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Sunday, June 10, 2018

When Do You Really Start A Business?



It doesn’t sound like much, but it can present a difficult tax issue.

When does a business start?

It helps to have sales. Sales are good. But sometimes you do not have sales.

Then what?

The issue is that tax law allows deductions for expenses incurred in a trade or business. This presumes that the activity has started and is occurring on a regular and continuous basis. Before that point it is more like an intent or hope than an actual business.   

Let’s set-up our story.

Taxpayer was a tax specialist, although I am not sure what that means. His wife was a nurse. For 2013 and 2014 he reported self-employed real estate losses of $15 and $22 thousand, respectively.

Got it. He is tax specialist when is he is not working real estate.

In 2010 he obtained a real estate license. He got together with friends and family and decided to invest in residential real estate. They were going to flip houses. The investor group decided to look in West Sacramento, California, (fortuitously, where he lived). On Saturdays he would leave home, drive 192 miles to Marina, California and pick-up one or more members of the group. They would return to Sacramento to check out houses and then back to Marina. At days-end, our protagonist would finally return home to West Sacramento.


Fortunately, he kept logs for all this driving. He racked up 24,882 miles in 2013 and 25,220 in 2014.

They never bought any property.

He also made no money as a real estate agent.

The IRS audited 2013 and 2014 and bounced the real estate expenses.

Off they went to Tax Court.

His argument was simple: are you kidding me? He was a realtor. He kept mileage logs. He had third parties who could testify that he did what he said he did. What more did the IRS want?

The IRS said that – whatever he was doing – it was not a trade or business.

There was no evidence that he was regularly and continuously working as a real estate agent for those years. You know, no income and all. 

So, what did the IRS think he doing with the family-and-friends consortium?

He was trying to start a business, a business flipping houses. But he and they never flipped a house, Heck, they never even bought a house. He was as much a house flipper as I am a retired ex-NFL player.

That put him in a tough spot.

Here is the Tax Court:
At best, petitioner husband’s activity in 2013 and 2014 was in the exploratory or formative stages of forming a business of flipping houses. Carrying on a trade or business requires more than initial research into a potential business opportunity; it requires that the business have actually commenced.
Section 162(a) does not permit current deductions for startup or preopening expenses incurred by a taxpayer before beginning business operations.”
He lost.

The IRS now wanted penalties – “substantial underpayment” penalties. This is a “super” penalty, for when the regular penalty is just not enough.

Remember that taxpayer listed his occupation as “tax specialist.”

Bad idea when you are trying to get penalties abated.

Here is the Court:
Petitioner husband considered his occupation to be a “tax specialist” and operated a tax preparation services business as a sole proprietorship. However, in preparing their tax returns petitioners failed to exercise due care or to do what a reasonable person would do under the circumstances to determine whether petitioner husband was in a trade or business ….”
Ouch.

The case is Samadi v Commissioner, for the home gamers.


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