I previously blogged the tax consequences of another giveaway on the October 30 Oprah Winfrey Show:
Every member of Oprah’s audience is going home with a $1,000 Bank of America debit card and a Sony DVD Handycam…but there’s a catch. Oprah is challenging more than 300 audience members to donate their money to a charitable cause… The audience members can’t spend their money on family members, and they’ll be videotaping their stories for a future show. They only have one week to come up with a plan for their money!
I noted that "[t]he tax consequences seem straighforward — income to each recipient ($1,000, plus fmv of the Handycam), along with a $1,000 charitable deduction to the extent the $1,000 is given to a qualifying charitable organization." This month’s "Shop Talk" column in the Journal of Taxation by Sheldon I. Banoff (Katten, Muchin Zavis Rosenman, Chicago) & Richard L. Lipton (Baker & McKenzie, Chicago) takes a much more detailed look at the tax consequences of the arrangement, including:
- Is the receipt of the $1,000 debit card income to the recipients?
- Does the constructive receipt doctrine apply to the receipt of the debit card?
- Do the conditions on the use of the debit card mean that there is no income opon receipt?
- Should the debit card be treated as a nontaxable prize?
- If the receipt of the debit card is not treated as income, is there income upon the usage of the card?
- If so, does the usage of the card for the benefit of a charity generate a charitable deduction (which may not make an audience member whole)?
- Would the use of a the card for the benefit of a needy individual foreclose a charitable deduction? Would it be treated as a taxable gift?
- Must the recipients report as income the fmv of the DVD recorders?
- Can Bank of America deduct the payments under section 162?
- Does Bank of America have reporting obligations with respect to the payments to the audience members?




