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Employer contribution to strike fund is capital expenditure.


A is an organization that is a member of Association B, an unincorporated Adj. 1. unincorporated - not organized and maintained as a legal corporation
unorganised, unorganized - not having or belonging to a structured whole; "unorganized territories lack a formal government"
 exempt business league under Sec. 501 (c)(6). B acts as the collective bargaining collective bargaining, in labor relations, procedure whereby an employer or employers agree to discuss the conditions of work by bargaining with representatives of the employees, usually a labor union.  representative of its members in their negotiations with employees. In Year 1, B members established a line of credit with banks to provide loans to members in the event of an employee strike. In fact, a long strike occurred in Year 1 and members made use of the credit line.

In Year 2, the members contemplated replacing the credit line with their own internal strike fund, to provide certain advantages (e.g., guaranteed access to market-rate loans, elimination of expensive borrowing fees and conditions imposed on the previous bank borrowings). The members authorized au·thor·ize  
tr.v. au·thor·ized, au·thor·iz·ing, au·thor·iz·es
1. To grant authority or power to.

2. To give permission for; sanction:
 the establishment of the strike fund on Date 1; a mandatory annual assessment was imposed on members to finance the fund. The members later unanimously resolved to increase the annual assessment. After that, the members unanimously voted to suspend the planned assessment for Years 3 and 4, respectively.

The strike fund made no loans to its members from Year 2 (the inception of the fund) through Year 6 (the tax year at issue). In Year 5, A and the other B members entered into a court-approved agreement settling longstanding litigation An action brought in court to enforce a particular right. The act or process of bringing a lawsuit in and of itself; a judicial contest; any dispute.

When a person begins a civil lawsuit, the person enters into a process called litigation.
 brought against them by their employees, obligating the members to make settlement payments. The members voted unanimously to use the strike-fund assets to satisfy part of their individual settlement obligations. The entire strike-fund balance was used to satisfy part of such obligations. A acknowledged that this use of fund assets Fund assets

The total value of a portfolio's securities, cash, and other holdings, minus any outstanding debts.
 was not a loan.

In Year 6, B imposed a strike-fund assessment on members. A paid this assessment, and deducted de·duct  
v. de·duct·ed, de·duct·ing, de·ducts

v.tr.
1. To take away (a quantity) from another; subtract.

2. To derive by deduction; deduce.

v.intr.
 it on its income tax return as an ordinary and necessary business expense.

Analysis

Sec. 162 generally allows a deduction for all ordinary and necessary expenses paid or incurred during the tax year in carrying on a trade or business. Regs. Sec. 1.162-15(c) provides that dues and other payments to a trade association that otherwise meet the requirements are deductible That which may be taken away or subtracted. In taxation, an item that may be subtracted from gross income or adjusted gross income in determining taxable income (e.g., interest expenses, charitable contributions, certain taxes).  in full. Sec. 263(a) provides that no deduction shall be allowed for any amount paid out for permanent improvements or betterments BETTERMENTS. Improvement's made to an estate. It signifies such improvements as have been made to the estate which render it better than mere repairs. See 2 Fairf. 482; 9 Shepl. 110; 10 Shepl. 192; 13 Ohio, R. 308; 10 Yerg. Verm. 533; 17 Verm. 109.  made to increase the value of any property. Regs. Sec. 1.263(a)-2(a) clarifies that Sec. 263(a) requires capitalization of costs incurred to acquire property having a useful life substantially beyond the close of the tax year. The Code's capitalization provisions take precedence The order in which an expression is processed. Mathematical precedence is normally:

1. unary + and - signs
2. exponentiation
3. multiplication and division
4.
 over its deduction provisions; see Secs. 161 and 261.

The Supreme Court has held that an expenditure must be capitalized if it creates or enhances a separate and distinct asset or otherwise provides significant future benefits for the taxpayer; see Lincoln Sav. & Loan Ass'n, 403 US 345 (1971). The IRS An abbreviation for the Internal Revenue Service, a federal agency charged with the responsibility of administering and enforcing internal revenue laws.  National Office contends that the issue here is governed by Lincoln Savings, because B members maintain a property interest in the strike fund and contributions to the fund are thus nondeductible non·de·duct·i·ble  
adj.
Not deductible, especially for income-tax purposes.

Adj. 1. nondeductible - not allowable as a deduction
deductible - acceptable as a deduction (especially as a tax deduction)
 capital expenditures. A contends that it maintains no property interest in the strike fund assets, and that the assessments constitute a temporary increase in membership dues that allow B to provide an additional service to members in the form of strike loans.

Rev. Rul. 82-15 specifically allows a deduction for contributions to a strike fund. In that ruling, members paid an increased dues charge to an exempt trade association to establish a loan fund for the sole purpose of providing loans to members experiencing a labor strike. Any amounts remaining in the loan fund on fund termination were to be used to further the trade association's exempt purposes. The ruling concludes that the additional dues charges are ordinary and necessary expenses, because they do not result in the acquisition by the members of any permanent interest in property.

The facts here are distinguishable from Rev. Rul. 82-15, because the members voted unanimously in Year 5 to use all of the accumulated fund contributions (and the earnings thereon there·on  
adv.
1. On or upon this, that, or it.

2. Archaic Following that immediately; thereupon.

Adv. 1. thereon - on that; "text and commentary thereon"
on it, on that
) to satisfy their individual settlement obligations under the settlement agreement. In this case, the strike fund resembles the secondary reserve in Lincoln Savings that was determined by the Supreme Court to constitute a separate and distinct asset of the insured institutions. Accordingly, contributions to the strike fund are not deductible as ordinary and necessary expenses. IRS LETTER RULING (TAM) 200240001 (10/4/02)
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Author:O'Driscoll, David
Publication:The Tax Adviser
Date:Feb 1, 2003
Words:721
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