Leaving California
March/April 2002Leaving CaliforniaAnd Other Hot State Tax Topicsby Leonard W. Williams, CPA The TaxTalk listserve is a gold mine of almost 400 CPAs and attorneys who discuss tax issues, ask tax questions and share information. Following are recent California tax highlights from TaxTalk. Leaving California to Avoid Tax This stirred a lot of TaxTalk discussion. Most responded that California takes the position that once a Califor-nian, always a Californian. So you start out with a heavy presumption against you by the FTB. If the taxpayer moves back to California, the FTB will treat the taxpayer as if he or she had never left. A couple of CPAs told of former clients who had successfully executed such a maneuver. A byproduct was that the clients had to jettison their Califor-nia CPA. The FTB will glom onto any contact with California as evidence that taxpayers haven't severed their ties with California. An FTB "Audit?" Although the salary split between California and the prior state was documented on a W-2, the FTB made its own allocation, based on its analysis. The Tax Practitioner Hotline was able to fill in the CPA on the background of the notice that the client received. However, hotline staff was unable to assist in locating anyone in the FTB to whom the client and CPA could present their arguments. When the dilemma was posted on TaxTalk, the prevailing advice was to contact the Taxpayer Advocate's office and ask for a re-audit. Problems, Complaints or Suggestions for the FTB? Client Can't Pay Sales Tax Due? Innocent Spouses However, the chair of the California State Bar's Tax Section posted a comment on TaxTalk that it isn't so simple. He pointed out that various limitations on the applicability of Sec. 19006 must be noted. He also added that Sec. 19006 should be reviewed carefully before assuming that the FTB will be required to follow the court order. Out-of-State Sec. 529 Plans California Rev. & Tax Code Sec. 17140 only specifies tax treatment for California's Golden State ScholarShare program, not all Sec. 529 plans. If the FTB issues no additional clarification, then this probably should be on the list of questions submitted for this fall's FTB liaison meeting. To illustrate how easily things can get confused, someone posted on TaxTalk that he had learned that the IRS would not treat out-of-state Sec. 529 plans the same as California's plan. However, the question pertains to the FTB's tax treatment, not the IRS'. How to Avoid a Year's Tax When Forming a Corporation at Year End It turns out that California Rev. and Tax Code Sec. 23114 says that a corporation will not be subject to income tax if it did no business in California and the income year was 15 days or less. In other words, the corporation would have to have been formed after Dec. 15 to avoid the corporate income tax. Although the $800 minimum tax has been eliminated for the first year, the tax as a percentage of profits would apply to the corporation formed Dec. 12, 2001. Thanks to CalCPA members and/or attorneys Cherie Putnam, Dave Kelly, Ann E. Sherrod, Steve Kramer, John Levy, Jack Jacobs, Bob Hines, Jim Counts, Chuck Rettig, Don Yamagishi and Professor Kitty Wright for their participation. Leonard W. Williams, CPA, is a Sunnyvale-based sole practitioner. He is a member of CalCPA's Committee on Taxation, an AICPA Tax Division member and a former Peninsula Chapter president. Williams can be reached at williams@lwwilliamscpa.com. © 2002 California Society of Certified Public Accountants. For reprint permission, contact Aldo Maragoni, managing editor. |







