In: Accounting
Paul and Anna plan to form the PA LLC by the end of the current year to produce and sell specialty athletic apparel. Paul and Anna will both serve as member-managers of the LLC and will be active in its operations. The members will each contribute $80,000 cash, and in addition, the LLC will borrow $440,000 from First State Bank. The $600,000 will be used to buy equipment and to lease a property they can use as a small manufacturing facility and a storefront.
The bank has stated that the debt must be guaranteed, and Anna has agreed to guarantee the entire amount. At the end of the year, the LLC also expects to have accounts payable of $40,000 for inventory and supplies.
The LLC's operating agreement provides that all LLC items will be allocated equally. The agreement also provides that capital accounts will be properly maintained and that each member must restore any deficit in the capital account upon the LLC's liquidation.
If the LLC claims 100% bonus depreciation, it will report a loss of about $580,000 in its first year, which the LLC members would like to deduct.
Paul and Anna would like to know how the debt ($440,000 loan and $40,000 of accounts payable) will be allocated between them, and how that allocation affects their ability to deduct the losses. Paul and Anna are single individual taxpayers.
Consider all potential loss limitations and assume that neither Paul nor Anna will have business income or losses from other sources.
Complete the memo for the PA LLC tax planning file for your manager's review that describes how the debt will be shared between Paul and Anna for purposes of computing the adjusted basis of each LLC interest.
If an amount is zero, enter "0".
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PAUL AND ANNA'S LOSSES ARE LIMITED AS FOLLOWS (Absents of other arrangements)
Particulars | PAUL ($) | ANNA ($) |
Contribution in Cash 80,000 80,000
Recourse Debt share 0 4,40,000
Non-Recourse Debtshare 20,000 20,000
§704(d) loss limitation 1,00,000 5,40,000
Less-Non recourse debt (20,000) (20,000)
§465 Limitation 80,000 5,20,000
Here members are active in business, so the passive activity loss limitation does not arise.But consider about excess business loss limitation.ACCORDING TO THIS RULE a single individual tax payers business lossess are limited to42,50,000 in a tax year. Here Paul & Anna.'s amount for this limit is considered as $80,000 and $5,20,000 because they have no business income/loss from other sources. But we can see that Anna.s allocated loss amount exceeds the limit, therefore she could deduct only$2,50,000 and the remaining $2,70,000(loss)would be carried forward as a part of net operating loss carryover.
Alternatively , Paul & Anna if agreed to guarantee one half of the recourse debt $4,40,000 equally allocated with ethem.Then their bases (§704d loss limitation) would be $3,20,00each and their amount of risk become $3,00,000each.
Here we can apply the excess business loss limitation and not the passive activity loss limitation. .based on this both of them suffer a loss of $2,50,000. So total $2,90,000 loss allocated to each of them and $2,50,000 deduction would be allowed. the excess loss of $40,000 is carried over as their net operating loss.
Note-Many of the LLc's utilize other provisions of the §704(b) regulations for ensuring profit allocations and with out including the restoration provision in the operating agreement.