Title: Stock and Debt Basis: Litigation, Rulings and Other Developments
1Chapter 3
- Stock and Debt Basis Litigation, Rulings and
Other Developments - IRC 1366(d), 1367
2Circular 230 Disclaimer
- Any tax advice contained in the body of this
presentation was not intended or written to be
used, and cannot be used, by the recipient for
the purpose of avoiding penalties that may be
imposed under the Internal Revenue Code or
applicable state or local tax law provisions.
3Overview
- Importance
- Gain or loss on sale
- Tax free distributions
- Allowable losses
4Caution
- Basis does not ensure deduction of losses
- At-risk rules
- (Nonrecourse or co-venturer financing)
- PAL rules
- Rental, business w/o material participation
- Others
- Capital loss, investment interest, charitable,
etc.
5Sequence of Loss Limits
- Source Loss and Deduction Limits Chapter 2 of
2003 National Income Tax Workbook. College
Station, TX, Land Grant University Tax Education
Foundation, pp. 43-94
61 Statutory Provisions For Debt Basis
- Little Amplification
- Regulations never have contained rule
- Frequent litigation
7Areas of litigation
- Guarantee by shareholder
- Loan from related person
- Origin of funds
- Other
8 101 Guarantees and Similar Arrangements
101.01 Cases decided before 1986.
No form of indirect borrowing, be it guaranty,
surety, accommodation, comaking or otherwise,
gives rise to
indebtedness from the corporation to the
shareholders
until and unless the shareholders pay all or a
part of the obligation
Raynor v. Commr, 50 TC 762 (1968)
9Cases Decided Before 1986 (cont)
- Perry,
- Borg,
- Neal,
- Blum,
- Cole,
- Smalley,
- Wheat
- Mirow
- Duke,
- Brown, JW
- Brown, F
- Williams,
- Calcutt,
- Harrington,
- Allowed 2.50
10Guarantees and Similar Arrangements (Cont)
- The Selfe decision
- Pro se 11th Cir, 1985
- Used Plantation Patterns as precedent
- Ct. found constructive
- Bank gt S/H gt Corp
11Selfe relationships
12Selfe Result
13Guarantees and Similar Arrangements (Cont)
- Decisions after Selfe
- Nowhere but 11th Cir.
- Leavitt departed from Selfe
- Schneiderman
- Calcutt
14Guarantees and Similar Arrangements (Cont)
- 101.04 IRS rulings
- Rev Rul 70-50 no basis until paid
- Rev. Rul. 71-288 later payment later basis
- Rev Rul 75-144 how to create basis
15IRS Rulings (Cont)
- How to create basis
- Rev Rul 75-144
- Substitute s/h for corp. on note
- Subrogation
- No checks necessary
16Rev Rul 75-144
17Rev Rul 75-144 (cont)
18IRS Rulings (cont)
- More recent rulings
- Rev. Rul. 81-187 economic outlay
19Substitution of Personal Note for Corporate Note
- SCT 101.05
- Following RR 75-144
- Gilday allowed basis with no subrogation
20Compare basis of S corp. Shareholder with LLC
member
21102 Loans from Parties Related to Shareholders
Prashker
22102 Loans from Parties Related to Shareholders
- Trusts
- Robertson
- Partnerships
- Frankel, Hill Blalock,
- Corporations
- Gurda, Meissner
23Loans from Parties Related to Shareholders (cont)
- Underwood
- Careful, observed some formalities
- Still lost
24Underwood, before rewrite
25Underwood, after rewrite
26Underwood, (cont)
- No Economic Outlay on part of Mr. Underwood
- Fatal to case
27Loans from Parties Related to Shareholders (cont)
- Wilson
- S1 loaned to S2 S3.
- Distributed notes from S1 to shareholders
- No basis allowed
- Factual problems
28Loans from Parties Related to Shareholders (cont)
- Shareholder victory Culnen
- Good books, and pre-taxed income
- But remember litigation cost
- Loss computation upheld in 2002
29Culnen Illustrated
- Compare cash flow with tax treatment
30Loans from Parties Related to Shareholders (cont)
- Shareholder victory Yates
- Mr. Y owned stock in 2 S corps (F A).
- A advanced money to F
- Mr. Y then split holdings for liability purposes.
- Kept all stock in A and gave all stock in F to
his wife. - After gift A continued to advance money to F.
31Loans from Parties Related to Shareholders (cont)
- Yates, contYates claimed
- Pre gift advances were distributions from A to Y,
who then contributed to capital to F -
32Loans from Parties Related to Shareholders (cont)
- Yates claimed
- Post gift advances were loans from A to Mrs. Y,
who then contributed to capital to F -
33After Culnen and Yates
- Miller (2006)
- Typical guarantee
- Refinanced and restructured, similar to RR 75-144
- Later corporation defaulted
- Other shareholders paid on Millers behalf
- Court found Miller was subject to economic burden
of repayment in the years in question, allowed
basis. - In later year, when other invertors relieved him,
he had cancellation of debt income. - Miller v. Commr, TC Memo 2006-125
34After Culnen and Yates
- In Gleason, there was weak documentation (both
sides) - Where money to corporation was clearly traceable
to shareholders personal borrowing, basis was
allowed - For situations where there were no clear tracks,
no basis was allowed.
35Back-to-Back and Circular Loans
- 103
- Lender -gt S/H -gt S Corp
- Seven Sixty Ranch Co. v. Kennedy
- Burnstein
- PLR 8747013
- Legitimate basis
36Back-to-Back Loans (Cont)Seven-Sixty and
Cornelius
- Back to back loan
- Court allowed basis
37Back-to-Back Loans (Cont)Bader Case
No basis Bader, PLR 9403003
38Oren and other Circular Cases
- Bergman
- Oren
- Kaplan
- Kerzner
39Bergman
40Bergman (cont)
41Circularity in Oren
42Oren Step Transactions
- Loan to create basis in Highway Leasing
43Oren Step Transactions
- Source of loan to create basis
44Oren Step Transactions
- Source of source of loan to create basis
45Circular Loans
- Kaplan
- 12/29/97 - - Sole shareholder of 2 S corps
borrowed 800,000 from bank. - Shareholder provided no personal financial
statements to lender but collateralized loan with
bank accounts of 2 S corps. - 12/29/97 -- the shareholder loaned 550,000 to
one S corp. and 250,000 to second S corp. - 1/8/98, shareholder borrowed 550,000 from 1st S
corp. and 250,000 from 2nd S corp. - 1/8/98, shareholder repaid bank loan.Funds never
left bank.
46Circular Loans
- Ruckriegel (2006)
- Two shareholders were also partners in a
partnership (equal and only in both) - The partnership advanced money to the corporation
and to the partners, who advanced to the
corporation. - The partner/shareholders were allowed basis for
amounts they had actually received, but not for
the transfers from the partnership
47Kerzner
- Loans from a partnership to its partners to the S
corporation in which the partners were also
shareholders - Shareholders loaned money to the S corporation
- The S corporation paid rent to the partnership.
- All transactions were in identical amounts within
three days. - IRS concludes that the entire series of
transactions was essentially circular. - Thus the shareholders do not get S corporation
basis for the funds they borrow from the
partnership and lend to the S corporation.
48Kerzner
49Miscellaneous Basis Litigation
- 104
- Applicability to Successor Corporation
- Carryback of losses
- Open Account loans
50Applicability to Successor Corporation
- 104.01
- Shareholders basis in survivor included basis in
loan to merged corp. Hunt
51Applicability to Successor Corporation (cont.)
- Transferee Liability
- Hitchins
- Hitchins was s/h in Corp 1
- Hitchins made loan to Corp 2
- Corp 1 assumed Corp 2s debt
- Tax Court held no basis to Hitchins
52Applicability to Successor Corporation (cont.)
- The rationale of Hitchins has been followed in a
similar circumstance. - Court upheld the substantial understatement
penalty of 6661. Bhatia
53Applicability to Successor Corporation (cont.)
- Taxpayer victory in Rose
- Shareholder loaned to PKV Corporation
- PKV merged into SLPC Corporation, which survived
the merger. - IRS and Tax Court denied basis in SLPC
- 11th Cir. Found that shareholder had made
economic outlay and allowed
54Unpaid Wages from the Corporation
- 104.02
- No basis for accruals not yet reported as income
by s/h - Borg, Leavitt, Sperl
55Open Account Loans
- Brooks v. Commissioner
- Effect of New Loans in the Same Year as Repayment
- If separate loans, presumably new lending does
not create basis for prior repayments - However, if the corporation and shareholders
maintain open accounts, the Tax Court has ruled
that all repayments and new loans in same year
are netted. Brooks v. Commr - Thus under the Brooks rationale, if year end loan
balance equals or exceeds the balance at the
beginning of the year, there has been no
repayment
56Brooks Case
- Prior to 1999, the shareholders had advanced
funds, the basis of which had been reduced to
zero by 1999. - In early 1999 the corporation repaid some of the
advances - In 1999, the corporation did not have net income,
so there was no basis restoration to the debt
repaid early in the year. - In late 1999, the shareholders advanced the
corporation enough to cover the prior repayments
and the 1999 losses.
57Brooks (Cont)
- According to the IRS, each advance was a distinct
transaction. - Therefore, there was no basis in the loan made
prior to 1999 when it was repaid.
58Open Account Loans (Cont)
- Anti-Brooks Proposed Regulation
- However, the IRS has proposed amendments to Reg.
1.13672, which would limit the treatment of
open account debt as a single instrument only
when the total balance does not exceed 10,000
on any day of the taxable year. - On the first day the debt exceeds 10,000, the
corporation must begin computing interest, and
the debt loses its status as open account,
permanently.
59Open Account Loans (Cont)
- Anti-Brooks Final Regulation
- However, the Final Regulation adopted in October
2008 is somewhat more liberal - The shareholder/creditor will need to keep a
running balance of all debts from the corporation
(including written instruments). - If the total of this running balance exceeds
25,000 on the last day of the year, the advances
and repayments will each constitute a separate
indebtedness from that day forward.
60105 Basis Adjustments
- Most adjustments in distributions materials
- 105.01 Apportionment of Losses in Excess of
Basis - 105.02 Charitable Contributions of Capital Gain
Property
61105.01 Apportionment of Losses in Excess of Basis
- Losses may be ordinary, capital, from active
business, from rental activities, etc. - Regulations under Subchapter S provide that
allocation of the basis limit shall be
apportioned to each loss pro-rata. - The Code treats charitable contributions as one
of the items that are limited by shareholder
basis.
62Example 1
- Basis 35,000
- Losses deductions total 50,000
- 40,000 ordinary loss
- 10,000 charitable contribution
- Claim 70 (35/50) in current year
- Ordinary 28,000
- Charitable 7,000
- Carry remainder of each forward
63105.02 Charitable Contributions of Capital Gain
Property
- Temporary rule
- Shareholders reduce stock basis for allocable
portions of basis in contribution - Allocate basis when there are multiple losses in
excess. - Apply same percentage to charitable deduction
64Example 2
- Same except contribution was capital gain
property - Basis 10,000
- Value 25,000
- Basis reduction and percentage apportionment are
the same
65Example 2
- Shareholder claims equivalent percent of basis,
plus all appreciation, as deduction - Claim 70 (35/50) in current year
- Ordinary 28,000
- Charitable basis 7,000
- Charitable appreciation 15,000 22,000
- Carry remainder of each forward
66Adjustments to basis of S corporation debt.
- When losses pass through to the shareholder, and
the losses exceed stock basis, however, the
shareholder must reduce debt basis. - When a shareholder has made multiple loans to a
corporation, any basis reduction for losses is
prorated among the various loans.
67Debt Basis Restoration.
- After debt basis has been reduced, there may be
subsequent income. - Such income will first restore debt basis.
68Basis Adjustments in the Year of Repayment.
- Repayment of reduced basis loan may create
ordinary income or capital gain to the
shareholder at the time of repayment. - Repayment of open account loan is treated as
ordinary income to creditor. - If the loan is evidenced by a note, the note may
be a capital asset to the holder. - Repayment of a reduced basis note creates capital
gain. - If part of the loan is repaid, the lender must
prorate between basis and gain (analogous to
installment sale).
69Adjustments to basis of a loan in the year of
repayment
- The Code is completely silent on the adjustment
to basis of a loan in the year in which it is
repaid. - If any portion of the debt has been repaid, the
corporation's income restores that basis before
any other debt or stock.
70Stock and Debt Basis Distinguished.
- When an S corporation repays a shareholder loan
after a reduction of basis, the only items that
can be taken into account for restoration of debt
basis are the income items flowing through from
the S corporation to the shareholder. - In Nathel v. Commissioner, shareholders had made
open account loans to the corporation and also
contributed directly to the corporations capital - When the corporation repaid the loans, the
shareholders claimed that the contributions to
the corporations capital should have restored
debt basis. - However, the IRS and Tax Court held that the
capital contributions were increases to stock
basis, rather than debt basis. - Because the loans had all been open account
loans, the gain on repayment was ordinary income.