|

Attorney Client Alert:
The Pitfalls of Qualified Settlement Funds
in Single Plaintiff Cases
by Martin Jacobson, Esq., General Counsel, Creative Capital Inc.
This is offered to Creative Capital Inc.'s (CCI) clients, counsel (involved
in prior and existing cases which CCI handled), and colleagues at the Bench
and Bar as an alert regarding the potential tax risk associated with single
plaintiff (or single family) Qualified Settlement Funds [or trusts] (QSF) under
Internal Revenue Code Section 468(B).
The Concept
Create a QSF in a case where the plaintiff attorney desires to obtain a structured
settlement for his/her client. Pursuant to court order (required) 100% of the
funds paid by the defendant are deposited into the QSF. The defendant receives
a complete release and has no further involvement. The plaintiff's attorney,
using the plaintiff's structured settlement broker, then "negotiates"
the terms of the structured settlement with the trustee of the QSF. The trustee,
acting on behalf of the QSF, enters into a Qualified Assignment transferring
the future payment obligation to a Qualified Assignee, just as in a vanilla
structured settlement where the defendant assigns its future payment obligation
to a Qualified Assignee. The plaintiff ends up with the same structured settlement
he/she would have had, but the plaintiff's broker gets all the commission and
does not need defense cooperation.
The Risk
Like many things in life that sound too good to be true, so too may be this.
If the plaintiff is audited in the future by the IRS and loses the tax-free
advantages of a proper structured settlement, the plaintiff will owe back taxes,
interest and penalties on the interest portion of every payment he/she has received.
The now failed structured settlement would be treated in exactly the same way
as an ordinary (tax deferred, but not tax-free) annuity purchased by a plaintiff
who settled for cash. However, interest and penalties will also be applied for
back taxes owed unless the audit took place immediately after settlement (not
a likely occurrence). On even a moderate size case (several hundred thousand
dollars into the structure), the back taxes, interest and penalties (to say
nothing of the cost of defending a potentially indefensible audit) would threaten
to wipe out the settlement. (I leave the discussion of potential legal malpractice
claims to another time.)
Why There is Risk
First, there is no question that 468(B) may be used in single plaintiff cases.
However, the real question is whether a single plaintiff QSF may enter into
a structured settlement with the plaintiff and execute a Qualified Assignment
under Internal Revenue Code (Code) section 130 (c).
For purposes of this memo, suffice it to say that I believe that a QSF (trustee)
acting as an assignor under Code section 130(c) may have rights equal to, but
no greater than, the original defendant. In other words, if the defendant cannot
execute a Qualified Assignment under Code section 130(c), then neither may the
QSF.
In 1983 the IRS was asked whether knowledge of the cost of a structured settlement
would deprive a plaintiff of the tax benefits provided by such a settlement.
The IRS answered in the negative stating that having knowledge only is ok, but
that having the unqualified availability of the cost of the annuity would deprive
the plaintiff of the tax free advantages of a structured settlement. Hence,
if a settlement were documented on the record in court as follows: "case
settled for $500,000 - plaintiff to let defendant know how much, if any, of
the $500,000 he wants to structure and how much he wants to take in a single
lump sum" it is too late to do a structured settlement. Why? Because the
plaintiff had the unqualified right to take the cash. Knowledge is ok. Availability
is not!
By analogy, in a single plaintiff 468(B) QSF, the plaintiff knows exactly how
much is unqualifiedly available to him/her. There is no dispute with other unrelated
plaintiffs (who have competing interests) who are claiming entitlement to the
same settlement dollars [the real reason for the existence of Code section 468(B)].
To conclude that the QSF (trustee) may enter into a Qualified Assignment in
these circumstances leads to the inescapable (and unsupportable) conclusion
that the QSF has the ability to do what the defendant itself cannot do i.e.
enter into a Qualified Assignment notwithstanding the fact that the plaintiff
had the unqualified right to take everything in cash.
The Search for Disputes
The attempted solution in single plaintiff QSF cases has been to search for
and identify purported disputes. Are liens in issue? How much of a quantified
settlement a spouse will get on his derivative claim, as opposed to his wife
who wants a structure, but cannot determine the net amount available, and other
disputes which the IRS will likely claim are feigned, are among the techniques
currently being used by some structured settlement brokers to justify the QSF.
However, the IRS need not and likely will not accept any of these "disputes"
and, in my opinion, will likely reject them all.
Economic Benefit Doctrine Violation
If the economic benefit doctrine has been triggered (thus charging the plaintiff
or the plaintiff family with having received the economic benefit of the cost
of the settlement), it is too late to accomplish a structured settlement (with
or without a qualified assignment). Hence, if there is only one claimant, an
ipso facto prior allocation exists at the time of the creation of the
Qualified Settlement Fund, since all of the money is paid on behalf of the sole
claimant. This prior allocation would trigger economic benefit and thus taxation
on the gain, and an inability to do a Qualified Assignment, under the requirement
that all of the periodic payments must be entirely excludable, pursuant to IRC
130(c)(2)(D).
Further, if the plaintiffs have already agreed among themselves on the allocation
of the settlement proceeds prior to creation of the QSF - or where that allocation
is determined by statute or by court precedent as it often is in death cases
(e.g. New York State's Kaiser formula), a structured settlement may not
be "negotiated" with a QSF. A plaintiff who manipulates a structured
settlement under such circumstances does so at his/her own peril. So too, plaintiff's
counsel who moves the court for the establishment of a QSF to steer the structure
to his/her own broker imperils not only the plaintiff, but also himself/herself,
if the plaintiff is ultimately audited by the IRS and is found to owe taxes,
interest and penalties on a structured settlement that would have been tax free
if only it had been accepted when offered by the defense.
Position of Life Companies
Many major life carriers will not accept an assignment under Section 130 of
the Internal Revenue Code from a Section 468(B) Qualified Settlement Fund (QSF)
if there is a single claimant or single claimant family. Important issues of
allocation and economic benefit preclude them from accepting assignments on
single claimant 468(B) funds.
Conclusion
Until there is a definitive ruling by the IRS, single plaintiff (and single
plaintiff family) QSFs should be avoided. If the defense has offered to negotiate
a structured settlement, every effort should be made to work with the defense
consultant, in a spirit of cooperation with plaintiff's broker, to achieve a
settlement that is satisfactory to all. This will accomplish the defendant's
goal of settling the case and closing the file and the plaintiff's goal of achieving
a tax-free and risk free structured settlement.
back to top
|