Fla. Admin. Code Ann. R. 12-13.007 - Grounds for Reasonable Cause for Compromise of Penalties
(1) The Executive Director or the Executive
Director's designee will make a determination whether the taxpayer's
noncompliance was due to reasonable cause and not to willful negligence,
willful neglect, or fraud based on the facts and circumstances of the specific
case. The standard used in this determination is whether the taxpayer exercised
ordinary care and prudence and was nevertheless unable to comply.
(a) When evaluating the facts and
circumstances relevant to penalties assessed as a result of an audit, the
Department shall consider information provided by the taxpayer in relation to
the following:
1. Whether the taxpayer has
been audited previously, and, if so, whether the penalties which are the
subject of the compromise request result from taxpayer actions that resulted in
a specific issue-related deficiency assessment during one or more of the
previous audits. It is not the intent of this subparagraph to apply to
infrequent occurrences of human error;
2. The materiality of the tax deficiency
assessed in an audit when considered within the context of taxes correctly
reported and timely remitted by the taxpayer for the same tax during the same
audit period;
3. Whether the
taxpayer has initiated controls or other actions that will promote proper
future reporting with respect to those activities which contributed to the
audit deficiency and related penalties; and,
4. Whether the tax was collected and not
remitted to the state by the taxpayer.
(b) When evaluating the facts and
circumstances relevant to penalties imposed pursuant to a billing not resulting
from an audit, the Department shall consider:
1. The timeliness of payments made by the
taxpayer during previous reporting periods;
2. The materiality of the tax deficiency to
which the penalty relates within the context of the amount of the same taxes
correctly reported and remitted;
3.
Whether the taxpayer has initiated controls or other actions related to the
errors that resulted in the billing and related penalties in order to promote
better compliance in the future; and,
4. Whether the tax was collected and not
remitted to the state by the taxpayer.
(2) Reasonable cause is indicated by the
existence of facts and circumstances which support the exercise of ordinary
care and prudence on the part of the taxpayer in complying with the revenue
laws of this state. Depending upon the circumstances, reasonable cause may
exist even though the circumstances indicate that slight negligence,
inadvertence, mistake, or error resulted in noncompliance. Consideration will
be given to the complexity of the facts and the difficulty of the tax law and
the issue involved, and also to the existence or lack of clear rules or
instructions covering the taxpayer's situation.
(3) Ignorance of the law or an erroneous
belief as to the need to comply with a revenue law constitutes reasonable cause
when there are facts and circumstances which indicate ordinary care and
prudence was exercised by the taxpayer.
(a)
For example, ignorance of the law or an erroneous belief held by the taxpayer
is a basis for reasonable cause when the taxpayer has a limited knowledge of
business, a limited education, limited experience in Florida tax matters, or
advice received from a competent advisor was relied upon in complying with the
provisions of a revenue law.
(b) A
good faith belief held by a taxpayer with limited business knowledge, limited
education, or limited experience with Florida tax matters is a basis for
reasonable cause when there is reasonable doubt as to whether compliance is
required in view of conflicting rulings, decisions, or ambiguities in the
law.
(4) Reliance upon
the erroneous advice of an advisor is a basis for reasonable cause when the
taxpayer relied in good faith upon written advice of an advisor who was
competent in Florida tax matters and the advisor acted with full knowledge of
all of the essential facts. Informal advice, advice based upon insufficient
facts, advice received in cases where facts were deliberately concealed, or
obviously erroneous advice are not grounds for reasonable cause. To establish
reasonable cause based upon reliance on the advice of a competent advisor, the
taxpayer shall demonstrate:
(a) That the
taxpayer sought timely advice of a person who was competent in Florida tax
matters;
(b) That the taxpayer
provided the advisor with all of the necessary information and withheld
nothing; and,
(c) That the taxpayer
acted in good faith upon written advice actually received from the
advisor.
(5) Reasonable
reliance upon the express terms of written advice given by the Department
establishes reasonable cause when the taxpayer shows that the advice was timely
sought from a departmental employee and that all material facts were disclosed,
and that the express terms of the advice were actually followed. "Written
advice" for purposes of establishing reasonable cause as a basis for compromise
of penalties includes a writing issued to the same taxpayer by the Department
in response to that taxpayer's request for advice. The determination whether
the taxpayer has reasonably relied on such written advice will be made in
accordance with the criteria for determining if a taxpayer has reasonably
relied on a written determination for purposes of compromise of tax and
interest as set forth in subsection
12-13.005(2),
F.A.C.
(6) Reliance upon another
person to comply with filing requirements, or to obtain information, or to
properly prepare returns or reports, is a basis for reasonable cause, depending
upon the circumstances. Noncompliance due to nonperformance of a
ministerial-type function, inadvertent misplacement of returns, reports, or
information, or the failure of the taxpayer's agent to properly prepare or file
returns or reports are each a basis for reasonable cause when the taxpayer
establishes that adequate procedures or steps for complying existed; that the
person responsible for performing the function ordinarily performed the task
properly; or, that extenuating or unusual circumstances prevented
compliance.
(7)
(a) Death, illness, or incapacity of the
taxpayer is a basis for reasonable cause when such circumstances directly
prevented compliance or adversely affected the taxpayer's ability to comply. An
unexplained or unsupported claim of noncompliance due to death, illness, or
incapacity is not a basis for reasonable cause. It must be shown that the
death, illness, or incapacity directly prevented compliance, in spite of
reasonable efforts to comply.
(b)
Death, illness, or incapacity of a member of the taxpayer's immediate family,
or of a person solely responsible for maintaining information necessary to
comply, or of a person with sole authority to prepare required returns or
reports is a basis for reasonable cause when the noncompliance resulted
directly from such a circumstance, in spite of reasonable efforts to
comply.
(8) Circumstances
beyond a taxpayer's reasonable control, such as acts of war, natural disaster,
accidental destruction by fire or other casualty, or unavoidable absence are a
basis for reasonable cause when the taxpayer demonstrates such circumstances
directly prevented compliance, or adversely affected the taxpayer's ability to
comply.
(9) Reasonable cause shall
be presumed to exist whenever a taxpayer voluntarily self-discloses liability
for tax, interest, or penalty by contacting the Department in writing to
disclose and pay tax and interest due prior to any contact by the Department
concerning such liability. The presumption does not apply when the taxpayer is
registered with the Department or has routinely filed returns with the
Department and the taxpayer's self-disclosure relates to a delinquency or
deficiency that is obvious and would routinely generate a billing if not
otherwise self-disclosed.
(10)
Reasonable cause shall be presumed to exist whenever a taxpayer voluntarily and
timely participates in completion of forms provided to the taxpayer by the
Department as part of a self-audit or self-analysis program and promptly remits
tax and interest due pursuant to such self-audit or self-analysis.
(11) Reasonable cause shall be presumed to
exist whenever a person who is not otherwise required to register as a dealer
pursuant to Chapter 212, F.S., purchases consumer goods for personal use
pursuant to a remote sale and remits Florida use tax and interest, either
voluntarily or in prompt response to a proposed assessment, assessment, or use
tax billing issued by the Department.
(12) Reasonable cause shall be presumed to
exist whenever a person who is not otherwise required to register as a dealer
pursuant to Chapter 212, F.S., purchases tangible personal property and imports
same into Florida for business purposes and remits Florida use tax and
interest, either voluntarily or in prompt response to a proposed assessment,
assessment, or use tax billing issued by the Department.
(13) Reasonable cause shall be presumed to
exist whenever the penalty at issue relates to tax or interest which is
compromised on the basis of doubt as to liability or doubt as to
collectibility.
(14) Subsections
(3) through (13) are intended to provide examples and guidance to taxpayers and
Department employees, but should not be construed to limit penalty compromises
to only those circumstances described in such subsections. Penalty may be
compromised whenever the facts and circumstances demonstrate reasonable
cause.
Notes
Rulemaking Authority 213.06(1), 213.21(5) FS. Law Implemented 213.21 FS.
New 5-23-89, Amended 8-10-92, 5-18-94, 10-2-01, 10-29-13, 5-23-22.
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