I suspect
that many of us know more about public charities and foundations than we cared
to know a couple of years ago.
What sets up
the temptation is that someone is not paying taxes, or paying extraordinarily
low taxes. For example, obtain that coveted 501(c)(3) status and you will pay
no taxes, barring extreme circumstances. If one cannot meet the "publicly
supported" test of a (c)(3), the fallback is a private foundation - which only
pays a 2% tax rate (and that can be reduced to 1%, with the right facts).
We should
all be so lucky.
Let's
discuss the issues of charities and private benefit and private inurement.
These rules
exist because of the following language in Section 501(c):
No part of the earnings [of the exempt organization] inures to the benefit of any private shareholder or individual….”
In practice
the Code distinguishes inurement depending upon who is being benefitted.
If that
someone is an “insider,” then the issue is private inurement. An insider is
someone who has enough influence or sway to affect the decision and actions of
the organization.
A common
enough example of private inurement is excessive compensation to a founder or
officer. The common safeguard is to
empower an independent compensation committee, with authority to review and
decide compensation packages. While not failsafe, it is a formidable defense.
If that
someone is an “outsider,” then the term is private benefit.
Here is a
question: say that someone sets up a foundation to assist with the expenses of
breast cancer diagnosis and treatment. Several years later a family member is
so diagnosed. Have we wandered into the realm of private inurement or benefit?
The Code
will allow one to receive benefits from the charity – if that individual is also
a member of a charitable class. In our example, that class is breast cancer
patients. If one becomes a member of that class, one should sidestep the
inurement or benefit issue.
The “should”
is because the Code will not accept too small a charitable class. Say – for
example - that the charitable class is restricted to the families of Cincinnati
tax CPAs who went to school in Florida and Missouri, have in-laws overseas and
who would entertain an offer to play in the NFL. While I have no problem with that
charitable class, it is very unlikely the IRS would approve.
By the way,
the cost of failing can be steep. There may be penalties on the charity and/or
the insider. Push it too far and the organization's exempt status may be
revoked altogether.
Or you may
never be exempt to begin with. Let’s look at a recent IRS review of an application
for exempt status.
A family
member has a rare disease. You establish a foundation to "assist
adolescent children and families in coping with undiagnosed and/or debilitating
diseases."
The Code
allows you to operate for a while and retroactively apply for exemption, which
you do.
Sounds good so far.
You and your
spouse are the incorporators.
This is common. You can still establish an independent Board.
Your organizing
paperwork does not have a "dissolution" clause.
Big oversight. The dissolution clause means that - upon dissolution - all remaining assets go to another charity. To say it differently, remaining assets cannot return to you or your spouse.
The charity is
named after your son, who suffers from an unidentified illness.
Not an issue. I suspect many foundations begin this way.
Your
fundraising materials specifically request donations to help your son.
You are stepping a bit close to the third rail with this one.
Since
inception, the only individual to receive funds is your son. Granted, you have
said you intend to make future distributions to other individuals and unrelated
nonprofits with a similar mission statement. Those individuals and
organizations will have to apply, and a committee will review their
application. It just hasn’t happened yet.
Problem.
The IRS
looked at your application for exemption and bounced it. There were two main reasons:
First, the
problem with the paperwork, specifically the dissolution clause. The IRS would
likely have allowed you the opportunity to correct this matter, except that ...
Secondly,
there were operational issues. It does not matter how flowery that mission
statement is. The IRS reserves the right to look at what you are actually
doing, and in this case what you were actually doing was making your son's
medical expenses tax-deductible by introducing a (c)(3). Granted, there was
language allowing for other children and other organizations, but the reality is
that your son was the only beneficiary of the charity's largesse. The rest was
just words.
The IRS denied
the request. All the benefits of the organization went to your family, and the
promise of future beneficiaries was too dim and distant to sway the answer. You
had too small a charitable class (that is, a class of one), and that constitutes
private inurement.
And you still
have a tax problem. You have an entity that has collected money and made disbursements.
The intent was for it to be a charity, but that intent was dashed. The entity
has to file a tax return, but it will have to file as a taxpaying entity.
Are the
monies received taxable income? Are the medical expenses even deductible? You
have a mess.
The upside
is that you would only be filing tax returns for a year or two, as you would
shut down the entity immediately.