Professor Rebecca Morrow at Wake Forest University Law
School has authored an interesting article, titled "Noncompetition Agreements as Tax Evasion," concerning the ubiquity of
noncompetition agreements and potentially attacking those agreements through treatment of them as tax evasion. Here is the abstract:
Al Capone famously boasted of his criminal empire: “Some call
it bootlegging. Some call it racketeering. I call it a business.” Treasury
Agent Frank Wilson and Prosecutor George Johnson put Capone behind bars not by
disputing his characterization and pursuing murder or assault or RICO charges,
but by accepting it and enforcing its tax implications. Irrespective of their
legality, Capone’s businesses were profitable, and Capone had not reported
their profits for tax purposes. A simple application of bedrock tax law
achieved what other legal routes failed to achieve and sent Capone to Alcatraz.
The trick was to see the tax argument.
Policymakers should use a similar approach to curtail the
excessive, exploitative, and anticompetitive use of employment noncompete
agreements. Currently, nearly one in five (or thirty million) American workers
is bound by an employment noncompete. Employers claim that they adequately
compensate employees for noncompete restrictions with higher wages, bigger
raises, and/or more generous bonuses. Policymakers scoff at this claim and use
contract law to attack them. Unfortunately, employment noncompetes are like Al
Capone in that they have flourished despite the law’s efforts to restrain them.
Recently, the largest study of noncompetes in U.S. history paradoxically found
that their prevalence is unaffected by their enforceability. In states like
California that refuse to enforce employment noncompetes, they are as common as
in states that uphold them. Contract law has proved ill-equipped to respond to
the pervasive, expanding, and damaging use of noncompetes.
This Article is the first to shift the focus and to argue
that employment noncompetes, as employers currently use them, constitute tax
evasion and should be attacked as such. If employers pay employees for
noncompetes through compensation, then by employers’ own account, this
compensation is not purely an expense associated with immediate benefits;
rather, it is an expenditure associated with future benefits — benefits that
the employer will enjoy years after payment. Thus, the IRS should stop allowing
employers to fully immediately deduct the compensation they pay to employees
subject to noncompetes and instead should require that an adequate portion of
total compensation be allocated to the noncompete and amortized over the
restricted period, beginning when employment ends.
The article is available,
here. [Hat tip to Professor Paul Caron's TaxProf Blog.]
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