Plaintiffs In Sexual Harassment Cases Are Taxed, Defendants Are Not

Taxes

Tax issues arise in nearly every sexual harassment settlement. In employment settings, some of the money is usually wages with taxes withheld. But most other money is for emotional distress and taxable too, on an IRS Form 1099. If you make claims for emotional distress, your damages are taxable. If you claim the defendant caused you physical injuries or caused you to become physically sick, damages may be tax free. But most sexual harassment plaintiffs will have a hard time doing that. The plaintiff does not necessarily need to prove that the defendant caused the sickness, but needs to show that she claimed that. In addition, the plaintiff needs to show that the defendant was aware of the claim and considered it in making payment.

To prove physical sickness, the plaintiff should have evidence of medical care, and evidence that she claimed the defendant caused or worsened the condition. The more medical evidence the better, including statements from medical professionals. Some plaintiffs claim the harassment gave them post traumatic stress disorder, and PTSD is arguably physical for tax purposes. But the IRS taxes most lawsuit settlements, exact wording matters, and taxes can make a huge difference in how much a plaintiff gets to keep after legal fees.

For business defendants, legal settlements are almost always tax deductible, as are legal fees. In fact, except for legal fees that have to be capitalized to an asset like one company buying another, or a purchase of real estate, legal fees are nearly universally deductible by businesses. Even legal fees related to clearly non-tax-deductible conduct (such as a company negotiating with the government to pay a criminal fine) can be deducted. The criminal fine might not be deductible, but the legal fees are. Even punitive damages are tax deductible for businesses, no matter how bad the conduct is. Over the last few decades, there have been several proposals in Congress to eliminate the tax deduction for punitive damages, but none has passed.

However, one thing that did pass at the end of 2017, effective starting in 2018 denies tax deductions for confidential settlements in sexual harassment or sex abuse cases. Related legal fees are also nondeductible, making the tax treatment of the legal fees here especially harsh. Section 162 of the tax code generally lists business expenses that are tax deductible. However, Section 162(q) now provides that:

“(q) PAYMENTS RELATED TO SEXUAL HAR
AR
ASSMENT AND SEXUAL ABUSE. — No deduction shall be allowed under this chapter for —(1) any settlement or payment related to sexual harassment or sexual abuse if such settlement or payment is subject to a nondisclosure agreement, or (2) attorney’s fees related to such a settlement or payment.”

The overwhelming majority of legal settlement agreements have a confidentiality or nondisclosure provision. Most legal releases understandably cover a wide range of claims, known and unknown. A defendant paying money to resolve a case wants to know that all claims will be barred, so they throw in the kitchen sink. In an employment case, even if race, gender, or age discrimination claims were not explicitly made, they will surely be covered by the settlement agreement. That raises the question whether any mention of sexual harassment claims make the settlement nondeductible? If it does, will it bar any tax deduction, even if the sexual harassment part of the case is minor?

In some cases, plaintiff and defendant agree on a particular tax allocation, attempting to limit the amount that is not deductible to the defendant. Legal settlements are routinely divvied up between claims. Plaintiffs nearly always ask for a favorable tax allocation, and the defense may have tax motivations too. The IRS is never bound by an allocation in a settlement agreement, but the IRS often respects them. So does the Tax Court, if the dispute ever gets that far. That’s why hammering out settlement agreement language is worth doing, even if it means frustration and delay. The only time either side has a chance at cooperation is when the settlement agreement isn’t yet signed. An allocation could reduce the tax exposure for both sides, so getting some tax advice can make sense.

Some defendants who want to deduct a sexual harassment settlement might be willing to forgo confidentiality entirely, or to allocate a dollar amount expressly to sexual harassment or sexual abuse. If the case is an employment case, as most sexual harassment cases are, an allocation might be more realistic for those who try to write off confidential sexual harassment settlements. But be careful, the tax law in this area is still developing, and there will probably be contested tax cases in the future where defendants wrote off all or a large part of their sexual harassment settlements and legal fees and then try to defend it.

Articles You May Like

Act now for $7,500 EV tax credit: There’s ‘real risk’ Trump will axe funding in 2025, lawyer says
Target shares plunge 20% after discounter cuts forecast, posts biggest earnings miss in two years
Thanksgiving meals are expected to be cheaper in 2024 as turkey prices drop
Citadel’s Ken Griffin says Trump’s tariffs could lead to crony capitalism
The founder of the biggest gold ETF is still bullish 20 years later

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *