Tax
avoidance is the legal utilization of the tax law to one's
own advantage. A person is entitled to reduce their amount
of tax by legal means.
In
Gregory v. Helvering (1935), the U.S. Supreme Court stated
that, "The legal right of a taxpayer to decrease the
amount of what otherwise would be his taxes, or altogether
avoid them, by means which the law permits, cannot be doubted."
Tax
evasion is when illegal means are used to not pay taxes.
Evasion usually involves deliberate misrepresentation, concealing
the true state of fiscal condition, and in particular, dishonest
tax reporting.
To
prove that if a scheme is creative or complex enough it
must be legal, some have developed elaborate structures
called "tax shelters." When a tax shelter legitimately
limits taxation, it's called avoidance. If the shelter dishonestly
pays no tax, it's called evasion. More specifically, the
structure becomes an "abusive tax shelter" or
"abusive tax scheme."
These
schemes are characterized by the use of trusts. The word
"trust," when used as a noun, is a "fiduciary
relationship in which one party, known as a trustor, gives
another party, the trustee, the right to hold title to property
or assets for the benefit of a third party, the beneficiary."
This relationship presumes that the beneficiary "trusts
the trust" to look out for their interests.
However,
there are times when trusting the trust is misguided and
could lead to unhappy consequences -- namely, going to jail.
That can happen when the trust is part of an abusive tax
scheme.
The
IRS has developed a nationally coordinated program to combat
these abusive tax schemes, primarily focusing on identifying
and investigating their promoters, as well as those who
support the process, such as accountants and lawyers.
Here
are some claims that are warning signs of an untrustworthy
trust.
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Establishing a trust will reduce or eliminate income taxes
or self-employment taxes.
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The taxpayer will retain complete control over their income
and assets with the establishment of a trust.
-
Taxpayers may deduct personal expenses paid by the trust
on their tax return.
-
Taxpayers can depreciate their personal residence and furnishings,
and take them as deductions on their tax return.
The
IRS has identified five commonly used trust schemes that
are regarded as abusive tax schemes:
(1)
Foreign trust -- These often are located in countries that
impose little or no tax on trusts and provide financial
secrecy. Typically, abusive foreign trust arrangements enable
taxable funds to flow through several trusts or entities
until the funds are ultimately distributed or made available
to the original owner. The trust promoter claims that this
distribution is tax-free. In fact, the income from these
arrangements is fully taxable.
(2)
Family residence trust -- Taxpayers transfer family residences,
including furnishings, to a trust, which sometimes rents
the residence back to the taxpayer. The trust deducts depreciation
and the expenses of maintaining and operating the residence,
including pool service and utilities. These expenses aren't
deductible, and the IRS will disallow them.
(3)
Charitable trust -- Taxpayers transfer assets or income
to a trust claiming to be a charitable organization. The
trust or organization pays for personal, educational and
recreational expenses on behalf of the taxpayer or family
member. The trust then claims the payments as charitable
deductions on its tax returns. These alleged charitable
organizations often aren't qualified and have no IRS exemption
letter. Therefore, contributions aren't deductible.
(4)
Business trust -- This involves the transfer of an ongoing
business to a trust. Also called an "unincorporated
business organization," a "pure trust" or
a "constitutional trust," it makes it appear the
taxpayer has given up control of their business. In reality,
however, through trustees or other entities controlled by
the taxpayer, he or she still runs day-to-day activities
and controls the business' stream of income. Such arrangements
provide no tax relief.
(5)
Equipment or service trust -- This trust is formed to hold
equipment that's rented or leased to the business trust,
often at inflated rates. The business trust reduces its
income by claiming deductions for payments to the equipment
trust. This type of arrangement has the same pitfalls as
the business trust. It provides no tax relief.
The
IRS continues its nationally coordinated strategy to address
fraudulent trust schemes. For more details about the IRS
policy regarding fraudulent trusts, read IRS Public Announcement
Notice 97-24, which warns taxpayers to avoid fraudulent
trust schemes that advertise bogus tax benefits. Announcement
97-24 may be found at www.irs.gov/pub/irs-tege/n97-24.pdf.
It references an IRS brochure, "Too Good to be True
Trusts," found at www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/p2193.pdf.
Report
suspected tax fraud to your local IRS office, 1-800-829-0433.
Once
again, heed the adage of, "If it sounds too good to
be true, it probably is -- or at least illegal."