Not to interrupt the argument as much as I enjoy it. But, I see this sort of outcome as a "teachable moment" for my individual clients and for the handful of 501c(3) clients that I service. I've already tucked away a note in my annual letter folder to make mention of this court case in next years missive.
That being said I find the Judge to have been very much “by the letter” and correct as far as my legalese challenged brain can discern. When I have a client looking to take what I feel is a excessive deduction I tell them something to this effect, “If you file your return with this deduction it will almost certainly be audited, in which case you will need to provide iron clad documentation to support the deduction, that being the case bring it in right now so I can look at it and determine I’ll represent you.” That approach has always resulted in one of two outcomes or a combination. Production of satisfactory documentation and or a dramatic adjustment of the deduction.
That being said I find the Judge to have been very much “by the letter” and correct as far as my legalese challenged brain can discern. When I have a client looking to take what I feel is a excessive deduction I tell them something to this effect, “If you file your return with this deduction it will almost certainly be audited, in which case you will need to provide iron clad documentation to support the deduction, that being the case bring it in right now so I can look at it and determine I’ll represent you.” That approach has always resulted in one of two outcomes or a combination. Production of satisfactory documentation and or a dramatic adjustment of the deduction.
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