The Death of Deducting Litigation Expenses: What’s Next?

By William Rothrock, CSSC, Brant Hickey – January 23, 2023
The Death of Deducting Litigation Expenses: What’s Next?

Over the next three-plus years, can you help your corporate clients defray litigation costs that lost deductibility after 2017? Examining the different sections of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) illuminates the enormity of the change. However, looking beyond the TCJA provides a possible solution to the loss in deductions.

Section 11045 of the TCJA eliminated the deductibility of all expenses subject to the 2-percent rule through the year 2026. Sections 13306 and 13307 further refine eliminating deductible expenses related to litigation. Specifically, identifying fines, whether punitive or penal legal fees, and the inclusion of “non-disclosure” agreements in cases of a sexual nature are no longer deductible expenses. A recent court case further narrowed the deduct­ibility of legal expenses as capital versus immediately expensed.

Case Precedent

In Mylan v. Commissioner, 156 T.C. No. 10 (April 27, 2021), the IRS took the position that the legal cost of defending a patent infringement case needed to be capitalized. The line determining the deductible status of litigation expenses starts at the nature of the litigation. What types of litigation apply after the passage of TCJA? If litigation arises in pursuit of profit-seeking activity, the cost of litigation can be expensed. Does the Mylan case indicate a clear under­standing of what constitutes profit-seeking behavior? Mylan’s litigation defense against patent infringement arose through the pursuit of profit indirectly, forcing them to capitalize the expense. Mylan’s litigation expense was directly attributable to creating a generic drug and qualified for an immediate expense by the company.

What Remains Deductible?

The litigation costs incurred defending a company from the government, plus reme­dial or compensatory damages, continue to be deductible. However, fines, penal or punitive, are not deductible.

Thus, profit-seeking and government-related litigation are deductible. But what about employee-related litigation mentioned above? Clearly, defense against allegations of sexual harassment and abuse does not qualify as profit-seeking behavior. However, the TCJA explicitly addresses this form of litigation. The TCJA eliminates the deductibility of all the associated litigation expenses for cases related to actions of harassment and abuse. Notably, including a non-disclosure agreement as a settlement term reinforces the non-deductibility of litigation expenses.

The CPA’s Role

How can CPAs help clients mitigate the cost of litigation? First, consider 26 U.S. Code § 104 — compensation for injuries or sickness. Employee cases related to harassment, sexual and otherwise, and sexual abuse do not qualify under 26 U.S. Code § 104. The proceeds the employee receives in settlement from the company constitute income taxable at the state and federal levels. The tax issue allows a CPA to help the defense litigation team reduce the settlement expense. Moreover, introducing a structured settlement for the client’s consideration allows the defense to reduce the actual cost of settling the case. Why? The constructive receipt doctrine determines when the income realization occurs for the plaintiff.

When considering this doctrine, the savings become clear to both parties when using a simple settlement. Consider the following example:

  • A settlement of $1 million taxed at a federal applicable rate for those married filing jointly leaves the plaintiff with $693,478.75 in disposable income before state tax.
  • Using an annual payout over three years reduces the tax liability, thus increasing the disposable income by $109,635.63 to $803,113.38.
  • In addition, if the parties agree to split the benefit, it reduces litigation costs by 5.48 percent for the defense.
  • Using a structured settlement, the plaintiff’s disposable income increases by $54,817.32. The defense sees their cost to fund the settlement reduced by the same amount.

When structured settlements originated, this form of needs-based cooperation represented an industry standard. Although larger insurance carriers know structured settlements, they are less aware of this particular strategy.

The TCJA severely restricted the deduc­tion of litigation expenses where only the pursuit of profit and government defense remains deductible. Utilizing strategies like offering the plaintiff a structured settlement option opens avenues to reducing the client’s litigation cost.


William  Rothrock

William Rothrock

William D. Rothrock, CSSC, is a settlement consultant at Brant Hickey.

More content by William Rothrock:

This article appeared in the winter 2022/23 issue of New Jersey CPA magazine. Read the full issue.

 

 

Related events

April 23, 2024Clark
Featured
June 11 - 14, 2024Atlantic City
Featured
April 30, 2024Secaucus
May 3, 2024Live Webcast
May 7, 2024Secaucus
May 8, 2024New Brunswick
May 9, 2024Haddonfield
Southwest Jersey Chapter
Nonprofit Update
May 9, 2024Edison
Middlesex/Somerset Chapter
Networking and CPE at Top Golf
May 10, 2024Live Webcast
May 13 - 16, 2024Live Webcast
May 15, 2024Live Webcast
May 17, 2024Webcast Replay
May 20, 2024Live Webcast
May 22, 2024New Brunswick
May 22, 2024Red Bank & Live Webcast
May 28, 2024Live Webcast
May 30, 2024Webcast Replay
May 31, 2024Roseland & Live Webcast
June 13, 2024Live Webcast
June 25, 2024Live Webcast
June 26, 2024Live Webcast
June 26, 2024Live Webcast
June 28, 2024Live Webcast
July 15 - 18, 2024Live Webcast
July 31, 2024Live Webcast
August 12 - 14, 2024Atlantic City
August 13, 2024Live Webcast
August 14, 2024Live Webcast
August 21, 2024Live Webcast
September 3 - 6, 2024Live Webcast
September 16 - 19, 2024Live Webcast
September 19 - 20, 2024Live Webcast
September 23, 2024Live Webcast
September 24, 2024Live Webcast
September 24, 2024Live Webcast
September 25, 2024Live Webcast
September 26, 2024Live Webcast
October 15, 2024Live Webcast
October 17 - 18, 2024Live Webcast
October 21 - 24, 2024Live Webcast
October 23, 2024Live Webcast
October 23, 2024Live Webcast
October 28 - 31, 2024Live Webcast
October 30, 2024Live Webcast
October 30, 2024Live Webcast
October 30, 2024Live Webcast
October 31, 2024Roseland & Live Webcast
November 1, 2024Live Webcast
November 1, 2024Live Webcast
November 5, 2024Live Webcast
November 6, 2024Live Webcast
November 14, 2024Live Webcast
November 20, 2024Live Webcast
November 20, 2024Live Webcast
November 21 - 22, 2024Live Webcast
November 21, 2024Live Webcast
November 25, 2024Live Webcast
November 25, 2024Live Webcast
December 3, 2024Live Webcast
December 4, 2024Live Webcast
December 4, 2024Live Webcast
December 5, 2024Live Webcast
December 5, 2024Live Webcast
December 6, 2024Live Webcast
December 9, 2024Live Webcast
December 10, 2024Live Webcast
December 12 - 13, 2024Live Webcast
December 13, 2024Live Webcast
December 13, 2024Live Webcast
December 16 - 17, 2024Live Webcast
December 18, 2024Live Webcast
December 19, 2024Live Webcast
December 20, 2024Live Webcast
December 20, 2024Live Webcast
December 23, 2024Live Webcast