280E

Tranquility

Well-Known Member
That's the code section in the tax code (26 U.S.C. § 280E)that says:
No deduction or credit shall be allowed for any amount paid or incurred during the taxable year in carrying on any trade or business if such trade or business (or the activities which comprise such trade or business) consists of trafficking in controlled substances (within the meaning of schedule I and II of the Controlled Substances Act) which is prohibited by Federal law or the law of any State in which such trade or business is conducted.​

It's a big deal and it costs those in the cannabis business a ton. One "former IRS attorney" says, those in the business of cannabis better hike up their shorts, the water is going to get pretty high pretty soon.

https://mjbizdaily.com/former-irs-a...ing-tsunami-of-marijuana-related-280e-audits/
A tax expert who spent six years as an IRS trial lawyer is sounding a new 280E alarm bell that many cannabis businesses might need to answer soon.

Nick Richards, a Denver-based tax attorney who now works in the private sector with a clientele that includes marijuana firms, is calling attention to changes in IRS policy that he believes will lead to a “tsunami” of audits that could cost larger cannabis businesses millions in unpaid taxes and penalties.

And the change in policy could mean probable 280E audits for ancillary management companies, including leasing companies, landlords or others that may profit directly from cannabis sales.

Under Section 280E of the IRS tax code, marijuana businesses are barred from taking federal tax deductions.

Richards said he learned of the policy changes directly from IRS staffers he keeps in touch with, and those policies resulted from two specific 2018 U.S. Tax Court cases and the expansion of a marijuana industry-auditing project begun by the IRS in Colorado:

  • The first court case, an attempt by Oakland, California-based Harborside to argue that 280E shouldn’t apply to state-legal cannabis companies, lost when the Tax Court ruled that 280E applies to any company that traffics in Schedule 1 narcotics, even if those companies are approved by state governments.
  • The second, which also lost, centered on Los Angeles dispensary Alternative Health Care, which attempted to avoid paying federal taxes under 280E by hiring a management company to run the storefront. And that opened the door for an expanded scope of the types of companies to which 280E applies, Richards said.
  • Under an IRS program aimed at the state-legal marijuana industry that’s being expanded into states other than Colorado, Richards predicted more cannabis companies will face audits in markets such as California – if they’re not already in progress.
The technical name for the program is a Compliance Initiative Project (CIP), Richards said.

The CIP includes an “audit technique guide,” he said, which he’s been told about by IRS agents and attorneys. The program was aided by Colorado’s seed-to-sale tracking system.

“Now they’ve developed that audit technique guide. … And I’ve been told that now they’re going to California with that new approach,” Richards noted.

Audits could loop in years of missing tax forms required for cash payments of more than $10,000, the penalties for which could easily get into the millions.

“It will be more of a tsunami than a 25-foot wave,” Richards said. “It’s going to be low and slow, but deep.”

All MJ companies at risk

A lack of clarity exists concerning where the IRS will draw the line as to what types of companies aside from licensed plant-touching businesses are subject to 280E under the agency’s new policy, Richards said.

Put together, the Harborside and Alternative Health Care rulings “really expand the scope (of 280E), in a big, big, big way,” he added.

“I’ve said things to IRS counsel like, ‘Is a law firm trafficking now? Can a law firm be subject to 280E? What about a payroll provider?’” Richards said. “Where do they draw the line?”

The answer seems to be case by case.

The IRS declined to comment for this story and would not confirm whether any written guidance or specific policy existed for agents to follow in 280E audits.

But Richards said he’s been told by some in the know that the agency isn’t targeting any company that does business with plant-touching businesses – only ones that get “too close to the crop.”

“What IRS counsel would say to me in that is, ‘You don’t see us coming after law firms, do you?’” Richards said.

“They’re conscious that they need to be a little careful about how far they go, but when they’re pushed with cases that take the position that 280E doesn’t apply at all, the rulings that come out of that make it harder and harder for cannabis companies … to make any profit at all.”

According to Richards, the IRS now considers unlicensed companies that work with plant-touching businesses as subject to 280E if they profited from marijuana sales – including the likes of management companies, landlords, leasing firms, etc., but clarity does not exist yet.

Cash payments also targeted

Upcoming audits also could uncover years of problematic cash payments within the industry, Richards warned.

“California has huge problems in the tax world,” he said. “Operating in the gray market for all those years is a giant problem. It’s not just about 280E and taxes. It’s also about the Bank Secrecy Act. That’s the money-laundering statute.

“That’s the other thing the IRS is ramping up on, and that’s the other thing that’s going to come to California in a big way.”

And if the IRS chooses to play as hard-nosed as possible, Richards said, it could result in huge investigations into past all-cash dealings, because any payment over $10,000 requires the filing of Form 8300 to disclose such a payment to the IRS.

If that paperwork isn’t filed, the agency can fine violators up to $25,000 per missing form.

“The penalty for willfully not filing that form … could easily be millions for a big cannabis cultivator,” Richards added.

Some audits underway

While he predicted the bulk of audits likely won’t come about for another year or two, Richards added he already has two audits underway as a result of newly expanded scope of 280E.

One involves a management company and another is a landlord that rents to a cannabis retailer.

“Both of those companies had kind of traditional sort of too-close-to-their-tenant kind of things – like loans,” Richards said. “The IRS is really showing their teeth.”

In those cases – and likely in many more to come – Richards said the IRS is “asserting that (the companies are) subject to trafficking under the Alternative Health and Harborside decisions, which really puts the thumbscrews on the company, because now you have a governmental body that’s saying, ‘You’re trafficking in a controlled substance, and we’re prepared to prove that,’ and there are all kinds of ramifications that could come from that.”

“It becomes a big tool for the IRS,” he added.

Richards said he heard directly from an IRS agent that “if any of the companies that the agent was involved with auditing had anything to do with cannabis, that they should put Alternative Health Care down” as a reference point in the audit, to bolster the strength of the tax case.​
 

Tranquility

Well-Known Member
https://www.investharborside.com/harborside-inc-announces-filing-appeal-in-tax-case/

Harborside lost its case. The news today is they intend to appeal. Their claim is some Constitutional income tax meaning of "income" as opposed to "revenue". The problem is, they've never had a tax class.

"What *is* "income"?" is the storied question at the start of tax class. After all in the front row yell out some rule or example, the professor knocks it down with a provision of the code that does not comply. Before too long you realize, "income" is whatever the person/government defining it says it is.

If Harborside wins on appeal (heh), the whole tax system goes down. The courts aren't going to do that. They are funded by taxes. I'm not sure why they are appealing other than the tax burden would shut them down. A BK is a BK, right? (Ignoring the favored status of tax debt in bankruptcy.)

https://mjbizdaily.com/medical-marijuana-licenses/#harborside-appeals-280e-ruling
Harborside appeals 280E ruling on cannabis business expenses

California-based Harborside, one of the most well-known and longest-operating cannabis dispensaries in the nation, said Tuesday it is appealing an $11 million judgment against the company regarding business deductions under 280E of the IRS tax code. “There is an increasing realization that Section 280E as applied by the IRS is (a) tax imposed without regard to income and violates the Sixteenth Amendment to the Constitution, which requires that the federal tax must be measured by income, not sales,” Harborside’s general counsel, Jack Nichols, said in a statement. Harborside interim CEO Peter Bilodeau added that the company contends the U.S. Tax Court “misapplied the law as it relates to dispensaries” in an October ruling against the Oakland-based company.

https://mjbizdaily.com/cannabis-firm-harborside-owes-11-million-under-280e-us-tax-court-rules/

Edit:
Technically, the argument has to do with cost of goods sold (COGS) and an attempt of Harborside to spin off expenses that can't be deducted under the 280E to an entity that might be able to deduct them because it is not related to the sale of a scheduled item.

Edit/edit:
Some explanation:
https://www.ganjapreneur.com/irc-280e-taxing-situation-cannabis-industry/
https://www.cpapracticeadvisor.com/...accountants-analysis-of-the-cannabis-industry

No need to really look at either unless the question is fascinating to you.
 
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Tranquility

Well-Known Member
If there's no check on an entities' ability to pay, the fine might be unconstitutionally excessive. If older returns don't reflect this, some might make a protective claim.

https://mjbizdaily.com/recent-decis...cannabis-industry-around-burdens-of-irs-280e/
The U.S. Supreme Court’s decision this week not to consider a Colorado Supreme Court ruling on a tax fine – coupled with dissenting opinions in a recent case involving a California medical marijuana company – could have significant ramifications for the cannabis industry, according to tax experts.

Left standing by the U.S. Supreme Court was a decision holding that a Colorado Department of Labor levy against Dami Hospitality was an excessive fine or penalty under the Eighth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.

The decision shed new light on possible limitations and defenses against Internal Revenue Code (IRC) Section 280E under the Eight Amendment, according to Nick Richards, a Denver-based cannabis tax attorney with Greenspoon Marder.

The two rulings together appear to have somewhat weakened 280E, which potentially is good news for the cannabis industry. Here’s why:
  • By not hearing the Colorado case, the U.S. Supreme Court decision could open the door to challenges to 280E. If such challenges are eventually successful, it would be a boon to the marijuana industry since that IRS provision states a business involved in the trafficking of a federally controlled substance, such as cannabis, cannot take tax deductions or credits even though it must pay taxes on income.
  • The dissenting opinions in the California case further cast doubt about 280E, with one judge contending it is unconstitutional under the Eighth Amendment.
Details around the cases

In the Colorado case, the state’s labor department fined Dami, owner of the Star Motel in Denver, $425,000 for letting its workers’ compensation insurance coverage lapse for nearly 1,700 days through July 2014, according to The Colorado Sun.

In its appeal, Dami argued it didn’t have the money to pay the fine, which it also contended was in violation of the Eighth Amendment, the Sun reported. The Colorado Supreme Court ruled in Dami’s favor.

That ruling comes on the heels of a challenge last October in U.S. Tax Court by Northern California Small Business Assistants, a California medical marijuana firm, of an IRS ruling disallowing the company’s claim of $1.5 million in tax deductions for “ordinary and necessary” business expenses in the 2012 tax year.

While the company’s challenge ultimately was unsuccessful, of particular interest to the cannabis industry are the dissenting opinions – there were two – in the case, according to Greenspoon Marder’s Richards.

In his dissent – which two additional judges hearing the case signed onto – U.S. Tax Court Judge David Gustafson wrote that IRC Section 280E was an unconstitutionally excessive fine or penalty under the Eighth Amendment.

His dissent essentially stated that because Section 280E is unlimited and applies to all “deductions and credits” paid or incurred in the sale of cannabis, it could result in taxes in excess of “income,” which is in violation of the 16th Amendment.

And, because it could violate the 16th Amendment, Gustafson held it was an unconstitutionally excessive penalty under the Eighth Amendment.

As counsel on numerous state and federal cannabis tax matters, Richards wrote in an email to Marijuana Business Daily that many in the industry are saddled with millions of dollars in tax debt they have no ability to pay.

Diving deeper into 280E

A former IRS trial attorney, Richards added if the Internal Revenue Service had to consider a company’s ability to pay before assessing and collecting Section 280E liabilities, the result would be different.

Specifically, before making a penalty assessment, the IRS must obtain certain manager approvals and follow certain administrative processes, Richards said.

Finding that Section 280E is a penalty, he continued, could trigger requirements that, because they were not followed, could lead to a claim that previous IRS assessments are invalid.

If the statute of limitations on assessment (three years from filing) had expired on an invalid assessment, said Richards, the IRS would not be able to correct the mistake “absent fraud or a substantial understatement by the taxpayer.”

These recent decisions could also help reduce Section 280E tax debt that was assessed correctly and is due, Richards said.

Generally, most tax liabilities are subject to “offers in compromise,” wherein taxpayers offer to pay a fraction of the total based upon their ability to pay, he added.

In the cannabis industry, however, the IRS does not reverse the Section 280E “phantom income” in determining eligibility for an offer, thus rendering ability to pay meaningless, Richards said.

If Section 280E was found to be a penalty, the IRS would have to consider a taxpayer’s actual ability to pay, and offers would be viable.

Because many taxpayers were assessed Section 280E income taxes far in excess of their income and net worth, according to Richards, a requirement to consider the true ability to pay for cannabis industry taxpayers could provide huge relief.

As such, many cannabis taxpayers and advisers, he said, are reviewing their tax liabilities and considering protective claims for refund to protect their past tax years.

Should Section 280E be found unconstitutional, a protective claim “could protect a taxpayer’s right to a refund after the three-year period to claim a refund expires,” Dean Guske, managing director of Guske & Co. accounting firm in Bellevue, Washington, wrote in an email to MJBizDaily.

Guske noted that since the California tax court decision he has been discussing protective claims for refund with his clients and is seriously considering them. The Colorado decision may provide further reason to file such claims, Richards said.

(Editor’s note: Nick J. Richards will be writing stories about the key points and challenges created by federal and state taxes affecting the cannabis industry as part of Marijuana Business Daily’s new Other Voices series. Richards is a partner at Greenspoon Marder, a national law firm serving the cannabis industry that has marijuana tax clients throughout North America. He has been a tax attorney for more than 20 years and is an adjunct professor of law at the University of Denver.)
 

Tranquility

Well-Known Member
Here's a couple articles from the same source on how the IRS is actually handling things under 280E.

Newly released IRS documents detail efforts to collect taxes from marijuana companies under 280E

Documents reveal how IRS became more adept at evaluating marijuana company taxes

Bottom line? They're coming. It is a VERY profitable area for auditors.
280e-money-min.png


280e-burden-new-min.png
 

arb

Semi shaved ape
I get deeply and dryly fucked every year around...........now.
Odd how rent and eviction,private enterprise and small companies got suspended but not any taxes or the payments thereof.
 

Tranquility

Well-Known Member
There is a site with the IRS audit guide and some training on 280E at https://mjbizdaily.com/the-tax-mans-marijuana-secrets/

While you need registration, they don't wait for you to reply to an email before you get access to the documents.

At 10 tips to help your marijuana business survive an IRS audit
There are...um...tips to help you survive an audit for your cannabis business. Rule #1?

Shut the fuck up.

Among those documents is a cannabis industry-related “Participant Guide,” which at least one other tax attorney has labeled the IRS’ “playbook.”In the Participant Guide, the IRS stresses, for example, the importance of initial interviews, because “as many taxpayers hire representation after the initial interview, it may be the only chance (agents) have to talk directly with the taxpayer.”

As to the 10 tips; keep records, learn the law, get represented and pay by IRS credit card and not cash.
 
Tranquility,
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