Many business owners choose to acquire and operate their businesses with partners. This allows them to divide the responsibilities and share the risks and the rewards.
But what happens when one business partner falls behind on their federal taxes? Could the tax-compliant partner’s share of the business and business assets be at risk? Can the IRS seize and sell the tax-compliant partner’s assets? Can the IRS do this even if it effectively terminates the business?
The IRS has broad collection powers when it comes to delinquent taxes. Few realize that these powers can extend beyond the delinquent taxpayer to innocent third parties who own property jointly with the taxpayer, such as a business partner. While the law provides a remedy for spouses who file jointly and own joint property, there is no such remedy for business partners who are not spouses.
The recent decision in United States v. Driscoll, Civil Action 18-11762 (RK) (RLS) (D.N.J. Jan. 6, 2025), provides an opportunity to consider what business owners need to know to protect themselves in this situation.
Facts & Procedural History
The case involved a dental practice in New Jersey that was operated by two dentists. The dental practice was operated as an LLC formed under state law. Each of the dentists owned a 50 percent interest in the dental practice. They also both owned a 50 percent interest in the office building in which the dental practice operated.
One of the dentists failed to pay federal income taxes for nearly a decade. He owed approximately $500,000 in back taxes. The IRS eventually filed tax liens against the taxpayer’s property interests and filed suit to force the sale of both the entire dental practice LLC and the entire office building.
The innocent business partner did not owe back taxes and had no tax liability. He opposed the forced sale. He argued that forcing him to sell his interests would require him to close his practice, lay off employees, and abandon his patient relationships. The business partner offered alternative solutions, such as allowing the IRS to sell only the taxpayer’s 50 percent interests or using a charging order against the taxpayer’s LLC interest.
The IRS rejected the partner’s proposals and asked the court to force the sale of the entire dental practice LLC and the entire interest in the real estate.
The Authority to Force Property Sales
The IRS’s power to collect delinquent taxes starts with Section 6321 of the tax code. This law allows the IRS to place a lien on “all property and rights to property” belonging to a delinquent taxpayer. This law has a very broad scope. It covers virtually any property interest the taxpayer owns, from real estate to business interests to financial accounts. The IRS lien can even reach certain trust assets, but maybe not if the trust is structured properly.
The filing of the IRS lien notice itself is not a high hurdle for the IRS. The lien notice is just a pre-printed form that is filed into the public records and mailed to the taxpayer’s last known address. The IRS files these in bulk with the various county clerks and secretary of state’s offices across the country. This is all that is required for the lien to be “filed.”
Once a lien notice has been filed, Section 7403 gives the IRS the authority to ask a court to force the sale of property to satisfy the unpaid tax debt. As relevant in this case, this authority extends beyond just the taxpayer’s interest. The court can order the sale of the entire property. This is true even when innocent third parties own portions of the property.
Notably, the statute uses the word “may” in describing the court’s powers. This opens the door for the courts to have some discretion in whether to order the foreclosure and sale of property.
The Rodgers Factor Analysis
Recognizing the potential harshness of forced sales on innocent co-owners, the Supreme Court established a factor test for the courts to consider in determining whether a forced sale is appropriate. These factors are set out in United States v. Rodgers, 461 U.S. 677 (1983) and have come to be known as the Rodgers factors.
The Rodgers factors say that the courts must consider four key factors in deciding whether to allow the IRS to foreclose on jointly-owned property:
- Financial prejudice to the government if limited to selling only the taxpayer’s interest
- Whether the innocent owner would expect their interest to be protected from a forced sale
- Prejudice to the innocent owner, including practical and personal costs
- The relative value and character of the liable and non-liable interests
In practice, courts tend to focus heavily on whether there’s a realistic market for selling just the taxpayer’s interest. If selling a partial interest would significantly reduce the sale price or make finding a buyer difficult, courts are more likely to order a complete sale.
In this case, the court found almost all of the factors in supported selling the entire dental practice LLC and the entire real estate in which it operated. The court reasoned that there was no market for buying a partial interest in these assets and, surprisingly, that there was no harm to the innocent taxpayer as he would receive payment for his interests.
Charging Order vs. Section 7403 Forced Sale
To understand this case, we also have to consider the difference between a charging order and the IRS’s Section 7403 forced sale power.
The innocent partner in this case argued that the proper remedy was a charging order. The reason why he did that was that a charging order is a more limited remedy that:
- Only redirects distributions/profits from the LLC to the creditor
- Leaves the LLC ownership structure intact
- Does not give the creditor management rights
- Is typically the exclusive remedy available to private creditors under state LLC laws
- Preserves the business as a going concern
In contrast, Section 7403 allows the IRS to:
- Force the sale of the entire business and property
- Extinguish all ownership interests
- Override state law limitations
- Terminate the business entirely
- Convert all interests to cash proceeds
So while a charging order just diverts profits, Section 7403 allows the IRS to completely liquidate the business–a much more severe remedy that reflects the IRS’s unique collection powers under federal law.
The court in this case directly addressed this distinction. It rejected the innocent partner’s argument that a charging order should be used. The court explained that while state law limits regular creditors to charging orders, the IRS’s power under Section 7403 “does not arise out of its privileges as an ordinary creditor, but out of the express terms of § 7403.”
Application of Favorable State Law
Given this outcome, you may be wondering whether simply choosing a different state to form the LLC may have produced a different result for the LLC interest.
While some states (like Nevada or Wyoming) have stronger charging order protections for LLCs, the court in in this case made clear that state law protections don’t bind the IRS when it’s pursuing collection under Section 7403. The court explicitly stated that “neither New Jersey law nor the IRS manual binds the Court in this case” and that while state law defines the underlying property interests, “the consequences that attach to those interests is a matter left to federal law.”
So while favorable LLC jurisdictions might provide protection against private creditors, they might not prevent the IRS from forcing a sale of the entire business under Section 7403 when pursuing a tax-delinquent partner.
Adding Protections in Legal Agreements
This does not mean that business partners are without options. Partners can take several steps to protect themselves when drafting their partnership agreements and maybe even in real estate deeds.
For partnership agreements, partners can include several protective provisions. First, they can require all partners to maintain tax compliance and provide periodic proof, such as tax transcripts or certificates of compliance from taxing authorities. Second, they can include buyout rights that give non-delinquent partners the first opportunity to purchase a tax-delinquent partner’s interest before the IRS pursues collection (whether the delinquent partner is dead or live at the time or going through a divorce). These provisions should clearly specify both the triggering events and the process for exercising the buyout rights. Third, the agreement can establish specific valuation methods for partnership interests, such as predetermined formulas or procedures for obtaining third-party valuations. Having these valuation methods in place helps avoid disputes and expedites any necessary buyouts.
For real estate deeds, the parties can include contingent interests that automatically revert ownership back to the non-delinquent partner upon specific trigger events, such as tax liens being filed against the property. The deed can specify that each owner’s interest is conditioned upon maintaining tax compliance, with a reversionary right in favor of the other owner if this condition is breached. There are court cases with varying fact patterns where taxpayers have prevailed over the IRS by changing the real estate filings. There are other cases where transfers failed. While the effectiveness of such provisions against the IRS is uncertain, they may provide additional leverage in negotiations or court proceedings.
These protections must be established before any tax problems arise. Attempting to add these protections after tax issues exist could be viewed as an improper attempt to avoid collection. The IRS even has tools available to it for this circumstance too, including its right to pursue the innocent partner using the transferee liability statutes and, in more egregious cases, even criminal penalties.
The Takeaway
Business owners should understand that their business partner’s tax problems can directly affect their own interests in joint property. This is true even if one partner has done nothing wrong. To protect against this the partners may consider including provisions in partnership agreements that require partners to maintain tax compliance, give other partners rights to buy out a delinquent partner’s interest, and establish valuation methods for partner buyouts. Business partners might also benefit from adding language to real estate deeds for this contingency.

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