No, community property states are the exception to the 1065 rule.
Another proof that I am correct. The IRS came out with Rev. Proc. 2002-69 which specifically says the taxpayer and spouse can file as either a Schedule C business or a 1065 partnership provided the business entity is:
1) Wholly owned by a husband and wife as community property under the laws of a state, a foreign country or a possession of the United States,
2) Not owned by any other person for federal tax purposes other than one or both spouses, and
3) Not treated as a corporation.
This ruling indicates that the IRS knows about the issue and has decided to concede (as Armando should) in the obvious case of a community property state where spouses automatically own 50% of each other’s income. Under this theory, if you were to insist on filing a 1065 every time a husband and wife were in business together, then the very idea that both spouses own 50% of each other’s income in a community property state would mean you would ALWAYS have to file a 1065 for every Schedule C business, regardless of whether or not the other spouse was a part owner of the business. The Rev. Proc. cuts out an exception to this idea saying, no, we don’t want you to always have to file a 1065. You decide how you want to report it.
We see this trend also in the argument of whether a business is an association, acting like a corporation or just a partnership. Rather than make up all kinds of rules nobody follows anyway, let’s let them decide for themselves how they want to be taxed for federal tax purposes. Thus, the creation of the so called “check-the-box” rules that let partnerships decide whether to be taxed as partnerships or corporations.
We also had a discussion recently over the passive activity rules for share crop arrangements. If you rent out your farm land for someone else to work and receive a percentage of the crops or livestock produced, and you do not materially participate in the business, you put it on a 4835. But if you just charge a flat cash fee for renting out the farm land, you put it directly on the Schedule E as rental of real estate.
Now I had never thought about it this way before, but the very idea that you would charge rent in the form of reaping a percentage of the profits of the guy renting from you is by its very nature a partnership. And the regs under section 469 confirm this. Yet IRS instructions say to use a 4835, not a 1065.
Am I right, or am I right?
Originally posted by S T
Another proof that I am correct. The IRS came out with Rev. Proc. 2002-69 which specifically says the taxpayer and spouse can file as either a Schedule C business or a 1065 partnership provided the business entity is:
1) Wholly owned by a husband and wife as community property under the laws of a state, a foreign country or a possession of the United States,
2) Not owned by any other person for federal tax purposes other than one or both spouses, and
3) Not treated as a corporation.
This ruling indicates that the IRS knows about the issue and has decided to concede (as Armando should) in the obvious case of a community property state where spouses automatically own 50% of each other’s income. Under this theory, if you were to insist on filing a 1065 every time a husband and wife were in business together, then the very idea that both spouses own 50% of each other’s income in a community property state would mean you would ALWAYS have to file a 1065 for every Schedule C business, regardless of whether or not the other spouse was a part owner of the business. The Rev. Proc. cuts out an exception to this idea saying, no, we don’t want you to always have to file a 1065. You decide how you want to report it.
We see this trend also in the argument of whether a business is an association, acting like a corporation or just a partnership. Rather than make up all kinds of rules nobody follows anyway, let’s let them decide for themselves how they want to be taxed for federal tax purposes. Thus, the creation of the so called “check-the-box” rules that let partnerships decide whether to be taxed as partnerships or corporations.
We also had a discussion recently over the passive activity rules for share crop arrangements. If you rent out your farm land for someone else to work and receive a percentage of the crops or livestock produced, and you do not materially participate in the business, you put it on a 4835. But if you just charge a flat cash fee for renting out the farm land, you put it directly on the Schedule E as rental of real estate.
Now I had never thought about it this way before, but the very idea that you would charge rent in the form of reaping a percentage of the profits of the guy renting from you is by its very nature a partnership. And the regs under section 469 confirm this. Yet IRS instructions say to use a 4835, not a 1065.
Am I right, or am I right?
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