Posted on 07/23/2012 5:15:30 AM PDT by afraidfortherepublic
This weeks winner of the you-cant-make-this-stuff-up contest is undoubtedly a front-page story in this mornings New York Times. When New York art dealer Ileana Sonnabend died in 2007, she left her children a fabulous collection of modern art valued at $1 billion. Her children have already paid $471 million in estate taxes on the collection, being forced to sell off most of it to meet the bill. (This is a beautiful example, by the way, of why estate taxes should be abolished and replaced with a capital gains tax on inherited assetsthe collection, an artistic whole in itself, had to be destroyed to pay the taxes due.)
But there is one item in the collection, a work by Robert Rauschenberg that cannot be sold. It contains a stuffed bald eagle and under the terms of the 1940 Bald and Golden Eagle Protection Act and the 1918 Migratory Bird Act, it is a felony to possess, sell, purchase, barter, transport, import or export any bald eagle alive or dead. The estate, advised by three experts, including one from Christies, therefore, valued the work at zero. The IRS decided it was worth $65 million, and is demanding $29.2 million in taxes and $11 million in penalties because the heirs inaccurately stated its value.
The trouble, of course, is that the heirs didnt inaccurately state its value. Anything that cannot, for whatever reason, be sold, is worth zero by economic definition. The value of anything is only what someone else is willing to pay for it. And to pay a dime for this particular artwork would be to commit a federal felony. To sell it for a dime would be to commit a federal felony.
The IRS has an Art Advisory Panel, that provides expert advice on the value of art works involved in estates. It was the panel that decided it was worth $65 million. Stephanie Barron, a member of the panel and an art curator at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, said that, Its a stunning work of art and we all just cringed at the idea of saying that this had zero value. It just didnt make any sense.
It makes perfect sense and Ms. Barrons statement is a classic example of the fallacy of the just price, that things have inherent value independent of the marketplace. They may have artistic value, emotional value, religious value, etc. But if they cannot be sold then they have no monetary value because they cannot be converted into money.
The IRS Art Advisory Board, I assume, is made up of art experts. It should add an economist to give the other board members a lesson in economics 101 when necessary. And the IRS should have someone empowered to tell the Bureau, Are you crazy? This will make us look like idiots, and vindictive idiots at that.
Inheritance taxes are a Socialist abomination.
I am afraid I might have give Stephani Barron the bird
Mailed it to her at the LA museum of art, and claimed a tax deduction of $65 million
The NYT, to it’s credit, printed this story..Our tax system is corrupt and set to get much worse with Obamacare. It is front and center to many of our problems..Please, Congress, change this!
The NYT, to it’s credit, printed this story..Our tax system is corrupt and set to get much worse with Obamacare. It is front and center to many of our problems..Please, Congress, change this!
“This will make us look like idiots, and vindictive idiots at that.
That’s allots about anyway. The inheritance tax allows them to keep “track” of whether or not everyone is reporting “appropriately” through out their life.....
$0 value is accurate.
Had to laugh at the last statement, reminded me of one of their agents I met once.
$65 million? Wow. I would take it to Europe and get a value....maybe $50. Then sell it and get a refund.
Leftists have an especially intense envy about inheritance because it develops in their formative school years. They were excluded by the "rich" kids at school, of which they could never be one. It's a major slap in the face to their vanity.
You may be living in the past. All the leftists I know are wealthy. The ones who aren’t trusties are public service employees.
Back in the day, I recall being shocked to see the parents’ homes of the most ardent Marxists. I saw those homes when the little statists went back there to collect money and steaks from the freezer.
Our government exists to confiscate wealth. Thats where we are.
I’d say take this to court. However, it would have to be tried in an IRS court, whose judges work for the IRS. So, it would be like Mr. Peanut suing a group of elephants for wrongful death for eating his family, and having Judge Dumbo presiding.
OK, then DONATE it to the Smithsonian and take a $65million tax deduction
Simple, pay the tax bill in stuffed bald eagles.
I believe the IRS just stated that they would accept the piece in lieu of $65 million. Let them deal with it.
Those are limousine leftists and their leftism is a public mask. It's a strategy to deflect envy, retain their wealth, and even enjoy it openly without inciting hatred. It's highly effective, which is why they do it. All leftism is about envy, but in their case it is about envy deflection. They do experience a unique type of envy though: intense envy at those that earn their wealth rather than have it given to them. For that reason they strongly support high income taxes as a barrier for people to work their way to wealth, something they could never do because they were raised as pets.
Hide Everything
Double-Will (like double-books)
I have not been able to understand how people in government have a right to take from me something which they had nothing to do with my accumulating it by my toil and sweat beyond a fair amount for those services I voluntarily choose. I know Obama has tried to explain that everything I accumulate happens because all these other people provided opportunity but somehow I missed or didn’t feel the participation of all these other people when I was sweating and needed a drink of ‘helpaid’.
Take it to sell in a country that doesn’t have it’s head quite so far up its nether regions.
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