| Revenue Procedure 2006-03 |
January 3, 2006 |
Areas In Which Rulings Will Not Be Issued
(Domestic Areas)
SECTION 1. PURPOSE AND NATURE OF CHANGES
.01 The purpose of this revenue procedure is to update Rev. Proc. 2005-3,
2005-1 C.B. 118, by providing a revised list of those areas of the Internal
Revenue Code under the jurisdiction of the Associate Chief Counsel (Corporate),
the Associate Chief Counsel (Financial Institutions and Products), the Associate
Chief Counsel (Income Tax and Accounting), the Associate Chief Counsel (Passthroughs
and Special Industries), the Associate Chief Counsel (Procedure and Administration),
and the Division Counsel/Associate Chief Counsel (Tax Exempt and Government
Entities) relating to issues on which the Internal Revenue Service will not
issue letter rulings or determination letters. For a list of areas under
the jurisdiction of the Associate Chief Counsel (International) relating to
international issues on which the Service will not issue letter rulings or
determination letters, see Rev. Proc. 2006-7, this Bulletin. For a list of
areas under the jurisdiction of the Commissioner, Tax Exempt and Government
Entities Division relating to issues, plans or plan amendments on which the
Service will not issue letter rulings and determination letters, see, respectively,
section 8 of Rev. Proc. 2006-4 (this Bulletin) and section 3.02 of Rev. Proc.
2006-6 (this Bulletin).
.02 Changes.
New section 3.01(3) (Sections 61, 451, and 1001.—Gross Income
Defined...) has been added. See Rev. Proc. 2005-61,
2005-37 I.R.B. 507.
Section 3.01(9) (Section 105(h). —Amount Paid to Highly Compensated
Individuals Under Discriminatory Self-Insured Medical Expense Reimbursement
Plan) has been modified to simplify the language.
New section 3.01(11) (Section 107.—Rental Value of Parsonages)
has been added.
Section 3.01(33) (Sections 332, 351, 368(a)(1)(A), (B), (C), (E) and
(F), and 1036.—Complete Liquidations of Subsidiaries...) has been modified
regarding the definition of “Significant Issue.” See Rev.
Proc. 2005-68, 2005-41 I.R.B. 694.
Section 4.01(30) (Section 441(i).—Taxable Year of Personal Service
Corporations) has been modified to update the regulation citation.
Section 4.01(37) (Section 664.—Charitable Remainder Trusts) has
been modified to indicate that this no-rule area includes unitrust payments
for a term of years.
Section 4.01(44) (Section 2055.—Transfers for Public, Charitable,
and Religious Uses) has been modified to include annuity or unitrust payments
for a term of years.
Section 4.01(48) (Section 2522.—Charitable and Similar Gifts)
has been modified to include annuity or unitrust payments for a term of years.
New section 5.02 (Sections 101 and 7702.—Certain Death Benefits;
Life Insurance Contract Defined) has been added.
Section 5.03 (Section 409A.—Inclusion in Gross Income of Deferred
Compensation Under Nonqualified Deferred Compensation Plans) has been modified
by including in this no-rule area the question of whether an arrangement is
an arrangement described in § 409A.
SECTION 2. BACKGROUND AND SCOPE OF APPLICATION
.01 Background.
Whenever appropriate in the interest of sound tax administration, it
is the policy of the Service to answer inquiries of individuals and organizations
regarding their status for tax purposes and the tax effects of their acts
or transactions, prior to the filing of returns or reports that are required
by the revenue laws.
There are, however, certain areas in which, because of the inherently
factual nature of the problems involved, or for other reasons, the Service
will not issue rulings or determination letters. These areas are set forth
in four sections of this revenue procedure. Section 3 reflects those areas
in which rulings and determinations will not be issued. Section 4 sets forth
those areas in which they will not ordinarily be issued. “Not ordinarily”
means that unique and compelling reasons must be demonstrated to justify the
issuance of a ruling or determination letter. Those sections reflect a number
of specific questions and problems as well as general areas. Section 5 lists
specific areas for which the Service is temporarily not issuing rulings and
determinations because those matters are under study. Finally, section 6
of this revenue procedure lists specific areas where the Service will not
ordinarily issue rulings because the Service has provided automatic approval
procedures for these matters.
See Rev. Proc. 2006-1 (this Bulletin) particularly section 6 captioned
“Under What Circumstances Does The Service Not Issue Letter Rulings
Or Determination Letters?” for general instructions and other situations
in which the Service will not or ordinarily will not issue letter rulings
or determination letters.
With respect to the items listed, revenue rulings or revenue procedures
may be published in the Internal Revenue Bulletin from time to time to provide
general guidelines regarding the position of the Service.
Additions or deletions to this revenue procedure as well as restatements
of items listed will be made by modification of this revenue procedure. Changes
will be published as they occur throughout the year and will be incorporated
annually in a new revenue procedure published as the third revenue procedure
of the year. These lists should not be considered all-inclusive. Decisions
not to rule on individual cases (as contrasted with those that present significant
pattern issues) are not reported in this revenue procedure and will not be
added to subsequent revisions.
.02 Scope of Application.
This revenue procedure does not preclude the submission of requests
for technical advice to the National Office from other offices of the Service.
.03 No-Rule Issues Part of Larger Transactions.
If it is impossible for the Service to determine the tax consequences
of a larger transaction without knowing the resolution of an issue on which
the Service will not issue rulings and determinations under this revenue procedure
involving a part of the transaction or a related transaction, the taxpayer
must state in the request to the best of the taxpayer’s knowledge and
belief the tax consequences of the no-rule issue. The Service’s ruling
or determination letter will state that the Service did not consider, and
no opinion is expressed upon, that issue. In appropriate cases the Service
may decline to issue rulings or determinations on such larger transactions
due to the relevance of the no-rule issue, despite the taxpayer’s representation.
SECTION 3. AREAS IN WHICH RULINGS OR DETERMINATION
LETTERS WILL NOT BE ISSUED
.01 Specific questions and problems.
Section 61.—Gross Income Defined.—Whether amounts voluntarily
deferred by a taxpayer under a deferred-compensation plan maintained by an
organization described in § 501 (other than a plan maintained by
an eligible employer pursuant to the provisions of § 457) are currently
includible in the taxpayer’s gross income.
Section 61.—Gross Income Defined.—Whether a split-dollar
life insurance arrangement is “materially modified” within the
meaning of § 1.61-22(j)(2) of the Income Tax Regulations. (Also
§§ 83, 301, 1401, 2501, 3121, 3231, 3306, 3401, and 7872.)
Sections 61, 451, and 1001.— Gross Income Defined; General Rule
for Taxable Year of Inclusion; Determination of Amount and Recognition of
Gain or Loss.—Whether, under authorization by an appropriate State agency
to recover certain costs pursuant to State specified cost recovery legislation,
any investor-owned utility company realizes income upon: (i) the creation
of an intangible property right; (ii) the transfer of that intangible property
right; or (iii) the securitization of the intangible property right.
Section 79.—Group-Term Life Insurance Purchased for Employees.—Whether
a group insurance plan for 10 or more employees qualifies as group-term insurance,
if the amount of insurance is not computed under a formula that would meet
the requirements of § 1.79-1(c)(2)(ii) of the regulations if the
group consisted of fewer than 10 employees.
Section 83.—Property Transferred in Connection with Performance
of Services.—Whether a restriction constitutes a substantial risk of
forfeiture, if the employee is a controlling shareholder. Also, whether a
transfer has occurred, if the amount paid for the property involves a nonrecourse
obligation.
Section 83.—Property Transferred in Connection with Performance
of Services.—Which corporation is entitled to the deduction under § 83(h)
in cases where a corporation undergoes a corporate division if the facts are
not similar to those described in Rev. Rul. 2002-1, 2002-1 C.B. 268.
Section 101.—Certain Death Benefits.—Whether there has been
a transfer for value for purposes of § 101(a) in situations involving
a grantor and a trust when (i) substantially all of the trust corpus consists
or will consist of insurance policies on the life of the grantor or the grantor’s
spouse, (ii) the trustee or any other person has a power to apply the trust’s
income or corpus to the payment of premiums on policies of insurance on the
life of the grantor or the grantor’s spouse, (iii) the trustee or any
other person has a power to use the trust’s assets to make loans to
the grantor’s estate or to purchase assets from the grantor’s
estate, and (iv) there is a right or power in any person that would cause
the grantor to be treated as the owner of all or a portion of the trust under
§§ 673 to 677.
Sections 101, 761, and 7701.—Definitions.—Whether, in connection
with the transfer of a life insurance policy to an unincorporated organization,
(i) the organization will be treated as a partnership under §§ 761
and 7701, or (ii) the transfer of the life insurance policy to the organization
will be exempt from the transfer for value rules of § 101, when
substantially all of the organization’s assets consists or will consist
of life insurance policies on the lives of the members.
Section 105(h).—Amount Paid to Highly Compensated Individuals
Under Discriminatory Self-Insured Medical Expense Reimbursement Plan.—Whether
a self-insured medical reimbursement plan satisfies the requirements of §105(h)
for a plan year.
Section 107.—Rental Value of Parsonages.—Whether amounts
distributed to a retired minister from a pension or annuity plan should be
excludible from the minister’s gross income as a parsonage allowance
under § 107.
Section 107.—Rental Value of Parsonages.—Whether an individual
is a “minister of the gospel” for federal tax purposes. (Also
§§ 1402(a)(8), (c)(4), and (e), 3121(b)(8)(A), and 3401(a)(9).)
Section 115.—Income of States, Municipalities, Etc.—The
results of transactions pursuant to a plan or arrangement created by state
statute a primary objective of which is to enable participants to pay for
the costs of a post-secondary education for themselves or a designated beneficiary,
including: (i) whether the plan or arrangement, itself, is an entity separate
from a state and, if so, how the plan or arrangement is treated for federal
tax purposes; and (ii) whether any contract under the plan or arrangement
is a debt instrument and, if so, how interest or original issue discount attributable
to the contract is treated for federal tax purposes. (Also §§
61, 163, 1275, 2501, and 7701.)
Section 115.—Income of States, Municipalities, Etc.—Whether
the income of membership organizations established by states exclusively to
reimburse members for losses arising from workmen’s compensation claims
is excluded from gross income under § 115.
Section 117.—Qualified Scholarships.—Whether an employer-related
scholarship or fellowship grant is excludible from the employee’s gross
income, if there is no intermediary private foundation distributing the grants,
as there was in Rev. Proc. 76-47, 1976-2 C.B. 670.
Section 119.—Meals or Lodging Furnished for the Convenience of
the Employer.—Whether the value of meals or lodging is excludible from
gross income by an employee who is a controlling shareholder of the employer.
Section 121.—Exclusion of Gain from Sale of Principal Residence.—Whether
property qualifies as the taxpayer’s principal residence.
Section 125.—Cafeteria Plans.—Whether amounts used to provide
group-term life insurance under § 79, accident and health benefits
under §§ 105 and 106, and dependent care assistance programs
under § 129 are includible in the gross income of participants and
considered “wages” for purposes of §§ 3401, 3121,
and 3306 when the benefits are offered through a cafeteria plan.
Section 162.—Trade or Business Expenses.—Whether compensation
is reasonable in amount.
Section 163.—Interest.—The income tax consequences of transactions
involving “shared appreciation mortgage” (SAM) loans in which
a taxpayer, borrowing money to purchase real property, pays a fixed rate of
interest on the mortgage loan below the prevailing market rate and will also
pay the lender a percentage of the appreciation in value of the real property
upon termination of the mortgage. This applies to all SAM arrangements where
the loan proceeds are used for commercial or business activities, or where
used to finance a personal residence, if the facts are not similar to those
described in Rev. Rul. 83-51, 1983-1 C.B. 48. (Also §§ 61,
451, 461, 856, 1001, and 7701.)
Section 170.—Charitable, Etc., Contributions and Gifts.—Whether
a taxpayer who advances funds to a charitable organization and receives therefor
a promissory note may deduct as contributions, in one taxable year or in each
of several years, amounts forgiven by the taxpayer in each of several years
by endorsement on the note.
Section 213.—Medical, Dental, Etc., Expenses.—Whether a
capital expenditure for an item that is ordinarily used for personal, living,
or family purposes, such as a swimming pool, has as its primary purpose the
medical care of the taxpayer or the taxpayer’s spouse or dependent,
or is related directly to such medical care.
Section 264(b).—Certain Amounts Paid in Connection with Insurance
Contracts.—Whether “substantially all” the premiums of a
contract of insurance are paid within a period of 4 years from the date on
which the contract is purchased. Also, whether an amount deposited is in
payment of a “substantial number” of future premiums on such a
contract.
Section 264(c)(1).—Certain Amounts Paid in Connection with Insurance
Contracts.—Whether § 264(c)(1) applies.
Section 269.—Acquisitions Made to Evade or Avoid Income Tax.—Whether
an acquisition is within the meaning of § 269.
Section 274.—Disallowance of Certain Entertainment, Etc., Expenses.—Whether
a taxpayer who is traveling away from home on business may, in lieu of substantiating
the actual cost of meals, deduct a fixed per-day amount for meal expenses
that differs from the amount authorized by the revenue procedure providing
optional rules for substantiating the amount of travel expenses for the period
in which the expense was paid or incurred.
Section 302.—Distributions in Redemption of Stock.—Whether
§ 302(b) applies when the consideration given in redemption by a
corporation consists entirely or partly of its notes payable, and the shareholder’s
stock is held in escrow or as security for payment of the notes with the possibility
that the stock may or will be returned to the shareholder in the future, upon
the happening of specific defaults by the corporation.
Section 302.—Distributions in Redemption of Stock.—Whether
§ 302(b) applies when the consideration given in redemption by a
corporation in exchange for a shareholder’s stock consists entirely
or partly of the corporation’s promise to pay an amount based on, or
contingent on, future earnings of the corporation, when the promise to pay
is contingent on working capital being maintained at a certain level, or any
other similar contingency.
Section 302.—Distributions in Redemption of Stock.—Whether
§ 302(b) applies to a redemption of stock, if after the redemption
the distributing corporation uses property that is owned by the shareholder
from whom the stock is redeemed and the payments by the corporation for the
use of the property are dependent upon the corporation’s future earnings
or are subordinate to the claims of the corporation’s general creditors.
Payments for the use of property will not be considered to be dependent upon
future earnings merely because they are based on a fixed percentage of receipts
or sales.
Section 302.—Distributions in Redemption of Stock.—Whether
the acquisition or disposition of stock described in § 302(c)(2)(B)
has, or does not have, as one of its principal purposes the avoidance of federal
income taxes within the meaning of that section, unless the facts and circumstances
are materially identical to those set forth in Rev. Rul. 85-19, 1985-1 C.B.
94; Rev. Rul. 79-67, 1979-1 C.B. 128; Rev. Rul. 77-293, 1977-2 C.B. 91; Rev.
Rul. 57-387, 1957-2 C.B. 225; Rev. Rul. 56-584, 1956-2 C.B. 179; or Rev. Rul.
56-556, 1956-2 C.B. 177.
Section 302(b)(4) and (e).—Redemption from Noncorporate Shareholder
in Partial Liquidation; Partial Liquidation Defined.—The amount of working
capital attributable to a business or portion of a business terminated that
may be distributed in partial liquidation.
Section 312.—Effect on Earnings and Profits.—The determination
of the amount of earnings and profits of a corporation.
Sections 331, 453, and 1239.—The Tax Effects of Installment Sales
of Property Between Entities with Common Ownership.—The tax effects
of a transaction in which there is a transfer of property by a corporation
to a partnership or other noncorporate entity (or the transfer of stock to
such entity followed by a liquidation of the corporation) when more than a
nominal amount of the stock of such corporation and the capital or beneficial
interests in the purchasing entity (that is, more than 20 percent in value)
is owned by the same persons, and the consideration to be received by the
selling corporation or the selling shareholders includes an installment obligation
of the purchasing entity.
Sections 332, 351, 368(a)(1)(A), (B), (C), (E) and (F), and 1036.—Complete
Liquidations of Subsidiaries; Transfer to Corporation Controlled by Transferor;
Definitions Relating to Corporate Reorganizations; and Stock for Stock of
Same Corporation.—Whether a transaction qualifies under § 332,
§ 351 or § 1036 for nonrecognition treatment, or whether
it constitutes a corporate reorganization within the meaning of § 368(a)(1)(A)
(including a transaction that qualifies under § 368(a)(1)(A) by
reason of § 368(a)(2)(D) or § 368(a)(2)(E)), § 368(a)(1)(B),
§ 368(a)(1)(C), § 368(a)(1)(E) or § 368(a)(1)(F),
and whether various consequences (such as nonrecognition and basis) result
from the application of that section, unless the Service determines that there
is a significant issue that must be resolved in order to decide those matters.
If the Service determines that there is a significant issue, and to the extent
the transaction is not described in another no-rule section, the Service will
rule on the entire transaction, and not just the significant issue. Notwithstanding
the preceding paragraph, the Service will rule on the application of § 351
to a controlled corporation when the transaction is undertaken prior to the
distribution of the stock of the controlled corporation in a transaction qualifying
under § 355.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUE: A significant issue is an issue of law that meets
the three following tests: (1) the issue is not clearly and adequately addressed
by a statute, regulation, decision of a court, tax treaty, revenue ruling,
revenue procedure, notice, or other authority published in the Internal Revenue
Bulletin; (2) the resolution of the issue is not essentially free from doubt;
and (3) the issue is legally significant and germane to determining the major
tax consequences of the transaction. An issue of law will be considered not
clearly and adequately addressed by the authorities above, and its resolution
will not be essentially free from doubt when, because of concern over a legal
issue (as opposed to a factual issue), taxpayer’s counsel is unable
to render an unqualified opinion on what the tax consequences of the transaction
will be.
OBTAINING A RULING: To obtain a ruling on a transaction involving a
significant issue, the taxpayer must in its ruling request explain the significance
of the issue, set forth the authorities most closely related to the issue,
and explain why the issue is not resolved by these authorities.
Section 351.—See section 3.01(33), above.
Section 358.—Basis to Distributees.—The acceptability of
an estimation procedure or the acceptability of a specific sampling procedure
to determine the basis of stock acquired by an acquiring corporation in a
reorganization described in § 368(a)(1)(B).
Section 368.—See section 3.01(33), above.
Section 424.—Substitution or Assumption of Incentive Stock Options.—Whether
the substitution of a new Incentive Stock Option (“ISO”) for an
old ISO, or the assumption of an old ISO, by an employer by reason of a corporate
transaction constitutes a modification which results in the issuance of a
new option by reason of failing to satisfy the spread test requirement of
§ 424(a)(1) or the ratio test requirement of § 1.425-1(a)(4).
The Service will continue to rule on the issue of whether the new ISO or
the assumption of the old ISO gives the employee additional benefits not present
under the old option within the meaning of § 424(a)(2).
Section 451.—See section 3.01(3), above.
Section 451.—General Rule for Taxable Year of Inclusion.—The
tax consequences of a non-qualified unfunded deferred-compensation arrangement
with respect to a controlling shareholder-employee eligible to participate
in the arrangement.
Section 451.—General Rule for Taxable Year of Inclusion.—The
tax consequences of unfunded deferred-compensation arrangements where the
arrangements fail to meet the requirements of Rev. Proc. 92-65, 1992-2 C.B.
428; and Rev. Proc. 71-19, 1971-1 C.B. 698.
Sections 451 and 457.—General Rule for Taxable Year of Inclusion;
Deferred Compensation Plans of State and Local Governments and Tax-Exempt
Organizations.—The tax consequences to unidentified independent contractors
in nonqualified unfunded deferred-compensation plans. This applies to plans
established under § 451 by employers in the private sector and to
plans of state and local governments and tax-exempt organizations under § 457.
However, a ruling with respect to a specific independent contractor’s
participation in such a plan may be issued.
Section 453.—See section 3.01(32), above.
Section 457.—See section 3.01(41), above.
Section 641.—Imposition of Tax.—Whether the period of administration
or settlement of an estate or a trust (other than a trust described in § 664)
is reasonable or unduly prolonged.
Section 642(c).—Deduction for Amounts Paid or Permanently Set
Aside for a Charitable Purpose.—Allowance of an unlimited deduction
for amounts set aside by a trust or estate for charitable purposes when there
is a possibility that the corpus of the trust or estate may be invaded.
Section 664.—Charitable Remainder Trusts.—Whether the settlement
of a charitable remainder trust upon the termination of the noncharitable
interest is made within a reasonable period of time.
Section 671.—Trust Income, Deductions, and Credits Attributable
to Grantors and Others as Substantial Owners.—Whether the grantor will
be considered the owner of any portion of a trust when (i) substantially all
of the trust corpus consists or will consist of insurance policies on the
life of the grantor or the grantor’s spouse, (ii) the trustee or any
other person has a power to apply the trust’s income or corpus to the
payment of premiums on policies of insurance on the life of the grantor or
the grantor’s spouse, (iii) the trustee or any other person has a power
to use the trust’s assets to make loans to the grantor’s estate
or to purchase assets from the grantor’s estate, and (iv) there is a
right or power in any person that would cause the grantor to be treated as
the owner of all or a portion of the trust under §§ 673 to
677.
Section 704(e).—Family Partnerships.—Matters relating to
the validity of a family partnership when capital is not a material income
producing factor.
Section 761.—See section 3.01(8), above.
Section 856.—Definition of Real Estate Investment Trust.—Whether
a corporation whose stock is “paired” with or “stapled”
to stock of another corporation will qualify as a real estate investment trust
under § 856, if the activities of the corporations are integrated.
Section 1001.—See section 3.01(3), above.
Section 1036.—See section 3.01(33), above.
Section 1221.—Capital Asset Defined.—Whether specialty stock
allocated to an investment account by a registered specialist on a national
securities exchange is a capital asset.
Section 1239.—See section 3.01(32), above.
Section 1551.—Disallowance of the Benefits of the Graduated Corporate
Rates and Accumulated Earnings Credit.—Whether a transfer is within
§ 1551.
Section 2031.—Definition of Gross Estate.—Actuarial factors
for valuing interests in the prospective gross estate of a living person.
Section 2512.—Valuation of Gifts.—Actuarial factors for
valuing prospective or hypothetical gifts of a donor.
Sections 3121, 3306, and 3401.—Definitions.—For purposes
of determining prospective employment status, whether an individual will be
an employee or an independent contractor. A ruling with regard to prior employment
status may be issued.
Sections 3121, 3306, and 3401.—Definitions; Employment Taxes.—Who
is the employer of an “employee-owner” as defined in § 269A(b)(2).
Sections 3121, 3306, and 3401.—Definitions.—For purposes
of determining employment classification pursuant to the filing of Form SS-8, Determination
of Worker Status for Purposes of Federal Employment Taxes and Income Tax Withholding,
whether a worker is a bona fide partner and, therefore,
not an employee of the business is at issue.
Section 4980B.—Failure to Satisfy Continuation Coverage Requirements
of Group Health Plans.—Whether an action is “gross misconduct”
within the meaning of § 4980B(f)(3)(B). (See section
3.05 of Rev. Proc. 87-28, 1987-1 C.B. 770, 771.)
Section 7701.—Definitions.—The classification of an instrument
that has certain voting and liquidation rights in an issuing corporation but
whose dividend rights are determined by reference to the earnings of a segregated
portion of the issuing corporation’s assets, including assets held by
a subsidiary.
Section 7701.—See section 3.01(8), above.
.02 General Areas.
The results of transactions that lack a bona fide business
purpose or have as their principal purpose the reduction of federal taxes.
A matter upon which a court decision adverse to the Government has been
handed down and the question of following the decision or litigating further
has not yet been resolved.
A matter involving alternate plans of proposed transactions or involving
hypothetical situations.
Whether under Subtitle F (Procedure and Administration) reasonable cause,
due diligence, good faith, clear and convincing evidence, or other similar
terms that require a factual determination exist.
Whether a proposed transaction would subject the taxpayer to a criminal
penalty.
A request that does not comply with the provisions of Rev. Proc. 2006-1
(this Bulletin).
Whether, under the common law rules applicable in determining the employer-employee
relationship, a professional staffing corporation (loan-out corporation) or
the subscriber is the employer of individuals, if:
-
the loan-out corporation hires employees of the subscriber and assigns
the employees back to the subscriber, or
-
the loan-out corporation assigns individuals to subscribers for more
than a temporary period (1 year or longer).
Questions that the Service determines, in its discretion, should not
be answered in the general interests of tax administration.
Any frivolous issue, as that term is defined in section 6.10 of Rev.
Proc. 2006-1 (this Bulletin)
SECTION 4. AREAS IN WHICH RULINGS OR DETERMINATION
LETTERS WILL NOT ORDINARILY BE ISSUED
.01 Specific questions and problems.
Sections 38, 39, 46, and 48.—General Business Credit; Carryback
and Carryforward of Unused Credits; Amount of Credit; Energy Credit; Reforestation
Credit.—Application of these sections where the formal ownership of
property is in a party other than the taxpayer, except when title is held
merely as security.
Section 61.—Gross Income Defined.—Determination as to who
is the true owner of property in cases involving the sale of securities, or
participation interests therein, where the purchaser has the contractual right
to cause the securities, or participation interests therein, to be purchased
by either the seller or a third party.
Sections 61 and 163.—Gross Income Defined; Interest.—Determinations
as to who is the true owner of property or the true borrower of money in cases
in which the formal ownership of the property, or the liability for the indebtedness,
is in another party.
Sections 83 and 451.—Property Transferred in Connection with Performance
of Services; General Rule for Taxable Year of Inclusion.—When compensation
is realized by a person who, in connection with the performance of services,
is granted a nonstatutory option without a readily ascertainable fair market
value to purchase stock at a price that is less than the fair market value
of the stock on the date the option is granted.
Section 103.—Interest on State and Local Bonds.—Whether
the interest on state or local bonds will be excludible from gross income
under § 103(a), if the proceeds of issues of bonds (other than advance
refunding issues) are placed in escrow or otherwise not expended for a governmental
purpose for an extended period of time even though the proceeds are invested
at a yield that will not exceed the yield on the state or local bonds prior
to their expenditure.
Section 103.—Interest on State and Local Bonds.—Whether
a state or local governmental obligation that does not meet the criteria of
section 5 of Rev. Proc. 89-5, 1989-1 C.B. 774, is an “arbitrage bond”
within the meaning of former § 103(c)(2) solely by reason of the
investment of the bond proceeds in acquired nonpurpose obligations at a materially
higher yield more than 3 years after issuance of the bonds or 5 years after
issuance of the bonds in the case of construction issues described in former
§1.103-13(a)(2)(ii)(E) or § 1.148-2(e)(2)(ii).
Sections 104(a)(2) and 3121.—Compensation for Injuries or Sickness;
Definitions.—Whether an allocation of the amount of a settlement award
(including a lump sum award) between back pay, compensatory damages, punitive
damages, etc. is a proper allocation for federal tax purposes.
Section 141.—Private Activity Bond; Qualified Bond.—Whether
state or local bonds will meet the “private business use test”
and the “private security or payment test” under §141(b)(1)
and (2) in situations in which the proceeds are used to finance certain output
facilities and, pursuant to a contract to take, or take or pay for, a nongovernmental
person purchases 30 percent or more of the actual output of the facility but
10 percent or less of the: (i) subparagraph (5) output of the facility as
defined in § 1.103-7(b)(5)(ii)(b) (issued under former § 103(b)),
or (ii) available output of the facility as defined in § 1.141-7(b)(1).
In similar situations, the Service will not ordinarily issue rulings or determination
letters concerning questions arising under paragraphs (3), (4), and (5) of
§ 141(b).
Sections 142 and 144.—Exempt Facility Bond; Qualified Small Issue
Bond.—Whether an issue of private activity bonds meets the requirements
of § 142 or § 144(a), if the sum of—
-
the portion of the proceeds used to finance a facility in which an owner
(or related person) or a lessee (or a related person) is a user of the facility
both after the bonds are issued and at any time before the bonds were issued,
and
-
the portion used to pay issuance costs and non-qualified costs equals
more than 5 percent of the net proceeds, as defined in § 150(a)(3).
Section 148.—Arbitrage.—Whether amounts received as proceeds
from the sale of municipal bond financed property and pledged to the payment
of debt service or pledged as collateral for the municipal bond issue are
sinking fund proceeds within the meaning of former § 1.103-13(g)
(issued under former § 103(c)) or replaced proceeds described in
§ 148(a)(2) (or former § 103(c)(2)(B)).
Sections 162 and 262.—Trade or Business Expenses; Personal, Living,
and Family Expenses.—Whether expenses are nondeductible commuting expenses,
except for situations governed by Rev. Rul. 99-7, 1999-1 C.B. 361.
Section 163.—See section 4.01(3), above.
Section 167.—Depreciation.
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Useful lives of assets.
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Depreciation rates.
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Salvage value of assets.
Sections 167 and 168.—Depreciation; Accelerated Cost Recovery
System.—Application of those sections where the formal ownership of
property is in a party other than the taxpayer except when title is held merely
as security.
Section 170.—Charitable, Etc., Contributions and Gifts.—Whether
a transfer to a pooled income fund described in § 642(c)(5) qualifies
for a charitable contribution deduction under § 170(f)(2)(A).
Section 170(c).—Charitable, Etc., Contributions and Gifts.—Whether
a taxpayer who transfers property to a charitable organization and thereafter
leases back all or a portion of the transferred property may deduct the fair
market value of the property transferred and leased back as a charitable contribution.
Section 170.—Charitable, Etc., Contributions and Gifts.—Whether
a transfer to a charitable remainder trust described in § 664 that
provides for annuity or unitrust payments for one or two measuring lives qualifies
for a charitable deduction under § 170(f)(2)(A).
Section 216.—Deduction of Taxes, Interest, and Business Depreciation
by Cooperative Housing Corporation Tenant-Stockholder.—If a cooperative
housing corporation (CHC), as defined in § 216(b)(1), transfers
an interest in real property to a corporation (not a CHC) in exchange for
stock or securities of the transferee corporation, which engages in commercial
activity with respect to the real property interest transferred, whether (i)
the income of the transferee corporation derived from the commercial activity,
and (ii) any cash or property (attributable to the real property interest
transferred) distributed by the transferee corporation to the CHC will be
considered as gross income of the CHC for the purpose of determining whether
80 percent or more of the gross income of the CHC is derived from tenant-stockholders
within the meaning of § 216(b)(1)(D).
Section 262.—See section 4.01(11), above.
Section 265(a)(2).—Expenses and Interest Relating to Tax-Exempt
Income.—Whether indebtedness is incurred or continued to purchase or
carry obligations the interest on which is wholly exempt from the taxes imposed
by subtitle A.
Section 302.—Distributions in Redemption of Stock.—The tax
effect of the redemption of stock for notes, when the payments on the notes
are to be made over a period in excess of 15 years from the date of issuance
of such notes.
Section 302(b)(4) and (e).—Redemption from Noncorporate Shareholder
in Partial Liquidation; Partial Liquidation Defined.—Whether a distribution
will qualify as a distribution in partial liquidation under § 302(b)(4)
and (e)(1)(A), unless it results in a 20 percent or greater reduction in (i)
gross revenue, (ii) net fair market value of assets, and (iii) employees.
(Partial liquidations that qualify as § 302(e)(2) business terminations
are not subject to this provision.)
Sections 302(b)(4) and (e), 331, 332, and 346(a).—Effects on Recipients
of Distributions in Corporate Liquidations.—The tax effect of the liquidation
of a corporation preceded or followed by the transfer of all or a part of
the business assets to another corporation (1) that is the alter ego of the
liquidating corporation, and (2) which, directly or indirectly, is owned more
than 20 percent in value by persons holding directly or indirectly more than
20 percent in value of the liquidating corporation’s stock. For purposes
of this section, ownership will be determined by application of the constructive
ownership rules of § 318(a) as modified by § 304(c)(3).
Section 306.—Dispositions of Certain Stock.—Whether the
distribution or disposition or redemption of “section 306 stock”
in a closely held corporation is in pursuance of a plan having as one of its
principal purposes the avoidance of federal income taxes within the meaning
of § 306(b)(4).
Sections 331 and 332.—See section 4.01(23), above.
Sections 331 and 346(a).—Gain or Loss to Shareholders in Corporate
Liquidations.—The tax effect of the liquidation of a corporation by
a series of distributions, when the distributions in liquidation are to be
made over a period in excess of 3 years from the adoption of the plan of liquidation.
Section 346(a).—See sections 4.01(23) and (26), above.
Section 351.—Transfer to Corporation Controlled by Transferor.—Whether
§ 351 applies to the transfer of an interest in real property by
a cooperative housing corporation (as described in § 216(b)(1))
to a corporation in exchange for stock or securities of the transferee corporation,
if the transferee engages in commercial activity with respect to the real
property interest transferred.
Section 355.—Distribution of Stock and Securities of a Controlled
Corporation.—Whether the active business requirement of § 355(b)
is met when, within the 5-year period described in § 355(b)(2)(B),
a distributing corporation acquired control of a controlled corporation as
a result of the distributing corporation transferring cash or other liquid
or inactive assets to the controlled corporation in a transaction in which
gain or loss was not recognized as a result of the transfer meeting the requirements
of § 351(a) or § 368(a)(1)(D).
Section 441(i).—Taxable Year of Personal Service Corporations.—Whether
the principal activity of the taxpayer during the testing period for the taxable
year is the performance of personal services within the meaning of § 1.441-3(c)(1)(iii).
Section 448(d)(2)(A).—Limitation on Use of Cash Method of Accounting;
Qualified Personal Service Corporation.—Whether 95 percent or more of
the time spent by employees of the corporation, serving in their capacity
as such, is devoted to the performance of services within the meaning of § 1.448-1T(e)(4)(i).
Section 451.—General Rule for Taxable Year of Inclusion.—The
tax consequences of a nonqualified deferred compensation arrangement using
a grantor trust where the trust fails to meet the requirements of Rev. Proc.
92-64, 1992-2 C.B. 422.
Section 451.—See section 4.01(4), above.
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