
S Corporations: Eligibility and Election
Before the advent of
limited liability companies (“LLCs”) in the 1990s, it was not unusual for a
limited partnership to have as its sole general partner an “S corporation,”[1] the shareholders of which corporation
were the limited partners themselves. This had the effect of not only providing
a limited liability shield for all of the owners of a given business venture,[2] it provided “pass-through”
treatment for all of the business venture’s profit and loss, as well. This is
because, despite its name, an “S corporation” is not a “corporation” at all, at
least not in the sense that it is subject to the corporate income tax of
section 11 of the Internal Revenue Code.[3] Instead, an S corporation
is more like a partnership, at least for income tax purposes, with all of the
income, gain, deductions, losses, and credits that the S corporation recognizes
“passing through” and being taxed directly to the shareholders themselves.[4]
Any eligible U.S.
corporation (and even some non-corporate entities like LLCs) can make the
election to become an S corporation. So long as there are not more than 100
shareholders, all of whom must, essentially, be natural persons, and so long as
the corporation issues only a “single class of stock,” the election may be made
at any time, including from the moment of the corporation’s existence.
Pass-through
Tax Treatment
The hallmark of C
corporations is that their income is taxed twice: once under section 11 when
the corporation recognizes the income, then again when that income (net of the
corporate tax) is distributed (i.e., paid) to the corporation’s shareholders,
typically in the form of taxable dividends. By electing to be an S corporation,
this double-taxation is avoided, with the shareholders themselves recognizing
directly all of the S corporation’s taxable income. This makes the S
corporation a “tax accounting” entity as opposed to a “taxpaying” entity. That
is to say, the S corporation must still account for its own gross income, its
deductions, and so on at the corporate level, but then it passes those items
through to its shareholders who themselves pay the resulting tax. Indeed,
except for a few specific circumstances,[5] an S corporation itself is
never subject to any federal income tax.[6]
As with partnerships,
the character of the S corporation’s
tax items is maintained as they are passed through to the shareholders.[7] This means, for example,
that if the S corporation recognizes ordinary business income, then so do the
shareholders (in their “distributive shares” of that income). Similarly, if the
S corporation recognizes long-term capital gain or interest income or a section
179 deduction, then so do the shareholders (again, in their distributive
shares) recognize long-term capital gain, interest income, and a section 179
deduction. Importantly, essentially only individuals (that is, natural persons)
can be shareholders of an S corporation, as we will see below, and accordingly
an S corporation must account for its income, deductions, etc. “in the same
manner as in the case of an individual.”[8] Thus while the S
corporation must be a “domestic corporation” in order to be eligible to make
the S election in the first place, it is otherwise not a “corporation” at all,
at least not for tax purposes.
Unlike partnerships,
the pass-through income of an S corporation must be allocated among the
shareholders strictly pro rata according to their stock ownership.[9] Thus a shareholder who
owns 50% of an S corporation’s stock must personally take into account 50% of
each item of S corporation income, deduction, etc. On the one hand this makes
an S corporation an inflexible mechanism for allocating income among a business
venture’s owners. Partners in a partnership, for example, can allocate their
venture’s items of income and deduction amongst themselves in almost any way
they see fit.[10]
On the other hand, with only one possible allocation scheme Subchapter S has
little in the way of the immense complexities that can be found in Subchapter
K,[11] and this relative
simplicity can make the S corporation an attractive alternative for many
taxpayers.
Making
the Election
Any “small business
corporation” may make the election to become an S corporation. We will look at
what a “small business corporation” is below. Before we get to that let’s focus
on the election itself.
First of all, all of
the shareholders of the S corporation must consent to the election.[12] This is sensible inasmuch
as it is the shareholders who will, after the effective date of the election,
be responsible for any income tax that may arise with respect to the S
corporation’s earning. The election is made by filing with the Internal Revenue
Service Form 2553, Election by a Small
Business Corporation. In addition to the vital details of the corporation
itself (i.e., its federal employer identification number, the date of its
incorporation, its address, etc.), all of the shareholders’ information must
also be included on the election form, including their Social Security numbers
and the percentage of stock in the corporation that they own.
The election can be
made for any tax year, though once made it is effective for all subsequent tax
years unless it is voluntarily or involuntarily terminated. If the election is
for a future tax year the election can be made at any time prior to that
effective year.[13]
If the election is for the current tax year, however, or if it is to be
immediately effective, then the election must be made by the fifteenth day of the S corporation’s third month.[14] Thus, for an S
corporation with a calendar tax year (i.e., a tax year ending December 31), the
election for the first S corporation tax year must be made by March 15 of that
tax year.[15]
The
“Small Business Corporation”
As mentioned above, any
“small business corporation” can elect to be an S corporation. The word “small”
here does not refer to the amount of the corporation’s earnings or the value of
its assets. Rather, “small” refers to the limitation on the number of eligible
shareholders (i.e., 100). The S corporation itself can really be of any size in
terms of its earnings and wealth.
Specifically, a “small
business corporation” is (1) an eligible domestic corporation that (2) has
a single class of stock and (3) 100 or fewer shareholders who (4) are natural
persons (or certain estates or trusts) and who (5) are residents of the United States.
(1) Eligible domestic corporation. A “domestic”
corporation is an entity that qualifies as a “corporation” and which was organized
in a U.S. jurisdiction. Foreign—i.e., non-U.S.—corporations cannot make an S
election, therefore. Certain types of corporations, such as some financial
institutions and insurance companies, also do not qualify.[16] Interestingly, however,
the term “corporation” can refer to an entity like an LLC that has made an
election under Reg. § 301.7701-2 (the “check-the-box” regulation) to be considered a corporation. Once that
election is made by an entity like an LLC, it is considered a “corporation” for
all federal tax purposes, including for the purpose of making an S election,
and thus an LLC can be an “S corporation.”
(2) A single class of stock. Recall that the shareholders of an S
corporation must take into account their pro rata shares of their S
corporation’s taxable income, etc. This is a rigid allocation rule with no
possibility of variation. The single class of stock requirement is consistent
with this rule, requiring that all of the shares of stock of an S corporation
have identical rights to distributions and the proceeds of liquidation.[17] Note that non-pro rata
distributions among the shareholders (e.g., a 50% shareholder receiving more or
less than 50% of the cash distributions in any given year) can be considered as
creating a second class of stock and thereby automatically terminate the S
corporation’s S election.
(3) No more than 100 shareholders. When originally
passed into law Subchapter S allowed only 10 shareholders. This was later
increased to 35 and then increased again to 100, suggesting that the concept of
a “small” corporation has evolved over the decades. The rules for determining
what a “shareholder” is for purposes of the 100-shareholder rule are beyond the
scope of this article. However, a husband and wife are generally considered one
shareholder,[18]
while stock held by a partnership as the nominee for its partners will mean
that each partner will be considered an individual shareholder in the S
corporation.[19]
(4) Only individuals (and their trusts and estates). As mentioned above,
an S corporation is a tax accounting entity (rather than a taxpaying entity)
that tracks its income, etc. “in the manner of an individual.” Consistently,
only individuals—that is, natural persons—can be S corporation shareholders. Corporations and partnerships (including LLCs) cannot be, except as
nominees for an individual. Individuals do (unfortunately) die, however, thus
the trust or estate of a deceased shareholder can hold S corporation stock during
the time it takes to settle the decedent’s estate.
(5) No nonresident aliens. As the income, deductions, etc. of an
S corporation pass through to its shareholders to be recognized directly by
them on their personal returns it should go without saying that those
individuals should be U.S. taxpayers. If some portion of an S corporation’s
earnings were allocated to a nonresident, non-U.S. taxpaying shareholder, then
that portion of those earnings would escape U.S. taxation. Accordingly, only
U.S.-taxpaying individuals may own stock in an S corporation.
[1] Section 1361(a)(1) of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the “Code” or “IRC”), provides that the term
“S corporation” means any “small business corporation” that has properly made
the election to be subject to Subchapter S. Subsection (a)(2) in turn provides
that any corporation that has not made the election is instead a “C
corporation” as any such non-electing corporation is instead subject to
Subchapter C.
[2] In a limited partnership there must
always be one “general partner” with unlimited liability. By making a
corporation the general partner, however, that “unlimited” liability is, in
effect, limited to the corporation itself, with the corporation’s shareholders
enjoying limited liability from the corporate general partner’s creditors. If this
corporation’s only activity is its management of the limited partnership, then
its only creditors would be the creditors of that limited partnership, and if
the corporate general partner’s shareholders are the same persons who are the
limited partners of the limited partnership, then, in effect, all of the
business venture’s owners will have limited liability protection. Today the
same limited liability protection for all of a business venture’s owners can be
achieved simply by engaging in the business venture via an LLC.
[3] See
IRC § 1363(a).
[4] IRC § 1366(a)(1).
[5] An S corporation can become liable for
a corporate-level tax on its “recognized built-in gains” (IRC § 1374). This
rule prevents a C corporation from making an S election immediately prior to
liquidating its assets and thereby avoiding having to pay a corporate tax on
the resulting gain. Under section 1374, an S corporation will be liable for a
corporate-level tax on any gains it recognizes during the 10-year period
following its S election, but only if those gains were accrued but as yet
unrealized (that is, built-in) as of the date of the election. A newly formed
corporation that immediately makes an S election is still subject to section
1374, but because it will have no assets at the moment of its formation there
will be no built-in gain. The very next section of the Code, section 1375, also
imposes a corporate-level tax on an S corporation, but only if the S
corporation has “accumulated earnings & profits,” or “E&P.” E&P is
the account that all C corporations maintain to track the amount of income it
has recognized and paid a corporate-level (section 11) tax on. As S
corporations are not subject to the section 11 tax an S corporation will never
accumulate E&P. However, a corporation might operate as a C corporation for
several years, accumulating E&P all the while, and thereafter make an S
election. Section 1375 provides that if this newly-elected S corporation fails
to distribute that E&P (and thereby trigger a taxable dividend to its
shareholders), but instead retains those earnings and invests them in some
passive activities, a corporate-level tax is imposed as if the E&P had
actually been distributed.
[6] S corporations can be subject to state income tax, however. In
California, for example, an S corporation must pay a 1.5% tax on its net income
with an $800 “minimum franchise tax” due annually whether the S corporation has
net income or not. Moreover, if an S corporation is an employer it may be
subject to certain federal payroll taxes, such as FICA, on the wages it pays to
its employees.
[7] IRC § 1366(b).
[8] IRC § 1363(b).
[9] IRC §§ 1366(a), 1377(a).
[10] See
IRC § 704(a) (providing that the distributive shares of the partners of a
partnership shall be determined by the partners’ agreement).
[11] The “substantial economic effect” rules
governing section 704(b) (Treas. Reg. § 1.704-1 et seq.), for example, are
probably some of the most complex and difficult to implement rules to be found
anywhere in the tax law.
[12] IRC § 1362(a)(2).
[13] IRC § 1362(b)(1)(A).
[14] IRC § 1362(b)(1)(B).
[15] The IRS is surprisingly lenient with
this rule, however, and late elections are relatively simple to remedy. Indeed,
the election form itself has room to explain a late election and request
effectiveness despite the untimeliness of an election’s filing. See Box H, Form 2553.
[16] IRC § 1361(b)(2).
[17] See
Treas. Reg. § 1.1361-1(l)(1).
[18] IRC § 1361(c)(1);
Treas. Reg. § 1.1361-1(e)(2).
[19] Treas. Reg. §
1.1361-1(e)(1).