Legal fees to receive alimony are deductible, but apparently legal fees to keep income by not paying alimony are not. That’s what the Tax Court told an engineer in California who incurred $13,574 in legal fees to have a court reduce the amount of spousal support that he had to pay to his former wife.
The tax rule is that legal fees incurred in connection with a divorce generally are a nondeductible personal expense. Legal fees paid for the production or collection of income are tax deductible. Whether legal fees are nondeductible or deductible depends on the origin of the claim.
In this case, the engineer argued that his fees were incurred to “defend his income.” He also argued that his payments of spousal support “severely limited [his] ability to invest money that would have been income earning either as 401(k) monies or perhaps rental property or other business endeavors.” The Tax Court rejected his arguments because his legal fees were not incurred to create income but rather to retain it; his fees were not deductible.
A statutory method of depreciation allowing accelerated rates for most types of property used in business and income-producing activities during the years 1981 through 1986. It has been superseded by the modified accelerated cost recovery system (MACRS) for assets placed in service after 1986.