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.

Posted in Gambling, Minnesota | 1 Comment

Creating Your Own Church Might Not Work

Churches don’t generally pay income tax. They’re non profits in the true sense of the word.

So why not create your own church? Take your salary, send it directly to the church (say, the Church of Russ), name yourself minister, and before you can say “Let us pray,” there goes all of your tax troubles!

Hint: It had better be a real church.

Second Hint: If you take a vow of poverty, make sure you do so.

Or you could find yourself in trouble. Like the Incline Village, NV man who allegedly formed the “International Academy of Lymphology,” assigning all of his income to the “church,” and then obtaining tax refunds of $100,000 and not reporting income of $500,000. He faces three felony counts of false claims and three counts of tax evasion.

News Story: Las Vegas Sun

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Survivor: Victorville Coming Soon

Last night I drove home from Las Vegas and the CSEA’s SuperSeminar (well worth it, as usual; I’ll have more on the seminars later). As you head out of the high desert from Barstow on Interstate 15, you pass a sign that says, “Victorville Federal Correctional Complex.” There’s a chance that our favorite Survivor contestant may soon be taking up residence there (or a Club Fed location near you).

Richard Hatch, who will be a charter member of the Bozo Tax Offender Hall of Fame, was sentenced to 51 months in prison. That was more time than expected. Although Hatch told the court before sentencing, “I believe I’ve been completely truthful and completely forthcoming throughout the entire process,” Judge Ernest Torres didn’t see it that way. “There’s no nice way to say it: Mr. Hatch lied,” Judge Torres remarked. And that led directly to his sentencing.

So, finally, the Richard Hatch story is over. The moral? If you win a prize with 300 million witnesses, you had better declare it on your tax return.

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Tax Seminar Time

For the next several days, I’ll be at the CSEA’s annual SuperSeminar; thus, updates will be infrequent at best. We’ll return next Wednesday or Thursday with more news and some information from what has in the past been an excellent seminar. Until then, take a look at some of the other tax bloggers listed in the blogroll on the right.

Happy Mother’s Day, too!

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Governator: Use Extra Cash As Rainy Day Fund

Perhaps the Governator reads Taxable Talk (though I doubt it). In any case, Governor Schwarzenegger will propose tomorrow to:

  1. Use $1.6 billion of the new revenues to retire debt;
  2. Use $1.6 billion for the reserve account;
  3. Use $2 billion to compensate schools for money “taken” over the past two years; and
  4. Spend $400 million on disaster preparedness.

Of course, who know what the Democratically controlled legislature will do, and how active the Governator’s red pencil (line item veto) will have to be. Don’t be shocked if he needs multiple red pencils this year.

Meanwhile, speculation is that Google is the major cause of the extra revenue. Not through taxes on Google itself; rather, through taxes on the sale of stock by Google insiders. cnet believes that it could amount to 10% of the tax revenue, $450 million.

News Stories: Governor’s Budget Plans (Scripps-Howard); Google/cnet

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Psychic Tax Evader Allegedly Commits Violence the Old-Fashioned Way

You’d think that if you’re a psychic you’d be able to just will your way to violence—you wouldn’t have to throw any punches.

Sadly, our tax evading psychic apparently threw plenty of punches at his wife. David Guardino of Cary, NC has been free pending his tax evasion trial (which he also apparently didn’t see coming). Joe Kristan has more on our not-so-pyschic psychic.

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One Tax Bill Likely to Pass

Republican negotiators in Congress sent tax legislation out of conference committee. The highlights of this generally lackluster legislation:

– AMT Relief extended, with a new higher exclusion of $62,550 for 2006;

– 15% capital gains rate extended for two more years, through 2010;

– Section 179 depreciation at $100,000 extended to 2010, from 2008;

– Roth IRA conversions allowed for everyone. This, as Joe Kristan correctly notes, increases tax revenues today, but drastically impacts tax revenues in a few years. Roth IRAs are not tax deductible today. However, when you retire and starth withdrawing the funds, they are tax-free;

– The Section 199 Production Deduction (the deduction from hell) has been toughened. The deduction will now be limited to 50% of W-2 wages; and

– Mandatory payments for Offers in Compromise (OIC) of 20% of the OIC. This will discourage OICs.

There’s plenty more, but it’s mostly arcane stuff. There’s a lot of budget shenanigans. As Joe Kristan noted, corporate estimated tax payments are definitely being played around with:

“The 2006 estimated tax payment installments due in July, August or September (third quarter, for calendar year taxpayers) will be 105% of the amount otherwise due for the quarter. The same installment in 2012 will be 106.25% of the amount otherwise due; in 2013, the magic number will be 100.75% of the amount otherwise due.

-In 2010, 20.5% of the third quarter installment due September 15 will be payable October 1; in 2011, 27.5% of the third quarter installment is payable in October.

The government has a September 30 fiscal year, and these rules obviously shuffle income among the fiscal years to meet some arcane budget rule, at least on paper and in a laughably phony manner.”

Of course, the whole procedure is that way. Many of the delayed tax increases will never see the light of day. They’re only in the legislation so that it meets the $70 billion tax cut limitation; if the tax cut were larger than that, the bill would be subject to a fillibuster in the Senate. It cannot be fillibustered.

For more information:
Text of the Bill (HR 4297);
Los Angeles Times News Story;
Roth Tax Updates Post;
and TaxProf Roundup on the legislation.

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If You Fail Once, You Can Fail Again

Back in the 1996 tax year, Leonard Gittinger, an attorney, didn’t pay his taxes. He argued that wages weren’t income. If you’ve been reading this blog, you know that argument is a typical tax protester argument, and is baseless. The Tax Court rejected his argument then, and the 5th Circuit also rejected his first appeal, noting it was “completely and utterly frivolous.”

Well, Mr. Gittinger also didn’t file tax returns for 1997 through 2001, and he filed yet another Tax Court case. Unfortunately, both Tax Court cases aren’t available online. However, he also lost his second case. We do know, from reading his appeal of that decision, that he had 19 typical tax protester arguments. As the Appeals Court noted, only one of his 19 items merited comment: ““Whether the allegations in the petition and . . . instant proceeding are ‘frivolous and groundless?’” The answer is yes.”

The Appeals Court noted that Mr. Gittinger should have learned his lesson the first time. As a reminder of the frivolous nature of the appeal (and, frankly, of the whole case), he was also ordered to pay a $6,000 sanction. “A
party who continues to advance long-defunct arguments invites sanctions.” Tello v. Comm’r, 410 F.3d 743, 744 (5th Cir. 2005)

Case: Gittinger v. Commissioner, 04-611118 (5th Circuit)

My thanks to Decision of the Day for their link to this case.

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Alchemists Rejoice!

Today the Tax Court looked at a §1031 Exchange case. The question before the court was whether a partnership (Peabody) could exchange gold mines for coal mines. The problem: the coal mines were encumbered with supply contracts that sent the coal to electric utilities. Does the encumbrances constitute “boot” that causes tax to be due?

Under a &sect1031 Exchange, like property is exchanged for like property. The exchanger avoids capital gains tax. Like property need not be exactly the same property. You can exchange a rental house for a rental duplex, for example. (There significant restrictions to &1031 exchanges; make sure you talk to your own tax advisor about your situation.)

When cash gets involved in the transaction, it’s considered “boot.” Boot is taxable. The IRS argued that the contracts weren’t real property, but were the equivalent of cash or personal property received along with like-kind property. (There’s no question that you can, in a &sect 1031 exchange, exchange one mine for another mine, even if each mines different substances, assuming the other provisions of &sect 1031 are followed.)

The court had to determine, (1) are supply contracts considered real property and, thus, can be part of a &sect 1031 exchange (the IRS argued that they are contracts to sell personal property); (2) are the servitudes created by the supply contracts real property; and (3) are the supply contracts boot or not?

The court noted that like-kind doesn’t mean exactly the same kind:

In determining whether the like-kind requirement of section 1031 had been met, we found it significant in Koch v. Commissioner, 71 T.C. at 65, that section 1031(a) refers to property of a like, not an identical, kind. The required comparison of the old and new exchanged properties, we reasoned, should be directed to whether the taxpayer, in making the exchange, has used its property to acquire a new kind of asset or has merely exchanged its property for an asset of like nature or character.

The court did note that not all real property exchanges are like-kind exchanges, though.

The idea behind a &sect 1031 exchange is that the taxpayer is exchanging one piece of property for another, and that his original investment has not been sold or liquidated. The court noted,

It is true Peabody is obligated to mine and supply coal to meet the operating needs of power stations and that Peabody is prohibited from impairing the contracted-for supply by selling coal to other buyers. In our view those contract obligations and restrictions constitute a distinction in the grade or quality of the old and new mining properties rather than a difference in their kind or class. The new coal mine property is of a like nature or character to the gold mining property Peabody exchanged. By exchanging the gold mining property for the coal mining property subject to the supply contracts, Peabody is essentially continuing the original investment which remains fully unliquidated.

The court concluded, “In the light of that holding and because the supply contracts cannot be separated from Peabody’s ownership of the Lee Ranch mine coal reserves, it follows that those contracts are not taxable as other property or boot under section 1031(b).”

So Peabody is allowed to turn gold into coal, tax-free.

Case: Peabody Natural Resources Company v. Commissioner, 126 T.C. No. 14

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CA Gets Tax Windfall; Will the Money be Spent or Saved?

In April, Californians sent $11.3 billion in personal income tax payments to the state, $4 billion more than predicted in January, according to the Department of Finance. So, what should be done with this money?

The California Constitution requires a balanced budget, so there’s no such thing as deficits or surpluses—at least on paper. The reality is a bit different, of course. For the last few years, the state has borrowed funds from a variety of sources in order to balance the books. Funds tapped included payments to local governments, funds for education, and emergency funds.

H.D. Palmer, a spokesman for the Department of Finance, notes what happened the last time California had an unexpected surplus. “When the dot-com boom went spectacularly bust and those one-time revenues disappeared, that increased the structural deficit that we are still working to close.”

It even appears that Democrats in the state legislature know that California has fiscal issues. “We as Democrats need to be careful and focus on getting ourselves out of this hole so we don’t have a permanent structural deficit,” said Wes Chesbro (D-Arcata).

So will the money go to reducing the structural deficit and paying back the debt/borrowed funds, or will the Democrats in the legislature attempt to spend the money? The budget is supposed to be approved by June 30th (a deadline that’s rarely met), so we should have some idea on this soon.

News Story: Contra Costa Times

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