Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Economic Substance in Tax Crimes

In American Boat LLC v. United States, ___ F.3d ___ (7th Cir. 2009), the Seventh Circuit affirmed a district court's holding that a taxpayer in a Son of Boss transaction was not liable for civil penalties for claiming the tax shelter on his return (I need not differentiate the civil penalties for present purposes). The essence of the relief granted was that the taxpayer had reasonable cause because of the tax lawyer's involvement and opinion (essentially like the other opinions for Son of Boss). The shelter was Jenkens & Gilchrist shelter of the type for which the lawyers promoting it have been indicted. (See discussion of indictment here.)

Echoing the mantra in the Nixon Watergate debacle, the Court said that "Again, the focus is on what Jump [the taxpayer] knew or should have known at the time he obtained the opinion letter." Focusing on the issuer of the opinion in a criminal context, it seems to me that the issue is the same -- to paraphrase, the focus is on what the lawyer knew or should have known at the time he issued the opinion letter. I don't think my paraphrasing is particularly insightful, but I do think it is helpful to state the truism from time to time, for I think it will help focus on the issue I raised in my earlier blog yesterday (see here). Keep in mind that the lawyer is guilty of a tax crime only if he knew the law (i.e., the crime was both knowable and he knew it) and he intended to violate the law.
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