Beware of a 100% Personal Liability Penalty
A "100% penalty" can be assessed against a responsible person when federal income tax and/or federal employment taxes are withheld from employee paychecks but aren't handed over to the government. This Trust Fund Recovery Penalty got its informal "100% penalty" moniker from the fact that the entire unpaid amount can be assessed against a responsible person (or several responsible persons). The purpose of the penalty is to collect withheld but unpaid federal taxes from individuals who had control over an employer's finances. Often, operating a business as a corporation protects the individual owner from personal liability for some corporate debts. In cases of unpaid payroll taxes, however, the corporate shield or corporate veil is "pierced" and the IRS looks past the corporation to the responsible person to pay the debt. Determining Who's Responsible The 100% penalty can only be assessed against a responsible person. That could be a shareholder, director, officer or employee of a corporation; a partner or employee of a partnership; or a member (owner) or employee of a multi-member LLC. It can also be assessed against an employee of a sole proprietorship or an employee of a single-member (one owner) LLC. To be hit with the penalty, the individual must:- Be responsible for collecting, accounting for, and paying withheld federal taxes, and
- Willfully fail to remit those taxes (willful means intentional, deliberate, voluntary and knowing, as opposed to accidental).
- Is an officer or director,
- Owns shares or has an entrepreneurial stake in the company,
- Is active in managing the day-to-day affairs of the company,
- Can hire and fire employees,
- Makes decisions regarding which, when, and in what order debts or taxes will be paid, and
- Exercises daily control over bank accounts and disbursement records.
- A bank had the authority under a loan agreement with a delinquent corporation to oversee much of the corporation's operations. It exercised this authority by honoring some checks but dishonoring others and was found by the IRS to be a responsible person.
- A volunteer member of a charitable organization's board of trustees had knowledge of the organization's tax delinquency and authority to decide whether to pay the taxes. The individual was determined to be a responsible person by the IRS.
- The president of a day care center's board of directors, who wasn't paid for his work and wasn't involved in day-to-day operations, was held to be a responsible person because he secured loans for the center, directed its tax payments, and reviewed its financial reports. Therefore, he was found to be sufficiently involved in the center's financial affairs to make him a responsible person.
- The executor of a decedent's estate was found to be a responsible person when the operators of an inn (which was an asset of the estate) failed to remit withheld federal taxes.
Not Paying Over Employment Taxes Can Even Lead to Prison In one 2016 case, the president of a construction company was sentenced to 18 months in prison for employment tax fraud and ordered to pay restitution to the IRS in the amount of $677,350, according to the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ). The 52-year-old man failed to collect, account for and pay over employment taxes to the IRS. The DOJ stated in a press release that he "chose to withhold employment tax from his employees, and use those funds for his personal benefit, inflicting substantial harm on the U.S. Treasury and gaining a competitive advantage over his law-abiding competitors." |