Sirius Solutions, L.L.L.P. v. Commissioner, No. 24-60240 (5th Cir. Jan. 16, 2026), is a major taxpayer win that adopts a bright-line, liability-based definition of “limited partner” for the Section 1402(a)(13) self-employment tax exception. It rejects the Tax Court’s functional analysis and holds that partners in a state-law limited partnership (including an LLLP) who have limited liability qualify for the limited partner exception on their distributive shares, even if they materially participate, with self-employment tax generally limited to their guaranteed payments.
·
A
“limited partner” under Section 1402(a)(13) means a partner in a limited
partnership who has limited liability under applicable state law.
·
The
phrase “as such” in Section 1402(a)(13) means that the exception applies to
income earned in the partner’s legal capacity as a limited partner, not to
compensation for services (e.g., guaranteed payments).
·
The court
expressly rejected the Tax Court’s “functional analysis,” which had
disqualified Sirius’s limited partners because they were actively involved in
the consulting business.
·
The
decision vacates the Tax Court and remands, but there is little left to resolve
other than mechanics given the court’s construction of “limited partner.”
Facts and
Procedural Background
·
Sirius
Solutions operated as a Texas limited liability limited partnership (LLLP),
with a corporate general partner (Sirius GP, LLC) holding a very small
percentage interest and multiple limited partners.
·
The
limited partners all had limited liability under Texas law but also provided
substantial services to the consulting firm.
·
Sirius
treated the limited partners’ distributive shares (other than guaranteed
payments) as exempt from self-employment tax under Section 1402(a)(13).
·
The IRS
recharacterized a large portion of those amounts as subject to SE tax, and the
Tax Court sided with the IRS using a multi-factor functional test focused on
participation and “passive investor” status.
·
On
appeal, the Fifth Circuit reversed, finding the Tax Court’s functional
interpretation inconsistent with the statutory text and historical usage of
“limited partner.”
·
Text and
ordinary meaning: The court looked to dictionaries and contemporaneous usage at
the time Section 1402(a)(13) was enacted and concluded that “limited partner”
was universally understood as a partner whose liability is limited by state
limited partnership statutes.
·
Administrative
materials: The opinion relied on historic SSA and IRS guidance that tied
“limited partner” status to limited liability, not to a passive-investor or
non-service test.
·
Structure
of Section 1402: The court noted that where Congress wanted to condition SE tax
treatment on the provision of services, it knew how to do so expressly (e.g.,
in nearby Section 1402(a)(10)), and it did not add such language to Section
1402(a)(13).
·
“As such”
language: The court read “as such” as limiting the exclusion to the partner’s
capacity as a limited partner but not as importing a separate “passivity” or
“no services” requirement.
·
Rejection
of Soroban and similar views: The panel explicitly disapproved the Second
Circuit’s Soroban Capital Partners decision and other authorities reading a
“passive investor” gloss into “limited partner.”
Practical Implications for Limited Partners and Fund Managers
·
Planning
clarity in the Fifth Circuit: Within the Fifth Circuit (Texas, Louisiana,
Mississippi), partners with limited liability in a state-law limited
partnership or LLLP can generally treat their distributive shares as excluded
from SE tax, regardless of their level of services, subject to SE tax on
guaranteed payments.
·
Entity
choice for managers: Fund and asset management structures using limited
partnerships with LLLP features gain significant comfort that GP and LP interests with limited liability can be
planned to minimize SE tax, so long as the state-law limited partnership form
and liability protections are respected.
·
Guaranteed
payments remain exposed: The opinion repeatedly notes that guaranteed payments
for services (and any other clearly service-based compensation streams) remain
subject to self-employment tax.
·
Open
questions: Commentators highlight unresolved issues, including whether owners
of the general partner entity in an LLLP might themselves be treated as
“limited partners” for purposes of the exception and how other circuits
(notably the First and Second, which have pending cases) will respond to
Sirius.
·
Golsen
and Tax Court cases: For taxpayers in the Fifth Circuit, the Tax Court will be
bound by Sirius under Golsen, while outside circuits the IRS is likely to
continue litigating for a functional or Soroban-like approach until the
conflict is resolved or guidance is updated.
Assume a Texas LLLP with:
·
GP entity
with a small interest and limited liability,
·
Several
individual limited partners with limited liability under Texas law, each
providing substantial services,
·
Distributive
shares of partnership income and separate guaranteed payments for services.
Under Sirius in the Fifth Circuit, the distributive shares
allocable to the limited partners (and arguably some or all of the GP interest
if treated as a limited partner under state law) should qualify for the Section
1402(a)(13) exclusion from SE tax, while guaranteed payments remain subject to
SE tax.
Contact the Tax Lawyers at
www.TaxAid.com or www.OVDPLaw.com
or Toll Free at 888 8TAXAID (888-882-9243)
Sources:
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