Departing partner's debt service payment income to partnership.IRC (Internet Relay Chat) Computer conferencing on the Internet. There are hundreds of IRC channels on numerous subjects that are hosted on IRC servers around the world. After joining a channel, your messages are broadcast to everyone listening to that channel. section 721 (a) says a partnership or any of its partners will not have to recognize gain or loss for contributing property In the law regulating historic districts in the United States, a contributing property is any property, structure or object that adds to the historical integrity or architectural qualities that make the historic district, listed locally or federally, significant. to the entity in exchange for a partnership interest. Such a capital contribution increases a partner's basis. IRC section 752(a) says "any increase in a partner's share of the liabilities of a partnership, or any increase in a partner's individual liabilities by reason of the assumption by such partner of partnership liabilities, shall be considered as a contribution of money by such partner to the partnership." Likewise section 752(b) says a decrease in a partner's share of partnership liabilities is considered a distribution to that partner. In a recent case the court held that a substantial payment a limited partner made when abandoning a partnership interest was taxable income Under the federal tax law, gross income reduced by adjustments and allowable deductions. It is the income against which tax rates are applied to compute an individual or entity's tax liability. The essence of taxable income is the accrual of some gain, profit, or benefit to a taxpayer. rather than a capital contribution. MAS One Limited Partnership was formed in Ohio as a limited partnership to own and operate an office building in Florida. The sole general partner was MAS One Generals. The sole limited partner was the Midland Mutual Life Insurance Co. In 1989 MAS One amended its limited partnership agreement to expand the partnership's purpose to include constructing and operating a second office building, Clearwater Tower. MAS One borrowed $14.5 million from Huntington National Bank to fund construction. Midland Mutual executed two guarantee agreements associated with the Tower debt. In the first Huntington required Midland to repay $2.5 million of the principal upon substantial completion of the building. The second agreement was a debt service guarantee of all interest payments for the life of the loan. In 1994 Midland decided to demutualize demutualize or -ise Verb [-izing, -ized] or -ising, -ised (of a mutual savings or life-assurance organization) to convert to a public limited company and become a stock company. It sought to divest To deprive or take away. Divest is usually used in reference to the relinquishment of authority, power, property, or title. If, for example, an individual is disinherited, he or she is divested of the right to inherit money. itself of its investment in MAS One. The debt service agreement, however, made it difficult for the insurer to withdraw from the partnership. Midland's negotiations with the debt holder to terminate the agreement were unsuccessful. It then orchestrated or·ches·trate tr.v. or·ches·trat·ed, or·ches·trat·ing, or·ches·trates 1. To compose or arrange (music) for performance by an orchestra. 2. a plan through which the partnership would sell Clearwater Tower, credit the proceeds toward the loan balance and Midland would pay any outstanding balance after the sale. Midland abandoned its interest on December 28, 1994. The next day MAS One sold the Clearwater Tower for $4.1 million, with the proceeds going directly to service the debt. On the same date Midland paid the lender $8,388,824.47--the remaining balance on the office building loan. On December 27, 1994, 1105 Corp. had purchased a 1% interest in MAS One. The parties amended the partnership agreement to continue Generals as the sole general partner with a 98% interest while 1105 Corp. would be a 2% limited partner. 1105 Corp. contributed $10 with no future obligation to contribute capital. On its 1994 form 1065 income tax return, MAS One claimed a $7.3 million loss on the sale of the Clearwater Tower, which the partnership allocated 98% to Generals and 2% to 1105 Corp. The partnership treated Midland's $8.3 million payment to Huntington as a capital contribution, not as income to the partnership. The IRS An abbreviation for the Internal Revenue Service, a federal agency charged with the responsibility of administering and enforcing internal revenue laws. sent Generals a notice requiring MAS One to claim Midland's $8.3 million payment as income on its 1994 return. MAS One filed a complaint alleging the IRS notice was erroneous. Both parties filed motions for summary judgment. MAS One argued Midland's payment was a capital contribution and as such not taxable as income. The government argued that because Midland was no longer a partner when it made its payment, the money could not have been a capital contribution. Rather it was either gross business income or discharge of indebtedness income. The IRS also argued the court should apply the step transaction doctrine to collapse Midland's abandonment of its partnership interest and the sale of Clearwater Tower into a single transaction occurring on the same day. Under this doctrine Midland, not MAS One, would be entitled to claim a loss on the sale of the Clearwater Tower under the limited partnership agreement. Result. For the IRS. The court cited Twenty Mile Joint Venture, PND (Personal Navigation Device) A portable GPS-based navigation system that can be used when walking, hiking or in any vehicle. See GPS. , Ltd. (2000-1 USTC USTC University of Science and Technology of China USTC United States Tax Cases (Commerce Clearing House) USTC United States Transportation Command (see USTRANSCOM) [paragraph] 50, 124) in its decision. In that case, the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals decided a departing partner's forgiveness of a loan constituted discharge of indebtedness income to the partnership rather than a capital contribution. The Twenty Mile court emphasized substance over form in finding that the departing partner wanted to disassociate dis·as·so·ci·ate tr.v. dis·as·so·ci·at·ed, dis·as·so·ci·at·ing, dis·as·so·ci·ates To remove from association; dissociate. dis itself entirely from the partnership, not contribute capital. Likewise, Midland's $8.3 million payment was not representative of any amount it owed MAS One. Since Midland did not seek a new interest in the partnership, the payment was income to the partnership, not a capital contribution. The court also held the step transaction doctrine did not apply to this case because the substance and the form of the transactions in question did not differ in any meaningful way. The tax consequences of each step would have been the same whether they were viewed as a whole or as a series of isolated steps. * MAS One Limited Partnership, 271 FSupp2d 1061 (SD Ohio 2003). Few Deduct Health-Related Costs Even though more than one-third of taxpayers itemized deductions Itemized Deduction A deduction from a taxpayer's taxable adjusted gross income that is made up of deductions for money spent on certain goods and services throughout the year. , the number claiming medical expenses for tax year 2000 was less than 6%. Source: IRS, www.irs.gov, 2003. Prepared by Claire Y. Nash, 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. , PhD, associate professor of accounting, Christian Brothers University In addition to intercollegiate athletics, CBU offers intramural sports. Types of intramurals, such as volleyball, flag football, and bowling, vary from year to year. Greek life Fraternity and sorority members comprise 21 - 24% of CBU students. , Memphis, and Tina Quinn, CPA, PhD, associate professor of accountancy, Arkansas State University Arkansas State University, at Jonesboro; coeducational; chartered 1909; named State Agricultural and Mechanical College, 1925–33. In 1933 the school became Arkansas State College, and in 1967 it achieved university status and adopted its present name. , Jonesboro. |
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