Law Offices of Robert J. Ross

Attorneys Robert J. Ross and Lehn G. Shepherd
Reach us at (847) 358-5757 or info@robertjross.com

The Law Offices of Robert J. Ross provides personalized legal services to address needs and concerns of our clients. Robert Ross draws upon 30 years of legal experience and his team of legal professionals to counsel and draft documents designed to avoid future conflicts and minimize long-term costs for clients.

We serve clients in the following areas of law:

Estate Planning
We prepare enforceable, personalized wills, trusts and other documents to address each client’s personal situation, planning for a variety of scenarios.
More information on Estate Planning
Estate Administration
We represent trustees and executors to carry out the final wishes of the deceased, attempt to minimize the need for Probate Court, and avoid family conflicts regarding inheritances and other matters.
More information on Estate Administration
Business and Commercial Law
We counsel and represent clients establishing, running, buying and selling businesses. We work to protect client’s personal assets, when possible, counseling clients to maximize protections under the law.
More information Business and Commercial

Contact us for a no-obligation initial consultation.

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Business Loans Cannot Reduce Estate Taxes

A section of the federal Internal Revenue Code authorizes estate tax deductions for qualifying interests in family-owned businesses. For the deduction to apply, the value of the interest in the business held by a person at the time of his or her death must exceed 50% of the total value of the person’s adjusted gross estate. This is known as the “50% liquidity test.”

Probably on the basis of creative, but dubious, tax advice, each of the estates of a husband and wife claimed deductions under this provision of over $600,000, based on loans made to a family-owned corporation. The question thus arose as to whether an “interest” in the business entity includes a loan made to that entity. Only if there was an affirmative answer to this question could the deduction apply. Unfortunately for the two estates, the U.S. Tax Court and then a federal appeals court answered in the negative.

The federal appeals court conceded that. in a very loose sense, a person who loans money to a business has an interest in the business, but only in that he or she looks to the business to repay the debt. When Congress used the words “interest in an entity” in the deduction provision, it meant that the person whose estate is claiming the deduction has an ownership interest in the entity. In the court’s words, “it strains common understanding to say that a person holds an interest in an entity merely because he or she is a creditor of that entity.”