Managing Transitions: Best Practices for When a Practitioner Passes Away
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OPR ResourcesCircular 230 Tax Professionals Circular No. 230 (Rev. 6-2014) Records about disciplinary actions against practitioners and other tax professionals |
Issue Number: 2025-6Inside This IssueManaging Transitions: Best Practices for When a Practitioner Passes Away Disclaimer: This article does not constitute legal advice; it’s provided for general informational purposes only. Benjamin Franklin famously wrote, "[I]n this world nothing is certain but death and taxes.” When a Circular 230 practitioner dies, leaving behind a tax practice, there can be many questions and much uncertainty about the practitioner’s preparations beforehand and the consequences for clients and those responsible for administering the deceased practitioner’s estate. The governing legal obligations and restrictions may vary from case to case depending on the practitioner’s status as an attorney, certified public accountant (CPA), or enrolled agent and the state and locality where the practitioner conducted their practice. Treasury Circular 230, Regulations Governing Practice before the Internal Revenue Service, sets forth rules of conduct for attorneys, CPAs, enrolled agents, and other individuals representing taxpayers before the IRS. While Circular 230 does not directly address the implications of a practitioner’s death or disability, section 10.33 sets forth aspirational best practices that tax practitioners should consider. This article discusses issues raised by the death of a tax practitioner or the onset of a severe debility in physical or mental health such that they can’t viably conduct their practice. The discussion below offers several suggestions and tips to protect the practitioner’s clients, firm, and family and ensure compliance with legal requirements of privacy and confidentiality. Be Prepared by Incorporating Best Practices into Your Business Operations A key best practice for all practitioners is to communicate clearly and regularly with clients and manage client expectations throughout the representation, from start to finish. This best practice begins when the practitioner first engages with a client. The practitioner should discuss all significant aspects of the representation: its scope, terms, and purposes or objectives, and the actions to be taken during the representation and at its termination. Further, these subjects ideally should be memorialized in a comprehensive engagement letter[1] or agreement with the client.[2] As the representation progresses, the practitioner should provide timely updates to the client, documented in writing, and if necessary, revise the engagement document to reflect material developments. If a practitioner unexpectedly becomes mentally or physically incapacitated or dies, the written engagement and updates will assist in any needed transition of the client’s matter(s) to another tax professional. Another best practice is to establish a clear policy for the retention, disposition (including destruction), and return of client files and other records. You can communicate this policy to clients in the engagement document. Retaining client files beyond the need for them leaves tax practitioners at risk for potential exposure of private client information and, upon the practitioner’s retirement, incapacity, or death, can cause an unnecessary burden for others in dealing with the files and related records. A third best practices is implementing a data security and privacy plan that complies with rules, requirements, and guidelines applicable to your practice.[3] Also consider adopting a business continuity plan that addresses the effect of extraordinary broadscale events (such as a natural disaster, cyberattack, or pandemic) and lays out steps to be taken if the result is either (1) the practitioner’s physical, technological, or other inability to function normally or (2) their general unavailability. Pertinent portions of the plan can be shared with clients (e.g., by inclusion in the engagement document). Adhering to the above best practices will advance the goal of providing the highest quality representation to clients. Make a Succession Plan Practitioners should consider developing a formal succession plan for how the sale or termination of the practitioner’s business (due to retirement, incapacity, or death) will be handled.[4] Ideally, this plan will be described in the practitioner’s engagement document or otherwise shared with clients. Among actions to be included in the development of the plan are:
What to Do if a Practitioner Becomes Incapacitated or Dies When a tax practitioner either becomes incapacitated[7] or dies, if there is a succession (or business continuity) plan, the practitioner’s firm or assisting practitioner should implement the plan and communicate with the practitioner's clients and the IRS. If there is no succession plan, in the case of a sole practitioner, the executor or administrator of the practitioner’s estate, or their guardian or the like (if they’re in the care of a fiduciary due to their physical or mental state), will need to take these actions and should contemplate retaining a tax professional to assist them. Communication with Clients
Communication with the IRS
The notice assigning the EIN from the IRS should also be enclosed with the close-out letter, if available. Send the document(s) to either: Internal Revenue Service Or Internal Revenue Service The business account can only be closed once all necessary returns have been filed and all outstanding taxes paid. For more information, see:
The impacted practitioner’s firm, the assisting or successor practitioner, and the executor, estate administrator, testamentary trustee, or guardian should safeguard any taxpayer information they receive from or in connection with the incapacitated or deceased practitioner’s practice. For general guidance on safeguarding taxpayer information, see IRS Publication 4557, Safeguarding Taxpayer Data (A Guide for Your Business). Note: Safeguarding client information is also part of an attorney-practitioner’s (and law firm’s) ongoing professional responsibility. ABA Model Rule of Professional Conduct 1.6, Confidentiality of Information. Likewise, there may be comparable protections at the state level that CPAs must comply with, as there are in California, for example. Cal. Code Regs. tit. 16, § 54.1 (“No confidential information obtained by a licensee, in his or her professional capacity, concerning a client or a prospective client shall be disclosed by the licensee without the written permission of the client or prospective client, except for the following: [enumerating several exceptions, including “disclosures made by a licensee in compliance with a subpoena or a summons enforceable by order of a court”; “disclosures made by a licensee in response to an official inquiry from a federal or state government regulatory agency”; “disclosures made when specifically required by law”; and “disclosures made at the direct request of the client to a person or entity that is designated by the client at the time of the request”].); see also Cal. Code Regs. tit. 16, § 54 (generally defining “Confidential information” as “all information obtained by a licensee, in his or her professional capacity, concerning a client or a prospective client[.]”).[10] If you have questions about this article, please contact our office by phone at 202-317-6897 or eFax at 855-814-1722. [1] Black's Law Dictionary (12th ed. 2024) (defining “engagement letter” as, “A document identifying the scope of a professional's services to a client and outlining the respective duties and responsibilities of both; esp., a letter from a lawyer agreeing to represent a person or entity in some legal matter and formally establishing an attorney-client relationship.”); cf. Cohen v. Radio-Elecs. Officers Union, Dist. 3, NMEBA, 679 A.2d 1188, 1196 (N.J.1996) (“Agreements between attorneys and clients concerning the client-lawyer relationship generally are enforceable, provided the agreements satisfy both the general requirements for contracts and the special requirements of professional ethics.”) (internal citation omitted); Skoda Minotti Co. v. DiGioia, 2010-Ohio-4901, ¶ 8, 2010 WL 3934571, *1 (in a case involving a fee dispute between an accounting firm (the plaintiff) and two related former clients (the defendants), plaintiff sent a letter to the defendants proposing to offer them accounting services, and the letter “expressed the terms of the agreement, the services plaintiff would perform, and the responsibilities of both plaintiff and defendants.”). [2] As an example, the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants and the Chartered Institute of Management Accountants (AICPA-CIMA) provide on their website a 2024 Tax Consulting Engagement Letter (“An engagement letter is a contract that establishes the services a practitioner will provide to his or her clients. Each engagement requires careful consideration to address its particular circumstances.”). [3] For general information, see IRS Publication 4557, Safeguarding Taxpayer Data: A Guide for Your Business, and IRS Publication 5293, Protect Your Clients; Protect Yourself – Data Security Resource Guide for Tax Professionals. If you are an Authorized IRS e-file Provider, see IRS Publication 1345, Authorized IRS e-file Providers of Individual Income Tax Returns (including “Safeguarding IRS e-file” in Chapter 2). [4] A succession plan is a matter of professional responsibility for attorneys. See, e.g., ABA Model Rule of Professional Conduct 1.3, Diligence, Comment [5] (“To prevent neglect of client matters in the event of a sole practitioner’s death or disability, the duty of diligence may require that each sole practitioner prepare a plan, in conformity with applicable rules, that designates another competent lawyer to review client files, notify each client of the lawyer’s death or disability, and determine whether there is a need for immediate protective action.”); accord ABA Comm. on Ethics and Pro. Resp., Formal Op. 92-369 (1992) (sole practitioners should “make arrangements for their client records to be maintained in the event of their own death” and “at a minimum include the designation of another lawyer” who would have authority to review the records and notify clients of their attorney’s death). See, generally, Emily Schmidt, Should States Require Private Attorneys to Maintain Succession Plans?, UCLA Law Review Blog (Nov. 23, 2021) (noting that four states mandate succession planning for sole practitioners, while an additional 38 states recommend it). [5] See Phila. Bar Ass’n Pro. Guidance Comm., Pa. Ethics Op. 2014-100 (2015) (“Along the lines suggested by [ABA Formal Ethics] Opinion 92-369 [referenced in footnote 4, above], a number of jurisdictions have concluded that appointment by a lawyer of a ‘backup attorney’ - more often called an ‘assisting attorney’ - is the favored mechanism for dealing with the closure, sudden or otherwise, of a law practice.”). [6] If the assisting practitioner wishes to confirm who (the specific taxpayers) the incapacitated or deceased practitioner was authorized to represent before the IRS, a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request may be filed with the IRS. In response to the FOIA request, the Centralized File Authorization (CAF) will generate a listing of the representative’s clients, which the assisting practitioner can then compare against the practitioner’s files. See the Instructions for Form 2848 for more details. [7] Incapacity is a “[l]ack of physical or mental capabilities” or a lack of “ability to have certain legal consequences attach to one's actions.” Black's Law Dictionary (12th ed. 2024) (“Also termed legal incapacity.”); Id., Incompetency (“Lack of legal ability in some respect, . . . .”). [8] It seems prudent (even if not obligatory) to obtain a client’s agreement or approval whenever possible. Cf. ABA Formal 92-369, n. 8 (“Although the designation of another lawyer to assume responsibility for a deceased lawyer's client files would seem to raise issues of client confidentiality, in that a lawyer outside the lawyer-client relationship would have access to confidential client information, it is reasonable to read Rule 1.6 [on confidentiality] as authorizing . . . disclosure . . . [under paragraph (a)] (‘A lawyer shall not reveal information relating to representation of a client . . . except . . .[if] impliedly authorized . . . to carry out the representation.’) Reasonable clients would likely not object to, but rather approve of, efforts to ensure that their interests are safeguarded.”). [9] The NAP application is designed as an IRS Master File research tool. An Information Exchange Agreement exists between the Social Security Administration and the IRS for death records. The file that’s generated can be accessed by IRS programs using the NAP. [10] Additionally, although Circular 230 doesn’t have a standalone section or sectional provision imposing a confidentiality requirement, section 10.51(a)(15) prohibits the following misconduct: “Willfully disclosing or otherwise using a tax return or tax return information in a manner not authorized by the Internal Revenue Code, contrary to the order of a court of competent jurisdiction, or contrary to the order of an administrative law judge in a proceeding instituted under §10.60.” (Emphasis added.) The prohibition includes any violation of IRC 6713 or IRC 7216, which are civil and criminal penalties for unauthorized use or disclosure of income “tax return information” (defined in Treas. Reg. § 301.7216-1(b)(3)). Also, Circular 230 practitioners and their firms are subject to similar use and disclosure restriction under IRC 6103(c) to the extent they receive a taxpayer’s confidential tax information from the IRS as a disclosure designee, typically designated on Form 8821, or on any other written consent to or request for disclosure. Thank you for subscribing to the IRS Newswire, an IRS e-mail service. If you know someone who might want to subscribe to this mailing list, please forward this message to them so they can subscribe. This message was distributed automatically from the mailing list IRS Newswire. Please Do Not Reply To This Message. |
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