Can an erroneous Form 1099 save you from tax and penalties?
It’s an oddball question, methinks. I anticipate the other side of that see-saw is whether one knew, or should have known, better.
Let’s look at the Clair Couturier case.
Clair is a man, by the way. His wife’s is named Vicki.
Clair used to be the president of Noll Manufacturing (Noll).
Clair and Noll had varieties of deferred compensation going on:
(1) He owned shares in the company employee stock ownership
program (ESOP).
(2) He had a deferred compensation arrangement (his
“Compensation Continuation Agreement”) wherein he would receive monthly
payments of $30 grand when he retired.
(3) He participated in an incentive stock option
plan.
(4) He also participated in another that sounds like
a phantom stock arrangement or its cousin. The plan flavor doesn’t matter; no
matter what flavor you select Clair is being served nonqualified deferred
compensation in a cone.
Sounds to me like Noll was taking care of Clair.
There was a corporate reorganization in 2004.
Someone wanted Clair out.
COMMENT: Let’s talk about an ESOP briefly, as it is germane to what happened here. AN ESOP is a retirement plan. Think of it as 401(k), except that you own stock in the company sponsoring the ESOP and not mutual funds at Fidelity or Vanguard. In this case, Noll sponsored the ESOP, so the ESOP would own Noll stock. How much Noll stock would it own? It can vary. It doesn’t have to be 100%, but it might be. Let’s say that it was 100% for this conversation. In that case, Clair would not own any Noll stock directly, but he would own a ton of stock indirectly through the ESOP.If someone wanted him out, they would have to buy him out through the ESOP.
Somebody bought out Clair for $26 million.
COMMENT: I wish.
The ESOP sent Clair a Form 1099 reporting a distribution of $26 million. The 1099 indicated that he rolled-over this amount to an IRA.
Clair reported the roll-over on his 2004 tax return. It was just reporting; there is no tax on a roll-over unless someone blows it.
QUESTION: Did someone blow it?
Let’s go back. Clair had four pieces to his deferred compensation, of which the ESOP was but one. What happened to the other three?
Well, I suppose the deal might have been altered. Maybe Clair forfeited the other three. If you pay me enough, I will go away.
Problem:
§ 409 Qualifications for tax credit employee stock ownership plans
So?
(p) Prohibited
allocations of securities in an S corporation
Clair was a disqualified person to the ESOP. He couldn’t just
make-up whatever deal he wanted. Well, technically he could, but the government
reserved the right to drop the hammer.
The government dropped the hammer.
The Department of Labor got involved. The DOL referred the
case to the IRS Employee Plan Division. The IRS was looking for prohibited transactions.
Found something close enough.
Clair was paid $26 million for his stock.
The IRS determined that the stock was worth less than a million.
QUESTION: What about that 1099 for the rollover?
ANSWER: You mean the 1099 that apparently was never sent to the IRS?
What was the remaining $25 million about?
It was about those three nonqualified compensation plans.
Oh, oh.
This is going to cost.
Why?
Because only funds in a qualified plan can be rolled to an IRA.
Funds in a nonqualified plan cannot.
Clair rolled $26 million. He should have rolled less than a million.
Wait. In what year did the IRS drop the hammer?
In 2016.
Wasn’t that outside the three-year window for auditing Clair’s return?
Yep.
So Clair was scot-free?
Nope.
The IRS could not adjust Clair’s income tax for 2004. It could however tag him with a penalty for overfunding his IRA by $25 million.
Potato, poetawtoe. Both would clock out under the statute of limitations, right?
Nope.
There is an excise tax (normal folk call it a “penalty”) in the Code for overfunding an IRA. The tax is 6 percent. That doesn’t sound so bad, until you realize that the tax is 6 percent per year until you take the excess contribution out of the IRA.
Clair never took anything out of his IRA.
This thing has been compounding at 6 percent per year for … how many years?
The IRS wanted around $8.5 million.
The Tax Court agreed.
Clair owed.
Big.
Our case this time was Couturier v Commissioner, T.C. Memo 2022-69.
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