The following three people live in one household all year. No one else lives in the home. All are US citizens. None are married. All other "normal" assumptions are valid. This is not a trick question.
Sarah is 40 years old. She is disabled. She has no income other than social security benefits. During 2007, she received $10,368 in social security benefits.
Megan is 18 years old. Megan is Sarah's daughter. Megan has wages of $13,000, and has no other income.
Crystal is 9 months old. Crystal is Megan's daughter. Crystal has no income.
Can Megan claim EIC with her daughter as a qualifying child?
Or does that violate the rule that says that you cannot claim EIC if you are the qualifying child of another taxpayer?
In other words, is Megan a qualifying child of Sarah, even though Sarah has no taxable income, no tax liability, and no filing requirement?
Here again, the IRS instructions for Form 1040, for 2007 ask:
And if the answer is YES, then you cannot take the Earned Income Credit (page 45, general instructions for Form 1040).
But the text of IRC 32 says:
This is not the question that is addressed by IRS Notice 2008-5.
But it highlights the original problem, which is not limited to the dependent exemption, or to the rules that govern the definition of qualifying relative.
The rules as they are written appear to require the taxpayer to determine his or her eligibility for certain tax benefits by using information about another person, that may not be available. And even when the information is available, the rules raise complex, difficult questions about how the "qualifying child" relation is defined when the other person is not required to file a return, or is not eligible for any of the benefits associated with a qualifying child.
Note that the language of the IRC says that an individual is not eligible for EIC if that individual IS the qualifying child of a taxpayer for the year in question. But the question posed by the IRS is "could you be a qualifying child of another person?"
Which raises once again the question that I posed two years ago:
How can someone have a qualifying child if the person is not even eligible for any of the benefits associated with having a qualifying child?
At what point do we concede that Megan is not Sarah's qualifying child, because this is simply not what Congress intended, and it is not a reasonable interpretation of the law?
For example, what if Sarah died in late January 2007, after receiving one social security check? Does this change anything?
What about the "lived in your home for more than half the year" test? If Sarah died in January, doesn't that mean that Megan did not live in her home for more than half the year? I don't think so. The IRS instructions say that
[General instructions for Form 1040 (2007), page 17]
Soooo... hmmm... does it matter whether it was Sarah's home or Megan's home?
I mean, in the fact pattern I described, is Megan living in Sarah's home or is Sarah living in Megan's home?
Does it make a difference which name is on the lease? Or who is actually paying the rent?
Probably not. The operative language in IRC 152(c) is "the same principal place of abode."
Gee, what if Sarah had no income at all? Now Sarah appears to be a qualifying person for Megan for purposes of Head of Household. Is anyone still going to argue that Megan is somehow Sarah's qualifying child, and that this precludes Megan from claiming EIC for her own child?
But Megan meets the definition of a qualifying child for Sarah for purposes of EIC. She meets the age, relationship, and residency tests, and the support test is not applicable to EIC. And according to a lot of people on this board, Sarah is a taxpayer even if she has absolutely no income at all.
Like I said in an earlier post, Congress needs to go back to the drawing board.
In the meantime, we have a responsibility to interpret the rules in a way that makes sense. And that's not going to get easier...
Burton M. Koss
koss@usakoss.net
Sarah is 40 years old. She is disabled. She has no income other than social security benefits. During 2007, she received $10,368 in social security benefits.
Megan is 18 years old. Megan is Sarah's daughter. Megan has wages of $13,000, and has no other income.
Crystal is 9 months old. Crystal is Megan's daughter. Crystal has no income.
Can Megan claim EIC with her daughter as a qualifying child?
Or does that violate the rule that says that you cannot claim EIC if you are the qualifying child of another taxpayer?
In other words, is Megan a qualifying child of Sarah, even though Sarah has no taxable income, no tax liability, and no filing requirement?
Here again, the IRS instructions for Form 1040, for 2007 ask:
Could you, or your spouse if filing a joint return, be a qualifying child of another person in 2007?
But the text of IRC 32 says:
If an individual is the qualifying child of a taxpayer for any taxable year of such taxpayer beginning in a calendar year, such individual shall not be treated as an eligible individual for any taxable year of such individual beginning in such calendar year.
The term “qualifying child” means a qualifying child of the taxpayer (as defined in section 152 (c), determined without regard to paragraph (1)(D) thereof and section 152 (e)).
The term “qualifying child” means a qualifying child of the taxpayer (as defined in section 152 (c), determined without regard to paragraph (1)(D) thereof and section 152 (e)).
But it highlights the original problem, which is not limited to the dependent exemption, or to the rules that govern the definition of qualifying relative.
The rules as they are written appear to require the taxpayer to determine his or her eligibility for certain tax benefits by using information about another person, that may not be available. And even when the information is available, the rules raise complex, difficult questions about how the "qualifying child" relation is defined when the other person is not required to file a return, or is not eligible for any of the benefits associated with a qualifying child.
Note that the language of the IRC says that an individual is not eligible for EIC if that individual IS the qualifying child of a taxpayer for the year in question. But the question posed by the IRS is "could you be a qualifying child of another person?"
Which raises once again the question that I posed two years ago:
How can someone have a qualifying child if the person is not even eligible for any of the benefits associated with having a qualifying child?
At what point do we concede that Megan is not Sarah's qualifying child, because this is simply not what Congress intended, and it is not a reasonable interpretation of the law?
For example, what if Sarah died in late January 2007, after receiving one social security check? Does this change anything?
What about the "lived in your home for more than half the year" test? If Sarah died in January, doesn't that mean that Megan did not live in her home for more than half the year? I don't think so. The IRS instructions say that
A person is considered to have lived with you for all of 2007 if the person was born or died in 2007 and your home was this person's home for the entire time he or she was alive.
Soooo... hmmm... does it matter whether it was Sarah's home or Megan's home?
I mean, in the fact pattern I described, is Megan living in Sarah's home or is Sarah living in Megan's home?
Does it make a difference which name is on the lease? Or who is actually paying the rent?
Probably not. The operative language in IRC 152(c) is "the same principal place of abode."
Gee, what if Sarah had no income at all? Now Sarah appears to be a qualifying person for Megan for purposes of Head of Household. Is anyone still going to argue that Megan is somehow Sarah's qualifying child, and that this precludes Megan from claiming EIC for her own child?
But Megan meets the definition of a qualifying child for Sarah for purposes of EIC. She meets the age, relationship, and residency tests, and the support test is not applicable to EIC. And according to a lot of people on this board, Sarah is a taxpayer even if she has absolutely no income at all.
Like I said in an earlier post, Congress needs to go back to the drawing board.
In the meantime, we have a responsibility to interpret the rules in a way that makes sense. And that's not going to get easier...
Burton M. Koss
koss@usakoss.net
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