[Posted
January 27, 2005]
Nos. 03-892 and 03-907, Supreme Court of the United
States (filed Aug. 18, 2004)
In an 8-0 decision on Jan. 24, 2005, the Supreme
Court upheld the double taxation of recoveries in
certain cases, ruling that "as a general rule,
when a litigant's recovery constituted income [for
tax purposes], the litigant's income includes the
portion of the recovery paid to the attorney as
a contingency fee."
The Center for Constitutional Litigation filed
an amicus brief on
behalf of AAJ in the Banks case. AAJ's
brief was acknowledged in the Court's opinion as
providing a novel and intriguing approach to the
taxability of the contingency fee portion of the
claimant's recovery.
Still, the Court declined to consider the approach
because it had not been presented by the parties
below. Last year, Congress fixed the problem with
respect to civil rights cases, and the decision
will have no effect on compensation in physical
injury cases. In other cases, attorneys will need
to consider the possible tax consequences during
settlement discussions.
Amicus Brief: Opportunity for Future Challenge
AAJ's amicus brief argued that the exchange of
a plaintiff's cause of action for money (in the
form of a judgment or settlement) ought to be treated
like the sale or exchange of stock or a house. In
other words, the taxpayer realizes income on the
net proceeds after subtracting the fee paid to the
broker or real estate agent.
Several Justices expressed some interest in this
theory during oral argument, including Justice Scalia
who asked the government attorney why counsel fees
shouldnt be treated like the real estate agents
contingency fee.
Although the Justices declined to adopt a theory
that had not been explored by lower courts, the
honorable mention may be viewed as an open invitation
to the lower federal courts to consider such theories.
Civil Rights Cases Not Affected
Many attorneys are interested in the impact of
the Banks decision on their clients. Plaintiffs
in malpractice, product liability, and automobile
cases will not be affected because the recovery
is not income. The ruling does impact recoveries
for nonphysical injuries, particularly in civil
rights and employment discrimination claims, which
the IRS treats as income.
Last year Congress addressed this problem in the
Civil Rights Tax Relief Act, which allows an above-the-line
deduction for attorney fees in discrimination cases.
The kinds of cases this applies to are listed in
the statute and include:
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Age Discrimination in Employment,
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Americans with Disabilities Act,
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other named federal laws, and
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state and common law causes of action involving
employment discrimination.
Where Banks Applies
This ruling makes a difference in nonphysical injury,
non civil rights cases. For example:
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interference with business relations,
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bad faith insurance actions for economic damage,
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intellectual property suits, and
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other economic claims under federal and state
law.
The decision will also affect recoveries of punitive
damages, which the tax code treats as income even
in personal injury actions. The IRS has previously
disputed taxpayers allocation between compensatory
and punitive damages. AAJ expects the Commissioner
to go after plaintiffs who have won punitive damages
to require them to make an allocation of the amount
of the attorneys fee that should be attributed
to the punitive portion of the recovery.
Conclusions
In sum, the Banks decision will have little
impact on most trial lawyers. Although the reported
decisions have almost all involved attorney fees
in employment discrimination cases, attorneys bringing
economic loss cases should expect that the IRS will
insist that the client include the attorneys
contingency fee as income. Those attorneys with
punitive damage claims may seek to attribute attorney
fees to the recovery of nontaxable compensatory
damages, but should anticipate that the IRS may
challenge that allocation.
AAJ's
Amicus Curiae Brief: Commissioner
of Internal Revenue v. Banks and Commissioner of
Internal Revenue v. Banaitis
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