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Government Seeks Reversal of District Court Decision That Invalidated PTIN User Fees

Posted on Feb. 28, 2018

One of the more interesting cases from last year was Steele v US, where a DC district court upheld regulations imposing a PTIN requirement for preparers but held that the IRS did not have authority to require preparers to pay a user fee for obtaining or renewing a PTIN. In Steele, the District Court in invalidating the fees largely relied on the reasoning in Loving, and applied the Independent Offices Appropriations Act (IOAA) which authorizes agencies to charge fees for “a service or thing of value provided by the agency.” The lower court essentially held that the IRS’s fees were a backdoor attempt at regulating return preparers, stating that IRS “may not charge fees for PTINs because this would be equivalent to imposing a regulatory licensing scheme and the IRS does not have such regulatory authority” after Loving.

The government appealed, and it just filed its opening brief.

The main argument that the government makes on appeal is that the district court failed to appreciate the service and value associated with obtaining a PTIN:

The PTIN provides a special benefit to tax return preparers because, as even the District Court held, it is required by statute and regulation to lawfully prepare returns for compensation. If a return preparer does not obtain a PTIN and provide it on returns he or she prepares, the preparer is subject to penalties of up to $25,000 per year, I.R.C. § 6695(c), as well as to being enjoined from preparing returns, I.R.C. § 7407. Return preparers comprise only a tiny fraction of the U.S. population, and the members of the general public who are not preparers have no occasion to request PTINs and receive no direct benefit from their issuance to those individuals who are return preparers. The issuance of PTINs thus provides a special benefit to the recipients of the PTINs, and therefore the IOAA authorizes the IRS to charge a user fee for PTINs.

In addition the government emphasized that the PTIN program helps “to protect preparers’ SSNs, which was Congress’s purpose in authorizing the IRS to create and mandate the use of the PTIN.”

The government on appeal attempts to separate the PTIN requirement from the regulation regime that Loving struck down. In so doing, the government emphasizes that while PTINs played a key role in that ill-fated regulatory regime (essentially only registered or licensed return preparers were eligible for a PTIN in the pre-Loving world) PTINs have a value and role that is distinct from regulating preparers.

As readers may recall, the district court’s conclusion mooted the alternative argument that the user fees IRS charged were excessive. If the government prevails on appeal, that issue will resurface.

Stay tuned.

For a prior post on Steele see here

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