Skip to content

This site uses cookies to store information on your computer. Some are essential to make our site work; others help us improve the user experience. By using the site, you consent to the placement of these cookies. Read our privacy policy to learn more.

Close
aicpa-logo-black
  • AICPA Resources:
  • AICPA-CIMA.com
  • Tax Section
  • Store
The Tax Adviser
  • INDIVIDUALS
    • All articles
    • Credits
    • Deductions
    • Income
    • Specialized Issues

    Latest Stories

    • Transactions between related parties
    • New legislation seeks to address disaster relief refund claim discrepancies
    • Current developments in taxation of individuals: Part 1
    • IRS keeps per diem rates unchanged for business travel year starting Oct. 1
  • PASSTHROUGHS
    • All articles
    • S Corporations
    • Partnerships & LLCs
    • Contributions, Distributions & Basis
    • Reporting & Filing Requirements

    Latest Stories

    • Partnership recapitalization: Lender admittance without liability reduction
    • Outlier or beginning of a trend? Illinois redefines investment partnerships
    • Signing partnerships’ returns and other tax documents
    • Prop. regs. would modify reporting obligations for Form 8308, Part IV
  • CORPORATIONS
    • All articles
    • Deductions
    • Formation & Reorganizations
    • Income
    • Reporting & Filing Requirements

    Latest Stories

    • The R&D tax credit for architects and engineers
    • Company’s $1.6 billion ‘break fee’ payment treated as ordinary deduction
    • IRS ruling clarifies treatment of R&D when computing the FDII deduction
    • IRS withdraws prop. regs. affecting corporate spinoff transactions
  • ESTATES
    • All articles
    • Estate Tax
    • Gift Tax
    • Tax Computation
    • Types of Trusts

    Latest Stories

    • Estate tax considerations for non-US persons owning US real estate
    • The final countdown: Benefiting from the higher BEA before it potentially expires
    • Proposed regulations update QDOT regulations
  • PROCEDURE
    • All articles
    • Collections & Liens
    • Representations & Examinations
    • Tax Planning & Minimization

    Latest Stories

    • IRS furloughs nearly half its workers, closes most operations
    • Social Security Administration head to also serve in new IRS role
    • AICPA calls for fully staffed IRS regardless of shutdown length
    • Job cuts mean strong 2025 tax season may be hard to repeat, IRS watchdog warns
  • Home
  • News
  • Magazine
  • Topics
Advertisement
  1. newsletter
  2. TAX INSIDER
TAX INSIDER

Employment taxes: Beware civil and criminal penalties

Employers should take several steps to protect themselves from liability.

By Craig W. Smalley
June 15, 2017

Please note: This item is from our archives and was published in 2017. It is provided for historical reference. The content may be out of date and links may no longer function.

Related

October 8, 2025

IRS furloughs nearly half its workers, closes most operations

October 7, 2025

Social Security Administration head to also serve in new IRS role

October 6, 2025

AICPA calls for fully staffed IRS regardless of shutdown length

TOPICS

  • IRS Practice & Procedure
    • Tax Planning; Tax Minimization

An employer is responsible for withholding federal income tax and the employee’s share of Federal Insurance Contributions Act taxes (FICA, which consists of Social Security and Medicare taxes) from the wages it pays to that employee. The employer is also responsible for its share of FICA taxes and Federal Unemployment Tax Act (FUTA) taxes. All of these employment taxes must be paid to the federal government, usually at least quarterly.  

Who is a responsible person?

Many employers who fail to pay over these amounts do not do it willfully, but are often caught by cash flow problems that they believe will turn around. Nonetheless, the government can and will impose a 100% trust fund recovery penalty under Sec. 6672 on “responsible persons” who were required to pay over the money or who controlled the funds that should have been deposited. Many people associated with a business may be found to be a responsible person, including corporate officers, treasurers, managers, and even bookkeepers, in certain circumstances.

Trust fund recovery penalties

The worst thing when representing someone with employment tax issues is that the IRS will want to assert the trust fund recovery penalty against the client, thus making the client responsible personally for the taxes owed even when the business was conducted in corporate form. Any responsible person can be held personally liable for the trust fund recovery penalty, which can amount to 100% of the unpaid withheld tax. 

The IRS will assess the penalty against any person who it believes was responsible for the nonpayment of the taxes, which could include a person who merely signed a Form 941, Employer’s Quarterly Federal Tax Return. In two recent cases, the IRS tried to assess the penalty against people who didn’t even have that level of involvement.

In a Tax Court case decided this year, the IRS tried to assess the trust fund penalty against a 77-year old man who spent a lot of time at a restaurant (and whose son managed it together with another person), but who had no other connection, just because he occasionally signed some checks for the restaurant (Shaffran, T.C. Memo. 2017-35).

In another recent case, Fitzpatrick, T.C. Memo. 2016-199, the IRS tried to assess trust fund penalties against the wife of an investor in a business who proved that she spent her time caring for her disabled son, and was not a responsible person. She had opened a bank account for the business to help out her husband, who was out of town at the time, and she was authorized to sign checks for the business.    

Although the IRS was not successful in either case, the cost in time, money, and emotional distress to the people who were forced to litigate their lack of responsibility for the unpaid taxes was probably substantial.

Criminal penalties

In addition to the civil trust fund recovery penalty, when an employer willfully fails to pay over employment taxes, the Justice Department can pursue criminal prosecution under Sec. 7202. Right at the end of this tax season, the Justice Department issued a stern warning to employment tax evaders. The warning is a change in what we have previously heard from the government regarding employment taxes. The press release forthrightly discusses criminal offenses associated with the willful nonpayment of employment taxes.

Willful nonpayment of employment taxes is a felony under Sec. 7202, punishable by a fine of up to $10,000, imprisonment up to 5 years, or both. When an employer withholds money from its employees’ paychecks and then does not pay it over to the Treasury, this act is considered embezzling money from the U.S. Treasury. Usually, the IRS only prosecutes high-profile cases. The Justice Department press release describes a number of these. Still, there is a risk, depending on the severity of the noncompliance, that a client could be pursued criminally for not paying employment taxes.

The simple fact that the Justice Department issued this warning about criminal prosecution should be a wake-up call to any practitioners who are dealing with clients experiencing employment or payroll tax issues. If a tax practitioner’s client owes employment taxes, and the case turns criminal, it is important to get an attorney involved immediately.

How to help

One route to help clients who can’t handle their employment tax responsibilities is to offer a payroll service for them. Practitioners who do this (or the commercial payroll services they use) debit the payroll and taxes out of the client’s account and pay the taxes when they are due. For example, my company has a payroll service that directly debits the payroll and payroll taxes out of the client’s account, directly deposits the net payroll checks into the employee’s account, and pays the taxes when they are due. This service even includes taking care of the employer tax forms: Forms W-2 and 1099.

One thing is for sure, when agencies such as the Justice Department are getting involved in employment taxes, you can be sure that the IRS is focusing on it. The problem is that clients don’t see how harsh the penalties for nonpayment of payroll taxes are until they go through the process. 

Craig W. Smalley, MST, is an enrolled agent and the founder and CEO of CWSEAPA PLLC, which provides accounting and financial services.

Advertisement

Latest News

October 8, 2025

IRS furloughs nearly half its workers, closes most operations

October 7, 2025

Social Security Administration head to also serve in new IRS role

October 6, 2025

AICPA calls for fully staffed IRS regardless of shutdown length

October 2, 2025

Job cuts mean strong 2025 tax season may be hard to repeat, IRS watchdog warns

October 1, 2025

IRS removes associated property rule in final interest capitalization regulations

Advertisement

Most Read

IRS shutdown plan: Employees stay on the job for first 5 workdays
Partnership distributions: Rules and exceptions
The Sec. 645 election to treat a trust as part of the estate
Understanding Qualified Domestic Trusts and Portability
IRS releases draft form for tip, overtime, car loan, and senior deductions
Reporting aspects of Sec. 743(b) adjustments
Advertisement

TAX PRACTICE MANAGEMENT

Image of happy, sad and neutral smiley faces.

2025 tax software survey

AICPA members in tax practice assess how their return preparation software performed during tax season and offer insights into their procedures.

Tax Clinic

IRS ruling clarifies treatment of R&D when computing the FDII deduction

Like-kind exchanges of real estate: Building on the basics

New legislation seeks to address disaster relief refund claim discrepancies

Partnership recapitalization: Lender admittance without liability reduction

Technology and tax standards: Understanding new SSTS Section 1.4 — Reliance on Tools

Magazine

September 2025

September 2025

September 2025
August 2025

August 2025

August 2025
July 2025

July 2025

July 2025
June 2025

June 2025

June 2025
May 2025

May 2025

May 2025
April 2025

April 2025

April 2025
March 2025

March 2025

March 2025
February 2025

February 2025

February 2025
January 2025

January 2025

January 2025
December 2024

December 2024

December 2024
November 2024

November 2024

November 2024
October 2024

October 2024

October 2024
view all

View All

http://view-all

JOIN

AICPA Tax Section

Your go-to source for tax developments and professional insights. Tap into expert guidance, tools, news, and career development.

Connect

  • x-logo The Tax Adviser on X
  • Linkedin AICPA Tax Practitioners on Linkedin

HOME

  • News
  • Monthly issues
  • Tax Insider articles
  • Topics
  • RSS feed rss feed
  • Sitemap

ABOUT

  • About The Tax Adviser
  • Contact us
  • Submit an article
  • Advertise
  • Privacy policy
  • Terms & conditions

JOIN/SUBSCRIBE

  • AICPA Tax Section
  • CPE Express

AICPA & CIMA Sites

  • AICPA-CIMA.com
  • Journal of Accountancy
  • Financial Management (FM)
  • Global Engagement Center
  • Global Career Hub
aicpa-logo-black

© 2025 Association of International Certified Professional Accountants. All rights reserved.