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Reminder:
Support Your Auto Expenses
BY ALI ALLISON FEBRUARY 23,
2009
Auto expenses are a very common deduction
for business owners and employees who must travel. Often
the taxpayer does not know the exact amounts necessary
to calculate the proper deduction and the tax preparer
must estimate the mileage, business percentage, and
ultimate auto deduction with the client’s help. Tax
preparers should remind their clients to have proper
substantiation or, if the IRS examines the return, the
deduction will more than likely be denied.
If the substantiation is lost or stolen,
the IRS will generally deny the deduction because the
Cohan rule (which allows a court to estimate deductible
amounts of unsubstantiated expenses) cannot be applied
for certain expenses, including automobile expenses
(IRC § 274(d)(4)). In the case of a lost or stolen substantiation,
combined with the nonavailability of contemporaneous
records, substitute records may be provided, but they
must include sufficient information to support the deduction
(Temp. Treas. Reg. § 1.274-5T(c)). In September, the
Tax Court in a summary decision upheld the Service’s
disallowance of an auto expense deduction of a traveling
salesperson due to lack of substantiation (Niyitegyeka,
T.C. Summ. 2008-129). It was obvious that the taxpayer
traveled for business and would ordinarily be entitled
to a deduction, but the submitted evidence was too weak
to allow it.
BACKGROUND
Section 6001 requires taxpayers to keep records to substantiate
their tax liability. In the absence of such evidence,
expenses can be estimated using circumstantial evidence
per Cohan, 39 F.2d 540 (2d Cir. 1930). However, section
274(d) overrides the Cohan rule and requires a taxpayer
to substantiate auto expenses (along with a few others).
Temp. Treas. Reg. § 1.274-5T(c)(2) expands
upon the substantiation rule. The regulation states,
“An account book, diary, log, statement of expense,
trip sheet, or similar record must be prepared or maintained
in such manner that each recording of an element of
an expenditure or use is made at or near the time of
the expenditure or use.” This means the record does
not have to be documented at the exact same time as
the expense, but it must be done within a reasonable
time so that the time, place, amount, and business purpose
can be recorded. The regulation gives the example that
maintaining a log on a weekly basis is near enough to
the expenditure to count as proper substantiation. The
evidence may be written or recorded on an accessible
computer memory device. The taxpayer may omit certain
confidential information from the records as long as
the information is available upon request.
NIYITEGYEKA
In Niyitegyeka, the taxpayer was a traveling salesperson
in training. He would go to his employer’s office in
Manhattan and then drive to his customers’ locations.
The employer’s policy was to not reimburse trainees
for expenses related to this type of travel, including
hotels, meals, and mileage. The taxpayer traveled often
and went as far as Queens, New Jersey, and Connecticut.
These facts were not in dispute. Because the travel
was definitely for business and the expenses were not
reimbursable, a deduction for business mileage was proper.
However, upon examination, the taxpayer did not present
any evidence to substantiate the mileage. Thus, the
Service disallowed the deduction. The taxpayer claimed
that he kept his records in his car, which had been
stolen. The taxpayer filed a police report and the car
was later recovered, but the business records were gone.
The Tax Court gave the taxpayer the opportunity
to present other evidence besides a contemporaneous
log or receipts. Accordingly, the taxpayer presented
a computer listing, purportedly from the employer, that
detailed the dates, names, and amounts of his draw and
commission activities. According to the Tax Court judge
who heard the case, this evidence was insufficient to
justify granting the deduction, and the IRS’s decision
to deny the deduction was upheld. Specifically, the
judge took issue with the following:
- This evidence
was being presented for the first time at trial, as
opposed to being available for the examiner.
- The listing was on plain white
paper, which had no identifying marks, letterhead,
or other indication of its source.
- No one from the employer was
presented to corroborate the listing.
- There were no addresses, locations,
or distances listed, so mileage could not be determined.
- Neither the tax preparer,
the taxpayer’s clients, nor anyone else was called
by the taxpayer to testify on his behalf.
Accordingly, the court found that the
listing was not sufficient evidence to support the deduction
that the taxpayer sought. The judge noted that no evidence
presented in this case provided “a rational basis on
which we may determine even a partial deduction.”
CONCLUSION
In the Niyitegyeka case, because it was an undisputed
fact that deductible travel did happen, it seems that
had the taxpayer done a bit more work there might have
been sufficient substantiation for the Tax Court to
approve the deduction. Tax preparers can provide a great
service by being sure their clients have proper documentation
for automobile expenses in case of an audit. This may
seem daunting to the client, so the tax preparer can
be the client’s friend by knowing how the client goes
about his or her business and suggesting a method that
is easy for the taxpayer to use. Does the client have
an appointment book in which the business mileage for
each appointment could be written down? If not, can
the client use a wall calendar to document the business
mileage? Keeping track of expenses on a regular basis
can be an annoying chore. However, the bottom line is
that a simple process of documenting a few extra items,
using tools the client already has, can save the client
a big headache during an examination.
Ali Allison, CPA, is a tax manager
at Singer Lewak LLP in Los Angeles. This article appears
in the December 2008 issue of The Tax Adviser, the AICPA's
monthly journal of tax planning, trends and techniques.
AICPA members can subscribe to The Tax Adviser for a
discounted price. Call 1-800-513- 3037 or e-mail taxsection@aicpa.org
for a subscription to the magazine or to become a member
of the Tax Section.
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