[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 26, Volume 13]
[Revised as of April 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 26CFR]

[Page 187-190]
 
                       TITLE 26--INTERNAL REVENUE
 
    CHAPTER I--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY 
                               (CONTINUED)
 
Procedure and Administration--Table of Contents
 
Sec.  1.6038A-4  Monetary penalty.

    (a) Imposition of monetary penalty--(1) In general. If a reporting 
corporation fails to furnish the information described in Sec.  1.6038A-
2 within the time and manner prescribed in Sec.  1.6038A-2 (d) and (e), 
fails to maintain or cause another to maintain records as required by 
Sec.  1.6038A-3, or (in the case of records maintained outside the 
United States) fails to meet the non-U.S. record maintenance 
requirements within the applicable time prescribed in Sec.  1.6038A-
3(f), a penalty of $10,000 shall be assessed for each taxable year with 
respect to which such failure occurs. Such a penalty may be imposed by 
the District Director or the Director of the Internal Revenue Service 
Center where the Form 5472 is filed. The filing of a substantially 
incomplete Form 5472 constitutes a failure to file Form 5472. Where, 
however, the information described in Sec.  1.6038A-2 (b)(3) through (5) 
is not required to be reported, a Form 5472 filed without such 
information is not a substantially incomplete Form 5472.
    (2) Liability for certain partnership transactions. A reporting 
corporation to which transactions engaged in by a partnership are 
attributed under Sec.  1.6038A-1(e)(2) is subject to the rules of this 
section to the extent failures

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occur with respect to the partnership transactions so attributed.
    (3) Calculation of monetary penalty. If a reporting corporation 
fails to maintain records as required by Sec.  1.6038A-3 of transactions 
with multiple related parties, the monetary penalty may be assessed for 
each failure to maintain records with respect to each related party. The 
monetary penalty, however, shall be imposed on a reporting corporation 
only once for a taxable year with respect to each related party for a 
failure to furnish the information required on Form 5472, for a failure 
to maintain or cause another to maintain records, or for a failure to 
comply with the non-U.S. maintenance requirements described in Sec.  
1.6038A-3(f). An additional penalty for another failure may be imposed, 
however, under the rules of paragraph (d)(2) of this section. Thus, 
unless such failures continue after notification as described in 
paragraph (d) of this section, the maximum penalty under this paragraph 
with respect to each related party for all such failures in a taxable 
year is $10,000. The members of a group of corporations filing a 
consolidated return are jointly and severally liable for any monetary 
penalty that may be imposed under this section.
    (b) Reasonable cause--(1) In general. Certain failures may be 
excused for reasonable cause, including not timely filing Form 5472, not 
maintaining or causing another to maintain records as required by Sec.  
1.6038A-3, and not complying with the non-U.S. maintenance requirements 
described in Sec.  1.6038A-3(f). If an affirmative showing is made that 
the taxpayer acted in good faith and there is reasonable cause for a 
failure that results in the assessment of the monetary penalty, the 
period during which reasonable cause exists shall be treated as 
beginning on the day reasonable cause is established and ending not 
earlier than the last day on which reasonable cause existed for any such 
failure. Additionally, the beginning of the 90-day period after mailing 
of a notice by the District Director or the Director of an Internal 
Revenue Service Center of a failure described in paragraph (d) of this 
section shall be treated as not earlier than the last day on which 
reasonable cause existed.
    (2) Affirmative showing required--(i) In general. To show that 
reasonable cause exists for purposes of paragraph (b)(1) of this 
section, the reporting corporation must make an affirmative showing of 
all the facts alleged as reasonable cause for the failure in a written 
statement containing a declaration that it is made under penalties of 
perjury. The statement must be filed with the District Director (in the 
case of failure to maintain or furnish requested information permitted 
to be maintained outside the United States within the time required 
under Sec.  1.6038A-3(f) or a failure to file Form 5472) or the Director 
of the Internal Revenue Service Center where the Form 5472 is required 
to be filed (in the case of failure to file Form 5472). The District 
Director or the Director of the Internal Revenue Service Center where 
the Form 5472 is required to be filed, as appropriate, shall determine 
whether the failure was due to reasonable cause, and if so, the period 
of time for which reasonable cause existed. If a return has been filed 
as required by Sec.  1.6038A-2 or records have been maintained as 
required by Sec.  1.6038A-3, except for an omission of, or error with 
respect to, some of the information required or a record to be 
maintained, the omission or error shall not constitute a failure for 
purposes of section 6038A(d) if the reporting corporation that filed the 
return establishes to the satisfaction of the District Director or the 
Director of the Internal Revenue Service Center that it has 
substantially complied with the filing of Form 5472 or the requirement 
to maintain records.
    (ii) Small corporations. The District Director shall apply the 
reasonable cause exception liberally in the case of a small corporation 
that had no knowledge of the requirements imposed by section 6038A; has 
limited presence in and contact with the United States; and promptly and 
fully complies with all requests by the District Director to file Form 
5472, and to furnish books, records, or other materials relevant to the 
reportable transaction. A small corporation is a corporation whose gross 
receipts for a taxable year are $20,000,000 or less.
    (iii) Facts and circumstances taken into account. The determination 
of whether

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a taxpayer acted with reasonable cause and in good faith is made on a 
case-by-case basis, taking into account all pertinent facts and 
circumstances. Circumstances that may indicate reasonable cause and good 
faith include an honest misunderstanding of fact or law that is 
reasonable in light of the experience and knowledge of the taxpayer. 
Isolated computational or transcriptional errors generally are not 
inconsistent with reasonable cause and good faith. Reliance upon an 
information return or on the advice of a professional (such as an 
attorney or accountant) does not necessarily demonstrate reasonable 
cause and good faith. Similarly, reasonable cause and good faith is not 
necessarily indicated by reliance on facts that, unknown to the 
taxpayer, are incorrect. Reliance on an information return, professional 
advice or other facts, however, constitutes reasonable cause and good 
faith if, under all the circumstances, the reliance was reasonable. A 
taxpayer, for example, may have reasonable cause for not filing a Form 
5472 or for not maintaining records under section 6038A if the taxpayer 
has a reasonable belief that it is not owned by a 25-percent foreign 
shareholder. A reasonable belief means that the taxpayer does not know 
or has no reason to know that it is owned by a 25-percent foreign 
shareholder. For example, a reporting corporation would not know or have 
reason to know that it is owned by a 25-percent foreign shareholder if 
its belief that it is not so owned is consistent with other information 
reported or otherwise furnished to or known by the reporting 
corporation. A taxpayer may have reasonable cause for not treating a 
foreign corporation as a related party for purposes of section 6038A 
where the foreign corporation is a related party solely by reason of 
Sec.  1.6038A-1(d)(3) (under the principles of section 482), and the 
taxpayer had a reasonable belief that its relationship with the foreign 
corporation did not meet the standards for related parties under section 
482.
    (c) Failure to maintain records or to cause another to maintain 
records. A failure to maintain records or to cause another to maintain 
records is determined by the District Director upon the basis of the 
reporting corporation's overall compliance (including compliance with 
the non-U.S. maintenance requirements under Sec.  1.6038A-3(f)(2)) with 
the record maintenance requirements. It is not an item-by-item 
determination. Thus, for example, a failure to maintain a single or 
small number of items may not constitute a failure for purposes of 
section 6038A(d), unless the item or items are essential to the correct 
determination of transactions between the reporting corporation and any 
foreign related parties. The District Director shall notify the 
reporting corporation in writing of any determination that it has failed 
to comply with the record maintenance requirement.
    (d) Increase in penalty where failure continues after notification--
(1) In general. If any failure described in this section continues for 
more than 90 days after the day on which the District Director or the 
Director of the Internal Revenue Service Center where the Form 5472 is 
required to be filed mails notice of the failure to the reporting 
corporation, the reporting corporation shall pay a penalty (in addition 
to the penalty described in paragraph (a) of this section) of $10,000 
with respect to each related party for which a failure occurs for each 
30-day period during which the failure continues after the expiration of 
the 90-day period. Any uncompleted fraction of a 30-day period shall 
count as a 30-day period for purposes of this paragraph (d).
    (2) Additional penalty for another failure. An additional penalty 
for a taxable year may be imposed, however, if at a time subsequent to 
the time of the imposition of the monetary penalty described in 
paragraph (a) of this section, a second failure is determined and the 
second failure continues after notification under paragraph (d)(1) of 
this section. Thus, if a taxpayer fails to file Form 5472 and is 
assessed a monetary penalty and later, upon audit, is determined to have 
failed to maintain records, an additional penalty for the failure to 
maintain records may be assessed under the rules of this paragraph if 
the failure to maintain records continues after notification under this 
paragraph.

[[Page 190]]

    (3) Cessation of accrual. The monetary penalty will cease to accrue 
if the reporting corporation either files Form 5472 (in the case of a 
failure to file Form 5472), furnishes information to substantially 
complete Form 5472, or demonstrates compliance with respect to the 
maintenance of records (in the case of a failure to maintain records) 
for the taxable year in which the examination occurs and subsequent 
years to the satisfaction of the District Director. The monetary penalty 
also will cease to accrue if requested information, documents, or 
records, kept outside the United States under the requirements of Sec.  
1.6038A-3(f) and not produced within the time specified are produced or 
moved to the United States under the rules of paragraph (f)(2)(ii) of 
this section.
    (4) Continued failures. If a failure under this section relating to 
a taxable year beginning before July 11, 1989 occurs, and if the failure 
continues following 90 days after the notice of failure under this 
paragraph is sent, the amount of the additional penalty to be assessed 
under this paragraph is $10,000 for each 30-day period beginning after 
November 5, 1990, during which the failure continues. There is no 
limitation on the amount of the monetary penalty that may be assessed 
after November 5, 1990.
    (e) Other penalties. For criminal penalties for failure to file a 
return and filing a false or fraudulent return, see sections 7203 and 
7206 of the Code. For the penalty relating to an underpayment of tax, 
see section 6662.
    (f) Examples. The following examples illustrate the rules of this 
section.

    Example 1 Failure to file Form 5472. Corp X, a U.S. reporting 
corporation, engages in related party transactions with FC. Corp X does 
not timely file a Form 5472 or maintain records relating to the 
transactions with FC for Year 1 or subsequent years. The Service Center 
with which Corp X files its income tax return imposes a $10,000 penalty 
for each of Years 1, 2, and 3 under section 6038A (d) and this section 
for failure to provide information as required on Form 5472 and mails a 
notice of failure to provide inrormation. Corp X does not file Form 
5472. Ninety days following the mailing of the notice of failure to Corp 
X an additional penaly of $10,000 is imposed. On the 135th day following 
the mailing of the notice of failure, Corp X files Form 5472 for Years 
1, 2, and 3. The total penalty owed by Corp X for Year 1 is $30,000. 
($10,000 for not timely filing Form 5472, $10,000 for the first 30-day 
period following the expiration of the 90-day period, and $10,000 for 
the fraction of the second 30-day period). The penalty for Years 2 and 3 
for the failure to file Form 5472 is also $30,000 for each year, 
calculated in the same manner as for Year 1. The total penalty for 
failure to file Form 5472 for Years 1, 2, and 3 is $90,000.
    Example 2 Failure to maintain records. Assume the same facts as in 
Example 1. In Year 5, Corp X is audited for Years 1 through 3. Corp X 
has not been maintaining records relating to the transactions with FC. 
The District Director issues a notice of failure to maintain records. 
Corp X has already been subject to the monetary penalty of $10,000 for 
each of Years 1, 2, and 3 for failure to file Form 5472 and, therefore, 
a monetary penalty under paragraph (a) of this section for failure to 
maintain records is not assessed. However, an additional penalty is 
assessed after the 90th day following the mailing of the notice of 
failure to maintain records. Corp X develops a record maintenance system 
as required by section 6038A and Sec.  1.6038A-3. On the 180th day 
following the mailing of the notice of failure to maintain records, Corp 
X demonstrates to the satisfaction of the District Director that the 
newly developed record maintenance system will comply with the 
requirements of Sec.  1.6038A-3 and the increase in the monetary penalty 
after notification ceases to accrue. The additional penalty for failure 
to maintain records is $30,000. An additional penalty of $30,000 per 
year is assessed for each of years 2 and 3 for the failure to maintain 
records for a total of $90,000.

    (g) Effective dates. For effective dates for this section, see Sec.  
1.6038A-1(n).

[T.D. 8353, 56 FR 28072, June 19, 1991]