In its second case this term
The petitioner, Connelly, argued that the IRS should not include the proceeds of the redemption of a family-owned company's policy on his brother's life in their construction firm's value because that insurance money immediately bought the remaining shares. The IRS collected additional tax of $889,914 from the deceased brother's estate based on the agency's view that the proceeds boosted the company's value. Two lower courts ruled in favor of the IRS.
Most observers
In theory, many tax experts could see how including the insurance proceeds in the company's valuation "rises to the level of being unfair" to an estate when the policy requires them to be redeemed by purchasing the deceased family members' shares, said Jose Reynoso, the head of personal financial planning and advance estate and tax for
"It's really interesting to us as planners and practitioners that the Supreme Court even took it up," Reynoso said in an interview. "It's a unique, sort of nichey thing that impacts not too many people."
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The issue does come up frequently for the owners of closely held businesses who purchase life insurance policies for their largest shareholders, he noted. The IRS valuation of the construction company "would destroy a valuable succession planning tool that the nation's small businesses have openly used for decades," the plaintiff's attorney, Kannon Shanmugam, said at the hearing,
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the National Federation of Independent Business Small Business Legal Center
Their apparent siding with the IRS and "tepid reception to the taxpayer estate" was not "entirely surprising" to Frank Paolini, partner with the private wealth services group at the
"While I could make arguments on either side of the case, the taxpayer estate must still contend with the logically glaring issue that a policy covering the life of a key shareholder would have an impact on the fair market value of the shares in any other context," Paolini said in an email.
"For instance, a hypothetical buyer of the company would ascribe additional value to the shares if the company held a policy on the life of key employees and shareholders," he continued. "Just because the company must use the policy proceeds to pay the decedent's family for the shares, the shares are still redeemed, and the value of the purchased equity is returned to the company on redemption," he said.
"Essentially, the value of the shares must go somewhere when the decedent dies. In the end, the family receives the benefit of the payment from the policy and the company receives the shares back in return, which is presumably equal to the value of the shares purchased from the decedent's estate. If the court held otherwise, it would seem incongruent with many other areas of estate tax valuation," Paolini said.
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The plaintiffs held that the government was taking positions that are out of step with the fact that the surviving brother would still be subject to capital gains taxes and rulings in other cases that contradicted the use of the proceeds in a valuation. However, their argument revolved around the notion that "before you can value something, you must first subtract the price paid for the very thing you are trying to value," U.S. Department of Justice Assistant to the Solicitor General Yaira Dubin told the court.
"A redemption obligation divides the corporate pie among existing shareholders without changing the value of their interests," Dubin said. "And, here, the corporate pie was worth $6.86 million, not $3.86 million."
Toward the end of the 54-minute hearing last month, Dubin spoke with the justices about how a cross-insurance agreement between the brothers or a trust structure could enable the taxpayers to avoid having the proceeds go into their corporation's valuation. The Supreme Court will release decisions in the Moore and Connelly cases by the end of June or early July.