In a different thread, Gary2 wrote:
And Gretel responded:
I'd like to see that case. I did some searching, but all I found was a case involving amounts of $8720 and $8650, where the Tax Court denied the deduction because the guy didn't produce cancelled checks, even though the Court held the record open, and gave him time to produce the checks after the trial.
This was a "small tax case" that has no value as precedent. But it certainly implies that the Court would have accepted cancelled checks if they were made out to a recognized charitable organization.
This is a very recent case. Here's a link to the decision:
I know what the regulation says: You have to have the receipt when you file your tax return. But I'm not sure that the literal interpretation of this rule has really been tested in court. I'm also not sure that the IRS is really denying deductions in an audit if the taxpayer can produce alternate forms of documentation.
We certainly have a duty to educate our clients on what the regs are, what the IRS officially expects, and what may happen if they can't substantiate a donation properly.
But it still seems to me that there's probably some sort of safety net for cases where records are lost or destroyed after the tax return has been filed, but before an audit.
Here's my point:
If the donation was really legitimate, particularly if it's a lot of money all at once, then the organization should not only issue a receipt at, or very shortly after, the time of the donation, but it should also be able to issue a duplicate receipt a couple years later. A duplicate receipt will not only show the date of the donation, but it should also show the date the original receipt was issued. In principle, it could be just a photocopy of the original receipt, which should be acceptable to the IRS. The client should have enough time between getting an audit notice and the audit itself to obtain such a duplicate. On this fact pattern, the IRS would never know, and wouldn't care, when the taxpayer obtained the receipt.
I'll take it a step further. If I was the treasurer or controller of a nonprofit, or, for that matter, if I was advising the treasurer or controller of a nonprofit, in my capacity as a tax pro, I would probably be willing to backdate an original receipt to reflect the date of the donation.
In other words, if the organization has a record of the donation, but does not have a photocopy or PDF image of the receipt that was issued when they received the donation, I don't think it's an act of fraud to write a receipt that shows the date of the donation, without indicating the date on which the receipt was issued. By doing so, the organization is manually creating a duplicate of the original receipt.
All of this is based on the assumption that the donation was really made during the year in question, that the organization has a record of it, and that both the taxpayer and the organization are behaving ethically and acting in good faith.
It shouldn't be that difficult to substantiate donations after the fact. The real point is that the taxpayer, and the tax pro, have to act quickly after receiving an audit notice.
Someone may want to argue about what it means to "manually create a duplicate" of an "original receipt," and whether it is appropriate to do so, as I suggested, without indicating the date the duplicate was created.
And that's an argument I'm ready to have. I use the term argument in a healthy, professional sense.
The definition, and the very concept, of an original document has changed dramatically in the last ten years or so. Banks stopped providing cancelled checks a long time ago. But it's much more profound than that. Many people don't even get a paper bank statement anymore. The statements are online. We issue invoices or receipts in PDF format, using QuickBooks or some other program, and e-mail the receipt to the customer.
An electronic document is often the original. This is certainly the case when it comes to tax returns that are e-filed.
So if the church that received the donation has a PDF image of the receipt they provided back when they got the donation, they can just e-mail it to the guy again, or they can print another copy.
But if the church is a tiny operation with only 30 members, and no computer, and they still use handwritten ledgers and handwritten receipts, the bookkeeper can write another receipt with the date of the donation. I don't see how that's any different than printing from the PDF.
The definition of copy is just as unstable as the definition of original. If I write a note to someone by hand, I can make a copy of it by writing it out a second time. Copy does not mean photocopy. Some will say that I have created two originals, and you might even be able to tell them apart based on subtle differences, such as where I began writing on the paper. But that doesn't mean it isn't a copy.
The question obviously involves some fairly complex historical and legal issues, and there's room for differing opinions. But the concept of multiple copies of a single document existed long before the printing press or the photocopy machine. Copies were made by hand. They weren't identical, but they were nevertheless considered to be copies.
The idea of an original instrument, in many areas of law and commerce, is slowly dying.
For a last will and testament, you better have an original instrument. And certainly the idea of an original is still relevant, for example, for works of fine art.
But in many other ways, the very concept of an original is becoming obsolete.
BMK
If someone wrote a check to a legitimate charity for $1000, but the receipt from the charity was lost, what do you do? Suppose the taxpayer is too embarrassed to ask the church treasurer for a copy of the receipt?
I would not deduct. Period. Have you heard about that court case where a T/P made a substantial contribution (around $8,000) to his church but only had his cancelled checks? When audited he requested and received the receipt from the church. Guess what? IRS and Court declined deduction since T/P needs to have receipt in his hands when filing the tax return. I am not in my office now but can provide cite when there.
This was a "small tax case" that has no value as precedent. But it certainly implies that the Court would have accepted cancelled checks if they were made out to a recognized charitable organization.
This is a very recent case. Here's a link to the decision:
I know what the regulation says: You have to have the receipt when you file your tax return. But I'm not sure that the literal interpretation of this rule has really been tested in court. I'm also not sure that the IRS is really denying deductions in an audit if the taxpayer can produce alternate forms of documentation.
We certainly have a duty to educate our clients on what the regs are, what the IRS officially expects, and what may happen if they can't substantiate a donation properly.
But it still seems to me that there's probably some sort of safety net for cases where records are lost or destroyed after the tax return has been filed, but before an audit.
Here's my point:
If the donation was really legitimate, particularly if it's a lot of money all at once, then the organization should not only issue a receipt at, or very shortly after, the time of the donation, but it should also be able to issue a duplicate receipt a couple years later. A duplicate receipt will not only show the date of the donation, but it should also show the date the original receipt was issued. In principle, it could be just a photocopy of the original receipt, which should be acceptable to the IRS. The client should have enough time between getting an audit notice and the audit itself to obtain such a duplicate. On this fact pattern, the IRS would never know, and wouldn't care, when the taxpayer obtained the receipt.
I'll take it a step further. If I was the treasurer or controller of a nonprofit, or, for that matter, if I was advising the treasurer or controller of a nonprofit, in my capacity as a tax pro, I would probably be willing to backdate an original receipt to reflect the date of the donation.
In other words, if the organization has a record of the donation, but does not have a photocopy or PDF image of the receipt that was issued when they received the donation, I don't think it's an act of fraud to write a receipt that shows the date of the donation, without indicating the date on which the receipt was issued. By doing so, the organization is manually creating a duplicate of the original receipt.
All of this is based on the assumption that the donation was really made during the year in question, that the organization has a record of it, and that both the taxpayer and the organization are behaving ethically and acting in good faith.
It shouldn't be that difficult to substantiate donations after the fact. The real point is that the taxpayer, and the tax pro, have to act quickly after receiving an audit notice.
Someone may want to argue about what it means to "manually create a duplicate" of an "original receipt," and whether it is appropriate to do so, as I suggested, without indicating the date the duplicate was created.
And that's an argument I'm ready to have. I use the term argument in a healthy, professional sense.
The definition, and the very concept, of an original document has changed dramatically in the last ten years or so. Banks stopped providing cancelled checks a long time ago. But it's much more profound than that. Many people don't even get a paper bank statement anymore. The statements are online. We issue invoices or receipts in PDF format, using QuickBooks or some other program, and e-mail the receipt to the customer.
An electronic document is often the original. This is certainly the case when it comes to tax returns that are e-filed.
So if the church that received the donation has a PDF image of the receipt they provided back when they got the donation, they can just e-mail it to the guy again, or they can print another copy.
But if the church is a tiny operation with only 30 members, and no computer, and they still use handwritten ledgers and handwritten receipts, the bookkeeper can write another receipt with the date of the donation. I don't see how that's any different than printing from the PDF.
The definition of copy is just as unstable as the definition of original. If I write a note to someone by hand, I can make a copy of it by writing it out a second time. Copy does not mean photocopy. Some will say that I have created two originals, and you might even be able to tell them apart based on subtle differences, such as where I began writing on the paper. But that doesn't mean it isn't a copy.
The question obviously involves some fairly complex historical and legal issues, and there's room for differing opinions. But the concept of multiple copies of a single document existed long before the printing press or the photocopy machine. Copies were made by hand. They weren't identical, but they were nevertheless considered to be copies.
The idea of an original instrument, in many areas of law and commerce, is slowly dying.
For a last will and testament, you better have an original instrument. And certainly the idea of an original is still relevant, for example, for works of fine art.
But in many other ways, the very concept of an original is becoming obsolete.
BMK
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