TTB, page 15-7 says:
Form 2848, Power of Attorney and Declaration of Representative. Form 2848 authorizes a person to represent a taxpayer before the IRS. Form 2848 will not be honored for any purpose other than representation before the IRS. The power of attorney authorizes the representative to perform any and all acts the taxpayer can perform, such as signing consents extending the time to assess tax, recording the interview, or executing waivers agreeing to a tax adjustment.
This information agrees with Form 2848 instructions which say:
Authority Granted
This power of attorney authorizes the representative to
perform any and all acts you can perform, such as signing
consents extending the time to assess tax, recording the
interview, or executing waivers agreeing to a tax adjustment.
Can the taxpayer tell IRS he has alzheimers? Can the taxpayer tell IRS the trustee skipped town? Of course.
The instructions for line 3 tell you which years the POA is for. There is no expiration date for the POA, other than if a new POA is signed that nullifies your POA, or the statute of limitations has run on the tax return.
Since the IRS has sent you a letter for 2004 concerning additional tax owed, they too consider your POA valid and not expired. Therefore, you have every right to talk to IRS about your client’s 2004 tax return including information you believe to be relevant to the reason why your client is ignoring request for additional payments. The purpose of a POA is to allow you to step into the taxpayer's shoes and talk to IRS. You are not violating any ethics rules as long as you stick to the information relevant to the 2004 tax return.
Form 2848, Power of Attorney and Declaration of Representative. Form 2848 authorizes a person to represent a taxpayer before the IRS. Form 2848 will not be honored for any purpose other than representation before the IRS. The power of attorney authorizes the representative to perform any and all acts the taxpayer can perform, such as signing consents extending the time to assess tax, recording the interview, or executing waivers agreeing to a tax adjustment.
This information agrees with Form 2848 instructions which say:
Authority Granted
This power of attorney authorizes the representative to
perform any and all acts you can perform, such as signing
consents extending the time to assess tax, recording the
interview, or executing waivers agreeing to a tax adjustment.
Can the taxpayer tell IRS he has alzheimers? Can the taxpayer tell IRS the trustee skipped town? Of course.
The instructions for line 3 tell you which years the POA is for. There is no expiration date for the POA, other than if a new POA is signed that nullifies your POA, or the statute of limitations has run on the tax return.
Since the IRS has sent you a letter for 2004 concerning additional tax owed, they too consider your POA valid and not expired. Therefore, you have every right to talk to IRS about your client’s 2004 tax return including information you believe to be relevant to the reason why your client is ignoring request for additional payments. The purpose of a POA is to allow you to step into the taxpayer's shoes and talk to IRS. You are not violating any ethics rules as long as you stick to the information relevant to the 2004 tax return.
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