Ill. Admin. Code tit. 86, § 100.9000 - General Income Tax Procedures (IITA Section 901)
a) Collection procedure. The Illinois income
tax system basically is one of self-assessment. In general, each person or
taxpayer liable for tax is required to file a prescribed form of return showing
the facts upon which tax liability may be determined and assessed; the taxpayer
is required to compute the tax due on the return and make payment thereof on or
before the due date for filing the return. If the taxpayer fails to pay all or
any part of the tax when due, the Director, after assessment, issues to each
person liable for any unpaid portion thereof, a notice and demand for payment
at the place and time stated in the notice. The income tax is principally
collected through witholding at the source or by payments of estimated tax
required by law to be filed by certain individual and corporate taxpayers.
Neither withholding nor payment of estimated tax relieves a taxpayer from the
duty of filing an income tax return otherwise required.
1) Prior to January 1, 1994, IITA Section
1003(a) provides that interest at the rate of 9% per annum (or at such adjusted
rate as is established under Section
6621(b) of the Internal
Revenue Code) shall be paid on unpaid amounts of tax imposed by the Act from
the due date to the date paid; however, subsection (e) thereunder provides
that, if a notice and demand for payment of an amount due is issued, interest
shall not be imposed for the period after the date of such issuance if such
amount is paid within ten days.
2)
On and after January 1, 1994, IITA Section 1003(a) provides that interest shall
be paid in the manner and at the rate prescribed in Section 3-2 of the UPIA for
the period from such date to the date of payment of such amount. Section 3-2(c)
of the UPIA provides that if notice and demand is made for the payment of any
amount of tax due and if the amount due is paid within 30 days after the date
of such notice and demand, interest on the amount so paid shall not be imposed
for the period after the date of the notice and demand.
b) Examination and determination of tax
liability
1) Filing and examination of
return. After the income tax returns are filed with the Department, they are
sorted, classified, and processed (which includes inspection of the return to
verify the accuracy of the tax and supporting computations therein). Errors
apparent in the return are corrected (see Section
100.9200(a)(2)
below) and notification of the error and the corrections are sent to the
taxpayer. Thereafter, many of these returns are selected for examination which
may be conducted by correspondence, office audit, or field audit. If, after
examination, the return is accepted as filed, the taxpayer is notified by
appropriate "no change" letter or report. If, as a result of examination,
adjustments are proposed increasing the amount of the tax liability shown on
the return or (with or without a claim for refund) decreasing it, and the
taxpayer agrees in whole or in part with such adjustments, he may be requested
to execute Illinois Form IL-870, waiving the restrictions on assessment and
collection, and enabling immediate assessment upon acceptance by the Department
after appropriate review of the examiner's (Revenue Auditor's) report. If
adjustments are proposed with which the taxpayer does not agree, he ordinarily
is afforded certain administrative appeal rights as described below which,
however, do not apply in any case where criminal prosecution is under
consideration or, in the discretion of the Director, the state's interest
thereby would be prejudiced. Nor is appropriate action otherwise precluded
where the assessment or collection of the tax is in jeopardy (see Section 1102
of the Illinois Income Tax Act).
2)
Office conference with Department auditor and his supervisor. A taxpayer
initiates the administrative appeal rights adverted to in subsection (b)(1)
above by requesting, after the Department has proposed adjustments, an office
conference to be attended by either himself or his representative (or both),
the auditor, and the auditor's supervisor or other designee; the request may be
by telephone or in writing. Written objections to the adjustments proposed are
not required. The objectives of the office conference are to provide taxpayers
an opportunity by discussion and further consideration to reach an early
agreement respecting disputed items arising from the examination and to assure
to the extent possible that all available pertinent facts, contentions, and
viewpoints are included in the file and taken into account in the formulation
of recommendations. Further objectives are to insure that the Act provisions as
interpreted by regulations and rulings are properly applied and that the
recommendations are consistent with any Department positions thereunder, as
well as to provide a full explanation to the taxpayer and to reflect in the
case file the findings and conclusions reached and the reasons therefor. If as
a result of the office conference adjustments are proposed with which the
taxpayer agrees in whole or part, he again ordinarily will be requested to
execute the aforementioned Form IL-870 subject to the Department's review and
acceptance; see Section 100.9220(a) for the effect such execution has on the
running of interest.
3) Audit
Review; Issuance of Notice of Deficiency. If, after the office conference, the
taxpayer does not agree with the proposed adjustments, the administrative case
file will then be submitted to the Department's audit review staff for
technical and arithmetic review. After such review, the Audit Review staff will
issue a Notice of Deficiency pursuant to IITA 904(c) for any unagreed or
disputed amounts. Notices of Deficiency, although to be prepared and issued by
Audit Review, due to being in the nature of pleadings, shall be subject to
review before issuance by the Income Tax Legal Division.
c) Protest Procedures. Pursuant to IITA
Sections 904(d) and 908(a) a taxpayer may protest the Notice of Deficiency by
requesting a hearing before the Department. The taxpayer has 60 days (150 days
if the taxpayer is outside the United States) after the issuance of a Notice of
Deficiency to submit a proper protest to the Audit Review Division. Failure to
properly protest the Notice of Deficiency within the 60 (150) day period
results in the automatic assessment of the tax, and penalty shown therein. See
86 Ill. Adm. Code 200.120 for protest
requirements. Upon receiving a timely protest to the adjustments proposed in
the examiner's report, the administrative case file will be forwarded to the
Department's Income Tax Legal Division.
d) Hearings. Department Hearings shall be
conducted in accordance with the regulations provided at 86 Ill. Adm. Code 200,
"Practice and Procedure for Hearings Before the Illinois Department of
Revenue".
Notes
Amended at 25 Ill. Reg. 4929, effective March 23, 2001
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