| |
| |
| A big blow to
unincorporated businesses. |
From The Tax Adviser:
No
Noncorporate Deduction for Underpayment Interest
he Tax Court held in Edward A. Robinson
III, 119 TC no. 4 (2002), that interest paid on
income tax underpayments and deficiencies was
nondeductible personal interest even if the tax resulted
from the taxpayers trade or business. This ruling,
which potentially applies to more than 20 million
noncorporate businesses, overrules the Tax Courts
prior decision in Redlark, 116 TC 31 (1996).
CPAs should familiarize themselves with this decision, so
they can advise clients accordingly.
DEDUCTING
OVERPAYMENT INTEREST
IRC section 162(a) allows
a taxpayer to deduct all ordinary and necessary expenses
paid or incurred in carrying on a trade or
business, including, under section 163(a), interest paid
or accrued during the tax year. However, section
163(h)(1) bars individuals from deducting personal
interest. Section 163(h)(2)(A) defines this term as
any interest allowable as a deduction, other than that
paid or accrued on debt properly allocable to a
trade or business (other than the trade or business
of being an employee).
Temporary regulations section
1.163-9T(b)(2)(i)(A) specifies that personal interest
includes interest paid on underpayments of individual
federal, state or local income taxes and on debt incurred
to pay such taxes, regardless of the source of the income
generating the tax liability. The section 163(h)(2)(A)
legislative history, after noting the trade or business
exception to the personal interest category, states that
personal interest generally includes interest on
tax deficiencies. In Redlark, the Tax
Court ruled temporary regulations section
1.163-9T(b)(2)(i)(A) invalid.
FACTS
In Robinson, the
IRS issued a deficiency to Edward and Diana Robinson for
their 1987 return, which included $195,716 in schedule C
adjustments from Edwards sole proprietorship law
practice. The service seized the Robinsons property
in 1994, sold it in 1995 and applied $69,617 of the
proceeds to interest on the 1987 underpayment. The
Robinsons deducted the $69,617 as interest on their 1995
schedule C, which the service disallowed.
COURT'S
HOLDING
According to the Tax
Court, the issue was not whether the taxpayers
interest on their 1987 income tax deficiency was
personal but, rather, whether it was
properly allocable to a trade or business.
In concluding it was not so allocable,
the court held that temporary regulations section
1.163-9T(b)(2)(i)(A) was a permissible interpretation of
the statute as supported by its legislative history.
Further, the regulation was supported by the Blue Book (General
Explanation of the Tax Reform Act of 1986), written
by the staff of the Joint Committee on Taxation.
RAMIFICATIONS
At the moment, Robinson
creates a nationwide rule disallowing the deduction of
interest paid on income tax underpayments and
deficiencies for noncorporate business taxpayers.
CPAs need to understand the
rulings implications for their unincorporated
business clients. For more information, see the Tax
Clinic, edited by Michael Koppel, in the December 2002
issue of The Tax Adviser.
Lesli Laffie,
editor
The Tax Adviser
| Notice to readers: Members of the AICPA tax
section may subscribe to The Tax Adviser at
a reduced price. Contact Judy Smith at
202-434-9270 for a subscription to the magazine
or to become a member of the tax section.section. |
|