Document Number
21-137
Tax Type
Corporation Income Tax
Description
Subtractions : Income - Ordinary Income, Capital Gains; Administration : Returns - Amended Returns, Overpayment Credits
Topic
Appeals
Date Issued
10-26-2021

October 26, 2021

Re:  § 58.1-1821 Application:  Corporate Income Tax

Dear *****:

This will reply to your letter in which you seek a refund of corporate income tax paid by ***** (the “Taxpayer”) for the taxable years ended December 31, 2009 and 2010. I apologize for the delay in responding to your appeal.

FACTS

The Taxpayer filed combined Virginia corporate income tax returns with its subsidiaries for the taxable years at issue. Subsequently, the Taxpayer filed amended returns. The Department audited the Taxpayer and numerous adjustments were made. The Taxpayer filed an appeal contesting several of the adjustments. Each of the adjustments will be addressed separately below.

DETERMINATION

Amended Returns

Because it had filed amended returns for the taxable years at issue, the Taxpayer believes the Department’s audit computations incorrectly started with the amounts reported on the Taxpayer’s original returns. Under audit, the Department will begin with the most current balances recorded in its accounting system. Until an amended return is processed and recorded in the Department’s accounts, the proper starting point for an audit is a taxpayer’s original return. While the amended returns in this case were received prior to the conclusion of the audit, they were not processed until the audit report was issued. As such, the auditor’s worksheets properly used the Taxpayer’s original return figures as the computational starting point. 

The auditor did acknowledge that the amended return changes were incorporated into the audit. In such situations, the audit report and worksheets should clearly set forth how such changes were incorporated into the audit. When audit staff includes amended return as audit adjustments, they should be recorded in the appropriate section of the audit report and identified as taxpayer amendments. Adjustments to taxpayer amendments should be recorded as a separate adjustment and labeled as such in the audit report. A review of the audit report does not clearly show how the Taxpayer’s amendments were included. 

Taxable Income Increase

The auditor disallowed a subtraction claimed by Taxpayer affiliate ***** (Corporation A) for the 2010 taxable year. The Taxpayer claims the auditor provided no explanation for the adjustment. It appears the adjustment was an oversight by the auditor.

Characterization of Loss 

Virginia Code § 58.1-301 provides, with certain exceptions, that terminology and references used in Title 58.1 of the Code of Virginia have the same meaning as provided in the Internal Revenue Code (IRC), unless a different meaning is clearly required. As such, Virginia’s conformity to federal law is limited to the actual use of a specific term in a Virginia statute. Further, conformity does not extend to terms, concepts, or principles specifically provided for in Title 58.1 of the Code of Virginia. For corporate income tax purposes, Virginia generally “conforms” to federal law in that it starts the computation of Virginia taxable income with federal taxable income (FTI). 
 
Virginia Code § 58.1-402 provides that a corporation’s Virginia taxable income for any given taxable year is the FTI and any other income taxable to the corporation under federal law for such year, adjusted and modified by certain specified additions, subtractions, and exemptions. For purposes of this statute, the term “federal taxable income” means all income from whatever source derived and however named on which a federal tax is imposed. See Title 23 VAC 10-120-100 A. 

The Taxpayer explains that it mistakenly characterized certain losses incurred by ***** (Corporation B), ***** (Corporation C), and ***** (Corporation D) as losses on mortgages on its 2009 federal income tax return. It used these losses to offset ordinary income. Under audit, the Department determined that losses on the sale of mortgages should be classified as capital losses and disallowed the offset of ordinary income. The Taxpayer contends that because Corporation A and Corporation B were leasing companies, losses from the sale of leases occurred from sales transacted in the normal course of business and were thus ordinary losses. The Taxpayer also asserts that Corporation C was a broker-dealer and the loss was from the sale of securities which is an ordinary loss. 

The Department requested documentation to substantiate the nature of the sales transactions in question. Although the Taxpayer provided an explanation as to the discrepancy, no further documentation has been provided. 

Amounts reported by a taxpayer on its return are considered to be accurate unless an inquiry, review or audit finds otherwise. When items are mischaracterized on a return, it is incumbent for the taxpayer to provide clear and cogent evidence of the error when requested to do so. 

Overpayment Credits 

The Taxpayer contends that the auditor did not apply all available overpayment credits from the 2008 taxable year to the 2009 taxable year, including overpayment credits derived from a corporation and its affiliates that merged with the Taxpayer in 2008. The Taxpayer also asserts that no overpayment credits from the 2009 taxable year were applied to its liability for the 2010 taxable year. 

Title 23 of the Virginia Administrative Code (VAC) 10-120-420 requires every corporation that expects its income tax to exceed $1,000 for a taxable year to file a declaration of estimated tax and to pay the tax in installments during the taxable year. Title 23 VAC 10-120-440, further provides:

All payments of estimated tax shall be applied toward the income tax liability of the taxpayer for the taxable year ... [p]ayments of estimated tax may not be applied toward any other tax or taxable year unless and until an income tax return is filed showing a refund.

It has been the Department’s policy that estimated taxes may be applied only toward the income taxes due for that taxable year. Once a return has been filed for that taxable year, any excess estimated payments may be returned to the taxpayer as a refund or applied to estimated payments toward the next tax year. Overpayments credited to a subsequent taxable year become estimated payments for that taxable year and may not be applied retroactively to a prior year’s underpayment. See Public Document (P.D.) 99-99 (5/6/1999) and P.D. 03-43 (4/24/2003). 

Virginia Code § 58.1-442 B 2 provides for a combined return for an affiliated group of corporations that computes its Virginia taxable income or loss separately for each corporation. This income or loss is then combined and reported on a single return. 

Pursuant to Title 23 VAC 10-120-420 E, affiliated groups of corporations which file on a consolidated or combined basis must also pay estimated tax on a consolidated or combined basis. Members of affiliated groups which become subject to Virginia income tax must use the method of reporting previously elected by the groups. See Title 23 VAC 10-120-320 B. As such, the combined overpayments of corporate taxpayers and their affiliates, including those that merged into an affiliated group during the prior taxable year, may be credited as an estimated payment for the combined groups the following taxable year. 

A reconciliation of the Taxpayer’s overpayment credits was complicated by the fact payments were made under a number of affiliates’ accounts in 2008. Based on the Department’s analysis (worksheet attached), it appears that the Taxpayer has ultimately carried forward a greater amount of overpayment credit than the Department can account. 

CONCLUSION

The subtraction claimed by Corporation A will be reinstated. The Taxpayer, however, has not provided sufficient documentation to show that the losses sustained by Corporation B and Corporation C were losses from the sale of leases, nor has it shown that the loss reported by Corporation D was from the sale of securities. As such, the Department cannot determine whether the losses were properly classified as ordinary. In addition, the Taxpayer’s overpayment credits from the 2008 taxable year have been applied in accordance with the attached schedule. 

The case will be remanded back to the auditor and the Taxpayer will be granted an opportunity to provide the documentation regarding the classification of the losses. The Taxpayer should contact the auditor to determine what documentation is required.   Upon receipt, the documentation will be reviewed and the audit adjusted accordingly. The auditor is instructed to provide a clear explanation to the Taxpayer as to how the amended returns were reflected in the audit report. Once the adjusted audit report is issued, the Taxpayer will have 90 days from the date it is issued to appeal of it disagrees with the conclusions. In addition, the audit staff is instructed to provide the Taxpayer with additional explanations concerning how the amended return figures were incorporated into the audit, if requested by the Taxpayer. 

The Code of Virginia sections, regulations and public documents cited are available on-line at www.tax.virginia.gov in the Laws, Rules & Decisions section of the Department’s web site. If you have any questions regarding this determination, you may contact ***** in the Office of Tax Policy, Appeals and Rulings, at *****.

Sincerely,

 

Craig M. Burns
Tax Commissioner

AR/539.B

Related Documents
Rulings of the Tax Commissioner

Last Updated 12/16/2021 14:59