Illinois Administrative Code
Title 86 - REVENUE
Part 200 - PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE FOR HEARINGS BEFORE THE ILLINOIS DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE
Section 200.137 - Settlements
Current through Register Vol. 48, No. 38, September 20, 2024
a) Once a protest and request for hearing has been filed, all offers made by taxpayers or their duly authorized representatives for the purpose of settling either all or some part of an outstanding dispute regarding any assessed liability, proposed deficiency or claim for credit or refund must be made in the manner and with the information indicated in subsection (e), below. Additional information may be tendered to the extent it may assist the Department in evaluating the proposal.
b) Offers shall be made only to the litigator representing the Department on a specific case. If no litigator is assigned, an offer should be made either to the litigation supervisor of the particular tax section or, if unavailable, to the Chief of Tax Litigation. Settlement proposals made by purported representatives without requisite authority on file (i.e., Power of Attorney and/or Appearance) will be rejected summarily. Offers may be made by non-attorney representatives, provided they conform to the provisions of this subsection (b) and subsections (e)(1) through (e)(7) below.
c) The sole purpose of the format is to allow the Department to analyze the settlement offer and respond to it. Therefore, any statements made by a taxpayer on the settlement form will be considered to be made in the course of good faith negotiations and will not be admissible against the taxpayer in any proceeding.
d) Any offer once received may be accepted, rejected or countered by the Department and the taxpayer or its representative shall be notified of such in writing.
e) The minimum information to be supplied upon a settlement offer shall consist of the following:
f) Settlements offered subsequent to the issuance of a notice or order setting a case for hearing shall not be cause to delay the hearing unless, in the discretion of the Administrative Law Judge and on representation of the parties, the offer is likely to finally resolve the controversy at issue. In all other cases, settlement offers which have not been responded to or otherwise resolved within 90 days after being tendered, or within such final extension of time as may thereafter be granted by the presiding Administrative Law Judge, shall cause the case to be restored to the regular hearing calendar.