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Transfer of Business Contracts – I.R.S. Disagrees with Greenteam, No Capital Gains Without a Fight

Transfer of Business Contracts – I.R.S. Disagrees with Greenteam, No Capital Gains Without a Fight

In an Action on Decision (“A.O.D.”) published in late 2019, the I.R.S. announced its nonacquiescence to the Tax Court’s decision in Greenteam Materials Recovery Facility v. Commr.  The case involved Code §1253, the provision that standardizes the rules under which payments that are incident to the transfer of a franchise, trademark, or trade name may or may not be properly treated as capital gains.  The case was decided in the taxpayer’s favor because the taxpayer’s agreement avoided all the terms that would otherwise cause the sales proceeds to be characterized as ordinary income.  The nonacquiescence means that the I.R.S. will not follow the holding in cases appealable in Circuit Courts of Appeals other than the 9th Circuit.  The I.R.S. position is that the assets were limited-term contracts to provide services under fixed-term arrangements and looked more like a sale of future income than the sale of an appreciated asset.  Lisa Marie Singh and Stanley C. Ruchelman discuss the case and the nonacquiescence, cautioning that a franchise contract that cannot appreciate over time because the payments are fixed in amount or in scope of service is not an appreciating asset in the eyes of the I.R.S.

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S.A.L.T. Cap Repeal Case Dismissed

S.A.L.T. Cap Repeal Case Dismissed

·       Several high-tax states – whose taxpayers are negatively affected by the T.C.J.A.’s $10,000 cap on the Federal deduction for state and local taxes ­– have instituted a legal challenge that is working its way through the courts.  On the last day of September, the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York ruled against the states under long standing authority that the Congress has broad power to eliminate tax benefits previously granted.  However, this may not be the end of dispute.  Nina Krauthamer and Lisa Singh, an extern at Ruchelman P.L.L.C. and a student at New York Law School, recap the ongoing saga and the latest results.

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I.R.S. Placing Watchdog Agents in International Financial Centers

I.R.S. Placing Watchdog Agents in International Financial Centers

In 2015, approximately 21 million people globally owned virtual currencies, but the I.R.S. estimates less than 900 people reported holding virtual currencies in U.S. tax returns. Now, the I.R.S. has adopted measures to ferret out crypto tax cheats. Whether modifying tax forms, cooperating with tax authorities through the J-5, or most recently stationing agents in international financial centers, the I.R.S. is serious in its attempts to track and tax cryptocurrency transactions. In their article, Stanley C. Ruchelman and Lisa Singh, an extern at Ruchelman P.L.L.C. and a student at New York Law School, look at recent global efforts.

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