A Defining Moment-Brokerage Trade or Business - Ed Zollars - a podcast by steve@leimbergservices.com

from 2009-03-07T03:42:29

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This PodCast is about the distinction between "active" and "passive" activity. The IRS has shown recent interest in disputing whether real estate agents meet the requirements to be treated as real estate professionals that can use the rules of "409(c)(7) to treat rental real estate under the standard passive activity rules rather than having such items automatically treated as passive. The IRS position is that since the law refers to a "brokerage" trade or business and such individuals generally are not licensed as real estate brokers, they cannot qualify.



In the case of Agarwal v. Commissioner, TC Summary 2009-29, the Tax Court did not agree with the IRS on that matter, instead allowing the taxpayer, who was a real estate agent who worked as an independent contractor under contract with a licensed brokerage firm, to qualify for "409(c)(7) treatment.

The podcast also discusses a 2007 case where it was the IRS who was (successfully) arguing that you can't use state law licensing definitions when the issue was whether an bookkeeping and tax preparation firm that was not licensed as a CPA firm was a personal service corporation.

In both of these cases, the Tax Court found that under the IRC we would look to the commonly understood definition of the terms, and that state licensing definitions did not control.



Materials for this podcast can be found at http://www.edzollars.com/2009-03-09_RealEstate.pdf .




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