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Showing posts with label pastor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pastor. Show all posts

Sunday, July 7, 2019

Driving To South Africa


Our protagonist this time is Donald Durden. He is a pastor with the Seventh Day Adventist Church, and he was based out of Columbus, Ohio for the tax year at issue. His territory included part of Maryland, Ohio, western Pennsylvania, West Virginia, and a part of Virginia.

Got it. I am guessing the case has something to do with travel expenses.

The Church reimbursed his business-related travel expenses using both an accountable and nonaccountable plan.

I guessed right.
COMMENT: The big difference between an accountable and nonaccountable plan is whether you have to provide your employer with receipts and other paperwork. If you do, the plan is accountable and the employer can leave the reimbursement off your W-2. Fail to turn in paperwork and the plan becomes nonaccountable. The reimbursement then goes on your W-2. That used to mean that one would have to itemize and claim employee business expenses. The new tax law disallows employee business expenses, meaning that – beginning with 2018 - one has income with no offsetting deduction.
Pastor Burden claimed $41,950 of unreimbursed employee expenses when he filed his 2013 tax return.

Good grief!

The IRS wanted to know what made up this number. Actually, so do I. There were all kinds of travel in there as well as vehicle expenses and other stuff, including “special shoes.”

Let’s talk about his South Africa visit.


He claimed travel expenses of $10,897. When pressed, he did not present receipts or records, opting to explain that he was away from home on ministerial duties for 100 days. At $180 per day – which he described as the “conservative high-low method” - that comes to $18,000 and was way more than he actually deducted. Why was there an issue?

Folks, it does work like that. I presume that he was referring to a per diem, but a per diem refers to hotels, meals and incidental expenses; it does not mean the air fare to get there in the first place. Additionally, one still has to substantiate the business reason for the trip and document the number of days against which to multiply the per diem. I cannot vacation for two weeks in Europe and make it deductible just by wandering into an accountants’ office one afternoon in Budapest.  

Our pastor had a receipt or two. He elaborated that he visited the Apartheid Museum, the Robben Island Museum, Nelson Mandela’s and Bishop Tutu’s residences, and the botanical gardens.

Sounds like a vacation, murmured the IRS.

Not at all, corrected the pastor. I was working.

How were you working, asked the IRS hopefully.

I said a prayer of dedication during a ceremony.

And …?

I led daily devotions with the parishioners who travelled with me. There was also a naming ceremony. I chose Chloe for my name.

Can you get to any records? Daily schedules, appointments, anything to substantiate ….

For international travel to be deductible, the primary purpose of the trip has to be business related. It is somewhat harsh, but that is the rule. If the trip is 45% business, there is no deduction. You do not get to multiply the cost of the trip by 45 percent.

It was a really good prayer, gleamed the pastor.

He also went to the Dominican Republic. Twice. Turns out his wife has family there.

Of course, sighed the IRS. Let’s go over those records. Let’s start with how you got there.

I drove there, said the pastor.

Whaa…?

I have a log. You see, right here, yeah, in January, I drove there. I left on a Sunday and returned the next Wednesday. In September I also left on a Sunday and came back eight days later.

You can’t drive to …

Ah, here it is. You see, my log shows that I drove to South Africa too. That was in December, added the pastor, squinting his eyes while remembering.

And so it continued, including other items that we cannot discuss without sounding like The Onion.

The Court bounced pretty much everything.

The Court also kept the penalty.

This time we discussed Burden and Torres v Commissioner.

It may be my favorite case so far in 2019.

Tuesday, November 6, 2018

Can You Make Gifts To Your Pastor?


Can you give someone money and not have it considered income?

Of course you can.

One way to do it is to die and leave money as a bequest.

That is a bit extreme for the average person, including me.

Another way is to give someone a gift. Granted, if the gift is large enough, you may have to report it. You do not actually write a check to Uncle Sam until your cumulative lifetime gifting exceeds $11,180,000, but you do have to file paperwork.

Can you make a gift to an employee?

Much harder.

The Code does allow some de minimis things, such as holiday hams – but even that has to be under $75. 

Oh, and it cannot be in cash, whether less than $75 or not. Cash taints the deal.

There is a narrow exemption for length of service or safety awards, but let’s pass on those details.

To a tax geek, the general answer is that anything you give an employee is taxable.

I was looking at a case a couple of weeks back that introduced a spin on this concept.

We have a pastor at a Minnesota church.

For the two years at issue he turned down a salary.

He did take a housing allowance.

And then it got interesting.

The church used donation envelopes. They were different colors, with each color having a different meaning.

The basic envelope was white. That was the weekly offering. It included a space where you could designate the amount of the donation that was for the pastor.

There were gold envelopes for special projects and events.

Then there were the blue envelopes. Blue envelopes were “gifts” to the pastor, and congregation members were instructed that those could not be deducted on their tax returns. The church did not track blue envelope donations, nor did the church make blue envelopes commonly available. If you wanted one, you had to ask for one.

For tax years 2008 and 2009, the pastor received the following;

                                                       2008              2009

          White envelopes              $40,000         $40,000
          Housing allowance          $78,000         $78,000
          Blue envelopes              $258,001        $234,826

When the IRS learned of this, they wanted tax on the blue envelopes.

What do you think?

Here is the Bible:
When I preach the gospel, I may make the gospel of Christ without charge, that I abuse not my power in the gospel.” 1 Cor. 9:18

Here is the Court: 
To decide this case, we must descend from the sacred to the profane."  

What sets up the tension in this case is that the term “gift” has a different meaning for tax than for common law. For common law, a gift is made voluntarily and without legal or moral obligation.

Tax views a gift as made from “detached and disinterested generosity” or “out of affection, respect, admiration, charity or like impulses.”

Huh? What is the difference?

The “disinterested generosity.”

That standard can be hard enough to pin down when reviewing a transaction between two individuals. How much harder can it get when reviewing a transaction between a group and an individual?

But that is what the Court had to decide.

The Court walked us through its decision process.

(1) Were donations provided in exchange for services?

The pastor did provide services, and to a reasonable person those blue envelopes look like an incentive for him to keep providing them.

Looks like a vote for income.

(2)  Did the pastor request the donations?

To his credit, the pastor referred to white envelopes when talking about tithes. He did not talk about blue envelopes, and a congregation member had to ask for one as they were not generally available.

Looks like a vote for a gift.

(3) Were the donations part of a routinized program?

That depends. Is the existence of blue envelopes per se evidence of a “routinized program?”

Can mere existence of a program rise to the level of a “routine?”

One can discern some routine no matter what the facts are, as the repetition of any action can be described as a “routine.” However, is that truly the intent of this test?

Call this one a push.

(4) Did the pastor receive a separate salary and what was the relationship of that salary to the personal donations?

The Court was very uncomfortable here:
We cannot ignore the sheer size of blue-envelope donations in 2008 and 2009, or the facts that they are very similar in amount in both years – within 10% of each other. We find it more likely than not that this means there was a ‘regularity of the payments from member to member and year to year ….’”

Oh, oh. We have our tie-breaker.

The Court had to discern the intent of the group, an almost mythical challenge. It saw blue-envelope donations total almost seven times the amount of white-envelope donations and asked: could it be that the congregation was trying to keep its popular and successful preacher?
CTG: I’ll play along: why, yes they were.
If they paid him more and donated less, perhaps they would not be as concerned.
CTG: By that reasoning, had he won the recent billion-dollar lottery they would not have to pay him at all. 
But he needs a certain amount just to pay his bills.
CTG: True, but how many parents across the fruited plain are giving their post-college kids money to live on? Is that income too?
The relationship between a parent and child is different.
CTG: The relationship between a faithful and his/her religious leader can also be different.
But being a minister is his job. Anything he receives for doing his job is – by definition – income.
CTG: Thank you. This is the clearest statement of your reasoning thus far. Why four criteria? Seems to me you could have fast-forwarded to the last one – the only one that really mattered.

The Court decided the pastor had income. He owed tax.

Register my surprise at zero, none, nada. I knew the ending of this movie from the first scene.

Our case this time was Felton v Commissioner.