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TAX AND TRUST
FUND ISSUES
By
Richard M. Colombik,
J.D., C.P.A.
&
Linda Godfrey,
J.D., C.P.A.
INTRODUCTION
IRC
§6672 reads as follows:
Any
person required to collect, personally account for, and pay over any
taxes owed by this title who willfully fails to collect such tax, or
personally account for and pay over such tax, or willfully attempts
in any manner to evade or defeat any such tax on the penalty thereof,
shall, in addition to other penalties provided by law, be liable to
a penalty equal to the total amount of the tax evaded, or not collected,
or not accounted for and paid over. No penalty shall be imposed
under Section 6653 for any offense to which this section is applicable.?
Employees
are allowed a credit against their tax liability for the taxes that
are withheld from their wages. This credit is allowed even if
the employer does not remit the withheld funds to the government.
Section 6672 was enacted by Congress so the government would not bear
the entire risk of loss when the employer failed to remit the trust
fund taxes. This section subjects all person considered responsible
for the withholding and payment of the trust fund taxes to a penalty
equal to the amount of the taxes the employer fails to remit.
This in referred to as the ?100% penalty.?
This
section only applies to third party taxes that are imposed on the person
other than the one required to collect and remit such taxes. The
employees withholding of federal income tax, social security taxes,
and Medicare taxes are subject to §6672.
35
ILCS §5/1002) (from Ch. 120, par. 10-1002)1
Sec. 1002. Failure to Pay Tax.
(d)
Willful failure to collect and pay over tax. Any person required to
collect, truthfully account for, and pay over the tax imposed by this
Act who willfully fails to collect such tax or truthfully account for
and pay over such tax or willfully attempts in any manner to evade or
defeat the tax or the payment thereof, shall, in addition to other penalties
provided by law, be liable for the penalty imposed by Section 3-7 of
the Uniform Penalty and Interest Act.
Note,
in Department of Revenue v. Heartland Investments2,
the Illinois Supreme Court stated that IRC §6672 and the predecessor
to 35 ILCS §1002(d), were similar in nature and intent, such that IRC
§6672 cases can provide guidance for deciding Illinois cases within
this section. Therefore, we will only address federal cases, as
they are also applicable to Illinois Department of Revenue cases.
REQUIREMENTS
FOR LIABILITY
There
are two major tests that are questions of fact to determine if someone
is subject to the provisions of IRC §6672 and with 35 ILCS §5/1002
- Whether the person
had a ?responsibility? to collect, account for, and pay trust fund
taxes, and
- Whether the person
?willfully? failed to perform this duty.
The
Internal Revenue Service has the right to pursue any person who meets
the provisions of these tests. The person does not have to be
an officer or an employee of the corporation that originally collected
the taxes.
RESPONSIBLE
PERSON
A ?person? is defined as anyone with a duty to perform according
to IRC §6671. This definition of person includes ?an officer
or employee of the corporation or a member or employee of a partnership,
who as such officer, employee, or member is under a duty to perform
the act in respect of which the violation occurs.? Any person
can be deemed to be a responsible person if he in fact acts in such
a way or has the requisite authority and control so as to make him considered
responsible for collecting, accounting for, and paying over federal
withholding taxes.3 The person may include shareholders,
directors, and officers of the corporation. It may also include
persons outside the formal structure of the corporation such as creditors,
lenders, sureties, attorneys, and accountants. Liability will
attach if the person meets the conditions of being a ?responsible?
person and if his conduct was ?willful.?
The
term ?responsible person? includes anyone who is connected or associated
with the corporate employer in a manner that he has the power to see
that the taxes are paid or the power to make final decisions concerning
the corporation, or determines which creditors are paid and when.4
Attorneys, accountants, and financial institutions have been held to
be responsible persons.
Ultimate
Control
Generally
the test for responsible person status is functional and focuses on
whether the individual exercises ultimate control over the financial
affairs of the business. The test specifically looks at the control
over the disbursement of funds and the priority of payments to creditors.
Significant control will establish responsibility.
Person?s
Authority
A
key element to determining a person?s authority is whether that person
has the statutorily imposed duty to make the trust fund tax payments.
The person may be deemed a responsible person is he exercises or is
under a duty to use his authority over financial affairs or general
management.
The
person?s authority to pay the trust fund taxes must be based only
on the tax periods at issue.
RESPONSIBILITY
Trust
Fund Recovery Penalty should apply only to the person or persons who
have ultimate control over company finances. The key is control
of finances within the corporation and the power to control the decision
making process that allocates funds to other creditors in preference
to its withholding tax obligations.
The
duties listed in §6672(a) of collecting, accounting for and paying
over the trust fund taxes are considered to be the duties of a responsible
person. A person may be considered a ?responsible person?
and not have performed the functions of collecting and paying the trust
fund taxes.
Many
factors are involved in determining whether a person is responsible
under §6672. Some of the factors that are examined are the corporate
by-laws, stock ownership, holder of a corporate office, corporate director,
the authority to sign checks, the day-to-day management, the hiring
and firing of employees, and the authority to sign and file payroll
tax returns.
Corporate
By-Laws
U.S.
v. Strebler5
held that the president and chief executive officer was a responsible
person because the corporate by-laws established that his duties included
supervision over the general policy, affairs and finances of the corporation.
Muck v. U.S.6 also referred to the corporate by-laws
that authorized the taxpayer to manage the business and affairs of the
company. The provision in the by-laws giving the person authority
over corporate financial affairs will not support a finding of responsible
person status if the evidence establishes that person does not have
actual control over the corporate finances.
Stock
Ownership
The
courts have recognized that stock ownership may create a responsible
person status.7 The stock ownership will create a responsible
person status if the shareholder controls corporate business affairs
and makes the decisions regarding what creditors will be paid and the
priority of those payments. The shareholder is not required to
have any official status with the company or to have any control over
the day-to-day operations.8
The
ownership of stock in a parent corporation is a considered factor for
establishing responsible person status in respect to a subsidiary corporation.
In Tiffany v. U.S.9 it was held the controlling shareholder
of a holding company was found to be a responsible person with respect
to the subsidiary corporation?s failure to pay the trust fund taxes.
The
controlling shareholder may be able to avoid responsible person status
if he is able to demonstrate a lack of knowledge of the trust fund tax
delinquency. With knowledge, the controlling shareholder may have
the power to take steps to ensure that the trust fund tax payments are
made. This power may include replacing directors and officers.
If the controlling shareholder has knowledge of the tax deficiency,
he should instruct the directors and officers to make the trust fund
payments and provide reports on the status. Responsible person
status may be imposed if there is knowledge and unexercised authority.
Holder
of Corporate Office
Generally,
the holder of a high corporate office is considered to be a responsible
person. The exception to this is a corporate officer that does
not have sufficient authority over the corporate financial affairs or
where his corporate title does not reflect his true authority or function.
Corporate
Director.
Mere
membership on a board of directors is insufficient to establish responsible
person status. Responsible person status may be created if the
board of directors possess control over the payment of the corporations
financial obligations
Authority
to Sign Checks.
The
authority to sign checks is a significant factor in determining responsible
person status. Generally check-signing authority comes with the
option to choose which creditors will be paid.10
Check-signing authority will not create responsibility when a superior
makes the actual decision on which checks to issue.11
A person with unlimited check-signing authority is found to be
a responsible person even though his superior directs him not to pay
the trust fund taxes or risk termination.
An
individual may be determined a responsible person when other factors
denoting responsible person status exist even though he has no check-signing
authority.12
Day-to-Day
Management.
Day
to day management of a corporation is not a prerequisite to responsible
person status. As long as the person is the ultimate decision
maker or had the effective power to pay the trust fund taxes, he will
attain the responsible person status. It is possible not to be
a responsible person even though day-to-day management is exercised
if the person lacks authority to direct which creditors are paid.
Hiring
and Firing Employees.
The
hiring and firing of employees is a supporting factor indicating a person?s
control over the business affairs of the corporation. The authority
to hire and fire employees will not create responsible person status
in and of itself.
Authority
to Sign and File Tax Returns.
The
signing and filing of payroll tax returns is an indicator of responsibility.
An individual will not be considered a responsible person if that individual
has no actual or supervisory role with respect to the record keeping,
completion of payroll tax returns and the lack of independent authority
over the corporation?s financial affairs.
Unexercised
Authority
Monday
v. U.S.,13 held that corporate office does not, per
se, impose a duty to collect and pay over withheld taxes. There
are many factors indicating the person is a responsible person, but
the key element is whether that person has the statutory imposed duty
to make tax payments. We look at the substance of that person?s
authority over financial affairs or general management or is under a
duty to do so before he is determined to be a responsible person.
A
number of cases hold individuals with unexercised authority to control
corporate payments and finances as responsible persons. Cassidento
v. U.S.14 held that the 50% shareholder, director and
officer is classed as a responsible person even though he did not participate
in or supervise the payment of the corporations bill payment since he
had the authority to control the disbursements if he desired to exercise
such authority. A person possessing unexercised authority that
becomes aware of trust fund tax deficiencies may cause him to attain
responsible person status.
Disjunctive
Reading of §6672.
The
Supreme Court ruled the three duties of collect, account for, and pay
over in §6672 should be read disjunctively so a person is responsible
if he has a duty to perform any one
of these three functions not all three.15
Multiple
Responsible Persons.
More
than one individual may be a responsible person regarding the same entity.
Each of these persons are jointly and severally liable for the penalty.
There is never a situation where there is no responsible person.
The government may collect from any or all of the responsible persons.
Volunteers
of Charitable Organizations.
Unpaid
voluntary board members of tax-exempt organizations have additional
protection from the assertion of a penalty. A penalty will not be asserted
if the board member is serving solely in an honorary capacity and does
not participate in day-to-day or financial operations and does not have
actual knowledge of the failure to pay the penalty.
Sole
Proprietors.
A
sole proprietor is not a legal entity separate from its owner. Therefore
sole proprietors are personally responsible for all business debts including
withholding taxes without regard to §6672. If an individual other
that the sole proprietor is found to be a responsible person, the IRS
will use §6672 to collect the unpaid trust fund taxes.
Partners
Section
6672 may be asserted against the partners considered responsible persons.
Bookkeepers
A
person acting as a bookkeeper with no independent authority regarding
the payment of creditors or disbursement of funds is not a responsible
person. This is true even if the bookkeeper signs checks, prepares
payroll, prepares the payroll tax returns and is very knowledgeable
about the operation of the business.
Liability
of Those Outside Formal Structure of Business.
Third
party creditors have been found to be liable for Trust Fund Recovery
Penalty. This occurs when the creditor has assumed and exercised
control over the disbursements of the taxpayer.16
Effect
of Family Relationships.
Family
relationship status has been taken into account in a number of court
cases. The court held in Barrett v. U.S.17 the
wife was not a responsible person and did not act willfully since she
was dominated by her husband and could not write any company checks
without her husband?s specific authorization. Another holding
was in Williams v. U.S.18 where the son had
all the officer titles of the company except the designation of president.
He also prepared and signed the payroll tax returns. His father,
the president of the company, allowed him to sign a few checks and contracts.
The court found the son did not have any independent authority and therefore
was not a responsible person.
Knowledge
of Trust Fund Liability
Knowledge
that trust fund taxes are not paid does not by itself cause responsibility.
Responsibility is status, duty, and authority. But, the lack of
knowledge that trust fund taxes are not being paid does not exclude
a finding of responsibility.
WILLFULNESS
The
trust fund recovery penalty applies to a ?responsible person? who
has ?willfully? failed to account for, collect, and remit payroll
taxes. Once a person obtains the status as a ?responsible person?,
he bears the burden to disprove his ?willfulness.?
The
responsible person is considered to act willfully is he makes a deliberate
choice to pay other creditors instead of paying the payroll taxes.
He also acts willfully if he has knowledge of the trust fund tax delinquency
and allows payments to be made to other creditors. The final element
of willfulness is the responsible person acts with reckless disregard
of the known or obvious risk that the trust fund taxes will not be remitted.
This includes failing to investigate or correct mismanagement after
obtaining knowledge the trust fund taxes have not been paid.
Definition
of Willfulness
?Willfully?
is defined as ?meaning, in general a voluntary, conscious, and intentional
act.?19 The willful element is satisfied when the
responsible person deliberately choose the pay the money from withheld
taxes to other creditors instead of the government. The willfulness
element exists if the responsible person acts with reckless disregard.
Reckless disregard is the failure to investigate and correct mismanagement
after obtaining knowledge the trust fund taxes are unpaid.
The
consideration of willfulness begins with a responsible person?s actions
from the time the employee?s net wages are paid and taxes withheld.
Financial
Difficulties of Corporation
The
financial difficulties of a company do not negate the willfulness element.
A responsible person acts willfully when he permits other creditors
to be paid ahead of the government with knowledge the trust fund taxes
are unpaid.
Inadequate
Funds to Pay Gross Wages
The
correct course of action when there are limited funds available is to
prorate those funds between the government and the employees.20
Insufficient funds to pay the net wages of the employee do not negate
the willfulness element.21
Failure
to Pay Over Pursuant to Superior?s Order
A
responsible person who does not remit the trust fund taxes due to a
direct order from a superior is willful. The responsible person
will have satisfied the element of willfulness even though payment of
the trust fund taxes would have resulted in his termination. The
court stated that the responsible person had a choice. He could
have paid the taxes and avoided the penalty or accepted the alternative
of termination.22 Once an individual is deemed a responsible
person, he is under no obligation recognized by the Internal Revenue
code to obey instructions from his superiors to not remit trust fund
taxes.23
Lack
of Knowledge of Unpaid Taxes
A
responsible person with the knowledge that trust fund taxes are unpaid
during his period of responsibility and proceeds to pay other creditors
before the government has performed a willful act. The responsible
person is liable to the extent he subsequently applies or permits the
application of unencumbered funds of the company to creditors other
than the government.24
The court stated in Olsen v. U.W.25 that ?in the
case of individuals who are responsible person both before and after
the withholding tax liability accrues? there is a duty to use unencumbered
funds acquired after the withholding obligation becomes payable to satisfy
that obligation; failure to do so when there is knowledge of liability?
constitutes willfulness.?26
Unencumbered
Funds
Funds
are considered encumbered if a security interest that is superior to
any interest claimed by the IRS restricts the use of those funds.
All funds that are used to pay creditors other than the IRS are considered
unencumbered funds that are available to pay the delinquent trust fund
taxes.
Coercion
by Creditors
A
corporation that is coerced by a creditor to pay the creditor instead
of the trust fund taxes under threat of withdrawal of an operating line
of credit or the closing down of operations is considered to have established
willfulness.27 For example in Kalb
v. U.S.,28 the bank threatened to withdraw the corporations
line of credit unless the bank was allowed to control the corporation?s
disbursements. The corporation agreed and submitted a list of
amounts owed to creditors to the bank including the trust fund taxes.
The bank refused to approve payment of the trust fund taxes. The
responsible person in the corporation was found to be willful since
he entered into the arrangement with the bank voluntarily and was free
to rescind the agreement at any time.29
Reckless
Disregard
The
willfulness element is satisfied if there is a reckless disregard of
obvious or known risks that the trust fund taxes are not being paid.
Recklessness exists even when a responsible person does not know the
trust fund taxes are not being paid. Following are some factual
circumstances that constitute recklessness:
- Knowledge of a past
history of unpaid trust fund taxes and current financial difficulties;
- Failing to investigate
and correct mismanagement after obtaining knowledge there are delinquent
trust fund taxes;
- Knowledge of cash
flow problems and delinquent trust fund tax payments;
- Reliance on an unreliable
person?s statement that trust fund taxes are paid; and
- Failing to make
inquiries as to whether there are sufficient funds available for the
trust fund tax payments when the corporation has financial problems.
AMOUNT
OF LIABILITY
The
liability of a responsible person is limited by §6672 to the amount
he was required to withhold, collect, or remit.30 The
responsible person is not liable to the extent others pay the trust
fund taxes.31
The
liability for trust fund taxes attach each time wages are paid.32
This is a contingent liability that becomes fixed on the date the trust
fund taxes are due and not paid.33 Responsibility attaches
from the time of withholding since liability attaches at the time the
wages are paid.34
COMMONLY
RAISED DEFENSES
Lack
of Sufficient Authority
An
individual must have sufficient authority and power within the corporation
to be considered a responsible person.
Resignation
The
resignation of a responsible person from the corporation terminates
the responsible person status as of that date. This only applies
to the penalty for trust fund taxes withheld or collected after the
date of resignation.35 A similar rule applies to an
individual who is relieved of his authority.36
Resigning
before the date the trust fund taxes are to be remitted does not avoid
the responsible person? liability.37 If it is shown
that he willfully preferred other creditor and there are not sufficient
funds to pay the government, the responsible person will still be liable.
Lack
of Knowledge
When
a responsible person does not know that the trust fund taxes are not
being collected or paid over to the government, the element of willfulness
is negated unless the responsible persons lack of knowledge is the result
of a reckless disregard of the facts.38 The responsible
person without knowledge may resign his position when he acquires the
knowledge the trust fund taxes are not being collected or paid This
may help negate willfulness or any damaging actions in the future.39
Delegation
of Authority
Under
certain circumstances the delegation of authority may prevent an individual
from being classified as a responsible person or eliminate the element
of willfulness. Generally, an individual who is a responsible
person cannot avoid §6672 liability by delegating his authority over
corporate finances.40 Where a delegator retains no
authority, responsible person status may be avoided. A corporation?s
financing arrangement where control of their finances is delegated to
a bank will not end a person?s status as a responsible person.
Delegation
of authority may negate the element of willfulness where the individual
delegating the authority is unaware of the failure to pay taxes even
thought it is not sufficient to avoid being classified as a responsible
person.
Directions
From Others
The
ministerial functions and duties performed by an individuals who possess
no independent authority or discretion are not subject to trust fund
tax liability when they do not pay trust fund taxes by direction of
their superior. The lack of responsible person status will avoid
liability.41 It has been held it is a lack of
willfulness.
When an
individual possesses the authority to warrant responsible person status,
directions from a superior not to pay trust fund taxes do not absolve
him of trust fund tax liability. This ?Nuremburg defense?,
that the individual was simply following orders and would have been
fired has the taxes been paid, is generally rejected by the courts.42
Final
Word
An
individual is a responsible person even if he does not have the final
word regarding the payment of creditors.43 Only significant
control is required to find responsible person status.44
Defending
Subordinate Employee
An
individual who can establish he did not possess or exercise ?significant
control? may not be a ?responsible person.? A principal?s
control over corporate finances was so complete that the subordinate
employee was not a responsible person, even though he possessed and
exercised check writing authority and was an officer of the corporation.
A person?s ?duty? is viewed in reference to his power to compel
or prohibit the disbursement of corporate funds. This is a test
of substance, not form.45
Reasonable
Cause
Some
courts have recognized reasonable cause as a defense to the willfulness
element. The majority of courts do not recognize such a defense.
A responsible person is rarely able to negate willfulness despite a
conscious failure to pay over the taxes.
Equitable
Defense Where Government?s Conduct Prevents Collection of Trust Fund
Taxes
Generally,
the liability of a responsible person is separate and distinct from
the employer. The IRS is not required to collect the trust fund
taxes from the employer before assessing the trust fund recovery penalty
against the responsible person. Where, as a result of an abuse
of discretion, if the IRS fails to collect trust fund taxes from the
employer as a result of an abuse of discretion, they may be precluded
from collecting the trust fund recovery penalty from the responsible
person. When the government?s affirmative conduct with respect
to the corporation leads to the IRS?s inability to collect the taxes,
an abuse of discretion exists. The failure of the IRS to attempt
to collect taxes from the employer before attempting to collect the
trust fund recovery penalty from the responsible person is not considered
an abuse of discretion.46 Also, the IRS does not abuse
its discretion in asserting the trust fund recovery penalty when they
delay tax collection efforts against the employer.
Statute
Of Limitations
The
IRS is barred from assessing or collecting the trust fund recovery penalty
after the applicable statute of limitations has expired. When
employment tax returns are timely filed, the trust fund recovery penalty
may be assessed within three years from April 15 of the year following
the calendar year in which the taxes were required to be withheld or
collected. The trust fund recovery penalty may be collected within
10 years after the date of assessment.
Previous
Negotiations with IRS
The
IRS will contact a business that has failed to pay its trust fund taxes
and attempt to resolve the unpaid tax liability. These negotiations
with the IRS are not relevant to any subsequent determination of willfulness
on the part of the responsible person.
Alcoholism,
Drug Addiction and Physical Illness
It
has been held that it is legally impossible for intoxication, whatever
its extent, to be the basis for a finding that a person was not responsible.
Section 6772 does not require proof of specific intent. Voluntary
intoxication from alcohol or drugs is not a valid defense to responsible
person status.47 Willfulness does not require
specific intent. A responsible person acted knowingly, consciously,
and intentionally is all that is required to prove willfulness.
Voluntary intoxication cannot negate the element of willfulness.48
An
individual?s physical illness has justified a failure to remit trust
fund taxes to the IRS. The physical illness has been an involuntary
condition in these cases.49 The illness may not excuse
the failure to remit the taxes during all periods.50
Courts
have ruled in favor of taxpayers that were disabled due to alcoholism
or other chemical dependencies.51 The courts have also
refused to find fraud, which necessitates a finding of ?willfulness?
due to psychiatric conditions such as severe psychosis, rather than
a neurosis or milder emotional disturbance.52 The courts
has also addressed the willfulness issue as to a drug habit, but have
not allowed such a defense absent evidence of psychiatric evidence or
hospitalization.53
Illness
is not by any means a complete bar to this penalty, but proper evidence
may be sufficient to overcome the willfulness element and result in
a successful defense with the proper factors and evidence present.
Section
3509 Relief for Employer Negates Willfulness Under 6672
Responsible
persons may maintain that the allowance of § 3509 precludes the imposition
of the §6672 penalty if workers have been misclassified as independent
contractors rather than employees, and the employer has been allowed
the benefits of the reduced withholding rates of § 3509. The
§3509 benefits are not available if the liability for employment tax
is due to the employer?s intentional disregard of the requirement
to deduct and withhold such tax. If a determination is made that
the employer is entitled to the §3509 rates, then the degree of willfulness
necessary to establish personal liability on responsible persons for
the trust fund taxes under §6722 does not exist.
COLLECTION
OR SATISFACTION OF AND CONSIDERATION FOR PENALTY
Joint
and Several Liability
Section
6672 imposes joint and several liability on all persons determined to
be liable for the trust fund penalty.54 Each person
can be assessed individually and held liable for the trust fund recovery
penalty.55 Even thought there are other liable persons,
this does not affect recovery of the entire trust fund tax penalty from
only one person.56 The courts have stated that the IRS may
collect the full amount of the tax only once. The IRS can choose
from whom to collect the taxes. There is no required allocation.57
Disclosure
of IRS Collection Efforts Against Others
The Taxpayer Bill of Rights 2 has an
amendment that states the IRS must disclose to responsible persons the
names of any other persons determined by the IRS to be liable and if
the IRS has attempted to collect the trust fund tax penalty from the
other person, the general nature of such collection activities, and
the amount collected. One who has been determined to be liable
must make this request in writing.
The
IRS often collects full payment of the trust fund recovery penalty from
only one person regardless of how many persons are considered responsible.
The right of contribution or indemnity allows the responsible person
to recover a proportionate amount from other responsible persons.
When
one or more person has paid the penalty they have the right to recover
from the other persons liable for the penalty. This amount is
equal to the excess paid. This suit is to be brought as a separate
cause of action.
No
Requirement to Collect from Employer First
The
IRS is not required to collect from the employer before assessing the
penalty against a responsible person.58
The trust fund tax liability is separate and distinct from that imposed
on the employer.59
DEDUCTIBILITY
OF PAYMENTS UNDER §6672
Business
Deduction Under §162
A deduction for ordinary and necessary
expenses incurred in a trade or business is generally allowed under
§162(a). Section 162(f) provides that no deduction is allowed
under §162(a) for any fine or similar penalty paid to a government
for the violation of any law. Regs §1.162-21(a) states that a
?fine or similar penalty? includes any amount paid under §6672.
This provision does not allow a trade or business deduction for the
payment of the trust fund recovery penalty.
Legal fees incurred in connection with
the §6672 penalty are allowable as itemized deductions under §212(3).
Legal fees and related expenses are not considered part of the fines
or penalties to which they relate.
Deductibility
of Accrued Interest on the Trust Fund Recovery Penalty
Section
163(a) allows a deduction for interest. There is no allowable
deduction for ?personal interest,? Personal interest is any
interest other than interest related to a trade or business, investment
interest, passive activity interest, residence interest, qualified education
loan interest and §6601 interest on any unpaid portion of the §2001
tax.
The
IRS argues that any interest imposed on a trust fund penalty is personal
interest, just as is interest on an income tax deficiency. The
taxpayer has been unsuccessful in the deductibility of trust fund interest
as business interest.
Cases
- 35 ILCS §5/1002
(from Ch. 120, par.10-1002)
- Department of
Revenue v. Heartland Investments, Inc., 106 Il. 2d 19 (1985)
- U.S. v. Graham,
309 F.2d 210 (9th cir. 1962)
- Plett v. U.S.,
185 F.3d 216 (4th Cir. 1999)
- U.S. v. Strebler
313 F2d 405(8th Cir. 1963)
- Muck v. U.S.
3 F3d 1978 (10th Cir. 1993)
- U.S. v. Sotelo,
436 U.S. 268 (1978)
- Larson v. U.S.
76 F. Supp.2d 1092 (E.D. Wash. 2000).
- Tiffany v. U.S.,
228 F.Supp. 700(D.N.J. 1963)
- Fisher v. U.S.,
2001-1 USTC ¶50, 159 (N.D. Okla. 2000)
- Gephart v. U.S.,
818 F.2d 469 (6th Cir. 1987)
- Liddon v.
U.S., 448 F.2d 509 (5th Cir. 1971)
- Monday v. U.S.,
421 F2d 1030 (CA7 1970)
- Cassidento v.
U.S., 90-1 USTC ¶50,71 (d. Conn. 1990)
- Slodov v. U.S.,
436 U.S. 238 (1978)
- U. S v. Security
Pacific Business Credit, Inc., 956 F.2d 703 (7th Cir.
1992)
- Barrett v. U.S.,
580 F.2d 449 (Ct. Cl. 1978)
- Williams v.
U.S., 26 Cl. Ct. 1031 (1992)
- Howard v. U.S.,
711 F.2d 729 (5th Cir. 1983)
- Hochstein v.
U.S., 900 F.2d 543 (2d Cir. 1990), cert. denied, 504 U.S.
985 (1992)
- Id.
- Howard v. U.S.,
711 F.2d 729 (5th Cir. 1983)
- Roth v. U.S.,
779 F.2d 1567 (11th Cir. 1986)
- Honey v. U.S.,
963 F.2d 1083 (8th Cir. 1992), cert. denied, 506 U.S.
1028 (1992)
- Olsen V. U.S.,
952 F.2d 236 (8th Cir. 1991)
- Stauffer v.
U.S., 98-2 USTC ¶50, 715 (D. Colo. 1998)
- Kalb v. U.S.
505 F.2d 506 (2d Cir. 1974), cert. denied, 421 U.S. 979 (1981)
- Id.
- Id.
- Monday v. U.S.,
421 F2d 1030 (CA7 1970)
- Verdung v. U.S.
421 F.2d 1210 (7th Cir. 1970)
- Davis v. U.S.,
961 F.2d 867 (9th Cir. 1992)
- Teel v. U.S.,
529 F.2d 903, 906 (9th Cir. 1976)
- U.S. v. DeBeradinis,
395 F.Supp. 944, 951 (D. Conn. 1975), aff?d 538 F.2d 315 (2d
Cir. 1976)
- Seaton v. U.S.,
254 F. Supp. 161 (D. Mo. 1966)
- Dudley v. U.S.,
428 F.2d 1196 (9th Cir. 1970)
- Turnbull v.
U.S., 929 F.2d 173 (5th Cir. 1991)
- Keller v. U.S.,
46 F.3d 851 (8th Cir. 1995), cert. denied, 516 U.S.
824 (1995)
- Turpin v. U.S.,
970 F.2d 1344, 1349 (4th Cir. 1992)
- Bradshaw v.
U.S., 83 F.3d 1175 (10th Cir. 1995), reh?g denied,
96-1 USTC ¶50,243 (10th Cir. 1996)
- U.S. v. Gekas,
94-2 USTC¶50,494 (M.D. Pa. 1994)
- Greenberg v.
U.S., 46 F.3d 239, 244 (3d Cir. 1994)
- Maggy v. U.S.,
560 F.2d 1372 (9th Cir. 1977), cert. denied, 439 U.S.
821 (1978)
- Winter v. U.S.,
196 F.3d 339 (2d Cir. 1999)
- Godfrey v. U.S.,
748 F.2d 1568, 1576 (Fed. Cir. 1984)
- Hornsby v. IRS,
588 F.2d 952 (5th Cir. 1979)
- U.S. v. Landau,
155 F.3d 93 (2d Cir. 1988)
- Sherwood v.
U.S., 246 F. Supp. 502 (E.D.N.Y. 1965)
- Id.
- In re Keith,
78-1 USTC ¶9264 (E.D. Va. 1978)
- Chandler Jr.
v. Commissioner, 60 T.C.M. 448 (1990)
- Hollman v. Commissioner,
38 TC 251 (1962)
- S.C. Yokum v.
Commissioner, 50 TCM 906 (1985)
- McCray v. U.S.,
910 F.2d 1289 (5thCir. 1990)
- Sinder v. U.S.,
655 F.2d 729 (6th Cir. 1981)
- Brown v. U.S.,
591 F.2d 1136 (5th Cir. 1979)
- Gens v. U.S.,
615 F.2d 1335 (Ct. Cl. 1980)
- U.S. v. Huckabee
Auto Co., 783 F.2d 1546 (11th Cir. 1986)
- Bradley v. U.S.,
936 F.2d 707, 710 (2d Cir. 1991)
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