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What is “Assignment of Income” Under the Tax Law?

Gross income is taxed to the individual who earns it or to owner of property that generates the income. Under the so-called “assignment of income doctrine,” a taxpayer may not avoid tax by assigning the right to income to another.

Specifically, the assignment of income doctrine holds that a taxpayer who earns income from services that the taxpayer performs or property that the taxpayer owns generally cannot avoid liability for tax on that income by assigning it to another person or entity. The doctrine is frequently applied to assignments to creditors, controlled entities, family trusts and charities.

A taxpayer cannot, for tax purposes, assign income that has already accrued from property the taxpayer owns. This aspect of the assignment of income doctrine is often applied to interest, dividends, rents, royalties, and trust income. And, under the same rationale, an assignment of an interest in a lottery ticket is effective only if it occurs before the ticket is ascertained to be a winning ticket.

However, a taxpayer can shift liability for capital gains on property not yet sold by making a bona fide gift of the underlying property. In that case, the donee of a gift of securities takes the “carryover” basis of the donor.  

For example, shares now valued at $50 gifted to a donee in which the donor has a tax basis of $10, would yield a taxable gain to the donee of its eventual sale price less the $10 carryover basis. The donor escapes income tax on any of the appreciation.

For guidance on this issue, please contact our professionals at 315.242.1120 or [email protected] .

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Recognizing when the IRS can reallocate income

  • C Corporation Income Taxation
  • IRS Practice & Procedure

Transactions between related parties come under close scrutiny by the IRS because they are not always conducted at arm's length. If the amounts involved in the transaction do not represent fair market values, the IRS can change the characteristics of the transaction to reflect its actual nature.

The IRS may attempt to reallocate income between a closely held corporation and its shareholders based on several sets of rules, including the following:

  • Assignment-of-income rules that have been developed through the courts;
  • The allocation-of-income theory of Sec. 482; and
  • The rules for allocation of income between a personal service corporation and its employee-owners of Sec. 269A.

Income reallocation under the assignment - of - income doctrine is dependent on determining who earns or controls the income. Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes made the classic statement of the assignment - of - income doctrine when he stated that the Supreme Court would not recognize for income tax purposes an "arrangement by which the fruits are attributed to a different tree from that on which they grew" ( Lucas v. Earl , 281 U.S. 111, 115 (1930)).

Reallocation under Sec. 482 is used to prevent tax evasion or to more clearly reflect income when two or more entities are controlled by the same interests. Note the use of the word "or" in the preceding sentence. The Code empowers the IRS to allocate income even if tax evasion is not present if the allocation will more clearly reflect the income of the controlled interests. The intent of these provisions is to place the controlled entity in the same position as if it were not controlled so that the income of the controlled entity is clearly reflected (Regs. Sec. 1. 482 - 1 (a)) .

Example 1. Performing services for another group member:   Corporations P and S are members of the same controlled group. S asks P to have its financial staff perform an analysis to determine S' s borrowing needs. P does not charge S for this service. Under Sec. 482, the IRS could adjust each corporation's taxable income to reflect an arm's - length charge by P for the services it provided to S .

Under Sec. 269A(a), the IRS has the authority to allocate income, deductions, credits, exclusions, and other items between a personal service corporation (PSC) and its employee - owners if:

  • The PSC performs substantially all of its services for or on behalf of another corporation, partnership, or other entity; and
  • The PSC was formed or used for the principal purpose of avoiding or evading federal income tax by reducing the income or securing the benefit of any expense, deduction, credit, exclusion, or other item for any employee-owner that would not otherwise be available.

A PSC will not be considered to have been formed or availed of for the principal purpose of avoiding or evading federal income taxes if a safe harbor is met. The safe harbor applies if the employee - owner's federal income tax liability is not reduced by more than the lesser of (1) $2,500 or (2) 10% of the federal income tax liability of the employee - owner that would have resulted if the employee - owner personally performed the services (Prop. Regs. Sec. 1. 269A - 1 (c)).

For purposes of this rule, a PSC is a corporation, the principal activity of which is the performance of personal services when those services are substantially performed by employee - owners (Sec. 269A(b)(1)). An employee - owner is any employee who owns on any day during the tax year more than 10% of the PSC's outstanding stock. As with many related - party provisions, the Sec. 318 stock attribution rules (with modifications) apply in determining stock ownership (Sec. 269A(b)(2)).

Example 2. Reallocation of income: H forms M Corp., which is a PSC. A few months later, he transfers shares of stock of an unrelated corporation to M . The following year, M receives dividends from the unrelated corporation and claims the Sec. 243(a) 50% dividend exclusion. The IRS may reallocate the dividend income from M to H if the principal purpose of the transfer of the unrelated stock to M was to use the 50% dividend exclusion under Sec. 243. However, the amounts to reallocate to H must exceed the safe - harbor amounts.

These rules usually apply when an individual performs personal services for an employer that does not offer tax - advantaged employee benefits (such as a qualified retirement plan and other employee fringe benefits). In those situations, the individual may set up a 100%- owned C corporation that contracts with the employer. The employer then pays the corporation. The individual functions as the employee of the corporation, and the corporation sets up tax - advantaged fringe benefit programs. The individual generally is able to "zero out" the income of the corporation with payments for salary and fringe benefits.

Despite the significant authority that Sec. 269A grants to the IRS, there is little evidence of the IRS or the courts using this statute. In a 1987 private letter ruling, the IRS held that a one - owner , one - employee medical corporation did not violate the statute, even though it retained only nominal amounts of taxable income, and the corporate structure allowed the individual to achieve a significant pension plan deduction. These facts were not sufficient to establish a principal purpose of tax avoidance (IRS Letter Ruling 8737001). In Sargent , 929 F.2d 1252 (8th Cir. 1991), the Eighth Circuit indicated a lack of interest in applying Sec. 269A because, in that case, the court felt the PSC had been set up for other legitimate reasons.    

This case study has been adapted from PPC's Tax Planning Guide — Closely Held Corporations , 31st Edition (March 2018), by Albert L. Grasso, R. Barry Johnson, and Lewis A. Siegel. Published by Thomson Reuters/Tax & Accounting, Carrollton, Texas, 2018 (800-431-9025; tax.thomsonreuters.com ).

Proposed regulations would update rules for consolidated returns

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the assignment of income

This article discusses the history of the deduction of business meal expenses and the new rules under the TCJA and the regulations and provides a framework for documenting and substantiating the deduction.

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SH Block Tax Services

FAQ: What Is the Assignment of Income?

Assignment of income allows you to assign part of your income directly to another person. While there are several valid reasons to assign your income to someone else, many taxpayers mistakenly believe that it can help lower their taxable income. While assignment of income allows you to divert income, you cannot divert taxes.

In this article, we’ll provide some examples of failed attempts at avoiding income taxes through the assignment of income and the valid reasons someone might want to assign income to someone else.

RELATED: Tax Evasion Vs. Tax Avoidance: The Difference and Why It Matters

You Can’t Use Assignment of Income to Avoid Paying Taxes

The assignment of income doctrine states that the taxpayer who earns the income must pay the tax on that income, even if he gave the right to collect the income to another person.

The doctrine is quite clear: taxpayers must pay their own taxes. However, that doesn’t stop many people from thinking they can avoid paying taxes or minimize their taxable income through the assignment of income.

Here are a few scenarios we commonly see.

  • High-Earning Individuals: In an attempt to avoid having to pay the higher tax rates on their substantial income, high-earning individuals sometimes try to divert income to a lower-income family member in a significantly lower tax bracket. The assignment of income doctrine prevents this scheme from working.
  • Charitable Donating : Even if a taxpayer assigns part of their income to a charitable organization, they will still have to pay the taxes. However, they might be eligible to claim a deduction for donations to charity while building some good karma by helping others in need.
  • Owning Multiple Businesses: A taxpayer who controls multiple businesses might try to divert income from one business to another, especially if one has the potential to receive a tax benefit but requires a higher income to do so. Not only is this illegal, but it also will not lower the taxable income of the business.

You Can Use Assignment of Income to… Assign Your Income

The assignment of income doctrine does not stop you from diverting part of your income to someone else. In fact, that’s the whole point! Maybe you’re helping to support an elderly family member, or you consistently donate to the same charity every month or year. Whatever the case, you can assign the desired amount of your income to go to another person or organization.

While there are no tax benefits involved in assigning income versus making traditional payments or donations, it can be a more convenient option if you’re making regular payments throughout the year.

S.H. Block Tax Services Provides Clear Answers For Complicated Questions

If you have any questions about how to go about assigning part of your income to a family member in need or a separate business entity, please contact S.H. Block Tax Services today. We can answer all of your questions and address all of your concerns regarding the assignment of income and provide suggestions on valid and legal ways to save on your taxes.

Please call us today at  (410) 872-8376  or complete  this brief contact form  to get started on the path toward tax compliance and financial freedom.

The content provided here is for informational purposes only and should not be construed as legal advice on any subject.

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Tax Identity Theft During the Holidays

Battling Uphill Against the Assignment of Income Doctrine: Ryder

the assignment of income

Benjamin Alarie

the assignment of income

Kathrin Gardhouse

Benjamin Alarie is the Osler Chair in Business Law at the University of Toronto and the CEO of Blue J Legal Inc. Kathrin Gardhouse is a legal research associate at Blue J Legal .

In this article, Alarie and Gardhouse examine the Tax Court ’s recent decision in Ryder and use machine-learning models to evaluate the strength of the legal factors that determine the outcome of assignment of income cases.

Copyright 2021 Benjamin Alarie and Kathrin Gardhouse . All rights reserved.

I. Introduction

Researching federal income tax issues demands distilling the law from the code, regulations, revenue rulings, administrative guidance, and sometimes hundreds of tax cases that may all be relevant to a particular situation. When a judicial doctrine has been developed over many decades and applied in many different types of cases, the case-based part of this research can be particularly time consuming. Despite an attorney’s best efforts, uncertainty often remains regarding how courts will decide a new set of facts, as previously decided cases are often distinguished and the exercise of judicial discretion can at times lead to surprises. To minimize surprises as well as the time and effort involved in generating tax advice, Blue J ’s machine-learning modules allow tax practitioners to assess the likely outcome of a case if it were to go to court based on the analysis of data from previous decisions using machine learning. Blue J also identifies cases with similar facts, permitting more efficient research.

In previous installments of Blue J Predicts, we examined the strengths and weaknesses of ongoing or recently decided appellate cases, yielding machine-learning-generated insights about the law and predicting the outcomes of cases. In this month’s column, we look at a Tax Court case that our predictor suggests was correctly decided (with more than 95 percent confidence). The Ryder case 1 has received significant attention from the tax community. It involved tax avoidance schemes marketed by the law firm Ernest S. Ryder & Associates Inc. (R&A) that produced more than $31 million in revenue between 2003 and 2011 and for which the firm reported zero taxable income. The IRS unmasked more than 1,000 corporate entities that R&A’s owner, Ernest S. Ryder , had created and into which he funneled the money. By exposing the functions that these entities performed, the IRS played the most difficult role in the case. Yet, there are deeper lessons that can be drawn from the litigation by subjecting it to analysis using machine learning.

In this installment of Blue J Predicts, we shine an algorithmic spotlight on the legal factors that determine the outcomes of assignment of income cases such as Ryder . For Ryder , the time for filing an appeal has elapsed and the matter is settled. Thus, we use it to examine the various factors that courts look to in this area and to show the effect those factors have in assignment of income cases. Equipped with our machine-learning module, we are able to highlight the fine line between legitimate tax planning and illegitimate tax avoidance in the context of the assignment of income doctrine.

II. Background

In its most basic iteration, the assignment of income doctrine stands for the proposition that income is taxed to the individual who earns it, even if the right to that income is assigned to someone else. 2 Courts have held that the income earner is responsible for the income tax in the overwhelming majority of cases, including Ryder . It is only in a small number of cases that courts have been willing to accept the legitimacy of an assignment and have held that the assignee is liable for the earned income. Indeed, Blue J ’s “Assigned Income From Services” predictor, which draws on a total of 242 cases and IRS rulings, includes only 10 decisions in which the assignee has been found to be liable to pay tax on the income at issue.

The wide applicability of the assignment of income doctrine was demonstrated in Ryder , in which the court applied the doctrine to several different transactions that occurred between 1996 and 2011. Ryder founded his professional law corporation R&A in 1996 and used his accounting background, law degree, and graduate degree in taxation for the benefit of his clients. R&A designed, marketed, sold, and administered six aggressive tax-saving products that promised clients the ability to “defer a much greater portion of their income than they ever dreamed possible, and, as a result, substantially reduce their tax liability.” 3 In 2003 the IRS caught on to Ryder ’s activities when his application to have 800 employee stock option plans qualified at the same time was flagged for review. A decade of investigations and audits of Ryder and his law firm spanning from 2002 to 2011 followed.

What is interesting in this case is that Ryder , through his law firm R&A, directly contracted with his clients for only three of the six tax-saving products that his firm designed, marketed, and sold (the stand-alone products). The fees collected by R&A from two of the stand-alone products were then assigned to two other entities through two quite distinct mechanisms. For the other three tax-saving products, the clients contracted — at least on paper — with other entities that Ryder created (the group-tax products). Yet, the court treated the income from all six tax-saving products identically. The differences between the six types of transactions did not affect the outcome of the case — namely, that it is R&A’s income in all six instances. Blue J ’s predictor can explain why: The factors that our predictor highlights as relevant for answering the question whether the assignment of income doctrine applies have less to do with the particular strategy that the income earner conjures up for making it look like the income belongs to someone else, and more to do with different ways of pinpointing who actually controls the products, services, and funds. In Ryder , the choices ultimately come down to whether that is R&A or the other entity.

We will begin the analysis of the case by taking a closer look at two of the six tax-saving products, paying particular attention to the flow of income from R&A’s clients to R&A and Ryder ’s assignment of income to the other entities. We have selected one of the tax-saving products in which Ryder drew up an explicit assignment agreement, and another one in which he tried to make it look like the income was directly earned by another entity he had set up. Regardless of the structures and means employed, the court, based on the IRS ’s evidence, traced this income to R&A and applied the assignment of income doctrine to treat it as R&A’s income.

This article will not cover in detail the parts of the decision in which the court reconstructs the many transactions Ryder and his wife engaged in to purchase various ranches using the income that had found its way to R& A. As the court puts it, the complexity of the revenues and flow of funds is “baroque” when R&A is concerned, and when it comes to the ranches, it becomes “ rococo .” 4 We will also not cover the fraud and penalty determinations that the court made in this case.

III. The Tax Avoidance Schemes

We will analyze two of the six schemes discussed in the case. The first is the staffing product, and the second is the American Specialty Insurance Group Ltd. (ASIG) product. Each serves as an example of different mechanisms Ryder employed to divert income tax liability away from R&A. In the case of the staffing product, Ryder assigned income explicitly to another entity. The ASIG product involved setting up another entity that Ryder argued earned the income directly itself.

A. The Staffing Product

R&A offered a product to its clients in the course of which the client could lease its services to a staffing corporation, which would in turn lease the client’s services back to the client’s operating business. The intended tax benefit lay “with the difference between the lease payment and the wages received becoming a form of compensation that was supposedly immune from current taxation.” 5 At first, the fees from the staffing product were invoiced by and paid to R&A. When the IRS started its investigation, Ryder drew up an “Agreement of Assignment and Assumption” with the intent to assign all the clients and the income from the staffing product to ESOP Legal Consultants Inc. ( ELC ). Despite the contractual terms limiting the agreement to the 2004-2006 tax years, Ryder used ELC ’s bank account until 2011 to receive fees paid by the various S corporations he had set up for his clients to make the staffing product work. R&A would then move the money from this bank account into Ryder ’s pocket in one way or another. ELC had no office space, and the only evidence of employees was six names on the letterhead of ELC indicating their positions. When testifying in front of the court, two of these employees failed to mention that they were employed by ELC , and one of them was unable to describe the work ELC was allegedly performing. Hence, the court concluded that ELC did not have any true employees of its own and did not conduct any business. Instead, it was R&A’s employees that provided any required services to the clients. 6

B. The ASIG Product

R&A sold “disability and professional liability income insurance” policies to its clients using ASIG, a Turks and Caicos corporation that was a captive insurer owned by Capital Mexicana . Ryder had created these two companies during his previous job with the help of the Turks and Caicos accounting firm Morris Cottingham Ltd. The policies Ryder sold to his clients required them to pay premiums to ASIG as consideration for the insurance. The premiums were physically mailed to R& A. Also , the clients were required to pay a 2 percent annual fee, which was deposited into ASIG’s bank account. In return, the clients received 98 percent of the policy’s cash value in the event that they became disabled, separated from employment, turned 60, or terminated the policy. 7

R&A’s involvement in these deals, aside from setting up ASIG, was to find the clients who bought the policies, assign them a policy number, draft a policy, and open a bank account for the client, as well as provide legal services for the deal as needed. It was R&A that billed the client and that ensured, with Morris Cottingham ’s help, that the fees were paid. R&A employees would record the ASIG policy fee paid by the clients, noting at times that “pymt bypassed [R&A’s] books.” 8 Quite an effort went into disguising R&A’s involvement.

First, there was no mention of R&A on the policy itself. Second, ASIG’s office was located at Morris Cottingham’s Turks and Caicos corporate services. Ryder also set up a post office box for ASIG in Las Vegas. Any mail sent to it was forwarded to Ryder . Third, to collect the fees, R&A would send a letter to Morris Cottingham for signature, receive the signed letter back, and then fax it to the financial institution where ASIG had two accounts. One of these was nominally in ASIG’s name but really for the client’s benefit, and the other account was in Ryder ’s name. The financial institution would then move the amount owed in fees from the former to the latter account. Whenever a client filed for a benefit under the policy, the client would prepare a claim package and pay a termination fee that also went into the ASIG account held in Ryder ’s name. The exchanges between the clients and ASIG indicate that these fees were to reimburse ASIG for its costs and services, as well as to allow it to derive a profit therefrom. But the court found that ASIG itself did nothing. Even the invoices sent to clients detailing these fee payments that were on ASIG letterhead were in fact prepared by R&A. In addition to the annual fees and the termination fee, clients paid legal fees on a biannual basis for services Ryder provided. These legal fees, too, were paid into the ASIG account in Ryder ’s name. 9

IV. Assignment of Income Doctrine

The assignment of income doctrine attributes income tax to the individual who earns the income, even if the right to that income is assigned to another entity. The policy rationale underlying the doctrine is to prevent high-income taxpayers from shifting their taxable income to others. 10 The doctrine is judicial and was first developed in 1930 by the Supreme Court in Lucas , a decision that involved contractual assignment of personal services income between a husband and wife. 11 The doctrine expanded significantly over the next 20 years and beyond, and it has been applied in many different types of cases involving gratuitous transfers of income or property. 12 The staffing product, as of January 2004, involved an anticipatory assignment of income to which the assignment of services income doctrine had been held to apply in Banks . 13 The doctrine is not limited to situations in which the income earner explicitly assigns the income to another entity; it also captures situations in which the actual income earner sets up another entity and makes it seem as if that entity had earned the income itself, as was the case with the ASIG product. 14

In cases in which the true income earner is in question, the courts have held that “the taxable party is the person or entity who directed and controlled the earning of the income, rather than the person or entity who received the income.” 15 Factors that the courts consider to determine who is in control of the income depend on the particular situation at issue in the case. For example, when a personal services business is involved, the court looks at the relationship between the hirer and the worker and who has the right to direct the worker’s activities. In partnership cases, the courts apply the similarity test, asking whether the services the partnership provided are similar to those the partner provided. In other cases, the courts have inquired whether an agency relationship can be established. In yet other cases the courts have taken a broad and flexible approach and consulted all the available evidence to determine who has the ultimate direction and control over the earnings. 16

V. Factors Considered in Ryder

Judge Mark V. Holmes took a flexible approach in Ryder . He found that none of the entities that Ryder papered into existence had their own office or their own employees. They were thus unable to provide the services Ryder claims they were paid for. In fact, the entities did not provide any services at all — the services were R&A’s doing. To top it off, R&A did nothing but set up the entities, market their tax benefits, and move money around once the clients signed up for the products. There was no actual business activity conducted. The court further found that the written agreements the clients entered into with the entities that purported to provide services to them were a sham and that oral contracts with R&A were in fact what established the relevant relationship, so that R&A must be considered the contracting party. In the case of the ASIG product, for example, a client testified that the fees he paid to Ryder were part of his retirement plan. Ryder had represented to him that the ASIG product was established to create an alternative way to accumulate retirement savings. 17

Regarding the staffing product in which there existed an explicit assignment of income agreement between R&A and ELC , the court found that ELC only existed on paper and in the form of bank accounts, with the effect that R&A was ultimately controlling the income even after the assignment. A further factor that the court emphasized repeatedly was that R&A, and Ryder personally as R&A’s owner, kept benefitting from the income after the assignment (for example, in the staffing product case) or, as in the case of the ASIG product, despite the income allegedly having been earned by a third party (that is, ASIG). 18

VI. Analysis

The aforementioned factors are reflected in Blue J ’s Assigned Income From Services predictor. 19 We performed predictions for the following scenarios:

the staffing product and R&A’s assignment of the income it generated to ELC with the facts as found by the court;

the staffing product and R&A’s assignment of the income it generated to ELC if Ryder ’s version of the facts were accepted;

the ASIG product and service as the court interpreted and characterized the facts; and

the ASIG product and service according to Ryder ’s narrative.

What is interesting and indicative of the benefits that machine-learning tools such as Blue J ’s predictor can provide to tax practitioners is that even if the court had found in Ryder ’s favor on all the factual issues reasonably in dispute, Ryder would still not have been able to shift the tax liability to ELC or ASIG respectively, according to our model and analysis.

The court found that R&A contracted directly with, invoiced, and received payments from its clients regarding the staffing product up until 2004, when Ryder assigned the income generated from this product explicitly to ELC . From then onward, ELC received the payments from the clients instead of R&A. Further, the court found that ELC did not have its own employees or office space and did not conduct any business activity. Our data show that the change in the recipient of the money would have made no difference regarding the likelihood of R&A’s liability for the income tax in this scenario.

According to Ryder ’s version of the facts, ELC did have its own employees, 20 even though there is no mention of a separate office space from which ELC allegedly operated. Yet, Ryder maintains that ELC was the one providing the staffing services to its clients after the assignment of the clients to the company in January 2004. Even if Ryder had been able to convince the court of his version of the facts, it would hardly have made a dent in the likelihood of the outcome that R&A would be held liable for the tax payable on the income from the staffing product.

With Ryder ’s narrative as the underlying facts, our predictor is still 94 percent confident that R&A would have been held liable for the tax. The taxation of the income in the hands of the one who earned it is not easily avoided with a simple assignment agreement, particularly if the income earner keeps benefiting from the income after the assignment and continues to provide services himself without giving up control over the services for the benefit of the assignee. The insight gained from the decision regarding the staffing product is that the court will take a careful look behind the assignment agreement and, if it is not able to spot a legitimate assignee, the assignment agreement will be disregarded.

The court made the same factual findings regarding the ASIG product as it did for the staffing product post-assignment. Ryder , however, had more to say here in support of his case. For one, he pointed to ASIG’s main office that was located at the Morris Cottingham offices. Morris Cottingham was also the one that, on paper, contracted with clients for the insurance services and the collection of fees was conducted, again on paper, in the name of Morris Cottingham . The court also refers to actual claims that the clients made under their policies. There is also a paper trail that indicates that the clients were explicitly acknowledging and in fact paying ASIG for its costs and services. From all this we can conclude that Ryder was able to argue that ASIG had its own independent office, had one or more employees providing services, and that ASIG engaged in actual business activity. However, even if these facts had been admitted as accurately reflecting the ASIG product, our data show that with a 92 percent certainty R&A would still be liable for the income tax payable on the income the ASIG product generated. It is clear that winning a case involving the assignment of income doctrine on facts such as the ones in Ryder is an uphill battle. If the person behind the scenes remains involved with the services provided without giving up control over them, and benefits from the income generated, it is a lost cause to argue that the assignment of income doctrine should be applied with the effect that the entity that provides the services on paper is liable for the income tax.

C. Ryder as ASIG’s Agent

Our data reveal that to have a more substantial shot at succeeding with his case under the assignment of income doctrine, Ryder would have had to pursue a different line of argument altogether. Had he set R&A up as ASIG’s agent rather than tried to disguise its involvement with the purported insurance business, Ryder would have been more likely to succeed in shifting the income tax liability to ASIG. For our analysis of the effect of the different factors discussed by the court in Ryder , we assume at the outset that Ryder would do everything right — that is, ASIG would have its own workers and office, and it would do something other than just moving money around (best-case scenario). We then modify each factor one by one to reveal their respective effect.

From this scenario testing, we can conclude that if R&A had had an agency agreement with ASIG, received some form of compensation for its services from ASIG, held itself out to act on ASIG’s behalf, and the client was interested in R&A’s service because of its affiliation with ASIG, Ryder would have reduced the likelihood to 73 percent of R&A being liable for the income tax. Add to these agency factors an element of monitoring by ASIG and the most likely result flips — there would be a 64 percent likelihood that ASIG would be liable for the income tax. If ASIG were to go beyond monitoring R&A’s services by controlling them too, the likelihood that ASIG would be liable for the income tax would increase to 82 percent. Let’s say Ryder had given Morris Cottingham oversight and control over R&A’s services for ASIG, then the question whether ASIG employs any workers other than R&A arguably becomes moot because there would necessarily be an ASIG employee who oversees R&A. Accordingly, there is hardly any change in the confidence level of the prediction that ASIG is liable for the income tax when the worker factor is absent.

Interestingly, this is quite different from the effect of the office factor. Keeping everything else as-is, the absence of having its own ASIG-controlled office decreases the likelihood of ASIG being liable to pay the income tax from 82 to 54 percent. Note here that our Assigned Income From Services predictor is trained on data from relatively old cases; only 14 are from the last decade. This may explain why the existence of a physical office space is predicted to play such an important role when the courts determine whether the entity that allegedly earns the income is a legitimate business. In a post-pandemic world, it may be possible that a trend will emerge that puts less emphasis on the physical office space when determining the legitimacy of a business.

The factor that stands out as the most important one in our hypothetical scenario in which R&A is the agent of ASIG is the characterization of ASIG’s own business activity. In the absence of ASIG conducting its own business, nothing can save Ryder ’s case. This makes intuitive sense because if ASIG conducts no business, it must be R&A’s services alone that generate the income; hence R&A is liable for the tax on the income. Also very important is the contracting party factor: If the client were to contract with R&A rather than ASIG in our hypothetical scenario, the likelihood that R&A would be held liable for the income tax is back up to 72 percent, all else being equal. If the client were to contract with both R&A and ASIG, it is a close case, leaning towards ASIG’s liability with 58 percent confidence. Much less significant is who receives the payment between the two. If it is R&A, ASIG remains liable for the income tax with a likelihood of 71 percent, indicating a drop in confidence by 11 percent compared with a scenario in which ASIG received the payment.

To summarize, if Ryder had pursued a line of argument in which he set up R&A as ASIG’s agent, giving ASIG’s employee(s) monitoring power and ideally control over R&A’s services for ASIG, he would have had a better chance of succeeding under the assignment of income doctrine. As we have seen, the main prerequisite for his success would have been to convince the court that it would be appropriate to characterize ASIG as conducting business. Ideally, Ryder also would have made sure that the client contracted for the services with ASIG and not with R&A. However, it is significantly less important that ASIG receives the money from the client. The historical case law also suggests that Ryder would have been well advised to set up a physical office for ASIG; however, given the new reality of working from home, this factor may no longer be as relevant as these older previously decided cases indicate.

VII. Conclusion

We have seen that R&A’s chances to shift the liability for the tax payable on the staffing and the ASIG product income was virtually nonexistent. The difficulty of this case from the perspective of the IRS certainly lay in gathering the evidence, tracing the money through the winding paths of Ryder ’s paper labyrinth, and making it comprehensible for the court. Once this had been accomplished, the IRS had a more-or-less slam-dunk case regarding the applicability of the assignment of income doctrine. As mentioned at the outset, an assignment of income case will always be an uphill battle for the taxpayer because income is generally taxable to whoever earns it.

Yet, in cases in which the disputed question is who earned the income and not whether the assignment agreement has shifted the income tax liability, the parties must lean into the factors discussed here to convince the court of the legitimacy (or the illegitimacy, in the case of the government) of the ostensibly income-earning entity and its business. Our analysis can help decide which of the factors must be present to have a plausible argument, which ones are nice to have, and which should be given little attention in determining an efficient litigation strategy.

1   Ernest S. Ryder & Associates Inc. v. Commissioner , T.C. Memo. 2021-88 .

2   Lucas v. Earl , 281 U.S. 111, 114-115 (1930).

3   Ryder , T.C. Memo. 2021-88, at 7.

4   Id. at 32.

5   Id. at 17, 19, and 111-112.

6   Id. at 51-52, 111-112, and 123-126.

7   Id. at 9-12.

8   Id. at 96.

10  CCH, Federal Taxation Comprehensive Topics, at 4201.

11   Lucas , 281 U.S. at 115.

12   See , e.g. , “familial partnership” cases — Burnet v. Leininger , 285 U.S. 136 (1932); Commissioner v. Tower , 327 U.S. 280 (1946); and Commissioner v. Culbertson , 337 U.S. 733 (1949). For an application in the commercial context, see Commissioner v. Banks , 543 U.S. 426 (2005).

13   Banks , 543 U.S. at 426.

14   See , e.g. , Johnston v. Commissioner , T.C. Memo. 2000-315 , at 487.

16   Ray v. Commissioner , T.C. Memo. 2018-160 .

17   Ryder , T.C. Memo. 2021-88, at 90-91.

18   Id. at 48, 51, and 52.

19  The predictor considered several further factors that play a greater role in other fact patterns.

20  The court mentions that ELC’s letterhead set out six employees and their respective positions with the company.

END FOOTNOTES

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ASSIGNMENT OF INCOME DOCTRINE – SECTION 61 INTERNAL REVENUE CODE – J. RONALD JACKSON

I don’t want to pay tax on this income, assignment of income doctrine.

By:  J Ronald “Ron” Jackson, MBA, CPA

Under federal income tax law gross income is taxed to the person who earns it or to the owner of property that generates the income. It is not uncommon for a high tax bracket taxpayer to want to shift income to a lower tax bracket family member in order to save on taxes and the income stay within the family unit. Alternatively, one who has appreciated stock or other type of property that he knows will be sold in the near future may wish to save on income taxes by gifting a portion of the property to a lower tax bracket family member who will report the sale at his or her lower income tax bracket. Alternatively, the individual may want a double benefit by gifting the appreciated property to a qualified charity thereby gaining a charitable income tax deduction for the value of the contributed property and being relieved of paying income taxes on the gain from the sale of the gifted property. This shifting of income, if permitted for income tax purposes, may provide considerable income tax savings.

The assignment of income doctrine was developed from court decisions which decided the issues, including the various methods employed in attempting to determine who earned the income. There was a time during the World War II years and thereafter, until around 1963, that the top income tax brackets could be as high as 91% – 93%. In addition to family members, the issues often arose when a high bracket taxpayer would make a gift of property (often the issues were gifts of appreciated stock that were to be sold shortly) to a qualified charity. The taxpayer would then take a charitable income tax deduction and not report the gain as he no longer owned the stock when sold. This shifting of income to a lower bracket taxpayer could have large savings in taxes for the high bracket taxpayer.

A simple example of income earned and taxed to the one who earns the income is when one works for weekly wages. The work week ends on Friday but the actual paycheck is not delivered until the following Wednesday. The wages are earned, for income tax purposes, at the end of the week (Friday). If the individual tells his employer to pay the earned wages to the individual’s mother, and the employer did that, the wages would still be taxed for federal income tax purposes to the individual since he earned the wages. The fact he may have made a gift of his earned wages does not change the income tax treatment as his employer has to include the earned wages on the individual’s W-2 form.

The above is a simple illustration of the doctrine that one who earns the income has to pay income tax on the wages. Let’s look at another situation. Suppose Perry, an individual taxpayer, owns all of the stock ownership in a very successful corporation (Company A) that he has run for many years. Perry is approached by the owners of another corporation (Company B) with an interest in purchasing Perry’s stock ownership in Company A. Negotiations have progressed and a total value has been tentatively negotiated of $5,000,000.00. The actual contract is still to be finalized and there are some remaining details to settle. Perry believes it will be finalized and signed within a reasonably short time. Perry, who is in a very high federal income tax bracket and who is a very civic-minded individual, has been told of the benefit of donating appreciated property to charity. Perry contacts the local Community Foundation and arranges to create the Perry Charitable Fund through the Community Foundation. The charitable fund will provide donations to his church and to other qualified charities that Perry usually supports. Perry then donates fifteen percent of his stock ownership, valued at $750,000.00 to the Community Foundation. Later after negotiations are completed, all of Company A’s stock is sold to Company B for the negotiated price of $5,000,000.00. Perry is happy. He has made a substantial profit from his years of work, made a donation to his favorite charity for which he plans to take a charitable income tax deduction, and will only have to report and pay income tax at capital gain rates on 85% of his stock as he has given 15% away.

Perry files his income tax return for the year and reports his taxable gain on the sale of his 85% ownership interest in Company A. About one year later Perry is audited by the IRS. The IRS agent questions why he did not report gain on the 15% of stock given to the Foundation. Perry replies that he did not own the stock as it was gifted to the charity before the date of the sale. The IRS auditor states that Perry should pay income tax on the gain on the stock given to the Community Foundation since it appears to have been a “done deal” before Perry gave the stock away and for that reason Perry owes income tax on all of the stock. Perry argues that no contracts were signed until weeks after the gift and that the deal could have fallen through at any time before signed by all parties. Perry disagreed with the audit. His tax dispute is now pending before the United States Tax Court. How will the court decide?

Section 61 of the Internal Revenue Code provides that gross income means all income earned from whatever source derived, and then lists several examples such as wages, services rendered, gains from the sales of property, and several other examples. In 1930, the U. S. Supreme Court summarized when addressing who earned income that “The fruits cannot be attributed to a different tree from that on which they grew.” Lucas v. Earl, 281 U.S. 111 (1930). This in effect clarified that gross income is to be taxed to the one that earns it and led to the fact that one cannot avoid paying income tax on earned income by gifting the property that created the income when it has been earned on or before the gift. An example would be when a corporation declares a dividend payable say on November 1st to stockholders of record on October 10th. A stockholder who owned the stock on October 10th is the one who has earned the income even if he or she sells or assigns their stock between October 10th and November 1st. The dividend is taxed to the owner on October 10, the date the dividend was declared.

In Perry’s case he argues that the negotiations were not complete when he made his gift, and that Company B could have backed out of the deal. When the court decides it will consider the stage of the negotiations, whether Company B had the financial backing to complete the deal, whether any contracts or preliminary statements of intent were prepared for review, and how long was the interval between the tentative agreement and the actual sale will all be considered. Situations like these happen from time to time. When the issue arises, it should be discussed in advance of the transaction, if possible, with your legal tax advisors who should be well versed in this area of tax law. One should be aware of the assignment of income doctrine in situations where it could apply in connection with his/her estate planning. What if this had been a publicly traded company?

If you have questions regarding   Assignment of Income Doctrine   and would like to discuss these issues, please contact Cody Walls, MBA, CPA at Denton Law Firm at 270-450-8253.

THIS ARTICLE IS DESIGNED TO PROVIDE GENERAL INFORMATION PREPARED BY THE PROFESSIONALS AT DENTON LAW FIRM, PLLC IN REGARD TO THE SUBJECT MATTER COVERED. IT IS PROVIDED WITH THE UNDERSTANDING THAT THE AUTHOR IS NOT ENGAGED IN RENDERING LEGAL, ACCOUNTING, OR OTHER PROFESSIONAL SERVICE. ALTHOUGH PREPARED BY PROFESSIONALS, THESE MATERIALS SHOULD NOT BE UTILIZED AS A SUBSTITUTE FOR PROFESSIONAL SERVICE IN SPECIFIC SITUATIONS. IF LEGAL ADVICE OR OTHER EXPERT ASSISTANCE IS REQUIRED, THE SERVICE OF A PROFESSIONAL SHOULD BE SOUGHT.

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Assignment of Income Lawyers

(This may not be the same place you live)

  What Happens if you Assign your Income?

There are some instances when a person may choose to assign a portion of their income to another individual. You may be able to do this by asking your employer to send your paycheck directly to a third party.

It should be noted, however, that if you choose to assign your income to a third party, then this does not mean that you will be able to avoid paying taxes on that income. In other words, you will still be responsible for paying taxes on that income regardless of whether you decide to assign your income to a third party or not. This guideline is known as the “assignment of income doctrine.”

The primary purpose of the “assignment of income doctrine” is to ensure that a person does not simply assign their income to a third party to avoid having to pay taxes. If they do, then they can be charged and convicted of committing tax evasion .

One other important thing to bear in mind about income assignments is that they are often confused with the concept of wage garnishments. However, income or wage assignments are different from wage garnishments. In a situation that involves wage garnishment, a person’s paycheck is involuntarily withheld from them to pay off a debt like outstanding child support payments and is typically ordered by a court.

In contrast, an income or wage assignment is when a person voluntarily agrees to assign their income to someone else through a contract or a similar type of agreement.

How is Assigned Income Taxed?

Are there any exceptions, should i consult with an attorney.

As previously discussed, a taxpayer will still be required to pay taxes on any income that is assigned to a third party. The person who earns the income is the one who will be responsible for paying taxes on the income, not the person to whom it is assigned. The same rule applies to income that a person receives from property or assets.

For example, if a person earns money through a source of what is considered to be a passive stream of income, such as from stock dividends, the person who owns these assets will be the one responsible for paying taxes on the income they receive from it. The reason for this is because income is generally taxed to the person who owns any income-generating property under the law.

If a person chooses to give away their income-generating property and/or assets as a gift to a family member, then they will no longer be taxed on any income that is earned from those property or assets. This rule will be triggered the moment that the owner has given up their complete control and rights over the property in question.

In order to demonstrate how this might work, consider the following example:

  • Instead, the person to whom the apartment building was transferred will now be liable for paying taxes on any income they receive from tenants paying rent to live in the building since they are the new owner.

There is one exception to the rule provided by the assignment of income doctrine and that is when income is assigned in a scenario that involves a principal-agent relationship . For example, if an agent receives income from a third-party that is intended to be paid to the principal, then this income is usually not taxable to the agent. Instead, it will be taxable to the principal in this relationship.

Briefly, an agent is a person who acts on behalf of another (i.e., the principal) in certain situations or in regard to specific transactions. On the other hand, a principal is someone who authorizes another person (i.e., the agent) to act on their behalf and represent their interests under particular circumstances.

For example, imagine a sales representative that is employed by a large corporation. When the sales representative sells the corporation’s product or service to a customer, they will receive money from the customer in exchange for that service or product. Although the sales representative is the one being paid in the transaction, the money actually belongs to the corporation. Thus, it is the corporation who would be liable for paying taxes on the income.

In other words, despite the fact that this income may appear to have been earned by the corporation’s agent (i.e., the sales representation in this scenario), the corporation (i.e., the principal) will still be taxed on the income since the sales representative is acting on behalf of the corporation to generate income for them.

One other exception that may apply here is known as a “kiddie tax.” A kiddie tax is unearned or investment-related income that belongs to a child, but must be paid by the earning child’s parent and at the tax rate assigned to adults (as opposed to children). This is also to help prevent parents from abusing the tax system by using their child’s lower tax rate to shift over assets or earned income and take advantage of their child’s lower tax bracket rate.

So, even though a parent has assigned money or assets to a child that could be considered their earned income, the money will still have to be paid by the parent and taxed at a rate that is reserved for adults. The child will not need to pay any taxes on this earned income until it reaches a certain amount.

In general, the tax rules that exist under the assignment of income doctrine can be confusing. There are several exceptions to these rules and many of them require knowing how to properly apply them to the specific facts of each individual case.

Therefore, if you have any questions about taxable income streams or are involved in a dispute over taxable income with the IRS, then it may be in your best interest to contact an accountant or a local tax attorney to provide further guidance on the matter. An experienced tax attorney can help you to avoid incurring extra tax penalties and can assist you in resolving your income tax issue in an efficient manner.

Your attorney will also be able to explain the situation and can recommend various options to settle the assignment of income issue or any related concerns. In addition, your attorney will be able to communicate with the IRS on your behalf and can provide legal representation if you need to appear in court.

Lastly, if you think you are not liable for paying taxes on income that has been assigned to you by someone else, then your lawyer can review the facts of your claim and can find out whether you may be able to avoid having to pay taxes on that income.

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The Assignment of Income Doctrine

Tax Court ruling of special interest to church treasurers.

the assignment of income

Ferguson v. Commissioner, 108 T.C. 244 (1997)

Background. Donors occasionally attempt to “assign” their right to receive income to a church, assuming that they are avoiding any receipt of taxable income.

Example. Rev. T is senior pastor of First Church. He conducts a service at Second Church, and is offered compensation of $500. Rev. T refuses to accept any compensation, and asks the pastor of Second Church to put the $500 in the church’s building fund. Rev. T, and the treasurer at Second Church, assume that there is no income to report. Unfortunately, they may be wrong.

The United States Supreme Court addressed this issue in a landmark ruling in 1940. Helvering v. Horst, 311 U.S. 112 (1940). The Horst case addressed the question of whether or not a father could avoid taxation on bond interest coupons that he transferred to his son prior to the maturity date. The Supreme Court ruled that the father had to pay tax on the interest income even though he assigned all of his interest in the income to his son. It observed: “The power to dispose of income is the equivalent of ownership of it. The exercise of that power to procure the payment of income to another is the enjoyment and hence the realization of the income by him who exercises it.” The Supreme Court reached the same conclusion in two other landmark cases. Helvering v. Eubank, 311 U.S. 122 (1940), Lucas v. Earl, 281 U.S. 111 (1930).

Example. A taxpayer earned an honorarium of $2,500 for speaking at a convention. He requested that the honorarium be distributed to a college. This request was honored, and the taxpayer assumed that he did not have to report the $2,500 as taxable income since he never received it. The IRS ruled that the taxpayer should have reported the $2,500 as taxable income. It noted that “the amount of the honorarium transferred to the educational institution at the taxpayer’s request … is includible in the taxpayer’s gross income [for tax purposes]. However, the taxpayer is entitled to a charitable contribution deduction ….” The IRS further noted that “the Supreme Court of the United States has held that a taxpayer who assigns or transfers compensation for personal services to another individual or entity fails to be relieved of federal income tax liability, regardless of the motivation behind the transfer” (citing the Horst case discussed above). Revenue Ruling 79 121.

A recent Tax Court ruling. The Tax Court has issued an important ruling addressing the assignment of income to a church. Don owned several shares of stock in Company A. On July 28, Company A agreed to merge with Company B. Pursuant to the merger agreement, Company B offered to purchase all outstanding shares of Company A for $22.50 per share (an 1,100% increase over book value). On August 15, Don informed his stockbroker that he wanted to donate 30,000 shares of Company A to his church. On September 8 Don deposited 30,000 shares in his brokerage account and on September 9 signed an authorization directing his broker to transfer the shares to his church. A few days later the church issued Don a receipt acknowledging the contribution. The receipt listed the “date of donation” as September 9. The church sold all of the shares to Company B for $22.50 per share. Don claimed a charitable contribution deduction for $675,000 (30,000 shares at $22.50 per share). He did not report any taxable income in connection with the transaction..

The IRS audited Don, and conceded that a gift of stock had been made to the church. It insisted, however, that Don should have reported the “gain” in the value of his stock that was transferred to the church. Not so, said Don. After all, he never realized or “enjoyed” the gain, but rather transferred the shares to the church to enjoy.

The IRS asserted that Don had a legal right to redeem his Company A shares at $22.50 per share at the time he transferred the shares to the church. As a result, Don had “assigned income” to the church, and could not avoid being taxed on it.

The Tax Court agreed with the IRS. It began its opinion by addressing the date of Don’s gift. Did the gift to the church occur before he had a legal right to receive $22.50 per share for his Company A stock? If so, there was no income that had been assigned and no tax to be paid. Or, did Don’s gift occur after he had a legal right to receive $22.50 per share? If so, Don had “assigned income” to the church and he would have to pay tax on the gain. The court concluded that Don’s gift occurred after he had a legal right to receive $22.50 per share. It quoted the following income tax regulation addressing the timing of gifts of stock:

Ordinarily, a contribution is made at the time delivery is effected …. If a taxpayer unconditionally delivers or mails a properly endorsed stock certificate to a charitable donee or the donee’s agent, the gift is completed on the date of delivery or, if such certificate is received in the ordinary course of the mails, on the date of mailing. If the donor delivers the stock certificate to his bank or broker as the donor’s agent, or to the issuing corporation or its agent, for transfer into the name of the donee, the gift is completed on the date the stock is transferred on the books of the corporation.

The critical issue was whether Don’s broker was acting as Don’s agent or the church’s agent in handling the transaction. The court concluded that the broker had acted as Don’s agent. The broker “facilitated” Don’s gift of stock to the church, and was acting on the basis of Don’s instructions. The court concluded:

[Don has] failed to persuade us that depositing stock in his brokerage account with instructions to [the stockbroker] to transfer some of the stock to the [church] constituted the unconditional delivery of stock to a charitable donee’s agent …. [Don] has failed to persuade us that depositing stock in [his] brokerage account with instructions to [his stockbroker] to transfer some of the stock to the [church] constituted the unconditional delivery of stock to a charitable donee’s agent pursuant to [the regulations] …. Based on the circumstances surrounding the gift … we believe that [the stockbroker] acted as [Don’s] agent in the transfer of the stock and that [he] relinquished control of the stock on September 9 when the letters of authorization were executed, and we so find. The gift to the [church], therefore, was complete on September 9.

The court concluded that on the date of the gift (September 9) Don had a legal right to receive $22.50 per share for all his shares of Company A, and therefore his gift to the church was a fully taxable “assignment of income.” The court observed:

It is a well-established principle of the tax law that the person who earns or otherwise creates the right to receive income is taxed. When ]the right to income has matured at the time of a transfer of property, the transferor will be taxed despite the technical transfer of that property …. An examination of the cases that discuss the anticipatory assignment of income doctrine reveals settled principles. A transfer of property that is a fixed right to income does not shift the incidence of taxation to the transferee …. [T]he ultimate question is whether the transferor, considering the reality and substance of all the circumstances, had a fixed right to income in the property at the time of transfer.

The court concluded that Don did have a “fixed right to income” at the time he donated the 30,000 shares to his church. According to the terms of the merger agreement between Company A and Company B, each outstanding share of Company A was “converted” into a right to receive $22.50 per share in cash. In essence, the stock in Company A “was converted from an interest in a viable corporation to a fixed right to receive cash.”

Conclusions. Here are a few principles for church treasurers to consider:

* Charitable contribution reporting. Note that the “assignment of income” doctrine does not bar recognition of a charitable contribution. Both the Tax Court and IRS conceded that Don was eligible for a charitable contribution deduction as a result of his gift of stock.

* Timing of a gift of stock. This case will provide helpful guidance to church treasurers in determining the date of a gift of stock. The income tax regulations (quoted above) contain the following three rules:

(1) Hand delivery. if a donor unconditionally delivers an endorsed stock certificate to a charity or an agent of a charity, the gift is completed on the date of delivery

(2) Mail. if a donor mails an endorsed stock certificate to a charity or an agent of a charity, the gift is completed on the date of mailing

(3) Delivery to an agent. if a donor delivers a stock certificate to his or her bank or stockbroker as the donor’s agent (or to the issuing corporation or its agent) for transfer into the name of a charity, the gift is completed on the date the stock is transferred on the books of the corporation

* Notification of income consequences. While certainly not required, church treasurers may want to inform some donors about the assignment of income doctrine. It often comes as a shock to donors (such as Don) to discover that their charitable contribution is “offset” by the taxable income recognized under the assignment of income doctrine. Assignments of income most often occur in connection with donations of stock rights or compensation for services already performed.

* Gifts of appreciated stock not affected. Many donors give stock that has appreciated in value to their church. Such transactions are not affected by the court’s ruling or by the assignment of income doctrine because the donor ordinarily has no “fixed right to income” at the time of transfer. Don’s case was much different. He had a contractual right to receive $22.50 per share for all of his shares of Company A stock as a result of the merger.

Key point. Persons who donate stock often can deduct the fair market value of the stock as a charitable contribution (there are some important limitations to this rule) and they have no “assigned income” to report.
Example. Jill is employed by a local business. Her company declares a $1,000 Christmas bonus. Jill asks her supervisor to send the bonus directly to her church. The supervisor does so. The church treasurer should be aware of the following: (1) Jill will be taxed on the bonus under the assignment of income doctrine. The church treasurer may want to point this out to Jill, although this is not required. There is no need for the church to report this income, or issue Jill a W-2 or 1099. (2) Jill should be given credit for a charitable contribution in the amount of the bonus. Since the bonus was in excess of $250 the receipt issued by the church should comply with the charitable contribution substantiation rules that apply to contributions of $250 or more.

This content is designed to provide accurate and authoritative information in regard to the subject matter covered. It is sold with the understanding that the publisher is not engaged in rendering legal, accounting, or other professional service. If legal advice or other expert assistance is required, the services of a competent professional person should be sought. "From a Declaration of Principles jointly adopted by a Committee of the American Bar Association and a Committee of Publishers and Associations." Due to the nature of the U.S. legal system, laws and regulations constantly change. The editors encourage readers to carefully search the site for all content related to the topic of interest and consult qualified local counsel to verify the status of specific statutes, laws, regulations, and precedential court holdings.

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Tax Law on “Assignment of Income”

Gross income is taxed to the individual who earns it or to an owner of property that generates the income. Under the so-called “assignment of income doctrine,” a taxpayer may not avoid tax by assigning the right to income to another. Specifically, the assignment of income doctrine holds that a taxpayer who earns income from services that the taxpayer performs or property that the taxpayer owns generally cannot avoid liability for tax on that income by assigning it to another person or entity. The doctrine is frequently applied to assignments to creditors, controlled entities, family trusts and charities.

A taxpayer cannot, for tax purposes, assign income that has already accrued from property the taxpayer owns. This aspect of the assignment of income doctrine is often applied to interest, dividends, rents, royalties, and trust income. And, under the same rationale, an assignment of an interest in a lottery ticket is effective only if it occurs before the ticket is ascertained to be a winning ticket. However, a taxpayer can shift liability for capital gains on property not yet sold by making a bona fide gift of the underlying property. In that case, the donee of a gift of securities takes the “carryover” basis of the donor. For example, shares now valued at $50 gifted to a donee in which the donor has a tax basis of $10, would yield a taxable gain to the donee of its eventual sale price less the $10 carryover basis. The donor escapes income tax on any of the appreciation.

For more information about this article, please contact our tax professionals at [email protected] or toll free at 844.4WINDES (844.494.6337).

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Section 1202 Planning: When Might the Assignment of Income Doctrine Apply to a Gift of QSBS?

US dollars in a white envelope on a wooden table. The concept of income, bonuses or bribes. Corruption, salary, bonus.

Jan 26, 2022

Categories:

Blogs Qualified Small Business Stock (QSBS) Tax Law Defined™ Blog

Scott W. Dolson

Section 1202 allows taxpayers to exclude gain on the sale of QSBS if all eligibility requirements are met.  Section 1202 also places a cap on the amount of gain that a stockholder is entitled to exclude with respect to a single issuer’s stock. [i]   A taxpayer has at least a $10 million per-issuer gain exclusion, but some taxpayer’s expected gain exceeds that cap.  In our article Maximizing the Section 1202 Gain Exclusion Amount , we discussed planning techniques for increasing, and in some cases multiplying, the $10 million gain exclusion cap through gifting QSBS to other taxpayers. [ii]  Increased awareness of this planning technique has contributed to a flurry of stockholders seeking last-minute tax planning help.  This article looks at whether you can “multiply” Section 1202’s gain exclusion by gifting qualified small business stock (QSBS) when a sale transaction is imminent.

This is one in a series of articles and blogs addressing planning issues relating to QSBS and the workings of Sections 1202 and 1045.  During the past several years, there has been an increase in the use of C corporations as the start-up entity of choice.  Much of this interest can be attributed to the reduction in the corporate rate from 35% to 21%, but savvy founders and investors have also focused on qualifying for Section 1202’s generous gain exclusion.  Recently proposed tax legislation sought to curb Section 1202’s benefits, but that legislation, along with the balance of President Biden’s Build Back Better bill, is currently stalled in Congress.

The Benefits of Gifting QSBS

Section 1202(h)(1) provides that if a stockholder gifts QSBS, the recipient of the gift is treated as “(A) having acquired such stock in the same manner as the transferor, and (B) having held such stock during any continuous period immediately preceding the transfer during which it was held (or treated as held under this subsection by the transferor.”  This statute literally allows a holder of $100 million of QSBS to gift $10 million worth to each of nine friends, with the result that the holder and his nine friends each having the right to claim a separate $10 million gain exclusion.  Under Section 1202, a taxpayer with $20 million in expected gain upon the sale of founder QSBS can increase the overall tax savings from approximately $2.4 million (based on no Federal income tax on $10 million of QSBS gain) to $4.8 million (based on no Federal income tax on $20 million of QSBS gain) by gifting $10 million worth of QSBS to friends and family. [iii]

A reasonable question to ask is whether it is ever too late to make a gift of QSBS for wealth transfer or Section 1202 gain exclusion cap planning?  What about when a sale process is looming but hasn’t yet commenced?  Is it too late to make a gift when a nonbinding letter of intent to sell the company has been signed?   What about the situation where a binding agreement has been signed but there are various closing conditions remaining to be satisfied, perhaps including shareholder approval?  Finally, is it too late to make a gift when a definitive agreement has been signed and all material conditions to closing have been satisfied?

Although neither Section 1202 nor any other tax authorities interpreting Section 1202 address whether there are any exceptions to Section 1202’s favorable treatment of gifts based on the timing of the gift, the IRS is not without potential weapons in its arsenal.

Application of the Assignment of Income Doctrine

If QSBS is gifted in close proximity to a sale, the IRS might claim that the donor stockholder was making an anticipatory assignment of income. [iv]

As first enunciated by the Supreme Court in 1930, the anticipatory assignment of income doctrine holds that income is taxable to the person who earns it, and that such taxes cannot be avoided through “arrangement[s] by which the fruits are attributed to a different tree from that on which they grew.” [v]   Many assignment of income cases involve stock gifted to charities immediately before a prearranged stock sale, coupled with the donor claiming a charitable deduction for full fair market value of the gifted stock.

In Revenue Ruling 78-197, the IRS concluded in the context of a charitable contribution coupled with a prearranged redemption that the assignment of income doctrine would apply only if the donee is legally bound, or can be compelled by the corporation, to surrender shares for redemption. [vi]  In the aftermath of this ruling, the Tax Court has refused to adopt a bright line test but has generally followed the ruling’s reasoning.  For example, in Estate of Applestein v. Commissioner , the taxpayer gifted to custodial accounts for his children stock in a corporation that had entered into a merger agreement with another corporation. Prior to the gift, the merger agreement was approved by the stockholders of both corporations.  Although the gift occurred before the closing of the merger transaction, the Tax Court held that the “right to the merger proceeds had virtually ripened prior to the transfer and that the transfer of the stock constituted a transfer of the merger proceeds rather than an interest in a viable corporation.” [vii]   In contrast, in Rauenhorst v. Commissioner , the Tax Court concluded that a nonbinding letter of intent would not support the IRS’ assignment of income argument because the stockholder at the time of making the gift was not legally bound nor compelled to sell his equity. [viii]

In Ferguson v. Commissioner , the Tax Court focused on whether the percentage of shares tendered pursuant to a tender offer was the functional equivalent of stockholder approval of a merger transaction, which the court viewed as converting an interest in a viable corporation to the right to receive cash before the gifting of stock to charities. [ix]   The Tax Court concluded that there was an anticipatory assignment of income in spite of the fact that there remained certain contingencies before the sale would be finalized.  The Tax Court rejected the taxpayer’s argument that the application of the assignment of income doctrine should be conditioned on the occurrence of a formal stockholder vote, noting that the reality and substance of the particular events under consideration should determine tax consequences.

Guidelines for Last-Minute Gifts

Based on the guidelines established by Revenue Ruling 78-197 and the cases discussed above, the IRS should be unsuccessful if it asserts an assignment of income argument in a situation where the gift of QSBS is made prior to the signing of a definitive sale agreement, even if the company has entered into a nonbinding letter of intent.  The IRS’ position should further weakened with the passage of time between the making of a gift and the entering into of a definitive sale agreement.  In contrast, the IRS should have a stronger argument if the gift is made after the company enters into a binding sale agreement.  And the IRS’ position should be stronger still if the gift of QSBS is made after satisfaction of most or all material closing conditions, and in particular after stockholder approval.  Stockholders should be mindful of Tax Court’s comment that the reality and substance of events determines tax consequences, and that it will often be a nuanced set of facts that ultimately determines whether the IRS would be successful arguing for application of the assignment of income doctrine.

Transfers of QSBS Incident to Divorce

The general guidelines discussed above may not apply to transfers of QSBS between former spouses “incident to divorce” that are governed by Section 1041.  Section 1041(b)(1) confirms that a transfer incident to divorce will be treated as a gift for Section 1202 purposes.  Private Letter Ruling 9046004 addressed the situation where stock was transferred incident to a divorce and the corporation immediately redeemed the stock.  In that ruling, the IRS commented that “under section 1041, Congress gave taxpayers a mechanism for determining which of the two spouses will pay the tax upon the ultimate disposition of the asset.  The spouses are thus free to negotiate between themselves whether the ‘owner’ spouse will first sell the asset, recognize the gain or loss, and then transfer to the transferee spouse the proceeds from the sale, or whether the owner spouse will first transfer the asset to the transferee spouse who will then recognize gain or loss upon its subsequent sale.”  Thus, while there are some tax cases where the assignment of income doctrine has been successfully asserted by the IRS in connection with transfers between spouses incident to divorce, Section 1041 and tax authorities interpreting its application do provide divorcing taxpayers an additional argument against application of the doctrine, perhaps even where the end result might be a multiplication of Section 1202’s gain exclusion.

More Resources 

In spite of the potential for extraordinary tax savings, many experienced tax advisors are not familiar with QSBS planning. Venture capitalists, founders and investors who want to learn more about QSBS planning opportunities are directed to several articles on the Frost Brown Todd website:

  • Planning for the Potential Reduction in Section 1202’s Gain Exclusion
  • Section 1202 Qualification Checklist and Planning Pointers
  • A Roadmap for Obtaining (and not Losing) the Benefits of Section 1202 Stock
  • Maximizing the Section 1202 Gain Exclusion Amount
  • Advanced Section 1045 Planning
  • Recapitalizations Involving Qualified Small Business Stock
  • Section 1202 and S Corporations
  • The 21% Corporate Rate Breathes New Life into IRC § 1202
  • View all QSBS Resources

Contact  Scott Dolson  or  Melanie McCoy  (QSBS estate and trust planning) if you want to discuss any QSBS issues by telephone or video conference.

[i] References to “Section” are to sections of the Internal Revenue Code.

[ii] The planning technique of gifting QSBS recently came under heavy criticism in an article written by two investigative reporters.  See Jesse Drucker and Maureen Farrell, The Peanut Butter Secret: A Lavish Tax Dodge for the Ultrawealthy.  New York Times , December 28, 2021.

[iii] But in our opinion, in order to avoid a definite grey area in Section 1202 law, the donee should not be the stockholder’s spouse.  The universe of donees includes nongrantor trusts, including Delaware and Nevada asset protection trusts.

[iv] This article assumes that the holder of the stock doesn’t have sufficient tax basis in the QSBS to take advantage of the 10X gain exclusion cap – for example, the stock might be founder shares with a basis of .0001 per share.

[v]   Lucas v. Earl , 281 U.S. 111 (1930).  The US Supreme Court later summarized the assignment of income doctrine as follows:  “A person cannot escape taxation by anticipatory assignments, however skillfully devised, where the right to receive income has vested.”  Harrison v. Schaffner , 312 U.S. 579, 582 (1941).

[vi] Revenue Ruling 78-197, 1978-1 CB 83.

[vii] Estate of Applestein v. Commissioner , 80 T.C. 331, 346 (1983).

[viii] Gerald A. Rauenhorst v. Commissioner , 119 T.C. 157 (2002).

[ix] Ferguson v. Commissioner , 108 T.C. 244 (1997).

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  • TAX MATTERS

Appreciated stock donation not treated as a taxable redemption

The tax court holds that taxpayers made an absolute gift..

  • Individual Income Taxation

The Tax Court granted summary judgment to a married couple, ruling that the IRS improperly recharacterized their charitable donations of stock as taxable redemptions. The court held the couple made an absolute gift in each tax year at issue, and although the charity soon after redeemed the stock, the court respected the form of the transaction.

Facts:  Jon and Helen Dickinson claimed a charitable contribution deduction on their joint federal income tax returns for 2013 through 2015, due to a contribution each year by Jon Dickinson of appreciated stock in his employer, Geosyntec Consultants Inc. (GCI), a privately held company, to Fidelity Investments Charitable Gift Fund, a Sec. 501(c)(3) tax-exempt organization. Dickinson was GCI’s CFO.

GCI’s board of directors authorized shareholders to donate GCI shares to Fidelity in written consent actions in 2013 and 2014, stating that Fidelity’s donor-advised fund program required Fidelity “to immediately liquidate the donated stock” and that the charity “promptly tenders the donated stock to the issuer for cash.” The board also authorized donations in 2015.

GCI confirmed in letters to Fidelity the recording of Fidelity’s new ownership of the shares. Dickinson signed a letter of understanding to Fidelity regarding each stock donation, stating that the stock was “exclusively owned and controlled by Fidelity.” Fidelity sent confirmation letters stating that it had “exclusive legal control over the contributed asset.” Fidelity redeemed the GCI shares for cash shortly after each donation.

The IRS issued a notice of deficiency, asserting that the Dickinsons were liable for tax on the redemption of the donated GCI shares and a penalty under Sec. 6662(a) for each year. The Service contended the donations should be treated in substance as taxable redemptions of the shares for cash by Dickinson, followed by donations of the cash to Fidelity.

The Dickinsons petitioned the Tax Court for a redetermination of the deficiencies and penalties and moved for summary judgment.

Issue:  Generally, pursuant to Sec. 170 and Regs. Sec. 1.170A-1(c)(1), a taxpayer may deduct the fair market value of appreciated property donated to a qualified charity without recognizing the gain in the property.

In  Humacid Co. , 42 T.C. 894, 913 (1964), the Tax Court stated: “The law with respect to gifts of appreciated property is well established. A gift of appreciated property does not result in income to the donor so long as [1] he gives the property away absolutely and parts with title thereto [2] before the property gives rise to income by way of a sale.” 

The issue before the court was whether the form of Dickinson’s donations of GCI stock should be respected as meeting the requirements in  Humacid Co. , or recharacterized as taxable redemptions resulting in income to the Dickinsons.

Holding:  The Tax Court held that the form of the stock donations should be respected, as both prongs of  Humacid Co.  were satisfied, and granted the taxpayers summary judgment.

Regarding the first prong, the court held that Dickinson transferred all his rights in the shares to Fidelity, based on GCI’s letters to Fidelity confirming the transfer of ownership in the shares, Fidelity’s letters to the Dickinsons stating it had “exclusive legal control” over the donated stock, and the letters of understanding. Thus, Dickinson made an absolute gift.

The Tax Court analyzed the second prong under the assignment-of-income doctrine. This provides that a taxpayer cannot avoid taxation by assigning a right to income to another. The court stated: “Where a donee redeems shares shortly after a donation, the assignment of income doctrine applies only if the redemption was practically certain to occur at the time of the gift, and would have occurred whether the shareholder made the gift or not.”

The Tax Court noted that in  Palmer , 62 T.C. 684 (1974), it held there was no assignment of income where there was not yet a vote for a redemption at the time of a stock donation, even though the vote was anticipated. Similarly, the court reasoned that “the redemption in this case was not a fait accompli at the time of the gift” and held Dickinson did not avoid income due to the redemption by donating the GCI shares. Thus, the court respected the form of the transaction.

The Tax Court did not apply Rev. Rul. 78-197, in which the IRS ruled that it “will treat the proceeds as income to the donor under facts similar to those in the  Palmer  decision only if the donee is legally bound, or can be compelled by the [issuing] corporation, to surrender the shares for redemption.” The court noted that it has not adopted the revenue ruling, and furthermore, the IRS did not allege that Dickinson had a fixed right to redemption income at the time of the donation.

  • Dickinson , T.C. Memo. 2020-128

—  By Mark Aquilio, CPA, J.D., LL.M. , professor of accounting and taxation, St. John’s University, Queens, N.Y.

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  • Tax Planning

What Is Income Shifting?

Income Shifting Explained

the assignment of income

How Does Income Shifting Work?

Types of income shifting.

  • Disadvantages and Restrictions

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

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Income shifting is the practice of moving unearned income from one taxpayer to another. Ideally, it moves to someone in a lower tax bracket so the tax bite taken out of the money isn’t as great.

Key Takeaways

  • Income shifting is a tactic of moving unearned income out of the ownership of one taxpayer and into that of a taxpayer in a lower tax bracket.
  • Income shifting is commonly employed among family members because you’re technically giving away income or income-producing assets.
  • The practice is perfectly legal, but the Internal Revenue Code imposes many rules and regulations for doing it correctly.
  • You could be hit with a gift tax or your child could be liable for the Kiddie Tax if the asset you give away is very valuable.

Income shifting involves redirecting a stream of income, such as from an investment or a business. It moves from you to another individual who will not pay a high tax rate on it. You’re actually giving them your income, so the practice is most common among family members. Income shifting is sometimes also called income splitting.

Income shifting doesn’t work with earned income , that which is paid to you by an employer or as an independent contractor. Those payments are tagged with your Social Security or tax ID number from the onset. They’re reported to the IRS as your income on Form W-2 or Form 1099-NEC. You’re free to give the money away, of course, but it will first be taxed at your own tax rate.

Only unearned income can be shifted.

Example of Income Shifting

The top dollar of your income might put you in the highest tax bracket , which for 2022 is 37%. You’re expecting to receive income from an investment at year’s end, or maybe you’re self-employed and having a banner year. In any case, you’d have to give 37 cents of every dollar of that money to the IRS because of your tax rate.

Meanwhile, your elderly mother is in the 12% tax bracket, and she’s unable to make ends meet on her own. Income shifting involves transferring that income-producing investment into her name so it’s only taxed at 12 cents on the dollar. You normally help her out financially anyway, but you won’t have to share that income with the federal government as well if you use this method of generosity.

Corporations and multinational companies may also engage in a form of income shifting by moving income from countries with high taxes to countries with lower taxation.

You can shift income a few ways. They all involve giving someone else a portion of your money in a documented way that establishes it as their own.

Hire a Family Member

You can hire your child or children to work for you if you have your own business. Rather than keep that money and be taxed on it at your own rate, you can pay it to them and claim a business deduction for their wages or salary. This also reduces your income for purposes of the self-employment tax if you’re a sole proprietor. Children under age 18 who are employed by their parent’s sole proprietorship or partnership aren’t subject to FICA taxes , either—Social Security and Medicare taxes.

This option isn’t reserved only for your kids. You can hire a parent or a sibling, too. Income you pay to any employee is technically shifted from you to them, but you can keep it in the family when you pay a family member.

Transfer Income-Producing Assets

You can also transfer ownership of an income-producing asset such as company stock to another taxpayer. This might be an investment account or even a rental property. They would report the income on their own tax return and pay their own, lower, tax rate on it. Of course, it no longer adds to your net worth, either—another reason why this tactic is typically used among family members.

You might consider transferring the asset into a trust for the benefit of your child if they are still a minor. This would have the same income-shifting effect because the trust, not you, now owns it.

Defer Bonuses and Income

This strategy doesn't involve giving money away. It's a matter of delaying it. Taxpayers can do this by shifting income from one tax year to the next.

This can be advantageous if you’re in a particularly high tax bracket this year but you expect your income will be less next year. You’ll also pay less of a tax percentage on the money if you delay taking year-end bonuses from your employer until January.

You can employ a similar tactic if you’re self-employed. You might delay invoicing or collecting income from a client in November or December and do so in January instead. Or you might pay tax-deductible expenses in December rather than in January, which would also reduce your taxable income in the current year.

You’re actually shifting income to yourself when you delay or defer bonuses and income, rather than shifting it to someone else.

Disadvantages and Restrictions When Shifting Income

Numerous tax rules and regulations restrict these income-shifting measures to some extent.

The ‘Kiddie Tax’

You might still end up paying a tax on income-producing assets that are transferred to your children under some circumstances. So your income-shifting efforts could turn out to be for naught. Congress put the “ Kiddie Tax ” in place to prevent the transfer of particularly lucrative assets in this way. You won’t get the tax bill for the investment—your child will—but they’ll be taxed on it at your highest tax rate, not their own.

You’ll dodge the Kiddie Tax if you employ your child because the tax only applies to unearned income.

Limits apply to the Kiddie Tax rule, however. The tax only applies to unearned income over a certain amount: $2,300 for the 2022 tax year if your child is any of the following:

  • Younger than age 18
  • 18 years old at the end of the tax year and you did not have earned income that was more than 50% of the child’s support needs
  • Age 19 through age 23 and the child didn’t have earned income equal to more than half of their support needs

The Uniform Transfers to Minors Act (UTMA)

This rule doesn’t apply at the federal level, but some states impose it. UTMA and the Uniform Gifts to Minors Act (UGMA) prohibit securities from being registered in the name of a minor child. You’d have to gift your child this type of asset under UTMA or UGMA rules, or place it into a trust for their benefit.

Placing it into a trust can be tricky as well. The trust’s income still is taxed to you if the trust is a revocable grantor trust . The only way to remove yourself from the ownership and tax equation is to place the asset in an irrevocable trust.

The Gift Tax

You might additionally be hit with a federal gift tax if you transfer an asset to your child—or to anyone else, for that matter. The IRS imposes a tax on gifts exceeding $16,000 per person per year, as of the 2022 tax year. You would owe a gift tax on $4,000 if you give your child or other family member an asset valued at $20,000. The donor is responsible for paying this tax, not the recipient.

You can defer this tax to be payable by your estate at the time of your death if you believe that the total value of your estate will fall below that year’s gift and estate tax exemption . The exemption is set at $12.06 million for individuals as of tax year 2022.

Your Child's Job

Income shifting won’t work unless you legitimately hire your child or family member for a bona fide job opening. In other words, they must honestly perform work for your business in some reasonable capacity. It’s recommended that you have them fill out a time card and other appropriate employment-related documentation. Avoid the temptation to pay them $75 an hour to sweep your floor. Your child’s wages or salary must be on par with what anyone else would receive for performing the same job.

Your Method of Accounting

The option of delaying income into the next year or accelerating tax-deductible expenses only works for self-employed persons who use the cash method of accounting . This method assigns income and deductions to the year in which money is received or expenses are paid. Otherwise, it’s assigned to the year in which you contracted the job or incurred an expense, if you use the accrual method.

What is the 'assignment of income' doctrine?

According to the assignment of income doctrine, gains should be taxed to those who earn them. Further, it states that a taxpayer cannot make an arrangement to assign the gains, and therefore the tax, to another entity before the gain is accrued. While assignment of income limits income shifting, taxpayers can engage in income-shifting of unearned income, the gains and therefore the tax from which have not been realized.

IRS. " IRS provides tax inflation adjustments for tax year 2022 ."

University of North Carolina, Kenan Institute of Private Enterprise. " Tax Income Shifting ."

IRS. " Family Help ."

Henssler Financial. " Tax Planning for the Self-Employed: Shifting Income/Timing Income ."

IRS. " Instructions for Form 8615 ."

Fidelity. " What to know about the kiddie tax ."

IRS. " Topic No. 553 Tax on a Child's Investment and Other Unearned Income (Kiddie Tax) ."

American Bar Association. “ Young Lawyers Network: Tax and Non-Tax Considerations When Drafting Irrevocable Trusts .”

IRS. “ Frequently Asked Questions on Gift Taxes .”

IRS. " Estate Tax ."

IRS. " Internal Revenue Bulletin: 2005-15 ."

Grossman St. Amour. " What is “Assignment of Income” Under the Tax Law? "

What is income tax? What to know about how it works, different types and more

the assignment of income

Filing taxes can get confusing, especially with all the forms and applications. Whether you file with help from a professional or on your own, calculating the precise total you owe to Internal Revenue Service (and vice versa) may take some time.

You may not even fully understand what is being taken out of your pay and why. And this is something that varies depending on where you live and work.

Here's a primer on income tax: what it is, how it works, how to calculate it and which states don't have it. 

What is income tax?

Income tax is a tax that governments put on income created by people and businesses within their jurisdiction.

There is federal as well as state income tax. However, not all states have income tax. In the jurisdictions that do, taxpayers must file income tax returns each year to see what they are accountable for. 

The purpose of income tax is to pay for public services and government obligations and toprovide goods for the public. For example, personal income taxes help fund Social Security, schools and roads. 

Types of income tax 

Individual income tax, also called personal income tax, is placed on a person's wages, salary and other forms of income. This particular tax is generally imposed by the state. Depending on your situation, there are certain exemptions, deductions or credits that could make you eligible to not pay taxes on your income.  

Business income tax is applied to corporations, small businesses and self-employed people. The company, its owners or shareholders disclose their business income and then subtract operating and capital expenses. The difference  the company's taxable business income.

Which states have no income tax? 

There are eight states that do not have an income tax: 

  • South Dakota
  • Washington 

New Hampshire has no state tax on income, but it does make residents pay a 5% tax on income earned from interest and dividends. 

Does yours make the list? These 8 states don’t have an income tax.

What percent of my income is taxed? 

The percentage of your income that is taxed depends on your specific situation: how much you make and your filing status. In short, the more income you earn, the more taxes you pay. 

How to calculate income tax?

To calculate income tax, you add all forms of taxable income earned in a tax year. Next, find your adjusted gross income. Then, subtract any eligible deductions from your adjusted gross income. 

More of your 2024 tax season questions answered

  • IRS announces new tax brackets for 2024.  What does that mean for you?
  • We'll help you decide:  Is it better to pay someone to do your taxes or do them yourself?
  • Mark your calendars:  Tax deadlines to keep in mind with Tax Day coming up
  • Where's my refund?  How to track your tax refund through the IRS system
  • When can you file taxes this year?  Here's when the 2024 tax season opens.

Tuko

Here Are Some of The Stories That Made Headlines This Week

1. kenyan man breaks down budget for ksh 71k salary.

A man, identified as Geoffrey Ben Omondi, garnered attention after sharing a breakdown of his monthly budget, revealing the financial challenges he faces on a KSh 71,000 salary.

Omondi took to the One Stop Marriage Facebook group to seek advice and financial assistance as he struggled to manage his expenses.

The breakdown provided by Omondi sheds light on his monthly financial commitments. The largest chunk of his income, KSh 23,800, goes towards paying his rent.

Omondi then allocates KSh 10,000 for shopping, KSh 3,000 for bills, KSh 10,000 for his mother's support, KSh 5,000 for transportation, and an additional KSh 5,000 for miscellaneous expenses.

However, what captured the attention of many was Omondi's admission that he spends KSh 15,000 on dates.

This revelation sparked discussions on social media, with some expressing concern over the apparent strain on his budget.

2. Mum exposes teacher for correcting son with wrong answers

A mother sought advice from netizens after her child's assignment was marked down by his teacher.

The mother said she helped her son to do his assignment only to see some corrections made by his teacher after he returned from school.

She shared a photo of the assignment question, which asked the child to write capital and small letters on a line.

Despite following the instructions, the teacher used a red pen to make corrections, which the mother believed was wrong.

Sharing a photo of the page, the mother said:

"Teachers in the house please help me. The teacher wrote with a red pen after my son submitted the work we did at home. Please, was it supposed to be like this considering the instructions and example given? Thank you."

3. Kabi wa Jesus flies wife to Singapore to get her pregnant

Celebrity couple Kabi Wa Jesus and his beautiful wife Milly are looking forward to expanding their family.

Kabi flew his lovely spouse to Singapore in an attempt to make her pregnant for the third time.

In a YouTube video that premiered on February 15, the couple revealed the plan to add baby number three, as asked by Kabi.

Kabi expressed his undying and unwavering love for the mother of his two kids, asking her to be open to having another baby.

"The reason I did this setup and have waited for this moment today is that I know that this is not something that we have agreed to do together, but it is something that I want to request from you for this Valentine's. Would you gift me baby number three?" Kabi asked his wife.

She agreed, and Kabi revealed they would be visiting two destinations, including Singapore and Malaysia, which could be the name of their third child.

4. Photos show progress of Kelvin Kiptum's house under construction

As the world prepares to bid farewell to departed world marathon record holder Kelvin Kiptum, construction workers have been burning the midnight oil to build a house for his family.

This was after President William Ruto ordered a three-bedroom house to be constructed within seven days.

Since the president's announcement, the athlete's Cherunya farm has been a beehive of activity as engineers and machines work against time.

Groundbreaking was on Thursday, February 15, with the house expected to be ready before his burial on February 23. Recent photos show impressive progress, with the house moving from the foundation phase to walling in less than three days, courtesy of new construction technology.

According to Bomet County Youth Leader Honourable Kiprono, the house design is called Light Gauge Steel Frame.

"It is a construction technology that uses cold-formed steel as the primary construction material. It can be used for roof systems, floor systems, wall systems, roof panels, decks, and the entire building," he wrote on Facebook.

5. Kamuiru Boys' High deputy principal dons school uniform

Kamuiru Boys' High School deputy principal showed off his hidden talent, which impressed many.

The principal showed his agility as he showcased his incredible dance moves in a video that excited netizens.

"Kamuiru Boys' High School agile deputy principal dancing during the school's inter-houses," read the caption on the video.

The deputy school head donned the school's uniform, and many would be forgiven for thinking he was also a student.

He stood confidently in front of the students as he flaunted his dance moves, leaving the students in laughter and awe.

Many looked surprised as the deputy put on a serious face while dancing in the viral TikTok video.

Here Are Some of The Stories That Made Headlines This Week

Global Citizenship & Equity Assignment taxation

IMAGES

  1. The Income Statement

    the assignment of income

  2. FAQ: What Is the Assignment of Income?

    the assignment of income

  3. The Spendthrift Trust & Assignment Of Income Doctrine

    the assignment of income

  4. What is an Income Statement and Why Is It Important?

    the assignment of income

  5. Income Assignment Form

    the assignment of income

  6. Income Assignment Order Form

    the assignment of income

VIDEO

  1. PET 3013 Economy Assignment 2

  2. ASSIGNMENT 2

  3. ECONOMICS ASSIGNMENT 2

  4. Basic Income

  5. The Assignment of Income doctrine

  6. Assignment on salary in Income tax

COMMENTS

  1. What is "Assignment of Income" Under the Tax Law?

    What is "Assignment of Income" Under the Tax Law? Gross income is taxed to the individual who earns it or to owner of property that generates the income. Under the so-called "assignment of income doctrine," a taxpayer may not avoid tax by assigning the right to income to another.

  2. Assignment of income doctrine

    The assignment of income doctrine is a judicial doctrine developed in United States case law by courts trying to limit tax evasion. The assignment of income doctrine seeks to "preserve the progressive rate structure of the Code by prohibiting the splitting of income among taxable entities." [1] History

  3. Recognizing when the IRS can reallocate income

    Assignment-of-income rules that have been developed through the courts; The allocation-of-income theory of Sec. 482; and The rules for allocation of income between a personal service corporation and its employee-owners of Sec. 269A. Assigning income to the entity that earns or controls the income

  4. FAQ: What Is the Assignment of Income?

    Assignment of income allows you to assign part of your income directly to another person. While there are several valid reasons to assign your income to someone else, many taxpayers mistakenly believe that it can help lower their taxable income. While assignment of income allows you to divert income, you cannot divert taxes.

  5. Battling Uphill Against the Assignment of Income Doctrine:

    In its most basic iteration, the assignment of income doctrine stands for the proposition that income is taxed to the individual who earns it, even if the right to that income is assigned to someone else. 2 Courts have held that the income earner is responsible for the income tax in the overwhelming majority of cases, including Ryder.

  6. ASSIGNMENT OF INCOME DOCTRINE

    The assignment of income doctrine was developed from court decisions which decided the issues, including the various methods employed in attempting to determine who earned the income. There was a time during the World War II years and thereafter, until around 1963, that the top income tax brackets could be as high as 91% - 93%.

  7. Assignment of Income Dilemma

    Lucas v. Earl. The idea of avoiding tax liability by assigning the right to receive income earned by the taxpayer to another is not new. As early as 1930, the Supreme Court of the United States ruled on this issue in Lucas v. Earl.

  8. Assignment of Income Lawyers

    The primary purpose of the "assignment of income doctrine" is to ensure that a person does not simply assign their income to a third party to avoid having to pay taxes. If they do, then they can be charged and convicted of committing tax evasion.

  9. FAQ: What is assignment of income under the tax law?

    Specifically, the assignment of income doctrine holds that a taxpayer who earns income from services that the taxpayer performs or property that the taxpayer owns generally cannot avoid liability for tax on that income by assigning it to another person or entity.

  10. The Assignment of Income Doctrine

    The church treasurer should be aware of the following: (1) Jill will be taxed on the bonus under the assignment of income doctrine. The church treasurer may want to point this out to Jill, although this is not required. There is no need for the church to report this income, or issue Jill a W-2 or 1099.

  11. What is Taxable and Nontaxable Income?

    Generally, an amount included in your income is taxable unless it is specifically exempted by law. Income that is taxable must be reported on your return and is subject to tax. Income that is nontaxable may have to be shown on your tax return but is not taxable. A list is available in Publication 525, Taxable and Nontaxable Income.

  12. FAQ: Can a taxpayer assign income to someone else?

    Under the assignment of income doctrine, a taxpayer cannot avoid tax liability by assigning a right to income to someone else. The doctrine is invoked, for example, for assignments to creditors, family members, charities, and controlled entities. Thus, the income is taxable to the person who earned it, even if the person assigns the income to ...

  13. Tax Law on "Assignment of Income"

    Tax Tax Law on "Assignment of Income" September 27, 2017 Gross income is taxed to the individual who earns it or to an owner of property that generates the income. Under the so-called "assignment of income doctrine," a taxpayer may not avoid tax by assigning the right to income to another.

  14. Internal Revenue Bulletin: 2005-15

    The rationale for the so-called anticipatory assignment of income doctrine is the principle that gains should be taxed "to those who earn them," Lucas, supra, at 114, a maxim we have called "the first principle of income taxation," Commissioner v. Culbertson, 337 U.S. 733, 739-740 (1949). The anticipatory assignment doctrine is meant to ...

  15. PDF Internal Revenue Service

    its income under the anticipatory assignment of income doctrine. LAW AND ANALYSIS Section 61 of the Internal Revenue Code provides that, except as otherwise provided by law, gross income means all income from whatever source derived. Section 451(a) provides that items of gross income shall be included in gross

  16. Section 1202 Planning: When Might the Assignment of Income Doctrine

    As first enunciated by the Supreme Court in 1930, the anticipatory assignment of income doctrine holds that income is taxable to the person who earns it, and that such taxes cannot be avoided through "arrangement [s] by which the fruits are attributed to a different tree from that on which they grew."

  17. Appreciated stock donation not treated as a taxable redemption

    The Tax Court analyzed the second prong under the assignment-of-income doctrine. This provides that a taxpayer cannot avoid taxation by assigning a right to income to another. The court stated: "Where a donee redeems shares shortly after a donation, the assignment of income doctrine applies only if the redemption was practically certain to ...

  18. What Is Income Shifting?

    Income shifting is a tactic of moving unearned income out of the ownership of one taxpayer and into that of a taxpayer in a lower tax bracket. Income shifting is commonly employed among family members because you're technically giving away income or income-producing assets. The practice is perfectly legal, but the Internal Revenue Code ...

  19. Assignment of Income And Charitable Contributions of Closely Held Stock

    In determining whether the donating taxpayer has assigned income in these circumstances, one relevant question is whether the prospective sale of the donated stock is a mere expectation or a virtual certainty. "More than expectation or anticipation of income is required before the assignment of income doctrine applies," the Court stated.

  20. Schneer v. Commissioner: Continuing Confusion Over the Assignment of

    More than sixty years have elapsed since Justice Holmes first enunciated in Lucas v. Earl the principle that income from personal services "must be taxed to him who earns it" and that assignments of such income "however skilfully devised" will not be respected for tax purposes. The Supreme Court has described this principle-now known as the assignment of income doctrine-as the "first principle ...

  21. I Am the Master(s) of My Fate: Owen v. Commissioner and the Assignment

    The Tax Court examined five such assignments of income and, on the basis of the two-part control of income test from Johnson, concluded that four of the assignments of income were improper because they had not met certain requirements of form developed through Johnson and its progeny, and were thus correctly subject to section 6662 (a) accuracy-...

  22. Assignment-of-Income Doctrine Precludes Taxpayer's Charitable Deduction

    Assignment-of-Income Doctrine Precludes Taxpayer's Charitable Deduction. A district court held that a couple could not deduct the contribution of a 4 percent partnership interest to a nonprofit because the donation was an anticipatory assignment of income. The court also concluded that a donor advised fund packet submitted with the taxpayers ...

  23. PDF Part I Section 61.--Gross Income Defined

    Section 1041 and the assignment of income doctrine Section 1041(a) provides that no gain or loss is recognized on a transfer of property from an individual to or for the benefit of a spouse or, if the transfer is incident to divorce, a former spouse.

  24. Income tax: what is it, how it works, types, how to calculate

    Individual income tax, also called personal income tax, is placed on a person's wages, salary and other forms of income. This particular tax is generally imposed by the state. Depending on your ...

  25. Here Are Some of The Stories That Made Headlines This Week

    The largest chunk of his income, KSh 23,800, goes towards paying his rent. ... She shared a photo of the assignment question, which asked the child to write capital and small letters on a line.

  26. Global Citizenship & Equity Assignment taxation

    1. In your opinion is the Canadian Tax System Fair and Equitable? Please provide your reasoning. (4 Marks) 2. What is your opinion on the reporting of worldwide income and declaration of foreign income using the T1135 - Foreign Income Verification Statement. (4 Marks) Q.No.1) answer: In my understanding Canadian taxation system is a progressive and multi-layered structure that includes federal ...

  27. Assignment 3_ Income Tax and Post-Employment Benefits (1) (1)

    A3 SW7 - 60 % Income Tax and Post-Employment Benefits (10%) Total 100 marks Assignment 3 Questions Subject Marks / Out of Q1 Bob's Baits Pension 15 /30 Q2 Bentall Ink Accounting / Tax Income 22 /40 Q3 Aberdeen Tax loss carry-back 28 /30 There are format issues with your work, and I have deducted marks for formatting as how you present your work is important. Be sure to review my welcome ...