©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 2008McGraw-Hill/Irwin Chapter 14 Partnership Taxation “People...

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©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 2008 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Chapter 14 Partnership Taxation “People who complain about taxes can be divided into two classes: men and women.” --- Anonymous

Transcript of ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 2008McGraw-Hill/Irwin Chapter 14 Partnership Taxation “People...

Page 1: ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 2008McGraw-Hill/Irwin Chapter 14 Partnership Taxation “People who complain about taxes can be divided into two classes:

©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 2008McGraw-Hill/Irwin

Chapter 14

Partnership Taxation

“People who complain about taxes can be divided

into two classes: men and women.”

--- Anonymous

Page 2: ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 2008McGraw-Hill/Irwin Chapter 14 Partnership Taxation “People who complain about taxes can be divided into two classes:

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LO #1- Partnership FormationLO #1- Partnership Formation

• Typically, a partner recognizes no gain or loss on the formation of a partnership

• Outside basis – the basis of the partnership interest in the hands of the partner

• Inside basis – the partner’s share of the basis of the individual assets in the partnership

• Inside basis usually equals outside basis

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LO #1- Partnership FormationLO #1- Partnership Formation

• Basis-in, Basis-out – The beginning basis to the partnership is usually the basis of the contributed assets.

• Steps into the shoes – the basis of assets in the hands of the partnership is the same as the basis in the hands of the contributing partner.

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LO #1- Partnership FormationLO #1- Partnership Formation

• Holding periods – general rule is that the holding period of the partnership interest includes the partner’s holding period when Section 1231 or capital assets are contributed

• Contribution of ordinary assets – the holding period begins on the date of the contribution.

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LO #1- Partnership FormationLO #1- Partnership Formation

• Contribution of services – a partner providing services in exchange for a partnership interest recognizes ordinary income to the extent of the FMV of the partnership interest

• Assumed liabilities by the partnership – any release of liability by a contributing partner is treated as a money distribution to the partner (reduces basis)

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LO #1- Partnership FormationConcept Check 14-1

LO #1- Partnership FormationConcept Check 14-1

1. Generally, a partner does not recognize a gain on the formation of a partnership.

True

2. Typically, the basis of the assets contributed to a partnership is the same in the hands of the partnership as it was in the hands of the contributing partner.

True

3. If two taxpayers form a partnership and each has a 50% interest in it, each partners outside basis must be equal.

False

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LO #1- Partnership FormationConcept Check 14-1

LO #1- Partnership FormationConcept Check 14-1

4. A partner does not have to recognize a gain on the receipt of a partnership interest in exchange for services.

False

5. A partner who assumes an increased portion of the partnership debt, is treated as making a cash contribution and his or her basis in the partnership increases.

True

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LO #2 - Partnership Ordinary Income or Loss

LO #2 - Partnership Ordinary Income or Loss

• Ordinary income or loss– Sales, revenue from services– Ordinary & necessary expenses– No items are included in ordinary income or losses

that can be treated differently at the partner level. These are “separately stated items.”

• Guaranteed payments – payments made to partners that are calculated without regard to partnership income

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LO #2 - Partnership Ordinary Income or Loss

LO #2 - Partnership Ordinary Income or Loss

• Depreciation – Follow the same rules as a sole

proprietorship– Section 179 expense must be separately

stated

• Partner health premium – Partners cannot exclude from income the

health insurance premiums paid by the partnership

– Premiums are treated as guaranteed payments

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LO #2 - Ordinary Income/Loss Concept Check 14-2

LO #2 - Ordinary Income/Loss Concept Check 14-2

1. A partnership can deduct which of the following in determining partnership ordinary income or loss:a. all ordinary and necessary expenses.b. guaranteed payments.c. depreciation.d. all of the above.

Answer: D

2. What tax form is the partnership required to file each year?a. Form 1120.b. Form 1040.c. Form 1065.d. Form 1120-S.

Answer: C

3. A payment made to a partner that is must calculated without regard to partnership income is a:a. partner salary.b. partner withdraw.c. loan to a partner.d. guaranteed payment.

Answer: D

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LO #3 – Separately Stated ItemsLO #3 – Separately Stated Items

• General rule - All income and expense items of a partnership that may be treated differently at the partner level must be “separately stated.”– Table 14-1 in text

• Most common separately stated items– Rental income– Interest and dividend income– Capital gains and losses– Section 179 expense

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LO #3 – Separately Stated ItemsLO #3 – Separately Stated Items

• Schedule K-1 – reports the share of ordinary income and separately stated items for each partner.

• Line numbers of the K-1 correspond to the Schedule K of Form 1065

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LO #3 – Separately Stated ItemsLO #3 – Separately Stated Items

• Self-employment Income – since a partner is not an employee of the partnership, income from the partnership is considered self-employment income

• Calculation:– 1. Ordinary income from Schedule K-1, line 1 – 2. Plus any guaranteed payments from Schedule

K-1, line 4– 3. Less any §1231 gain included in ordinary

income– 4. Less any §179 expense from Schedule K-1, line

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LO #3 – Separately Stated ItemsConcept Check 14-3

LO #3 – Separately Stated ItemsConcept Check 14-3

1. Why are items such as rental income/loss, capital gains/losses, and charitable contributions that flow-through a partnership treated as separately stated?

All income and expense items of a partnership that may be treated differently at the partner level must be “separately stated.” Rental income/loss, capital gains/losses, and charitable contributions all can be treated differently at the partner level. For example, an individual partner can take up to $3,000 of capital losses against ordinary income where a corporate partner in the same partnership can not.

2. Why is income from a partnership treated as self-employment income?

A partner is not an employee of the partnership. Thus, income received by the partner from the partnership has no social security or Medicare withheld by the partnership.

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LO #4 – Basis of the Partnership InterestLO #4 – Basis of the Partnership Interest

• Outside basis calculation (calculated for each partner)– Basis of property contributed – Plus: FMV of services rendered (or cost, if partnership

interest was purchased)– Plus: Basis of cash or property contributions after formation– Plus: Share of partnership ordinary income– Plus: Share of separately stated income or gain items– Plus: Share in partnership liabilities– Less: Basis of cash or property distributed (but not below

zero)– Less: Share of partnership ordinary loss (but not below zero)– Less: Share of separately stated loss/expense items– Less: Release of partnership liabilities

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LO #4 – Basis of the Partnership Interest - Concept Check 14-4

LO #4 – Basis of the Partnership Interest - Concept Check 14-4

1. A partner must use basis to determine the gain or loss on a sale of the partnership interest and whether losses are deductible.

True

2. A partner’s basis is not increased by his or her share of tax exempt income items.

False

3. In the calculation of basis, the order of the basis adjustments is not important.

False

4. A partner’s basis is never increased by his or her share of recourse liabilities.

False

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LO #5 – Partnership DistributionsLO #5 – Partnership Distributions

• General rule - a partner recognizes no gain or loss on a non-liquidating distribution

• Gain is recognized only:– Only money or marketable securities are

distributed in excess of the partner’s basis– Current distribution triggers a pre-

contribution gain

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LO #5 – Partnership DistributionsLO #5 – Partnership Distributions

• Pre-contribution gain - occurs when a partner contributes appreciated property to a partnership and, within seven years, the partnership distributes the same property to another partner.

• Basis of distributed property – typically the partner steps into the shoes of the partnership.

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LO #5 – Partnership DistributionsConcept Check 14-5

LO #5 – Partnership DistributionsConcept Check 14-5

1. Which of the following is true concerning recognition of gain on a distribution from a partnership?a. gain is recognized if the partner receives property with a basis greater than his or hers partnership interest basis.b. gain is recognized if the partner receives cash in excess of his or her basis.c. the partner never recognizes a gain on a partnership distribution.d. the partner always recognizes a gain on a partnership distribution.

Answer: B

2. Nelson has a partnership basis of $12,000. He receives from the partnership a distribution of furniture with a basis to the partnership of $16,000 and a FMV of $10,000. Nelson’s basis in the furniture after the distribution from the partnership:a. $10,000.b. $12,000.c. $16,000.d. none of the above.

Answer: B

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LO #5 – Partnership DistributionsConcept Check 14-5

LO #5 – Partnership DistributionsConcept Check 14-5

3. Assume the same facts as #2. However, Nelson also receives a cash distribution of $4,000 with the furniture. The basis in the furniture after the distributions is:a. $ 8,000.b. $10,000.c. $12,000.d. $16,000.

Answer: A

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LO #6 – Disposal or Liquidation of a Partnership Interest

LO #6 – Disposal or Liquidation of a Partnership Interest

• Liquidation– Rules similar to current distributions– A distribution of money in excess of basis

causes a capital gain– A loss can be recognized when the amount

received in liquidation is less than the partner’s outside basis and only money, receivables and/or inventory are received

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LO #6 – Disposal or Liquidation of a Partnership Interest

LO #6 – Disposal or Liquidation of a Partnership Interest

• Sale of a partnership interest– Treated as a sale of a capital asset– If the partnership has substantially

appreciated inventory or accounts receivable, some of the capital gain could be ordinary

• Individual partners report sale on Form 1040, Schedule D.

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LO #6 – Disposal or Liquidation of a Partnership Interest-Concept Check 14-6

LO #6 – Disposal or Liquidation of a Partnership Interest-Concept Check 14-6

1. Shelly has a basis in her partnership interest of $30,000. She receives the following assets in complete liquidation of the partnership interest:

Cash $ 9,000Inventory (basis) $ 6,000Equipment (basis) $ 8,000Land (basis) $12,000

a. What is Shelly’s recognized gain?b. What is Shelly’s basis in each of the assets distributed?

Answer: a. Shelly’s recognized gain would be $0. She did not receive cash in

excess of her basis.b. Shelly’s basis in the assets would be as follows:

Cash $9,000Inventory $6,000Equipment ($15,000 × $8,000/$20,000) $6,000Land ($15,000 × $12,000/$20,000) $9,000

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LO #6 – Disposal or Liquidation of a Partnership Interest-Concept Check 14-6

LO #6 – Disposal or Liquidation of a Partnership Interest-Concept Check 14-6

2. Callie purchased a 60% partnership interest for $55,000 in March 2005. She had income of $18,000 from the partnership in 2005 and $26,000 in 2006. She made no additional contributions to or withdrawals from the partnership. On December 30, 2006, Callie sold her partnership interest for $107,000.

a. What is her basis before the sale?b. What is her gain or loss?c. Is the gain or loss (if any) capital or ordinary?

Answer: a. $99,000 ($55,000 beginning basis + $18,000 + $26,000)b. $8,000 ($107,000 sales price - $99,000 basis)c. Since the partnership interest is a capital asset and there was no

mention of inventory or receivables in the partnership, then the gain would be a long term capital gain.