Watch Out for Unfavorable ‘Related Party’ Rules
Beware of the tricky “related party” tax rules if you are considering buying or selling business assets or ownership interest (corporate stock or a partnership or LLC interest). The Internal Revenue Code contains a number of rules aimed at penalizing sales between individuals or entities that are considered closely connected and thus more likely to try to beat the federal government out of tax revenue.
The problem is that the rules are not very well known, quite complicated and reflect a notion of “related” that far exceeds what most people would have reason to suspect. These provisions can snare perfectly legitimate purchase-sale transactions that weren’t concocted just to avoid taxes.
Here’s a rundown of four especially unfavourable “related party” rules:
1. Disallowed Loss From a Sale
This rule disallows the seller’s tax loss when a “related party” buys an asset, including a business ownership interest. The disallowed loss doesn’t disappear. It is added to the buyer’s tax basis. This reduces the buyer’s taxable gain — or increases the taxable loss — when the buyer eventually sells the asset or ownership interest later on. However, the extra basis never does the seller any good.
A similar rule can potentially disallow a loss from the sale of an asset between a partnership and a majority partner or between two partnerships that are considered to have common ownership.
And there is another rule that can disallow a portion of a loss between a partnership and a taxpayer considered to be is “related” to a partner of that firm.
The latter two rules can also apply to multi-member LLCs treated as a partnership for tax purposes. [Sources: Section 267(a)(1) and Section 707(b)(1) of the Internal Revenue Code and Treasury Regulation 1.267(b)-1(b).]
2. Disallowance of Capital Gain Treatment For Profit from a Sale
This rule can potentially convert low-taxed capital gains into high-taxed ordinary income. It can come into play when an appreciated asset is sold to a “related party” who will be able to depreciate the asset under applicable tax rules.
A somewhat similar rule can apply to the sale of an appreciated asset between a partnership and a majority partner when the asset will not be a capital asset in the hands of the buyer. Generally, this means an asset the buyer can depreciate under applicable tax rules or land the buyer will use for business purposes. (Sources: Section 1239(a) and Section 707(b)(2) of the Internal Revenue Code.)
3. Disallowance of Gain Deferral for Installment Sale Profit
When there is a gain from a sale between “related” parties, this rule can disallow favourable instalment sale treatment, which generally postpones the recognition of taxable gain until the seller actually receives cash from the buyer.
When the disallowance rule applies, the seller must include the entire gain in taxable income for the year of the sale, whether or not any cash changed hands. This provision applies only to assets that the buyer can depreciate. (Source: Section 453(g) of the Internal Revenue Code.)
4. Disallowance of Amortization Deduction for a Purchased Intangible Asset
A so-called anti-churning provision can prevent the buyer from claiming amortization deductions for an intangible asset purchased from a “related party.” (Source: Section 197(f)(9) of the Internal Revenue Code.)
Unfortunately, there’s still more bad news. The Internal Revenue Code includes several other unfavourable provisions that can potentially create adverse tax results for sales between “related parties.”
Even worse, the definitions of what constitutes “related parties” are complicated, and are not necessarily the same for each rule. For example, Rule Number 1 above can apply to a sale between a corporation and a partnership when the same taxpayers own more than 50 per cent of both entities. This seems fairly simple. But in fact, it isn’t because ownership of corporate stock can be attributed to “related” taxpayers who don’t directly own any shares themselves. Strange but true.
It gets worse. Similar attribution rules can create “phantom” ownership by taxpayers who do not have any direct ownership of non-corporate entities such as partnerships and multi-member LLCs treated as partnerships for federal tax purposes.
Bottom Line: “Related party” rules can crop up in unexpected situations. Seek professional advice before making a significant purchase-sale transaction if you have even the slightest suspicion that the other party is “related” to you under the tax law. In many cases, proper advance planning can mitigate or avoid unfavourable tax results.