Professional Tax Research Solutions from the Founder of Kleinrock. tax and accounting research
Parker Tax Pro Library
Accounting News Tax Analysts professional tax research software Like us on Facebook Follow us on Twitter View our profile on LinkedIn Find us on Pinterest
federal tax research
Professional Tax Software
tax and accounting
Tax Research Articles Tax Research Parker's Tax Research Articles Accounting Research CPA Client Letters Tax Research Software Client Testimonials Tax Research Software Federal Tax Research tax research


Accounting Software for Accountants, CPA, Bookeepers, and Enrolled Agents

S Corporation ESOP Did Not Qualify Due to Operational and Form Failures

(Parker Tax Publishing January 2020)

The Tax Court held that an S corporation's employee stock ownership plan was not a qualified retirement plan under Code Sec. 401(a) for the plan year at issue and for all subsequent plan years. The Tax Court sustained the IRS's determination of the plan's operational failures, which included (1) allowing ineligible individuals to participate in the plan, (2) accepting contributions in excess of the limitations imposed by Code Sec. 401(a)(16) and Code Sec. 415(c)(1), and (3) failing to have an independent appraiser value employer securities as required under Code Sec. 401(a)(28)(C). Ed Thielking, Inc. v. Comm'r, T.C. Memo. 2020-5.

Background

Ed Thielking, Inc. is an S corporation owned by Ed Thielking. Mr. Thielking's father, Stephen Thielking, is an accountant who formed Ed Thielking, Inc. (the S corporation) for his son as a holding company for Ed's electrical contracting business. Ed transferred his 50 percent partnership interest in Gray Thielking Electric (GTE) - his primary asset - to the S corporation. For 2007 and each subsequent year, GTE issued a Schedule K-1 to the S corporation in accordance with its 50 percent interest in GTE. Ed and his wife, Amy, were the S corporation's officers and directors.

In March of 2006, the S corporation established an employee stock ownership plan (ESOP) and an employee stock ownership trust (ESOT). The ESOP agreement stated that participation in the ESOP began immediately after one year of service. In addition, employer contributions to the plan required at least 1,000 hours of service during a plan year. The ESOP agreement defined an hour of service as an hour for which an employee is paid or entitled to payment by the employer.

The S corporation's primary source of income in 2007 was the income allocation from GTE. The S corporation did not report any compensation of officers or salaries and wages as deductible expenses. It did not file employment and unemployment tax returns, Forms W-2, or Forms 1099 for 2007. In 2007, the S corporation issued a stock dividend to the participants of the ESOP. Ed, the only plan participant, elected for the dividend to be contributed to his ESOT account. The S corporation claimed a deduction with respect to the ESOT contribution, which largely offset the income allocation to it from GTE. The S corporation followed this course of action for 2007 through 2011, the years at issue. It also issued stock dividends to Amy as trustee of the ESOT. The only other contribution to the ESOT occurred in November of 2007, when the ESOT received a purported rollover contribution from Amy's Code Sec. 401(k) account. The S corporation's ESOT purchased additional shares with the funds contributed in the rollover.

The S corporation reported on a Form 5500, Annual Return/Report of Employee Benefit Plan, for 2007, only one participant, Ed. Ed's account consisted of 23,000 shares of the S corporation's stock. Stephen prepared a written appraisal that valued each share of the S corporation's stock at $1, resulting in a valuation of $23,000 for Ed's ESOT account. The appraisal, however, did not include Stephen's signature or his qualifications as an appraiser. The S corporation also reported Ed as the only participant in the ESOP on Form 5500 for 2008.

The plan received a rollover contribution on behalf of Amy during 2008, even though she was not reported as a plan participant for that period. The plan reported total assets of 59,434 shares of the S corporation's stock. Again, Stephen valued each share at $1, resulting in a net plan asset value of $59,434, but he again failed to sign the appraisal or include his qualifications as an appraiser. The S corporation finally reported that Amy was a second participant for the first time on its Form 5500 for 2009. Once again the S corporation relied on an unsigned appraisal prepared by Stephen, valuing the 66,234 shares held by the ESOT at $1 each, or $66,234.

The IRS subsequently determined that the ESOP failed to qualify under Code Sec. 401(a) as a qualified retirement plan due to both operational and form failures. The IRS determined that the operational failures included: (1) allowing ineligible individuals to participate in the plan, (2) accepting contributions in excess of the limitations imposed by Code Sec. 401(a)(16) and Code Sec. 415(c)(1), and (3) failing to have an independent appraiser value employer securities as required by Code Sec. 401(a)(28)(C). The IRS determined that the plan failed to qualify in form because it did not conform to certain statutory and regulatory requirements, and because the S corporation did not adopt timely amendments. The S corporation sought a declaratory judgment from the Tax Court that the ESOP was a qualified retirement plan under Code Sec. 401(a).

Tax Court's Analysis

The Tax Court held that the IRS did not abuse its discretion in determining that the ESOP was not a qualified retirement plan under Code Sec. 401(a) for 2007 and all subsequent plan years.

The Tax Court found that it was impossible for Ed to have attained a year of service when he became a plan participant in February of 2007 because the S corporation was incorporated in March of 2006. The court further found that Ed did not perform services for the S corporation that met the 1,000 hours of service requirement. The court noted that while the ESOP agreement defined an hour of service as each hour for which an employee was paid for the performance of duties, the S corporation did not report as deductions either officer compensation or salaries and wages for 2007 and provided no evidence that it compensated Ed for any duties performed for the S corporation. Therefore, Ed failed both prongs of the test for eligibility, and his admission as a plan participant in 2007 created an operational failure. Additionally, the court found that the ESOT accepted a rollover contribution from Amy in 2008, but the S corporation did not report Amy as a participant until 2009, creating another operational failure.

The Tax Court further held that, because the S corporation contributed property with an alleged value of $23,000 to the ESOT, it exceeded the contribution limits under Code Sec. 401(a)(16) and Code Sec. 415(c), which limit ESOP contributions to the lesser of $40,000 or 100 percent of the participant's compensation. The court found that because Ed performed no duties for the S corporation, his contribution limit for 2007 was zero.

The Tax Court also held that Stephen was not an independent appraiser as required under Code Sec. 401(a)(28)(C). The court determined that, as Ed's father, Stephen constructively owned all of the S corporation's stock under Code Sec. 267(c)(1), and found that he was therefore a related person and not an independent appraiser. The court rejected the assertion that Stephen had been found an independent appraiser in a previous Tax Court case, Val Lanes Recreation Ctr. Corp. v. Comm'r, T.C. Memo. 2018-92. The court said that Stephen had no familial relationship with the primary beneficiary of the ESOP in that case and, in that case, the court found that signed appraisals were submitted.

Finally, the Tax Court found that the ESOP had form failures because it never amended the ESOP agreement to comport with subsequent changes to the requirements under Code Sec. 401(a). The court noted that the IRS requested the plan documents and all amendments on at least three occasions in 2010, 2011, and 2012, but never received them.

For a discussion of ESOPs and S corporations, see Parker Tax ¶33,560.

Disclaimer: This publication does not, and is not intended to, provide legal, tax or accounting advice, and readers should consult their tax advisors concerning the application of tax laws to their particular situations. This analysis is not tax advice and is not intended or written to be used, and cannot be used, for purposes of avoiding tax penalties that may be imposed on any taxpayer. The information contained herein is general in nature and based on authorities that are subject to change. Parker Tax Publishing guarantees neither the accuracy nor completeness of any information and is not responsible for any errors or omissions, or for results obtained by others as a result of reliance upon such information. Parker Tax Publishing assumes no obligation to inform the reader of any changes in tax laws or other factors that could affect information contained herein.

Parker Tax Pro Library - An Affordable Professional Tax Research Solution. www.parkertaxpublishing.com


Professional tax research

We hope you find our professional tax research articles comprehensive and informative. Parker Tax Pro Library gives you unlimited online access all of our past Biweekly Tax Bulletins, 22 volumes of expert analysis, 250 Client Letters, Bob Jennings Practice Aids, time saving election statements and our comprehensive, fully updated primary source library.

Parker Tax Research

Try Our Easy, Powerful Search Engine

A Professional Tax Research Solution that gives you instant access to 22 volumes of expert analysis and 185,000 authoritative source documents. But having access won’t help if you can’t quickly and easily find the materials that answer your questions. That’s where Parker’s search engine – and it’s uncanny knack for finding the right documents – comes into play

Things that take half a dozen steps in other products take two steps in ours. Search results come up instantly and browsing them is a cinch. So is linking from Parker’s analysis to practice aids and cited primary source documents. Parker’s powerful, user-friendly search engine ensures that you quickly find what you need every time you visit Our Tax Research Library.

Parker Tax Research Library

Dear Tax Professional,

My name is James Levey, and a few years back I founded a company named Kleinrock Publishing. I started Kleinrock out of frustration with the prohibitively high prices and difficult search engines of BNA, CCH, and RIA tax research products ... kind of reminiscent of the situation practitioners face today.

Now that Kleinrock has disappeared into CCH, prices are soaring again and ease-of-use has fallen by the wayside. The needs of smaller firms and sole practitioners are simply not being met.

To address the problem, I’ve partnered with a group of highly talented tax writers to create Parker Tax Publishing ... a company dedicated to the idea that comprehensive, authoritative tax information service can be both easy-to-use and highly affordable.

Our product, the Parker Tax Pro Library, is breathtaking in its scope. Check out the contents listing to the left to get a sense of all the valuable material you'll have access to when you subscribe.

Or better yet, take a minute to sign yourself up for a free trial, so you can experience first-hand just how easy it is to get results with the Pro Library!

Sincerely,

James Levey

Parker Tax Pro Library - An Affordable Professional Tax Research Solution. www.parkertaxpublishing.com

    ®2012-2020 Parker Tax Publishing. Use of content subject to Website Terms and Conditions.

IRS Codes and Regs
Tax Court Cases IRS guidance