self employment tax and LLC
Collapse
X
-
I do agree with the OP. (It seems we just had this conversation recently in another thread where all positions on the matter were thoroughly examined, cites discussed, regs thrashed and disposed of, and we parted ways agreeing to respectively disagree.) Since Congress can't seem to agree either, I guess we are left to the courts to decide in a subsequent relevant case. I thought of the QJV issue as well, but JoshInNC is correct. Since it is an LLC, can't use. The partnership can use a different percentage for ownership, profits and liabilities, can it not?Comment
-
this case did involve lawyers performing personal services (legal services) for the law firm, and for a LLP (not an LLC). It was a flimsy argument that lawyers that derive nearly all of their income from services could exclude their "limited partner" source of income distribution from SE earnings. Still, I think that the proposed reg may work in the case of a husband and wife owned business where the wife has little or no active participation.
2) An LLP gives the partners the same limited liability status of that of an LLC or a corporation. Thus, you can't ignore the case and say that only applies to LLPs.
3) The court said nothing about the 500 hour active participation rule for passive activities. It used active participation to mean in contrast to just being an investor with no substantial services being performed. Thus, the IRS regs really have no bearing on the outcome of this court case.
What is interesting is what the court said: "Congress intended Section 1402(a)(13) to apply to investors who were not actively participating in the partnership."
That is a HUGE statement, because it contradicts the very reason why the LLC members are claiming they are not subject to SE tax - the fact that they are limited partners due to their liability protection under state law. The court says liability protection has nothing to do with code Section 1402. The court says Section 1402 was written because limited partners are usually investors that do not participate in management.
I can see this case being argued again and again in future cases where LLC members try to claim they are not subject to SE tax due to their limited liability status. If other courts follow this case, that argument won't be valid anymore.Last edited by Bees Knees; 08-28-2012, 10:53 AM.Comment
-
Bees
1) Most of our LLC clients perform all of the work, just like the lawyers in the Renkemeyer case. So unless you are claiming your LLC members are just investors in the business and do not perform services, according to this court case they are subject to SE tax, regardless of their limited liability status.
2) An LLP gives the partners the same limited liability status of that of an LLC or a corporation. Thus, you can't ignore the case and say that only applies to LLPs.
3) The court said nothing about the 500 hour active participation rule for passive activities. It used active participation to mean in contrast to just being an investor with no substantial services being performed. Thus, the IRS regs really have no bearing on the outcome of this court case.
What is interesting is what the court said: "Congress intended Section 1402(a)(13) to apply to investors who were not actively participating in the partnership."
That is a HUGE statement, because it contradicts the very reason why the LLC members are claiming they are not subject to SE tax - the fact that they are limited partners due to their liability protection under state law. The court says liability protection has nothing to do with code Section 1402. The court says Section 1402 was written because limited partners are usually investors that do not participate in management.
I can see this case being argued again and again in future cases where LLC members try to claim they are not subject to SE tax due to their limited liability status. If other courts follow this case, that argument won't be valid anymore.Circular 230 Disclosure:
Don't even think about using the information in this message!Comment
-
I understand completely. One suggestion on another forum was to pay each member their respectively reasonable salaries (guaranteed payments) and then the remaining profits (distributive shares of profit) would not be subject to SE tax, just taxed as ordinary income; very similar to an S Corporation. Do you think the IRS would have a problem with that stance?Comment
-
I understand completely. One suggestion on another forum was to pay each member their respectively reasonable salaries (guaranteed payments) and then the remaining profits (distributive shares of profit) would not be subject to SE tax, just taxed as ordinary income; very similar to an S Corporation. Do you think the IRS would have a problem with that stance?
I don't necessarily agree with that. I think reasonable wage means what other non-owner employees receive for doing the same type of work.Last edited by Bees Knees; 08-29-2012, 11:10 AM.Comment
-
That is the view I have held for many years, and seems reasonable. However, a tax seminar speaker who has extensive experience with S corporation audits said the IRS is looking for the owners to receive the maximum wage that is subject to the Social Security tax portion of FICA. So reasonable wage to IRS means paying maximum Social Security tax. If you are going to take the same approach with LLCs, then max Social Security is what IRS would be looking for.
I don't necessarily agree with that. I think reasonable wage means what other non-owner employees receive for doing the same type of work.
Partnerships have always been different, in that general partners have to treat their entire distributive share as subject to SE tax. Hence, ages ago, Congress used the liability distinction between general and limited partners to distinguish between SECA and non-SECA income. Then states introduce LLPs and LLCs, and all of a sudden, people in the roles of general partners get the benefit of limited liability, and Congress's distinction no longer achieves its intent. If you go with the original intent (or what I'm assuming, dangerously, was their intent), then it makes perfect sense that anyone in an LLC who fits all the characteristics of a traditional general partner except for liability would have to pay SE tax on their full distributive share plus guaranteed payments. If they want the benefit of excluding income from SE tax, they should choose S-Corp treatment.
This makes me wonder: Prior to the introduction of LLPs and LLCs, to what extent did state law prohibit limited partners from participating in the work of the partnership in order to maintain their limited liability protection.Comment
Disclaimer
Collapse
This message board allows participants to freely exchange ideas and opinions on areas concerning taxes. The comments posted are the opinions of participants and not that of Tax Materials, Inc. We make no claim as to the accuracy of the information and will not be held liable for any damages caused by using such information. Tax Materials, Inc. reserves the right to delete or modify inappropriate postings.
Comment