Law Office of John H Eggertsen, P.C. v. Comm'r of Internal Revenue, No. 14-2591 (6th Cir. 2015)
Annotate this CaseIn 1998, Eggersten's law office, an S corporation, established an employee stock ownership plan (ESOP), a retirement plan that primarily owns securities of the sponsoring employer. Eggertsen transferred his ownership to the ESOP. S corporations pass their income through to shareholders who pay any tax due on that income. 26 U.S.C. 1366, and, in the mid-1990s, it was possible for ESOPs, then exempt from taxes at the plan level, to own shares in S corporations, 26 U.S.C. 501(a), 512(e)(3), 1361(b)(1)(B), 1361(c)(6)(B). ESOP participants, such as Eggertsen, were not taxed on income attributable to stock held in the ESOP until that stock was distributed, typically at retirement. The law office, therefore, did not pay tax on its income; the ESOP would not owe tax at the plan level. Eggertsen, who ultimately owned the shares, would not owe tax on the income until retirement. In 2001, Congress amended the provisions, giving affected taxpayers a grace period to come into compliance. The law firm did not comply within the grace period. The IRS waited until 2011 to try to collect the excise tax (over $200,000) that resulted from delayed compliance. The Sixth Circuit upheld the imposition of the tax and held that the limitations period remained open.
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