(1)
Introduction. This rule applies to deaths occurring on or before
May 16, 2005, and discusses the due date for filing of Washington's estate tax
return and payment of the tax due. It explains that a penalty is imposed on the
taxes due with the state return when the return is not filed on or before the
due date, and that interest is imposed when the tax due is not paid by the due
date. The rule also discusses the limited circumstances under which the law
allows the department of revenue to cancel or waive the penalty, and the
procedure for requesting that cancellation or waiver. The Washington State
Estate and Transfer Tax Return and the instructions for completing return can
be found on the department's web site at
http://www.dor.wa.gov/ under the heading
titled forms. The return and instructions can also be obtained by calling the
estate tax section at 360-570-3265, option 2. The estate tax rules for deaths
occurring on or after May 17, 2005, can be found in WAC
458-57-105 through
458-57-165.
(2)
Filing the state return -- Payment
of the tax due. The Washington estate tax return (state return) referred
to in
RCW
83.100.050 and a copy of the federal estate
tax return (federal return) and all supporting documentation is due nine months
from the date of the decedent's death. The tax due with the state return must
be paid on or before the due date.
(a) Section
6075 of the Internal Revenue Code (IRC) requires that the federal return be
filed within nine months after the date of the decedent's death. In the case of
any estate for which a federal return must be filed under the current IRC, a
state return must be filed with the Washington state department of revenue
(department) on or before the date on which the federal return is required to
be filed. (This may include a federally granted extension of time for filing.
See (b) of this subsection.)
(b)
Section 6081 of the IRC permits the granting of a reasonable extension of time
for filing the federal return, generally not to exceed six months from the
original due date. If a federal extension of the time to file is granted, the
personal representative is required to file a true copy of that extension with
the department on or before the original due date, or within thirty days of the
issuance of the federal extension, whichever is later.
RCW
83.100.050(2). If the
personal representative fails to do so, the department may require the personal
representative to file the state return on the date that the federal return
would have been due had the federal extension not been granted.
(c) When the personal representative obtains
an extension of time for payment of the federal tax, or elects to pay that tax
in installments, the personal representative may choose to pay the state estate
tax over the same time period and in the same manner as the federal tax. The
personal representative is required to file a true copy of that extension with
the department on or before the original due date, or within thirty days of the
issuance of the federal extension, whichever is later.
RCW
83.100.060(2). If the
personal representative fails to do so, the department may require the personal
representative to pay the state tax on the date that the federal tax would have
been due had the federal extension not been granted.
(d) The department shall issue a release when
Washington's estate tax has been paid. Upon issuance of a release, all property
subject to the tax shall be free of any claim for the tax by the state.
RCW
83.100.080.
(3)
The late filing penalty. If
the state return is not filed by the due date, or any extension of the state
return's due date, the person required to file the return may be subject to a
late filing penalty.
(a)
When does the
penalty apply? This penalty applies if the person required to file the
return has not timely filed the state return with the department prior to being
notified by the department, in writing, of the necessity to file the state
return. The late payment penalty is equal to five percent of the tax due for
each month during which the state return has not been filed, not to exceed the
lesser of twenty-five percent of the tax or one thousand five hundred dollars.
RCW
83.100.070.
(b)
How is the penalty computed?
The penalty is the equivalent of five percent for each month, but is accrued on
a daily basis for those periods less than a month. For any portion of a month,
it is calculated by taking the five percent monthly rate and dividing it by the
number of days from the beginning of the month through the date the return is
filed, including the filing date.
For example, assume a state return is due on February 3rd but
is not filed until April 20th of the same year. The state return is delinquent
starting with February 4th. The amount of tax due with the state return is
$10,000.
(i) The penalty should be
computed as follows:
|
Feb 4-Feb 28
|
$10,000 tax at 5% per month
|
$446.43
|
|
Mar 1-Mar 31
|
$10,000 tax at 5% per month
|
$500.00
|
|
Apr 1-Apr 20
|
$10,000 tax at .1667% x 17 days
|
$333.34
|
|
Total delinquent penalty due on April
20th filing date
|
$1,297.77
|
(ii)
In this example, the first month (February) is a partial month. February has
twenty-eight days, the five percent monthly rate is divided by twenty-eight
days to arrive at a daily rate of .0017857 (or .17857 percent). The daily rate
is then multiplied by the twenty-five days of penalty accrual to arrive at the
total percentage of penalty due for that portion of a month (.0017857 x 25
days=.044643 or 4.4643 percent). The second calendar month (March) is complete
and incurs the full five percent penalty. The last portion of a month is a
total of seventeen days, including both April 4th and April 20th. Since April
has thirty days total, the five percent monthly rate is divided by the thirty
days in April to arrive at a daily rate of .001667 (or .1667 percent). The
daily rate is then multiplied by the twenty days of penalty accrual to arrive
at the total percentage of penalty due for that portion of a month (.001667 x
20 days=.03334 or 3.334 percent).
(4)
Interest is imposed on late
payment. The department is required by law to impose interest on the tax
due with the state return if payment of the tax is not made on or before the
due date. RCW 83.100.070. Interest applies
to the delinquent tax only, and is calculated from the due date until the date
of payment. Interest imposed for periods after December 31, 1996, will be
computed at the annual variable interest rate described in
RCW
82.32.050(2). Interest
imposed for periods prior to January 1, 1997, will be computed at the rate of
twelve percent per annum.
(5)
Waiver or cancellation of penalties.RCW
83.100.070(3) authorizes the
department to waive or cancel the penalty for late filing of the state return
under limited circumstances.
(a)
Claiming the waiver. A request for a waiver or cancellation of
penalties should contain all pertinent facts and be accompanied by such proof
as may be available. The request must be made in the form of a letter and
submitted to the department's special programs division. The person responsible
bears the burden of establishing that the circumstances were beyond the
responsible person's control and directly caused the late filing. The
department will cancel or waive the late filing penalty imposed on the state
return when the delinquent filing is the result of circumstances beyond the
control of the person responsible for filing of the state return. The person
responsible for filing the state return is the same person who is responsible
for filing the federal return.
(b)
Circumstances eligible for waiver. In order to qualify for a
waiver of penalty the circumstances beyond the control of the person
responsible for filing the state return must directly cause the late filing of
the return. These circumstances are generally immediate, unexpected, or in the
nature of an emergency. Such circumstances result in the person responsible not
having reasonable time or opportunity to obtain an extension of their due date
(see subsection (2)(b) of this section) or to otherwise timely file the state
return. Circumstances beyond the control of the responsible person include, but
are not necessarily limited to, the following:
(i) The delinquency was caused by the death
or serious illness of the person responsible for filing the state return or a
member of the responsible person's immediate family. In order to qualify for
penalty waiver, the death or serious illness must directly prevent the person
responsible from having reasonable time or opportunity to arrange for timely
filing of the state return. Generally, the death or serious illness must have
occurred within sixty days prior to the due date, provided that a valid state
return is filed within sixty days of the due date.
(ii) The delinquency was caused by an
unexpected and unavoidable absence of the person responsible. Generally, this
absence must be within sixty days prior to the due date, provided that a valid
state return is filed within sixty days of the due date. "Unavoidable absence
of the person responsible" does not include absences because of business trips,
vacations, personnel turnover, or personnel terminations.
(iii) The delinquency was caused by the
destruction by fire or other casualty of estate records necessary for
completion of the state return.
(iv) An estate tax return was timely filed,
but was filed incorrectly with another state due to an issue of the decedent's
domicile.
(v) A Washington estate
tax return was properly prepared and timely filed, but was sent to the location
for filing of the federal estate tax return.
(6)
Waiver or cancellation of
interest.Title 83 RCW (Estate Taxation) does not provide any
circumstances that allow for waiver of the interest, even though penalty may be
waived under limited circumstances (see subsection (5) of this
section).
(7)
Application of
payment towards liability. The department will apply taxpayer payments
first to interest, next to penalties, and then to the tax, without regard to
any direction of the taxpayer.