Section 83(b), Section 409A, Section 457A And Subchapter K©

  1. INTRODUCTION

    On May 24, 2005, the Treasury Department ("Treasury") published proposed treasury regulations (the "proposed regulations") and a proposed revenue procedure (the "proposed revenue procedure") governing the issuance and vesting of capital and profits partnership interests issued in connection with the performance of services (such interests, "compensatory partnership interests").1 As discussed below, the proposed regulations represent a significant change in the government's approach to the taxation of compensatory partnership interests.2

    The proposed regulations would alter the basis for taxing compensatory partnership interests (or not), while attempting to preserve the tax consequences under the current rules. Achieving this goal may depend in large part on whether final regulations expand the scope of the liquidation value safe harbor and reduce the procedural hurdles associated with its use. Treasury has postponed work on finalizing the proposed regulations while Congress considers proposed carried interest legislation.3

    Very generally, section 409A4 limits the ability of taxpayers to defer compensation under nonqualified deferred compensation plans by imposing stringent deferral election and distribution requirements, and section 457A effectively precludes service providers of "nonqualified entities" from deferring compensation by taxing such amounts when they cease to be subject to a substantial risk of forfeiture. Treasury and the Internal Revenue Service ("IRS") have issued only very limited guidance applying these Code sections to partnership and LLC interests.

  2. SECTION 83 GOVERNS COMPENSATORY PARTNERSHIP INTERESTS

    Section 83 generally applies to service-related transfers of property, and courts have held that a partnership capital interest is property for this purpose.5 Resolving a long history of case law questioning the status of profits interests as property for section 83 purposes,6 the proposed regulations provide that section 83 governs the tax consequences of both capital and profits interests issued for services.7 Although the proposed regulations apply section 83 to both capital and profits interests, they do not govern a bare right to receive allocations and distributions from a partnership described in section 707(a)(2)(A), because such a right does not constitute a partnership interest.8 The preamble to the proposed regulations explains that Congress has directed that, consistent with its substance, such an arrangement is properly treated as a disguised payment of compensation to the service provider.9 Excepting section 707(a)(2)(A) payments from the section 83 regime adopted by the proposed regulations creates considerable uncertainty regarding the type of payments the proposed regulations would govern. Section 707(a) provides that a transaction...

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