Steve Hamilton is a Tampa native and a graduate of the University of South Florida and the University of Missouri. He now lives in northern Kentucky. A career CPA, Steve has extensive experience involving all aspects of tax practice, including sophisticated income tax planning and handling of tax controversy matters for closely-held businesses and high-income individuals.
Thursday, November 22, 2018
Saturday, November 17, 2018
Blade’s Offer In Compromise
I am enough
of a nerd to say that I enjoyed the Blade movies. I am a fan of Wesley Snipes,
who played the half-vampire vampire hunter in the series.
You may
recall that he got into big-time tax trouble several years ago. He bought into tax
protestor arguments, such as being an ambassador from the planet Naboo or some
similar nonsense. He spent three years in prison.
When he came
out of prison the IRS wanted over $23 million in taxes, penalties and interest.
He went to a
Collections Due Process hearing. The purpose of a CDP is to tamp-down IRS
aggressiveness in separating you from your money. The CDP has limited range,
but sometimes that range makes all the difference.
So he goes and
requests collection alternatives.
Perfect.
Exactly what a CDP is designed to do.
He proposes
an installment agreement.
There are
flavors of these, and one of the flavors is called a “partial pay.” For a
partial, you have to convince the IRS that you are unable to fully pay your
taxes over the period the IRS can collect from you. You almost have to provide
photos of Bigfoot to persuade the IRS to go along.
Alternatively,
he proposes an offer in compromise (OIC).
In some
cases, the difference between a partial pay and an OIC can be slight, except
for maybe at the edges. For example, enter a partial pay and the IRS may
request payment adjustment if your income goes up. That is a risk you do not
have with an OIC.
Right there
you can anticipate that an OIC is harder to obtain than a partial pay.
And an OIC
for an actor who has made millions from movies is going to be harder still.
OICs are the
“pennies on the dollar” tripe you hear on radio or late-night commercials.
Those “pennies” OICs are few and far between, and usually involve some or all
of the following factors:
· Someone was injured and will never
work again
· Someone has retired and will never
work again
· Someone owns next to nothing
· Someone owes the IRS money
The key
theme here is that someone is broke,
and there is little likelihood that condition will ever change.
Folks, that
is not tax planning. That is bad luck in life, very poor life choices, or both.
Wesley
Snipes put in an OIC of $842,061.
Out of $25
million plus.
Heck, even I
don’t believe him.
Let’s begin with
personal financials. You know the IRS is going to check him out, especially
with such a lowball offer.
· Snipes owns real estate and other
assets through a series of related companies.
OK. The IRS is going to have to look at this.
· Snipes argued that some of this real
estate had been sold or went missing.
OK. The IRS is going to have to look at this.
· Snipes argued that his financial
advisor had “diverted” his assets and money without his knowledge or consent.
OK. The IRS is going to have to look
at this.
· Snipes requested that his tax liability
be “transferred” to his advisor, as the advisor had conveniently “transferred”
Snipe’s assets to himself. This would require an investigation, of course, and perhaps
the IRS could place his account in “currently not collectible” status during
the investigation.
I suspect there is or will be a
lawsuit here. I would have hired an attorney and filed papers already.
The problem is that Appeals (where
Snipes was at the moment) is not built for this. Snipes is requesting an audit,
and audits are done by Examination. Given what was alleged, this matter could
even go to the Criminal Division of the IRS. While Appeals can review the work
of the field (Examination) division, they cannot perform the field
investigation themselves.
· He has one more argument: economic
hardship.
Problem: the normal indicia of
economic hardship include illness, disability, or exhaustion of income or assets providing for oneself or dependents. These do not apply in his case.
That leaves an argument that he is
unable to borrow against assets, and the forced sale of said assets would leave
him unable to meet basic expenses.
This argument may have traction. He
is – after all – asserting that assets have disappeared and he doesn’t know
when or where.
But he failed to provide enough financial
information to allow the IRS to evaluate the matter. The IRS and the Court kept
circling on this point. Could it be that he truly could not sherlock what
happened to his money?
However, not providing information in
an OIC tends to be fatal.
Still, the IRS was moved. They agreed
to reduce the settlement to $9,581,027.
Snipes’ team said: No. It is $842,061
or nothing.
The Court said: Then nothing it is.
I suspect
the most interesting part of the story is the part that was not provided: what
happened to the real estate and other money?
I also wonder
if there is a certain schadenfreude here.
Tax
protestors sometimes use unnecessarily complicated structures (trusts, for
example) to distance, obscure and possibly hide the ultimate control of money
or assets. A protestor would not own real estate directly, for example. Rather
an entity would own the real estate and the protestor would control the entity.
Or there would be an intermediate entity owned by yet another entity controlled
by the protestor.
What if the
protestor goes to prison? The protestor might then cede a certain amount of
authority over the entity/entities to someone – like an advisor - while
incarcerated.
What happens
if that advisor does not have the protestor’s best interest at heart?
Might sound
a lot like what we read here.
Labels:
advisor,
Blade,
compromise,
estate,
IRS,
jail protest,
offer,
payment,
prison,
real,
Snipes,
tax,
Wesley
Sunday, November 11, 2018
Can Creditors Reach The Retirement Account Of A Divorced Spouse?
Let’s say
that you divorce. Let say that retirement savings are unequal between you and your
ex-spouse. As part of the settlement you receive a portion of your spouse’s
401(k) under a “QDRO” order.
COMMENT: A QDRO is a way to get around the rule prohibiting alienation or assignment of benefits under a qualified retirement plan. I generally think of QDROs as arising from divorce, but they could also go to a child or other dependent of the plan participant.
Your QDRO has
(almost) the same restrictions as any other retirement savings. As far as you
or I are concerned, it IS a retirement account.
You file for
bankruptcy.
Can your
creditors reach the QDRO?
Sometimes I
scratch my head over bankruptcy decisions. The reason is that bankruptcy –
while having tax consequences – is its own area of law. If the law part pulls a
bit more weight than the tax part, then the tax consequence may be nonintuitive.
Let’s segue
to an inherited IRA for a moment. Someone passes away and his/her IRA goes to
you. What happens to it in your bankruptcy?
The Supreme
Court addressed this in Clark, where
the Court had to address the definition of “retirement funds” otherwise
protected from creditors in bankruptcy.
The Court
said there were three critical differences between a plain-old IRA and an
inherited IRA:
(1) The holder of an inherited IRA can never add
to the account.
(2) The holder of an inherited IRA must draw money
virtually immediately. There is no waiting until one reaches or nears
retirement.
(3) The holder of an inherited IRA can drain the
account at any time – and without a penalty.
The Court
observed that:
Nothing about the inherited IRA’s legal characteristics would prevent (or even discourage) the individual from using the entire balance of the account on a vacation home or sports car immediately after bankruptcy proceedings are complete.”
The Court continued
that – to qualify under bankruptcy – it is not sufficient that monies be inside
an IRA. Those monies must also rise to the level of “retirement funds,” and –
since the inheritor could empty the account at a moment’s notice - the Court
was simply not seeing that with inherited IRAs.
I get it.
Let’s switch
out the inherited IRA and substitute a QDRO. With a QDRO, the alternate payee
steps into the shoes of the plan participant.
The Eighth
Circuit steps in and applies the 3-factor test of Clark to the QDRO. Let’s walk through it:
(1) The alternate payee cannot add to a QDRO.
(2) The alternate payee does not have to start
immediate withdrawals – unless of required age.
(3) The alternate payee cannot – unless of
required age - immediately empty the account and buy that vacation home or
sports car.
By my account,
the QDRO fails the first test but passes the next two. Since there are three
tests and the QDRO passes two, I expect the QDRO to be “retirement funds” as
bankruptcy law uses the term.
And I would
be wrong.
The Eighth
Circuit notes that tests 2 and 3 do not apply to a QDRO. The Court then concludes
that the QDRO has only one test, and the QDRO fails that.
The Eighth
Circuit explains that Clark:
… clearly suggests that the exemption is limited to individuals who create and contribute funds into the retirement account.”
It is not
clear to me, but there you have it – at least if you live in the Eighth
Circuit.
No
bankruptcy protection for you.
Our case
this time for the home gamers was In re
Lerbakken.
Labels:
bankruptcy,
Clark,
creditor,
divorce,
eighth,
exempt,
inherit,
IRA,
Lerbakken,
QDRO,
retirement,
spouse
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