Tax Court Bars Above-the-Line Deduction for Fair Credit Reporting Act Legal Fees: Analyzing Eiler v. Commissioner
James Wendelin Eiler and Kathryn Ann Eiler, Deceased v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 167 T.C. No. 3, July 14, 2026
For tax practitioners managing the tax consequences of litigation settlements, the characterization of attorney's fees is a critical issue that often dictates whether a client is left with a meaningful recovery or an unexpected tax liability. In Eiler v. Commissioner, the United States Tax Court addressed a significant issue of first impression: whether litigation settlement proceeds under the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) involving credit reporting inaccuracies constitute claims of “unlawful discrimination” under Internal Revenue Code (I.R.C.) Section 62(a)(20).
Historically, the Supreme Court’s landmark ruling in Commissioner v. Banks, 543 U.S. 426 (2005), established that a taxpayer’s gross income includes the portion of a litigation recovery paid to an attorney under a contingent fee arrangement. While Congress created an above-the-line deduction in I.R.C. Section 62(a)(20) to mitigate this harsh result for cases involving “unlawful discrimination” or civil rights enforcement, the Tax Court in Eiler strictly limited this exception. The court held that the taxpayers’ claims under the FCRA did not involve the enforcement of "civil rights" as contemplated by I.R.C. Section 62(e)(18)(i), rendering the attorney's fees fully taxable and nondeductible above-the-line.
Read More