Executive Summary:
Revenue Procedure
2009-20 provides an
optional safe harbor method for eligible taxpayers to deduct theft losses from
criminally fraudulent investment arrangements that take the form of "Ponzi"
schemes.
The safe harbor
method provides a uniform, simplified method for eligible taxpayers to determine
the amount and timing of their theft loss deductions.
Revenue Ruling
2009-09 addresses the tax
treatment of losses from criminally fraudulent investment arrangements that take
the form of "Ponzi" schemes.
The ruling holds
that the losses are theft losses and provides guidance on the character,
timing, and amount of the loss deduction.
FACTS:
Revenue Procedure
2009-20 and Revenue Ruling 2009-09 will be published in Internal Revenue
Bulletin 2009-14 on April 6, 2009.
REV. PROC.
2009-20
Examination of
returns and claims for refund, credit or abatement; determination of correct tax
liability.
This revenue
procedure provides an optional safe harbor treatment for taxpayers that
experienced losses in certain investment arrangements discovered to be
criminally fraudulent. This revenue procedure also describes how the Internal
Revenue Service will treat a return that claims a deduction for such a loss and
does not use the safe harbor treatment described in this revenue
procedure.
BACKGROUND
The Service and
Treasury Department are aware of investment arrangements that have been
discovered to be fraudulent, resulting in significant losses to taxpayers.
These arrangements often take the form of so-called "Ponzi" schemes, in which
the party perpetrating the fraud receives cash or property from investors,
purports to earn income for the investors, and reports to the investors income
amounts that are wholly or partially fictitious.
Payments, if any,
of purported income or principal to investors are made from cash or property
that other investors invested in the fraudulent arrangement. The party
perpetrating the fraud criminally appropriates some or all of the investors'
cash or property.
Rev. Rul. 2009-9,
2009 I.R.B (April 6, 2009), describes the proper income tax treatment for losses
resulting from these Ponzi schemes.
The Service and
Treasury Department recognize that whether and
when investors meet the
requirements for claiming a theft loss for an investment in a Ponzi scheme are
highly factual determinations that often cannot be made by taxpayers with
certainty in the year the loss is discovered.
In view of the
number of investment arrangements recently discovered to be fraudulent and the
extent of the potential losses, this revenue procedure provides an optional safe
harbor under which qualified investors (as defined in this revenue procedure)
may treat a loss as a theft loss deduction when certain conditions are met.
This treatment
provides qualified investors with a uniform manner for determining their theft
losses. In addition, this treatment avoids potentially difficult problems of
proof in determining how much income reported in prior years was fictitious or a
return of capital, and alleviates compliance and administrative burdens on both
taxpayers and the Service.
SCOPE
The safe harbor
procedures of this revenue procedure apply to taxpayers that are qualified
investors within the meaning of this revenue procedure.
DEFINITIONS:
The following
definitions apply solely for purposes of this revenue
procedure.
Specified fraudulent
arrangement.
A specified fraudulent
arrangement is an arrangement in which a party (the
lead figure)
-
receives cash or property from investors;
- purports to earn income for the investors;
- reports income amounts to the investors
that are partially or wholly fictitious;
- makes payments, if any, of purported
income or principal to some investors from amounts that other investors invested
in the fraudulent arrangement; and
- appropriates some or all of the investors'
cash or property.
-
For example, the fraudulent
investment arrangement described in Rev. Rul. 2009-9 is a specified fraudulent
arrangement.
Qualified
loss.
A qualified loss is a loss
resulting from a specified fraudulent arrangement in which, as a result of the
conduct that caused the loss-
1. The lead figure (or one of the lead figures, if more
than one) was charged by indictment or information (not withdrawn or dismissed)
under state or federal law with the commission of fraud, embezzlement or a
similar crime that, if proven, would meet the definition of theft for purposes
of Code Sec. 165 and Reg. Sec. 1.165-8(d) under the law of the jurisdiction in
which the theft occurred;
2. The lead figure was the subject of a state or federal
criminal complaint (not withdrawn or dismissed) alleging the commission of a
crime described in section 4.02(1) of this revenue procedure, and either
-
a. The complaint alleged an admission by the lead
figure, or the execution of an affidavit by that person admitting the crime;
or
b. A receiver or trustee was appointed with
respect to the arrangement or assets of the arrangement were
frozen.
Qualified
investor.
A qualified
investor means a United States person, as defined in § 7701(a)(30) -
1. That generally qualifies to deduct theft
losses under § 165 and § 1.165-8;
2. That did not have actual knowledge of the
fraudulent nature of the investment arrangement prior to it becoming known to
the general public;
3. With respect to which the specified
fraudulent arrangement is not a tax shelter, as defined in§ 6662(d)(2)(C)(ii);
and
4. That transferred cash or property to a
specified fraudulent arrangement. A qualified investor does not include a
person that invested solely in a fund or other entity (separate from the
investor for federal income tax purposes) that invested in the specified
fraudulent arrangement. However, the fund or entity itself may be a qualified
investor within the scope of this revenue procedure.
Discovery
year.
A qualified investor's
discovery year is the taxable year of the investor in which the indictment,
information, or complaint described in section 4.02 of this revenue procedure
is filed.
Responsible
group.
Responsible group means, for
any specified fraudulent arrangement, one or more of the following:
1. The individual or individuals (including the lead
figure) who conducted the specified fraudulent
arrangement;
2. Any investment vehicle or other entity that conducted
the specified fraudulent arrangement, and employees, officers, or directors of
that entity or entities;
3. A liquidation, receivership, bankruptcy or similar
estate established with respect to individuals or entities who conducted the
specified fraudulent arrangement, in order to recover assets for the benefit of
investors and creditors; or
4. Parties that are subject to claims brought by a trustee,
receiver, or other fiduciary on behalf of the liquidation, receivership,
bankruptcy or similar estate described in section 4.05(3) of this revenue
procedure.
Qualified investment.
Qualified
investment means the excess, if any, of -
(a) The
sum of -
(i) The total amount of cash, or the
basis of property, that the qualified investor invested in the arrangement in
all years; plus
(ii) The total amount of net income with
respect to the specified fraudulent arrangement that, consistent with
information received from the specified fraudulent arrangement, the qualified
investor included in income for federal tax purposes for all taxable years prior
to the discovery year, including taxable years for which a refund is barred by
the statute of limitations; over
(b) The total amount of cash or property
that the qualified investor withdrew in all years from the specified fraudulent
arrangement (whether designated as income or principal).
(2) Qualified
investment does not include any of the following-
- Amounts borrowed from the responsible
group and invested in the specified fraudulent arrangement, to the extent the
borrowed amounts were not repaid at the time the theft was
discovered;
- Amounts such as fees that were paid to the
responsible group and deducted for federal income tax purposes;
- Amounts reported to the qualified investor
as taxable income that were not included in gross income on the investor's
federal income tax returns; or
- Cash or property that the qualified
investor invested in a fund or other entity (separate from the qualified
investor for federal income tax purposes) that invested in a specified
fraudulent arrangement.
Actual
recovery.
Actual recovery
means any amount a qualified investor actually receives in the discovery year
from any source as reimbursement or recovery for the qualified
loss.
Potential
insurance/SIPC recovery.
Potential
insurance/SIPC recovery means the sum of the amounts of all actual or potential
claims for reimbursement for a qualified loss that, as of the last day of the
discovery year, are attributable to-
- Insurance
policies in the name of the qualified investor;
- Contractual arrangements other
than insurance that guaranteed or otherwise protected against loss of the
qualified investment; or
- Amounts payable from the
Securities Investor Protection Corporation (SIPC), as advances for customer
claims under 15 U.S.C. § 78fff-3(a)(the Securities Investor
Protection Act of 1970), or by a similar entity under a similar
provision.
Potential
direct recovery.
Potential direct
recovery means the amount of all actual or potential claims for recovery for a
qualified loss, as of the last day of the discovery year, against the
responsible group.
Potential
third-party recovery.
Potential
third-party recovery means the amount of all actual or potential claims for
recovery for a qualified loss, as of the last day of the discovery year, that
are not described in section 4.08 or 4.09 of this revenue
procedure.
APPLICATION
In
general.
If a qualified
investor follows the procedures described in section 6 of this revenue
procedure, the Service will not challenge the following treatment by the
qualified investor of a qualified loss-
- The loss is deducted as a theft
loss;
- The taxable year in which the theft was
discovered within the meaning of § 165(e) is the discovery year described in
section 4.04 of this revenue procedure; and
- The amount of the deduction is the amount
specified section 5.02 of this revenue procedure.
Amount to
be deducted.
The amount
specified in this section 5.02 is calculated as follows-
i. Multiply the amount of the qualified investment
by-
a. 95 percent, for a qualified investor that
does not pursueany potential third-party recovery;
or
b. 75 percent, for a qualified investor that
is pursuing or intends to pursue any potential third-party recovery;
and
ii. Subtract from this product the sum of any actual
recovery and any potential insurance/SIPC recovery.
The amount of the
deduction calculated under this section 5.02 is not further reduced by potential
direct recovery or potential third-party recovery.
Future
recoveries.
The qualified
investor may have income or an additional deduction in a year subsequent to the
discovery year depending on the actual amount of the loss that is eventually
recovered. See § 1.165-1(d); Rev. Rul. 2009-9.
PROCEDURE
A qualified
investor that uses the safe harbor treatment described in section 5 of this
revenue procedure must -
1. Mark "Revenue Procedure 2009-20" at the top of
the Form 4684, Casualties and Thefts, for the federal income tax return for the
discovery year. The taxpayer must enter the "deductible theft loss" amount from
line 10 in Part II of Appendix A of this revenue procedure on line 34, section
B, Part I, of the Form 4684 and should not complete the remainder of section B,
Part I, of the Form 4684;
2. Complete and sign the statement provided in Appendix A of
this revenue procedure; and
3. Attach the executed statement provided in
Appendix A of this revenue procedure to the qualified investor's timely filed
(including extensions) federal income tax return for the discovery year.
Notwithstanding the preceding sentence, if, before April 17, 2009, the taxpayer
has filed a return for the discovery year or an amended return for a prior year
that is inconsistent with the safe harbor treatment provided by this revenue
procedure, the taxpayer must indicate this fact on the executed statement and
must attach the statement to the return (or amended return) for the discovery
year that is consistent with the safe harbor treatment provided by this revenue
procedure and that is filed on or before May 15, 2009.
By executing the
statement provided in Appendix A of this revenue procedure, the taxpayer
agrees:
-
Not to deduct in the discovery year any
amount of the theft loss in excess of the deduction permitted by section 5 of
this revenue procedure;
- Not to file returns or amended returns to
exclude or recharacterize income reported with respect to the investment
arrangement in taxable years preceding the discovery year;
- Not to apply the alternative computation
in § 1341 with respect to the theft loss deduction allowed by this revenue
procedure; and
- Not to apply the doctrine of equitable
recoupment or the mitigation provisions in §§ 1311-1314 with respect to income
from the investment arrangement that was reported in taxable years that are
otherwise barred by the period of limitations on filing a claim for refund under
§ 6511.
EFFECTIVE
DATE
This revenue
procedure applies to losses for which the discovery year is a taxable year
beginning after December 31, 2007.
TAXPAYERS THAT
DO NOT USE THE SAFE HARBOR TREATMENT PROVIDED BY THIS REVENUE
PROCEDURE
A taxpayer that
chooses not to apply the safe harbor treatment provided by this revenue
procedure to a claimed theft loss is subject to all of the generally applicable
provisions governing the deductibility of losses under § 165.
EXAMPLE:
A taxpayer
seeking a theft loss deduction must establish that the loss was from theft and
that the theft was discovered in the year the taxpayer claims the deduction.
The taxpayer must also establish, through sufficient documentation, the amount
of the claimed loss and must establish that no claim for reimbursement of any
portion of the loss exists with respect to which there is a reasonable prospect
of recovery in the taxable year in which the taxpayer claims the loss.
A taxpayer that
chooses not to apply the safe harbor treatment of this revenue procedure to a
claimed theft loss and that files or amends federal income tax returns for years
prior to the discovery year to exclude amounts reported as income to the
taxpayer from the investment arrangement must establish that the amounts sought
to be excluded in fact were not income that was actually or constructively
received by the taxpayer (or accrued by the taxpayer, in the case of a taxpayer
using an accrual method of accounting).
However, provided
a taxpayer can establish the amount of net income from the investment
arrangement that was reported and included in the taxpayer's gross income
consistent with information received from the specified fraudulent arrangement
in taxable years for which the period of limitation on filing a claim for refund
under § 6511 has expired, the Service will not challenge the taxpayer's
inclusion of that amount in basis for determining the amount of any allowable
theft loss, whether or not the income was genuine.
Returns claiming
theft loss deductions from fraudulent investment arrangements are subject to
examination by the Service.
REV. RUL.
2009-09
ISSUES:
-
Is
a loss from criminal fraud or embezzlement in a transaction entered into for
profit a theft loss or a capital loss under § 165 of
the Internal Revenue Code?
- Is
such a loss subject to either the personal loss limits in § 165(h) or the limits
on itemized deductions in §§ 67 and 68?
- In
what year is such a loss deductible?
- How
is the amount of such a loss determined?
- Can such a loss create or increase a net operating loss
under § 172?
- Does such a loss qualify for the computation of tax
provided by § 1341 for the restoration of an amount held under a claim of
right?
- Does such a loss qualify for the application of §§
1311-1314 to adjust tax liability in years that are otherwise barred by the
period of limitations on filing a claim for refund under §
6511?
HOLDINGS
-
A
loss
from criminal fraud or embezzlement in a transaction entered into for profit is
a theft loss, not a capital loss, under
§ 165.
-
A theft loss in a transaction entered into
for profit is deductible under § 165(c)(2), not § 165(c)(3), as an itemized
deduction that is not subject to the personal loss limits in § 165(h), or the
limits on itemized deductions in §§ 67 and 68.
- A theft loss in a transaction entered into
for profit is deductible in the year the loss is discovered, provided that the
loss is not covered by a claim for reimbursement or recovery with respect to
which there is a reasonable prospect of recovery.
-
The amount of a theft loss in a
transaction entered into for profit is generally the amount invested in the
arrangement, less amounts withdrawn, if any, reduced by reimbursements or
recoveries, and reduced by claims as to which there is a reasonable prospect of
recovery. Where an amount is reported to the investor as income prior to
discovery of the arrangement and the investor includes that amount in gross
income and reinvests this amount in the arrangement, the amount of the theft
loss is increased by the purportedly reinvested amount.
- A theft loss in a transaction entered into
for profit may create or increase a net operating loss under § 172 that can be
carried back up to 3 years and forward up to 20 years. An eligible small
business may elect either a 3, 4, or 5-year net operating loss carryback for an
applicable 2008 net operating loss.
- A theft loss in a transaction entered into
for profit does not qualify for the computation of tax provided by §
1341.
- A
theft loss in a transaction entered into for profit does not qualify for the
application of §§ 1311-1314 to adjust tax liability in years that are otherwise
barred by the period of limitations on filing a claim for refund under §
6511.
FACTS:
A is an individual who uses the cash
receipts and disbursements method of accounting and files federal income tax
returns on a calendar year basis. B holds himself out to the public as
an investment advisor and securities broker.
In Year 1,
A, in a transaction entered into for profit, opened an investment account
with B, contributed $100x to the account, and provided B
with power of attorney to use the $100x to purchase and sell securities
on A's behalf. A instructed B to reinvest any income and
gains earned on the investments. In Year 3, A contributed an additional
$20x to the account.
B periodically issued account statements to
A that reported the securities purchases and sales that B
purportedly made in A's investment account and the balance of the
account. B also issued tax reporting statements to A and to the
Internal Revenue Service that reflected purported gains and losses on A's
investment account. B also reported to A that no income was
earned in Year 1 and that for each of the Years 2 through 7 the investments
earned $10x of income (interest, dividends, and capital gains), which
A included in gross income on A's federal income tax returns.
At all times
prior to Year 8 and part way through Year 8, B was able to make
distributions to investors who requested them. A took a single
distribution of $30x from the account in Year 7.
In Year 8, it was
discovered that B's purported investment advisory and brokerage activity
was in fact a fraudulent investment arrangement known as a "Ponzi" scheme.
Under this scheme, B purported to invest cash or property on behalf of
each investor, including A, in an account in the investor's name. For
each investor's account, B reported investment activities and resulting
income amounts that were partially or wholly fictitious. In some cases, in
response to requests for withdrawal, B made payments of purported income
or principal to investors. These payments were made, at least in part, from
amounts that other investors had invested in the fraudulent
arrangement.
When B's fraud was discovered in
Year 8, B had only a small fraction of the funds that B reported
on the account statements that Bissued to A and other
investors. A did
not receive any reimbursement or other recovery for the loss in Year 8. The
period of limitation on filing a claim for refund under § 6511 has not yet
expired for Years 5 through 7, but has expired for Years 1 through
4.
B's actions constituted criminal fraud or
embezzlement under the law of the jurisdiction in which the transactions
occurred. At no time prior to the discovery did A know that B's
activities were a fraudulent scheme. The fraudulent investment arrangement was
not a tax shelter as defined in§ 6662(d)(2)(C)(ii) with
respect to A.
COMMENT:
Issue
1. Theft
loss.
Code Section 165(a) allows a deduction for losses sustained
during the taxable year and not compensated by insurance or otherwise.
· For
individuals, § 165(c)(2) allows a deduction for losses incurred in a transaction
entered into for profit, and § 165(c)(3) allows a deduction for certain losses
not connected to a transaction entered into for profit, including theft losses.
· Under §
165(e), a theft loss is sustained in the taxable year the taxpayer discovers the
loss. Section 165(f) permits a deduction for capital losses only to the extent
allowed in §§ 1211 and 1212.
· In certain
circumstances, a theft loss may be taken into account in determining gains or
losses for a taxable year under § 1231.
For federal income tax
purposes, "theft" is a word of general and broad connotation, covering any
criminal appropriation of another's property to the use of the taker, including
theft by swindling, false pretenses and any other form of guile. ("theft" includes larceny and embezzlement).
A taxpayer
claiming a theft loss must prove that the loss resulted from a taking of
property that was illegal under the law of the jurisdiction in which it occurred
and was done with criminal intent. However, a taxpayer need not show a
conviction for theft.
The character of
an investor's loss related to fraudulent activity depends, in part, on the
nature of the investment.
EXAMPLE:
A loss that is
sustained on the worthlessness or disposition of stock acquired on the open
market for investment is a capital loss, even if the decline in the value of the
stock is attributable to fraudulent activities of the corporation's officers or
directors, because the officers or directors did not have the specific intent to
deprive the shareholder of money or property.
Here,
unlike the situation in Rev. Rul. 77-17,
B specifically intended to, and did, deprive A of money by
criminal acts. B's actions constituted
a theft from A, as theft is defined for § 165
purposes.
Accordingly,
A's loss is a theft loss, not a capital
loss.
Issue
2. Deduction
limitations.
Section 165(h)
imposes two limitations on casualty loss deductions, including theft loss
deductions, for property not connected either with a trade or business or with a
transaction entered into for profit.
Section 165(h)(1)
provides that a deduction for a loss described in § 165(c)(3) (including a
theft) is allowable only to the extent that the amount exceeds $100 ($500 for
taxable years beginning in 2009 only).
Section 165(h)(2)
provides that if personal casualty losses for any taxable year (including theft
losses) exceed personal casualty gains for the taxable year, the losses are
allowed only to the extent of the sum of the gains, plus so much of the excess
as exceeds ten percent of the individual's adjusted gross income.
Rev. Rul. 71-381,
1971-2 C.B. 126, concludes that a taxpayer who loans money to a corporation in
exchange for a note, relying on financial reports that are later discovered to
be fraudulent, is entitled to a theft loss deduction under § 165(c)(3).
However,
§ 165(c)(3) subsequently was amended to clarify that the limitations applicable
to personal casualty and theft losses under § 165(c)(3) apply only to those
losses that are not connected with a trade or business or a transaction entered
into for profit. Tax Reform Act of 1984, Pub. L. No. 98-369, § 711 (1984). As
a result, Rev. Rul. 71-381 is obsolete to the extent that it holds that theft
losses incurred in a transaction entered into for profit are deductible under
§ 165(c)(3), rather than under § 165(c)(2).
In opening an
investment account with B, A entered into a transaction for
profit. A's theft loss therefore is deductible under § 165(c)(2)
and is not subject to the § 165(h) limitations.
Section 63(d)
provides that itemized deductions for an individual are the allowable deductions
other than those allowed in arriving at adjusted gross income (under § 62) and
the deduction for personal exemptions. A theft loss is not allowable under § 62
and is therefore an itemized deduction.
Section 67(a)
provides that miscellaneous itemized deductions may be deducted only to the
extent the aggregate amount exceeds two percent of adjusted gross income. Under
§ 67(b)(3), losses deductible under § 165(c)(2) or (3) are excepted from the
definition of miscellaneous itemized deductions.
Section 68
provides an overall limit on itemized deductions based on a percentage of
adjusted gross income or total itemized deductions. Under § 68(c)(3), losses
deductible under § 165(c)(2) or (3) are excepted from this
limit.
Accordingly, A's theft loss is an itemized deduction that is not subject
to the limits on itemized deductions in §§ 67 and 68.
Issue
3. Year of deduction.
Section 165(e)
provides that any loss arising from theft is treated as sustained during the
taxable year in which the taxpayer discovers the loss. Under §§ 1.165-8(a)(2)
and 1.165-1(d), however, if, in the year of discovery, there exists a claim for
reimbursement with respect to which there is a reasonable prospect of recovery,
no portion of the loss for which reimbursement may be received is sustained
until the taxable year in which it can be ascertained with reasonable certainty
whether or not the reimbursement will be received, for example, by a settlement,
adjudication, or abandonment of the claim. Whether a reasonable prospect of
recovery exists is a question of fact to be determined upon examination of all
facts and circumstances.
A may deduct the theft loss in Year 8, the
year the theft loss is discovered, provided that the loss is not covered by a
claim for reimbursement or other recovery as to which A has a reasonable
prospect of recovery.
To the extent
that A's deduction is reduced by such a claim, recoveries on the claim in
a later taxable year are not includible in A's gross income. If A
recovers a greater amount in a later year, or an amount that initially was not
covered by a claim as to which there was a reasonable prospect of recovery, the
recovery is includible in A's gross income in the later year under the
tax benefit rule, to the extent the earlier deduction reduced A's income
tax. See § 111; § 1.165-1(d)(2)(iii).
Finally, if
A recovers less than the amount that was covered by a claim as to which
there was a reasonable prospect of recovery that reduced the deduction for theft
in Year 8, an additional deduction is allowed in the year the amount of recovery
is ascertained with reasonable certainty.
Issue
4. Amount of
deduction.
Section
1.165-8(c) provides that the amount deductible in the case of a theft loss is
determined consistently with the manner described in § 1.165-7 for determining
the amount of a casualty loss, considering the fair market value of the property
immediately after the theft to be zero.
Under these
provisions, the amount of an investment theft loss is the basis of the property
(or the amount of money) that was lost, less any reimbursement or other
compensation.
The amount of a
theft loss resulting from a fraudulent investment arrangement is generally the
initial amount invested in the arrangement, plus any additional investments,
less amounts withdrawn, if any, reduced by reimbursements or other recoveries
and reduced by claims as to which there is a reasonable prospect of recovery.
If an amount is
reported to the investor as income in years prior to the year of discovery of
the theft, the investor includes the amount in gross income, and the investor
reinvests the amount in the arrangement, this amount increases the deductible
theft loss.
Accordingly, the
amount of A's theft loss for purposes of § 165 includes A's
original Year 1 investment ($100x) and additional Year 3 investment
($20x). A's loss also includes the amounts that A reported
as gross income on A's federal income tax returns for Years 2 through 7
($60x). A's loss is reduced by the amount of money distributed to
A in Year 7 ($30x). If A has a claim for reimbursement
with respect to which there is a reasonable prospect of recovery, A may
not deduct in Year 8 the portion of the loss that is covered by the claim.
Issue
5. Net operating
loss.
Section 172(a) allows as a
deduction for the taxable year the aggregate of the net operating loss
carryovers and carrybacks to that year. In computing a net operating loss under
§ 172(c) and (d)(4), nonbusiness deductions of noncorporate taxpayers are
generally allowed only to the extent of nonbusiness income. For this purpose,
however, any deduction for casualty or theft losses allowable under § 165(c)(2)
or (3) is treated as a business deduction.
Section 172(d)(4)(C).
Under § 172(b)(1)(A), a net
operating loss generally may be carried back 2 years and forward 20 years.
However, under § 172(b)(1)(F), the portion of an individual's net operating loss
arising from casualty or theft may be carried back 3 years and forward 20
years.
Section 1211 of the American
Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, Pub. L. No. 111-5, 123 Stat. 115
(February 17, 2009), amends § 172(b)(1)(H) of the Internal Revenue Code to allow
any taxpayer that is an eligible small business to elect either a 3, 4, or
5-year net operating loss carryback for an "applicable 2008 net operating
loss."
Section 172(b)(1)(H)(iv)
provides that the term "eligible small business" has the same meaning given that
term by § 172(b)(1)(F)(iii), except that § 448(c) is applied by substituting
"$15 million" for "$5 million" in each place it appears. Section
172(b)(1)(F)(iii) provides that a small business is a corporation or partnership
that meets the gross receipts test of § 448(c) for the taxable year in which the
loss arose (or in the case of a sole proprietorship, that would meet such test
if the proprietorship were a corporation).
Because § 172(d)(4)(C) treats
any deduction for casualty or theft losses allowable under § 165(c)(2) or (3) as
a business deduction, a casualty or theft loss an individual sustains after
December 31, 2007, is considered a loss from a "sole proprietorship" within the
meaning of § 172(b)(1)(F)(iii). Accordingly, an individual may elect either a
3, 4, or 5-year net operating loss carryback for an applicable 2008 net
operating loss, provided the gross receipts test provided in § 172(b)(1)(H)(iv)
is satisfied. See Rev. Proc. 2009-19, 2009-14 I.R.B. (April 6,
2009).
To the extent A's theft
loss deduction creates or increases a net operating loss in the year the loss is
deducted, A may carry back up to 3 years and forward up to 20 years the
portion of the net operating loss attributable to the theft loss. If A's
loss is an applicable 2008 net operating loss and the gross receipts test in §
172(b)(1)(H)(iv) is met, A may elect either a 3, 4, or 5-year net
operating loss carryback for the applicable 2008 net operating
loss.
Issue
6. Restoration of amount
held under claim of right.
Section 1341 provides an
alternative tax computation formula intended to mitigate against unfavorable tax
consequences that may arise as a result of including an item in gross income in
a taxable year and taking a deduction for the item in a subsequent year when it
is established that the taxpayer did not have a right to the item.
Section 1341 requires that:
1. an item was included in gross income for a prior taxable
year or years because it appeared that the taxpayer had an unrestricted right to
the item,
2. a deduction is allowable for the taxable year because it
was established after the close of the prior taxable year or years that the
taxpayer did not have a right to the item or to a portion of the item, and
3. the amount of the deduction exceeds $3,000. Section
1341(a)(1) and (3).
If § 1341 applies, the tax for
the taxable year is the lesser of: (1) the tax for the taxable year computed
with the current deduction, or (2) the tax for the taxable year computed without
the deduction, less the decrease in tax for the prior taxable year or years that
would have occurred if the item or portion of the item had been excluded from
gross income in the prior taxable year or years.
To satisfy the requirements of
§ 1341(a)(2), a deduction must arise because the taxpayer is under an obligation
to restore the income.
When A incurs a loss
from criminal fraud or embezzlement by B in a transaction entered into
for profit, any theft loss deduction to which A may be entitled does not
arise from an obligation on A's part to restore income. Therefore,
A is not entitled to the tax benefits of § 1341 with regard to A's
theft loss deduction.
Issue
7. Mitigation
provisions.
The mitigation provisions of
§§ 1311-1314 permit the Service or a taxpayer in certain circumstances to
correct an error made in a closed year by adjusting the tax liability in years
that are otherwise barred by the statute of limitations. The party invoking
these mitigation provisions has the burden of proof to show that the specific
requirements are satisfied.
Section 1311(a) provides that
if a determination (as defined in § 1313) is described in one or more of the
paragraphs of § 1312 and, on the date of the determination, correction of the
effect of the error referred to in § 1312 is prevented by the operation of any
law or rule of law (other than §§ 1311-1314 or § 7122), then the effect of the
error is corrected by an adjustment made in the amount and in the manner
specified in § 1314.
Section 1311(b)(1) provides in
relevant part that an adjustment may be made under §§ 1311-1314 only if, in
cases when the amount of the adjustment would be credited or refunded under §
1314, the determination adopts a position maintained by the Secretary that is
inconsistent with the erroneous prior tax treatment referred to in
§ 1312.
A cannot use the mitigation provisions of §§ 1311-1314 to
adjust tax liability in Years 2 through 4 because there is no inconsistency in
the Service's position with respect to A's prior inclusion of income in
Years 2 through 4. See § 1311(b)(1).
The Service's position that
A is entitled to an investment theft loss under § 165 in Year 8 (as
computed in Issue 4, above), when the fraud loss is discovered, is consistent
with the Service's position that A properly included in income the
amounts credited to A's account in Years 2 through 4. See
§ 1311(b)(1)(A).
DISCLOSURE
OBLIGATION UNDER §
1.6011-4
A theft loss in a transaction entered into for profit that is
deductible under § 165(c)(2) is not taken into account in determining whether a
transaction is a loss transaction under § 1.6011-4(b)(5).
EFFECT ON OTHER DOCUMENTS
Rev.
Rul. 71-381 is obsoleted to the extent that it holds that a theft loss incurred
in a transaction entered into for profit is deductible under § 165(c)(3) rather
than § 165(c)(2).
CITE
AS:
LISI Estate Planning Newsletter # 1433 (March
17, 2009) at http://www.leimbergservices.com
Copyright 2009 Leimberg Information Services, Inc. (LISI) .
CITES:
Revenue Ruling 2009-09 and
Revenue Procedure 2009-20.
Click here for
Commissioner Doug
Shulman's Testimony Before The Senate Finance Committee Tax Issues Related To
Ponzi Schemes And An Update On Offshore Tax Evasion Legislation.