Hoops, LP v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, No. 22-2012 (7th Cir. 2023)
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Hoops, which owned an NBA franchise sought a $10.7 million tax deduction for deferred compensation that it owed to two of its players at the close of the 2012 tax year, based on their performance during previous seasons. Under 26 U.S.C. 404(a)(5), an accrual-based taxpayer like Hoops can only deduct deferred compensation expenses in the tax years when it pays its employees or contributes to certain qualified plans, such as a trust or pension fund. Hoops did not do either. In 2012 the firm sold substantially all its assets and liabilities. As part of the transaction, the buyer assumed Hoops’s $10.7 million deferred compensation liability. Hoops viewed this $10.7 million amount as a deemed payment to the buyer to compensate it for assuming the deferred compensation obligation and took a tax deduction, claiming the buyer’s assumption of the $10.7 million liability as an ordinary business expense deductible at the time of sale.
The IRS denied the deduction. The Tax Court and Seventh Circuit affirmed. Section 404(a)(5) barred Hoops from claiming a deduction for deferred compensation in the 2012 tax year because the firm did not pay the employees during that year; the statute precluded Hoops from taking the deduction until the players were paid.
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