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When IRS Taxes “Loans” As Income

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When your uncle loans you $5,000 to tide you over, is it taxable as income? Of course not, you have to repay it. What about when the bank loans you $100,000? Again no. When you receive a loan, the money isn’t taxable because you must pay it back. Can lawyers borrow too, just like anyone else? Yes, and for that reason, some lawyers and litigation funders worry about Novoselsky v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2020-68 (2020), where a lawyer was taxed on loans. The case is full of tax lessons. David Novoselsky, a solo lawyer, raised $1.4 million with loan agreements he drafted himself. The IRS said they were not loans and instead were taxable as income. The Tax Court agreed with the IRS the $1.4 million “loans” was income. Novoselsky was a do-it-yourselfer and an entrepreneurial litigator, so in 2009 and 2011, he signed up “litigation support agreements” with eight doctors and lawyers around Chicago. They fell into three groups, each with a pre-existing stake in the litigation: (i) doctors who were plaintiffs in lawsuits Novoselsky was cooking up; (ii) doctors whose economic interests were aligned with the plaintiffs; and (iii) lawyers with whom Novoselsky had fee-sharing agreements.

Novoselsky documented them as loans. In some, he promised a high rate of interest, and in others, a multiple of the investment. All loans were nonrecourse. He did not report them as income on his 2009 and 2011 tax returns, since they were loans! On audit, the IRS said they were not loans and Novoselsky omitted $1.4 million of gross income. When Novoselsky refused to extend the statute of limitations—standard fare in an audit—the IRS assessed tax deficiencies and penalties over $600,000.  Novoselsky went to Tax Court, but proceedings were stayed when he declared bankruptcy in 2014, apparently for strategic reasons. Several years of acrimonious litigation ensued. Novoselsky, acted as his own bankruptcy lawyer too, and he emerged from bankruptcy without a discharge. 

Back in Tax Court he argued that nonrecourse loans were standard for litigation funders, with security on the case or cases in question. Unfortunately, Novoselsky didn’t bother with security agreements. In their place, he put language in the litigation support agreements requiring him to pay the relevant investor “at the successful conclusion of this litigation.” If the litigation was a bust, he would have no obligation to pay. This probably sounded like D-I-Y common sense. But the Tax Court jumped all over it, citing some of the numerous cases holding that an obligation is not debt for tax purposes if it is contingent on the occurrence of a future event. 

That includes obligations that are contingent on the outcome of litigation. The obligations under these litigation support agreements were contingent on successful lawsuits, so they were not loans. The burden then shifted to Novoselsky to provide another justification for excluding the advances from income. He claimed they were gifts or were deposits held “in trust” for investors, but the Tax Court didn’t buy either one. The Tax Court said these litigation support agreements said they were “loans,” but there was no promissory note, no payment schedule, no security, and no payments of principal were ever made. Some called for interest or a fixed-dollar premium, but no interest or other amount was ever paid. The advances were payable only out of future litigation proceeds.

Had the parties conducted themselves as if the transactions were bona fide loans? Nope. Each investor had agreed that Novoselsky would have no obligation to pay unless the litigation was a success. The Tax Court then invoked Frierdich v. Commissioner, Frierdich v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1989-393, aff’d, 925 F.2d 180 (7th Cir. 1991). In Frierdich, a widow hired the taxpayer, an attorney, to represent her as the executor of her late husband’s estate. The widow was well acquainted with the attorney, who had been her husband’s partner in various real estate ventures. The attorney had also dealt with the widow in certain business matters.

They came to an unusual arrangement. The widow not only hired the attorney to provide legal services, but also lent him $100,000. The attorney gave the widow a note bearing interest at 8%, but there was no fixed schedule for repayment.  Instead, the principal and accrued interest were payable when the attorney was due his fee, which was “subject to [the] closing of the estate.” The widow was authorized to deduct the loan balance from the attorney’s fee. In Frierdich, the Tax Court re-characterized the widow’s loan as an advance payment of the attorney’s fee. The attorney’s obligation to pay under the note was not due until he was paid for closing of the estate. The Tax Court found that both parties intended that repayment would be in the form of legal services. Novoselsky extended this analysis to include not only the advances received from the formal plaintiffs, but also those received from the doctors and lawyers who were not parties but had interests in the outcome of the litigation. 

Novoselsky’s counter-parties were clients, medical professionals with interests aligned to the interests of his clients, or lawyers with fee-sharing agreements. Repayment was not required at all unless the litigation was successful, so the contingency determined whether any obligation arose in the first place. The Tax Court then held that the investors’ advances were actually compensation for Novoselsky’s legal services.

Does this case jeopardize lawyers getting real litigation funding? Not really, since in a commercial litigation funding transaction, the funder should have no pre-existing interest in the litigation. That should make it difficult for the IRS to argue that the funder’s advance is a disguised payment for the attorney’s legal services. As long as the loan documentation does not condition the borrower’s obligation on the outcome of the litigation, Novoselsky should not prevent loans from qualifying as loans, or as purchases for the deals structured that way. Novoselsky reminds us—if we need one—that plaintiffs and lawyers should generally not prepare funding documents themselves. They should not include any language suggesting that their obligation to repay a loan depends on the success of the litigation. They should limit the funders’ recourse to a security interest in the litigation proceeds. 

Of course, loans are not common in commercial litigation funding in the first place. Most are purchases, often prepaid forward purchases. That further diminishes the impact of Novoselsky. In the few loans that come along, professional loan documentation usually includes a non-contingent payment obligation. Novoselsky also warns lawyers not to borrow from clients or anyone else with a stake in the case’s outcome.

Otherwise, there is a risk that a lender’s advance may be re-characterized as an advance payment of compensation. If the lender is a professional funder with no prior interest in the lawsuit, the risk seems low. Still, does Novoselsky warn lawyers that they may face a somewhat greater tax risk than plaintiffs who are similarly situated? Suppose that a plaintiff sells a part of his case under a good prepaid forward contract. It may be awfully difficult for the IRS to find a way to tax the upfront money until the contract closes on the conclusion of the case. But let’s say that only the contingent fee lawyer is the seller under the contract, and the plaintiff is not even participating in the deal.

Let’s say the lawyer is entitled to 40% if the case produces money, and he “sells” his right to half of that fee. Even if the lawyer’s funding deal is documented as a legitimate prepaid forward, it may be more tempting for the IRS to seek ways to attack the arrangement. The lawyer, unlike the plaintiff, is always earning compensation income, so a successful challenge will hit the lawyer with ordinary income. And, of course, the IRS has a long history of going after lawyers to set an example.

Perhaps this is one reason many lawyer funding deals are structured with the plaintiff(s) also participating on some level. It is another reason that the tax timing issues for lawyers may be a little more sensitive than for plaintiffs. In the end, though, the strange case of Novoselsky seems like such a slam dunk for the IRS, and such an obvious loser for the D-I-Y lawyer that it’s also a reminder to all: don’t try this at home.

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