34 Tex. Admin. Code § 3.2 - Offsets and Application of Credits and Payments to Liabilities; Unjust Enrichment
(a) Definitions.
The following words and terms, when used in this section, shall have the
following meanings, unless the context clearly indicates otherwise.
(1) Credit--An available balance for transfer
or refund, including funds from another tax type.
(2) Offset--A period-by-period reduction in
amounts owed by a taxpayer.
(3)
Period--Filing period, such as month, quarter, or year.
(b) Offsets and application of credits and
payments to liabilities.
(1) Requirements for
offset requests.
(A) A taxpayer must file a
written request to offset a liability before the determination, order, or
decision establishing the liability becomes final. A separate request must be
made for each credit a taxpayer proposes to apply to a liability. If a request
is made to offset multiple liabilities, each of the liabilities must be listed
in the order in which the taxpayer wants the credits applied.
(B) The written request for offset must
include the following information for both the credits and liabilities:
(i) taxpayer number;
(ii) the audit or refund period, exam, or
return period in which the credit and liability was created;
(iii) tax type; and
(iv) the tax amount.
(2) Rules for when offsets are and
are not allowed.
(A) A credit that has
already been refunded to the taxpayer or applied as a payment cannot be used to
offset a liability.
(B) Offsets
will only be allowed for liabilities owed by the same legal entity to which the
credit is due.
(C) Any claim for
refund filed on or after September 1, 2005 for a report period due on or after
January 1, 2000 cannot be used to offset any liabilities due on a
period-by-period basis and will be processed separately from any amounts found
due in an audit. For more information about how to file a refund claim see
§
3.325 of this title (relating to
Refunds and Payments Under Protest). This policy does not preclude auditors
from making adjustments in the course of an audit that reflect overpayments of
tax that have not already been separately identified in a refund claim such
that any interest due from or owed to a taxpayer is computed on the final
balance. The comptroller will apply the following policies to the following
facts, but this does not control how the comptroller will handle other facts
that may be presented.
(i) Audit in progress;
refund items found by or presented to auditor during the audit. If an audit
entrance conference is after September 1, 2005 and the auditor finds credits in
the normal course of the audit, or the taxpayer brings credit items to the
auditor's attention and they are not perfected in a separate claim for refund,
the auditor will include the credits in the audit unless the taxpayer
specifically requests that they be processed separately. If the credit items
are processed within the audit, any offsets between deficiencies and credits
will occur before the calculation of penalty and interest due as a result of
the audit.
(ii) Audit completed;
request for redetermination filed. If an audit is completed and a taxpayer
timely files a request for redetermination that includes new refund items, or
identifies refund items for additional consideration that were presented during
the audit and not approved by the auditor, the refund items will be processed
within the audit. Any offsets between deficiencies and credits will occur
before the calculation of penalty and interest due as a result of the audit. If
a taxpayer makes an additional claim for refund after the time in which a
redetermination may be timely requested, those refund items will be treated as
a separate, original claim for refund and they will not be processed as part of
the request for redetermination.
(iii) Audit completed; claim for refund filed
after notification of audit becomes final. If a taxpayer does not request
redetermination and files a claim for refund after the audit becomes final, the
refund claim and any interest due will be processed separately from the audit.
Refunds due the taxpayer may be applied as a payment to any outstanding
liability based on the date those funds are available for payment to the
taxpayer.
(iv) Claim for refund
filed; audit begins at a later date. If a taxpayer files a claim for refund
after September 1, 2005 and an audit is started after the date the claim is
filed, any refund amount granted will be processed separately from any amount
found due based on the audit. Any refund due the taxpayer may be applied as a
payment to any outstanding liability based on the date those funds are
available for payment to the taxpayer, but the refund will not be processed as
an offset.
(D) Amounts
paid to settle a disputed obligation, including but not limited to settlements
relating to litigation, are not credits and cannot be used to offset a tax
liability or any resulting interest or penalty amounts.
(E) Amounts paid pursuant to a court judgment
resulting from a claim for refund are not credits and cannot be used to offset
a tax liability or any resulting interest or penalty amounts.
(F) An offset may be recalculated and billed
if the credit used for the offset is subsequently reduced or
eliminated.
(G) The comptroller
will determine on a case-by-case basis whether an offset applies in any
situation not specifically covered by this section, but will not approve an
offset request for the following:
(i)
property tax;
(ii) unclaimed
property;
(iii) inheritance
tax;
(iv) motor fuel tax refunds
for fuel not used on Texas highways;
(v) franchise tax refunds resulting from an
audit or adjustment made by the Internal Revenue Service;
(vi) enterprise zone projects;
(vii) refunds due by the Texas Workforce
Commission;
(viii) bad debt
credits; and
(ix) amounts governed
under the Texas Insurance Code.
(3) Application of credits and payments.
(A) When credits are established in a period,
they will automatically be netted against liabilities in the same period. If
there are no liabilities to net against the credits, or the credits are greater
than the liabilities in the same period, the credits will first be applied as
payments to liabilities in prior periods.
(B) The application of credits will begin in
the oldest liability period and apply within that period first to tax, next to
penalty, and finally to interest. If credits remain, they will be applied to
the next oldest period in the same manner, until all prior liabilities are paid
or the credits are extinguished.
(C) If a credit remains after all preceding
liabilities have been satisfied, and the taxpayer is current in all tax
filings, applicable credit interest will be calculated for periods due on or
after January 1, 2000, and a refund will be issued for the credit amount and
interest.
(D) When a credit is
applied to a tax liability in a prior period, the liability will continue to
accrue interest under Tax Code, §
111.060 through the due date
of credit period. Unpaid tax balances after application of a credit will
continue to accrue interest through the due date of the next applied credit or
until midnight of the payment postmark date.
(E) When a credit is applied to a later
liability period, any unpaid balance will continue to accrue applicable
interest through the date of the next applied credit. Interest is accrued in
accordance with Tax Code, §
111.060.
(F) When a credit is applied to a later
liability period, the credit will accrue applicable credit interest under Tax
Code, §
111.064 through the due date
of the liability period in which the credit was applied. If there is a
remaining credit balance, it will continue to accrue applicable credit interest
until applied to another deficiency or refunded.
(G) Under circumstances where multiple type
tax liabilities exist, such as city and state sales tax, payments will be
divided proportionately between the taxes so that each tax shall share the
payment on the basis of the amount due each tax.
(c) Unjust enrichment.
(1) If amounts are collected as tax in
transactions on which tax is not due, the comptroller will require, under the
doctrine of unjust enrichment, that these amounts be remitted to the state or
be refunded to the customers from whom they were collected.
(2) In the case of refunded amounts,
documentary evidence must be retained establishing the transaction, the amount
collected, the party from whom collected, the amount refunded, and the party to
whom refund is made.
Notes
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