Senate Amendments to House Bill No. 1460

 

TO THE CLERK OF THE HOUSE:

 

  THIS IS TO INFORM YOU THAT THE SENATE HAS ADOPTED THE AMENDMENTS SET OUT BELOW:

 

 

AMENDMENT NO. 1

 

     Amend by striking all after the enacting clause and inserting in lieu thereof the following:

 


     SECTION 1.  As use in this act:

          (a)  "Debt" means a past due, legally enforceable state or federal income tax obligation, unless otherwise indicated.

          (b)  "Debtor" means a person who owes a state or federal income tax obligation.

          (c)  "Past due, legally enforceable obligation" means a debt resulting from:

              (i)  A judgment rendered by a court of competent jurisdiction which has determined an amount of income tax to be due;

              (ii)  A determination after an administrative hearing which has determined an amount of income tax to be due and which is no longer subject to judicial review; or

              (iii)  An income tax assessment, including self-assessments, which has become final in accordance with law, but which has not been collected.

          (d)  "State" means the State of Mississippi acting through the State Tax Commission.

          (e)  "Federal government" means the United States Department of the Treasury or any agency under its administration.

          (f)  "Tax refund offset" means withholding or reducing a tax refund overpayment by an amount necessary to satisfy a debt owed by the payee.

          (g)  "Tax refund payment" means any overpayment of taxes to be refunded to the person making the overpayment.

     SECTION 2.  (1)  The federal government may submit information on any past due, legally enforceable obligation to the State Tax Commission for collection through a tax refund offset.  The state may submit information on any past due, legally enforceable obligation to the federal government for collection through a tax refund offset.

     (2)  Upon receiving notice from the federal government that a named person owes a past due, legally enforceable obligation, the State Tax Commission shall:

          (a)  Reduce the amount of any tax refund payment payable to the named person by the amount of the past due, legally enforceable obligation owed the federal government and, if the tax refund exceeds the obligation, remit the excess to the person;

          (b)  Pay the amount by which the refund payment is reduced under paragraph (a) of this subsection to the federal government and notify the federal government of the person's name, taxpayer identification number, address and the amount collected; and

          (c)  Notify the named person that the tax refund payment has been reduced by an amount necessary to satisfy a past due, legally enforceable obligation.

     (3)  Upon receiving from the federal government the amount collected from a person who owes the state a past due, legally enforceable obligation, the State Tax Commission shall apply the amount to the person's state debt and reduce the person's obligation by the amount collected.

     SECTION 3.  Section 27-7-83, Mississippi Code of 1972, is amended as follows:

     27-7-83. (1)  Returns and return information filed or furnished under the provisions of this chapter shall be confidential, and except in accordance with proper judicial order, or as otherwise authorized by this section, it shall be unlawful for members of the State Tax Commission or members of the Mississippi Department of Information Technology Services, any deputy, agent, clerk or other officer or employee thereof, or any former employee thereof, to divulge or make known in any manner the amount of income or any particulars set forth or disclosed in any report or return required.  The provisions of this section shall apply fully to any federal return, a copy of any portion of a federal return, or any information reflected on a federal return which is attached to or made a part of the state tax return.  Likewise, the provisions of this section shall apply to any federal return or portion thereof, or to any federal return information data which is acquired from the Internal Revenue Service for state tax administration purposes pursuant to the Federal-State Exchange Program cited at Section 6103, Federal Internal Revenue Code.  The term "proper judicial order" as used in this section shall not include subpoenas or subpoenas duces tecum, but shall include only those orders entered by a court of record in this state after furnishing notice and a hearing to the taxpayer and the State Tax Commission.  The court shall not authorize the furnishing of such information unless it is satisfied that the information is needed to pursue pending litigation wherein the return itself is in issue, or the judge is satisfied that the need for furnishing the information outweighs the rights of the taxpayer to have such information secreted.

     (2)  Returns and return information with respect to taxes imposed by this chapter shall be open to inspection by or disclosure to the Commissioner of the Internal Revenue Service of the United States, or the proper officer of any state imposing an income tax similar to that imposed by this chapter, or the authorized representatives of such agencies.  Such inspection shall be permitted, or such disclosure made, only upon written request by the head of such agencies, or the district director in the case of the Internal Revenue Service, and only to the representatives of such agencies designated in a written statement to the commissioner as the individuals who are to inspect or to receive the return or return information on behalf of such agency.  The commissioner is authorized to enter into agreements with the Internal Revenue Service and with other states for the exchange of returns and return information data, or the disclosure of returns or return information data to such agencies, only to the extent that the statutes of the United States or of such other state, as the case may be, grant substantially similar privileges to the proper officer of this state charged with the administration of the tax laws of this state.

     (3)  (a)  The return of a person shall, upon written request, be open to inspection by or disclosure to:

              (i)  In the case of the return of an individual, that individual;

              (ii)  In the case of an income tax return filed jointly, either of the individuals with respect to whom the return is filed;

              (iii)  In the case of the return of a partnership, any person who was a member of such partnership during any part of the period covered by the return;

              (iv)  In the case of the return of a corporation or a subsidiary thereof, any person designated by resolution of its board of directors or other similar governing body, or any officer or employee of such corporation upon written request signed by any principal officer and attested to by the secretary or other officer;

              (v)  In the case of the return of an estate, the administrator, executor or trustee of such estate, and any heir at law, next of kin or beneficiary under the will, of the decedent, but only to the extent that such latter persons have a material interest which will be affected by information contained therein;

              (vi)  In the case of the return of a trust, the trustee or trustees, jointly or separately, and any beneficiary of such trust, but only to the extent that such beneficiary has a material interest which will be affected by information contained therein;

              (vii)  In the case of the return of an individual or a return filed jointly, any claimant agency seeking to collect a debt through the set-off procedure established in Sections 27-7-701 through 27-7-713 and Sections 27-7-501 through 27-7-519,  from an individual with respect to whom the return is filed.

          (b)  If an individual described in paragraph (a) is legally incompetent, the applicable return shall, upon written request, be open to inspection by or disclosure to the committee, trustee or guardian of his estate.

          (c)  If substantially all of the property of the person with respect to whom the return is filed is in the hands of a trustee in bankruptcy or receiver, such return or returns for prior years of such person shall, upon written request, be open to inspection by or disclosure to such trustee or receiver, but only if the commissioner finds that such receiver or trustee, in his fiduciary capacity, has a material interest which will be affected by information contained therein.

          (d)  Any return to which this section applies shall, upon written request, also be open to inspection by or disclosure to the attorney-in-fact duly authorized in writing by any of the persons described in paragraph (a) of this subsection to inspect the return or receive the information on his behalf, subject to the conditions provided in paragraph (a).

          (e)  Return information with respect to any taxpayer may be open to inspection by or disclosure to any person authorized by this subsection to inspect any return of such taxpayer if the commissioner determines that such disclosure would not seriously impair state tax administration.

     (4)  The State Auditor and the employees of his office shall have the right to examine only such tax returns as are necessary for auditing the State Tax Commission, and the same prohibitions against disclosure which apply to the State Tax Commission shall apply to the State Auditor and his employees or former employees.

     (5)  Nothing herein shall be construed to prohibit the publication of statistics, so classified as to prevent the identification of particular reports or returns and the items thereof, or the inspection by the Attorney General, or any other attorney representing the state, of the report or return of any taxpayer who shall bring action to set aside the tax thereon, or against whom any action or proceeding has been instituted to recover any tax or penalty imposed.

     (6)  Nothing in this section shall prohibit the chairman of the commission from making available information necessary to recover taxes owing the state pursuant to the authority granted in Section 27-75-16, Mississippi Code of 1972.

     (7)  Reports and returns required under the provisions of this chapter shall be preserved in accordance with approved records control schedules.  No records, however, may be destroyed without the approval of the Director of the Department of Archives and History.

     (8)  The commission is authorized to disclose to the Child Support Unit of the Department of Human Services the name, address, social security number, amount of income, source of income and assets for individuals who are delinquent in the payment of any child support as defined in Section 93-11-101, Mississippi Code of 1972.

     (9)  Nothing in this section shall prohibit the commission from exchanging information with the federal government that is necessary to offset income tax refund payment on debts owed to this state of the United States.

     SECTION 4.  This act shall take effect and be in force from and after its passage.


     Further, amend by striking the title in its entirety and inserting in lieu thereof the following:

 


     AN ACT TO AUTHORIZE THE STATE TAX COMMISSION TO OFFSET STATE INCOME TAX REFUNDS TO TAXPAYERS AGAINST THE TAXPAYER'S PAST DUE, LEGALLY ENFORCEABLE PAST DUE FEDERAL INCOME TAX PAYMENTS AND PAY THE AMOUNT OFFSET TO THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT; TO AUTHORIZE THE STATE TAX COMMISSION TO RECEIVE FROM THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT AMOUNTS COLLECTED FROM PERSONS OWING PAST DUE, LEGALLY ENFORCEABLE INCOME TAX PAYMENTS TO THE STATE AND APPLY THE AMOUNT RECEIVED TO THE AMOUNT THE PERSON OWES; TO AMEND SECTION 27-7-83, MISSISSIPPI CODE OF 1972, IN CONFORMITY THERETO; AND FOR RELATED PURPOSES.


 

SS02\HB1460A.J

 

                                                 John O. Gilbert

                                         Secretary of the Senate