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 24, 2022
Saturday, November 19, 2022
Can A Severance Be A Gift?
I am looking at a case wondering why a tax practitioner would take it to Tax Court.
Then I
noticed that it is a pro se case.
We have
talked about this before: pro se means that the taxpayer is representing
himself/herself. Technically that is not correct (for example, someone could
drag me in and still be considered pro se), but it is close enough for our
discussion.
Here is the
issue:
Can an employer make a nontaxable
gift to an employee?
Jennifer
Fields thought so.
She worked
at Paragon Canada from 2009 to 2017. Apparently, she was on good terms with her
boss, as the company …
· Wired her 35,000 Canadian dollars in
2012
· Wired her $53,020 in 2014 to help
with the down payment on a house in Washington state.
I am
somewhat jealous. I am a career CPA, and CPA firms are not known for … well,
doing what Paragon did for Jennifer.
She
separated from Paragon in 2017.
They
discussed a severance package.
Part of the
package was forgiveness of the loan arising from those wires.
Forgiveness
here does not mean what it means on Sunday. The company may forgive repayment,
but the IRS will still consider the amount forgiven to be taxable income. The
actual forgiveness is therefore the after-tax amount. If one’s tax rate is 25%,
then the actual forgiveness would be 75% of the amount forgiven. It is still a
good deal but not free.
Paragon
requested and she provided a Form W-9 (the form requesting her social security
number).
Well, we
know that she will be getting a W-2 or a 1099 for that loan.
A W-2 would
be nice. Paragon would pick-up half of the social security and Medicare taxes.
If she is really lucky, they might even gross-up her bonus to include the taxes
thereon, making the severance as financially painless as possible.
She received a 1099.
Oh well.
She left the
1099 off her tax return.
The IRS
computers caught it.
Because … of
course.
Off to Tax
Court they went.
This is not
highbrow tax law, folks. She worked somewhere. She received a paycheck. She
left work. She received a final paycheck. What is different about that last one?
· She tried to get Paragon to consider
some of her severance as a gift.
The Court was curt on this point. You can try to be a bird,
but you better not be jumping off tall buildings thinking you can fly.
· She was good friends with her boss.
She produced e-mails, text messages and what-not.
That’s nice, said the Court, but this is a job. There is an
extremely high presumption in the tax Code that any payment to an employee is
compensatory.
But my boss and I were good friends, she pressed. The law
allows a gift when the relationship between employer and employee is personal
and the payment is unrelated to work.
Huh, I wonder what that means.
Anyway, the Court was not buying:
Paragon’s inclusion of the disputed amount in the signed and
executed severance agreement and the subsequent issuance of a Form 1099-MISC
indicates that the payments were not intended to be a gift.”
She really
did not have a chance.
The IRS also
wanted penalties. Not just your average morning-drive-through penalties, no
sir. They wanted the Section 6662(a) “accuracy related” penalty. Why? Well,
because that penalty is 20%, and it is triggered if the taxpayer omits enough
income to underpay tax by the greater of $5 grand or 10% of what the tax should
have been.
Think biggie
size.
The Court
agreed on the penalty.
I was
thinking what I would have done if Jennifer had been my client.
First, I
would have explained that her chance of winning was almost nonexistent.
COMMENT: She would have fired me then, realistically.
Our best
course would be to resolve the matter administratively.
I want the
penalties dropped.
That means
we are bound for Appeals. There is no chance of getting that penalty dropped
before then.
I would
argue reasonable cause. I would likely get slapped down, but I would argue. I
might get something from the Appeals Officer.
Our case
this time was Fields v Commissioner, T.C. Summary Opinion 2022-22.
Sunday, November 6, 2022
Thinking About Private Foundations
I’ll admit it: last month (October) left room for
improvement. An unresponsive IRS and a dearth of hirable accounting talent is
taking its toll here at Command Center. I am hoping that recent hiring at the
IRS will take the edge off the former; I see little respite from the latter,
however.
This month many of our nonprofit returns are due. That
is OK, as those do not approach the volume of individual returns we prepare.
I find myself thinking about private foundations.
I would set-up a family foundation if I came into megabucks. It would, among other things, allow the CTG family to aggregate, review, discuss and decide our charitable giving as a family unit.
But I have also been in practice long enough to see family foundations misused. A common-enough practice is to hire an … unmotivated … family member as a foundation employee.
Let’s talk about the self-dealing rules and foundations.
First, let’s clarify what we mean when we use the term
private (or family) foundation.
It is a charity – like the March of Dimes or United
Way – but not as much. Think of foundations as the milk chocolate to the public
charity dark chocolate. The dark chocolate is – let’s be frank – the better
chocolate. Contributions to both are tax deductible, but there are restrictions
on the private foundation that do not exist for a public charity. Why? Because
a public charity tends to have a diverse and diffuse donor base. A private
foundation can be one family – or one person. A private foundation can therefore
be more disposed to get its nose in traps than a public charity.
Let’s introduce two terms: disqualified persons and self-dealing.
There are two main categories of disqualified persons.
I will use the CTG Foundation (and its one donor – me) as an example.
· Category
One
o
A substantial contributor (that would be
me)
o
Members of my family
o
A corporation, partnership or trust
wherein I am at least a 35% owner
· Category
Two
o
Foundation directors and officers
o
Their families
A family foundation might keep everything in the family,
in which case categories one and two are the same people. It does not have to be,
though.
We have the players. Now we need an event, such as:
· Buying
or selling property from or to a disqualified (person)
· Renting
from or to a disqualified (unless from and for free)
· Lending
money to or borrowing from a disqualified (unless from and interest free)
· Allowing
disqualifieds to use the foundation’s assets or facilities, except on terms
available to all members of the public
· Paying
or reimbursing unreasonable or unrelated expenses of a disqualified
· Paying
excessive compensation to a disqualified
In theory, that last one would discourage hiring the …
unmotivated … family member. In reality … there is very little discouragement.
The deterring effect of punishment is impacted by its likelihood: no likelihood
= no deterrence.
A key thing about self-dealing transactions is that,
as a generalization, the tax Code does not care whether the foundation is getting
a “deal.” Say that I own rental real
estate in Pigeon Forge. I sell it to the CTG Foundation for pennies on the
dollar. Financially, the foundation has received a significant benefit. Tax-wise,
there is self-dealing. The Code says “NO” buying or selling to or from a disqualified.
There is no modifying language for “a deal.”
So, what happens if there is self-dealing?
There are two tiers of penalties.
· Tier
One
o
A 10% annual penalty on the self-dealer. In
our Pigeon Forge example, that would be me. If the violation is not cleaned-up
quickly, the 10% applies every year until it is.
o
There may be a 5% penalty on a
foundation manager who participated in the act of self-dealing, knowing it to
be such. Again, the penalty applies annually.
· Tier
Two
o
The Code wants the foundation and
disqualified to reverse and clean-up whatever they did. In that spirit, the
penalty becomes severe if they blow it off:
§ The
penalty on the self-dealer goes to 200%
§ The
penalty on the foundation manager goes to 50%
You clearly want to avoid tier two.
What would impel the foundation to even report
self-dealing and pay those penalties?
I like to think that the annual 990-PF preparation by
a reputable accounting or law firm would provide motivation. I would
immediately fire a private foundation client which entered into and refused to
unwind a self-deal. I am more concerned about my reputation and licensure. I
can always get another client.
Then there is the possibility of an IRS audit.
It happens. I was reading one where the private foundation
made a loan to a disqualified. The disqualified never made payments or even paid
interest, and this went on for so long that the statute of limitations expired.
According to the IRS, it might not be able to get to those closed years for
penalties, but it could force the foundation to increase the loan balance by
the missed interest payments (even for closed tax years) when calculating
penalties for the open years.
Yep, that is what got me thinking about private
foundations.
For the home gamers, this time we discussed CCA
202243008.
Saturday, November 5, 2022
Is Found Money Taxable?
Say that you found a money clip with several hundred dollars. There is no identification, so there is no way to return it.
Question: Do you have taxable income?
Let’s look
at a famous tax case.
In 1957 the
Cesarinis purchased a used piano at an auction for $15. Their daughter took lessons
using this piano.
In 1964, while
cleaning the piano, they discovered $4,467 in old currency bills. They exchanged
the old currency for new at the bank. They also reported the $4,467 as income
on their tax return.
By October
1965 they were having second thoughts. They amended their 1964 tax return,
reversing the $4,467 from income and asking for a tax refund of $836.
The IRS
rejected the refund claim.
Off to Court
they went.
The
Cesarinis had three arguments:
(1) The $4,467 was not income under the tax Code.
(2) If it was, then it was income in 1957, when
they purchased the piano. Since 1957 was a closed tax year, there was no
further tax consequence.
(3) Even if it was taxable in 1964, it
should be taxable as capital gains and not as ordinary income.
The Court
was methodical:
· Code section 61(a) stated “except as otherwise provided in this subtitle, gross income means all income from whatever source derived….”
Granted, there are other
sections that may keep a source from being taxed – or delaying its taxation –
but the general rule is to consider all accessions to wealth as taxable. The
language was intentional, and it was deliberately used by Congress to assert
the full measure of its taxing power under the 16th amendment.
· The IRS did not, but the Court did,
point to the following Regulation:
Treasure trove, to the extent of its value in United States
currency, constitutes gross income for the taxable year in which it is reduced
to undisputed possession.”
The Cesarinis, seeing an opening, pressed on the year they obtained
undisputed possession.
That is not a tax question per se, so the Court looked at state
law. Say the Cesarinis had sold the piano in 1958, not knowing about the cash.
Would they have an action against a purchaser who later found the cash? In Ohio
(their state of residence) they would not. Extrapolating, the Court determined that
“undisputed possession” occurred in 1964, when the cash was found.
· The Court acknowledged that both the piano and the cash could be construed as capital assets, and that capital gains derive from the sale or exchange of capital assets.
And this is where word selection is
critical: neither the piano or the currency had been sold or exchanged. No sale
or exchange = no capital gain.
The Cesarini
case cemented that found money – sometimes called “treasure trove” – is taxable
just like any other type of income.
You are not
really surprised at the answer, are you?
Our case
this time was Cesarini v United States 296 F Supp 3 (N.D. Ohio 1969).
Sunday, October 2, 2022
The Obamacare Subsidy Cliff
I am looking at a case involving the premium tax
credit.
We are talking about the Affordable Care Act, also
known as Obamacare.
Obamacare uses mathematical tripwires in its
definitions. That is not surprising, as one must define “affordable,” determine
a “subsidy,” and - for our discussion – calculate a subsidy phase-out. Affordable
is defined as cost remaining below a certain percentage of household income.
Think of someone with extremely high income - Elon Musk, for example. I
anticipate that just about everything is affordable to him.
COMMENT: Technically the subsidy is referred to as the “advance premium tax credit.” For brevity, we will call it the subsidy.
There is a particular calculation, however, that is brutal.
It is referred to as the “cliff,” and you do not want to be anywhere near it.
One approaches the cliff by receiving the subsidy. Let’s say that your premium would be $1,400 monthly but based on expected income you qualify for a subsidy of $1,000. Based on those numbers your out-of-pocket cost would be $400 a month.
Notice that I used the word “expected.” When
determining your 2022 subsidy, for example, you would use your 2022 income.
That creates a problem, as you will not know your 2022 income until 2023, when
you file your tax return. A rational alternative would be to use the prior
year’s (that is, 2021’s) income, but that was a bridge too far for Congress.
Instead, you are to estimate your 2022 income. What if you estimate too high or
too low? There would be an accounting (that is, a “true up”) when you file your
2022 tax return.
I get it. If you guessed too high, you should have
been entitled to a larger subsidy. That true-up would go on your return and
increase your refund. Good times.
What if it went the other way, however? You guessed
too low and should have received a smaller subsidy. Again, the true-up would go
on your tax return. It would reduce your refund. You might even owe. Bad times.
Let’s introduce another concept.
ACA posited that health insurance was affordable if
one made enough money. While a priori truth, that generalization was unworkable.
“Enough money” was defined as 400% of the poverty level.
Below 400% one could receive a subsidy (of some amount).
Above 400% one would receive no subsidy.
Let’s recap:
(1) One could receive a subsidy if one’s income
was below 400% of the poverty level.
(2) One guessed one’s income when the subsidy
amount was initially determined.
(3) One would true-up the subsidy when filing
one’s tax return.
Let’s set the trap:
(1) You estimated your income too low and received
a subsidy.
(2) Your actual income was above 400% of the
poverty level.
(3) You therefore were not entitled to any subsidy.
Trap: you must repay the excess subsidy.
That 400% - as you can guess – is the cliff we
mentioned earlier.
Let’s look at the Powell case.
Robert Powell and Svetlana Iakovenko (the Powells)
received a subsidy for 2017.
They also claimed a long-term capital loss deduction
of $123,822.
Taking that big loss into account, they thought they were
entitled to an additional subsidy of $636.
Problem.
Capital losses do not work that way. Capital losses
are allowed to offset capital losses dollar-for-dollar. Once that happens,
capital losses can only offset another $3,000 of other income.
COMMENT: That $3,000 limit has been in the tax Code since before I started college. Considering that I am close to 40 years of practice, that number is laughably obsolete.
The IRS caught the error and sent the Powells a
notice.
The IRS notice increased their income to over 400% and
resulted in a subsidy overpayment of $17,652. The IRS wanted to know how the
Powells preferred to repay that amount.
The Powells – understandably stunned – played one of
the best gambits I have ever read. Let’s read the instructions to the tax form:
We then turn to the text
of Schedule D, line 21, for the 2017 tax year, which states as follows:
If line
16 is a loss, enter ... the smaller of:
· The
loss on line 16 or
· $3,000
So?
The Powells pointed out that a loss of $123,822 is
(technically) smaller than a loss of $3,000. Following the literal instructions,
they were entitled to the $123,822 loss.
It is an incorrect reading, of course, and the Powells
did not have a chance of winning. Still, the thinking is so outside-the-box
that I give them kudos.
Yep, the Powells went over the cliff. It hurt.
Note that the Powell’s year was 2017.
Let’s go forward.
The American Rescue Plan eliminated any subsidy
repayment for 2020.
COVID year. I understand.
The subsidy was reinstated for 2021 and 2022, but
there was a twist. The cliff was replaced with a gradual slope; that is, the
subsidy would decline as income increased. Yes, you would have to repay, but it
would not be that in-your-face 100% repayment because you hit the cliff.
Makes sense.
What about 2023?
Let’s go to new tax law. The ironically named
Inflation Reduction Act extended the slope-versus-cliff relief through 2025.
OK.
Congress of course just kicked the can down the road,
as the cliff will return in 2026.
Our case this time was Robert Lester Powell and
Svetlana Alekseevna Iakovenko v Commissioner, T.C. Summary Opinion 2002-19.
Sunday, September 25, 2022
An Intelligence Site, A Tax Treaty, and a Closing Agreement
I am looking at a case involving IRS closing agreements and the U.S. Pine Gap facility in Australia.
It gives us a chance to talk about closing agreements,
an uncommon topic.
It also gives a chance to talk about Pine Gap, which
is a U.S. Intelligence-gathering facility in the Northern Territory of
Australia. It started decades ago as a monitoring station for Soviet ballistic
testing, and with the years it has acquired several new roles. Think of drone attacks
in Pakistan, and you have an idea of what happens at Pine Gap.
FIRST ACT: we have a spooky intelligence site.
Let’s move on to a treaty.
Under general tax rules, Australia would be able to
tax American workers at Pine Gap. They are - after all – working in Australia. This
was not the desired result, so a treaty in the 1960s exempted American workers
at Pine Gap from Australian tax. There was a requisite, though: to be exempt, the
wages had to be taxed by the U.S.
Got it. There was a one-bite-at-the-apple rule.
Australia would back off if the U.S. got the first bite.
But U.S. tax law also includes a foreign earned income
exclusion, whereby an American worker overseas could exempt some (or all) of
his/her wages from tax, if certain requirements were met.
How could Australia be sure that the wages were being taxed
by the U.S.? Mind you, the alternative was for Australia to apply the default
rule, meaning that both Australia and the U.S. would tax the wages. Sure, the
worker could claim a foreign tax credit on his/her U.S. tax return, but the tax
consequences of working at Pine Gap would have escalated unappealingly.
The treaty was revised in the 1980s to allow American
workers at Pine Gap to relinquish their foreign earned income exclusion by
entering into a closing agreement with the IRS.
SECOND ACT: we have an income tax treaty.
Cory was a U.S. Air Force veteran and engineer. In
2009 he received a job offer from Raytheon to work at Pine Gap. He was informed
that Australia would not tax him, but to get there he would have to sign a
closing agreement with the IRS. The agreement was straightforward: he would not
claim the foreign earned income exclusion.
Mind you, he did not have to sign a closing agreement.
Australia would then tax him, and his U.S. return would get a little more
complicated.
Cory signed the agreement.
The point behind a closing agreement is finality. Both
sides agree, settle, and move on. Excepting fraud or malfeasance, there are no
“do-overs.” That is - as you would expect - the reason that one requests one.
An example is the wrap-up of a taxable estate. The tax practitioner does not
want that estate resurrecting later, causing headaches when all parties
considered the matter closed.
Cory wanted out of his closing agreement.
Problem.
Closing agreements arise under a Code section. This means
that the Court would be reviewing statutory law (that is, the Code as statute
on the matter) and not just the general principles of contract law (offer, acceptance,
and all that).
That Code section doesn’t let one off the hook without
showing malfeasance or misrepresentation of a material fact.
Cory argued that he met that standard. Somebody
somewhere at the IRS did not have appropriate signature authority; the IRS
committed malfeasance by sharing information with his employer, Raytheon; he
was induced to sign by false representations.
I think Cory was grasping at straws.
The Court apparently thought the same way. The Court
decided Cory was stuck with the agreement. He signed it; he owned it.
THIRD ACT: we have a closing agreement.
This is a specialized case pulling-in several
different areas of the Code.
I get Cory’s point. He wanted exemption both from
Australian tax AND some/all U.S. tax.
Me too, Cory. Me too.
Our case this time was Cory H Smith v Commissioner,
159 T.C. No. 3 (Aug 25,2022).
Sunday, September 18, 2022
No Penalty Abatement When Taxes Not Paid For Years
I am looking at a case where the taxpayers wanted penalty
abatement for reasonable cause.
I have been cynical for years about the IRS allowing reasonable
cause, but let’s read on.
The Koncurats owed for years 2005, 2006 and 2010
through 2016.
CTG: There is a donut in there from 2007 through 2009.
I wonder what happened?
For the years at issue Stephen Koncurat owned his own company
in the insurance industry. Tamara Koncurat maintained their home and raised
four children.
The interest and penalties added up, exceeding $670
grand. To their credit, the Koncurats did not argue the tax due. They did feel,
however, that penalty abatement was warranted because “circumstances largely
beyond his control” prevented them from meeting their tax obligations.
There were a lot of years involved, though. What were
those circumstances?
· Around
2007 or 2008 Stephen had six rental properties foreclosed.
COMMENT: Got it. That was
the Lehman Brothers bankruptcy and the near implosion of the American housing
market.
· From
2010 to 2011 Stephen’s income dropped sharply from over $450K to about $96K.
· There was a stretch where they could not even afford to make their house payment. Stephen’s father made the payments for them.
OBSERVATION: This is years after 2005 and 2006, however. I can see going into a payment plan, then negotiating with the IRS to reduce or interrupt payments because of subsequent events cratering one’s income. It is not the easiest thing to do, but it can be done.
· Around
2014 or 2015 Stephen broke his back.
· In
2018 he was diagnosed with cancer and a blocked artery.
· He
thereafter underwent three major surgeries and attended over 100 medical
appointments.
He continued to work, as best he could., They reported
the following income:
2005 $274,359
2006 $251,902
2010 $462,455
2011 $95,974
2012 $71,847
2013 $109,072
2014 $171,648
2015 $207,398
2016 $314,491
I get it. The 2011 through 2013 tax years were aberrant.
I am impressed how well he did during the broken back,
cancer and surgery years, though.
Stephen voluntarily paid $1,500 a month to the IRS.
Good.
Starting January 2020.
What? Starting …??
I admit, this is going to be a problem. Unexpected
circumstances can knock you off your feet. Maybe you don’t file or pay for a
couple of years, but there is a beginning and end to the story. Somewhere in
there the IRS – and reasonable cause – expects you to put on your big boy pants
and try to comply. Hopefully you can file and pay, but maybe all you can do is
file. Fine, then file and request a payment plan. Will the IRS be unreasonable?
Of course. What if they want more than you can pay? Then request a Collections
Due Process hearing.
The point is: get back into the system.
If you don’t, then reasonable cause – hard to obtain
under regular circumstances – takes a step up the difficulty ladder. You now
have to present “unavoidable obstacles” to your compliance.
Short of being in a coma or Marvel Universe superheroes
destroying your city, that “unavoidable” threshold is going to be near-nigh
impossible to meet.
Here is the Court:
· They
have alleged no details sufficient to support a finding that any of the hardships
they experienced actually presented unavoidable obstacles.”
· Further,
the Koncurats have not alleged … that they ‘didn’t have [the money] or couldn’t
keep [the installment plan] going…’”
· While
the family’s financial troubles were significant at times, the record reflects
that they have had consistent access to financial resources throughout the years
at issue.”
· They
were … contributing tuition, housing and wedding expenses to children….”
That last one doesn’t make sense for broke people.
· Stephen
Koncurat earned more than one million dollars in income in 2019, and again in
2021.”
So we are not talking about broke people. Broke people
do not make a million dollars a year.
The Court wanted to know why – with that million
dollars – they did not clean-up their tax debt – or at least a chunk of it – rather
than delaying payment and tying up the Court’s time.
There was no reasonable cause for the Koncurats. Heck,
one could have looked at the extended failure to pay and instead concluded that
there was willful neglect.
Meaning no penalty abatement.
No surprise there.
The Koncurats dug themselves a hole by letting the
matter go on long enough to attend high school. The likelihood of reasonable
cause over that much time was minimal, but I do think that there was something
they could have done to improve their odds.
What would that have been?
Take that $1 million dollars and pay the IRS.
They would then have gone before the Court and argued
that they had a bad stretch, causing them to fail in their obligations and run
afoul of the tax system. However, when their fortune improved, the first party
they took care of was … the IRS.
Would this have allowed reasonable cause? Financial
difficulties generally do not lead to eligibility for reasonable cause relief.
But it would not have hurt. It also would have lifted the
needle off zero and given the Court something specific to support a
taxpayer-favorable determination.
Our case this time was United States v Koncurat,
USDC MD, Case No 1:21-cv-00676.