Here is a good "basis" question.
S corp has a 60% shareholder. Corporation is worth considerable more than its
book value. This shareholder's tax basis is $100,000 excluding any loan factors.
The $100,000 basis is the conventional calculation: original investment plus taxable
earnings minus dividends, etc.
Shareholder sells on 12/31/06, for $1 million. Capital gains of $900,000, right?
Well, hold on. Corporation has numerous loans on its books, most notably
$700,000 for equipment. Corporation has existed for 12 years, and during this
time has had loans fluctuating between $400,000 and $800,000 for the last
several years. Corporation is solvent, has never defaulted, and there is no reason
to believe its debt will not be paid.
Here's the catch. The 60% shareholder has had to personally guarantee the
corporation's indebtedness since corp was founded. The $700,000 note payable
on the books of the corporation at the time of the sale, also has the signature
of this shareholder as a surety. Note: loan is officially made to the corporation,
not to shareholder. Shareholder is surety only.
Question: Does the $700,000 guarantee get added to the shareholders' basis?
i.e. basis is increased from $100K to $800K by virtue of the surety?? This reduces
the capital gain to $200K.
This may appear reasonable at first glance. However, let's assume the shareholders
Schedule D shows this $200K capital gain on his 2006 return. But then what happens
when the corporation pays off the $700K debt? Shareholder is claiming basis that
he never contributed, and was never consummated.
How 'bout it, folks????
S corp has a 60% shareholder. Corporation is worth considerable more than its
book value. This shareholder's tax basis is $100,000 excluding any loan factors.
The $100,000 basis is the conventional calculation: original investment plus taxable
earnings minus dividends, etc.
Shareholder sells on 12/31/06, for $1 million. Capital gains of $900,000, right?
Well, hold on. Corporation has numerous loans on its books, most notably
$700,000 for equipment. Corporation has existed for 12 years, and during this
time has had loans fluctuating between $400,000 and $800,000 for the last
several years. Corporation is solvent, has never defaulted, and there is no reason
to believe its debt will not be paid.
Here's the catch. The 60% shareholder has had to personally guarantee the
corporation's indebtedness since corp was founded. The $700,000 note payable
on the books of the corporation at the time of the sale, also has the signature
of this shareholder as a surety. Note: loan is officially made to the corporation,
not to shareholder. Shareholder is surety only.
Question: Does the $700,000 guarantee get added to the shareholders' basis?
i.e. basis is increased from $100K to $800K by virtue of the surety?? This reduces
the capital gain to $200K.
This may appear reasonable at first glance. However, let's assume the shareholders
Schedule D shows this $200K capital gain on his 2006 return. But then what happens
when the corporation pays off the $700K debt? Shareholder is claiming basis that
he never contributed, and was never consummated.
How 'bout it, folks????
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