I have a client who raises horses. Their situation is as follows:
They breed racehorses and raise them at their farm until the fall of their yearling year. At this point the horses go into training or are conditioned to show. This activity is done by their son with the couple funding most of the expenses. The expenses related to raising the horses to the fall of the yearling year are reported on a Schedule F, and then once they enter training/conditioning they are reported on the 1065.
My question concerns the transfer of the horses to the partnership:
I'm revising some of the prior returns (not prepared by myself), and was wondering what would be the best way of recording the horses in the partnership. I see my options as:
a) Capital contribution - record at taxpayer's ACB -which is zero since these are raised horses and the expenses have already been deducted.
b) Sale to partnership -but at what price? FMV is very difficult to determine.
Some horses are sold immediately and others are raced and then sold. My concern with going with option A which is simplest is that the Schedule F will always be reporting losses since the income would be reported in the partnership. This is an 80/20 partnership with the 80% going back to the couple, so most of the income will revert back to them upon the eventual sale or entering racing but it will be on the K-1
Problem with B is determining a sales price - I was thinking with going with amount invested in each horse but realistically this may not be FMV.
What would you do with this situation? I don't believe there is anything technically wrong with option A but it does disturb me that the Schedule F will always be reporting losses. The partnership and the Schedule F are really different arms of the same business, do you think the IRS would see it that way under audit scrutiny?
Thanks
Carolyn
They breed racehorses and raise them at their farm until the fall of their yearling year. At this point the horses go into training or are conditioned to show. This activity is done by their son with the couple funding most of the expenses. The expenses related to raising the horses to the fall of the yearling year are reported on a Schedule F, and then once they enter training/conditioning they are reported on the 1065.
My question concerns the transfer of the horses to the partnership:
I'm revising some of the prior returns (not prepared by myself), and was wondering what would be the best way of recording the horses in the partnership. I see my options as:
a) Capital contribution - record at taxpayer's ACB -which is zero since these are raised horses and the expenses have already been deducted.
b) Sale to partnership -but at what price? FMV is very difficult to determine.
Some horses are sold immediately and others are raced and then sold. My concern with going with option A which is simplest is that the Schedule F will always be reporting losses since the income would be reported in the partnership. This is an 80/20 partnership with the 80% going back to the couple, so most of the income will revert back to them upon the eventual sale or entering racing but it will be on the K-1
Problem with B is determining a sales price - I was thinking with going with amount invested in each horse but realistically this may not be FMV.
What would you do with this situation? I don't believe there is anything technically wrong with option A but it does disturb me that the Schedule F will always be reporting losses. The partnership and the Schedule F are really different arms of the same business, do you think the IRS would see it that way under audit scrutiny?
Thanks
Carolyn
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