Lew Taishoff has a rather cryptic review of George v. Commissioner, T. C. Memo. 2026-10 (2/3/26), TC 27494-16, here, at # 209 and GS here [to come]. See ALWAYS CHICKENS OUT (Taishoff Law 2/3/26), here. George involves the qualified research credit in §§ 46 and 174; the credit is arcane legally and usually fact-intensive, as the George opinion (86 pages) proves. Taishoff concludes that “Judge Tag Greaves has thoroughly reviewed the Section 41 landscape. It’s a must-read for specialists, and eyeglazing for the rest of us.” I am among the eyeglazing majority who may skim the opinion without digging into the details on the substantive issue. So, I will not deal with the merits of substantive tax issue.
I focus on the discussion of the § 6662 accuracy-related penalties (Slip Op. 81-85) which is a common subject for tax procedure enthusiasts. The Georges conceded some accuracy-related penalties (Slip Op. 2 n. 2 & 38 n. 21.) The accuracy-related penalties in issue were negligence and substantial understatement, both of which have an exception for “reasonable cause." The Court finds that the Georges had reasonably cause in relying on alliantgroup a major provider for research credit advice. See alliantgroup website here. The Court describes alliantgroup (Slip Op. 83):
Petitioners sought the advice of alliantgroup to determine whether any activities performed by GOMI qualified for research credits and if so, the amounts of such credits. At the time George’s contracted for the research study, alliantgroup had over 12 years of experience in conducting tax credit and incentive studies for clients. Its ranks are filled with people who are knowledgeable on the intricacies of the tax code, including tax attorneys and those with tax policy experience. One such person was Mr. Troutman. He had a long history at alliantgroup and specialized in research credit studies for the agriculture industry. He also was an attorney who went through extensive internal training at alliantgroup to stay on top of the latest developments in the area.
The reputation of alliantgroup was also bolstered by Frost PLLC's recommendation. As Gary testified, Frost PLLC grew alongside George's and had a tremendous amount of knowledge about George's business operations. When Frost PLLC called regarding a possible collaboration with alliantgroup, it was reasonable for Gary to conclude that alliantgroup was competent in its field. alliantgroup had the necessary expertise to competently advise petitioners.
alliantgroup diligently requested and reviewed documents and met with employees to determine GOMI's eligibility for the research credits. Although petitioners did not directly provide alliantgroup with records, George's, the entity with the relevant documents, provided alliantgroup with open access to George's books and records and the plethora of data routinely gathered throughout the standard production process. George's used these documents for business purposes, including to determine grower compensation and to perform trend monitoring, so there is no reason to doubt the accuracy of the information contained therein. alliantgroup also had access to employees from the C-suite down to the field service technicians for interviews. Finally, alliantgroup worked closely with Frost PLLC, which provided additional documents, verified facts, and answered any lingering questions.