I have a client who did not file his 2000, 2001 and 2002 tax returns. He thought he had filed them because he signed joint tax returns every year. He works out of town so he trusted his girlfriend to mail them. His now ex-girlfriend did not mail them. She had convinced him that they were common law spouses. She filed her own returns without him. I'm sure she filed HoH and got EIC on both of their children. She is now accused of embezzlement from a company she worked for. They have now parted ways. In 2004 he received a letter from the IRS about the delinquent returns. They had created returns for him based on his 1099's, and sent him a bill. He contacted me and we filed the returns for those years. He mailed those in a few monts ago.
He signed a POA listing 2000, 2001, and 2002. About a month ago he was contacted by the IRS for an audit of 2003. Did he contact me, no. There was no POA for 2003. They asked for his 2001, 2002, and 2004 copies and he took them.
When his ex-girlfriend hid or destroyed the tax returns he thought he was filing, she also hid or destroyed his mileage logs for those years. I have been instructing him to keep mileage logs. I had warned him when we filed the late returns that he had better be sure to have proof of those miles.
The auditor disallowed his mileage deduction based on no logs. She allowed him a minimal amount of milege per week, according to him. He called me today and told me all of this. He showed her all of his motel bills and told her there was no way he could drive from X to X on that minimal mileage.
If he didn't sign anything, what would be the chances of getting the auditor to allow recreation of that mileage? He does have the motel bills that show where he was working. He does not stay in one place for more than a few days. Is there anything wriiten that addresses recreation of expenses?
He signed a POA listing 2000, 2001, and 2002. About a month ago he was contacted by the IRS for an audit of 2003. Did he contact me, no. There was no POA for 2003. They asked for his 2001, 2002, and 2004 copies and he took them.
When his ex-girlfriend hid or destroyed the tax returns he thought he was filing, she also hid or destroyed his mileage logs for those years. I have been instructing him to keep mileage logs. I had warned him when we filed the late returns that he had better be sure to have proof of those miles.
The auditor disallowed his mileage deduction based on no logs. She allowed him a minimal amount of milege per week, according to him. He called me today and told me all of this. He showed her all of his motel bills and told her there was no way he could drive from X to X on that minimal mileage.
If he didn't sign anything, what would be the chances of getting the auditor to allow recreation of that mileage? He does have the motel bills that show where he was working. He does not stay in one place for more than a few days. Is there anything wriiten that addresses recreation of expenses?
Comment