How FTB Tax Liens Affect Your Credit Report

How FTB tax liens affect your credit report

As if taxes were not complicated and frightening enough, the federal and state taxing authorities have a variety of devices in their arsenal to compel payment and stave off penalties.

Tax liens, one of the most common of those devices, can cause trouble not just with your property and bank accounts, but with your credit score and ability to obtain lines of credit.

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Franchise Tax Board Liens – Part Three

Government Code Section 7171 authorizes both the recording of a Notice of State Tax Lien (NSTL) in the office of a county recorder and the filing of a NSTL with the Secretary of State (SOS) at any time after the state tax lien is created and before it is extinguished. Any recording with county recorder becomes a public record and is used mostly for real property. A Secretary of State lien will be filed to attach consumer goods, fixtures, and bulk sales, as well as when personal property like accounts receivable, chattel paper, equipment, farm product or equipment, inventory, negotiable documents of time or interest in a partnership or LLP. The state tax lien attaches personal property and, consequently, a taxpayer or entity’s interest in a partnership may not be sold, assigned or otherwise conveyed free of a state tax lien. Notice to Taxpayer and Notice to Partnership are used to notify the taxpayer and partners of the force and effect of the state tax lien. Although the state tax lien attaches to a taxpayer’s interest in a partnership, it does not attach to specific partnership distributions of profits and surplus.

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Franchise Tax Board Liens – Part One

The FTB is authorized to impose liens on taxpayer’s property to recover tax debts. A lien is a charge on taxpayer’s personal or real property to satisfy tax debt or duty. Once lien encumbers the property, taxpayer generally can not sell it or or transfer through escrow as long as lien exists. FTB files liens if a non-compliant taxpayer or business entity has a delinquent liability. California Revenue and Taxation Code Section 19221 provides that if a tax liability is not paid at the time that it becomes “due and payable” and due process is served; an enforceable state tax lien is created for the amount of the tax liability. Since the lien arises by operation of law, it is called a “statutory lien.” Revenue and Taxation Code Section 19221 also defines when a tax liability becomes “due and payable” for purposes of creating a state tax lien also known as the statutory lien date. The conditions vary for different types of FTB assessments. The general rule is that state tax lien arises on the date the amount is established on the records of FTB (or other department, like EDD for the amount of any liability disclosed on a return filed before the date payment is due and after payment is due). The state lien can also arise on the date a Jeopardy Assessment notice is mailed to taxpayer for issued amounts determined by the Jeopardy Assessment.

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