Have Californians Wised Up?

Proposition 82, the free preschool, tax increase, Help Las Vegas, Phoenix, and Denver Initiative, may now be trailing in polls. While no new polls have been released publicly, Bill Bradley of LA Weekly notes in a recent column that support has fallen below 50%. If you’re a Californian and want to make sure that we don’t have a new bureaucracy to deal with (along with higher taxes and fewer businesses to pay those taxes), make sure you express your opinion on election day next Tuesday.

By the way, both the Orange County Register and the Los Angeles Times have come out in editorials against Proposition 82. This may be the first time in some time that the state’s most conservative paper (the Register) and the state’s most liberal paper (the Times) have agreed on a controversial measure.

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The IRS Give Single Member S Corps a Lump of Coal

The IRS announced today a “clarification” of the rules for self-employed health insurance deductions for S Corporations. This is bad news overall, and especially bad news for California S Corporations.

The self-employed health insurance deduction allows sole proprietorships, partnerships, LLCs (those treated as partnerships or as disregarded entities) to deduct their health insurance premiums “above the line;” that is, an adjustment to AGI rather than as an itemized deduction subject to a 7.5% limitation on AGI. This is a large tax savings for the self-employed.

The IRS announcement indicates that for S Corporations to be eligible for this deduction, the policy must be in the name of the corporation. But if you do this, the health insurance premiums will be included as compensation on your W-2 (although they are exempt from FICA and medicare).

Additionally, many states, including California, do not allow single-employee corporations of any kind to obtain health insurance. This ruling means that California single-member S Corporations (a single individual is the employee and owner) are generally ineligible for this deduction.

For example, my health insurance premiums run about $5,000 annually. If I were impacted by this ruling and were in the 25% tax bracket, my federal tax bill just went up $1,250.

If you’re impacted by this ruling I urge you to write your Representatives and Senators. I’m certain this is not what Congress intended when they enacted this deduction.

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US: In the Middle

Forbes magazine recently presented its annual comparison of taxes in the US to the world. So where does the US rank? More or less, in the middle.

Of course, that depends on what state you reside in. The comparison looked at two US states: New York (a relatively high tax state) and Texas (with no personal state income tax). New York ranks 115.7 on Forbes’ misery index; Texas is at 94.6.

As far as the rest of the world, leading the way in low taxes is the United Arab Emirates at 18.0 (not surprising, given their oil). The worst place for taxes? France, at 166.8.

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The Spanish-American War Officially Ends!

And you thought that the Treaty of Paris (signed on December 10, 1898) ended the Spanish-American War. No! It ended today, May 25, 2006, when the Department of the Treasury announced that they will no longer fight for enforcement of the 3% telephone excise tax used to fund the Spanish-American War.

Refunds of tax for long-distance service paid over the past three years will be given as part of your 2006 tax returns filed in 2007. As to what documentation (if any) is required, this has not been announced. (From a tax preparers’ viewpoint, I hope that preparers aren’t the ones who will have to check that individuals requesting refunds meet the requirements….)

Additionally, the press release and the news stories do not reference mobile telephone service (e.g. cellular). However, the IRS notice does, stating,

“These cases [on the telephone excise tax] hold that a telephonic communication for which there is a toll charge that varies with elapsed transmission time and not distance (time-only service) is not taxable toll telephone service as defined in § 4252(b)(1) of the Internal Revenue Code. As a result, amounts paid for time-only service are not subject to the tax imposed by § 4251. Accordingly, the government will no longer litigate this issue and Notice 2005-79, 2005-46 I.R.B. 952, which states otherwise, is revoked.”

So cellular phone service and long-distance service should be free of the excise tax.

Until the IRS and the Department of the Treasury announce the procedure for refunds, keep your old phone bills! The Treasury Department estimates that refunds will total $15 billion.

Links: Reuters News Story, Roth Tax Updates, and TaxProf Blog

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Proposition 82: Be Scared. Be Very Scared.

Proposition 82, the Mandatory Preschool/Tax Increase/Help Las Vegas, Phoenix, and Denver Initiative, still leads in the polls. However, the last statewide poll was released over a month ago.

Unfortunately for all Californians, the primary election on June 6th is dominated by the Democratic primary for Governor. With no major draw for Republicans, it’s very likely that this initiative, which would likely continue California’s downward march among states to do business, will pass.

Interestingly enough Dan Weintraub (of the Sacramento Bee) noted that a measure buried in the Governator’s budget would provide preschool to the most needy at a fraction of the cost of Proposition 82. Now, excuse my sarcasm, but do Democrats support a lean program, targeted to those who need it, or a new bureaucracy, with a program to match?

Dan Weintraub’s Column (registration required)
Text of Proposition 82

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Fixing the Match: Italian Tax Evasion

I’m not a soccer fan. But if you are, the World Cup begins in just a couple of weeks. One of the favorites (based on what I’ve read) is Italy. But a scandal is clouding the picture.

International football (soccer, for us Americans) president Sepp Blatter was quoted in the Italian newspaper Corriere della Sera as saying, “This is madness. How is it possible that Italian soccer has stooped so low? This is the greatest scandal in the history of soccer.”

So what happened? Allegations include rigging matches through corrupt referees, kidnapping a referee and two linesmen, wiretaps that show some of the alleged offenses, betting by players, embezzlement (through using public funds to chauffeur some of the ringleaders), and, of course, tax evasion. Another Italian newspaper, La Repubblica, said that Italian officials were investigating whether millions of Euros have been stashed at the Vatican Bank. The transcript of allegations runs over 1,000 pages.

Agenzia Giornalistica Italia reports that player transfers have led to tax fraud based on omissions of at least 70 million Euros. Three publicly traded soccer teams have seen their shares fall by 50% since the scandal broke.

For Italian soccer fans, this scandal, code named “Off Side” and dubbed by the Italian media “Operation Clean Feet,” is the equivalent of the Black Sox scandal of 1919. It will be interesting to see the impact on the Italian World Cup team, and what charges (if any) are actually filed.

Links: AGI Story, The Australian (much more readable than AGI)

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Tax Increase Prevention and Reconciliation Act of 2005

That’s not a typo in the subject of this post. The tax bill that was signed last week by President Bush is titled “The Tax Increase Prevention and Reconciliation Act of 2005.” Apparently Congress didn’t look at a calendar….

Here are the good points of the bill, such as they are:

1. AMT Relief, but just for one year. The bill increases the AMT exemption to $62,500 for Married Filing Jointly and $42,500 for single filers for 2006. However, yet another tax bill will need to be passed in 2007 to further extend AMT relief or millions of taxpayers will find themselves in AMT hell.

That’s the long list, in my view, of the good points. Now, here are the probable good points of the bill…but these could change, as they’re all in the future:

2. Dividend and Capital Gains Cuts Extended. This bill extends the dividend and capital gains tax cuts (these were scheduled to expire in 2008) until 2010. Note that nothing prevents Congress from extinguishing this extension next year.

3. Roth IRA Conversions. In 2010 anyone will be able to convert a regular IRA into a Roth IRA. Regular IRAs give taxpayers a tax deduction today but distributions (upon retirement) are taxable. Roth IRAs do not give a tax deduction today but the proceeds (in retirement) are tax-free. The tax owed for these conversion must be paid in 2011 and 2012. It’s quite possible that this new tax break could itself be broken by Congress between now and 2009.

Now let’s examine the negative points of the bill.

4. Offers in Compromise. Do you want to make an Offer in Compromise (OIC) with the IRS? You had better do it very soon—you have until July 15th to make an OIC without making a 20% OIC deposit. If your OIC is rejected by the IRS you will lose that deposit. I doubt we’ll see many OICs after July 15th.

5. Kiddee Tax Increase. If you’re wealthy, one tax strategy is to shift income to your children. The kiddee tax used to end at age 14…but the new bill extends it until age 18.

6. Expatriate Tax Increase. While the new bill does increase the Foreign Earned Income Exclusion (to $82,400), it greatly reduces the housing allowance for Americans living abroad. Additionally, the tax rate for investment income of expatriates is increased dramatically. The International Herald Tribune has an excellent story on this.

7. Changes to Section 199. If you’re a manufacturer (or a business that qualifies for this deduction), the Section 199 Deduction is now limited to 50% of W-2 earnings.

What’s not in the bill? Plenty. Tuition deduction, educators deduction, estate tax…the list is endless. A second bill is likely to emerge from Congress this Fall.

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Fuel at SFO, Sales Tax in Oakland

California’s sales tax rules, enforced by the Board of Equalization are far too complicated. Then throw in political shenanigans and you get…a lawsuit.

San Francisco International Airport is located just south of the City by the Bay in San Mateo County. United Airlines has a major hub at SFO. This sounds like a sales tax boon for San Mateo County.

Except for a law that relocates the sale from the airport to an office building in Oakland, in Alameda County. The Governator signed a bill that will eliminate this “quirk” in 2008. San Mateo County decided they couldn’t wait that long.

Did I mention that Oakland gives a kickback of $0.65 to United for every dollar of sales tax collected? But as Aero-News notes, the Legislature believes the deal is currently legal.

Given the backlog in California’s courts, the case will likely not be decided for a couple of years.

News Stories: Aero-News Net, San Francisco Business Journal

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Crime Blog

There was lots of activity this week among scofflaws and other tax cheats. First, the operators of a Middle-Eastern restaurant have been accused of skimming $16 million in cash from La Shish restaurants and sending the money to Lebanon. One of the owners is in custody; the other has apparently fled to Lebanon.

>From Cleveland comes the story of a sportscaster who didn’t pay between $12,000 and $30,000 in taxes. Bruce Drennan is the former voice of the Cleveland Indians. Mr. Drennan apparently debated the betting line on his radio talkshow, and then bet on the games. He apparently was a successful gambler…but he forgot to claim his winnings on his tax returns. Oops. He is also alleged to have been running a bookmaking ring. The Cleveland Plain Dealer has a full summary of the case here.

Mr. Drennan has pled guilty, and under a plea agreement will serve five months in prison and then five months under house arrest. Mr. Drennan, quoted by the AP, stated, “I am not being punished because I bet on games and lost…I am being punished because I bet on games and won, and did not declare those winnings to the IRS, and that’s a crime, and I pled guilty to the that crime. It’s wrong, and I’m sorry, and I’m going to pay the price for that.”

Contrast Mr. Drennan, who admitted his wrongs, to our next lucky winner, Richard Hatch. As I noted a few days ago, Mr. Hatch was sentenced to over four years in prison. Survivor: Victorville is coming soon!

But our biggest loser comes from Washington state. David Carroll Stephenson was sentenced to eight years for conspiring to defraud the U.S. and for not filing three years of tax returns. Additionally, he must pay $8.5 million in restitution. Mr. Stephenson was behind “pure equity trusts.” These trusts weren’t worth the paper they were printed on, and were devised just to avoid taxes. My usual rule of thumb applies: If it sounds too good to be true, it probably is.

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Slots a Business, Says Minnesota Supreme Court

The always vexing question of whether or not a gambler is a professional or an amateur was looked at this week by the Minnesota Supreme Court. In Busch v. Commissioner of Revenue (A05-656), Estelle Busch fought the Minnesota Department of Revenue’s ruling that she was an amateur and had to pay Minnesota’s Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT) on her gambling winnings.

The facts of the case were not in dispute. Estelle Busch, a retiree, began playing slot machines at an Indian casino in Minnesota. She enjoyed herself, but lost. She played more and more, from 40 to 60 hours per week. Initially, she filed as an amateur, putting her winnings as Other Income (line 21 of her federal return) and her losses as an itemized deduction on Schedule A of her federal return.

In 2001, she decided that she met the standard of being a professional, and filed a Schedule C. She was not able to take her losses as a deduction against other income on her return; however, she was able to net out her income so she essentially reported $0 as the “net income” from her business.

The IRS apparently never audited her. (The record is not completely clear on this.) However, the Minnesota Department of Revenue did, and the Commissioner of Revenue fought her in Minnesota Tax Court. Minnesota has a very strict AMT. Minnesota AMT denies most deductions and forces a gambler to pay tax on the gross winnings rather than the net winnings. This is quite different from the federal AMT. Although in certain situations gambling winnings could conceivably cause a taxpayer to fall into the federal AMT, gambling losses are deductible on the federal AMT. The Commissioner won in Minnesota Tax Court, and Ms. Busch appealed to the Minnesota Supreme Court.

The Minnesota Supreme Court looked at four issues: (1) Was Minnesota prohibited from challenging the business vs. hobby status by the actions (or inactions) of the IRS; (2) Did the Groetzinger decision apply to Ms. Busch; and (3) Did Ms. Busch have a reasonable expectation of profit?

The first issue is a collateral estoppel argument. Is Minnesota precluded from acting because the IRS hasn’t acted? The court ruled that Minnesota can have a different ruling than the federal government, if the laws and circumstances justify it.

On the second issue, the Groetzinger decision states:

“[I]f one’s gambling activity is pursued full time, in good faith, and with regularity, to the production of income for a livelihood, and is not a mere hobby, it is a trade or business within the meaning of the statutes with which we are here concerned. Respondent Groetzinger satisfied that test in 1978. Constant and large-scale effort on his part was made. Skill was required and was applied. He did what he did for a livelihood, though with a less-than-successful result. This was not a hobby or a passing fancy or an occasional bet for amusement.”

Ms. Busch was certainly gambling on a full-time basis. But did she have an expectation of profit?

Here, the fact that she kept scrupulous records aided her case immensely. That, and the fact that she did win a jackpot now and then helped out.

Still, the Commissioner argued that it was impossible for anyone to be a professional slots player because “it’s impossible to win.” (As a side note, there are slot machines in some casinos that are either beatable (100% payback with perfect play), or are so close to beatable that perfect play combined with slot club rewards can lead to a positive expectation. That was likely not the case where Ms. Busch gambled.) The court noted,

“[W]e disagree with the tax court’s conclusion that a reasonable expectation of profit is required for a given activity to qualify as a trade or business. We conclude that it is often too difficult and uncertain for courts to decide, from the safe position of hindsight, which business activities had a reasonable expectation of profit and which did not. Furthermore, if trade or business tax incentives hinged upon a court’s determination of whether an activity had a “realistic” expectation of profit, valuable innovation in our entrepreneurial society could be chilled. We conclude that the taxpayer’s expectation of profit from a given activity need not always be reasonable for the activity to qualify as a trade or business.”

So Ms. Busch wins the big gamble, fighting the Minnesota Department of Revenue, avoids AMT, and will be able to pursue her slot play as a business.

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