Printer Friendly
The Free Library
19,573,952 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Check-the-box regs. do not affect the valuation of LLC interests.


[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

The Tax Court held that limited liability company (LLC (Logical Link Control) See "LANs" under data link protocol.

LLC - Logical Link Control
) interests transferred by a taxpayer into trusts set up for the benefit of her children should be valued as transfers of LLC interests and not as transfers of the underlying assets owned by the LLC.

Background

The taxpayer, Suzanne Suzanne is a common female given name that was particularly popular in the United States in the 1950s and 1960s. It remained in the top 200 most popular names in the United States between 1930 and the late 1980s.  Pierre Pierre (pēr), city (1990 pop. 12,906), state capital (since 1889) and seat of Hughes co., central S.Dak., on the east bank of the Missouri River, opposite Fort Pierre; inc. 1883. , received a $10 million gift from a wealthy friend in 2000. Pierre, who was in her eighties, wished to use some of the gift to provide support for her son and granddaughter but wanted to keep the family wealth intact. To achieve these goals, later that year she set up a valid single-member New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 LLC, the Pierre Family, LLC, which was treated as a disregarded dis·re·gard  
tr.v. dis·re·gard·ed, dis·re·gard·ing, dis·re·gards
1. To pay no attention or heed to; ignore.

2. To treat without proper respect or attentiveness.

n.
 entity under the check-the-box regulations (Regs. Secs. 301.7701-1 through -3), and separate trusts for her son and granddaughter. She then transferred $4.25 million in cash and publicly traded securities to the LLC and subsequently transferred a 9.5% membership interest in the LLC to each of the trusts by gift and sold each trust a 40.5% interest in the LLC in return for promissory notes promissory note, unconditional written promise to pay a certain sum of money at a definite time to bearer or to a specified person on his order. Promissory notes are generally used as evidence of debt. .

Pierre filed a gift tax return for 2000 that reported the gifts of the membership interests to the trusts. When valuing the transfers for federal gift tax purposes, she applied substantial discounts for lack of marketability Marketability

A negotiable security is said to have good marketability if there is an active secondary market in which it can easily be resold.


marketability

The ease with which an investment may be bought and sold in the secondary market.
 and control and therefore paid no gift tax on the transfers.

On examination, the IRS An abbreviation for the Internal Revenue Service, a federal agency charged with the responsibility of administering and enforcing internal revenue laws.  determined that the entire amount of the 9.5% interests transferred by gift should be treated as gifts of the LLC's underlying assets because, under the check-the-box regulations, the LLC was classified as a disregarded single-member entity. This treatment eliminated the valuation discounts, resulting in a much higher gift value for gift tax purposes. It also found that the value of the 40.5% interests, less the value of the promissory notes given by the trusts, should be treated as gifts.

Pierre challenged the IRS's determination in Tax Court. She argued that state, not federal, law determines the nature of a taxpayer's interest in transferred property. She further argued that, under New York law, a membership interest in an LLC is personal property and a member has no interest in specific property of the LLC. Therefore, she properly valued the gifts as gifts of an LLC interest rather than gifts of the LLC's assets.

The Tax Court's Opinion

The Tax Court held that the determination of the value of the LLC interests transferred by Pierre should be made under state law. Because under New York law Pierre, as the owner of the LLC, did not have an interest in the specific property of the LLC, the Tax Court held that Pierre had transferred interests in the LLC and that her gift tax liability should be calculated based on the value of the transferred interests, not on the value of the LLC's underlying assets.

The court agreed with the IRS that the check-the-box regulations govern how a single-member LLC is taxed for federal tax purposes, but it did not agree that they should govern whether the donor The party conferring a power. One who makes a gift. One who creates a trust.


donor n. a person or entity making a gift or donation.


DONOR. He who makes a gift. (q.v.)
 of an LLC interest is subject to federal gift tax. According to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 the Tax Court, under the federal gift tax regime, the determination of the amount of gift tax on a transfer could be broken down into three steps: (1) the determination under state law of the property interest transferred; (2) the determination of the value of the property and the amount of the value subject to tax; and (3) the calculation of the tax.

The court found that neither the check-the-box regulations nor any of the cases cited by the IRS supported a conclusion that the check-the-box regulations applied to disregard the existence of an LLC in determining what property the taxpayer had transferred in the first step of the process. The Tax Court stated that if the regulations were thus interpreted, they would go "far beyond classifying the LLC for tax purposes" and would overturn the existing, long-established federal gift tax valuation regime, which "would be 'manifestly incompatible' with the federal estate and gift tax statutes as interpreted by the Supreme Court."

Reflections

Two complementing dissenting opinions dissenting opinion n. (See: dissent)  disagreed with the majority's reliance on state law and instead found that the determination of what property Pierre transferred should be made under federal law, in this case as expressed in the check-the-box regulations. Analyzing those regulations, the dissents found that they were not incompatible incompatible adj. 1) inconsistent. 2) unmatching. 3) unable to live together as husband and wife due to irreconcilable differences. In no-fault divorce states, if one of the spouses desires to end the marriage, that fact proves incompatibility, and a divorce  with the federal gift tax regime and that, based on the plain language of the regulations, the IRS's interpretation of them with respect to the treatment of the gifts of the LLC interests was plausible. Therefore, the dissents would have treated the LLCs as disregarded entities for gift tax purposes and treated the taxpayer's transfers as transfers of the LLC's property.

The dissents stated that the majority had incorrectly read the phrase "federal tax purposes" in Regs. Sec. 301.77011(a)(1) to mean "federal income tax purposes." According to the dissents, this interpretation was wrong because the regulations did not say "federal income tax purposes," and the regulation drafters could have specifically excluded federal gift taxes from the scope of the regulations had that been their intent. The dissents also noted that the majority's position ignored the IRS's consistent treatment of single-member LLC owners as the owners of the LLCs' assets.

Pierre, 133 T.C. No. 2 (2009)

James Beavers, J.D., LL.M LL.M Legum Magister (Master of Laws) ., CPA (Computer Press Association, Landing, NJ) An earlier membership organization founded in 1983 that promoted excellence in computer journalism. Its annual awards honored outstanding examples in print, broadcast and electronic media. The CPA disbanded in 2000.  
COPYRIGHT 2009 American Institute of CPA's
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2009 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Author:Beavers, James
Publication:The Tax Adviser
Date:Oct 1, 2009
Words:902
Previous Article:Contributions of property to an LLC.
Next Article:Tax accrual workpapers not protected by work-product privilege.
Topics:



Related Articles
Two-member LLC as disregarded entity.
Gift tax SOL disclosure final regs.
Using an LLC to maximize losses.
Using an LLC to maximize losses.
SE tax on LLC distributable income and guaranteed payments.
Holding period of partnership/LLC interests.
Supreme Court declines to review check-the-box case.
Handling gifts and bequests of LLC interests.
LLCs, LLPs, and the passive loss rules.
Underlying assets not gift tax value of interest in N.Y. LLC.

Terms of use | Copyright © 2012 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles