected within 7 calendar days, the request will
be closed and returned to the field office. The request may be resubmitted
when the deficiencies are corrected.
If only minor procedural deficiencies exist, the Associate office attorney
will request the additional information without returning the case. If substantial
additional information is required to resolve an issue or if major procedural
problems cannot be resolved, the Associate office attorney will inform the
field office and field counsel that the request for technical advice will
be returned. If a request is returned, the field office should promptly notify
the taxpayer of that decision and the reasons for the decision.
.05 The Associate office attorney should contact the field office
within 21 calendar days of receipt to discuss the procedural and substantive
issues in the request. The Associate office attorney should also inform the
field office about any matters referred to another Associate office or branch
for assistance and provide points of contact for the other Associate offices
or branches.
If additional information requested
.06 If additional information is needed, the Associate office attorney
will obtain that information from the taxpayer, the director, or the Appeals
Area Director in the most expeditious manner possible. Any additional information
requested from the taxpayer by the Associate office must be submitted by letter
with a penalties of perjury statement that conforms with the penalties of
perjury statement set forth in Section 7.05 of this revenue procedure within
10 calendar days after the request for information is made. To facilitate
prompt action, the Service and taxpayers are encouraged to use fax or email
to exchange information whenever feasible. A taxpayer’s failure to
submit the additional information requested will be considered failure to
participate in a material stage of the TAM process and result in a waiver
of the right to the conference discussed in Section 9.
Taxpayer request for extension of time to submit
additional information
.07 A taxpayer’s request for an extension of time to submit
additional information must be made in writing and received by the Associate
office within the 10-day period. It must provide compelling facts and circumstances
to justify an extension. Only the Associate Chief Counsel of the primary
office to which the case is assigned may determine whether to grant or deny
the request for an extension. Except in rare and unusual circumstances, the
Associate office will not agree to an extension of more than 10 calendar days
beyond the end of the 10-day period. There is no right to appeal the denial
of a request for an extension.
Where to send additional information
.08 Any additional information submitted by the taxpayer should be
sent to the attention of the assigned Associate office attorney. Generally,
only the original of the additional information is necessary. In appropriate
cases, however, the Associate office may request additional copies of the
information. The taxpayer must also send a copy of the additional information
to the director for comment. Any comments by the director must be furnished
within an agreed period of time to the Associate office with primary responsibility
for the TAM request. If the director does not have any comments, he or she
must notify the Associate office attorney promptly. When the director receives
a copy of the additional information from the taxpayer, the director must
provide field counsel with a copy.
.09 The Associate office attorney will inform the field office and
field counsel when all necessary substantive and procedural information has
been received. If possible, the Associate office attorney will provide a
tentative conclusion.If no tentative conclusion has been reached, the Associate
office is encouraged to discuss the underlying complexities with the field
office and field counsel. Because the Associate office attorney’s tentative
conclusion may change during the preparation and review of the TAM, the tentative
conclusion should not be considered final. If the tentative conclusion is
changed, the Associate office attorney will inform the field office and field
counsel. Neither the Associate office, the field office, nor the field counsel
should discuss the tentative conclusion and its underlying rationale with
the taxpayer or the taxpayer’s representative until the Associate office
is ready to issue a TAM that agrees with the taxpayer’s position or
is ready to hold an adverse conference. To afford taxpayers an appropriate
opportunity to prepare and present their position at an adverse conference,
however, the taxpayer or the taxpayer’s representative shall be told
(by the Associate office attorney) the tentative conclusion when scheduling
the adverse conference. Field counsel should be notified and given the opportunity
to participate in the notification to the taxpayer of the tentative conclusions
and scheduling of the adverse conference.
SECTION 9. TAXPAYER CONFERENCES
Notification of conference
.01 If the Associate office proposes to issue a TAM that will be adverse
to the taxpayer, and if the taxpayer has not waived its right to a conference,
the taxpayer will be informed of the time and place of the conference.
.02 The conference for a TAM must be held within 10 calendar days
after the taxpayer is informed that an adverse TAM is proposed. The Associate
office will notify the field office and field counsel of the scheduled conference
and will offer the field office and field counsel the opportunity to participate
in the conference.
Taxpayers may request extensions
.03 Only an Associate Chief Counsel may approve an extension of the
10-day period for holding a conference. Although extensions will be granted
in appropriate circumstances in the discretion of the Associate Chief Counsel,
taxpayers should not expect extensions to be routinely granted. The taxpayer
must submit a request for an extension in writing to the Associate Chief Counsel
of the primary office to which the case is assigned, and must immediately
notify the field office and field counsel of the request. The request must
contain a detailed justification for the extension and must be submitted sufficiently
before the end of the 10-day period to allow the Associate Chief Counsel to
consider, and either approve or deny, the request before the end of the 10-day
period. If unusual circumstances near the end of the 10-day period make a
timely written request impractical, the taxpayer may orally inform the assigned
Associate office attorney or reviewer before the end of the 10-day period
about the need for an extension and then promptly submit the written request.
The Associate office attorney will inform the taxpayer by telephone of the
approval or denial of a requested extension. There is no right to appeal
the denial of a request for extension.
.04 In general, a taxpayer who has not waived the right to a conference
is entitled by right to only one conference with the Associate office. The
conference is normally held at the branch level. A person who has authority
to sign the transmittal memorandum in his or her own name, or on behalf of
the branch chief, will participate. When more than one branch of an Associate
office has taken an adverse position on issues in the request or when the
position ultimately adopted by one branch will affect another branch’s
determination, a representative from each branch with authority to sign in
his or her own name, or for the branch chief, will participate in the conference.
The conference is the conference of right for each subject discussed.
Additional conferences may be offered
.05 After the conference of right, the Service will offer the taxpayer
an additional conference of right only if an adverse holding is proposed on
a new issue or on the same issue but on grounds different from those discussed
at the first conference. If a tentative position is reversed at a higher
level with a result less favorable to the taxpayer, the taxpayer has no right
to another conference if the grounds or arguments on which the reversal is
based were discussed at the conference of right. The limitation on the number
of conferences to which a taxpayer is entitled does not prevent the Associate
office from inviting a taxpayer to participate in additional conferences if
that office determines that additional conferences would be useful. These
additional conferences are not offered routinely following an adverse decision.
Additional information submitted after the conference
.06 In order to ensure that the conference of right is productive,
the taxpayer should make a reasonable effort to supply all information, documents,
and arguments in writing well before the conference. Sometimes, however,
it becomes apparent that new information may be helpful in resolving issues
discussed at the conference. If the Associate office and the taxpayer agree
that such information would be helpful, all such materials must be submitted
and received within 10 calendar days after the conference. Any extension
of the 10-day period must be requested by the taxpayer in writing and must
be approved by the Associate Chief Counsel. Extensions will not be routinely
granted. Taxpayers have no right to submit additional materials after the
conference, and are discouraged from providing additional copies or versions
of materials already submitted. If the additional information is not received
from the taxpayer within 10 calendar days plus any extensions granted by an
Associate Chief Counsel, the TAM will be issued on the basis of the existing
record.
The taxpayer must also send a copy of the additional information to
the director for comment. The director must provide a copy to the field counsel
assigned to the request for technical advice. If the additional information
has a significant impact on the facts in the request, the Associate office
will ask the director for comments. The director will respond within the
agreed period of time. If the director has no comments, he or she must notify
the Associate office attorney promptly.
Normally conducted in person
.07 Conferences under this section are generally conducted in person,
but may be conducted by telephone.
Service makes only tentative recommendations
.08 At the conclusion of the conference, no commitment will be made
about the conclusion that the Service will finally adopt for any issue, including
the outcome of a request for relief under § 7805(b).
Conference may not be taped
.09 No tape, stenographic, or other verbatim recording of a conference
may be made by any party.
SECTION 10. PREPARATION OF THE TECHNICAL ADVICE
Reply consists of two parts
.01 The Associate office prepares replies to requests for technical
advice in two parts. Each part identifies the taxpayer by name, address,
identification number, and year or years involved. The first part of the
reply is a transmittal memorandum (Form M-6000). If the transmittal memorandum
provides information not in the TAM, or the case is returned for further development,
the transmittal memorandum may be Chief Counsel Advice, as defined in §
6110(i)(1), subject to public inspection under § 6110. The second
part is the TAM, which contains: (1) a statement of the issues; (2) the conclusions
of the Associate office; (3) a statement of the facts pertinent to the issues;
(4) a statement of the pertinent law, tax treaties, regulations, revenue rulings,
and other precedents published in the Internal Revenue Bulletin, and court
decisions; and (5) a discussion of the rationale supporting the conclusions
reached by the Associate office. The conclusions give direct answers, whenever
possible, to the specific issues raised by the field office. The Associate
office is not bound by the issues as submitted by the taxpayer or by the field
office and may reframe the issues to be answered in a TAM after consultation
with the field office and field counsel. The discussion of the issues in
a TAM will be in sufficient detail so that the field or Appeals officials
will understand the reasoning underlying the conclusion.
.02 The taxpayer or the taxpayer’s authorized representative
may obtain information on the status of the request by contacting the field
office that requested the advice. The Associate office attorney or reviewer
assigned to the TAM request will give frequent status updates to the field
office and field counsel.
.03 Accompanying the TAM is a notice under § 6110(f)(1)
of intention to disclose a TAM, including a copy of the version proposed to
be open to public inspection and notations of third party communications under
§ 6110(d). Before issuing a TAM, the Associate office will inform
the taxpayer orally or in writing of the material likely to appear in the
TAM that the taxpayer proposed for deletion but that the Service has determined
should not be deleted. If so informed, the taxpayer may submit within 10
calendar days any further information or arguments supporting the taxpayer’s
proposed deletions. The Service attempts to resolve all disagreements about
proposed deletions before the Associate office issues a TAM. The taxpayer
does not have the right to a conference to resolve any disagreements about
material to be deleted from the text of the TAM.
Opportunity for field counsel review
.04 The Associate office attorney will inform the field counsel of
the Associate office’s final conclusions before the TAM is issued.
The field counsel will be offered a reasonable opportunity to review and informally
discuss these conclusions before the TAM is issued.
Copy of preliminary TAM to field office and field
counsel
.05 After the field counsel is given a reasonable opportunity to review
the Associate office’s final conclusions but before the TAM is issued,
the Associate Office attorney will provide a draft of the proposed final version
of the TAM to the field office and field counsel. If the field office or
field counsel disagrees with the proposed final conclusions, normal reconciliation
and reconsideration procedures will be followed to resolve the differing views
.06 A TAM is generally addressed to the field office that requested
it. A copy of the reply to a request from LMSB should be mailed simultaneously
to the appropriate Industry Director. A reply to a request from Appeals should
be addressed to the appropriate field office, through the Appeals Director,
Technical Services, C:AP.
Copy of final TAM to field counsel and Division
Counsel
.07 The Associate office will provide a copy of the reply to the request
for technical advice (the final TAM) to the individual field counsel attorney
who assisted the field office in submitting the request and to that attorney’s
Associate Area Counsel. The Associate office also will provide a copy of
the final TAM to the Division Counsel for the operating division from which
the request was initiated or that has jurisdiction over the particular matter
in the TAM. The reply may be transmitted electronically if it is in .pdf
format, or may be sent by mail or fax transmission.
.08 The director may formally request reconsideration. Before formally
requesting reconsideration, the director must consult with field counsel.
Requests for reconsideration must describe with specificity the errors in
the analysis and conclusions. Requests should focus on points that the TAM
overlooked or misconstrued rather than simply re-argue points raised in the
initial request. The Associate office will give priority consideration to
the request and should act on the request as expeditiously as possible. The
Associate office may request further submissions from the field or the taxpayer,
but the parties should otherwise make no additional submissions. If a request
for reconsideration fails to follow the procedures set forth in this section
of this revenue procedure, or the request fails to raise issues or arguments
different from those asserted in the initial request for technical advice,
the Associate office may return the request for reconsideration without ruling
on the request for reconsideration. The taxpayer is not entitled to be informed
that a request for reconsideration is being considered.
Discussing contents with the taxpayer
.09 The Associate office will not discuss the specific contents of
the TAM with the taxpayer until after the field office has given a copy of
the TAM to the taxpayer.
TAM takes effect when taxpayer receives a copy
.10 After a TAM is sent to the director, the director gives the taxpayer
a copy of the issued TAM, the notice of intention to disclose under § 6110
(f)(1), and a copy of the version proposed to be open to public inspection,
which includes notations of third party communications under § 6110.If
a request for technical advice pertains to more than one taxpayer, the director
will provide each pertinent taxpayer with a copy of the TAM and will notify
the Associate office when this occurs. The requirement to give a taxpayer
a copy of the TAM does not apply to a TAM involving civil fraud or a criminal
investigation, relating to a civil fraud or criminal investigation, or involving
a jeopardy or termination assessment.
Taxpayer may protest deletions not made
.11 Generally, the Associate office considers only the deletion of
material that the taxpayer has proposed for deletion or other deletions as
required under § 6110(c) before the TAM is sent to the director.
After receiving the notice under § 6110(f)(1) of intention to disclose
the TAM, the taxpayer may protest the disclosure of certain information in
it by submitting a written statement within 20 calendar days which identifies
those deletions not made by the Service that the taxpayer believes should
have been made. The taxpayer must also submit a copy of the version of the
TAM proposed to be open to public inspection with brackets around the deletions
proposed by the taxpayer that have not been made by the Associate office plus
a statement indicating the statutory basis under § 6110 for each
proposed deletion. Within 20 calendar days after it receives the taxpayer’s
response to the notice under § 6110(f)(1), the Associate office
must mail to the taxpayer its final administrative conclusion about the deletions
to be made.
Public inspection of § 6104 applications
for exemption and letter rulings issued to certain exempt organizations
.12 The public inspection provisions of § 6110, including
taxpayer notification and deletion processes, do not apply to any document
to which § 6104 applies.
Public inspection in civil fraud or criminal
investigation cases
.13 The provisions of this section about referring issues upon the
taxpayer’s request, telling the taxpayer about the referral of issues,
giving the taxpayer a copy of the arguments submitted, submitting proposed
deletions, granting conferences in the Associate office, or providing a copy
of the TAM to the taxpayer do not apply to a TAM described in § 6110(g)(5)(A)
that involves any matter that is the subject of a civil fraud or criminal
investigation, is otherwise closely related to a civil fraud or criminal investigation,
or involves a jeopardy or termination assessment. In these cases, a copy
of the TAM may be given to the taxpayer only after all proceedings in the
investigations or assessments are complete, but before the Commissioner mails
the notice of intention to disclose the TAM under § 6110(f)(1).
The taxpayer may then provide the statement of proposed deletions to the
Associate office.
SECTION 11. WITHDRAWAL OF REQUESTS FOR TECHNICAL
ADVICE
.01 Once a request for a TAM has been sent to the Associate office,
only a director may withdraw the request, but this must be done before the
responding transmittal memorandum for the TAM is signed. To withdraw the
request, the director must first notify the taxpayer of the intent to withdraw
unless: (1) the period of limitations on assessment is about to expire and
the taxpayer has declined to give written consent to extend the period or
(2) the notification would be prejudicial to the best interests of the Government.
If the taxpayer does not agree that the request should be withdrawn and wishes
to request review of the decision, the procedures in Section 5.04 of this
revenue procedure for review must be followed.
Acknowledgment of withdrawal
.02 Acknowledgment of the withdrawal of a request submitted by a director
or Appeals should be sent to the appropriate director or Appeals office, through
the Appeals Director, Technical Services, C:AP.
Associate office may decide not to issue a TAM
.03 If the Associate office determines that a TAM should not be issued,
it may return the TAM unanswered. This determination must be made on the
basis of sound tax administration and must be approved by the Associate Chief
Counsel. The decision not to issue a TAM should be an infrequent occurrence
and should be made only after consultation with field counsel and the requesting
field office. If field counsel disagrees with this determination, they may
request reconsideration through existing reconciliation procedures.
Associate office may provide views
.04 If a request for technical advice is withdrawn or an Associate
office decides not to issue a TAM, the Associate office may address the substantive
issues through published guidance, such as a regulation or revenue ruling,
by some other form of legal advice, or through generic advice. The decision
to address the issues through these other forms of guidance will be based
on the general standards for issuing those types of guidance.
SECTION 12. USE OF THE TECHNICAL ADVICE
Generally applies advice in processing the taxpayer’s
case
After a TAM is issued, the director must process the taxpayer’s
case on the basis of the conclusions in the TAM. Specifically, if a TAM provides
conclusions involving a § 103 obligation and the issuer of this
obligation, the director must apply the conclusions to the issuer and any
holder of the obligation, unless the holder also initiates a request for a
TAM on the same issue addressed in the TAM involving the issuer, and the Associate
office issues a TAM involving that issue and that holder. The Appeals Area
Director may settle the issue under its existing settlement authority.
SECTION 13. RETROACTIVITY AND RELIANCE
Usually applies retroactively
.01 The holdings in a TAM are applied retroactively, whether they
are initial holdings or they are later holdings that modify or revoke holdings
in a prior TAM. The Associate Chief Counsel with jurisdiction over the TAM,
however, may exercise the discretionary authority under § 7805(b)
to limit the retroactive effect of any holding. This authority is exercised
in rare and unusual circumstances.
Revocation or modification of an earlier letter
ruling or TAM
.02 Generally, a TAM revoking or modifying a letter ruling or an earlier
TAM will not be applied retroactively if: (1) the applicable law has not
changed; (2) the taxpayer directly involved in the letter ruling or earlier
TAM relied in good faith on it; and (3) revoking or modifying the letter ruling
or earlier TAM would be detrimental to the taxpayer. The new TAM will be
applied retroactively to the taxpayer whose tax liability was directly involved
in the letter ruling or TAM if: (1) controlling facts have been misstated
or omitted or (2) the facts at the time of the transaction are materially
different from the controlling facts on which the letter ruling or earlier
TAM was based. If a letter ruling or a TAM is modified or revoked with retroactive
effect, the notice to the taxpayer, except in fraud cases, should set forth
the grounds on which the modification or revocation is being made and the
reason why the modification or revocation is being applied retroactively.
Continuing action or series of actions
.03 If a TAM relates to a continuing action or a series of actions,
it is generally applied until it is withdrawn or until the conclusion is modified
or revoked by a final decision in favor of the taxpayer with respect to the
issue addressed by the TAM, the enactment of legislation, the ratification
of a tax treaty, a decision of the United States Supreme Court, or the issuance
of temporary regulations, final regulations, a revenue ruling, or other statement
published in the Internal Revenue Bulletin. Publication of a notice of proposed
rulemaking does not affect the application of a TAM. If a new holding in
a TAM is less favorable to the taxpayer than the holding in an earlier TAM,
the new holding is generally not applied to the period when the taxpayer relied
on the earlier holding. It will be applied to that period, however, if material
facts on which the earlier TAM was based have changed.
.04 Under § 6110(k)(3), a taxpayer may not rely on a TAM
issued by the Service for another taxpayer. In addition, retroactive or non-retroactive
treatment to one member of an industry directly involved in a letter ruling
or TAM does not extend to another member of that same industry, and retroactive
or non-retroactive treatment to one client of a tax practitioner does not
extend to another client of that same practitioner.
SECTION 14. HOW MAY RETROACTIVE EFFECT BE LIMITED?
Requests for relief under § 7805(b).
.01 A taxpayer for whom a TAM was issued or for whom a TAM request
is pending may request that the appropriate Associate Chief Counsel limit
the retroactive effect of any holding in the TAM or of any subsequent modification
or revocation of the TAM. For a pending request for technical advice, the
taxpayer should make the request for relief under § 7805(b) as part
of the initial request for advice. The Associate office will consider a request
for relief under § 7805(b) made at a later time if there is justification
for having delayed the request.
Form of request for relief — In general
.02 During the course of an examination of a taxpayer’s return
by the director or during consideration of the taxpayer’s return by
the Appeals Area Director, a taxpayer’s request to limit retroactivity
must be made in the form of a request for a TAM. This includes recommendations
by the director that an earlier letter ruling or TAM be modified or revoked.
The request must meet the general requirements of a request for technical
advice. It must also: (1) state that it is being made under § 7805(b);
(2) state the relief sought; (3) explain the reasons and arguments in support
of the relief sought; and (4) include any documents bearing on the request.
The taxpayer’s request must be submitted to the director, who should
then forward the request to the Associate office for consideration.
Form of request for relief — continuing
transaction before examination of return
.03 A request for relief under § 7805(b) must be made in
the form of a request for a letter ruling if (1) a TAM addressing a continuing
transaction is modified or revoked by later published guidance and (2) the
request for relief is submitted before an examination has begun covering those
years for which relief is sought. The requirements for a letter ruling request
are given in Rev. Proc. 2007-1 (this Bulletin).
Taxpayer’s right to a conference
.04 When a request for a TAM concerns only the application of § 7805(b),
the taxpayer has the right to a conference with the Associate office in accordance
with the provisions of Section 9 of this revenue procedure. If the request
for application of § 7805(b) is included in the request for a TAM
on the substantive issues or is made before the conference of right on the
substantive issues, the § 7805(b) issues will be discussed at the
taxpayer’s one conference of right. If the request for the application
of § 7805(b) is made as part of a pending TAM request after a conference
has been held on the substantive issues and the Service determines that there
is justification for having delayed the request, then the taxpayer will have
the right to one conference of right concerning the application of § 7805(b),
with the conference limited to discussion of this issue only.
Reconsideration of request for relief under § 7805(b)
.05 When a TAM grants a taxpayer relief under § 7805(b),
the director may not request reconsideration of the § 7805(b) issue
unless the director determines there has been a misstatement or omission of
controlling facts by the taxpayer in its request for § 7805(b) relief.
SECTION 15. SIGNIFICANT CHANGES MADE TO REV.
PROC. 2006-2
.01 In 2006, the Office of Chief Counsel adopted certain changes to
the process by which it provides legal advice to IRS operating divisions and
to Appeals. Some of these changes affect the TAM process and are intended
to improve the timeliness and usefulness of TAMs. This revenue procedure
incorporates these changes, the most significant of which are listed in paragraphs
.02 through .06 below. The Office of Chief Counsel will evaluate the effect
these changes have on the TAM process and, if necessary, further modify these
procedures in the future to ensure that the process results in the provision
of timely and accurate legal advice and operates in a manner that is fair
to taxpayers.
Request regarding same taxpayer or transaction
.02 With respect to the same taxpayer or the same transaction, when
the issue is under the jurisdiction of Appeals and the applicability of more
than one kind of federal tax is dependent upon the resolution of that issue,
a director may now request technical advice on the applicability of any of
the taxes involved. A case remains under the jurisdiction of the director
even though Appeals has the identical issue under consideration for another
taxpayer (not related within the meaning of § 267 or a member of
an affiliated group of which the taxpayer is not also a member within the
meaning of § 1504) in a different transaction.
Request when issue pending in Appeals
.03 A Director may request technical advice even though the issue
is pending in Appeals for the same taxpayer.
.04 Taxpayers are strongly encouraged to consistently and timely participate
in the TAM process from the very beginning. A failure to participate in stages
of the TAM process identified as “material” will constitute a
waiver of rights to a taxpayer conference regarding a proposed adverse ruling.
Additional information requested from taxpayer
.05 Additional information requested from the taxpayer must be submitted
to the Associate office within 10 calendar days after the request for information
is made.
Elimination of TEAM procedures
.06 TEAM procedures have been eliminated.
SECTION 16. EFFECT ON OTHER DOCUMENTS
.01 Rev. Proc. 2006-2, 2006-1 I.R.B. 89, is superseded.
SECTION 17. EFFECTIVE DATE
This revenue procedure is effective January 2, 2007.
The principal author of this revenue procedure is Rosy Lor of the Office
of Associate Chief Counsel (Procedure & Administration). For further information
regarding this revenue procedure for matters under the jurisdiction of:
(1) the Associate Chief Counsel (Corporate), contact Richard Todd at
(202) 622-7700 (not a toll-free call);
(2) the Associate Chief Counsel (Financial Institutions and Products),
contact Arturo Estrada at (202) 622-3900 (not a toll-free call);
(3) the Associate Chief Counsel (Income Tax and Accounting), contact
Arlene Blume at (202) 622-4800 (not a toll-free call);
(4) the Associate Chief Counsel (Passthroughs and Special Industries),
contact Stephanie Bland at (202) 622-3110 (not a toll-free call);
(5) the Associate Chief Counsel (Procedure and Administration), contact
George Bowden or Henry Schneiderman at (202) 622-3400 (not a toll-free call);
(6) the Division Counsel/Associate Chief Counsel (Tax Exempt and Government
Entities), contact Calder Robertson at (202) 622-6000 (not a toll-free call);
(7) the Associate Chief Counsel (International), contact Bill Yates
at 202 622-3164 (not a toll-free call);
(8) the Commissioner (Large and Mid-Size Business Division), contact
Shirley S. Lee at (202) 283-8417 (not a toll-free call);
(9) the Commissioner (Small Business/Self-Employed Division), contact
Ronald E. Hartman at (856) 414-6447 (not a toll-free call);
(10) the Commissioner (Wage and Investment Division), contact Geoffrey
Gerbore at (631) 447-4428 (not a toll-free call); or
(11) the Chief Appeals, contact Sandy Cohen at (202) 435-5617 (not a
toll-free call).
Internal Revenue Bulletin 2007-01
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