61.113 and expense reimbursements
What if Jerry, Kelly and Sam are not employees of the same company?
On Nov 20, 12:19 am, "RST Engineering"
wrote:
Let's cut through the horse****.
I'm a private pilot (no, I'm a commercial pilot, CFI, A&P, IA but let that
go for the moment).
My company sends me to a conference. The company policy pays IRS mileage
(48.5c a mile) for me to get there by private vehicle. Vehicle is
automobile, wagon train, muleback, or any other method I choose.
The company policy says that I can go by myself or carry as many other
employees as I wish in my private vehicle for the same 48.5 cents a mile.
I load up Gerry, Kelly, Sam and myself into the airplane and fly to the
conference. I'm not paid to get to the conference, just be a company
employee while I am at the conference.
I get home without incident.
I bill the company for what would have been automobile mileage and multiply
it by 48.5 cents a mile and submit it. Company pays. Case closed.
I have an accident on the way to or the way from the conference. Let the
lawyers sort it out. I was on company time; let the company lawyers decide
fault and such.
The FARs have relatively little to do with the process. You aren't being
paid to fly; you are being recompensated for getting yourself to the
conference and participating.
Then again, I've only been doing this for forty years, but what do I know?
Jim
--
"If you think you can, or think you can't, you're right."
--Henry Ford
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