Have you
heard about the “Nick Saban” tax?
Let’s set it
up.
There has
been a longstanding tax provision limiting the deduction for public company
executive compensation to $1 million. Mind you, this is not a restriction on
how much you can pay an executive; the restriction only applies to how much you
can deduct on a tax return. The restriction does not apply to all executives,
either; it applies to the CEO, CFO and three other most-highly-paids.
But there
was an exception large enough for the Fortune 500 to drive through. The
exception was for “performance.” Magically and almost overnight, virtually all
executive compensation packages became based on “performance.” Options were
considered performance-based, and eventually options came to be passed around
like candy. Realistically, one had to refuse to do any tax planning for this
provision to actually apply.
This changed
with the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act passed in December, 2017. Congress tightened up
this code Section (162(m)) by taking away the performance exception. The $1
million cap now has a real bite.
But Congress
was still looking for money.
Congress
decided to put the same $1 million compensation limit on nonprofits.
This creates
a quandary, as nonprofits (generally) do not pay tax. If I were a nonprofit
executive and Congress threatened to disallow my deduction, I would not be
feeling the tremulous fear of my for-profit peers.
Congress
thought of that. They decided that the nonprofit would pay a 21% tax on my
behalf.
Whoa. Now
you have my attention. Granted, the tax is not on me, but we all know how this
works in the real world. Only small children and Congress believes in free. The
rest of us have to pay.
Congress
passed a tax provision applying the $1 million cap to the five highest- paid employees
of a 501(a), which includes a 501(c)(3). Think nonprofits, certain hospitals,
colleges and universities and the like.
BTW medical
professors were excluded from this, so it appears clear that Congress was
trying to reach the athletics programs and their coaches.
But there is
a problem.
Here is Code
section 4960 imposing the tax:
For purposes of this section-
The term "applicable
tax-exempt organization" means any organization which for the taxable
year-
(A) is exempt from taxation under section 501(a) ,
(B) is a farmers' cooperative organization described in section
521(b)(1) ,
(C) has
income excluded from taxation under section 115(1) ,
or
(D) is a political organization described in section
527(e)(1) .
What is that Section 115(1)?
§ 115 Income of states,
municipalities, etc.
Gross income does not include-
(1) income derived
from any public utility or the exercise of any essential governmental function
and accruing to a State or any political subdivision thereof, or the District
of Columbia; or …
What does this
mean?
Congress
thought that – by extending Section 4960 to reference Section 115(1) – it would
reach those entities exempt via Section 115(1).
Entities
such as Alabama.
Or the University
of Alabama.
Why?
Because the
University of Alabama is an instrumentality of the state of Alabama.
And here the
tax law goes wonky.
The Courts
have looked at the interaction of Sections 115(1) and 511(which is the
unrelated business income tax which applies to a nonprofit). Can a state
instrumentality (say a university) run a business – say a farm-to-table restaurant
chain – and avoid the unrelated business income tax because of Section 115(1)?
If that were the case, then Illinois could start a chain called Outfront Steakhouse,
make a zillion dollars and never pay tax because of Section 115(1).
The Courts have
clarified that is not the case. There is a limit to Section 115(1).
According to
that reasoning, it seems to me that Congress should be able to tax those university
salaries.
But there is
another argument – the doctrine of implied statutory immunity. This arises from
our federalist system of government: the federal government has to respect the
state government. Under this theory, if the federal government wants to tax a
state, it has to say so in an unambiguous manner – that is, it cannot be “implied.”
Continuing
our example, if the federal government wanted to tax Illinois for opening a steakhouse
chain and locating them adjacent to every Outback Steakhouse location
throughout the land, it would have to say something like:
… the [] tax will apply to an entity relying upon Section 115(1)
for nontaxability of their [] business activity should that activity be the
same or substantially similar to a business activity conducted by a for-profit
restaurant chain.”
That is explicit.
That breaches implied statutory immunity. The tax would then stick.
Is that what
Congress did with the new Section 4960(c) tax?
Nowhere close,
it appears.
Under that reasoning
the University of Alabama will not pay the Nick Saban tax, as the tax does not reach the
University of Alabama.
There are
universities clearly affected by this new law: Duke, for example, or Northwestern.
They have to pay up. Think of it as the difference between a “public”
university and a “tax-exempt” university.
But having
the state name in the university’s name, however, does not mean that the
university is exempt as “public.” It depends on how the university was
organized and chartered. Texas A&M will be affected by the new tax
provision, but the University of Texas - Austin will not. It is enough to give
one a headache.
What happens
next?
The easiest path
is for Congress to revise Code section 4960 and clean up the language. Without
Congressional action, you can be certain the “public” universities will
litigate this matter. They have to.
But the
likelihood of the present Congress accomplishing anything seems unlikely, at
best.