(a)

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Terms Used In Tennessee Code 67-1-803

  • Commissioner: means the commissioner of revenue. See Tennessee Code 67-1-101
  • Department: means the department of revenue. See Tennessee Code 67-1-101
  • Jurisdiction: (1) The legal authority of a court to hear and decide a case. Concurrent jurisdiction exists when two courts have simultaneous responsibility for the same case. (2) The geographic area over which the court has authority to decide cases.
  • Oversight: Committee review of the activities of a Federal agency or program.
  • Person: includes a corporation, firm, company or association. See Tennessee Code 1-3-105
  • Reporter: Makes a record of court proceedings and prepares a transcript, and also publishes the court's opinions or decisions (in the courts of appeals).
  • State: when applied to the different parts of the United States, includes the District of Columbia and the several territories of the United States. See Tennessee Code 1-3-105
  • Statute of limitations: A law that sets the time within which parties must take action to enforce their rights.
  • Uniform Commercial Code: A set of statutes enacted by the various states to provide consistency among the states' commercial laws. It includes negotiable instruments, sales, stock transfers, trust and warehouse receipts, and bills of lading. Source: OCC
(1) The commissioner is authorized to waive, in whole or in part, any statutory penalty imposed under any revenue laws administered by the commissioner in any case of deficiency or delinquency tax collection made by the department, if the commissioner determines that the payment by a taxpayer of a tax in an amount less than that due under the applicable laws and regulations, or that the failure of a taxpayer to pay any tax by the due date is the result of one (1) or more of the good and reasonable causes enumerated in subsection (c) and is not a result of gross negligence or willful disregard of the law.
(2) Under no circumstances, however, shall this authority be deemed to extend to any interest payable under the law in connection with any case of tax deficiency or delinquency.
(3) The commissioner shall prescribe and publish rules and regulations governing the manner in which applications for a waiver of penalty shall be accepted and processed.
(b) Initial receipt, review and recommendation for approval or disapproval of each application for waiver of penalty, as authorized in subsection (a), shall be made by the director, or the director’s delegate, of the division or agency within the department charged by the commissioner with the enforcement of the tax involved. The commissioner or the commissioner’s delegate shall thereafter review and approve or disapprove each application for waiver of penalty, as the commissioner or the commissioner’s delegate may deem proper, and such determination by the commissioner or the commissioner’s delegate shall constitute the determinative and final decision on the application.
(c)

(1) In the case of a tax deficiency, that is constituted by a failure to pay the full amount of tax due under the law, the following specific causes, if clearly established by the taxpayer, shall be acceptable as good and reasonable cause for the waiver of penalty:

(A) The taxpayer incurred the deficiency as a result of having been misled by erroneous advice or action, that was not clearly in contravention of the law, on the part of officials charged with the enforcement of this state‘s tax statutes;
(B) The taxpayer incurred the deficiency as a result of legal misadvice that was not clearly in contravention of the law, from an ostensibly competent and financially independent lawyer or accountant;
(C) The provisions of the pertinent law or regulation were, at the time the deficiency was incurred, unsettled, unclear, and misleading to a reasonable person; and the taxpayer acted in good faith on a reasonable, though mistaken, application of such law or regulation, with the result that the tax deficiency in question was incurred;
(D) The deficiency resulted from reliance by the taxpayer upon factual, but not legal, misrepresentations made by persons with whom the taxpayer dealt in the course of the taxpayer’s business, other than the taxpayer’s own agents or employees, the taxpayer having no reason to doubt or question such misrepresentations; or
(E) The deficiency resulted from a mistake of fact on the part of the taxpayer, who thereafter voluntarily and without any kind of demand upon the part of the officials charged with the enforcement of the law, tenders the amount of the deficiency, plus accrued interest.
(2) If the cause for the deficiency does not comport with any of the causes provided for in subdivision (c)(1), a determination may be made, nevertheless, as to whether the statement of facts submitted by the taxpayer, or known to the commissioner, establishes a good and reasonable cause. Any cause for a deficiency may be accepted as a good and reasonable cause that appears to the commissioner to justify a conclusion by the commissioner that the taxpayer has done everything the taxpayer could reasonably be expected to do as an ordinarily intelligent and reasonably prudent business person and that clearly negates either a willful disregard of the law or gross negligence.
(d)

(1) In the case of a tax delinquency of not more than thirty (30) days, which is constituted by a failure to file a return and pay the tax within not more than thirty (30) days after the time prescribed by law, the following specific causes, if clearly established by the taxpayer, shall be acceptable as good and reasonable cause for the waiver of penalty:

(A) Return was timely mailed, but for reasons either known or unknown was not timely received or not received at all, and the taxpayer satisfactorily explains noncompliance within § 67-1-107;
(B) Delinquency was due to erroneous information given the taxpayer by an official charged with the enforcement of this state’s tax statutes;
(C) Delinquency was attributable to an intervening providential cause, such as, but not limited to, the occurrence of a disabling injury, illness, or death of the taxpayer, or a member of the taxpayer’s immediate family, or of a person upon whom the taxpayer has heretofore exclusively relied for the preparation of the taxpayer’s returns, and such intervening cause occurred prior to the date on which the required return and payment would otherwise be deemed delinquent;
(D) Delinquency was caused by unavoidable absence of the taxpayer or a person upon whom the taxpayer has heretofore exclusively relied for the preparation of the taxpayer’s returns;
(E) Delinquency was caused by the destruction by fire or other casualty of the taxpayer’s place of business or business records;
(F) The taxpayer proves that the taxpayer made timely application to the department for the proper tax forms, and these were not furnished the taxpayer in sufficient time to permit the executed return to be filed on or before the due date;
(G) The taxpayer proves that the taxpayer personally visited an office of the department before the expiration of the time within which to file the required return for the purpose of securing information or aid to properly make out the taxpayer’s return and, through no fault of the taxpayer, was unable to secure such information or aid;
(H) Delinquency was a result of the taxpayer’s failure to enclose a negotiable instrument, as defined by the Uniform Commercial Code, compiled in title 47, with the taxpayer’s timely filed return, and the taxpayer promptly responds to a request for payment upon notification thereof, and satisfactorily demonstrates such failure was due to an inadvertent oversight or error; or
(I) Delinquency becomes apparent when the taxpayer voluntarily pays the tax but, for any legal reason, the department would be unable to enforce collection, such as the collection would be barred by the statute of limitations, the lack of jurisdiction or other similar reason.
(2) If the cause for the delinquency does not comport with any of the causes provided for in subdivision (d)(1), or if the delinquency is of more than thirty (30) days’ duration, a determination may be made, nevertheless, as to whether the statement of facts submitted by the taxpayer, or known to the commissioner, establishes a good and reasonable cause. Any cause for a delinquency may be accepted as a good and reasonable cause that appears to the commissioner to justify a conclusion by the commissioner that the taxpayer has done everything the taxpayer could reasonably be expected to do as an ordinarily intelligent and reasonably prudent business person, and that clearly negates either a willful disregard of the law or gross negligence.
(3) Notwithstanding subdivisions (d)(1) and (2), the commissioner may accept as good and reasonable cause for waiver of a delinquency penalty the fact that the taxpayer has timely filed and paid such tax for a period of at least two (2) years next preceding the due date of the delinquent return and payment, if the specific cause for the delinquency does not constitute a willful disregard of the law or gross negligence. If the taxpayer has filed estimated payments of franchise and excise taxes by the due date as required by § 67-4-2015 for a period of at least two (2) years, but the estimated payments resulted in an underpayment for which penalties and interest accrued, the commissioner may consider such estimated payments to be filed in a timely manner for purposes of establishing good and reasonable cause under this subdivision (d)(3).
(e)

(1) There shall be no judicial review of the commissioner’s action upon applications for waiver of penalty as authorized in subsection (a) otherwise than as provided in part 9 of this chapter.
(2) The commissioner’s action upon all applications for waiver of penalty made under this section shall be deemed final.
(3) Prior determinations of the attorney general and reporter as to what constitutes good and reasonable cause for a deficiency shall serve as a guide and standard of reference for future decisions whenever those determinations may be applicable to the specific cause established.
(4)

(A) The commissioner is authorized, in the commissioner’s discretion, to designate subordinate officials in the department to waive, on the commissioner’s behalf, penalties in amounts of five thousand dollars ($5,000) or less.
(B) The commissioner is authorized, in the commissioner’s discretion, to waive penalties in amounts of fifteen thousand dollars ($15,000) or less.
(C) The commissioner is authorized, in the commissioner’s discretion, to waive penalties in amounts of more than fifteen thousand dollars ($15,000); provided, that the attorney general and reporter may require that such waivers or any class of such waivers be subject to the attorney general and reporter’s prior review and approval.