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Showing posts with label appraisal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label appraisal. Show all posts

Thursday, April 27, 2023

Losing A Casualty Loss

 

I have stayed away from talking about casualty losses.

To be fair, one needs to distinguish business casualty losses from personal casualty losses. Business casualties are still deductible under the Code. Personal casualties are not. This change occurred with the Tax Cut and Jobs Act of 2017 and is tax law until 2025, when much of it expires.

This is the tax law that did away with office-in-home deductions, for example. Great timing given that COVID would soon have multitudes working from home.

It also did away with personal casualty losses, with an exception for presidentially - declared disaster areas.

Have someone steal your personal laptop. No casualty loss. Accident with your personal car? No casualty loss. Lost your house during the storms and tornados in western Tennessee at the end of March 2023? That would be a casualty loss because there was a presidential declaration.

I consider it terrible tax law, but Congress was primarily concerned about finding money.  

I am reading a case that involves casualty losses. Two, in fact. The Court included several humorous flourishes in its decision.

Let’s go over it.

Thomas Richey and his wife Maureen Cleary bought a second home in Stone Harbor on Cape May in the south of New Jersey. The house was on the waterfront with access to the open ocean. They also bought a 40-foot boat.

Sounds nice.

In 2017 storm Stella hit.

Richey and Cleary claimed casualty losses totaling over $820,000 on their 2017 tax return.

That will catch attention.

Here is the Court:

Such a large loss - one that caused them to reduce their adjusted gross income of more than $850,000 to a taxable income of zero – bobbed into the Commissioner’s view, and he selected their return for audit.”
The Commissioner did more than select the return; he denied the casualty loss deduction altogether.

Richey and Cleary petitioned the Tax Court.

Yep. Had to.

Whereas they lived in Maryland (remember: New Jersey was their second home), they petitioned the Court for trial in Los Angeles.

I do not get the why. Very little upside. Possible massive downside.

We added the case to one of our trial calendars for Los Angeles, but on the first day of that session neither petitioner showed up.”

Uh, Richey …?!

We postponed trial for a day to enable Richey to testify via Zoom.”

Richey explained that he learned about the trial only a week before, and even then, no one gave him specific details.

We do not find this credible ….”

This could have started better. 

The couple’s case began taking on water right at the start…”

The Court seemed amused.

Back to business, Richey. Let’s first establish that a casualty occurred.

He testified that he had taken pictures of the damage to both boat and home on his phone shortly after the storm.”

Good.

He explained, however, that a later software update to his phone deleted them.”

Seriously?

That left him to introduce only photographs of the house taken … nearly a year after the storm hit and after reconstruction had already begun.”

A year? Were you that busy?

These photographs depict no visible damage other than that which one might see at any construction site, and we could see nothing that showed damage that we could specifically attribute to the storm. “

Richey, I have a question for you.

… we did not find Richey’s testimony, standing alone, credible on this point.”

Have you seen John Wick?

As for the boat, the couple introduces a photograph of what the boat looked like before the storm, but nothing to show what it looked like afterwards. The couple also gave us no receipts for any boat repairs.”

Tell me the truth: did you do something to this judge’s dog?

Whom are we to believe?”

Richey, this is legal-speak for “we do not believe you.”

OK, we are going to have to lean double hard on the appraisals. Those involve third parties, so maybe we can get the Court to back off a bit.

Richey and Cleary did not get an appraisal of their own home valuing it before and after the storm.”

And may I ask why, Richey?

Richey instead consulted a real-estate agent who provided them with Multiple Listing Service (MLS) printouts of other people’s homes. This is a problem for many different reasons.”

You think?

The first … is that he didn’t talk to this agent until after the audit had begun.”

I have an idea, Richey, but it’s a long shot.

It is not impossible for a homeowner to conduct an appraisal himself …”

Richey, go improv. You live in Cape May. You know the prices. You know the damage the storm wrought. Make the Court believe you. Sell it.

They also produced no evidence of their awareness of market conditions in Stone Harbor. What we got were photographs of MLS printouts.”

You are a man of commitment and sheer will, Richey.

We infer from Richey’s having to reach out to an agent to give him such comparables an unspoken admission that he is not qualified to conduct an adequate appraisal on his own.”

I am familiar with the parlance, Richey.

If the absence of proof of damage causes the couple’s case to founder, the absence of proof on valuing that damage causes it to sink altogether.”

Well, that’s that. Maybe we can get something on the boat.

Richey and Cleary fare no better on the loss they claim for their boat.”

Richey, walk out of here with your pride intact.

All these attacks by the Commissioner have picked completely clean the flesh of their claimed deduction.”

Richey, just walk out of here.

Richey’s first mistake was scheduling a Tax Court hearing in Los Angeles. That led to the disastrous failure-to-show, which clearly angered the Court. The Court felt they were being lied to, and they never relented. The lack of an appraisal – while not necessarily having to be fatal – was fatal in this case. Richey was unable to persuade the Court that he had the experience or expertise to substitute for an appraisal.    

Sometimes the Court will carry water for a petitioner who is underprepared. We have reviewed a couple of these cases before, but that beneficent result presupposes the Court likes the person. That was not a factor here.

Our case this time was Richey and Cleary v Commissioner, T.C. Memo 2023-43.


Monday, January 30, 2023

Donating Cryptocurrency

 

I was reading something recently, and it reminded me how muddled our tax Code is.

Let’s talk about cryptocurrency. I know that there is bad odor to this topic after Sam Bankman-Fried and FTX, but cryptocurrencies and their exchanges are likely a permanent fixture in the financial landscape.

I admit that I think of cryptos – at least the main ones such as Bitcoin, Ethereum or Binance Coin – as akin to publicly traded stock. You go to www.finance.yahoo.com , enter the ticker symbol and see Bitcoin’s trading price. If you want to buy Bitcoin, you will need around $23 grand as I write this.

Sounds a lot like buying stock to me.   

The IRS reinforced that perspective in 2014 when it explained that virtual currency is to be treated as property for federal income tax purposes. The key here is that crypto is NOT considered a currency. If you buy something at Lululemon, you do not have gain or loss from the transaction. Both parties are transacting in American dollars, and there is no gain or loss from exchanging the same currency.

COMMENT: Mind you, this is different from a business transaction involving different currencies. Say that my business buys from a Norwegian supplier, and the terms require payment in krone within 20 days. Next say that the dollar appreciates against the krone (meaning that it takes fewer dollars to purchase the same amount of krone). I bought something costing XX dollars. Had I paid for it then and there, the conversation is done. But I did not. I am paying 20 days later, and I pay XX minus Y dollars. That “Y” is a currency gain, and it is taxable.

So, what happens if crypto is considered property rather than currency?

It would be like selling Proctor and Gamble stock (or a piece of P&G stock) when I pay my Norwegian supplier. I would have gain or loss. The tax Code is not concerned with the use of cash from the sale.

Let’s substitute Bitcoin for P&G. You have a Bitcoin-denominated wallet. On your way to work you pick-up and pay for dry cleaning, a cup of coffee and donuts for the office. What have you done? You just racked up more taxable trades before 9 a.m. than most people will all day, that is what you have done.

Got it. We can analogize using crypto to trading stock.

Let’s set up a tax trap involving crypto.

I donate Bitcoin.

The tax Code requires a qualified appraisal when donating property worth over $5,000.

I go to www.marketwatch.com.

I enter BTC-USD.

I see that it closed at $22,987 on January 27, 2023. I print out the screen shot and attach it to my tax return as substantiation for my donation.

Where is the trap?

The IRS has previously said crypto is property, not cash.

A donation of property worth over $5 grand generally requires an appraisal. Not all property, though. Publicly-traded securities do not require an appraisal.

So is Bitcoin a publicly-traded security?

Let’s see. It trades. There is an organized market. We can look up daily prices and volumes.

Sounds publicly-traded.

Let’s look at Section 165(g)(2), however:

    (2)  Security defined.

For purposes of this subsection, the term "security" means-

(A)  a share of stock in a corporation;

(B)  a right to subscribe for, or to receive, a share of stock in a corporation; or

(C)  a bond, debenture, note, or certificate, or other evidence of indebtedness, issued by a corporation or by a government or political subdivision thereof, with interest coupons or in registered form.

The IRS Office of Chief Counsel looked at this and concluded that it could not see crypto fitting the above categories.

Crypto could therefore not be considered a security.

As property not a security, any donation over $5 grand would require a qualified appraisal.

There was no qualified appraisal in our example. All I did was take a screen shot and include it with the return.

That means no charitable deduction.

I have not done a historical dive on Section 165(g)(2), but I know top-of-mind that it has been in the Code since at least 1986.

Do you know what did not exist in 1986?

The obvious.

Time to update the law, me thinks.

This time we were discussing CCA 202302012.

Tuesday, December 27, 2022

No Deduction For African Sculpture

 

You can anticipate the final decision when you read the following sentence:

One does not need to be a tax expert to open his eyes and read plain English.”

This time we are talking about art. Expensive art. And donations of said expensive art.

I am not a fan of the minutiae in this area. It strikes me as a deliberate gambit to blow-up an otherwise laudable donation for what one could consider ministerial oversight, but such is the state of tax law.

Then again, the taxpayer side of these transactions tends to have access to high-powered professional advice, so perhaps the IRS is not being intractable.

Still, one likes to see reasonable application of the rules, with acknowledgement that not everyone has advanced degrees and decades of experience in tax practice. Even if one does, there can be disagreement in reading a sentence, the interpretation of a comma, the precedence of a prior case, or the interplay - or weighting - of related tax provisions. Or maybe someone is overworked, exhausted, running the kids to activities, attending to aging parents and simply made - excuse a human foible - a mistake. 

It used to be known as reasonable cause and can be grounds for penalty abatement. I remember it existing when I was a younger tax practitioner. Today? Not so much.

One way to (almost certainly) blow reasonable cause?

Be an expert. I doubt the IRS would ever allow reasonable cause on my personal return, for example.

Let’s look at the Schweizer case.

Heinrich Schweizer was a high-powered art advisor.

He better not get into it with the IRS about art donations, then.

Schweizer received a law degree in Germany. He then worked an internship with Sotheby’s in New York City. When the internship ended, he returned to Germany to pursue a PhD, a goal interrupted when Sotheby’s recruited him for a position in their African art department. He there served as Director of African and Oceanic Art from 2006 to 2015. He increased the value of the annual auctions and provided price estimates at which customers might sell their art at auction. He also worked closely with Sotheby’s appraisal department in providing customers with formal appraisals.

Schweizer filed his first US tax return in 2007. He hired a CPA firm to help with the tax return. He continued this relationship to our year in question.

In 2011 Schweizer made a substantial donation to the Minneapolis Institute of Art (MIA). He donated a Dogon sculpture that he had acquired in Paris in 2003. The deduction was $600 grand.

The accountants filed for an extension and contacted the IRS Art Appraisal Services (AAS) unit.

COMMENT: One can spend a career in tax and never do this. AAS provides advice and assistance to the IRS and taxpayers on valuation questions. A reason to contact AAS is to obtain a statement of value (SOV) after donating but before filing a tax return. The donor can rely on the SOV as support for the value deducted on the tax return. It is – by the way – not easy to get into AAS. The minimum ticket is a $50 grand donation as well as a filing fee for time and attention.

Schweizer obtained his SOV. All he had to do now was file his return and include the magic forms (Form 8283 with all the required signatures and secret handshakes, a copy of the appraisal, yada yada).

Guess what he did not do?

No properly completed Form 8283, no copy of the appraisal, nothing.

Remember: form is everything in this area of the tax law.

Off to Tax Court they went.

His argument?

His failure to meet the documentation requirements was due to reasonable cause and not willful neglect.

 Move me with a story.

He received and reasonably relied on advice from the accounting firm that it was unnecessary to include either a qualified appraisal or a fully completed Form 8283 with his 2011 return.

Why would I believe this?

Because the IRS already had these documents through the SOV process.

I know the conclusion is wrong, but it gives me pause.

OK, reliance on tax advice can be grounds for reasonable cause. He will of course need the firm to back up his story ….

The spokesman for the firm testified but did not corroborate, in any respect, Schweizer’s testimony about the alleged advice.”

Well, that seems to be prompting a malpractice suit.

Schweizer’s attorney will have to cross-examine aggressively.

And petitioner’s counsel asked no questions of […] squarely directed to this point.”

Huh? Why not?

The fact that petitioner did not seek corroborative testimony from the person who might have supplied it weighs against him.”

Well, yeah. If someone can bail you out and they fail to do so, the Court will double-down on its skepticism.

Now it became a matter of whom the Court believed.

To tighten the screws even further, the Court noted that – even if the firm had told Schweizer that he need not include a phonebook with his tax return - the Court did not believe that Schweizer would have relied on such advice in good faith.

Why not, pray tell?

Schweizer was a high-powered art advisor. He was also trained in law. He had done this - or something very similar - for clients at Sotheby’s over the years. The Court said: he knew. He may not have been an expert in tax, but he had been up and down this stretch of road enough to know the rules.

There was no deduction for Schweizer.

Our case this time was Schweizer v Commissioner, T.C. Memo 2022-102.

Sunday, May 9, 2021

IRS Challenges Rent In A Small Town


Let’s look at a case involving rent.

What sets this up is a C corporation in Montana.

A C corporation means that it pays its own tax. Contrast this with an S corporation, which (with rare exception) passes-through its income to its shareholders, who then combine that income with their own income (W-2, interest and dividends) and pay tax personally.

As a generalization, a tax advisor working with entrepreneurial clients is much more likely to work with S corporations (or LLCs, an increasingly popular choice). The reason is simple: a C corporation has two levels of tax: once to the company itself and then to the owners when distributed as dividends. Now that may not be an issue to a Fortune 1000, some of which are larger than certain countries and themselves are near-permanent entities - expected to outlive any current corporate officer or investor. It however is an issue to a closely-held company that will be lucky to transition one generation and unlikely to transition two.

Plentywood Drug is a Montana corporation that operates the only pharmacy in Plentywood, Montana and serves four counties spanning 7,200 square miles.

The company has four owners, representing two families.

It leases a building owned by its four owners.

COMMENT: So far, there is zero unusual about this.

The company paid the following rent:

           2011                       $ 83,584

           2012                       $192,000

           2013                       $192,000

The IRS did not like this one bit.

Why not?

Let’s go tax nerd for a moment. The IRS said that the company was paying too much in rent. Rent is deductible. Excess rent is considered a dividend and is not deductible. The corporation would lose a deduction for its excess rent. The owners however received $192,000, so they are going to be taxed on that amount. How will they be taxed if the IRS ratches-down the rent? The excess will be considered dividends and taxed to them accordingly.

Remember: a C corporation does not get a deduction for dividends. The IRS gets more tax from the company while the individual taxes of the four owners stays the same. It’s a win for the IRS.

An S corporation does not have this issue, as all income of the S is taxed to its owners. This is another reason that tax advisors representing entrepreneurial wealth prefer working with S corporations.

How does the IRS win this?

Well, it has to show that $192,000 is too much rent.

Problem: the town of Plentywood has 1,700 people.

Another problem: Montana is a nondisclosure state, meaning real estate data – such as sales prices – is legally confidential and simply not available.

The IRS brought in its valuation specialist. Third problem: Montanans do not tend to share financial information easily with strangers.

The IRS expert remarked that that he did not identify himself as an IRS agent while he was in Plentywood.

Probably for the best.

Then the IRS expert made a fateful decision: he would base his appraisal solely on Plentywood data.

Well, that should take about half a day.

He looked at the post office, two apartment buildings and a 625-square-foot commercial space.

He did the best he could to compensate by making adjustments: for commercial versus residential, for the safety of the Post Office as a tenant, for Aaron Rodgers possibly leaving the Packers.

The two families brought in their specialist, who supplemented his database by including Williston, North Dakota – the “big town” about an hour away and with a population about eight times the size.

The IRS argued that Williston was simply not comparable.

Here is the Court:

We therefore do not accept the Williston properties as being reasonable comparisons.”

Oh oh.

The two families argued that the IRS specialist was mixing tamarinds and eggplants.

Here is the Court:

His expert used two residential properties in his analysis. Government-subsidized multifamily residential housing is like a retail drugstore in that both are rented. But not in much else.”

You can tell the Court was frustrated.

How about the post office? Both sides used the post office.

Yet even though both sides agree that the post office is comparable, they disagree about the number of square feet it has.”

The Court – having to do something – decided that fair rent was $171,187.

The IRS then wanted penalties. The IRS always wants penalties.

What for?

The Commissioner alleges that the first cause on this list – negligence or disregard of rules or regulations … - applies to Plentywood Drug ….”

The Court squinted and said: What? You brought a trial, the rent turned out to be within $20 grand of what the families deducted in the first place, we have heard far too much about appraising properties over frontier America and you have the nerve to say that there was negligence or disregard?

The Court adjusted the rent and nixed the penalties.

Our case this time was Plentywood Drug Inc v Commissioner, T.C. Memo 2021-45.

Sunday, June 28, 2020

This Is Why We Cannot Have Nice Things


I am looking at a case involving a conservation easement.

We have talked about easements before. There is nothing innately sinister about them, but unfortunately they have caught the eye of people who have … stretched them beyond recognition.

I’ll give you an example of an easement:

·      You own land in a bucolic setting.
·      It is your intention to never part with the land.
·      It is liturgy to the beauty and awe of nature. You will never develop it or allow it to be developed.

If you feel that strongly, you might donate an easement to a charitable organization who can see to it that the land is never developed. It can protect and defend long after you are gone.

Question: have you made a donation?

I think you have. You kept the land, but you have donated one of your land-related legal rights – the right to develop the land.

What is this right worth?

That is the issue driving this area of tax controversy.

What if the land is on the flight path for eventual population growth and development? There was a time when Houston’s Galleria district, for example, was undeveloped land. Say you had owned the land back when. What would that easement have been worth?

You donated a potential fortune.

Let’s look at a recent case.

Plateau Holdings LLC (Plateau) owned two parcels of land in Tennessee. In fact, those parcels were the only things it owned. The land had been sold and resold, mined, and it took a while to reunite the surface and mineral rights to obtain full title to the land. It had lakes, overlooks, waterfalls and sounded postcard-worthy; it was also a whole lot out-of-the-way between Nashville and Chattanooga. Just to get utilities to the property would probably require the utility company to issue bonds to cover the cost.

Enter the investor.

He bought the two parcels (actually 98.99%, which is close enough) for approximately $5.8 million.

He worked out an arrangement with a tax-exempt organization named Foothills Land Conservancy. The easement would restrict much of the land, with the remainder available for development, commercial timber, hunting, fishing and other recreational use.

Routine stuff, methinks.

The investor donated the easement to Foothills eight days after purchasing the land.

Next is valuing the easement

Bring in the valuation specialist. Well, not actually him, as he had died before the trial started, but others who would explain his work. He had valued the easement at slightly over $25 million.

Needless to say, the IRS jumped all over this.

The case goes on for 40 pages.

The taxpayer argument was relatively straightforward. The value of the easement is equal to the reduction in the best and highest use value of the land before and after the granting of the easement.

And how do you value an undeveloped “low density mountain resort residential development”? The specialist was looking at properties in North Carolina, Georgia, and elsewhere in Tennessee. He had to assume government zoning, that financing would be available, that utilities and roads would be built, that consumer demand would exist.

There is a flight of fancy to this “best and highest” line of reasoning.

For example, I would have considered my best and highest professional “use” to be a long and successful career in the NFL. I probably would have been a strong safety, a moniker no longer used in today’s NFL (think tackling). Rather than playing on Sundays, I have instead been a tax practitioner for more than three decades.

According to this before-and-after reasoning, I should be able to deduct the difference between my earning power as a successful NFL Hall of Famer and my actual career as a tax CPA. I intend to donate that difference to the CTG Foundation for Impoverished Accountants.

Yeah, that is snark.

What do I see here?

·      Someone donated less than 100% of something.
·      That something cost about $6 million.
·      Someone waited a week and gave some of that something away.
·      That some of something was valued at more than four times the cost of the entire something. 

Nah, not buying it.

Neither did the Court.

Here is one of the biggest slams I have read in tax case in a while:

           We give no weight to the opinion of petitioner’s experts.”

The taxpayer pushed it too far.

Our case this time for the home gamers was Plateau Holdings LLC v Commissioner.

Tuesday, May 5, 2020

Donating Eyeglasses


Some tax cases take near forever to wrap-up.

I am looking at a case involving tax year 2008; it was decided in April, 2020. It involves over $300 grand in taxes and penalties.

Let’s set it up.
A.  Take an accounting firm with offices in Cerritos, California and Kansas City, Missouri.
B.   Through them the taxpayers (Campbell) learned of a donation program involving Lions in Sight. The program was rather straightforward.

a.    A company (ZD Products) consolidates eyeglass frames (let’s say approximately 170,000).
b.   The company breaks down that number into lots (let’s say approximately 3,400 frames).
c.    It then sells the lots for approximately $50 grand each.
d.   If you buy a lot, you are advised to wait a year before doing anything. Not to fear, they will take care of your lot for you.
e.    After a year you donate the lot to Lions in Sight.
                                             i.     This is prearranged.
                                           ii.     Lions in Sight is affiliated with the Lions Club International. Its mission is to collect and provide used eyeglasses for use worldwide and to provide eye care assistance to the needy and low-income. In truth, it sounds like a fine charity.
f.     You will get a bright shiny appraisal saying that your donation was worth approximately $225 grand.

It sounds like the program ran well. In 2007 Lions in Sight had so many frames in storage that they requested ZD Products to store a sizeable new donation until 2008, when they could free up space.

Nice problem to have.

The IRS became aware and did not care for this at all. No surprise: one puts in $50 grand and – a year and a day later – gets a donation worth $225 grand.  Quick math tells me that someone with a tax rate over 23% comes out ahead.

What do we have? Someone takes a good cause (the Lions Club), stirs in a for-profit party (both the company selling the eyeglasses and the company organizing the deal), and has a sacerdote (the appraiser) bless the bona fides. Everybody wins; well, everybody but the IRS.   

We have seen something similar to this with conservation easements. Take a good cause – say preserve a wetland … or just green space. Bring in the marketers, attorneys and valuation experts. Stick the property into an LLC; sell interests in the LLC; donate the LLC interests to who-knows-who and – voila – instant big bucks tax deduction for someone who was never really that interested in wetlands or green space to begin with.

I have a question for you. Why do you think that the IRS has so many rules concerning donations? You know them: you need a receipt; past a certain dollar limit you need a letter from the charity; past another dollar limit you need an appraisal; somewhere in there you have a form attached to your tax return just for the donation.

Tripwires.

Let me give you one.

If you need an appraisal, then the appraisal has to be for what you actually donated.

Bear with me.

This story started off with approximately 170,000 eyeglass frames. They are of varying sizes, styles, quality and value. An appraisal is done on the mother lode.

Break the lode into lots of approximately 3,400.

Donate the lots.

The appraisal was done on the 170,000.

You need an appraisal on your 3,400.

You do not have this. Best you have is 34/1,700 of an appraisal.

But it is virtually impossible that each lot will be the same. There are too many combinations of styles, sizes, designers, costs and whatnot.  Just taking a percentage (34/1,700) is not good enough – not for this purpose.

You have no appraisal.

You have no deduction.

Tripwire.

The case for the home gamers is Campbell v Commissioner.

Thursday, August 10, 2017

RERI-ng Its Ugly Head - Part Two

Let’s continue our story of Stephen Ross, the billionaire owner of the Miami Dolphins and of his indirect contribution of an (unusual) partnership interest to the University of Michigan.

What made the partnership interest unusual was that it represented a future ownership interest in a partnership owning real estate. The real estate was quite valuable because of a sweet lease. When that ship came in, the future interest was going to be worth crazy money.

That ship was a “successor member interest” or “SMI.”

We talked about the first case, which went before the Tax Court in 2014 and involved legal motions. The case then proceeded, with a final decision in July, 2017.
COMMENT: Yes, it can take that long to get a complex case through Tax Court. Go after Apple, for example, and your kid will likely be finishing high school before that tax case is finally resolved.
The SMI was purchased for $2.95 million.

Then donated to the University of Michigan for approximately $33 million.
COMMENT: This is better than FaceBook stock.
After two years, the University of Michigan sold the SMI (to someone related to the person who started this whole story) for around $2 million.
OBSERVATION: Nah, FaceBook stock would have been better.
Now RERI was in Court and explaining how something that was and will be worth either $2 or $3 million is generating a tax deduction of $33 million.

And it has to do with the SMI being “part of” of something but not “all of” something.  SMI is the “future” part in “all of” a partnership owning valuable leased real estate in California.

The concept is that someone has to value the “all of” something. Once that is done, one can use IRS tables to value the “part of” something. Granted, there are hoops and hurdles to get into those tables, but that is little obstacle to a shrewd tax attorney.

Ross found a shrewd tax attorney.

Virtually all the heavy lifting is done when valuing the “all of” part. One then dumps that number into the IRS tables, selects a number of years and an interest rate and – voila! The entrée round, my fellow tax gastronomes, featuring a $33 million tasty secret ingredient.


The pressure is on the first number: the “all of.”

This will require a valuation.

There are experts who do these things, of course.

Their valuation report will go with your tax return.  No surprise. We should be thankful they do not also have to do a slide presentation at the IRS. 

And there will be a (yet another) tax form to highlight the donation. That is Form 8283, and – in general – you can anticipate seeing this form when you donate more than $5,000 in property.

There are questions to be answered on Form 8283. We have spoken about noncash donations in the past, and how this area has become a tax minefield. Certain things have to be done a certain way, and there is little room for inattention. Sometimes the results are cruel.

Form 8283 wants, for example:

·      A description of the property
·      If a partial interest, whether there is a restriction on the property
·      Date acquired
·      How acquired
·      Appraised fair market value
·      Cost

I suspect the Court was already a bit leery with a $3 million property generating a $33 million donation.

And the Court noticed something …

The Form 8283 left out the cost.

Yep, the $3 million.

Remember: there is little room for inattention with this form.

Question is: does the number mean anything in this instance?

Rest assured that RERI was bailing water like a madman, arguing that it “substantially complied” with the reporting requirements. It relied heavily on the Bond decision, where the Court stated that the reporting requirements were:
“… directory and not mandatory”
The counterpunch to Bond was Smith:
“ the standard for determining substantial compliance under which we ‘consider whether … provided sufficient information to permit … to evaluate the reported contributions, as intended by Congress.’”
To boil this down to normal-speak: could RERI’s omission have influenced a reasonable person (read: IRS) to question or not question the deduction. After all, the very purpose of Form 8283 was to provide the IRS enough information to sniff-out stuff like this.

Here is the Court:
“The significant disparity between the claimed fair market value and the price RERI paid to acquire the SMI just 17 months before it assigned the SMI to the University, had it been disclosed, would have alerted respondent to a potential overvaluation of the SMI”
Oh oh.
“Because RERI failed to provide sufficient information on its Form 8283 to permit respondent to evaluate its purported contribution, …we cannot excuse on substantial compliance grounds RERI’s omission from the form of its basis in the SMI.”
All that tax planning, all the meetings and paperwork and yada-yada was for naught, because someone did not fill-out the tax form correctly and completely.

I wonder if the malpractice lawsuit has already started.

The Court did not have to climb onto a high-wire and juggle dizzying code sections or tax doctrines to deny RERI’s donation deduction. It could just gaze upon that Form 8283 and point-out that it was incomplete, and that its incompleteness prejudiced the interests of the government. It was an easy way out.

And that is precisely what the Court did.