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| Court says employers can
seek limited refunds. |
From The Tax Adviser:
Payroll
Taxes on Terminated Employees
mployers who withheld taxes on severance pay
granted to certain terminated employees may be entitled
to refunds. In CSX Corp., 52 Fed. Cl. 208
(2002), the Court of Federal Claims approved the refund
of Railroad Retirement Tax Act (RRTA) taxes and Federal
Insurance Contributions Act (FICA) taxes collected on
amounts paid to certain employees under
reduction-in-force programs. CPAs should read the
decision to determine whether to file for refunds.
FACTS
From 1984 to 1990, CSX
terminated about 20,000 employees through job layoffs,
cuts in work hours and pay rates, and workers
electing permanent separations from employment. Affected
employees became entitled to a specific payment from the
employer, as established either by government regulatory
rulings or by superseding collective bargaining
provisions. CSX paid its share of FICA and RRTA taxes and
withheld and remitted the employees share.
TAXPAYERS
ARGUMENT
Later seeking a refund of
those taxes, CSX argued that its payments to employees
fell outside the definition of wages for FICA purposes
and the definition of compensation for RRTA purposes.
Rather, CSX contended that its payments fell within the
definition of supplemental unemployment compensation
benefits (SUCBs) as used in IRC section 3402(o). Such
payments are not subject to FICA taxation or to income
tax withholding.
COURTS
ANALYSIS
IRC section 3402(o)(2)(A)
defines SUCBs as payments to an employee, pursuant to a
plan to which the employer is a party, because of an
employees involuntary separation from employment
(whether or not temporary), resulting directly from a
reduction in force, the discontinuance of a plant or
operation or other similar conditions, but only to the
extent such benefits are includible in the
employees gross income.
For payments made to involuntarily
terminated workers, the court concluded these laid-off
employees were not performing any service for the
employer. Thus, these payments qualified as SUCBs, not
subject to payroll taxes, and eligible for a refund.
Payments made to employees on standby,
who remained subject to recall on an as-needed basis and
who received a guaranteed minimum compensation per pay
period were subject to tax, because there was no
separation from employment under IRC section 3402(o)(2);
thus, these workers were not unemployed.
Finally, for payments made to employees
who opted for early retirement, the court found that the
voluntary surrender of employment rights for a cash
payment represented the surrender of rights to future
earnings for a present sum. Thus, these amounts were
wages subject to payroll tax.
FUTURE
ACTION
While CPAs can file refunds for eligible clients with
laid-off employees for now, the IRS will probably suspend
applications for such refunds, pending a decision on
whether to appeal the CSX Corp. decision. For
more information see the Tax Clinic, edited by Tom
Ochsenschlager, in the February 2003 issue of The Tax
Adviser.
Lesli Laffie,
editor
The Tax Adviser
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