Discussion:LLC passive loss Garnett case

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Discussion Forum Index --> Advanced Tax Questions --> LLC passive loss Garnett case
Discussion Forum Index --> Tax Questions --> LLC passive loss Garnett case

Smokeytax (talk|edits) said:

3 July 2009
Say, have you all seen the Garnett T.C. No. 19 case that just came out?

It looks like this is really good news for owners of LLC's that have passive losses, doesn't it?

Before, there was the Gregg case, but now there's another win for the taxpayers.

Death&Taxes (talk|edits) said:

3 July 2009
http://www.ustaxcourt.gov/InOpHistoric/Garnett.TC.WPD.pdf

It seems to turn more on the definition of a Limited Partner.

KatieJ (talk|edits) said:

3 July 2009
So an interest in an LLP or LLC is not presumptively passive because IRC Sec. 469(h)(2) is not applicable to them. Instead, whether such an interest is passive must be determined under the general rules for such determinations (i.e., whether the holder of the interest materially participates in the entity's activities).

It's a win for the taxpayers only in removing the presumption of passivity. They still have to show material participation in order to win. Still, a good result for taxpayers.

Riley2 (talk|edits) said:

4 July 2009
Let me get this straight. A limited partner (as defined in the 469 regulations) can ignore Internal Revenue Code § 469(h)(2) if he is also a general partner (as not defined in the 469 regulations). Very interesting.

Smokeytax (talk|edits) said:

4 July 2009
Here's why I'm thinking that the Garnett case is such good news:

LLC is formed near the end of the year and generates a loss, which I run into on a regular basis.

Under 469(h)(2), LP limited partnership interests are presumed passive, except as provided in Regs.

Under Reg 1.469-5T(a), there are seven tests, but only Test (1), related to 500 hours, and Tests (5) and (6), related to past years, can be considered with regard to limited partnership interests in LP's.

General partnership interests in LP's can look to all seven tests.

If the entity is an LLC, then the IRS would assert that there are no general partnership interests at all under the rules defining what constitutes a general partnership interest in an LP.

So, that leaves us with a serious problem, because with an entity formed near the end of the year, it's unlikely that the 500 hour test could be met, and of course the tests related to past years would be inapplicable.

This can be a large tax hit, because typically the owners of the new LLC will have earned a bunch of income prior to setting up the LLC.

But, if LLC's are not the same as LP's, then it's very likely one of the other seven tests in Reg 1.469-5T will fit.

Under the Gregg decision, the taxpayer who was an LLC member won, but this was just one decision, and it was in District Court.

The Garnett case is both a second decision in favor of the taxpayer who was an LLC member, but also is in Tax Court rather than District Court.

Does this analysis make sense.

How thrilled am I that Death&Taxes, Riley2 and KatieJ are weighing in on this discussion, any one of whom I would love to be half as smart as!

Death&Taxes (talk|edits) said:

4 July 2009
I would also note that IRS has not acquiesced. The decisions mean you have substantial authority, but your client could end up spending the tax savings in court.

Harry Boscoe (talk|edits) said:

4 July 2009
So, what's the court *really* saying here? That a couple of pig farmers are allowed to deduct their losses...?

Is it fair to say that based on these proceedings petitioners' prior planning prevented piss-poor performance for pork-producers putatively precluded from participation in their presumptively passive partnerships? Or is it not fair to say that?

RoyDaleOne (talk|edits) said:

4 July 2009
To me, the ruling just says that a member in an LLC maybe dressed up and look like a limited partner in a limited partnership, which may or may not be the factual case. Differences can and do exist between a member and a limited partner. You, the IRS, can not ignore the differences. Go back and make some new rules, because, the attempt to paint all members of an LLC with the current rules ignores to many of the legal differences between LLC members and limited liabilities partners.

Harry, what is fair to say is that the court said the IRS got it wrong, not the taxpayer.

Riley2 (talk|edits) said:

4 July 2009
The Tax Court correctly pointed out that neither Sec. 469 nor the temporary regulations include a definition of a general partner. Therefore, the court apparently felt justified in simultaneously classifying certain working LLP and LLC members as general and limited partners with respect to the same interest for purposes of Temporary Regulation § 1.469-5T(e)(3)(ii).

RoyDaleOne (talk|edits) said:

5 July 2009
I don't believe the court ruled that the members interest were held as limited partners, or were to be treated like limited partnership interest for any purpose. The court did note that this issue was stated by the fiction that LLC's were partnerships.

"Held: Because Ps did not hold their interests in the L.L.P.s or L.L.C.s as “limited partners”, these interests are not subject to the rule of sec. 469(h)(2), I.R.C. Held, further, because Ps’ interests in the tenancies in common are not interests in limited partnerships, these interests also are not subject to the rule of sec. 469(h)(2), I.R.C."

"In doing so, we recognize that petitioners’ status in these entities differs significantly from the status of general partners in State law limited partnerships, but we also recognize that their status differs significantly from that of limited partners in State law limited partnerships. The need to pigeonhole the ownership interests as either general partner interests or limited partner interests arises in the first instance from the fiction of treating an L.L.P. or an L.L.C. as a “limited partnership” under section 1.469-5T(e)(3)(i), Temporary Income Tax Regs., supra. Inasmuch as classifying an L.L.P. or L.L.C. interest as a limited partnership interest entails a departure from conventional concepts of limited partnerships, it similarly entails, we believe, a departure from conventional concepts of general partners and limited partners. In the final analysis, and absent explicit regulatory provision, we conclude that the legislative purposes of the special rule of section 469(h)(2) are more nearly served by treating L.L.P. and L.L.C. members as general partners for this purpose."

It is more clear that the court said that members of a LLC for only the purposes of section 469(h)(2) should be treated as general partners. The court noted that the issue of self-employment taxes was not before it and therefore declined to comment.

Riley2 (talk|edits) said:

8 July 2009
Right, which is exactly what 1.469-5T(e)(3)(ii) says. Surprise, surprise -- the Tax Court validated a temporary regulation.

Smokeytax (talk|edits) said:

8 July 2009
Here's a really interesting article about the Garnett case that appeared on the front page of the C section of today's Wall Street Journal

Entrepreneurs Win Tax Case Versus IRS Losses on Business Investments Can Be Deducted Against Salary, Other Income; an Appeal?

  By LAURA SAUNDERS

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124698320557906557.html

Death&Taxes (talk|edits) said:

22 July 2009
Here is a follow up case agreeing with Garnett:

http://op.bna.com/dt.nsf/id/egrr-7u6up6/$File/thompson.pdf

JR1 (talk|edits) said:

July 22, 2009
Haven't read this yet, too much to do right now, but does this open up the door a bit for bifurcating the LLC interest into limited and general?

Death&Taxes (talk|edits) said:

22 July 2009
Read the article Smokey posted; it has nothing to do with bifurcation, JR.

JR1 (talk|edits) said:

July 22, 2009
Good article. Talk about wanting your cake and eating it, too...the IRS position then has been that if you had a loss, sorry, not deductible, but if you had income, subject to SE per the proposed regs! The reason I ask about bifurcation is that since the court is looking at RoyDale's quote above...there seems to be acknowledgment that holding an LLC interest doesn't tell us anything about that interest being active or passive. So legally bifurcating it might. Just wondering out loud is all. No answers expected for now.

Smokeytax (talk|edits) said:

23 July 2009
I'm thinking that the two new cases differentiating LLC's from LP's, if extended to SE tax, will hurt us trying to argue anything other than the proposed LLC SE tax regulations will apply - essentially if you work over 500 hours in an LLC you're dead in the water with regard to SE tax, unless there is bifurcation.

The bifurcation of a managerial vs. investment class of membership would have to be documented in the LLC agreement, which could be quite cumbersome, to say the least.

The PPC Limited Liability Companies guidebook is now saying that taking any other position than the proposed regulations will expose the preparers to penalties unless disclosed on the tax return, even with the new substantial authority standard having replaced the more likely than not standard for preparer penalties.

I know we've gone over all of this ad nauseum, but it's still making me nuts!

RoyDaleOne (talk|edits) said:

23 July 2009
When was the PPC LLC guidebook last updated. You need to relax. The decision is not 30 days old.

Death&Taxes (talk|edits) said:

23 July 2009
For those who subscribe to RIA's Checkpoint and receive a daily email bulletin, there is a very good small piece on the Thompson case and its import today.

Smokeytax (talk|edits) said:

23 July 2009
Good point, RoyDaleOne. The guidebook was last updated October 2008.

JR1 (talk|edits) said:

July 23, 2009
And Proposed Regs are NOT authoritative, so IN THEIR OPINION, you're exposed. In MY opinion you're not. So there.

Taxteck (talk|edits) said:

23 July 2009
Proposed regulations are substantial authoritative support. See Notice 90-20.