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Income recognized when stock options exercised.


An employee's income from employer stock options was taxable in the year the employee exercised them, not when he paid off the margin loan used to purchase the stock.

Background

P entered into two agreements with his employer, M, giving him options to purchase shares of M's stock. P exercised the options, financing the stock purchase with a loan from Q a third-party investment company. The shares were deposited in an account maintained by O in P's name. However, P became the registered owner Registered Owner

An individual or organization to whom certificates are directly issued and who, as a result, is recorded on the corporation's securityholder records (as maintained by the transfer agent).
 and acquired the right to vote the shares, receive dividends and pledge the stock as collateral for a loan. O obtained a security interest in the shares; M was completely divested of any interest in the shares, because it had been paid in full with the funds from the margin loan.

Per his agreement with O, P was not required to make any periodic principal or interest payments on the margin loan. Rather, he merely was required to maintain a predetermined pre·de·ter·mine  
v. pre·de·ter·mined, pre·de·ter·min·ing, pre·de·ter·mines

v.tr.
1. To determine, decide, or establish in advance:
 minimum balance of cash and/or and/or  
conj.
Used to indicate that either or both of the items connected by it are involved.

Usage Note: And/or is widely used in legal and business writing.
 collateral in the account. The loan agreement included deficiency clauses, under which O was 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:
 to liquidate To pay and settle the amount of a debt; to convert assets to cash; to aggregate the assets of an insolvent enterprise and calculate its liabilities in order to settle with the debtors and the creditors and apportion the remaining assets, if any, among the stockholders or owners of the  the stock if the account balance fell below this minimum threshold; P agreed to be liable for any deficiency in his accounts.

In March 2001, P paid off the O margin loans. P asserts that the stock transactions were taxable when he paid off the margin loan in 2001, rather than when he obtained ownership of the stock from M in 2000.

Analysis

Under Sec. 83(a), the financial gain realized by an employee on exercising stock options is taxable as gross income in the year the options were exercised if two prerequisites are met. First, under Regs. Sec. 1.83-1(a)(1) and -3(a)(1), the shares must be "transferred" to the employee, which occurs when the employee acquires "a beneficial ownership interest" in the stock. Second, the shares must become "substantially vested vested adj. referring to having an absolute right or title, when previously the holder of the right or title only had an expectation. Examples: after 20 years of employment Larry Loyal's pension rights are now vested. (See: vest, vested remainder) " in the employee, which happens when the stock becomes "either transferable or not subject to a substantial risk of forfeiture The involuntary relinquishment of money or property without compensation as a consequence of a breach or nonperformance of some legal obligation or the commission of a crime. The loss of a corporate charter or franchise as a result of illegality, malfeasance, or Nonfeasance. ." If both conditions are satisfied, the employee realizes gross income equal to the difference between the stock's fair market value at the moment it became substantially vested and the amount paid to exercise the options.

Transfer: Whether a transaction is a stock transfer or the grant of an option to purchase the stock in the future is a question of fact under Kegs. Sec. 1.83-3(a)(2). This determination is made by analyzing "the type of property involved, the extent to which the risk that the property will decline in value has been transferred, and the likelihood that the purchase price will, in fact, be paid."

On exercising his stock options, the purchase price of the stock was, in fact, paid to M, and P became the stock's beneficial (and actual) owner. Any risk of decline in the value of the shares was transferred from M to P. Whether P ultimately transferred that risk to O has no bearing on our analysis; a transfer from M to P indisputably occurred in 2000.

P incorrectly cites Regs. Sec. 1.833(a)(7), Example 2, as support for his position that a transfer did not occur until he repaid the margin loan. However, the corporation in that example was never paid for the stock and, because the employee did not have any personal liability on the note used to pay for the stock, there is a very real possibility that the corporation would never be paid. This case is significantly different, because M was paid in full and transferred all of its rights in its stock to P.

Substantially vested: Whether the stock was substantially vested is also a question of fact under Regs. Sec. 1.833(b) and (c). Stock becomes substantially vested "when it is either transferable or not subject to a substantial risk of forfeiture" "A substantial risk of forfeiture exists" when the transferred property rights are conditioned "upon the future performance (or refraining from performance) of substantial services by any person, or the occurrence of a condition related to a purpose of the transfer [under which] the possibility of forfeiture is substantial if such condition is not satisfied" (Regs. Sec. 1.83-3(c)(1)).

There is no evidence of any possibility that P's rights in the stock could have been revoked by M. That O could have sold P's stock in certain situations is of no moment. The transfer from M to P had already occurred, and what P chose to do with his stock thereafter is irrelevant. The stock became substantially vested in P at the moment he executed his options in 2000.

Thus, the transaction was a taxable event Taxable event

An event or transaction that has a tax consequence, such as the sale of stock holding that is subject to capital gains taxes.
 in 2000, the tax year during which P excercised the stock options, rather than when he fully repaid the loan in 2001; accord, Ricardo Ri·car·do   , David 1772-1823.

British economist whose major work, Principles of Political Economy and Taxation (1817), supported the laws of supply and demand in a free market.

Noun 1.
 Cidale, 5th Cir., 1/9/07; James James, person in the Bible
James, in the Gospel of St. Luke, kinsman of St. Jude. The original does not specify the relationship.
James, rivers, United States
James.
 H. Tuff, 469 F3d 1249 (9th Cir. 2006); Miller, 9th Cir., 12/4/06; see Jean-Remy Facq, 363 FSupp2d 1288 (WDWA WDWA Whale and Dolphin Watch Australia  2005); Robert Robert, Henry Martyn 1837-1923.

American army engineer and parliamentary authority. He designed the defenses for Washington, D.C., during the Civil War and later wrote Robert's Rules of Order (1876).

Noun 1.
 C. Racine Racine (rəsēn`), industrial city (1990 pop. 84,298), seat of Racine co., SE Wis., on Lake Michigan, at the mouth of the Root River; inc. 1848. , TC Memo 2006-162.

JONATHAN PALAHNUK, Fed. Cir., 2/12/07
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Article Details
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Title Annotation:EMPLOYEE BENEFITS & PENSIONS
Author:Palahnuk, Jonathan
Publication:The Tax Adviser
Date:Apr 1, 2007
Words:853
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