Income Inclusion When Lessee Treated as Having Acquired Investment Credit Property, 34775-34782 [2019-15497]
Download as PDF
Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 139 / Friday, July 19, 2019 / Rules and Regulations
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Internal Revenue Service
26 CFR Part 1
[TD 9872]
RIN 1545–BM74
Income Inclusion When Lessee
Treated as Having Acquired
Investment Credit Property
Internal Revenue Service (IRS),
Treasury.
ACTION: Final regulations and removal of
temporary regulations.
AGENCY:
This document contains final
regulations that provide guidance
concerning the income inclusion rules
under section 50(d)(5) of the Internal
Revenue Code (Code) that are applicable
to a lessee of investment credit property
when a lessor of such property elects to
treat the lessee as having acquired the
property. These final regulations also
provide rules to coordinate the section
50(a) recapture rules with the section
50(d)(5) income inclusion rules. In
addition, these final regulations provide
rules regarding income inclusion upon
a lease termination, lease disposition by
a lessee, or disposition of a partner’s or
S corporation shareholder’s entire
interest in a lessee partnership or S
corporation outside of the recapture
period. Accordingly, these regulations
will affect lessees of investment credit
property when the lessor of the property
makes an election to treat the lessee as
having acquired the property and an
investment credit is determined under
section 46 with respect to such lessee.
DATES:
Effective date: These regulations are
effective on July 17, 2019.
Applicability date: For date of
applicability, see § 1.50–1(f).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Barbara J. Campbell or Michael J.
Torruella Costa, (202) 317–4137 (not a
toll-free number).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
Background
jspears on DSK30JT082PROD with RULES
I. Overview
This document amends the Income
Tax Regulations (26 CFR part 1) to
finalize rules under section 50(d)(5) of
the Code. On July 22, 2016, the
Department of the Treasury (Treasury
Department) and the IRS published in
the Federal Register a notice of
proposed rulemaking by cross-reference
to temporary regulations ((REG–102516–
15) (81 FR 47739)) (proposed
regulations) and final and temporary
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:15 Jul 18, 2019
Jkt 247001
regulations ((TD 9776) (81 FR 47701))
(temporary regulations) that amended
§ 1.50–1 of the Income Tax Regulations.
On September 23, 2016, the Treasury
Department and the IRS published
corrections to the temporary regulations
in the Federal Register (81 FR 65541).
(Subsequent references in this preamble
to the temporary regulations are to the
temporary regulations as so corrected.)
The Treasury Department and the IRS
received two written comments on the
proposed regulations. No requests for a
public hearing were made, and no
public hearing was held. After
consideration of the comments received,
these final regulations adopt the
proposed regulations without
modification.
II. Section 50 Background
Section 50(d) provides special rules
applicable to the investment credit
determined under section 46
(investment credit property). Section
50(d)(5) provides the income inclusion
rules applicable to a lessee of
investment credit property when a
lessor elects to treat the lessee as having
acquired the property. Section 50(d)(5)
provides that, for purposes of the
investment credit, rules similar to
former section 48(d) (as in effect prior
to the enactment of the Revenue
Reconciliation Act of 1990 (Pub. L. 101–
508, 104 Stat 1388 (November 5, 1990)))
apply.
Former section 48(d)(1) permitted a
lessor of new section 38 property to
elect to treat that property as having
been acquired by the lessee for an
amount equal to its fair market value
(or, if the lessor and lessee were
members of a controlled group of
corporations, equal to the lessor’s basis).
Former section 48(d)(3) provided that if
the lessor made the election provided in
former section 48(d)(1) with respect to
any such property, the lessee would be
treated for all purposes of subpart E,
part IV, subchapter A, Chapter 1,
subtitle A, as having acquired such
property. Section 50(a)(5)(A) replaced
the term ‘‘section 38 property’’ with the
term ‘‘investment credit property.’’
Under former section 48(q), if a credit
was determined under section 46 with
respect to section 38 property, the basis
of the property was reduced by 50
percent of the amount of the credit
determined (or 100 percent of the
amount of the credit determined in the
case of a credit for qualified
rehabilitation expenditures). Former
section 48(d)(5) provided specific rules
coordinating the effect of the former
section 48(d) election with the basis
adjustment rules under former section
48(q). Because the lessee would have no
PO 00000
Frm 00007
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
34775
basis in the property that the lessee was
deemed to have acquired pursuant to
the election, former section 48(d)(5)(A)
provided that the basis adjustment rules
under former section 48(q) did not
apply. Section 50(c) replaced former
section 48(q) and provides the current
basis adjustment rules.
In lieu of a basis adjustment, former
section 48(d)(5)(B) provided that the
lessee was required to include ratably in
gross income, over the shortest recovery
period which could be applicable under
section 168 with respect to the property,
an amount equal to 50 percent of the
amount of the credit allowable under
section 38 to the lessee with respect to
such property. In the case of the
rehabilitation credit, former section
48(q)(3) provided that former section
48(d)(5)(B) was to be applied without
the phrase ‘‘50 percent of.’’
Former section 48(d)(5)(C) provided
that, in the case of a disposition of
property to which former section 47 (the
former recapture rules) applied, the
income inclusion rules of former section
48(d)(5) applied in accordance with
regulations prescribed by the Secretary.
Section 50(a) replaced former section 47
and provides the current recapture
rules.
The temporary regulations provide
the applicable rules that the Secretary
determined are similar to the rules of
former section 48(d)(5). The temporary
regulations are limited in scope to the
income inclusion rules that apply when
a lessor elects under § 1.48–4 to treat the
lessee as having acquired investment
credit property.
The temporary regulations provide
general rules for coordinating the basis
adjustment rules under section 50(c)
(the successor to former section 48(q))
with the rules under § 1.48–4 pursuant
to which a lessor may elect to treat the
lessee of investment credit property as
having acquired such property for
purposes of calculating the investment
credit. Similar to the rule in former
section 48(d)(5)(A), which provided that
the basis adjustment rules under former
section 48(q) did not apply when a
§ 1.48–4 election was made, the
temporary regulations provide that
section 50(c) does not apply when the
election is made. Thus, the lessor is not
required to reduce its basis in the
property by the amount of the
investment credit (or 50 percent of the
amount of the credit in the case of the
energy credit under section 48)
determined under section 46.
The temporary regulations require
that, in lieu of a basis adjustment, and
similar to the rule contained in former
section 48(d)(5)(B), a lessee must
include in gross income an amount
E:\FR\FM\19JYR1.SGM
19JYR1
jspears on DSK30JT082PROD with RULES
34776
Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 139 / Friday, July 19, 2019 / Rules and Regulations
equal to the amount of the credit (or 50
percent of the amount of the credit in
the case of the energy credit under
section 48) determined under section
46. The lessee includes the amount
ratably over the shortest recovery period
applicable under the accelerated cost
recovery system provided in section
168, beginning on the date the
investment credit property is placed in
service and continuing on each one-year
anniversary date thereafter until the end
of the applicable recovery period. The
amount required to be included by the
lessee is not subject to any limitations
under section 38(c) on the amount of the
credit allowed based on the amount of
the lessee’s income tax.
Because section 50(c) replaces the old
basis adjustment rules under former
section 48(q), the amount the lessee is
required to include in gross income
under the temporary regulations
corresponds to the current basis
adjustment amounts required under
section 50(c), rather than the former
basis adjustment amounts provided in
former section 48(q).
The temporary regulations include
special rules for partnerships and S
corporations. In the case of a
partnership (other than an electing large
partnership) or an S corporation for
which an election is made under § 1.48–
4 to treat such entity as having acquired
the investment credit property, each
partner or S corporation shareholder
that is the ultimate credit claimant is
treated as the lessee for purposes of the
income inclusion rules under the
temporary regulations. The term
ultimate credit claimant is defined in
the temporary regulations as any partner
or S corporation shareholder that files
(or that would file) Form 3468,
‘‘Investment Credit’’ (or its successor
form), with such partner’s or S
corporation shareholder’s income tax
return to claim the investment credit
determined under section 46 that results
in the corresponding income inclusion
under the temporary regulations. Each
partner or S corporation shareholder
that is the ultimate credit claimant must
include in gross income the amount
required under the temporary
regulations in proportion to the amount
of the credit determined under section
46 (or 50 percent of the amount of the
credit in the case of the energy credit
under section 48) with respect to the
partner or S corporation shareholder.
The temporary regulations also
coordinate the income inclusion rules
with the credit recapture rules in
section 50(a). The temporary regulations
provide that, when the investment
credit recapture rules under section
50(a) are triggered (including when
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:15 Jul 18, 2019
Jkt 247001
there is a lease termination), causing a
recapture of the credit or a portion of
the credit, an adjustment will be made
to the lessee’s (or, as applicable, the
ultimate credit claimant’s) gross income
for any discrepancies between the total
amount included in gross income under
the income inclusion requirement in the
temporary regulations and the total
credit allowable after recapture. The
adjustment amount is taken into
account in the taxable year in which the
property is disposed of or otherwise
ceases to be investment credit property.
The temporary regulations provide rules
for when the amount of the
unrecaptured credit (that is, the
allowable credit after taking into
account the recapture amount, or 50
percent of the unrecaptured credit in the
case of the energy credit) exceeds the
income inclusion, and when the income
inclusion exceeds the unrecaptured
credit.
The temporary regulations also allow
a lessee or an ultimate credit claimant
to make an irrevocable election to
include in gross income any remaining
income required to be taken into
account under § 1.50–1T(b)(2) in the
taxable year in which the lease
terminates or is otherwise disposed of.
Similarly, the temporary regulations
provide that if an ultimate credit
claimant disposes of its entire interest,
either direct or indirect, in a partnership
(other than an electing large
partnership) or an S corporation, the
ultimate credit claimant may make an
irrevocable election to include in gross
income any remaining income required
to be taken into account by the
temporary regulations in the taxable
year of the disposition. The availability
of this election allows a lessee or an
ultimate credit claimant to account for
any remaining required gross income
inclusion in the taxable year in which
the lease terminates or is otherwise
disposed of or in which an ultimate
credit claimant exits its investment.
This election is available only outside
of the section 50(a) recapture period,
and only if the lessee or the ultimate
credit claimant was not already required
to accelerate the gross income required
to be included under § 1.50–1T(b)(2)
because of a recapture event during the
recapture period. Additionally, a former
partner or S corporation shareholder
that no longer owns a direct or indirect
interest in the lessee partnership or S
corporation may not elect to accelerate
the gross income required to be
included under the temporary
regulations at the time of a termination
or disposition of the lease by the lessee
partnership or S corporation. The
appropriate time for a former partner or
PO 00000
Frm 00008
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
S corporation shareholder that is an
ultimate credit claimant to elect income
acceleration is the taxable year that it
disposes of its entire interest in a lessee
partnership or S corporation.
Summary of Comments and
Explanation of Provisions
I. Reconsideration of the Special Rule
for Partnerships and S Corporations
The temporary regulations (§ 1.50–
1T(b)(3)) clarify that the gross income
inclusion is not an item of partnership
income or an item of S corporation
income to which the rules of subchapter
K or subchapter S apply. One
commenter requested that the Treasury
Department and the IRS reconsider the
rules in § 1.50–1T(b)(3) based on a
concern that the operation of the rules
will decrease the amount of investment
that flows into the credit programs,
which will result in less cash available
for projects. The commenter also
expressed a related concern that
requiring credit claimants to identify
and track the income inclusion will add
additional complexity to the
investments.
As explained in the preamble to the
temporary regulations, because the
investment credit and any limitations
on the credit itself are determined at the
partner or S corporation shareholder
level it is appropriate that the income
inclusion occurs at the partner or
shareholder level. In the case of a
partnership that owns the investment
credit property, a partner in a
partnership is treated as the taxpayer
with respect to the partner’s share of the
basis of partnership investment credit
property under § 1.46–3(f)(1) and
separately computes the investment
credit based on its share of the
partnership’s basis in the investment
credit property. Similarly, in the case of
a lessee partnership where the lessor
makes an election under § 1.48–4 to
treat the partnership as having acquired
investment credit property, each partner
in the lessee partnership is the taxpayer
with respect to whom the investment
credit is determined under section 46.
Each partner in the lessee partnership
will separately compute the investment
credit based on each partner’s share of
the investment credit property. The
credit is therefore computed at the
partner level based on partner level
limitations. Section 1.704–1(b)(4)(ii),
which requires allocations with respect
to the investment tax credit provided by
section 38 to be made in accordance
with the partners’ interests in the
partnership, provides that allocations of
cost or qualified investment (as opposed
to the investment credit itself, which is
E:\FR\FM\19JYR1.SGM
19JYR1
jspears on DSK30JT082PROD with RULES
Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 139 / Friday, July 19, 2019 / Rules and Regulations
not determined at the partnership level)
made in accordance with § 1.46–3(f)
shall be deemed to be made in
accordance with the partners’ interests
in the partnership.
Under similar principles, in the case
of a lessor that makes an election under
§ 1.48–4 to treat a lessee S corporation
as having acquired investment credit
property, each shareholder in the lessee
S corporation is the taxpayer with
respect to whom the investment credit
is determined under section 46. The
credit is therefore computed at the S
corporation shareholder level based on
shareholder level limitations.
The Treasury Department and the IRS
have determined that the burden of
income inclusion should match the
benefits of the allowable credit.
Therefore, because the investment credit
and any limitations on the credit are
determined at the partner or shareholder
level, these final regulations adopt the
rule from the proposed regulations that
provides that the gross income required
to be ratably included is not an item of
partnership income for purposes of
subchapter K or an item of S corporation
income for purposes of subchapter S.
Accordingly, the basis adjustment rules
that would apply if such gross income
was an item of income under section
702 or section 1366, such as section
705(a) (providing for an increase in a
partner’s outside basis for items of
partnership income) or section 1367(a)
(providing for an increase in an S
corporation shareholder’s stock basis for
items of S corporation income), do not
apply.
When the temporary regulations were
issued, the Treasury Department and the
IRS were aware that some partnerships
and S corporations had taken the
position that this income is includible
by the partnership or S corporation and
that their partners or S corporation
shareholders were entitled to increase
their bases in their partnership interests
or S corporation stock as a result of the
income inclusion. The Treasury
Department and the IRS determined that
such basis increases are inconsistent
with Congressional intent as they thwart
the purpose of the income inclusion
requirement in former section
48(d)(5)(B) and confer an unintended
benefit upon partners and S corporation
shareholders of lessee partnerships and
S corporations that is not available to
any other credit claimant.
The investment credit rules operate to
allow a taxpayer to claim the benefit of
the credit in exchange for the
recoupment of that amount (or 50
percent of that amount in the case of the
section 48 energy credit) over time.
Where the taxpayer claiming the credit
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:15 Jul 18, 2019
Jkt 247001
owns the investment credit property,
the basis reduction provided in section
50(c) results in reduced cost recovery
deductions over the life of the property
or the realization of gain (or a reduction
in the amount of loss realized) upon the
disposition of the property. In the case
of a lessor that elects under § 1.48–4 to
treat the lessee of investment credit
property as having acquired such
property, § 1.50–1T(b)(2) instead
requires the lessee to ratably include
this amount in gross income over the
life of the property.
If that lessee is a partnership or an S
corporation, however, some
partnerships and S corporations
contend that this income inclusion is
treated as an item of partnership or S
corporation income that entitles their
partners or S corporation shareholders
to a corresponding outside basis
increase under section 705(a) or section
1367(a). If these partners or S
corporation shareholders were entitled
to an outside basis increase equal to
their share of the income inclusion, they
would be able to claim an offsetting loss
(or reduce the amount of gain realized)
upon the disposition of their
partnership interests or S corporation
shares.
As noted, the Treasury Department
and the IRS have concluded that the
income inclusion is not properly treated
as an item of partnership income or of
S corporation income. Nonetheless, had
the Treasury Department and the IRS
determined otherwise, the Treasury
Department and the IRS have decided
that in addition to being inconsistent
with the purpose of section 48(d)(5)(B),
allowing a basis increase for the income
inclusion would also be inconsistent
with the purpose of sections 705 and
1367. The income to be included is a
notional amount, which has no current
or future economic effect on the basis of
assets held by a partnership or S
corporation. In general, Congress
intended for sections 705 and 1367 to
preserve inside and outside basis parity
for partnerships and S corporations so
as to prevent any unintended tax benefit
or detriment to the partners or
shareholders. See H.R. Rep. No. 1337,
83d Cong., 2d Sess. A225 (1954); S. Rep.
No. 1622, 83d Cong., 2d Sess. 384
(1954); H.R. Rep. No. 97–826, 97th
Cong., 2d Sess. p. 17 (1982); S. Rep. No.
97–640, 97th Cong., 2d Sess. 16, 18
(1982); and Rev. Rul. 96–11 (1996–1 CB
140). Ultimately, the Treasury
Department and the IRS have
determined that, under any approach,
allowing partners and S corporation
shareholders a basis increase to offset
the income inclusion required by the
temporary regulations upon disposition
PO 00000
Frm 00009
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
34777
of their partnership interests or S
corporation shares is inappropriate, and
that Congress did not intend to allow
partners and S corporation shareholders
the full benefit of the credit without any
of the corresponding burden.
Additionally, the Treasury
Department and the IRS are aware that
one practitioner questioned whether the
Supreme Court’s holding in U.S. v.
Basye, 410 U.S. 441 (1973), is contrary
to the position taken in the temporary
regulations that the notional income
created under section 50(d)(5) is not an
item of partnership income computed
under section 703. In Basye, the
partnership entered into a contractual
arrangement whereby a portion of the
payments it received for services
rendered was redirected to a trust
established for the benefit of the
partnership’s partner and non-partner
physicians. The payments were not
forfeitable by the partnership or
recoverable by the payor upon the
happening of any contingency. The
Court held that because the payments
represented compensation for services
rendered by the partnership, the
partnership was required to include
them in current income and each
partner was required to include his
distributive share of those amounts in
his income. The Court stated:
This conclusion rests on two familiar
principles of income taxation, first, that
income is taxed to the party who earns
it and that liability may not be avoided
through an anticipatory assignment of
that income, and, second, that partners
are taxable on their distributive or
proportionate shares of current
partnership income irrespective of
whether that income is actually
distributed to them.
Basye at 447–448.
The Treasury Department and the IRS
believe that Basye is inapplicable to the
determination that the notional income
created under section 50(d)(5) is not an
item of partnership income computed
under section 703. Unlike the income at
issue in Basye, the income created
under section 50(d)(5) is not ‘‘earned’’
by the partnership. It has no economic
effect as it is merely a notional item
created to mimic the effect of the basis
adjustment under former section 48(q)
with respect to a lessee. Further, treating
it as a partnership income item would
generate an inappropriate basis increase
to the partners under section 705 that
would allow them to take a noneconomic loss.
II. Basis Reduction Election
The temporary regulations (§ 1.50–
1T(c)) allow a lessee or an ultimate
E:\FR\FM\19JYR1.SGM
19JYR1
jspears on DSK30JT082PROD with RULES
34778
Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 139 / Friday, July 19, 2019 / Rules and Regulations
credit claimant, under certain
circumstances, to elect to accelerate the
income inclusion outside of the section
50(a) recapture period (income
acceleration election). This income
acceleration election is available in the
taxable year in which the lease
terminates or is otherwise disposed of or
when an ultimate credit claimant
disposes of their entire interest in the
partnership or the S corporation. One
commenter requested that the final
regulations permit the lessor and lessee
of investment credit property, together
with the ultimate credit claimant, to
make an irrevocable ‘‘basis reduction
election.’’ This election would allow the
lessor of investment credit property to
reduce the basis of the property by the
remaining amount of the ultimate credit
claimant’s income inclusion in lieu of
requiring the ultimate credit claimant to
continue to account for the income
inclusion or make the income
acceleration election. The commenter
suggested that the ‘‘basis reduction
election’’ be permitted after the
recapture period when a lease
termination occurs or when an ultimate
credit claimant disposes of their entire
interest in the partnership or S
corporation. The commenter requested
that the Treasury Department and the
IRS adopt the ‘‘basis reduction election’’
based on policy considerations the
Treasury Department and the IRS took
into account when incorporating the
income acceleration election in the
temporary regulations.
As previously noted, the investment
credit rules operate to allow a taxpayer
to claim the benefit of the credit in
exchange for the recoupment of that
amount (or 50 percent of that amount in
the case of the section 48 energy credit)
over time. In the case of a lessee, in lieu
of a basis adjustment, and similar to the
rule contained in former section
48(d)(5)(B), the lessee (or an ultimate
credit claimant) must include in gross
income an amount equal to the amount
of the credit (or 50 percent of the
amount of the credit in the case of the
energy credit under section 48)
determined under section 46. The
Treasury Department and the IRS did
consider the administrative convenience
and reduced reporting burden for
taxpayers when permitting the income
acceleration election. The Treasury
Department and the IRS also determined
that such an election is consistent with
the applicable rules in former section
48(d)(5)(B), because a lessee (or an
ultimate credit claimant) that benefitted
from the credit is the appropriate party
to recognize the gross income inclusion
described in the statute.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:15 Jul 18, 2019
Jkt 247001
The Treasury Department and the IRS
have determined that the suggested
‘‘basis reduction election’’ is
inconsistent with the applicable rules in
former section 48(d)(5)(B) because the
election would allow the lessee or
ultimate credit claimant that recognized
the benefit of the credit to transfer the
burden of the offsetting income
inclusion to the lessor. The suggested
‘‘basis reduction election’’ would
essentially permit participants in
investment credit leasing transactions to
unwind the transactions after the
section 50(a) recapture period. For these
reasons, the Treasury Department and
the IRS do not adopt this
recommendation in the final
regulations.
III. Amount of Credit Included Ratably
in Gross Income
The temporary regulations (§§ 1.50–
1T(b)(2) and (3)) require a lessee or an
ultimate credit claimant to include
ratably in gross income, over the
shortest recovery period which could be
applicable under section 168 with
respect to that property, an amount
equal to the amount of the credit (or 50
percent of the amount of the energy
credit under section 48). The temporary
regulations made applicable the rule in
former section 48(d)(5) that required the
lessee of investment credit property to
recognize the gross income inclusion
over the shortest applicable recovery
period under section 168. One
commenter suggested that the final
regulations allow a lessee or ultimate
credit claimant to calculate the income
inclusion based on the depreciation
methods and conventions applicable to
the underlying investment credit
property. The commenter described an
example where an owner-lessor of
investment credit property elects to
depreciate rental property over 40 years
instead of over the usual 271⁄2 year
recovery period, and the lessee or
ultimate credit claimant reports the
offsetting income inclusion over the
same 40-year period instead of the
shortest recovery period. The
commenter suggested that the approach
is equitable and can be justified under
the ‘‘rules similar to’’ language in
section 50(d)(5), which provides that for
purposes of the investment credit, rules
similar to former section 48(d) apply.
The Treasury Department and the IRS
have determined that the applicable
rules from the temporary regulations
(§ 1.50–1T(b)(2) and (3)) are the correct
interpretation of the language in section
50(d)(5). A rule that permits a lessee or
ultimate credit claimant to calculate the
income inclusion based on the
depreciation methods and conventions
PO 00000
Frm 00010
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
applicable to the underlying investment
credit property is dissimilar to the rule
in former section 48(d)(5)(B), because it
contradicts the plain language of the
statute. Adopting a rule that would
allow a lessor or an ultimate credit
claimant to recognize the income
inclusion over a longer recovery period
would facilitate an inappropriate
income deferral, and create additional
reporting and monitoring burden. For
these reasons, the Treasury Department
and the IRS are not adopting this
recommendation in the final
regulations.
IV. Request for Comments in the
Proposed Regulations
The preamble to the proposed
regulations included a specific request
for comments regarding whether
guidance is needed to address the
applicability of the income inclusion
rules under section 50(d)(5) to trusts,
estates, and/or electing large
partnerships. No comments were
received in response to this request.
However, the Treasury Department and
the IRS are aware that, given the
reference to electing large partnerships,
some questioned how the temporary
regulations would interact with the
centralized partnership audit regime
enacted as part of the Bipartisan Budget
Act of 2015. Such guidance is beyond
the scope of these final regulations.
V. Effective and Applicability Dates
The temporary regulations were
effective on July 22, 2016, and
applicable to investment credit property
placed in service on or after the date
that is 60 days after the date of filing in
the Federal Register (September 19,
2016). The preamble to the temporary
regulations states that the effective date
of the regulations should not be
construed to create any inference
concerning the proper interpretation of
section 50(d) prior to the effective date
of the regulations. Both commenters
requested that the final regulations
clarify the treatment of pre-effective
date transactions.
Both commenters also requested that
the effective date be modified to limit
the application of the rules for
investment partnership transactions
entered into in prior years. Both
commenters noted that different
portions of a project could be placed in
service both before and after the
effective date, because some historic
rehabilitation projects involve multiple
placed in service dates (for example, if
a project involves renovating multiple
buildings over a period of years). One
commenter proposed to deem an entire
project as placed in service on the first
E:\FR\FM\19JYR1.SGM
19JYR1
Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 139 / Friday, July 19, 2019 / Rules and Regulations
jspears on DSK30JT082PROD with RULES
placed in service date when
contemporaneous evidence shows that
the project will include more than one
building. The other commenter
suggested that the effective date be
based on timing of investment in the
investment partnership, rather than the
placed in service date.
The Treasury Department and the IRS
do not adopt these recommendations in
the final regulations. These final
regulations are effective on July 17,
2019, and are applicable to investment
credit property placed in service on or
after September 19, 2016. Section
7805(b)(1)(B) provides that a final
regulation may apply to a taxable period
ending on or after the date on which a
proposed or temporary regulation to
which the final regulation relates was
filed with the Federal Register. The
applicability date of the rules in the
final regulations is September 19, 2016,
the same date as the applicability date
of the rules as set forth in the temporary
regulations. Those regulations were
issued as temporary regulations to
address investment credit transactions
in which partnerships and S
corporations treated the income
inclusion as an item of partnership or S
corporation income that entitled their
partners or S corporation shareholders
to a corresponding outside basis
increase under section 705(a) or section
1367(a). Such a basis increase would
allow these partners or S corporation
shareholders to claim an inappropriate
loss (or reduce the amount of gain
realized) upon the disposition of their
partnership interests or S corporation
shares. Revising the rules in accordance
with commenters’ suggestions would
conflict with the purpose of these
regulations. Accordingly, the
applicability date of the final
regulations corresponds to the
applicability date of the temporary
regulations. Similar to the temporary
regulations, the applicability date of
these final regulations should not be
construed to create any inference
concerning the proper interpretation of
section 50(d) prior to the applicability
date of these regulations.
VI. Revenue Procedure 2014–12
As explained in the Effect on Other
Documents section of TD 9776, the
temporary regulations modified
Revenue Procedure 2014–12 (2014–3
IRB 415). Because these final regulations
remove the temporary regulations from
the Federal Register, this Treasury
decision includes an identical
modification to Rev. Proc. 2014–12 in
the Effect on Other Documents section.
Rev. Proc. 2014–12 establishes the
requirements under which the IRS will
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:15 Jul 18, 2019
Jkt 247001
not challenge partnership allocations of
section 47 rehabilitation credits by a
partnership to its partners. Section 3
states that Rev. Proc. 2014–12 does not
address how a partnership is required to
allocate the income inclusion required
by section 50(d)(5). Furthermore,
section 4.07 of Rev. Proc. 2014–12
provides that, solely for purposes of
determining whether a partnership
meets the requirements of that section,
the partnership’s allocation to its
partners of the income inclusion
required by section 50(d)(5) shall not be
taken into account.
Because § 1.704–1(b)(4)(ii) provides
that allocations of cost or qualified
investment, and not the investment
credit itself (which is not determined at
the partnership level), made in
accordance with § 1.46–3(f) shall be
deemed to be made in accordance with
the partners’ interests in a partnership,
this Treasury decision modifies Rev.
Proc. 2014–12 by changing all
references to allocations of section 47
rehabilitation credits to refer instead to
allocations of qualified rehabilitation
expenditures under section 47(c)(2).
Additionally, because § 1.50–1(b)(3)
provides that the gross income required
to be included under section 50(d)(5) is
not an item of partnership income to
which the rules of subchapter K apply,
this Treasury decision modifies Rev.
Proc. 2014–12 by deleting the sentences
in section 3 and section 4.07 that refer
to allocation by a partnership of the
income inclusion required under
section 50(d)(5).
VII. Recapture of the Rehabilitation
Credit
These regulations finalize the rules
described in § 1.50–1T(c) that
coordinate the credit recapture rules in
section 50(a) with the income inclusion
rules in § 1.50–1T(b)(2) and (3). These
final regulations incorporate the rule
from the temporary regulations
requiring the lessee or ultimate credit
claimant to make an adjustment to gross
income for any discrepancies between
the total amounts included in gross
income under the income inclusion
rules and the total unrecaptured credit.
When the temporary regulations were
published in 2016, section 47(a)
provided that the rehabilitation credit
was 20% of the qualified rehabilitation
expenditures (QREs) with respect to a
certified historic structure. Section 47(a)
was amended by section 13402 of the
Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, Public Law 115–
97, 131 Stat. 2054, 2134 (TCJA). Section
47(a)(1) now provides that for any
taxable year during the 5-year period
beginning in the taxable year in which
the qualified rehabilitated building is
PO 00000
Frm 00011
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
34779
placed in service, the rehabilitation
credit for the year is an amount equal
to the ratable share. Section 47(a)(2)
defines the ratable share as 20 percent
of the qualified rehabilitation
expenditures with respect to the
qualified rehabilitated building, as
allocated ratably to each year during the
period. The TCJA did not amend section
47(b), which provides that qualified
rehabilitation expenditures with respect
to any qualified rehabilitated building
are taken into account for the taxable
year in which the building is placed in
service. These final regulations adopt
the rules from the temporary
regulations, but the Treasury
Department and the IRS request
comments addressing whether
additional guidance under section 50(a)
is needed to coordinate recapture of the
rehabilitation credit.
Effect on Other Documents
Rev. Proc. 2014–12 (2014–3 IRB 415)
is modified by: (1) Changing all
references to allocations of section 47
rehabilitation credits to refer instead to
allocations of qualified rehabilitation
expenditures under section 47(c)(2); and
(2) deleting the sentences in section 3
and section 4.07 that refer to allocation
by a partnership of the income inclusion
required under section 50(d)(5).
Statement of Availability of IRS
Documents
Rev. Proc. 2014–12 (2014–3 IRB 415)
is published in the Internal Revenue
Bulletin (or Cumulative Bulletin) and is
available from the Superintendent of
Documents, U.S. Government Printing
Office, Washington, DC 20402, or by
visiting the IRS website at https://
www.irs.gov.
Special Analyses
This regulation is not subject to
review under section 6(b) of Executive
Order 12866 pursuant to the
Memorandum of Agreement (April 11,
2018) between the Department of the
Treasury and the Office of Management
and Budget regarding review of tax
regulations. Therefore, a regulatory
impact assessment is not required.
Because these regulations do not impose
a collection of information on small
entities, the Regulatory Flexibility Act
(5 U.S.C. chapter 6) does not apply.
Pursuant to section 7805(f) of the Code,
the notice of proposed rulemaking
preceding these regulations was
submitted to the Chief Counsel for
Advocacy of the Small Business
Administration for comment on their
impact on small businesses. No
comments were received from the Small
Business Administration.
E:\FR\FM\19JYR1.SGM
19JYR1
34780
Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 139 / Friday, July 19, 2019 / Rules and Regulations
Drafting Information
The principal authors of these
temporary regulations are Barbara J.
Campbell and Michael J. Torruella
Costa, Office of the Associate Chief
Counsel (Passthroughs and Special
Industries), IRS. However, other
personnel from the Treasury
Department and the IRS participated in
their development.
List of Subjects in 26 CFR Part 1
Income taxes, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
Adoption of Amendments to the
Regulations
Accordingly, 26 CFR part 1 is
amended as follows:
PART 1—INCOME TAXES
Paragraph 1. The authority citation
for part 1 is amended by removing the
entry for § 1.50–1T to read in part as
follows:
■
Authority: 26 U.S.C. 7805 * * *
Par. 2. Section 1.50–1 is revised to
read as follows:
■
jspears on DSK30JT082PROD with RULES
§ 1.50–1 Lessee’s income inclusion
following election of lessor of investment
credit property to treat lessee as acquirer.
(a) In general. Section 50(d)(5)
provides that, for purposes of
computing the investment credit, rules
similar to the rules of former section
48(d) (relating to certain leased
property) (as in effect on the day before
the date of the enactment of the
Revenue Reconciliation Act of 1990
(Pub. L. 101–508, 104 Stat. 1388
(November 5, 1990))) apply. This
section provides rules similar to the
rules of former section 48(d)(5) that the
Secretary has determined shall apply for
purposes of determining the inclusion
in gross income required when a lessor
elects to treat a lessee as having
acquired investment credit property.
(b) Coordination with basis
adjustment rules. In the case of any
property with respect to which an
election is made under § 1.48–4 by a
lessor of investment credit property to
treat the lessee as having acquired the
property—
(1) Basis adjustment. Section 50(c)
does not apply with respect to such
property.
(2) Amount of credit included ratably
in gross income—(i) In general. A lessee
of the property must include ratably in
gross income, over the shortest recovery
period which could be applicable under
section 168 with respect to that
property, an amount equal to the
amount of the credit determined under
section 46 with respect to that property.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:15 Jul 18, 2019
Jkt 247001
The ratable income inclusion under this
paragraph begins on the date the
investment credit property is placed in
service and continues on each one year
anniversary date thereafter until the end
of the applicable recovery period. The
lessee will include in gross income the
amount of its credit determined under
section 46 regardless of limitations on
the amount of the credit allowed under
section 38(c) based on the amount of the
lessee’s income tax.
(ii) Special rule for the energy credit.
In the case of any energy credit
determined under section 48(a),
paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this section applies
only to the extent of 50 percent of the
amount of the credit determined under
section 46.
(3) Special rule for partnerships and
S corporations—(i) In general. For
purposes of paragraph (b)(2) of this
section, if the lessee of the property is
a partnership (other than an electing
large partnership) or an S corporation,
the gross income includible under such
paragraph is not an item of partnership
income to which the rules of subchapter
K of Chapter 1, subtitle A of the Code
apply or an item of S corporation
income to which the rules of subchapter
S of Chapter 1, subtitle A of the Code
apply. Any partner or S corporation
shareholder that is an ultimate credit
claimant (as defined in paragraph
(b)(3)(ii) of this section) is treated as a
lessee that must include in gross income
the amounts required under paragraph
(b)(2) of this section in proportion to the
credit determined under section 46 with
respect to such partner or S corporation
shareholder.
(ii) Definition of ultimate credit
claimant. For purposes of this section,
the term ultimate credit claimant means
any partner or S corporation
shareholder that files (or that would file)
Form 3468, ‘‘Investment Credit,’’ with
such partner’s or S corporation
shareholder’s income tax return to claim
an investment credit determined under
section 46 with respect to such partner
or S corporation shareholder.
(c) Coordination with the recapture
rules—(1) In general. If section 50(a)
requires an increase in the lessee’s or
the ultimate credit claimant’s tax or a
reduction in the carryback or carryover
of an unused credit (or both) as a result
of an early disposition (including a lease
termination), etc., of leased property for
which an election had been made under
§ 1.48–4, the lessee or the ultimate
credit claimant is required to include in
gross income an amount equal to the
excess, if any, of the amount of the
credit that is not recaptured over the
total increases in gross income
previously made under paragraph (b)(2)
PO 00000
Frm 00012
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
of this section with respect to the
property. Such amount is in addition to
the amounts the lessee or the ultimate
credit claimant previously included in
gross income under paragraph (b)(2) of
this section.
(2) Income inclusion exceeds
unrecaptured credit. If section 50(a)
requires an increase in the lessee’s or
ultimate credit claimant’s tax or a
reduction in the carryback or carryover
of an unused credit (or both) as a result
of an early disposition (including a lease
termination), etc., of leased property for
which an election had been made under
§ 1.48–4, the lessee’s or the ultimate
credit claimant’s gross income shall be
reduced by an amount equal to the
excess, if any, of the total increases in
gross income previously included under
paragraph (b)(2) of this section over the
amount of the credit that is not
recaptured.
(3) Special rule for the energy credit.
In the case of any energy credit
determined under section 48(a),
paragraphs (c)(1) and (2) of this section
apply by substituting the phrase ‘‘50
percent of the amount of the credit that
is not recaptured’’ for the phrase ‘‘the
amount of the credit that is not
recaptured.’’
(4) Timing of income inclusion or
reduction following recapture. Any
adjustment required by paragraphs (c)(1)
and (2) of this section is taken into
account in the taxable year in which the
property is disposed of or otherwise
ceases to be investment credit property.
(d) Election to accelerate income
inclusion outside of the recapture
period—(1) In general. If after the
recapture period described in section
50(a), but prior to the expiration of the
recovery period described in paragraph
(b)(2) of this section, there is a lease
termination, the lessee otherwise
disposes of the lease, or a partner or S
corporation shareholder that is an
ultimate credit claimant disposes of its
entire interest, either direct or indirect,
in a lessee partnership (other than an
electing large partnership) or S
corporation, the lessee, or, in the case of
a partnership or S corporation, the
ultimate credit claimant may
irrevocably elect to take into account the
remaining amount required to be
included in gross income under this
section in the taxable year of the
disposition or termination.
(2) Exceptions. The election provided
under paragraph (d)(1) of this section is
not available to—
(i) Lessees or ultimate credit
claimants required by paragraph (c) of
this section to account for the remaining
amount required to be included in gross
income after accounting for recapture in
E:\FR\FM\19JYR1.SGM
19JYR1
Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 139 / Friday, July 19, 2019 / Rules and Regulations
jspears on DSK30JT082PROD with RULES
the taxable year in which the property
was disposed of or otherwise ceased to
be investment credit property under
section 50(a); or
(ii) Former partners or S corporation
shareholders that own no interest, either
direct or indirect, in a lessee partnership
or S corporation at the time of a lease
termination or disposition.
(3) Manner and time for making
election. The election under paragraph
(d)(1) of this section is made by
including the remaining amount
required to be included under this
section in gross income in the taxable
year of the lease termination or
disposition or the disposition of the
ultimate credit claimant’s entire
interest, either direct or indirect, in a
partnership or S corporation. The
election must be made on or before the
due date (including any extension of
time) of the lessee’s income tax return,
or, in the case of a partnership or S
corporation, the ultimate credit
claimant’s income tax return for the
taxable year in which the lease
termination or disposition or the
disposition of the ultimate credit
claimant’s entire interest, either direct
or indirect, in a partnership or S
corporation occurs.
(e) Examples. The provisions of this
section may be illustrated by the
following examples:
(1) Example 1. X, a calendar year C
corporation, leases nonresidential real
property from Y. The property is placed in
service on October 1, 2016. Y elects under
§ 1.48–4 to treat X as having acquired the
property. X’s investment credit determined
under section 46 for 2016 with respect to
such property is $9,750. The shortest
recovery period that could be available to the
property under section 168 is 39 years.
Because Y has elected to treat X as having
acquired the property, Y does not reduce its
basis in the property under section 50(c).
Instead, X, the lessee of the property, must
include ratably in gross income over 39 years
an amount equal to the credit determined
under section 46 with respect to such
property. Under paragraph (b)(2) of this
section, X’s increase in gross income for each
of the 39 years beginning with 2016 is $250
($9,750/39 year recovery period).
(2) Example 2. The facts are the same as
in Example 1 in paragraph (e)(1) of this
section, except that instead of nonresidential
real property, X leases from Y solar energy
equipment for which an energy credit under
section 48 is determined under section 46.
X’s investment credit determined under
section 46 for 2016 with respect to the
property is $9,750. The shortest recovery
period that could be available to the property
under section 168 is 5 years. X, the lessee of
the property, must include ratably in gross
income over 5 years an amount equal to 50%
of the credit determined under section 46
with respect to such property. Under
paragraph (b)(2) of this section, X’s increase
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:15 Jul 18, 2019
Jkt 247001
in gross income for each of the 5 years
beginning with 2016 is $975 ($4,875/5 year
recovery period).
(3) Example 3. A and B, calendar year
taxpayers, form a partnership, the AB
partnership, that leases nonresidential real
property from Y. The property is placed in
service on October 1, 2016. Y elects under
§ 1.48–4 to treat the AB partnership as having
acquired the property. A’s investment credit
determined under section 46 for 2016 is
$3,900 and B’s investment credit determined
under section 46 for 2016 is $7,800 with
respect to the property. The shortest recovery
period that could be available to the property
under section 168 is 39 years. Because Y has
elected to treat the AB partnership as having
acquired the property, Y does not reduce its
basis in the building under section 50(c).
Instead, A and B, the ultimate credit
claimants, must include the amount of the
credit determined with respect to A and B
under section 46 ratably in gross income over
39 years, the shortest recovery period
available with respect to such property.
Therefore, A and B must include ratably in
gross income over 39 years under paragraph
(b)(2) of this section an amount equal to
$3,900 and $7,800, respectively. Under
paragraph (b)(2) of this section, A’s increase
in gross income for each of the 39 years
beginning with 2016 is $100 ($3,900/39 year
recovery period) and B’s is $200 ($7,800/39
year recovery period). Because the gross
income A and B are required to include
under paragraph (b)(2) of this section is not
an item of partnership income, the rules
under subchapter K applicable to items of
partnership income do not apply with
respect to such income. In particular, A and
B are not entitled to an increase in the
outside basis of their partnership interests
under section 705(a) and are not entitled to
an increase in their capital accounts under
section 704(b).
(4) Example 4. The facts are the same as
in Example 3 in paragraph (e)(3) of this
section, except that on January 1, 2019, the
lease between AB partnership and Y
terminates (Y retains ownership of the
property), which is a recapture event under
section 50(a). A’s and B’s income tax for 2019
is increased under section 50(a) by $2,340
and $4,680, respectively (60% of $3,900 and
$7,800, respectively, assuming that the
aggregate decrease in the credits allowed
under section 38 was the full amount of the
investment credits determined as to A and B
under section 46). Therefore, the amount of
the unrecaptured credit as to A and B is
$1,560 and $3,120, respectively (40% of
$3,900 and $7,800, respectively). The
amounts that A and B previously included in
gross income under paragraph (b)(2) of this
section are $300 ($100 for each of 2016, 2017,
and 2018) and $600 ($200 for each of 2016,
2017, and 2018), respectively. A and B are
required under paragraph (c)(1) of this
section to include in gross income an amount
equal to the excess of the credit that is not
recaptured ($1,560 and $3,120, respectively)
over the total increases in gross income
previously made under paragraph (b)(2) of
this section with respect to the property
($300 and $600, respectively). Therefore, A
and B must include in gross income $1,260
PO 00000
Frm 00013
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
34781
and $2,520, respectively, in the taxable year
of the lease termination (2019) in addition to
the recapture amounts described above.
(5) Example 5. (i) The facts are the same
as in Example 4 in paragraph (e)(4) of this
section, except that instead of nonresidential
real property, the AB partnership leases from
Y solar energy equipment for which an
energy credit under section 48 is determined
under section 46. Because the shortest
recovery period that could be available to the
property under section 168 is 5 years, A and
B are required under paragraph (b)(2)(ii) of
this section to include ratably in gross
income over 5 years an amount equal to 50%
of the credit determined under section 46
with respect to such property (50% of
$3,900/5, or $390, per year for A, and 50%
of $7,800/5, or $780, per year for B).
(ii) The January 1, 2019 lease termination
requires A’s and B’s income tax for 2019 to
be increased under section 50(a) by $2,340
and $4,680, respectively (60% of $3,900 and
$7,800, respectively). Therefore, the amount
of the unrecaptured credit as to A and B is
$1,560 and $3,120, respectively (40% of
$3,900 and $7,800, respectively). Under
paragraph (b)(2)(ii) of this section, the
amounts A and B previously included in
gross income are $1,170 ($390 for each of
2016, 2017, and 2018) and $2,340 ($780 for
each of 2016, 2017, and 2018), respectively.
A and B are entitled to a reduction in gross
income under paragraph (c)(2) of this section
equal to the excess of the total increases in
gross income made under paragraph (b)(2)(ii)
of this section ($1,170 and $2,340,
respectively) over 50% of the amount of the
credit that is not recaptured ($780 and
$1,560, respectively). Therefore, A and B are
entitled to a reduction in gross income in the
amount of $390 and $780, respectively, in the
taxable year of the lease termination (2019).
(6) Example 6. (i) The facts are the same
as in Example 3 in paragraph (e)(3) of this
section, except that on December 1, 2021, A
sells its entire interest to C, and on January
1, 2022, the lease between AB partnership
and Y terminates. At the time of the lease
termination, B is still a partner in the AB
partnership. There is no recapture event
under section 50(a) because both the lease
termination and the disposition of A’s
interest in the partnership occurred outside
of the recapture period.
(ii) At the time that A sold its interest in
the AB partnership to C, A had previously
included $500 ($100 for each of 2016–2020)
in gross income under paragraph (b)(2) of this
section. Under paragraph (b)(2) of this
section, A must continue to include the
remaining $3,400 (including $100 in 2021) in
gross income ratably over the remaining
portion of the applicable recovery period of
39 years. Alternatively, under paragraph
(d)(1) of this section, A may irrevocably elect
to include the remaining $3,400 in gross
income in the taxable year that A sold its
entire interest in the AB partnership to C
(2021). Pursuant to paragraph (d)(2) of this
section, A cannot make this election in the
taxable year of the lease termination (2022).
(iii) At the time of the lease termination,
B had previously included $1,200 ($200 for
each of 2016–2021) in gross income under
paragraph (b)(2) of this section. Under
E:\FR\FM\19JYR1.SGM
19JYR1
34782
Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 139 / Friday, July 19, 2019 / Rules and Regulations
paragraph (b)(2) of this section, B must
continue to include the remaining $6,600
required in gross income ratably over the
remaining portion of the applicable recovery
period of 39 years. Alternatively, under
paragraph (d)(1) of this section, B may
irrevocably elect to include the remaining
$6,600 in gross income in the taxable year of
the lease termination (2022).
(f) Applicability date. This section
applies to property placed in service on
or after September 19, 2016.
§ 1.50–1T
■
[Removed]
Par. 3. Section 1.50–1T is removed.
Kirsten Wielobob,
Deputy Commissioner for Services and
Enforcement.
Approved: June 21, 2019.
David J. Kautter,
Assistant Secretary of the Treasury (Tax
Policy).
[FR Doc. 2019–15497 Filed 7–17–19; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 4830–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade
Bureau
27 CFR Part 9
[Docket No. TTB–2018–0009; T.D. TTB–156;
Ref: Notice No. 178]
RIN 1513–AC43
Establishment of the Crest of the Blue
Ridge Henderson County Viticultural
Area
Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and
Trade Bureau, Treasury.
ACTION: Final rule; Treasury decision.
AGENCY:
The Alcohol and Tobacco Tax
and Trade Bureau (TTB) establishes the
approximately 215-square mile ‘‘Crest of
the Blue Ridge Henderson County’’
viticultural area in Henderson County,
North Carolina. The Crest of the Blue
Ridge Henderson County viticultural
area is not located within any other
established viticultural area. TTB
designates viticultural areas to allow
vintners to better describe the origin of
their wines and to allow consumers to
better identify wines they may
purchase.
SUMMARY:
This final rule is effective August
19, 2019.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Karen A. Thornton, Regulations and
Rulings Division, Alcohol and Tobacco
Tax and Trade Bureau, 1310 G Street
NW, Box 12, Washington, DC 20005;
telephone 202–453–1039, ext. 175.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
jspears on DSK30JT082PROD with RULES
DATES:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:15 Jul 18, 2019
Jkt 247001
Background on Viticultural Areas
TTB Authority
Section 105(e) of the Federal Alcohol
Administration Act (FAA Act), 27
U.S.C. 205(e), authorizes the Secretary
of the Treasury to prescribe regulations
for the labeling of wine, distilled spirits,
and malt beverages. The FAA Act
provides that these regulations should,
among other things, prohibit consumer
deception and the use of misleading
statements on labels and ensure that
labels provide the consumer with
adequate information as to the identity
and quality of the product. The Alcohol
and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau
(TTB) administers the FAA Act
pursuant to section 1111(d) of the
Homeland Security Act of 2002,
codified at 6 U.S.C. 531(d). The
Secretary has delegated various
authorities through Treasury
Department Order 120–01, dated
December 10, 2013 (superseding
Treasury Order 120–01, dated January
24, 2003), to the TTB Administrator to
perform the functions and duties in the
administration and enforcement of these
laws.
Part 4 of the TTB regulations (27 CFR
part 4) authorizes the establishment of
definitive viticultural areas and
regulates the use of their names as
appellations of origin on wine labels
and in wine advertisements. Part 9 of
the TTB regulations (27 CFR part 9) sets
forth standards for the preparation and
submission of petitions for the
establishment or modification of
American viticultural areas (AVAs) and
lists the approved AVAs.
Definition
Section 4.25(e)(1)(i) of the TTB
regulations (27 CFR 4.25(e)(1)(i)) defines
a viticultural area for American wine as
a delimited grape-growing region having
distinguishing features, as described in
part 9 of the regulations, and a name
and a delineated boundary, as
established in part 9 of the regulations.
These designations allow vintners and
consumers to attribute a given quality,
reputation, or other characteristic of a
wine made from grapes grown in an area
to the wine’s geographic origin. The
establishment of AVAs allows vintners
to describe more accurately the origin of
their wines to consumers and helps
consumers to identify wines they may
purchase. Establishment of an AVA is
neither an approval nor an endorsement
by TTB of the wine produced in that
area.
Requirements
Section 4.25(e)(2) of the TTB
regulations (27 CFR 4.25(e)(2)) outlines
PO 00000
Frm 00014
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
the procedure for proposing an AVA
and provides that any interested party
may petition TTB to establish a grapegrowing region as an AVA. Section 9.12
of the TTB regulations (27 CFR 9.12)
prescribes standards for petitions for the
establishment or modification of AVAs.
Petitions to establish an AVA must
include the following:
• Evidence that the area within the
proposed AVA boundary is nationally
or locally known by the AVA name
specified in the petition;
• An explanation of the basis for
defining the boundary of the proposed
AVA;
• A narrative description of the
features of the proposed AVA affecting
viticulture, such as climate, geology,
soils, physical features, and elevation,
that make the proposed AVA distinctive
and distinguish it from adjacent areas
outside the proposed AVA boundary;
• The appropriate United States
Geological Survey (USGS) map(s)
showing the location of the proposed
AVA, with the boundary of the
proposed AVA clearly drawn thereon;
and
• A detailed narrative description of
the proposed AVA boundary based on
USGS map markings.
Crest of the Blue Ridge Henderson
County Petition
TTB received a petition from Mark
Williams, the executive director of
Agribusiness Henderson County, and
Barbara Walker, the county extension
support specialist for North Carolina
Cooperative Extension, on behalf of
local vineyards and winery operators,
proposing the establishment of the
‘‘Crest of the Blue Ridge Henderson
County’’ AVA in Henderson County,
North Carolina. The proposed Crest of
the Blue Ridge Henderson County AVA
covers approximately 215 square miles
and is not located within any other
AVA. There are 14 commercial
vineyards covering a total of
approximately 70 acres within the
proposed AVA, as well as two bonded
wineries. According to the petition, an
additional 55 acres of vineyards are
planned for planting in the next five
years.
According to the petition, the
distinguishing features of the proposed
AVA are its climate and topography—
specifically its elevation. Elevation can
influence such climatic factors as
temperature, length of growing season,
and precipitation. The petition
describes the Crest of the Blue Ridge
Henderson County AVA as straddling
the Eastern Continental Divide,
colloquially known as the Crest of the
Blue Ridge. The crest separates two
E:\FR\FM\19JYR1.SGM
19JYR1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 84, Number 139 (Friday, July 19, 2019)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 34775-34782]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2019-15497]
[[Page 34775]]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Internal Revenue Service
26 CFR Part 1
[TD 9872]
RIN 1545-BM74
Income Inclusion When Lessee Treated as Having Acquired
Investment Credit Property
AGENCY: Internal Revenue Service (IRS), Treasury.
ACTION: Final regulations and removal of temporary regulations.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This document contains final regulations that provide guidance
concerning the income inclusion rules under section 50(d)(5) of the
Internal Revenue Code (Code) that are applicable to a lessee of
investment credit property when a lessor of such property elects to
treat the lessee as having acquired the property. These final
regulations also provide rules to coordinate the section 50(a)
recapture rules with the section 50(d)(5) income inclusion rules. In
addition, these final regulations provide rules regarding income
inclusion upon a lease termination, lease disposition by a lessee, or
disposition of a partner's or S corporation shareholder's entire
interest in a lessee partnership or S corporation outside of the
recapture period. Accordingly, these regulations will affect lessees of
investment credit property when the lessor of the property makes an
election to treat the lessee as having acquired the property and an
investment credit is determined under section 46 with respect to such
lessee.
DATES:
Effective date: These regulations are effective on July 17, 2019.
Applicability date: For date of applicability, see Sec. 1.50-1(f).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Barbara J. Campbell or Michael J.
Torruella Costa, (202) 317-4137 (not a toll-free number).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
I. Overview
This document amends the Income Tax Regulations (26 CFR part 1) to
finalize rules under section 50(d)(5) of the Code. On July 22, 2016,
the Department of the Treasury (Treasury Department) and the IRS
published in the Federal Register a notice of proposed rulemaking by
cross-reference to temporary regulations ((REG-102516-15) (81 FR
47739)) (proposed regulations) and final and temporary regulations ((TD
9776) (81 FR 47701)) (temporary regulations) that amended Sec. 1.50-1
of the Income Tax Regulations. On September 23, 2016, the Treasury
Department and the IRS published corrections to the temporary
regulations in the Federal Register (81 FR 65541). (Subsequent
references in this preamble to the temporary regulations are to the
temporary regulations as so corrected.) The Treasury Department and the
IRS received two written comments on the proposed regulations. No
requests for a public hearing were made, and no public hearing was
held. After consideration of the comments received, these final
regulations adopt the proposed regulations without modification.
II. Section 50 Background
Section 50(d) provides special rules applicable to the investment
credit determined under section 46 (investment credit property).
Section 50(d)(5) provides the income inclusion rules applicable to a
lessee of investment credit property when a lessor elects to treat the
lessee as having acquired the property. Section 50(d)(5) provides that,
for purposes of the investment credit, rules similar to former section
48(d) (as in effect prior to the enactment of the Revenue
Reconciliation Act of 1990 (Pub. L. 101-508, 104 Stat 1388 (November 5,
1990))) apply.
Former section 48(d)(1) permitted a lessor of new section 38
property to elect to treat that property as having been acquired by the
lessee for an amount equal to its fair market value (or, if the lessor
and lessee were members of a controlled group of corporations, equal to
the lessor's basis). Former section 48(d)(3) provided that if the
lessor made the election provided in former section 48(d)(1) with
respect to any such property, the lessee would be treated for all
purposes of subpart E, part IV, subchapter A, Chapter 1, subtitle A, as
having acquired such property. Section 50(a)(5)(A) replaced the term
``section 38 property'' with the term ``investment credit property.''
Under former section 48(q), if a credit was determined under
section 46 with respect to section 38 property, the basis of the
property was reduced by 50 percent of the amount of the credit
determined (or 100 percent of the amount of the credit determined in
the case of a credit for qualified rehabilitation expenditures). Former
section 48(d)(5) provided specific rules coordinating the effect of the
former section 48(d) election with the basis adjustment rules under
former section 48(q). Because the lessee would have no basis in the
property that the lessee was deemed to have acquired pursuant to the
election, former section 48(d)(5)(A) provided that the basis adjustment
rules under former section 48(q) did not apply. Section 50(c) replaced
former section 48(q) and provides the current basis adjustment rules.
In lieu of a basis adjustment, former section 48(d)(5)(B) provided
that the lessee was required to include ratably in gross income, over
the shortest recovery period which could be applicable under section
168 with respect to the property, an amount equal to 50 percent of the
amount of the credit allowable under section 38 to the lessee with
respect to such property. In the case of the rehabilitation credit,
former section 48(q)(3) provided that former section 48(d)(5)(B) was to
be applied without the phrase ``50 percent of.''
Former section 48(d)(5)(C) provided that, in the case of a
disposition of property to which former section 47 (the former
recapture rules) applied, the income inclusion rules of former section
48(d)(5) applied in accordance with regulations prescribed by the
Secretary. Section 50(a) replaced former section 47 and provides the
current recapture rules.
The temporary regulations provide the applicable rules that the
Secretary determined are similar to the rules of former section
48(d)(5). The temporary regulations are limited in scope to the income
inclusion rules that apply when a lessor elects under Sec. 1.48-4 to
treat the lessee as having acquired investment credit property.
The temporary regulations provide general rules for coordinating
the basis adjustment rules under section 50(c) (the successor to former
section 48(q)) with the rules under Sec. 1.48-4 pursuant to which a
lessor may elect to treat the lessee of investment credit property as
having acquired such property for purposes of calculating the
investment credit. Similar to the rule in former section 48(d)(5)(A),
which provided that the basis adjustment rules under former section
48(q) did not apply when a Sec. 1.48-4 election was made, the
temporary regulations provide that section 50(c) does not apply when
the election is made. Thus, the lessor is not required to reduce its
basis in the property by the amount of the investment credit (or 50
percent of the amount of the credit in the case of the energy credit
under section 48) determined under section 46.
The temporary regulations require that, in lieu of a basis
adjustment, and similar to the rule contained in former section
48(d)(5)(B), a lessee must include in gross income an amount
[[Page 34776]]
equal to the amount of the credit (or 50 percent of the amount of the
credit in the case of the energy credit under section 48) determined
under section 46. The lessee includes the amount ratably over the
shortest recovery period applicable under the accelerated cost recovery
system provided in section 168, beginning on the date the investment
credit property is placed in service and continuing on each one-year
anniversary date thereafter until the end of the applicable recovery
period. The amount required to be included by the lessee is not subject
to any limitations under section 38(c) on the amount of the credit
allowed based on the amount of the lessee's income tax.
Because section 50(c) replaces the old basis adjustment rules under
former section 48(q), the amount the lessee is required to include in
gross income under the temporary regulations corresponds to the current
basis adjustment amounts required under section 50(c), rather than the
former basis adjustment amounts provided in former section 48(q).
The temporary regulations include special rules for partnerships
and S corporations. In the case of a partnership (other than an
electing large partnership) or an S corporation for which an election
is made under Sec. 1.48-4 to treat such entity as having acquired the
investment credit property, each partner or S corporation shareholder
that is the ultimate credit claimant is treated as the lessee for
purposes of the income inclusion rules under the temporary regulations.
The term ultimate credit claimant is defined in the temporary
regulations as any partner or S corporation shareholder that files (or
that would file) Form 3468, ``Investment Credit'' (or its successor
form), with such partner's or S corporation shareholder's income tax
return to claim the investment credit determined under section 46 that
results in the corresponding income inclusion under the temporary
regulations. Each partner or S corporation shareholder that is the
ultimate credit claimant must include in gross income the amount
required under the temporary regulations in proportion to the amount of
the credit determined under section 46 (or 50 percent of the amount of
the credit in the case of the energy credit under section 48) with
respect to the partner or S corporation shareholder.
The temporary regulations also coordinate the income inclusion
rules with the credit recapture rules in section 50(a). The temporary
regulations provide that, when the investment credit recapture rules
under section 50(a) are triggered (including when there is a lease
termination), causing a recapture of the credit or a portion of the
credit, an adjustment will be made to the lessee's (or, as applicable,
the ultimate credit claimant's) gross income for any discrepancies
between the total amount included in gross income under the income
inclusion requirement in the temporary regulations and the total credit
allowable after recapture. The adjustment amount is taken into account
in the taxable year in which the property is disposed of or otherwise
ceases to be investment credit property. The temporary regulations
provide rules for when the amount of the unrecaptured credit (that is,
the allowable credit after taking into account the recapture amount, or
50 percent of the unrecaptured credit in the case of the energy credit)
exceeds the income inclusion, and when the income inclusion exceeds the
unrecaptured credit.
The temporary regulations also allow a lessee or an ultimate credit
claimant to make an irrevocable election to include in gross income any
remaining income required to be taken into account under Sec. 1.50-
1T(b)(2) in the taxable year in which the lease terminates or is
otherwise disposed of. Similarly, the temporary regulations provide
that if an ultimate credit claimant disposes of its entire interest,
either direct or indirect, in a partnership (other than an electing
large partnership) or an S corporation, the ultimate credit claimant
may make an irrevocable election to include in gross income any
remaining income required to be taken into account by the temporary
regulations in the taxable year of the disposition. The availability of
this election allows a lessee or an ultimate credit claimant to account
for any remaining required gross income inclusion in the taxable year
in which the lease terminates or is otherwise disposed of or in which
an ultimate credit claimant exits its investment.
This election is available only outside of the section 50(a)
recapture period, and only if the lessee or the ultimate credit
claimant was not already required to accelerate the gross income
required to be included under Sec. 1.50-1T(b)(2) because of a
recapture event during the recapture period. Additionally, a former
partner or S corporation shareholder that no longer owns a direct or
indirect interest in the lessee partnership or S corporation may not
elect to accelerate the gross income required to be included under the
temporary regulations at the time of a termination or disposition of
the lease by the lessee partnership or S corporation. The appropriate
time for a former partner or S corporation shareholder that is an
ultimate credit claimant to elect income acceleration is the taxable
year that it disposes of its entire interest in a lessee partnership or
S corporation.
Summary of Comments and Explanation of Provisions
I. Reconsideration of the Special Rule for Partnerships and S
Corporations
The temporary regulations (Sec. 1.50-1T(b)(3)) clarify that the
gross income inclusion is not an item of partnership income or an item
of S corporation income to which the rules of subchapter K or
subchapter S apply. One commenter requested that the Treasury
Department and the IRS reconsider the rules in Sec. 1.50-1T(b)(3)
based on a concern that the operation of the rules will decrease the
amount of investment that flows into the credit programs, which will
result in less cash available for projects. The commenter also
expressed a related concern that requiring credit claimants to identify
and track the income inclusion will add additional complexity to the
investments.
As explained in the preamble to the temporary regulations, because
the investment credit and any limitations on the credit itself are
determined at the partner or S corporation shareholder level it is
appropriate that the income inclusion occurs at the partner or
shareholder level. In the case of a partnership that owns the
investment credit property, a partner in a partnership is treated as
the taxpayer with respect to the partner's share of the basis of
partnership investment credit property under Sec. 1.46-3(f)(1) and
separately computes the investment credit based on its share of the
partnership's basis in the investment credit property. Similarly, in
the case of a lessee partnership where the lessor makes an election
under Sec. 1.48-4 to treat the partnership as having acquired
investment credit property, each partner in the lessee partnership is
the taxpayer with respect to whom the investment credit is determined
under section 46. Each partner in the lessee partnership will
separately compute the investment credit based on each partner's share
of the investment credit property. The credit is therefore computed at
the partner level based on partner level limitations. Section 1.704-
1(b)(4)(ii), which requires allocations with respect to the investment
tax credit provided by section 38 to be made in accordance with the
partners' interests in the partnership, provides that allocations of
cost or qualified investment (as opposed to the investment credit
itself, which is
[[Page 34777]]
not determined at the partnership level) made in accordance with Sec.
1.46-3(f) shall be deemed to be made in accordance with the partners'
interests in the partnership.
Under similar principles, in the case of a lessor that makes an
election under Sec. 1.48-4 to treat a lessee S corporation as having
acquired investment credit property, each shareholder in the lessee S
corporation is the taxpayer with respect to whom the investment credit
is determined under section 46. The credit is therefore computed at the
S corporation shareholder level based on shareholder level limitations.
The Treasury Department and the IRS have determined that the burden
of income inclusion should match the benefits of the allowable credit.
Therefore, because the investment credit and any limitations on the
credit are determined at the partner or shareholder level, these final
regulations adopt the rule from the proposed regulations that provides
that the gross income required to be ratably included is not an item of
partnership income for purposes of subchapter K or an item of S
corporation income for purposes of subchapter S. Accordingly, the basis
adjustment rules that would apply if such gross income was an item of
income under section 702 or section 1366, such as section 705(a)
(providing for an increase in a partner's outside basis for items of
partnership income) or section 1367(a) (providing for an increase in an
S corporation shareholder's stock basis for items of S corporation
income), do not apply.
When the temporary regulations were issued, the Treasury Department
and the IRS were aware that some partnerships and S corporations had
taken the position that this income is includible by the partnership or
S corporation and that their partners or S corporation shareholders
were entitled to increase their bases in their partnership interests or
S corporation stock as a result of the income inclusion. The Treasury
Department and the IRS determined that such basis increases are
inconsistent with Congressional intent as they thwart the purpose of
the income inclusion requirement in former section 48(d)(5)(B) and
confer an unintended benefit upon partners and S corporation
shareholders of lessee partnerships and S corporations that is not
available to any other credit claimant.
The investment credit rules operate to allow a taxpayer to claim
the benefit of the credit in exchange for the recoupment of that amount
(or 50 percent of that amount in the case of the section 48 energy
credit) over time. Where the taxpayer claiming the credit owns the
investment credit property, the basis reduction provided in section
50(c) results in reduced cost recovery deductions over the life of the
property or the realization of gain (or a reduction in the amount of
loss realized) upon the disposition of the property. In the case of a
lessor that elects under Sec. 1.48-4 to treat the lessee of investment
credit property as having acquired such property, Sec. 1.50-1T(b)(2)
instead requires the lessee to ratably include this amount in gross
income over the life of the property.
If that lessee is a partnership or an S corporation, however, some
partnerships and S corporations contend that this income inclusion is
treated as an item of partnership or S corporation income that entitles
their partners or S corporation shareholders to a corresponding outside
basis increase under section 705(a) or section 1367(a). If these
partners or S corporation shareholders were entitled to an outside
basis increase equal to their share of the income inclusion, they would
be able to claim an offsetting loss (or reduce the amount of gain
realized) upon the disposition of their partnership interests or S
corporation shares.
As noted, the Treasury Department and the IRS have concluded that
the income inclusion is not properly treated as an item of partnership
income or of S corporation income. Nonetheless, had the Treasury
Department and the IRS determined otherwise, the Treasury Department
and the IRS have decided that in addition to being inconsistent with
the purpose of section 48(d)(5)(B), allowing a basis increase for the
income inclusion would also be inconsistent with the purpose of
sections 705 and 1367. The income to be included is a notional amount,
which has no current or future economic effect on the basis of assets
held by a partnership or S corporation. In general, Congress intended
for sections 705 and 1367 to preserve inside and outside basis parity
for partnerships and S corporations so as to prevent any unintended tax
benefit or detriment to the partners or shareholders. See H.R. Rep. No.
1337, 83d Cong., 2d Sess. A225 (1954); S. Rep. No. 1622, 83d Cong., 2d
Sess. 384 (1954); H.R. Rep. No. 97-826, 97th Cong., 2d Sess. p. 17
(1982); S. Rep. No. 97-640, 97th Cong., 2d Sess. 16, 18 (1982); and
Rev. Rul. 96-11 (1996-1 CB 140). Ultimately, the Treasury Department
and the IRS have determined that, under any approach, allowing partners
and S corporation shareholders a basis increase to offset the income
inclusion required by the temporary regulations upon disposition of
their partnership interests or S corporation shares is inappropriate,
and that Congress did not intend to allow partners and S corporation
shareholders the full benefit of the credit without any of the
corresponding burden.
Additionally, the Treasury Department and the IRS are aware that
one practitioner questioned whether the Supreme Court's holding in U.S.
v. Basye, 410 U.S. 441 (1973), is contrary to the position taken in the
temporary regulations that the notional income created under section
50(d)(5) is not an item of partnership income computed under section
703. In Basye, the partnership entered into a contractual arrangement
whereby a portion of the payments it received for services rendered was
redirected to a trust established for the benefit of the partnership's
partner and non-partner physicians. The payments were not forfeitable
by the partnership or recoverable by the payor upon the happening of
any contingency. The Court held that because the payments represented
compensation for services rendered by the partnership, the partnership
was required to include them in current income and each partner was
required to include his distributive share of those amounts in his
income. The Court stated:
This conclusion rests on two familiar principles of income
taxation, first, that income is taxed to the party who earns it and
that liability may not be avoided through an anticipatory assignment of
that income, and, second, that partners are taxable on their
distributive or proportionate shares of current partnership income
irrespective of whether that income is actually distributed to them.
Basye at 447-448.
The Treasury Department and the IRS believe that Basye is
inapplicable to the determination that the notional income created
under section 50(d)(5) is not an item of partnership income computed
under section 703. Unlike the income at issue in Basye, the income
created under section 50(d)(5) is not ``earned'' by the partnership. It
has no economic effect as it is merely a notional item created to mimic
the effect of the basis adjustment under former section 48(q) with
respect to a lessee. Further, treating it as a partnership income item
would generate an inappropriate basis increase to the partners under
section 705 that would allow them to take a non-economic loss.
II. Basis Reduction Election
The temporary regulations (Sec. 1.50-1T(c)) allow a lessee or an
ultimate
[[Page 34778]]
credit claimant, under certain circumstances, to elect to accelerate
the income inclusion outside of the section 50(a) recapture period
(income acceleration election). This income acceleration election is
available in the taxable year in which the lease terminates or is
otherwise disposed of or when an ultimate credit claimant disposes of
their entire interest in the partnership or the S corporation. One
commenter requested that the final regulations permit the lessor and
lessee of investment credit property, together with the ultimate credit
claimant, to make an irrevocable ``basis reduction election.'' This
election would allow the lessor of investment credit property to reduce
the basis of the property by the remaining amount of the ultimate
credit claimant's income inclusion in lieu of requiring the ultimate
credit claimant to continue to account for the income inclusion or make
the income acceleration election. The commenter suggested that the
``basis reduction election'' be permitted after the recapture period
when a lease termination occurs or when an ultimate credit claimant
disposes of their entire interest in the partnership or S corporation.
The commenter requested that the Treasury Department and the IRS adopt
the ``basis reduction election'' based on policy considerations the
Treasury Department and the IRS took into account when incorporating
the income acceleration election in the temporary regulations.
As previously noted, the investment credit rules operate to allow a
taxpayer to claim the benefit of the credit in exchange for the
recoupment of that amount (or 50 percent of that amount in the case of
the section 48 energy credit) over time. In the case of a lessee, in
lieu of a basis adjustment, and similar to the rule contained in former
section 48(d)(5)(B), the lessee (or an ultimate credit claimant) must
include in gross income an amount equal to the amount of the credit (or
50 percent of the amount of the credit in the case of the energy credit
under section 48) determined under section 46. The Treasury Department
and the IRS did consider the administrative convenience and reduced
reporting burden for taxpayers when permitting the income acceleration
election. The Treasury Department and the IRS also determined that such
an election is consistent with the applicable rules in former section
48(d)(5)(B), because a lessee (or an ultimate credit claimant) that
benefitted from the credit is the appropriate party to recognize the
gross income inclusion described in the statute.
The Treasury Department and the IRS have determined that the
suggested ``basis reduction election'' is inconsistent with the
applicable rules in former section 48(d)(5)(B) because the election
would allow the lessee or ultimate credit claimant that recognized the
benefit of the credit to transfer the burden of the offsetting income
inclusion to the lessor. The suggested ``basis reduction election''
would essentially permit participants in investment credit leasing
transactions to unwind the transactions after the section 50(a)
recapture period. For these reasons, the Treasury Department and the
IRS do not adopt this recommendation in the final regulations.
III. Amount of Credit Included Ratably in Gross Income
The temporary regulations (Sec. Sec. 1.50-1T(b)(2) and (3))
require a lessee or an ultimate credit claimant to include ratably in
gross income, over the shortest recovery period which could be
applicable under section 168 with respect to that property, an amount
equal to the amount of the credit (or 50 percent of the amount of the
energy credit under section 48). The temporary regulations made
applicable the rule in former section 48(d)(5) that required the lessee
of investment credit property to recognize the gross income inclusion
over the shortest applicable recovery period under section 168. One
commenter suggested that the final regulations allow a lessee or
ultimate credit claimant to calculate the income inclusion based on the
depreciation methods and conventions applicable to the underlying
investment credit property. The commenter described an example where an
owner-lessor of investment credit property elects to depreciate rental
property over 40 years instead of over the usual 27\1/2\ year recovery
period, and the lessee or ultimate credit claimant reports the
offsetting income inclusion over the same 40-year period instead of the
shortest recovery period. The commenter suggested that the approach is
equitable and can be justified under the ``rules similar to'' language
in section 50(d)(5), which provides that for purposes of the investment
credit, rules similar to former section 48(d) apply.
The Treasury Department and the IRS have determined that the
applicable rules from the temporary regulations (Sec. 1.50-1T(b)(2)
and (3)) are the correct interpretation of the language in section
50(d)(5). A rule that permits a lessee or ultimate credit claimant to
calculate the income inclusion based on the depreciation methods and
conventions applicable to the underlying investment credit property is
dissimilar to the rule in former section 48(d)(5)(B), because it
contradicts the plain language of the statute. Adopting a rule that
would allow a lessor or an ultimate credit claimant to recognize the
income inclusion over a longer recovery period would facilitate an
inappropriate income deferral, and create additional reporting and
monitoring burden. For these reasons, the Treasury Department and the
IRS are not adopting this recommendation in the final regulations.
IV. Request for Comments in the Proposed Regulations
The preamble to the proposed regulations included a specific
request for comments regarding whether guidance is needed to address
the applicability of the income inclusion rules under section 50(d)(5)
to trusts, estates, and/or electing large partnerships. No comments
were received in response to this request. However, the Treasury
Department and the IRS are aware that, given the reference to electing
large partnerships, some questioned how the temporary regulations would
interact with the centralized partnership audit regime enacted as part
of the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2015. Such guidance is beyond the scope
of these final regulations.
V. Effective and Applicability Dates
The temporary regulations were effective on July 22, 2016, and
applicable to investment credit property placed in service on or after
the date that is 60 days after the date of filing in the Federal
Register (September 19, 2016). The preamble to the temporary
regulations states that the effective date of the regulations should
not be construed to create any inference concerning the proper
interpretation of section 50(d) prior to the effective date of the
regulations. Both commenters requested that the final regulations
clarify the treatment of pre-effective date transactions.
Both commenters also requested that the effective date be modified
to limit the application of the rules for investment partnership
transactions entered into in prior years. Both commenters noted that
different portions of a project could be placed in service both before
and after the effective date, because some historic rehabilitation
projects involve multiple placed in service dates (for example, if a
project involves renovating multiple buildings over a period of years).
One commenter proposed to deem an entire project as placed in service
on the first
[[Page 34779]]
placed in service date when contemporaneous evidence shows that the
project will include more than one building. The other commenter
suggested that the effective date be based on timing of investment in
the investment partnership, rather than the placed in service date.
The Treasury Department and the IRS do not adopt these
recommendations in the final regulations. These final regulations are
effective on July 17, 2019, and are applicable to investment credit
property placed in service on or after September 19, 2016. Section
7805(b)(1)(B) provides that a final regulation may apply to a taxable
period ending on or after the date on which a proposed or temporary
regulation to which the final regulation relates was filed with the
Federal Register. The applicability date of the rules in the final
regulations is September 19, 2016, the same date as the applicability
date of the rules as set forth in the temporary regulations. Those
regulations were issued as temporary regulations to address investment
credit transactions in which partnerships and S corporations treated
the income inclusion as an item of partnership or S corporation income
that entitled their partners or S corporation shareholders to a
corresponding outside basis increase under section 705(a) or section
1367(a). Such a basis increase would allow these partners or S
corporation shareholders to claim an inappropriate loss (or reduce the
amount of gain realized) upon the disposition of their partnership
interests or S corporation shares. Revising the rules in accordance
with commenters' suggestions would conflict with the purpose of these
regulations. Accordingly, the applicability date of the final
regulations corresponds to the applicability date of the temporary
regulations. Similar to the temporary regulations, the applicability
date of these final regulations should not be construed to create any
inference concerning the proper interpretation of section 50(d) prior
to the applicability date of these regulations.
VI. Revenue Procedure 2014-12
As explained in the Effect on Other Documents section of TD 9776,
the temporary regulations modified Revenue Procedure 2014-12 (2014-3
IRB 415). Because these final regulations remove the temporary
regulations from the Federal Register, this Treasury decision includes
an identical modification to Rev. Proc. 2014-12 in the Effect on Other
Documents section. Rev. Proc. 2014-12 establishes the requirements
under which the IRS will not challenge partnership allocations of
section 47 rehabilitation credits by a partnership to its partners.
Section 3 states that Rev. Proc. 2014-12 does not address how a
partnership is required to allocate the income inclusion required by
section 50(d)(5). Furthermore, section 4.07 of Rev. Proc. 2014-12
provides that, solely for purposes of determining whether a partnership
meets the requirements of that section, the partnership's allocation to
its partners of the income inclusion required by section 50(d)(5) shall
not be taken into account.
Because Sec. 1.704-1(b)(4)(ii) provides that allocations of cost
or qualified investment, and not the investment credit itself (which is
not determined at the partnership level), made in accordance with Sec.
1.46-3(f) shall be deemed to be made in accordance with the partners'
interests in a partnership, this Treasury decision modifies Rev. Proc.
2014-12 by changing all references to allocations of section 47
rehabilitation credits to refer instead to allocations of qualified
rehabilitation expenditures under section 47(c)(2). Additionally,
because Sec. 1.50-1(b)(3) provides that the gross income required to
be included under section 50(d)(5) is not an item of partnership income
to which the rules of subchapter K apply, this Treasury decision
modifies Rev. Proc. 2014-12 by deleting the sentences in section 3 and
section 4.07 that refer to allocation by a partnership of the income
inclusion required under section 50(d)(5).
VII. Recapture of the Rehabilitation Credit
These regulations finalize the rules described in Sec. 1.50-1T(c)
that coordinate the credit recapture rules in section 50(a) with the
income inclusion rules in Sec. 1.50-1T(b)(2) and (3). These final
regulations incorporate the rule from the temporary regulations
requiring the lessee or ultimate credit claimant to make an adjustment
to gross income for any discrepancies between the total amounts
included in gross income under the income inclusion rules and the total
unrecaptured credit. When the temporary regulations were published in
2016, section 47(a) provided that the rehabilitation credit was 20% of
the qualified rehabilitation expenditures (QREs) with respect to a
certified historic structure. Section 47(a) was amended by section
13402 of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, Public Law 115-97, 131 Stat. 2054,
2134 (TCJA). Section 47(a)(1) now provides that for any taxable year
during the 5-year period beginning in the taxable year in which the
qualified rehabilitated building is placed in service, the
rehabilitation credit for the year is an amount equal to the ratable
share. Section 47(a)(2) defines the ratable share as 20 percent of the
qualified rehabilitation expenditures with respect to the qualified
rehabilitated building, as allocated ratably to each year during the
period. The TCJA did not amend section 47(b), which provides that
qualified rehabilitation expenditures with respect to any qualified
rehabilitated building are taken into account for the taxable year in
which the building is placed in service. These final regulations adopt
the rules from the temporary regulations, but the Treasury Department
and the IRS request comments addressing whether additional guidance
under section 50(a) is needed to coordinate recapture of the
rehabilitation credit.
Effect on Other Documents
Rev. Proc. 2014-12 (2014-3 IRB 415) is modified by: (1) Changing
all references to allocations of section 47 rehabilitation credits to
refer instead to allocations of qualified rehabilitation expenditures
under section 47(c)(2); and (2) deleting the sentences in section 3 and
section 4.07 that refer to allocation by a partnership of the income
inclusion required under section 50(d)(5).
Statement of Availability of IRS Documents
Rev. Proc. 2014-12 (2014-3 IRB 415) is published in the Internal
Revenue Bulletin (or Cumulative Bulletin) and is available from the
Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office,
Washington, DC 20402, or by visiting the IRS website at https://www.irs.gov.
Special Analyses
This regulation is not subject to review under section 6(b) of
Executive Order 12866 pursuant to the Memorandum of Agreement (April
11, 2018) between the Department of the Treasury and the Office of
Management and Budget regarding review of tax regulations. Therefore, a
regulatory impact assessment is not required. Because these regulations
do not impose a collection of information on small entities, the
Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. chapter 6) does not apply.
Pursuant to section 7805(f) of the Code, the notice of proposed
rulemaking preceding these regulations was submitted to the Chief
Counsel for Advocacy of the Small Business Administration for comment
on their impact on small businesses. No comments were received from the
Small Business Administration.
[[Page 34780]]
Drafting Information
The principal authors of these temporary regulations are Barbara J.
Campbell and Michael J. Torruella Costa, Office of the Associate Chief
Counsel (Passthroughs and Special Industries), IRS. However, other
personnel from the Treasury Department and the IRS participated in
their development.
List of Subjects in 26 CFR Part 1
Income taxes, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
Adoption of Amendments to the Regulations
Accordingly, 26 CFR part 1 is amended as follows:
PART 1--INCOME TAXES
0
Paragraph 1. The authority citation for part 1 is amended by removing
the entry for Sec. 1.50-1T to read in part as follows:
Authority: 26 U.S.C. 7805 * * *
0
Par. 2. Section 1.50-1 is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 1.50-1 Lessee's income inclusion following election of lessor of
investment credit property to treat lessee as acquirer.
(a) In general. Section 50(d)(5) provides that, for purposes of
computing the investment credit, rules similar to the rules of former
section 48(d) (relating to certain leased property) (as in effect on
the day before the date of the enactment of the Revenue Reconciliation
Act of 1990 (Pub. L. 101-508, 104 Stat. 1388 (November 5, 1990)))
apply. This section provides rules similar to the rules of former
section 48(d)(5) that the Secretary has determined shall apply for
purposes of determining the inclusion in gross income required when a
lessor elects to treat a lessee as having acquired investment credit
property.
(b) Coordination with basis adjustment rules. In the case of any
property with respect to which an election is made under Sec. 1.48-4
by a lessor of investment credit property to treat the lessee as having
acquired the property--
(1) Basis adjustment. Section 50(c) does not apply with respect to
such property.
(2) Amount of credit included ratably in gross income--(i) In
general. A lessee of the property must include ratably in gross income,
over the shortest recovery period which could be applicable under
section 168 with respect to that property, an amount equal to the
amount of the credit determined under section 46 with respect to that
property. The ratable income inclusion under this paragraph begins on
the date the investment credit property is placed in service and
continues on each one year anniversary date thereafter until the end of
the applicable recovery period. The lessee will include in gross income
the amount of its credit determined under section 46 regardless of
limitations on the amount of the credit allowed under section 38(c)
based on the amount of the lessee's income tax.
(ii) Special rule for the energy credit. In the case of any energy
credit determined under section 48(a), paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this
section applies only to the extent of 50 percent of the amount of the
credit determined under section 46.
(3) Special rule for partnerships and S corporations--(i) In
general. For purposes of paragraph (b)(2) of this section, if the
lessee of the property is a partnership (other than an electing large
partnership) or an S corporation, the gross income includible under
such paragraph is not an item of partnership income to which the rules
of subchapter K of Chapter 1, subtitle A of the Code apply or an item
of S corporation income to which the rules of subchapter S of Chapter
1, subtitle A of the Code apply. Any partner or S corporation
shareholder that is an ultimate credit claimant (as defined in
paragraph (b)(3)(ii) of this section) is treated as a lessee that must
include in gross income the amounts required under paragraph (b)(2) of
this section in proportion to the credit determined under section 46
with respect to such partner or S corporation shareholder.
(ii) Definition of ultimate credit claimant. For purposes of this
section, the term ultimate credit claimant means any partner or S
corporation shareholder that files (or that would file) Form 3468,
``Investment Credit,'' with such partner's or S corporation
shareholder's income tax return to claim an investment credit
determined under section 46 with respect to such partner or S
corporation shareholder.
(c) Coordination with the recapture rules--(1) In general. If
section 50(a) requires an increase in the lessee's or the ultimate
credit claimant's tax or a reduction in the carryback or carryover of
an unused credit (or both) as a result of an early disposition
(including a lease termination), etc., of leased property for which an
election had been made under Sec. 1.48-4, the lessee or the ultimate
credit claimant is required to include in gross income an amount equal
to the excess, if any, of the amount of the credit that is not
recaptured over the total increases in gross income previously made
under paragraph (b)(2) of this section with respect to the property.
Such amount is in addition to the amounts the lessee or the ultimate
credit claimant previously included in gross income under paragraph
(b)(2) of this section.
(2) Income inclusion exceeds unrecaptured credit. If section 50(a)
requires an increase in the lessee's or ultimate credit claimant's tax
or a reduction in the carryback or carryover of an unused credit (or
both) as a result of an early disposition (including a lease
termination), etc., of leased property for which an election had been
made under Sec. 1.48-4, the lessee's or the ultimate credit claimant's
gross income shall be reduced by an amount equal to the excess, if any,
of the total increases in gross income previously included under
paragraph (b)(2) of this section over the amount of the credit that is
not recaptured.
(3) Special rule for the energy credit. In the case of any energy
credit determined under section 48(a), paragraphs (c)(1) and (2) of
this section apply by substituting the phrase ``50 percent of the
amount of the credit that is not recaptured'' for the phrase ``the
amount of the credit that is not recaptured.''
(4) Timing of income inclusion or reduction following recapture.
Any adjustment required by paragraphs (c)(1) and (2) of this section is
taken into account in the taxable year in which the property is
disposed of or otherwise ceases to be investment credit property.
(d) Election to accelerate income inclusion outside of the
recapture period--(1) In general. If after the recapture period
described in section 50(a), but prior to the expiration of the recovery
period described in paragraph (b)(2) of this section, there is a lease
termination, the lessee otherwise disposes of the lease, or a partner
or S corporation shareholder that is an ultimate credit claimant
disposes of its entire interest, either direct or indirect, in a lessee
partnership (other than an electing large partnership) or S
corporation, the lessee, or, in the case of a partnership or S
corporation, the ultimate credit claimant may irrevocably elect to take
into account the remaining amount required to be included in gross
income under this section in the taxable year of the disposition or
termination.
(2) Exceptions. The election provided under paragraph (d)(1) of
this section is not available to--
(i) Lessees or ultimate credit claimants required by paragraph (c)
of this section to account for the remaining amount required to be
included in gross income after accounting for recapture in
[[Page 34781]]
the taxable year in which the property was disposed of or otherwise
ceased to be investment credit property under section 50(a); or
(ii) Former partners or S corporation shareholders that own no
interest, either direct or indirect, in a lessee partnership or S
corporation at the time of a lease termination or disposition.
(3) Manner and time for making election. The election under
paragraph (d)(1) of this section is made by including the remaining
amount required to be included under this section in gross income in
the taxable year of the lease termination or disposition or the
disposition of the ultimate credit claimant's entire interest, either
direct or indirect, in a partnership or S corporation. The election
must be made on or before the due date (including any extension of
time) of the lessee's income tax return, or, in the case of a
partnership or S corporation, the ultimate credit claimant's income tax
return for the taxable year in which the lease termination or
disposition or the disposition of the ultimate credit claimant's entire
interest, either direct or indirect, in a partnership or S corporation
occurs.
(e) Examples. The provisions of this section may be illustrated by
the following examples:
(1) Example 1. X, a calendar year C corporation, leases
nonresidential real property from Y. The property is placed in
service on October 1, 2016. Y elects under Sec. 1.48-4 to treat X
as having acquired the property. X's investment credit determined
under section 46 for 2016 with respect to such property is $9,750.
The shortest recovery period that could be available to the property
under section 168 is 39 years. Because Y has elected to treat X as
having acquired the property, Y does not reduce its basis in the
property under section 50(c). Instead, X, the lessee of the
property, must include ratably in gross income over 39 years an
amount equal to the credit determined under section 46 with respect
to such property. Under paragraph (b)(2) of this section, X's
increase in gross income for each of the 39 years beginning with
2016 is $250 ($9,750/39 year recovery period).
(2) Example 2. The facts are the same as in Example 1 in
paragraph (e)(1) of this section, except that instead of
nonresidential real property, X leases from Y solar energy equipment
for which an energy credit under section 48 is determined under
section 46. X's investment credit determined under section 46 for
2016 with respect to the property is $9,750. The shortest recovery
period that could be available to the property under section 168 is
5 years. X, the lessee of the property, must include ratably in
gross income over 5 years an amount equal to 50% of the credit
determined under section 46 with respect to such property. Under
paragraph (b)(2) of this section, X's increase in gross income for
each of the 5 years beginning with 2016 is $975 ($4,875/5 year
recovery period).
(3) Example 3. A and B, calendar year taxpayers, form a
partnership, the AB partnership, that leases nonresidential real
property from Y. The property is placed in service on October 1,
2016. Y elects under Sec. 1.48-4 to treat the AB partnership as
having acquired the property. A's investment credit determined under
section 46 for 2016 is $3,900 and B's investment credit determined
under section 46 for 2016 is $7,800 with respect to the property.
The shortest recovery period that could be available to the property
under section 168 is 39 years. Because Y has elected to treat the AB
partnership as having acquired the property, Y does not reduce its
basis in the building under section 50(c). Instead, A and B, the
ultimate credit claimants, must include the amount of the credit
determined with respect to A and B under section 46 ratably in gross
income over 39 years, the shortest recovery period available with
respect to such property. Therefore, A and B must include ratably in
gross income over 39 years under paragraph (b)(2) of this section an
amount equal to $3,900 and $7,800, respectively. Under paragraph
(b)(2) of this section, A's increase in gross income for each of the
39 years beginning with 2016 is $100 ($3,900/39 year recovery
period) and B's is $200 ($7,800/39 year recovery period). Because
the gross income A and B are required to include under paragraph
(b)(2) of this section is not an item of partnership income, the
rules under subchapter K applicable to items of partnership income
do not apply with respect to such income. In particular, A and B are
not entitled to an increase in the outside basis of their
partnership interests under section 705(a) and are not entitled to
an increase in their capital accounts under section 704(b).
(4) Example 4. The facts are the same as in Example 3 in
paragraph (e)(3) of this section, except that on January 1, 2019,
the lease between AB partnership and Y terminates (Y retains
ownership of the property), which is a recapture event under section
50(a). A's and B's income tax for 2019 is increased under section
50(a) by $2,340 and $4,680, respectively (60% of $3,900 and $7,800,
respectively, assuming that the aggregate decrease in the credits
allowed under section 38 was the full amount of the investment
credits determined as to A and B under section 46). Therefore, the
amount of the unrecaptured credit as to A and B is $1,560 and
$3,120, respectively (40% of $3,900 and $7,800, respectively). The
amounts that A and B previously included in gross income under
paragraph (b)(2) of this section are $300 ($100 for each of 2016,
2017, and 2018) and $600 ($200 for each of 2016, 2017, and 2018),
respectively. A and B are required under paragraph (c)(1) of this
section to include in gross income an amount equal to the excess of
the credit that is not recaptured ($1,560 and $3,120, respectively)
over the total increases in gross income previously made under
paragraph (b)(2) of this section with respect to the property ($300
and $600, respectively). Therefore, A and B must include in gross
income $1,260 and $2,520, respectively, in the taxable year of the
lease termination (2019) in addition to the recapture amounts
described above.
(5) Example 5. (i) The facts are the same as in Example 4 in
paragraph (e)(4) of this section, except that instead of
nonresidential real property, the AB partnership leases from Y solar
energy equipment for which an energy credit under section 48 is
determined under section 46. Because the shortest recovery period
that could be available to the property under section 168 is 5
years, A and B are required under paragraph (b)(2)(ii) of this
section to include ratably in gross income over 5 years an amount
equal to 50% of the credit determined under section 46 with respect
to such property (50% of $3,900/5, or $390, per year for A, and 50%
of $7,800/5, or $780, per year for B).
(ii) The January 1, 2019 lease termination requires A's and B's
income tax for 2019 to be increased under section 50(a) by $2,340
and $4,680, respectively (60% of $3,900 and $7,800, respectively).
Therefore, the amount of the unrecaptured credit as to A and B is
$1,560 and $3,120, respectively (40% of $3,900 and $7,800,
respectively). Under paragraph (b)(2)(ii) of this section, the
amounts A and B previously included in gross income are $1,170 ($390
for each of 2016, 2017, and 2018) and $2,340 ($780 for each of 2016,
2017, and 2018), respectively. A and B are entitled to a reduction
in gross income under paragraph (c)(2) of this section equal to the
excess of the total increases in gross income made under paragraph
(b)(2)(ii) of this section ($1,170 and $2,340, respectively) over
50% of the amount of the credit that is not recaptured ($780 and
$1,560, respectively). Therefore, A and B are entitled to a
reduction in gross income in the amount of $390 and $780,
respectively, in the taxable year of the lease termination (2019).
(6) Example 6. (i) The facts are the same as in Example 3 in
paragraph (e)(3) of this section, except that on December 1, 2021, A
sells its entire interest to C, and on January 1, 2022, the lease
between AB partnership and Y terminates. At the time of the lease
termination, B is still a partner in the AB partnership. There is no
recapture event under section 50(a) because both the lease
termination and the disposition of A's interest in the partnership
occurred outside of the recapture period.
(ii) At the time that A sold its interest in the AB partnership
to C, A had previously included $500 ($100 for each of 2016-2020) in
gross income under paragraph (b)(2) of this section. Under paragraph
(b)(2) of this section, A must continue to include the remaining
$3,400 (including $100 in 2021) in gross income ratably over the
remaining portion of the applicable recovery period of 39 years.
Alternatively, under paragraph (d)(1) of this section, A may
irrevocably elect to include the remaining $3,400 in gross income in
the taxable year that A sold its entire interest in the AB
partnership to C (2021). Pursuant to paragraph (d)(2) of this
section, A cannot make this election in the taxable year of the
lease termination (2022).
(iii) At the time of the lease termination, B had previously
included $1,200 ($200 for each of 2016-2021) in gross income under
paragraph (b)(2) of this section. Under
[[Page 34782]]
paragraph (b)(2) of this section, B must continue to include the
remaining $6,600 required in gross income ratably over the remaining
portion of the applicable recovery period of 39 years.
Alternatively, under paragraph (d)(1) of this section, B may
irrevocably elect to include the remaining $6,600 in gross income in
the taxable year of the lease termination (2022).
(f) Applicability date. This section applies to property placed in
service on or after September 19, 2016.
Sec. 1.50-1T [Removed]
0
Par. 3. Section 1.50-1T is removed.
Kirsten Wielobob,
Deputy Commissioner for Services and Enforcement.
Approved: June 21, 2019.
David J. Kautter,
Assistant Secretary of the Treasury (Tax Policy).
[FR Doc. 2019-15497 Filed 7-17-19; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 4830-01-P