Million-dollar baseballs are raining down on fans like pennies from heaven, and the taxman isn't far behind.
One of those balls, potentially worth $2 million, fell into a fan's hands Tuesday night when New York Yankee Aaron Judge broke the American League single-season home run record. Both Yankees and Texas Rangers fans erupted as Judge belted out his 62nd, besting the 61-homer record set by Yankee legend Roger Maris in 1961.
For the lucky fan who caught the ball—identified by a local TV station as Cory Youmans—and anyone else snagging a record-setting ball this season, the Internal Revenue Service's rules governing the immediate tax implications have all the clarity and precision of a Yogi Berra aphorism.
Chris Ivy, the director of sports auctions at Dallas-based Heritage Auction Galleries, was at the stadium Tuesday night when Youmans made the catch.
"He was asked last night what his plans were for the ball and he said 'I haven't really thought about it yet," Ivy said in an interview Wednesday, and estimated that the baseball is worth at least $2 million.
The only IRS guidance statement addressing rare, record-setting baseballs—a three-paragraph press release from 1998—has limited value for any bleacher bum hoping to capitalize on one of these five-ounce nuggets of gold. Then-Commissioner Charles Rossotti lamented in the thin statement that "sometimes pieces of the tax code can be as hard to understand as the infield fly rule."
Asked before Judge's historic home run whether the government intended to update its views after 24 years, Treasury Department senior spokesperson Julia Krieger would only say, "we don't have anything to add."
Meanwhile, fans and sports memorabilia collectors are keenly aware that Judge isn't the only one adding a milestone to baseball's history. Just before Judge clinched his record, Cardinals veteran Albert Pujols hit his 703rd lifetime homer on Monday.
The feat elevates Pujols well into the "700 club," which includes all stars Barry Bonds (762 career home runs), Hank Aaron (755), and Babe Ruth (714). Fans are also aware that both Judge and Pujols could extend their records before the regular season concludes tonight.
The sport hasn't seen this kind of hysteria since the late 1990s to early 2000s when Bonds, Mark McGwire, and Sammy Sosa set a string of single-season home run records. While each surpassed Judge's accomplishments, their records are considered by many to be tainted by allegations the trio used performance-enhancing drugs.
Unprecedented Momentum
A rare constellation of factors—including a "neater, cleaner era" of baseball, a 20-year drought of home run derbies, and spiking prices for sports collectibles—is creating unprecedented momentum behind balls hit by Judge and Pujols, said Michael Heffner, president of the sports memorabilia appraiser and auction house Lelands.
"This is a goldmine for the fans sitting in the stands," Heffner said. "I don't think we've seen this many milestones and records since the era of Bonds, McGwire, and Sosa."
So what's a Judge or Pujols ball really worth?
Values are hard to predict, but Heffner said several of Judge's late-season balls would likely be worth $1 million and perhaps as much as $2 million.
Before Judge's latest record, Heffner estimated that his 60th home run ball would be valuable because it tied Ruth's 1927 season record, and the 61st ball would be expensive because it tied Maris.
Judge's number 62 also would be pricey, but any final bleacher-busting ball of the season would likely be the most expensive of the lot.
No disrespect to the significant accomplishments of Pujols, but Heffner said balls surpassing the 700-career homer mark would likely fetch six figures. Judge balls have an edge because "anything having to do with the Yankees makes it more valuable than just about any other team in baseball."
Treasure Trove
Addressing the tax consequences linked to any of these balls is fraught with "uncertainty" and conflicting opinions, said Michael J. Graetz, emeritus law professor at Yale Law School and emeritus tax law professor at Columbia Law School and a former deputy assistant Treasury secretary for tax policy.
Taken literally, the tax code would pull any fan catching one of Judge's pricey baseballs into the so-called "treasure trove regulation," Graetz said. The regulation (Section 1.61-14) holds that windfalls dropping into a taxpayer's lap must be immediately recognized as ordinary income.