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AICPA's 2008 Tax Review Series: S Corps, LLCs and Other Pass-Through Entities

Author/Moderator: Bill Harden, CPA, ChFC, Ph.D., with contributions by Carolyn Turnbull, CPA, MST
Publisher: AICPA
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Description

This course has been updated to include content on the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008

This course drills down on the key tax issues impacting S Corps and other passthrough entities. It is the perfect companion to the related C Corp course in this series. Both of these courses will tackle key business tax issues using a handson approach as well as covering the latest business tax developments. You will truly be getting your tax return training from the industry's best! You will not only reinforce your understanding of frequently used principles, but you will receive a wealth of tax planning tips and strategies. Learn how to apply the latest changes when preparing federal income tax returns and advise clients on new developments and tax-saving ideas for pass-through entities. Many key tax return issues are covered in this course.

Objectives: 

  • Apply the latest changes when preparing federal pass-through income tax returns
  • Advise individual clients on latest developments and tax-saving ideas

Prerequisite: Knowledge of pass-through entities income taxation

Table of Contents

  • Chapter 1 - Summary of Major Corporate Tax Developments
    • Learning Objectives
    • 2008’s Key Inflation-Indexed Figures
      • Standard Mileage Rate per Business Mile
      • High Low Per Diem Rates for Business Travel
      • Depreciation Dollar Caps for Business Vehicles (§280F)
      • §179 First Year Depreciation
      • Qualified Plans
    • Summary of Major Developments
      • Chapter 2 – S Corporations
      • Chapter 3 – Section 1244 Stock, Formation of a Corporation, Personal Service Corporations, and Limited Liability Companies
      • Chapter 4 – Form 1120
      • Chapter 4 – Accounting Methods
      • Chapter 5 – Expenses vs. Capital Expenditures
      • Chapter 5 – Amortization
      • Chapter 5 – Cost Recovery and Depreciation
      • Chapter 5 – Modified Accelerated Cost Recovery System (MACRS)
      • Chapter 5 – Election to Expense Depreciable Business Assets
      • Chapter 5 – Deduction for Domestic Production Activities
      • Chapter 6 – Retirement Plans
      • Chapter 7 – Corporate Tax Credits
  • Chapter 2 - S Corporations
    • Learning Objectives
    • Advantages and Disadvantages of S Corporations
      • Advantages of S Corporation Election
      • Disadvantages of S Corporation Election
    • Eligibility and S Elections
      • Qualifying as an S Corporation
      • Corporations Ineligible for S Corporation Status
      • Subsidiaries of S Corporations
      • Electing S Status
      • Relief for Late S Elections
    • Corporate-Level Taxes Imposed on S Corporations
      • Overview
      • Excess Passive Investment Income
      • Built-In Gains Tax
      • LIFO Recapture Tax
      • Estimated Tax
    • S Corporation Pass-Through Treatment
      • Shareholder Deductibility of S Losses
      • Shareholder Stock Basis
      • Treatment of Distributions
      • Allocations upon Changes in Stock Ownership
    • Tax Years and Other Compliance Issues
      • Tax Year of S Corporation
      • Termination of S Status
      • Compensation and Fringe Benefits
      • Compliance Matters
  • Chapter 3 - Section 1244 Stock, Formation of a Corporation, Personal Service Corporations, and Limited Liability Companies
    • Learning Objectives
    • Section 1244 Stock
      • Overview
      • Eligibility
      • Stock Issuance Rules
      • Tax Planning
      • Exceeding the $1,000,000 Capital Limit
      • Claiming the §1244 Loss
      • NOL Deduction from §1244 Stock
    • Formation of a Corporation
      • Overview
      • Transfer of Assets into a Corporation
      • Transfer of Liabilities into a Corporation
    • Personal Service Corporations
      • Overview
      • Personal Service Corporation Tax Benefits
      • Personal Service Corporation Tax Pitfalls
      • Summary of PSC Tax Restrictions
      • Special PSC Rules
    • Limited Liability Companies
      • Overview
      • Issues with LLCs
      • Simplification of Entity Classification Rules (“Check-the-Box” Regs.)
  • Chapter 4 - Accounting Methods and Income
    • Learning Objectives
    • Form 1120
      • Book-Tax Reconciliation for Large Corporations (Schedule M-3)
    • Accounting Methods and Change of Accounting Method
      • Determination of Proper Accounting Method
      • Cash vs. Accrual Issues
      • Accrual to Cash Conversions: Under $1 Million Gross
      • Accrual to Cash Conversions: Under $10 Million Gross
      • General Change in Accounting Method
      • Change in Accounting Period
    • Distributions of Appreciated Property
      • Overview
      • Exception to Taxable Distribution Treatment
      • Distribution of an Installment Sale Receivable in Liquidation
    • Rental Income
      • Lease Payments
      • Lease Cancellation Payments
      • Passive Activity Status
  • Chapter 5 - Items of Deduction
    • Learning Objectives
    • Salaries and Wages
      • Overview
      • Severance Payments
      • Reasonable Compensation
    • Expenses vs. Capital Expenditures
      • Repairs
      • Twelve Month Prepaid Expense Rule
      • Employee Compensation to Acquire Intangibles
      • Accounting Method Changes
      • Treatment of Environmental Expenditures
      • Other Capitalization Issues
      • Proposed Regulations on Capitalization of Repairs and Tangible Property Expenditures
    • Interest Expense
      • Interest When Carrying Tax Exempt Securities
      • Prepaid Interest
      • Capitalizing Interest
      • Allocation of Interest Expense among S Corp. Expenditures
      • Related Taxpayers
    • Amortization
      • Overview
      • Research and Experimental Expenditures
      • Corporate Organizational Expenditures
      • Amortizable Bond Premium
      • Lease Acquisition Costs
      • Business Start-Up Costs
      • Franchises, Trademarks, and Trade Names
      • Goodwill and Intangible Property
    • Cost Recovery and Depreciation
      • Depreciation Systems
      • Leasehold Improvements
      • Income-Forecast Method of Depreciation
      • Capitalization of Minor Cost Assets
      • Tax-Exempt Entity Leasing
      • Demolition Expenses
    • Modified Accelerated Cost Recovery System (MACRS)
      • Overview
      • MACRS Recovery Periods
      • Residential and Nonresidential Real Property
      • Percentage Tables Used for MACRS Calculations
      • Correction of Depreciable Class Life
      • Applicable Depreciation Conventions
      • Alternative Depreciation System
      • 30% and 50% First Year Bonus Depreciation
      • Recovery Periods for Short Tax Years
      • General Asset Accounts
      • Luxury Autos
      • Leased Automobiles
    • Election to Expense Depreciable Business Assets
      • Overview
      • Qualifying Property
      • Making the Election
      • Calculating the Deduction
      • Deduction Limits
      • $25,000 Vehicle Limit
      • Recapture of §179 Expensed Amounts
      • Effect of Expensing on Corporate Earnings and Profits
      • Energy Efficient Commercial Building Expensing
    • Deduction for Domestic Production Activities
      • Overview
      • Eligible Production Income
      • The Wage Limitation
      • Eligibility Issues
      • Puerto Rico Part of U.S. for the PAD
      • Other PAD Changes Now Effective
      • Regulations for §199 – Online Software and Cooperatives
      • Calculating QPAI at Entity Level
      • Use of Statistical Sampling with §199
      • Other §199 Rules
  • Chapter 6 - Other Items of Deduction and Passive Activity Loss Limitations
    • Learning Objectives
    • Retirement Plans
      • SIMPLE Retirement Plans
      • Qualified Plans
      • Nondiscrimination and Other Rules for Qualified Plans
      • Additional Requirements for a Qualified Pension, Profit-Sharing, or Stock Bonus Plan
      • “Cash or Deferred” Profit-Sharing Plans – §401(k) (CODAs)
    • Other Deduction Items
      • Timing – Economic Performance
      • Use of the Recurring Item Exception for Payroll Taxes on Vacation Pay and Bonuses
      • “At-Risk” Limitation on Deducting Losses
    • Employee Benefit Programs
      • Health Savings Accounts (HSAs)
      • Tax Relief and Health Care Act HSA Modifications
      • Health Reimbursement Arrangements (HRAs)
      • Health FSA and HRA Rollovers to HSA
      • Split-Dollar Life Insurance
    • Limitation On Passive Activity Losses
      • Overview
      • Closely Held C Corporations
      • Passive Activity Rules Affecting Corporations
      • Disposition of a Passive Activity
      • Passive Activity Credits
      • Significant Participation
      • Material Participation
      • Treating Self-Charged Items of Income and Expense
      • Pass-Through Entities
      • Relief from PAL Rules for Real Estate Professionals
  • Chapter 7 - Tax Credits and Compliance Matters
    • Learning Objectives
    • Corporate Tax Credits
      • Organization of Tax Credits
      • Jobs Tax Credits
      • Tax Credit for Increasing Research Activities
      • Employer-Provided Child Care Credit
      • New Retirement Plans Credit
      • Low-Income Housing Credit
      • Disabled Access Credit
      • Empowerment Zone Employment Credit
      • Employer Social Security Credit on Tips
      • Home Contractor Energy Credit
      • Alternative Motor Vehicle Credit
    • Compliance Matters
      • Income Tax Return Preparer Changed to Tax Return Preparer
      • Payments and Penalties
  • Chapter 8 - Ethics Focus: Taxation
    • Ethics Overview
    • Recent Developments
    • Spotlight on Independence in Tax Services
    • Key Ethical Dilemmas and Judgment Calls
    • Addressing Ethical Dilemmas
    • Available Resources
  • Chapter 9 - Latest Developments

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Excerpts

Summary of Major Developments

Chapter 2 - S Corporations

  • The increase in the application of the Kiddie Tax from children under age 18 to those under 19 and to full-time students between the ages of 18 and 24 whose earned income accounts for less than one-half of their support is reflected in a discussion regarding gifts of S corporation stock to children [~§~1(g)].
  • For taxable years beginning after December 31, 2006, restricted bank director stock is no longer treated as outstanding stock of an S corporation for purposes of (a) determining whether the S corporation has more than one class of stock; (b) determining the number of S corporation shareholders; and (c) allocating items of S corporation income, gain, loss and credit among the S corporation shareholders [Act 8232 of the Small Business and Work Opportunity Tax Act of 2007].
  • For years beginning after December 31, 2006, if a parent S corporation sells the stock of its QSub and the sale terminates the QSub election (which is usually the case), the sale is treated as a sale of an undivided interest in the assets of the QSub (based on the percentage of stock sold) followed by a deemed transfer of the sold QSub's assets and liabilities to a new corporation in a transaction that qualifies under ~§~351 [Act ~§~8234 of the Small Business and Work Opportunity Tax Act of 2007].
  • The IRS has issued final regulations that treat QSubs and other single-owner disregarded entities as separate entities for purposes of employment tax and excise tax reporting. The final regulations eliminate the disregarded entity status for federal employment tax purposes for wages paid on or after January 1, 2009. In addition, the final regulations eliminate the disregarded entity status for excise taxes where the liability is imposed or the action is first required or permitted in periods beginning on or after January 1, 2008 (Reg. ~§~301.7701-2, T.D. 9356, 8/15/2007).
  • The IRS has provided an additional simplified procedure for making a late S corporation election in Rev. Proc. 2007-62, 2007-41 I.R.B. 786. This revenue procedure allows an entity to make a late S corporation election by filing Form 2553 with a Form 1120S for the first taxable year the entity intended to be an S corporation, provided certain requirements are met. In addition, this revenue procedure provides simplified procedures for an entity to make a combined late S corporation and corporate entity classification election by filing Form 2553 with Form 1120S within 6 months after the due date of the return (excluding extensions).
  • For years beginning after May 25, 2007, capital gain from the sale of stock or securities is no longer treated as passive investment income for purposes of computing the tax on excessive passive investment income under ~§~1375 and the prohibition against an S corporation having excessive passive investment income for three consecutive years under 1362(d)(3) [~§~1362(d)(3)(C); Act ~§~8231 of the Small Business and Work Opportunity Tax Act of 2007].
  • The Tax Court has confirmed that an S corporation shareholder who gives his full recourse note to a bank in satisfaction of a prior loan by that bank to the S corporation has achieved basis for that note (Miller v. Comm., TC Memo 2006-125, 6/15/2006).
  • The Tax Court has not allowed S corporation shareholders to receive basis for indirect loans that were made by a general partnership also controlled by the shareholders. The fact that the funds had moved directly from the partnership to the S corporation prevented the shareholders from achieving basis for the loans (Ruckriegel v. Comm., TC Memo 2006-78, 4/18/2006).
  • The IRS has issued proposed regulations under Reg. ~§~1.1367-2 to limit an S corporation shareholder's open account indebtedness, net of repayments, to $10,000 at the close of any day during the S corporation's taxable year [NPRM REG-144859-04 (4/12/2007), corrected 5/8/2007].
  • Effective May 25, 2007, an S corporation may eliminate pre-1983 earnings and profits notwithstanding that it may not have been an S corporation for its first tax year beginning after December 31, 1996 [Act 8235 of the Small Business and Work Opportunity Tax Act of 2007].
  • Revenue Ruling 2008-42, addresses two issues involving (key person) employer-owned life insurance contracts. The first is whether premiums paid by an S corporation for this type of policy (when the S corporation is directly or indirectly a beneficiary) reduce the S corporation's AAA. The second is whether the death benefits meeting an exception under ~§~101(j)(2) increase AAA. The ruling concludes that premiums paid by the S corporation on an employer-owned life insurance contract (the S corporation is directly or indirectly a beneficiary) do not reduce the S corporation's AAA. It also holds that the benefits received by reason of the death from this type of policy that meets an exception under ~§~101(j)(2) do not increase the S corporation's AAA.
  • For tax years beginning in 2006 and 2007, an S corporation shareholder is required to reduce the basis in their S corporation stock by the shareholder's pro rata share of the S corporation's adjusted basis in any noncash donations the S corporation makes to charity [Act ~§~1203(b) of the Pension Protection Act of 2006].
  • Revenue Procedure 2008-18, 2008-10 IRB 573, details how a bank (including a bank QSub) that changes from the reserve method bad debts under ~§~585 for its first tax year with a ~§~1362(a) S election can elect under ~§~1361(g) to take the ~§~481(a) adjustment into taxable income for the preceding tax year.
  • The IRS recently released special rules providing that a two-percent shareholderemployee of an S corporation may deduct amounts paid for insurance under ~§~162(l) (the 100% deduction for self-employed health insurance premiums) if the insurance plan was established by the S corporation. A plan is considered established by the S corporation under these rules if either (1) the S corporation makes the premium payments in the current year or (2) the two-percent shareholder makes the premium payments and is then reimbursed by the S corporation in the current year. Either way, the payments are required to be included in the shareholder's wages and reported on the shareholder's W-2. The IRS does not consider payments of accident and health insurance premiums to be distributions for purposes of the single class of stock requirement of ~§~1361(b)(1)(D) [Notice 2008-1, I.R.B. 2007-2 (12/13/2007)].
  • For years beginning after December 31, 2006, an ESBT may not deduct interest paid or accrued in connection with the acquisition of stock in an S corporation [Act 8236 of the Small Business and Work Opportunity Tax Act of 2007, amending IRC ~§~642(c)(2)(C)].
  • The IRS has issued M-3, Net Income (Loss) Reconciliation for S Corporations With Total Assets of $10 Million or More, to be used for S corporations with $10 million or more of total assets on Schedule L of Form 1120S, effective for tax years ending on or after December 31, 2006. In addition, an S corporation subject to M-3 filing must notify any partnership in which it has a 50% or greater interest, to inform the partnership of its M-3 filing responsibility.
  • The Mortgage Forgiveness Debt Relief Act of 2007 imposes a new entity level penalty on S corporations that fail to meet any information filing obligation under IRC ~§~6037. The penalty is assessed at $85 per month (or portion thereof) times the number of persons who were shareholders in the S corporation at any time during the tax year for each month that the failure continues, up to a maximum of twelve months. The S corporation may have the penalty abated for reasonable cause. The provision applies to returns required to be filed after December 20, 2007. [Act ~§~9(j) of the Mortgage Forgiveness Debt Relief Act of 2007, P.L 110-142, adding IRC ~§~~§~6699(a) and (c).]
  • The Mortgage Forgiveness Debt Relief Act of 2007 enacted a new provision to protect the taxpayer identity information of an S corporation shareholder. In particular, new IRC ~§~6103(e)(10) now prohibits an S corporation from disclosing any supporting schedule, attachment or list that includes the taxpayer identity information of any person other than the person conducting the investigation.

Chapter 3 - Section 1244 Stock, Formation of a Corporation, Personal Service Corporations, and Limited Liability Companies

  • The Tax Court determined that a CPA practice operating as a C corporation was not a Personal Service Corporation (PSC) because about 20% of its payroll was allocable to employees doing financial services brokerage activities rather than rendering accounting or consulting services. As a result, the entity was not a PSC and avoided the flat 35% corporate tax rate (Ron Lykins, Inc. v. Comm., TC Memo 2006-35, 3/2/2006).
  • The Tax Court found that a Nevada firm that performed tax and bookkeeping services was a personal service corporation and subject to the flat 35% corporate rate despite the fact that it employed no CPAs. The court found that the taxpayer was attempting to define accounting services too narrowly and had failed to distinguish between public accounting services and the meaning of accounting services under ~§~448(d)(2) (Rainbow Tax Services, Inc. v. Comm., 128 T.C. 5 (2007)).
  • In a Tax Court summary opinion, the Tax Court ruled that a corporation that performed architectural services may not take treasury stock into account in determining whether employees who perform personal services own substantially all (i.e., at least 95%) of the outstanding stock of the corporation, as required under ~§~448(d)(2)(B) (Robertson Strong & Apgar Architects, PC v. Comm., TC Summary Opinion 2007-48).

Chapter 4 - Form 1120

  • In the instructions for the 2006 Schedule M-3, Net Income (Loss) Reconciliation for Corporations With Total Assets of $10 Million or More, the IRS imposed a new reporting requirement on corporations that are subject to M-3 filing and that own, directly or indirectly, a 50% or greater interest in a partnership on or after June 30, 2006. Those corporations must satisfy a reporting requirement to the partnership that will require the partnership to file its own Schedule M-3 (IRS News Release IR-2006-114, 7/20/2006).
  • Effective for transactions occurring on or after January 6, 2006, transactions that create a significant book-tax difference (i.e., a transaction in which the amount of any items of income, gain, expense or loss reported for tax purposes differs from the gross amount of the items reported for book purposes) are no longer required to be disclosed on Form 8886, Reportable Transaction Disclosure Statement [Notice 2006-6, IRB 2006-5, 385 (1/6/2006)].

Chapter 4 - Accounting Methods

  • The IRS has revised its instructions to Form 3115, Application for Change in Accounting Method, to reflect earlier regulations allowing the use of automatic consent accounting method change procedures for C corporations required to convert to the accrual method of accounting by ~§~448. Under ~§~448, a C corporation is generally required to convert from the cash method to the accrual method if its average annual gross receipts exceed $5 million for the three prior years. Under automatic consent accounting method change procedures, the increase to income from converting to the accrual method may be spread over four tax years [Instructions to Form 3115; Reg. ~§~1.448-1(g)(2)(i)].
  • The Tax Court has ruled that computational errors by an auto dealership in its LIFO inventory over a ten-year period represented an accounting method error. As a result, the IRS was permitted to impose an accounting method correction that adjusted the LIFO inventory valuation from the inception of the error, not merely for the open period under the statute of limitations (Huffman v. Comm., 126 TC No. 17, 5/16/2006). The Sixth Circuit has now affirmed the decision of the Tax Court in 518 F3d 357 (6th, 2008).

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Videocourse Details

NASBA Field of Study: Taxes
Level: Update
Recommended CPE Credit: 9
AICPA's 2008 Tax Review Series: S Corps, LLCs and Other Pass-Through Entities
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