Backgammon is an ancient game of dice, strategy, and skill. The name
dates back to the 1600s, but the game itself goes back to the Byzantine
Emperor Zeno (AD 476-481). While it's never been as popular here as
poker or chess, it became a huge fad in the 1960s, with Playboy founder
Hugh Hefner hosting high-profile games at his Chicago mansion.
John McManus is an Irish gambler who started out taking bets at a
greyhound track before moving up to horses and currency trading. He's
parlayed his initial stake of four pounds into a €775 million fortune,
enough to make him the Emerald Isle's eighth-richest man.
Alec Gores is a private equity mogul worth $2.1 billion who lives in a
$31 million chateau just down the street from home-run king Barry
Bonds. Gores has wagered millions in Hollywood poker games with
celebrities like Tobey Maguire, Ben Affleck, and Matt Damon. He's not
afraid to color a bit outside the lines, and drew fire for hiring a
shady Hollywood private eye to wiretap his brother and former wife to
confirm that they had become "inappropriately involved."
What do backgammon, McManus, and Gores have in common? Well, both men
are backgammon fanatics. In fact, McManus famously travels with a
portable set, and he's been known to start games with strangers on
airplanes to win back his airfare. (Seriously, the guy flies commercial?
What a peasant.)
In 2012, McManus and Gores sat down for "a serious backgammon match." When the dust settled, three days later, the luck of the Irish had prevailed and McManus had taken $17.4 million from the billionaire. "You always feel good after winning," McManus quipped to The Independent
after his score. (Gores may be a billionaire and all, but it still had
to feel a bit like waking up in a bathtub full of ice with a sore back
and a hollow spot where a kidney used to be.)
Here's why we're talking about the story today. Gambling winnings are
taxable, of course — at least here in the U.S. So Gores "helpfully"
withheld $5.2 million of the Irishman's score and forwarded it to the
IRS.
But McManus says he doesn't owe the tax. He stakes his claim on a
treaty between the U.S. and Ireland, signed in 1997, designed to prevent
double taxation. That treaty lets certain wealthy Irish residents avoid
tax on U.S. income in favor of a flat "domicile levy" of €200,000 on
their non-Irish income.
McManus filed a U.S. nonresident tax return and requested his $5.2
million back. He says the IRS approved that claim before sending it "to
another department" for review. Since then, he hasn't heard a word. So
now he's filed suit in the U.S. Court of Federal Claims. The IRS replies
that McManus didn't qualify as an Irish resident under the terms of the
treaty, and didn't even file an Irish tax return for that year. They
have until October 30 to respond to the suit, so we'll have to wait until then to learn what happens next.
Here are a couple of lessons to ponder while the case makes its way
through the system. First, don't sit down for a high-stakes gamble
without knowing your opponent! And second, don't let the IRS catch you
by surprise. Navigating the tax game board without a plan is a gamble you don't want to take! Come to us so you don't have to leave your fortune to a toss of the dice.
No comments:
Post a Comment