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Monster Media 1993 #2
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F116.SBE
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1993-07-01
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@156 CHAP ZZ
┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ CHOICE OF ENTITY: AUTHORS, SOFTWARE DEVELOPERS │
│ AND OTHERS WHO EARN SIGNIFICANT ROYALTY INCOME │
└─────────────────────────────────────────────────┘
Authors, computer software developers and other persons
earning significant royalties from the licensing of "intel-
lectual property" (such as copyrights or patents) will find
to their serious dismay that the tax law provides some maj-
or DISincentives to incorporating those business activities.
@IF177xx](Take careful note, since this could be particularly appli-
@IF177xx]cable to your business: You have indicated that much of the
@IF177xx]income of @NAME is from royalties.)
@IF177xx]
@IF156xx]This is important for you to understand, since your company,
@IF156xx]@NAME, is in the software business.
@IF156xx]
@IF172xx]This could be of importance to your firm, which you have in-
@IF172xx]dicated is in the data processing business, but you're like-
@IF172xx]ly to be affected only if significant amounts of gross income
@IF172xx]from royalties are earned by @NAME.
@IF172xx]
@IF120xx]However, your business is not incorporated right now; thus,
@IF120xx]neither of the 2 major tax problems discussed below is a pos-
@IF120xx]sible concern to you for now, and should not be, so long as
@IF120xx]@NAME remains a @ENTITY.
@IF120xx]
@IF118xx]However, your business is not a C corporation right now, so
@IF118xx]only one of the two major tax problems discussed below is a
@IF118xx]possible concern to you, and this should be true as long as
@IF118xx]@NAME remains an S corporation.
@IF118xx]
@IF118xx](S corporations don't have to worry about "personal holding
@IF118xx]company" tax status.)
@IF118xx]
@IF117xx]Your company is organized as a "C" corporation, which is pre-
@IF117xx]cisely the type of legal entity that is likely to encounter
@IF117xx]the most serious income tax problems, if it has significant
@IF117xx]royalty income from ownership of patents, copyrights, or oth-
@IF117xx]er similar intangible property rights.
@IF117xx]
(i) PERSONAL HOLDING COMPANY STATUS. An almost univer-
sal problem for such incorporated businesses is
that if they generate the bulk of their revenues
in the form of royalties they will often find it
difficult to avoid being categorized by the IRS as
"personal holding companies" and thus their cor-
poration will become potentially subject to a 28%
penalty tax on any undistributed "personal holding
company income" it earns each year. Paying out
dividends to avoid the penalty tax will still re-
sult in double taxation, since the shareholder
will pay tax on the dividends, often at the same
28% rate (or perhaps even 31% or slightly more).
The PHC (personal holding company) rules in the
tax law were originally intended to keep individ-
uals from sheltering personal service income and
income from passive sources (such as oil and gas
royalties or investment income) by using corpor-
ations to avoid the much higher individual tax
rates that once existed. Despite the fact that
corporate tax rates are now higher than individ-
ual rates, and that the PHC provisions were not
targeted at actively conducted businesses, the
Congress has not bothered to repeal this obso-
lete and grotesquely complex section of the tax
code.
Thus, many actively conducted businesses, such
as software development companies, are potential
victims of this archaic law if they operate as C
corporations, if more than 60% of their "adjusted
ordinary gross income" is PHC income (such as
royalties) and if over 50% of the stock of the
company is owned by five or fewer shareholders.
Larger, widely-held corporations do not need to
be concerned about PHC status.
(With S corporations now able to have up to 35
shareholders, S corporation elections may make
more sense than ever for such companies, where
they need to operate in corporate form. S cor-
porations are not subject to the PHC tax. How-
ever, note that S status is not available if
there is more than one class of stock--other
than common with different voting rights--or if
any shareholder is a corporation or partnership,
which would rule out most venture capital com-
panies as investors.)
The Tax Reform Act of 1986 provided some limited
relief for software companies that license, rath-
er than sell, their software, but several require-
ments must be met:
. The corporation earning the royalties
(or a predecessor) must have developed
or manufactured the software from which
it receives royalties in connection
with its trade or business;
. Such royalties must be at least 50% of
the company's "ordinary gross income"
for the taxable year;
. Certain types of business expense de-
ductions must be at least 25% of ordin-
ary gross income for the year (or, al-
ternatively, this test can be based on
an average for the last 5 years); and
. Dividends must be paid by the corpora-
tion, to the extent that other types of
PHC income exceed 10% of ordinary gross
income for the year.
Not all software companies will be able to meet all
of these requirements. Therefore, various strate-
gies may need to be pursued, such as diluting the
percentage of PHC income (below the 60% threshold)
by generating significant active income from sales
of software, services and other means; by diluting
control of the company's stock so that no 5 share-
holders own over 50%; by disincorporating (which
can result in substantial income tax upon liqui-
dation); by paying out most PHC income as divi-
dends; or by electing to become an S corporation,
where this is feasible.
Creative professionals such as individual authors
who receive book royalties will find the PHC rules
even more difficult to cope with, and should, there-
fore, avoid putting their royalty income in a C cor-
poration, if the royalties will be a major source of
income for the corporation.
(ii) TAX ON VALUE OF ROYALTY RIGHTS IN LIQUIDATION. An
author of books or software or holder of valuable
patents who wishes to place the rights to income
from such intellectual property in a corporation
and avoid the personal holding company tax may be
able to elect S corporation status and escape that
particular trap. However, if future law changes or
other factors cause you to want to remove such
rights from the corporation, you will find that you
may incur a substantial tax on liquidating the cor-
poration, based on the value of those rights (plus
any other assets) you receive upon liquidation.
For example, if your corporation receives $100,000
a year in royalties from books you have written,
the IRS may value that right at several hundred
thousand dollars, on which you will pay tax NOW if
you liquidate the corporation, even if you receive
no cash from this "exchange" with which to pay the
tax. Obviously, this would be a major tax disaster,
perhaps resulting in a six-figure tax liability,
just for putting the royalty contract in a corpor-
ation and taking it back out again!
In most cases, this writer is of the opinion that you will
be better off receiving any software, book or patent royal-
ties as a sole proprietor, rather than incorporating. Since
such income will ordinarily be "earned" income, you will
have to pay self-employment tax on it, but you may also set
up Keogh pension or profit sharing plans (or both) for your-
self to shelter a healthy percentage of any such royalties
from income tax. For example, with a simple pair of Keogh
plans, a profit sharing plan and a money purchase pension
plan, you can set aside, with a current tax deduction, up
to 20% of your pre-tax earned income (or potentially even
more with a more complex "defined benefit plan").
┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│BOTTOM LINE RECOMMENDATION: DON'T INCORPORATE IF YOU ARE│
│AN INDIVIDUAL WRITER, INVENTOR OR SOFTWARE DEVELOPER WHO│
│WILL BE RECEIVING ROYALTY INCOME---DOING SO WILL OFTEN BE│
│A VICIOUS TAX TRAP. FOR SOFTWARE COMPANIES WITH MULTIPLE│
│OWNERS WHO FEEL THEY NEED TO INCORPORATE FOR NON-TAX REA-│
│SONS, BE AWARE THAT YOU MUST DO CAREFUL PLANNING TO AVOID│
│THE PERSONAL HOLDING COMPANY TAX, A TRAP FOR THE UNWARY.│
└─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘