45 Ind. Admin. Code 15-3-2

Current through October 31, 2024
Section 45 IAC 15-3-2 - Rules and regulations

Authority: IC 6-8.1-3-3

Affected: IC 6-8.1-3-3; IC 6-8.1-5-1

Sec. 2.

(a) The department has the authority to promulgate rules that are consistent with the statutory provisions of the listed taxes.
(b) An interpretation of the statutory provisions governing the listed taxes, made by a court of competent jurisdiction, which conflicts with rules promulgated by the department, will render that rule, or portion of a rule, null and void, and will become the official interpretation of the department, effective upon the date of issuance of the court's decision. If such decision is appealed by the department, the interpretation will become effective when such decision becomes final.
(c) As a general rule, the modification of a rule will not be applied retroactively. If a rule is later found to be inconsistent with changes in the law by statute or by decisions of a court of precedence, the rule will not protect a taxpayer in the same or subsequent years once the rule has been determined to be inconsistent with the law.
(d)
(1) The department provides advice to taxpayers in many different forms. Rulings are issued to individual taxpayers based upon specific factual situations. Applications for rulings should be directed to the administrator of the particular division of tax from which the taxpayer is requesting a ruling. All relevant facts must be submitted in writing for such a determination to be made. The department will not issue a ruling based upon either an oral request or a written request from an anonymous taxpayer.
(2) As a general rule, the revocation or modification of a ruling will not be applied retroactively with respect to the taxpayer to whom the ruling was originally issued or to a taxpayer whose tax liability was directly involved in such a ruling. Under circumstances where a ruling to a taxpayer is revoked with retroactive effect, the notice to such taxpayer will set forth the grounds upon which the revocation is being made and the extreme circumstance under which revocation is being applied retroactively. This retroactive revocation is decided upon a case-by-case basis taking into account all relevant facts and circumstances. The department may exercise its discretion to retroactively rescind or modify rulings in the following extreme circumstances, which are not all inclusive:
(A) There was a misstatement or omission of material facts.
(B) The facts, as developed after the ruling, were materially different from the facts on which the department based its ruling.
(C) There was a change in the applicable statute, case law or regulation.
(D) The taxpayer directly involved in the ruling did not act in good faith.

Taxpayers are cautioned that changes in the law and final decisions of Appellate Court, Supreme Court and Indiana Tax Court cases are notification to the taxpayer of a possible revocation of a ruling, effective from the date of the court decision or change in the law within the statutory open period.

(3) In respect to rulings issued by the department, based on a particular fact situation which may affect the tax liability of the taxpayer, only the taxpayer to whom the ruling was issued is entitled to rely on it. Since the department publicizes summaries of rulings which it makes, other taxpayers with substantially identical factual situations may rely on the publicized rulings for informational purposes in preparing returns and making tax decisions. Generally, department publications may be relied on by any taxpayer if their fact situation does not vary substantially from those facts upon which the department based its publication. If a taxpayer relies on a publicized ruling and the department discovers, upon examination, that the fact situation of the particular taxpayer is different in any material respect from that situation on which the original ruling was issued, the ruling will afford the taxpayer no protection and the examination will apply to all open years under the statutes. Letters of findings that are issued by the department, as a result of protested assessments, are to be considered rulings of the department as applied to the particular facts protested.
(e) Oral opinions or advice will not be binding upon the department. However, taxpayers may inquire as to whether or not the department will make a ruling or determination based on the facts presented by the taxpayer. If the taxpayer wishes a ruling by the department, the formal request must be in writing. A taxpayer may also orally receive technical assistance from the department in preparation of returns. However this advice is advisory only and is not binding in the latter examination of returns.

Based upon general inquiries and correspondence, the department often issues written letters of advice. Such letters are advisory in nature only and merely technical assistance tools for the taxpayer. Strictly informational type letters are not to be considered rulings by the department and will not be binding.

However, some written inquiries have asked for the tax consequences of a particular transaction, based upon the facts presented. In such instances, the department may consider such letters as rulings that may bind the department to the position stated in respect to that taxpayer only. All such rulings issued will be binding provided that all of the facts described in obtaining the ruling are true and accurate. Any misstatement of material fact or information will void the ruling.

(f) In respect to material published by the department, the general policy is that a taxpayer may rely on these publications with regard to their own business activities, regardless of the fact that the taxpayer may never have read the publications when entering into the transaction. Thus, the taxpayer need not have a specific ruling on the matter. However, the taxpayer must show that his particular fact situation complies with the guidelines of the publication.
(g) Examples are included in department publications and rules for illustrative purposes only. Such examples are often simplified to illustrate a specific point without regard to transactions or situations which would normally be related to the specific point illustrated. Accordingly, items specifically designated as examples, which are included in department rules and publications, are not to be considered as an official part of such rules and publications and cannot be relied upon by a taxpayer as illustrative of any particular situation in its entirety.

45 IAC 15-3-2

Department of State Revenue, 45 IAC 15-3-2; filed Oct 1, 1987, 1:30 pm: 11 IR 535