Information Reporting and Transfer for Valuable Consideration Rules for Section 1035 Exchanges of Life Insurance and Certain Other Life Insurance Contract Transactions, 30058-30068 [2023-09637]
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30058
Proposed Rules
Federal Register
Vol. 88, No. 90
Wednesday, May 10, 2023
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER
contains notices to the public of the proposed
issuance of rules and regulations. The
purpose of these notices is to give interested
persons an opportunity to participate in the
rule making prior to the adoption of the final
rules.
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Internal Revenue Service
26 CFR Part 1
[REG–108054–21]
RIN 1545–BQ07
Information Reporting and Transfer for
Valuable Consideration Rules for
Section 1035 Exchanges of Life
Insurance and Certain Other Life
Insurance Contract Transactions
Internal Revenue Service (IRS),
Treasury.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
AGENCY:
This document contains
proposed regulations providing
guidance on the application of the
transfer for valuable consideration rules
and associated information reporting
requirements for reportable policy sales
of interests in life insurance contracts to
exchanges of life insurance contracts
qualifying for nonrecognition of gain or
loss, as well as to certain acquisitions of
interests in life insurance contracts in
transactions that qualify as corporate
reorganizations. The proposed
regulations affect parties involved in
these life insurance contract
transactions, including with respect to
payments of reportable death benefits.
This document also invites comments
on these proposed regulations.
DATES: Written or electronic comments
and requests for a public hearing must
be received by July 10, 2023. Requests
for a public hearing must be submitted
as prescribed in the ‘‘Comments and
Requests for a Public Hearing’’ section.
ADDRESSES: Commenters are strongly
encouraged to submit public comments
electronically. Submit electronic
submissions via the Federal
eRulemaking Portal at
www.regulations.gov (indicate IRS and
REG–108054–21) by following the
online instructions for submitting
comments. Once submitted to the
Federal eRulemaking Portal, comments
cannot be edited or withdrawn. The
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SUMMARY:
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Department of the Treasury (Treasury
Department) and the IRS will publish
for public availability any comments
submitted to the IRS’s public docket.
Send paper submissions to:
CC:PA:LPD:PR (REG–108054–21), Room
5203, Internal Revenue Service, P.O.
Box 7604, Ben Franklin Station,
Washington, DC 20044.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Concerning the proposed regulations,
Kathryn M. Sneade, (202) 317–6995 (not
a toll-free number); concerning
submissions of comments or requests for
a public hearing, Vivian Hayes, (202)
317–6902 (not a toll-free number) or by
email to publichearings@irs.gov
(preferred).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
This document contains proposed
amendments to the Income Tax
Regulations (26 CFR part 1) under
sections 101 and 6050Y of the Internal
Revenue Code (Code). The proposed
regulations under sections 101 and
6050Y (proposed regulations) would
provide guidance on the application of
the rules for determining the amount of
death benefits excluded from gross
income following reportable policy sales
of interests in life insurance contracts
under section 101 and the associated
information reporting requirements for
reportable policy sales under section
6050Y to the exchange of a life
insurance contract for another life
insurance contract qualifying for
nonrecognition of gain or loss under
section 1035 (section 1035 exchange), as
well as to certain acquisitions of
interests in life insurance contracts in
transactions that qualify as
reorganizations under section 368(a)
(reorganizations). The proposed
regulations would amend final
regulations under sections 101 and
6050Y (T.D. 9879) published in the
Federal Register (84 FR 58460) on
October 31, 2019, as corrected (84 FR
68042) on December 13, 2019 (final
regulations). Following the publication
of the final regulations in the Federal
Register, the Treasury Department and
the IRS received letters relating to the
application of sections 101 and 6050Y
to section 1035 exchanges and
reorganizations. The proposed
regulations would modify the final
regulations to address the issues raised
in these letters.
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Development of the Final Regulations
The Treasury Department and the IRS
published the final regulations to
implement legislative changes to the
Code made by sections 13520 and 13522
of Public Law 115–97, 131 Stat. 2054,
2148, 2151 (2017), commonly known as
the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA).
Section 13522 of the TCJA amended
section 101 by adding new section
101(a)(3) to the Code, which defines the
term ‘‘reportable policy sale’’ and
provides rules for determining the
amount of death benefits excluded from
gross income following a reportable
policy sale.1 The final regulations under
section 101 provide definitions
applicable under sections 101 and
6050Y and guidance for determining the
amount of death benefits excluded from
gross income. For example, § 1.101–
1(c)(1) of the final regulations defines
‘‘reportable policy sale’’ to mean,
subject to certain exceptions, any direct
or indirect acquisition of an interest in
a life insurance contract if the acquirer
has, at the time of the acquisition, no
substantial family, business, or financial
relationship with the insured apart from
the acquirer’s interest in the life
insurance contract.
Section 13520 of the TCJA added
section 6050Y to chapter 61
(Information and Returns) in subtitle F
of the Code. Section 6050Y(a) requires
1 Generally, under section 101(a)(1), gross income
does not include amounts received (whether in a
single sum or otherwise) under a life insurance
contract if such amounts are paid by reason of the
death of the insured. However, the first sentence of
section 101(a)(2) (the transfer for value rule)
provides that, in the case of a transfer for a valuable
consideration, by assignment or otherwise, of a life
insurance contract or any interest therein, the
amount excluded from gross income by section
101(a)(1) cannot exceed an amount equal to the sum
of the actual value of such consideration and the
premiums and other amounts subsequently paid by
the transferee. The second sentence of section
101(a)(2) provides that the transfer for value rule
does not apply in the case of transfers described in
section 101(a)(2)(A) or (B). Section 101(a)(2)(A) (the
carryover basis exception) applies if the contract or
interest therein has a basis for determining gain or
loss in the hands of a transferee determined in
whole or in part by reference to such basis of such
contract or interest therein in the hands of the
transferor. Section 101(a)(2)(B) applies if the
transfer is to the insured, to a partner of the insured,
to a partnership in which the insured is a partner,
or to a corporation in which the insured is a
shareholder or officer. However, section
101(a)(3)(A) provides that the exceptions in the
second sentence of section 101(a)(2) do not apply
in the case of a transfer of a life insurance contract,
or any interest therein, that is a reportable policy
sale.
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a person who acquires a life insurance
contract or any interest in a life
insurance contract in a reportable policy
sale to report certain information about
payments made in the sale. Section
6050Y(b) requires issuers of life
insurance contracts to report certain
information upon notice of a reportable
policy sale or a transfer of a life
insurance contract to a foreign person.
Section 6050Y(c) requires a payor of
reportable death benefits (defined by
section 6050Y(d)(4) as amounts paid by
reason of the death of the insured under
a life insurance contract that has been
transferred in a reportable policy sale) to
report certain information about such
payments. Section 6050Y provides that
each of the returns required by section
6050Y is to be made ‘‘at such time and
in such manner as the Secretary shall
prescribe.’’ 2 The final regulations under
section 6050Y implement section 6050Y
by specifying the manner in which and
time at which the information reporting
obligations imposed by section 6050Y
must be satisfied. The final regulations
also provide definitions and rules that
govern the application of the
information reporting obligations.
The final regulations were adopted
after consideration of public comments
received on proposed regulations under
sections 101 and 6050Y (REG–103083–
18) published in the Federal Register
(84 FR 11009) on March 25, 2019 (2019
proposed regulations), and a public
hearing held on June 5, 2019.
Additionally, the Treasury Department
and the IRS received comments in
response to Notice 2018–41, 2018–20
I.R.B. 584, which described the
regulations the Treasury Department
and the IRS expected to propose under
sections 101 and 6050Y, and considered
these comments in developing the rules
in the 2019 proposed regulations.
Development of the Section 1035
Exchange Provisions of the Final
Regulations
Prior to amendment in 2019, the
regulations under section 101 did not
explicitly address section 1035
exchanges. Comments received on
Notice 2018–41 suggested that the
person to whom a life insurance
contract is issued (that is, the original
policyholder) should not be considered
an ‘‘acquirer’’ for purposes of section
6050Y(a), which imposes reporting
obligations on any person who acquires
a life insurance contract or any interest
in a life insurance contract in a
reportable policy sale. See 84 FR 11009,
2 Section 7701(a)(11)(B) provides that when used
in the Code, the term ‘‘Secretary’’ means the
Secretary of the Treasury or her delegate.
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11016. In response, § 1.101–1(e)(2) of
the 2019 proposed regulations clarified
that the issuance of a life insurance
contract to a policyholder, other than
the issuance of a policy in an exchange
pursuant to section 1035, is not a
transfer of an interest in a life insurance
contract.
The preamble to the 2019 proposed
regulations requested comments on
whether the regulations should include
additional provisions regarding the
treatment of section 1035 exchanges of
life insurance contracts. See 84 FR
11009, 11019. As described in the
preamble to the final regulations, one
commenter on the 2019 proposed
regulations recommended that no
additional provisions be added to the
regulations for this circumstance, stating
that the acquirer of a life insurance
contract in a reportable policy sale
would be unlikely to meet the state law
requirements for an insurable interest in
the insured and, consequently, would
not be able to make a section 1035
exchange. See 84 FR 58460, 58465.
Another commenter recommended that
the statement in § 1.101–1(e)(2) of the
2019 proposed regulations regarding
section 1035 exchanges be deleted or
amended to eliminate any suggestion
that such transactions, by themselves,
can be reportable policy sales. The
commenter acknowledged that in a
section 1035 exchange, the new carrier
acquires an interest in the old policy,
but advocated against treating that
acquisition as a reportable policy sale.
As explained in the preamble to the
final regulations, the reference in
§ 1.101–1(e)(2) to section 1035
exchanges was not intended to imply
that the transfer of a policy to an
insurance company in a section 1035
exchange would be a reportable policy
sale. See 84 FR 58460, 58465. Rather,
the concern prompting the reference to
section 1035 exchanges related to the
possibility that a policy transferred in a
reportable policy sale subsequently
could be exchanged for a new policy in
an exchange pursuant to section 1035
and that, absent the reference in
§ 1.101–1(e)(2), the death benefits paid
under the new policy might not be
reported under section 6050Y(c).
Section 1.101–1(e)(2) of the 2019
proposed regulations was adopted as
proposed in the final regulations, but in
response to the comments received on
section 1035 exchanges, § 1.101–
1(c)(2)(iv) of the final regulations
provides that the acquisition of a life
insurance contract by an insurance
company in an exchange pursuant to
section 1035 is not a reportable policy
sale. Additionally, § 1.101–1(c)(2)(v) of
the final regulations provides that the
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acquisition of a life insurance contract
by a policyholder in an exchange
pursuant to section 1035 is not a
reportable policy sale if the
policyholder has a substantial family,
business, or financial relationship with
the insured, apart from its interest in the
life insurance contract, at the time of the
exchange. Based on a comment received
on the 2019 proposed regulations, a
situation in which the policyholder
making a section 1035 exchange does
not have a substantial family, business,
or financial relationship with the
insured should rarely arise due to state
law insurable interest requirements.
Should this situation arise, however, the
final regulations provide certain
exceptions to the reporting requirements
that generally apply to reportable policy
sales. See § 1.6050Y–2(f)(3) of the final
regulations (providing that, with respect
to the issuance of a life insurance
contract in a section 1035 exchange, the
acquirer is not required to file the
information return required by section
6050Y(a)(1) and § 1.6050Y–2(a) of the
final regulations); § 1.6050Y–3(f)(3) of
the final regulations (providing that the
issuer of a new life insurance contract
in a section 1035 exchange is not
required to file a return or furnish a
statement to the seller under section
6050Y(b) and § 1.6050Y–3 of the final
regulations). Additionally, the final
regulations provide certain rules
applicable to section 1035 exchanges to
clarify the reporting required with
respect to section 1035 exchanges that
are reportable policy sales. See
§ 1.6050Y–1(a)(8)(ii) (providing that, in
the case of the issuance of a life
insurance contract to a policyholder in
an exchange pursuant to section 1035,
the issuer of the new contract is the
6050Y(a) issuer with respect to whom
the acquirer has reporting obligations
under section 6050Y(a) and § 1.6050Y–
2 of the final regulations).
Letters Received on the Section 1035
Exchange Provisions of the Final
Regulations
Following the publication of the final
regulations in the Federal Register, the
Treasury Department and the IRS
received letters relating to the
application of sections 101 and 6050Y
to section 1035 exchanges under the
final regulations.
One letter indicated that, in at least
some cases, the final regulations under
section 101 regarding reportable policy
sales appear to treat a section 1035
exchange as a transfer for value that can
cause the death benefits to become
taxable. The letter said that this
treatment appears to arise even when
neither the contract given in the
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exchange nor any predecessor contract
has been involved in a reportable policy
sale. The author of the letter requested
guidance that the issuance of a life
insurance contract in a section 1035
exchange is not a transfer of an interest
in the contract to the owner for
purposes of the transfer for value rule
and provided support for the position
that treating a section 1035 exchange as
a transfer for value is inconsistent with
the relevant statutes, congressional
intent, sound tax policy, and longstanding interpretations of the law.
The author of another letter took a
contrary position, stating that a section
1035 exchange has always (before the
TCJA was enacted, as well as after)
constituted a transfer of a life insurance
contract for purposes of section
101(a)(2) that qualifies for the exception
set forth in section 101(a)(2)(A) to the
transfer for value rule for contracts held
with a transferred basis, commonly
referred to as the ‘‘carryover basis’’
exception. This author advocated
against guidance concluding that the
issuance of a life insurance contract in
a section 1035 exchange is not a transfer
of an interest in the contract to the
owner for purposes of the transfer for
value rule, suggesting that to do so
would be to adopt a policy choice that
was specifically rejected by Congress
with the enactment of section 101(j).3
The author remarked that section 101(j)
was enacted in response to concerns
that despite state insurable interest
rules, companies were acquiring
insurance on persons whose
relationship with the company was too
attenuated and were doing so without
the consent (or even knowledge) of such
persons.
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Development of Exceptions Related to
Ordinary Course Trade or Business
Acquisitions in the Final Regulations
Several commenters on Notice 2018–
41 suggested that acquisitions of life
insurance contracts, or interests therein,
in ordinary course business transactions
in which one trade or business acquires
another trade or business that owns life
insurance on the lives of former
employees or directors should not be
reportable policy sales. The 2019
3 Section 101(j) generally provides that in the case
of an employer-owned life insurance contract, the
amount of death benefits excluded from gross
income under section 101(a) is limited, unless
certain notice and consent requirements are met
and either an exception based on the insured’s
status applies (because the insured was an
employee in the twelve months preceding death or
the insured was, at the time the life insurance
contract was issued, a director, highly compensated
employee, or highly compensated individual) or an
exception for amounts paid to the insured’s heirs
applies.
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proposed regulations included
provisions that exclude certain of these
transactions from the definition of
reportable policy sales. Public
comments remarked favorably on these
provisions, which were adopted by the
final regulations. See § 1.101–1(d)(2) of
the final regulations (defining the term
‘‘substantial business relationship’’ to
include the relationship between an
insured and an acquirer in certain
circumstances involving the acquirer’s
acquisition of an active trade or
business with respect to which the
insured is an employee within the
meaning of section 101(j)(5) 4 or was a
director, highly compensated employee,
or highly compensated individual);
§ 1.101–1(d)(4)(i) of the final regulations
(providing a special rule for indirect
acquisitions that deems the acquirer of
an interest in a life insurance contract
to have a substantial business or
financial relationship with the insured
if the direct holder of the interest in the
life insurance contract has such a
relationship); and § 1.101–1(e)(3)(ii) of
the final regulations (defining the term
‘‘indirect acquisition of an interest in a
life insurance contract’’ to exclude an
acquisition through ownership of stock
in a C corporation provided that no
more than 50 percent of the gross value
of the assets of the C corporation
consists of life insurance contracts).
As described in the preamble to the
final regulations, one commenter on the
2019 proposed regulations remarked
that § 1.101–1(e)(3)(ii) results in the
disparate treatment of policies
transferred directly in asset
reorganizations and indirectly in stock
reorganizations. See 84 FR 58460,
58466–58468. That is, with respect to
policies held by a C corporation, not
more than 50 percent of the gross value
of the assets of which consists of life
insurance contracts, an indirect
acquisition of the policies, such as
through a stock reorganization under
section 368(a)(1)(B), would not result in
a reportable policy sale, but a direct
acquisition of the policies, such as
through an asset reorganization under
section 368(a)(1)(A), could result in a
reportable policy sale. The commenter
asserted that this disparate treatment is
inappropriate and not warranted as a
matter of good tax policy and requested
that the 2019 proposed regulations be
revised to provide that any transfer of an
interest in a life insurance contract as
part of a reorganization of a C
corporation conducted in the ordinary
4 Section 101(j)(5) defines the term ‘‘employee’’ to
include an officer, director, and highly
compensated employee (within the meaning of
section 414(q)).
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course of business is eligible for an
exception to being treated as a
reportable policy sale under section
101(a)(3)(B), regardless of whether the
target C corporation survives the
reorganization transaction unless,
immediately prior to the acquisition,
more than 50 percent of the gross value
of the assets of the C corporation
consists of life insurance contracts.
The commenter acknowledged that
the 2019 proposed regulations provide
certain exceptions that could apply to
mergers qualifying as reorganizations in
which the target goes out of existence
and the surviving corporation continues
to hold the life insurance contract, but
asserted that having to determine in
these types of mergers whether a
particular exception applies on a
contract-by-contract basis is unduly
complex and a trap for the unwary. The
commenter further asserted that this
burdensome exercise does not serve the
purpose of the change in the statute.
The commenter’s recommendation
was not adopted in the final regulations
for reasons further described in the
preamble to the final regulations.
Briefly, the final regulations preserve
the different results for stock and asset
reorganizations because the Treasury
Department and the IRS concluded that
significant differences between the two
types of reorganization justify different
treatment for purposes of sections 101
and 6050Y. For instance, an acquirer of
an interest in an entity may have limited
ability to determine what types of assets
an entity owns, or to obtain from the
entity information necessary to report
on the entity’s assets. Further, the
Treasury Department and the IRS had
not identified any clear policy reason
why the complete exclusion of death
benefits from policies held by a
corporation should carry over when
ownership of the insurance policy is
transferred but a substantial business or
financial relationship does not exist
between the acquirer and insured.
Regarding the commenter’s remark on
the burden of a case-by-case review of
policies in certain types of transactions,
the preamble to the final regulations
noted that, in asset reorganizations, it
would in any case be necessary to
review the life insurance contracts
directly acquired on a contract-bycontract basis in order to update
insurance contract ownership and
beneficiary information with the
relevant insurance company.
Letter Received on Exceptions Related to
Ordinary Course Trade or Business
Acquisitions in the Final Regulations
Following the publication of the final
regulations in the Federal Register, the
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Treasury Department and the IRS
received a letter relating to the disparate
treatment of different types of ordinary
course trade or business acquisitions
under the final regulations.
The author noted that, since the
issuance of the final regulations, the life
insurance industry has seen a number of
circumstances in which transactions
that are wholly unrelated to the transfer
of life insurance are nevertheless subject
to negative outcomes under the
reportable policy sale rules as a result of
the transactions’ legal form, even though
transactions with identical or nearly
identical economic substance but a
different legal form would be treated
more favorably. The author noted that
the ordinary course acquisitive
transactions of concern do not in any
way turn on tax outcomes pertaining to
the meagre amounts of life insurance
that are commonly at issue, and asserted
that there are a number of legal,
economic, and business practice reasons
why it is highly unlikely that these same
transactions can simply be restructured
to meet the form-driven rules of the
final regulations. The author suggested
the addition of an exception from the
reportable policy sale rules for
acquisitive transactions involving
entities that own a de minimis amount
of life insurance (for example, as a
proportion of the total value of the
transaction). More specifically, the
author proposed that the Treasury
Department and the IRS consider a
further exception for transactions in
which the amount of life insurance
acquired as a result of the acquisitive
transaction (and any related
acquisitions) is five percent or less of
the value of the stock, assets, or both
acquired.
Explanation of Provisions
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Section 1035 Exchanges
As stated in the preamble to the final
regulations, the concern prompting the
references to section 1035 exchanges in
the 2019 proposed regulations and the
final regulations related to the
possibility that a policy transferred in a
reportable policy sale subsequently
could be exchanged for a new policy in
an exchange pursuant to section 1035
and that the death benefits paid under
the new policy might not be reported
under section 6050Y(c). See 84 FR
58460, 58465. The section 1035
exchange provisions were not intended
to change the treatment under section
101 of the policyholder’s new contract
if the policyholder’s old contract was
never transferred in a reportable policy
sale.
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However, the Treasury Department
and the IRS have determined that such
a change was inadvertently effected by
the final regulations. Prior to the
issuance of the final regulations, the
transfer for value rule of section
101(a)(2) did not apply as the result of
a section 1035 exchange of a life
insurance contract by the original
policyholder of the contract. However,
under § 1.101–1(e)(2) of the final
regulations, the issuance of a new policy
in a section 1035 exchange is a transfer
of an interest in a life insurance
contract. Because the new policy is
issued in exchange for an old policy, the
exchange is a transfer for valuable
consideration under § 1.101–1(f)(5) of
the final regulations. Therefore, the new
policy is subject to the transfer for value
rule of section 101(a)(2), unless one of
the exceptions in section 101(a)(2)(A)
and (B) applies. For either exception to
apply, there must be a substantial
business, family, or financial
relationship between the insured and
the acquirer of the new policy. The
Treasury Department and the IRS have
determined that the carryover basis
exception of section 101(a)(2)(A) would
not apply in this case.5 Therefore, the
application of the transfer for value rule
would generally limit the amount of
death benefits excludable under section
101(a)(1), even in the absence of a
reportable policy sale, unless one of the
section 101(a)(2)(B) exceptions applies
(that is, the transfer is to the insured, to
a partner of the insured, to a partnership
in which the insured is a partner, or to
a corporation in which the insured is a
shareholder or officer). The Treasury
Department and the IRS have
5 The Code recognizes two categories of
substituted basis property: transferred basis
property and exchanged basis property. See section
7701(a)(42). Property has a ‘‘transferred basis’’ for
Federal tax purposes when the same property is
transferred from one person to another but keeps
the same basis. See section 7701(a)(43). Property
has an ‘‘exchanged basis’’ for Federal tax purposes
when a person’s basis in new property is
determined by reference to other property held by
that same person. See section 7701(a)(44). The
section 101(a)(2) ‘‘carryover basis’’ exception
applies to a transfer if the transferred life insurance
contract or interest therein has a basis for
determining gain or loss in the hands of a transferee
determined in whole or in part by reference to such
basis of such contract or interest therein in the
hands of the transferor. That is, the exception
applies if the contract is transferred basis property.
However, the basis of a new policy issued in a
section 1035 exchange to the same taxpayer is the
same as the basis of the old policy held by that
taxpayer, decreased in the amount of any money
received by the taxpayer and increased in the
amount of gain or decreased in the amount of loss
to the taxpayer that was recognized on such
exchange. See sections 1035(d)(2) and 1031(d). The
new policy is thus exchanged basis property, not
transferred basis property. It is therefore ineligible
for the carryover basis exception of section
101(a)(2)(A).
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30061
determined that this result is
inconsistent with the prior treatment of
new policies issued in section 1035
exchanges.
Accordingly, the proposed regulations
are intended to correct the unintended
change effected by the final regulations
to the treatment under section 101 of a
life insurance contract issued to a
policyholder in a section 1035
exchange, while continuing to address
the concern that the reporting of death
benefits paid under section 6050Y(c)
could be avoided by exchanging a
policy transferred in a reportable policy
sale for a new policy in a section 1035
exchange, as well as the concern that a
policyholder could attempt to avoid the
limitation on the excludability of death
benefits resulting from the application
of the transfer for value rule through a
section 1035 exchange. The proposed
regulations would accomplish these
objectives by revising the final
regulations in four ways.
1. Modify Definition of a Transfer of an
Interest in a Life Insurance Contract
First, proposed § 1.101–1(e)(2) would
revise the definition of a transfer of an
interest in a life insurance contract in
§ 1.101–1(e)(2) of the final regulations to
exclude the issuance of a life insurance
contract to a policyholder, without
qualification. As such, any issuance of
a life insurance contract to a
policyholder, including in a section
1035 exchange, is not a transfer of an
interest in a life insurance contract and
therefore cannot be a reportable policy
sale under § 1.101–1(c)(1) of the final
regulations. The Treasury Department
and the IRS do not view this position as
inconsistent with the purpose of section
101(j). See Public Law 109–280, 863(d),
120 Stat. 780, 1024 (2006) (providing
that section 101(j) generally applies to
life insurance contracts issued after
August 17, 2006, ‘‘except for a contract
issued after such date pursuant to an
exchange described in section 1035 . . .
for a contract issued on or prior to that
date’’); Notice 2009–48, 2009–1 C.B.
1085 (providing that further notice and
consent is not required by section 101(j)
with regard to a contract received in a
section 1035 exchange for an employerowned life insurance contract issued
after August 17, 2006, for which the
notice and consent requirements were
previously satisfied if either (1) the
existing consent remains valid, or (2)
the exchange does not result in a
material change in the death benefit or
other material change in the contract).
The proposed regulations make
conforming changes to remove the
exception in § 1.101–1(c)(2)(v) of the
final regulations (providing that the
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acquisition of a life insurance contract
by a policyholder in a section 1035
exchange is not a reportable policy sale
if the policyholder has a substantial
family, business, or financial
relationship with the insured, apart
from its interest in the life insurance
contract, at the time of the exchange); to
remove §§ 1.6050Y–2(f)(3) and 1.6050Y–
3(f)(3) of the final regulations (providing
certain reporting requirement
exceptions related to section 1035
exchanges that are no longer necessary);
and to remove § 1.6050Y–1(a)(8)(ii) of
the final regulations (providing a
definitional rule related to section 1035
exchanges that is no longer necessary).
2. New Rule Addressing Section 1035
Exchanges
Second, proposed § 1.101–1(b)(2)(iv)
provides a new rule that would apply to
the exchange of an interest in a life
insurance contract (old interest) in a
section 1035 exchange for an interest in
a newly issued life insurance contract
(new interest) and provides guidance on
how to determine the amount of the
proceeds attributable to the new interest
that is excludable from gross income
under section 101(a), provided the new
interest is not subsequently transferred
or exchanged. If the new interest is
subsequently transferred or exchanged,
the amount excludable from gross
income under section 101(a) would be
determined under the rule in § 1.101–
1(b) applicable to the type of transfer or
exchange involved. The limitation (or
lack of any limitation) on the amount of
the proceeds attributable to the old
interest that is excludable from gross
income applies under proposed § 1.101–
1(b)(2)(iv) to the new interest for which
it is exchanged, just as the basis of the
old interest applies to the new interest.
See sections 1031(d) and 1035(d)(2)
(providing that a contract acquired in a
section 1035 exchange has the same
basis as the contract for which it was
exchanged). The IRS has previously
treated certain attributes of contracts
exchanged in section 1035 exchanges as
applying to the new contracts acquired.
See, e.g., Rev. Rul. 92–95, 1992–2 C.B.
43 (for purposes of section 72(q)(2)(I)
and 72(u)(4), the ‘‘date of purchase’’ of
an annuity contract acquired in a
section 1035 exchange for another
annuity contract is the date of purchase
of the annuity contract that was
exchanged for the new contract). See
also section 7702A(a)(2) (defining a
modified endowment contract to
include any contract exchanged for a
contract that is a modified endowment
contract under section 7702A(a)(1)).
Proposed § 1.101–1(b)(2)(iv) ensures
that the acquirer of an interest in a life
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insurance contract in a reportable policy
sale cannot avoid any limit imposed by
section 101(a)(2) and (a)(3) on the
amount of the proceeds attributable to
the interest that is excludable from gross
income under section 101(a)(1) by
simply exchanging the interest for a new
life insurance contract. Under proposed
§ 1.101–1(b)(2)(iv)(A), if the entire
amount of the proceeds attributable to
the old interest would have been
excludable from gross income under
section 101(a) at the time of the section
1035 exchange, the entire amount of the
proceeds attributable to the new interest
is excludable from gross income. Under
proposed § 1.101–1(b)(2)(iv)(B), if less
than the entire amount of the proceeds
attributable to the old interest would
have been excludable from gross income
under section 101(a) at the time of the
section 1035 exchange, the amount of
the proceeds attributable to the new
interest that is excludable from gross
income is limited to the sum of the
amount of the proceeds attributable to
the old interest that would have been
excludable at the time of the section
1035 exchange, and the premiums and
other amounts subsequently paid with
respect to the new interest by the
policyholder. Proposed § 1.101–
1(b)(2)(iv)(B) also provides that, when
determining the premiums and other
amounts subsequently paid by the
policyholder with respect to the new
interest, the amounts paid by the
policyholder are reduced, but not below
zero, by amounts received by the
policyholder under the new life
insurance contract that are not received
as an annuity, to the extent excludable
from gross income under section 72(e).
The proposed regulations also make
conforming changes to § 1.101–1(a)(1) of
the final regulations and the headings of
§ 1.101–1(b) and (b)(2) of the final
regulations to reflect the addition of
proposed § 1.101–1(b)(2)(iv). The
proposed regulations also add two
examples to illustrate the application of
the rules set forth in proposed § 1.101–
1(b)(2)(iv). See proposed § 1.101–
1(g)(17) and (18).
3. Modification to Definition of
Reportable Policy Sale
Third, the proposed regulations
would modify the definition of
‘‘reportable policy sale’’ to address
section 1035 exchanges. Specifically,
proposed § 1.101–1(c)(3) addresses
situations in which an old interest is
exchanged in a section 1035 exchange
for a new interest, and the old interest
was previously transferred for valuable
consideration in a reportable policy sale
or is treated, under proposed § 1.101–
1(c)(3), as an interest in a life insurance
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contract that was previously transferred
for valuable consideration in a
reportable policy sale. In such cases, the
new interest is treated, for purposes of
§ 1.101–1, as an interest in a life
insurance contract that was previously
transferred for valuable consideration in
a reportable policy sale.
Under the proposed rule, the old
interest’s attribute of having been
previously transferred for valuable
consideration in a reportable policy sale
applies to the new interest acquired in
a section 1035 exchange. Whether or not
an interest in a life insurance policy was
previously transferred in a reportable
policy sale is relevant for the purpose of
determining the applicability of certain
provisions in the final regulations. See,
e.g., § 1.101–1(b)(1)(ii)(B)(1) of the final
regulations (applies only if the interest
was not previously transferred for
valuable consideration in a reportable
policy sale); § 1.101–1(b)(1)(ii)(B)(2) and
(3) of the final regulations (apply if the
interest was previously transferred for
valuable consideration in a reportable
policy sale); § 1.101–1(b)(2)(i) of the
final regulations (includes a special rule
for interests that have not previously
been transferred for value in a
reportable policy sale). The Treasury
Department and the IRS have previously
treated (and continue to treat) other
attributes of contracts exchanged in
section 1035 exchanges as applying to
the new contracts acquired, so the new
contract is treated the same as the old
contract. See, e.g., Rev. Rul. 92–95.
Similarly, the proposed rule ensures
that the new interest is treated the same
as the old interest when applying rules
that consider whether an interest in a
life insurance contract was previously
transferred in a reportable policy sale.
See proposed § 1.101–1(c)(3).
Proposed § 1.101–1(c)(3) also provides
that, for purposes of §§ 1.6050Y–3 and
1.6050Y–4, the section 1035 exchange is
treated as the transfer of an interest in
the life insurance contract in a
reportable policy sale if the old interest
previously was transferred for valuable
consideration in a reportable policy sale
(or is treated, under proposed § 1.101–
1(c)(3), as an interest in a life insurance
contract that previously was transferred
for valuable consideration in a
reportable policy sale). Accordingly, the
designation of death benefits as
reportable death benefits is an attribute
that transfers from the old interest to the
new interest in a section 1035 exchange.
See also proposed § 1.6050Y–1(a)(12).
The Treasury Department and the IRS
previously have treated other attributes
of contracts exchanged in section 1035
exchanges as transferring to the new
contracts acquired. In this case, the
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proposed rule ensures that death
benefits under the new interest are
treated the same as under the old
interest for purposes of reporting under
section 6050Y(c) and § 1.6050Y–4.
These rules are necessary to ensure that
the acquirer of an interest in a life
insurance contract in a reportable policy
sale cannot avoid the designation of the
death benefits as reportable death
benefits and the associated reporting of
the payment of the reportable death
benefits by simply exchanging the
interest for a new life insurance
contract. The proposed regulations also
make conforming changes to § 1.101–
1(c)(1) of the final regulations to reflect
the addition of proposed § 1.101–1(c)(3).
4. Conforming Modifications to
§§ 1.6050Y–1 Through 1.6050Y–4
Finally, consistent with proposed
§ 1.101–1(c)(3), the proposed regulations
would modify several definitions in
§ 1.6050Y–1 of the final regulations and
modify the reporting rules under
§§ 1.6050Y–3 and 1.6050Y–4 of the final
regulations to ensure proper reporting of
reportable death benefits paid under
contracts issued in section 1035
exchanges. Notably, however, the
section 1035 exchange rules of proposed
§ 1.101–1(c)(3) do not apply for
purposes of § 1.6050Y–2 of the final
regulations, and no reporting is required
under § 1.6050Y–2 of the final
regulations at the time of a section 1035
exchange, even if the new interest is
exchanged for an old interest that was
previously transferred for valuable
consideration in a reportable policy
sale.
Proposed § 1.6050Y–1(a)(14) provides
that the term ‘‘reportable policy sale’’
has the meaning given to it in § 1.101–
1(c)(1), except as otherwise provided in
§ 1.6050Y–1. Proposed § 1.6050Y–
1(a)(12) provides that the term
‘‘reportable death benefits’’ means
amounts paid by reason of the death of
the insured under a life insurance
contract that are attributable to an
interest in the contract that was
transferred in a reportable policy sale
described in § 1.101–1(c)(1) of the final
regulations or proposed § 1.101–1(c)(3).
Accordingly, payors of such amounts
are subject to the reporting requirements
of section 6050Y(c) and § 1.6050Y–4 of
the final regulations. Proposed
§ 1.6050Y–1(a)(1) and (2) modify the
definitions of ‘‘acquirer’’ and ‘‘buyer,’’
respectively, to treat as a buyer for
purposes of reporting under section
6050Y(c) and § 1.6050Y–4 a person to
whom an interest in a life insurance
contract is issued in a section 1035
exchange treated as the transfer of an
interest in the life insurance contract in
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a reportable policy sale under proposed
§ 1.101–1(c)(3). See § 1.6050Y–4(a)(5) of
the final regulations (requiring a payor
of reportable death benefits to report the
payor’s estimate of investment in the
contract with respect to the buyer,
limited to the payor’s estimate of the
buyer’s investment in the contract with
respect to the interest for which the
reportable death benefits payment
recipient was paid).
To ensure proper reporting of
reportable death benefits paid under
contracts issued in section 1035
exchanges, proposed § 1.6050Y–3(a)
requires reporting by each ‘‘6050Y(b)
issuer’’ that is a ‘‘section 1035 issuer’’
with respect to each ‘‘seller’’ at the time
of the exchange. Proposed § 1.6050Y–
1(a)(8)(iii)(C) provides that the term
‘‘6050Y(b) issuer’’ includes any person
that is a section 1035 issuer or the
designee of a section 1035 issuer.
Proposed § 1.6050Y–1(a)(8)(v) defines
the term ‘‘section 1035 issuer’’ to
include the issuer of the old interest
(old issuer) and the issuer of the new
interest (new issuer) in a section 1035
exchange that is treated as the transfer
of an interest in the life insurance
contract in a reportable policy sale
under proposed § 1.101–1(c)(3). The old
issuer is a section 1035 issuer described
in proposed § 1.6050Y–1(a)(8)(v)(A),
and the new issuer is a section 1035
issuer described in proposed § 1.6050Y–
1(a)(8)(v)(B). However, an issuer is not
considered a section 1035 issuer if it
never received information indicating
that the interest in a life insurance
contract with respect to which it is an
issuer was transferred in a reportable
policy sale under § 1.101–1(c)(1) or (3).
See proposed § 1.6050Y–1(a)(8)(v)(A)
and (B). Proposed § 1.6050Y–1(a)(18)
provides that, for purposes of reporting
by both the old issuer and the new
issuer, the term ‘‘seller’’ includes any
person that holds an interest in a life
insurance contract that has been
transferred in a reportable policy sale
under § 1.101–1(c)(1) or (3) and
exchanges that interest for an interest in
a new life insurance contract in an
exchange pursuant to section 1035. The
information to be provided by a section
1035 issuer includes the name, address,
and taxpayer identification number of
the seller, the investment in the contract
with respect to the seller, and any other
information that is required by the form
or its instructions. It is anticipated that
this reporting will be completed on
Form 1099–SB, ‘‘Seller’s Investment in
Life Insurance Contract’’, and the
information to be provided will also
include the policy number (old or new,
as applicable) and identification of the
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30063
transaction as a section 1035 exchange.
Under proposed § 1.6050Y–3(a)(3),
section 1035 issuers are not required to
report the amount the seller would have
received if the seller had surrendered
the life insurance contract.
The proposed regulations make
conforming changes to § 1.6050Y–3(c) of
the final regulations to provide the time
and place for filing returns required to
be made by section 1035 issuers. See
proposed § 1.6050Y–3(c) (section 1035
issuers file returns at the same time and
place as other 6050Y(b) issuers).
Proposed § 1.6050Y–3(d)(1) provides
that each section 1035 issuer must
furnish a statement to each seller who
makes a section 1035 exchange, just as
other 6050Y(b) issuers are required to
furnish a statement to sellers, and
proposed § 1.6050Y–3(d)(2) imposes the
same deadline for doing so.
Additionally, proposed § 1.6050Y–
3(d)(1) requires the old issuer to furnish
a statement to the new issuer in a
section 1035 exchange providing
information about the interest being
exchanged. This statement serves to
provide notice to the new issuer that the
old interest was transferred in a
reportable policy sale and, therefore,
that the new interest will be treated as
an interest in a life insurance contract
that has been transferred in a reportable
policy sale and that death benefits paid
under the new interest are reportable
death benefits. Proposed § 1.6050Y–
3(d)(2) provides that this statement must
be furnished within 30 days of the
section 1035 exchange.
The proposed regulations also modify
the exception to reporting set forth in
§ 1.6050Y–4(e)(3) of the final
regulations. Section 1.6050Y–4(e)(3) of
the final regulations provides an
exception from reporting under
§ 1.6050Y–4 of the final regulations if
the payor never received, and has no
knowledge of any issuer having
received, a reportable policy sale
statement (RPSS) with respect to the
interest in a life insurance contract with
respect to which the reportable death
benefits are paid. However, death
benefits paid with respect to the new
interest may be reportable death benefits
even though an RPSS was never
furnished with respect to the new
interest. Accordingly, the existing
exception would apply too broadly in
the context of section 1035 exchanges.
Proposed § 1.6050Y–4(e)(3) therefore
imposes an additional requirement if
the reportable death benefits are paid
with respect to an interest in a life
insurance contract issued in a section
1035 exchange. In that case, the
exception applies only if the payor also
never received, and has no knowledge
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of any issuer having received, a
statement described in § 1.6050Y–
3(d)(1) from a section 1035 issuer or
other information indicating that the
issuance of the contract is treated as a
transfer of an interest in the contract in
a reportable policy sale under § 1.101–
1(c)(3).
Ordinary Course Trade or Business
Acquisitions
As noted in the preamble to the final
regulations, C corporations are not
frequently used as vehicles for investing
in life insurance contracts covering
insureds with respect to which the
corporation does not have a substantial
business, financial, or family
relationship at the time the contract is
issued because a corporate level income
tax applies to corporate earnings in
addition to income tax on distributions
at the shareholder level. See 84 FR
58460, 58467. After consideration of the
comments and letter received on the
2019 proposed regulations and the final
regulations, respectively, regarding
ordinary course trade or business
acquisitions, the Treasury Department
and the IRS are proposing an exception
for certain direct acquisitions of
interests in life insurance contracts from
a C corporation.
Proposed § 1.101–1(c)(2)(v) provides
that the direct acquisition of an interest
in a life insurance contract from a C
corporation by a C corporation is not a
reportable policy sale if (1) the
acquisition results from a transaction
that qualifies as a reorganization under
section 368(a); (2) immediately before
the acquisition, (i) the interest is held by
a C corporation that conducts an active
trade or business within the meaning of
§ 1.367(a)–2(d)(2) and (3), (ii) the C
corporation does not engage in a trade
or business of investing in interests in
life insurance contracts, and (iii) no
more than 5 percent of the gross value
of the assets of the C corporation
consists of life insurance contracts; and
(3) immediately after the acquisition, (i)
the acquiring C corporation does not
engage in a trade or business of
investing in interests in life insurance
contracts, and (ii) not more than 5
percent of the gross value of the assets
of the C corporation consists of life
insurance contracts. This exception
would provide relief from the reportable
policy sale rules for acquisitions of
interests in life insurance contracts
through certain ordinary course trade or
business acquisitions while preserving
different treatment for direct and
indirect acquisitions of interests in life
insurance contracts in other cases. The
proposed regulations modify Example
11 in § 1.101–1(g)(11) of the final
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regulations to reflect the addition of the
exception in proposed § 1.101–
1(c)(2)(v). See proposed § 1.101–
1(g)(11).
Proposed §§ 1.101–1(b)(2)(iv) and
(c)(3) are proposed to apply to section
1035 exchanges occurring on or after the
date the Treasury decision adopting
these regulations as final regulations is
published in the Federal Register, and
proposed § 1.101–1(c)(2)(v) is proposed
to apply to any acquisition of an interest
in a life insurance contract occurring on
or after the date the Treasury decision
adopting these regulations as final
regulations is published in the Federal
Register. See proposed § 1.101–6(c).
However, it is proposed that a taxpayer
may choose to apply § 1.101–1(b)(2)(iv),
(c)(2)(v), and (c)(3) of the regulations set
forth in the Treasury decision adopting
these regulations as final regulations to
all section 1035 exchanges and
acquisitions occurring after December
31, 2017, and before the date of
publication of the Treasury decision
adopting these rules as final regulations
in the Federal Register. See section
7805(b)(7) of the Code. Alternatively, a
taxpayer may rely on proposed § 1.101–
1(b)(2)(iv), (c)(2)(v), and (c)(3) for all
section 1035 exchanges and acquisitions
occurring after December 31, 2017, and
before the date of publication of the
Treasury decision adopting these rules
as final regulations in the Federal
Register.
The reporting obligations under
proposed § 1.6050Y–3 are proposed to
apply to any section 1035 exchange
treated as a reportable policy sale under
proposed § 1.101–1(c)(3) if the exchange
occurs on or after the date the Treasury
decision adopting these regulations as
final regulations is published in the
Federal Register. See proposed
§ 1.6050Y–1(b)(2). The reporting
obligations under proposed § 1.6050Y–4
are proposed to apply to reportable
death benefits paid with respect to an
interest in a life insurance contract
issued in a section 1035 exchange
treated as a reportable policy sale under
proposed § 1.101–1(c)(3) if the exchange
occurs on or after the date the Treasury
decision adopting these regulations as
final regulations is published in the
Federal Register. See proposed
§ 1.6050Y–1(b)(2). Any person with a
reporting obligation under proposed
§ 1.6050Y–3 or proposed § 1.6050Y–4
may, however, rely on the proposed
regulations with respect to all section
1035 exchanges occurring after May 10,
2023, and before the date of publication
of the Treasury decision adopting these
Frm 00007
Fmt 4702
Special Analyses
I. Regulatory Planning and Review
Applicability Dates
PO 00000
rules as final regulations in the Federal
Register.
Sfmt 4702
The proposed regulations are not
subject to review under section 6(b) of
Executive Order 12866, as amended
pursuant to the Memorandum of
Agreement (April 11, 2018) between the
Treasury Department and the Office of
Management and Budget regarding
review of tax regulations.
II. Paperwork Reduction Act
The additional collection of
information relating to this notice of
proposed rulemaking will be submitted
to the Office of Management and Budget
for review under OMB Control Number
1545–2281 in accordance with the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44
U.S.C. 3507(d)). In general, the
additional collection of information is
required under section 6050Y. When an
interest in a life insurance contract that
was previously transferred in or is
treated as having been previously
transferred in a reportable policy sale
(original contract) is exchanged by a
policyholder under section 1035 for a
new life insurance contract (new
contract), proposed § 1.6050Y–3(a)
would require the issuer of the original
contract (original issuer) to notify the
issuer of the new contract (new issuer),
the policyholder, and the IRS of the
status of the original contract as a
contract transferred in or treated as
having been transferred in a reportable
policy sale and to provide the
investment in the contract for the
original contract. Proposed § 1.6050Y–
3(a) would also require any new issuer
receiving such notification with respect
to a section 1035 exchange to provide
the policyholder and the IRS with the
policy number of the new contract and
the investment in the contract. This
information is necessary to carry out the
purpose of section 6050Y(c), which
requires a payor of reportable death
benefits to report certain information
about payments of reportable death
benefits.
The likely respondents to the
collection of information are life
insurance companies.
The burden for the additional
collection of information contained in
proposed § 1.6050Y–3 will be reflected
in the burden on Form 1099–SB,
‘‘Seller’s Investment in Life Insurance
Contract’’, when the burden is revised to
reflect the additional collection of
information in proposed § 1.6050Y–3.
The OMB Control Number for this form
is 1545–2281.
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Comments on the collection of
information should be sent to the Office
of Management and Budget, Attn: Desk
Officer for the Department of the
Treasury, Office of Information and
Regulatory Affairs, Washington, DC
20503, with copies to the Internal
Revenue Service, Attn: IRS Reports
Clearance Officer, SE:CAR:MP:T:T:SP,
Washington, DC 20224. Comments on
the collection of information should be
received by July 10, 2023.
Comments are specifically requested
concerning:
Whether the proposed collection of
information is necessary for the proper
performance of the functions of the IRS,
including whether the information will
have practical utility;
The accuracy of the estimated burden
associated with the proposed collection
of information;
How the quality, utility, and clarity of
the information to be collected may be
enhanced;
How the burden of complying with
the proposed collection of information
may be minimized, including through
the application of automated collection
techniques or other forms of information
technology; and
Estimates of capital or start-up costs
and costs of operation, maintenance,
and purchase of services to provide
information.
An agency may not conduct or
sponsor, and a person is not required to
respond to, a collection of information
unless it displays a valid control
number assigned by the Office of
Management and Budget.
III. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
requires agencies to ‘‘prepare and make
available for public comment an initial
regulatory flexibility analysis,’’ which
will ‘‘describe the impact of the
proposed rule on small entities.’’ 5
U.S.C. 603(a). Section 605(b) of the RFA
allows an agency to certify a rule, in lieu
of preparing an analysis, if the proposed
rulemaking is not expected to have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
Pursuant to the RFA, it is hereby
certified that the proposed regulations
will not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities, because any effect on small
entities by the rules proposed in this
document flows directly from section
13520 of the TCJA. In addition, it is
anticipated that requirements in the
proposed regulations, which implement
the statutory requirements under section
13520 of the TCJA, will fall primarily on
financial and insurance firms with
annual receipts greater than $41.5
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million and, therefore, on no small
entities. Therefore, the Commissioner of
the IRS hereby certifies that the
proposed regulations will not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
The Treasury Department and the IRS
request comments on the impacts of this
proposed rule on small entities.
Pursuant to section 7805(f) of the
Code, this notice of proposed
rulemaking will be submitted to the
Chief Counsel for the Office of
Advocacy of the Small Business
Administration for comment on its
impact on small entities.
IV. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
Section 202 of the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA)
requires that agencies assess anticipated
costs and benefits and take certain other
actions before issuing a final rule that
includes any Federal mandate that may
result in expenditures in any one year
by a state, local, or tribal government, in
the aggregate, or by the private sector, of
$100 million in 1995 dollars, updated
annually for inflation. This proposed
rule does not include any Federal
mandate that may result in expenditures
by state, local, or tribal governments, or
by the private sector in excess of that
threshold.
V. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
Executive Order 13132 (Federalism)
prohibits an agency from publishing any
rule that has federalism implications if
the rule either imposes substantial,
direct compliance costs on state and
local governments, and is not required
by statute, or preempts state law, unless
the agency meets the consultation and
funding requirements of section 6 of the
Executive Order. These proposed
regulations do not have federalism
implications and do not impose
substantial direct compliance costs on
state and local governments or preempt
state law within the meaning of the
Executive Order.
Comments and Requests for a Public
Hearing
Before these proposed amendments to
the final regulations are adopted as final
regulations, consideration will be given
to comments that are submitted timely
to the IRS as prescribed in this preamble
under the ADDRESSES heading. The
Treasury Department and the IRS
request comments on all aspects of the
proposed regulations. Any electronic
comments submitted, and to the extent
practicable any paper comments
submitted, will be made available at
www.regulations.gov or upon request.
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30065
A public hearing will be scheduled if
requested in writing by any person who
timely submits electronic or written
comments. Requests for a public hearing
are also encouraged to be made
electronically. If a public hearing is
scheduled, notice of the date and time
for the public hearing will be published
in the Federal Register.
Drafting Information
The principal author of these
regulations is Kathryn M. Sneade, Office
of Associate Chief Counsel (Financial
Institutions and Products), IRS.
However, other personnel from the
Treasury Department and the IRS
participated in their development.
Availability of IRS Documents
The revenue rulings, notices, and
other guidance cited in this document
are published in the Internal Revenue
Bulletin (or Cumulative Bulletin) and
are available from the Superintendent of
Documents, U.S. Government
Publishing Office, Washington, DC
20402, or by visiting the IRS website at
www.irs.gov.
List of Subjects in 26 CFR Part 1
Income taxes, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
Proposed Amendments to the
Regulations
Accordingly, the Treasury Department
and the IRS propose to amend 26 CFR
part 1 as follows:
PART 1—INCOME TAXES
Paragraph 1. The authority citation
for part 1 continues to read in part as
follows:
■
Authority: 26 U.S.C. 7805 * * *
Par. 2. Section 1.101–1 is amended
by:
■ 1. Adding a heading for paragraph (a)
introductory text.
■ 2. In paragraph (a)(1), adding a
sentence after the fourth sentence.
■ 3. In paragraphs (b) introductory text
and (b)(2), revising the headings.
■ 4. Adding paragraph (b)(2)(iv).
■ 5. Adding a sentence at the end of
paragraph (c)(1).
■ 6. Revising paragraph (c)(2)(v).
■ 7. Adding paragraph (c)(3).
■ 8. In paragraph (e)(2), removing ‘‘,
other than the issuance of a policy in an
exchange pursuant to section 1035’’ in
the last sentence.
■ 9. In paragraph (g)(11), adding two
sentences after the fourth sentence.
■ 10. Adding paragraphs (g)(17) through
(g)(19).
The additions and revisions read as
follows:
■
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§ 1.101–1 Exclusion from gross income of
proceeds of life insurance contracts
payable by reason of death.
(a) Exclusion from gross income—(1)
In general. * * * The extent to which
this exclusion applies in cases where
life insurance policies have been
gratuitously transferred or issued in an
exchange pursuant to section 1035
(section 1035 exchange) is stated in
paragraph (b)(2) of this section. * * *
*
*
*
*
*
(b) Transfers and exchanges of life
insurance policies.
*
*
*
*
*
(2) Other transfers and exchanges—
* * *
*
*
*
*
*
(iv) Section 1035 exchanges. When an
interest in a life insurance contract (old
interest) is exchanged in a section 1035
exchange for an interest in a newly
issued life insurance contract (new
interest), except as otherwise provided
by this section with respect to any
portion of the new interest that is
transferred or exchanged subsequent to
the section 1035 exchange, the amount
of the proceeds attributable to the new
interest that is excludable from gross
income under section 101(a) is
determined as follows:
(A) If, at the time of the exchange, the
entire amount of the proceeds
attributable to the old interest would
have been excludable from gross income
under section 101(a), the entire amount
of the proceeds attributable to the new
interest is excludable from gross
income; and
(B) If, at the time of the exchange, less
than the entire amount of the proceeds
attributable to the old interest would
have been excludable from gross income
under section 101(a), the amount of the
proceeds attributable to the new interest
that is excludable from gross income is
limited to the sum of the amount of the
proceeds attributable to the old interest
that would have been excludable at the
time of the exchange and the premiums
and other amounts subsequently paid
with respect to the new interest by the
policyholder, reduced (but not below
zero) by amounts received by the
policyholder under the life insurance
contract that are not received as an
annuity, to the extent excludable from
gross income under section 72(e).
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(1) * * * See paragraph (c)(3) of this
section for special rules applicable to
section 1035 exchanges.
(2) * * *
(v) The direct acquisition of an
interest in a life insurance contract by
a C corporation if:
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(A) Immediately before the
acquisition, the interest is held by
another C corporation (target C
corporation) that actively conducts a
trade or business within the meaning of
§ 1.367(a)–2(d)(2) and (3);
(B) Immediately before the
acquisition, the target C corporation
does not engage in a trade or business
of investing in interests in life insurance
contracts;
(C) Immediately before the
acquisition, no more than 5 percent of
the gross value of the assets (as
determined under paragraph (f)(4) of
this section) of the target C corporation
consists of life insurance contracts;
(D) The acquisition results from a
transaction that qualifies as a
reorganization under section 368(a) with
respect to which the target C
corporation and the acquiring C
corporation each is a party to the
reorganization (within the meaning of
section 368(b));
(E) Immediately after the acquisition,
the acquiring C corporation does not
engage in a trade or business of
investing in interests in life insurance
contracts, and
(F) Immediately after the acquisition,
no more than 5 percent of the gross
value of the assets (as determined under
paragraph (f)(4) of this section) of the
acquiring C corporation consists of life
insurance contracts.
(3) Section 1035 exchanges. This
paragraph (c)(3) applies if an interest in
a life insurance contract (old interest) is
exchanged in a section 1035 exchange
for an interest in a newly issued life
insurance contract (new interest), and
the old interest previously was
transferred for valuable consideration in
a reportable policy sale under paragraph
(c)(1) of this section or is treated as an
interest in a life insurance contract that
previously was transferred for valuable
consideration in a reportable policy sale
under this paragraph (c)(3). For
purposes of this section, the new
interest is treated as an interest in a life
insurance contract that previously was
transferred for valuable consideration in
a reportable policy sale. For purposes of
§§ 1.6050Y–3 and 1.6050Y–4, the
section 1035 exchange is treated as the
transfer of an interest in the life
insurance contract in a reportable policy
sale.
*
*
*
*
*
(g) * * *
(11) * * * Also, the exception in
paragraph (c)(2)(v) of this section
applies, provided Corporation X
satisfies the requirements of paragraph
(c)(2)(v)(A) through (C) of this section
immediately before the acquisition by
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Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
Corporation Y, and Corporation Y
satisfies the requirements of paragraph
(c)(2)(v)(E) and (F) of this section
immediately after the acquisition. This
would be the case even if A were no
longer employed by Corporation X at
the time of the transfer. * * *
*
*
*
*
*
(17) Example 17. The facts are the
same as in Example 4 in paragraph (g)(4)
of this section except that, before A’s
death, C exchanges the policy on A’s life
for a new policy on A’s life in a section
1035 exchange. The amount of the
proceeds C may exclude from C’s gross
income under this section is limited
under paragraph (b)(2)(iv)(B) of this
section to $6,000 plus any premiums
and other amounts paid by C with
respect to the original policy subsequent
to the transfer and any premiums and
other amounts paid by C with respect to
the new policy subsequent to the
exchange.
(18) Example 18. The facts are the
same as in Example 17 in paragraph
(g)(17) of this section except that, before
A’s death, C sells the new policy to A
for fair market value. A’s estate receives
the proceeds of $100,000 on A’s death.
Under paragraph (b)(1)(ii)(B)(3)(i) of this
section, the amount of the proceeds A’s
estate may exclude from gross income is
not limited by paragraph (b) of this
section.
(19) Example 19. A is the initial
policyholder of a $100,000 insurance
policy on A’s life. A transfers the policy
for $6,000, its fair market value, to an
individual, C, who does not have a
substantial family, business, or financial
relationship with A at the time of the
transfer. The transfer from A to C is a
reportable policy sale. C also is the
initial policyholder of a $200,000
insurance policy on A’s life. Before A’s
death, C exchanges the two policies on
A’s life for a single new policy on A’s
life in a section 1035 exchange. C
receives the proceeds from the new
policy on A’s death. The entire amount
of the proceeds attributable to the
interest in the new policy that was
issued in exchange for the policy
originally issued to C is excludable from
gross income under paragraph
(b)(2)(iv)(A) of this section. The amount
of the proceeds attributable to the
interest in the new policy that was
issued in exchange for the policy
originally issued to A that is excludable
from gross income is limited under
paragraph (b)(2)(iv)(B) of this section to
$6,000 plus any premiums and other
amounts paid by C with respect to the
policy originally issued to A subsequent
to the transfer and any premiums and
other amounts paid by C with respect to
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the interest in the new policy that was
issued in exchange for the policy
originally issued to A.
■ Par. 3. Section 1.101–6 is amended by
adding paragraph (c) to read as follows:
§ 1.101–6
Effective date.
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with PROPOSALS1
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Notwithstanding paragraphs (a)
and (b) of this section, § 1.101–
1(b)(2)(iv) and (c)(3) apply to any
interest in a life insurance contract
issued in a section 1035 exchange
occurring on or after the date these
regulations are published as final
regulations in the Federal Register, and
§ 1.101–1(c)(2)(v) applies to any
acquisition of an interest in a life
insurance contract occurring on or after
the date these regulations are published
as final regulations in the Federal
Register. However, under section
7805(b)(7), a taxpayer may choose to
apply the rules in § 1.101–1(b)(2)(iv),
(c)(2)(v), and (c)(3) to all exchanges and
acquisitions occurring after December
31, 2017, and before the date these
regulations are published as final
regulations in the Federal Register.
■ Par. 4. Section 1.6050Y–1 is amended
by:
■ 1. In paragraph (a)(1), adding a
sentence at the end of the paragraph.
■ 2. In paragraph (a)(2), adding ‘‘under
§ 1.101–1(c)(1) or treated as such an
interest under § 1.101–1(c)(3)’’ before
the second comma.
■ 3. In paragraph (a)(8)(ii), removing the
last sentence.
■ 4. In paragraph (a)(8)(iii)(A), removing
‘‘or’’ at the end.
■ 5. In paragraph (a)(8)(iii)(B)(2),
removing the period at the end of the
paragraph and adding in its place ‘‘; or’’.
■ 6. Adding paragraph (a)(8)(iii)(C).
■ 7. Adding paragraph (a)(8)(v).
■ 8. In paragraph (a)(12), adding ‘‘under
§ 1.101–1(c)(1) or (3)’’ before the period
at the end of the paragraph.
■ 9. In paragraph (a)(14), removing
‘‘§ 1.101–1(c)’’ before the period at the
end of the paragraph, and adding in its
place ‘‘§ 1.101–1(c), except as otherwise
provided in this section’’.
■ 10. In paragraph (a)(18)(i), removing
‘‘or’’ at the end of the paragraph.
■ 11. In paragraph (a)(18)(ii), removing
the period at the end of the paragraph
and adding in its place ‘‘; or’’.
■ 12. Adding paragraph (a)(18)(iii).
■ 13. Redesignating paragraphs (b)(1)
through (5) as paragraphs (b)(1)(i)
through (v); redesignating paragraph (b)
introductory text as paragraph (b)(1);
adding a heading to paragraph (b)
introductory text; revising the heading
for the newly redesignated paragraph
(b)(1); revising the first two sentences of
newly redesignated paragraph (b)(1);
and adding paragraph (b)(2).
VerDate Sep<11>2014
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Jkt 259001
The additions and revisions read as
follows:
§ 1.6050Y–1 Information reporting for
reportable policy sales, transfers of life
insurance contracts to foreign persons, and
reportable death benefits.
(a) * * *
(1) * * * For purposes of determining
the buyer under paragraph (a)(2) of this
section, the term acquirer also includes
any person to whom an interest in a life
insurance contract is issued in an
exchange pursuant to section 1035
(section 1035 exchange) that is treated
as the transfer of an interest in the life
insurance contract in a reportable policy
sale under § 1.101–1(c)(3).
*
*
*
*
*
(8) * * *
(iii) * * *
(C) Any person that is a section 1035
issuer or the designee of a section 1035
issuer.
*
*
*
*
*
(v) Section 1035 issuer. A section
1035 issuer is any person that, on the
date of a section 1035 exchange of an
interest in an existing life insurance
contract for an interest in a newly
issued life insurance contract that is
treated as the transfer of an interest in
a life insurance contract in a reportable
policy sale under § 1.101–1(c)(3), is:
(A) An issuer with respect to the
existing life insurance contract,
provided the issuer received an RPSS, a
statement required by § 1.6050Y–3(d)(1),
or other information indicating that the
existing life insurance contract or
interest therein was transferred in a
reportable policy sale under § 1.101–
1(c)(1) or (3); or
(B) An issuer with respect to the
newly issued life insurance contract,
provided the issuer receives the
statement required by § 1.6050Y–3(d)(1)
or other information indicating that
existing life insurance contract or
interest therein was transferred in a
reportable policy sale under § 1.101–
1(c)(1) or (3).
*
*
*
*
*
(18) * * *
(iii) For purposes of reporting under
§ 1.6050Y–3 by both the section 1035
issuer described in paragraph
(a)(8)(v)(A) of this section and the
section 1035 issuer described in
paragraph (a)(8)(v)(B) of this section,
holds an interest in a life insurance
contract that has been transferred in a
reportable policy sale under § 1.101–
1(c)(1) or (3) and exchanges that interest
for an interest in a new life insurance
contract in a section 1035 exchange.
(b) Applicability date—(1) In general.
Except as otherwise provided in
paragraph (b)(2) of this section, this
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30067
section and §§ 1.6050Y–2 through
1.6050Y–3 apply to reportable policy
sales made after December 31, 2018.
Except as otherwise provided in
paragraph (b)(2) of this section, this
section and § 1.6050Y–4 apply to
reportable death benefits paid after
December 31, 2018. * * *
*
*
*
*
*
(2) Section 1035 exchanges. Section
1.6050Y–3 applies to a section 1035
exchange treated as a reportable policy
sale under § 1.101–1(c)(3) if the
exchange occurs on or after the date
these regulations are published as final
regulations in the Federal Register.
Section 1.6050Y–4 applies to reportable
death benefits paid with respect to an
interest in a life insurance contract
issued in a section 1035 exchange
treated as a reportable policy sale under
§ 1.101–1(c)(3) if the exchange occurs on
or after the date these regulations are
published as final regulations in the
Federal Register.
§ 1.6050Y–2
[Amended]
Par. 5. Section 1.6050Y–2 is amended
by removing paragraph (f)(3).
■ Par. 6. Section 1.6050Y–3 is amended
by:
■ 1. In paragraph (a) introductory text,
removing ‘‘that receives an RPPS or any
notice of a transfer to a foreign person’’
in the first sentence and adding in its
place ‘‘that receives an RPSS, receives
any notice of a transfer to a foreign
person, or is a section 1035 issuer’’.
■ 2. In paragraph (a)(3), removing ‘‘The’’
at the beginning of the paragraph and
adding in its place ‘‘For 6050Y(b)
issuers other than section 1035 issuers,
the’’.
■ 3. In paragraph (c), removing
‘‘reportable policy sale or the transfer to
a foreign person occurred’’ before the
period at the end of the first sentence
and adding in its place ‘‘reportable
policy sale, transfer to a foreign person,
or section 1035 exchange occurred’’.
■ 4. In paragraph (d)(1), removing ‘‘is a
reportable policy sale payment recipient
or makes a transfer to a foreign person’’
in the first sentence and adding in its
place ‘‘is a reportable policy sale
payment recipient, makes a transfer to a
foreign person, or makes a section 1035
exchange’’, and adding a sentence at the
end of the paragraph.
■ 5. In paragraph (d)(2), removing
‘‘reportable policy sale or transfer to a
foreign person occurred’’ before the
period at the end of the first sentence
and adding in its place ‘‘reportable
policy sale, transfer to a foreign person,
or section 1035 exchange occurred’’,
and adding a sentence after the second
sentence.
■
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6. In paragraph (f), removing
‘‘paragraph (f)(1), (2), or (3) of this
section applies’’ before the period at the
end of the paragraph and adding in its
place ‘‘paragraph (f)(1) or (2) of this
section applies’’.
■ 7. Removing paragraph (f)(3).
The additions read as follows:
■
§ 1.6050Y–3 Information reporting by
6050Y(b) issuers for reportable policy sales
and transfers of life insurance contracts to
foreign persons.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) * * *
(1) * * * In addition, every section
1035 issuer described in § 1.6050Y–
1(a)(8)(v)(A) filing a return required by
paragraph (a) of this section with
respect to a section 1035 exchange must
furnish to each section 1035 issuer
described in § 1.6050Y–1(a)(8)(v)(B)
with respect to that exchange a written
statement showing the information
required by paragraph (a) of this section
with respect to the seller in the
exchange and the name, address, and
phone number of the information
contact of the person filing the return.
(2) Time for furnishing statement.
* * * Each statement required by
paragraph (d)(1) of this section to be
furnished to any section 1035 issuer
described in § 1.6050Y–1(a)(8)(v)(B)
must be furnished within 30 days of the
date of the section 1035 exchange.
* * *
*
*
*
*
*
■ Par. 7. Section 1.6050Y–4 is amended
by adding a sentence at the end of
paragraph (e)(3) to read as follows:
§ 1.6050Y–4 Information reporting by
payors for reportable death benefits.
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*
*
*
*
*
(e) * * *
(3) * * * Additionally, if the
reportable death benefits are paid with
respect to an interest in a life insurance
contract issued in a section 1035
exchange, the payor never received, and
has no knowledge of any issuer having
received, a statement described in
§ 1.6050Y–3(d)(1) from a section 1035
issuer or other information indicating
that the issuance of the contract is
treated as a transfer of an interest in the
contract in a reportable policy sale
under § 1.101–1(c)(3).
*
*
*
*
*
Douglas W. O’Donnell,
Deputy Commissioner for Services and
Enforcement.
[FR Doc. 2023–09637 Filed 5–9–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4830–01–P
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POSTAL SERVICE
39 CFR Part 111
Custom Declaration Exceptions
Postal ServiceTM.
Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
The Postal Service proposes
amending Mailing Standards of the
United States Postal Service, Domestic
Mail Manual (DMM®) in various
subsections to remove the ‘‘known
mailer’’ and ‘‘official mail’’ exceptions
for customs declarations for mail to or
from overseas military and diplomatic
post office addresses.
DATES: Submit comments on or before
June 9, 2023.
ADDRESSES: Mail or deliver written
comments to the Director, Product
Classification, U.S. Postal Service, 475
L’Enfant Plaza SW, Room 4446,
Washington, DC 20260–5015. If sending
comments by email, include the name
and address of the commenter and send
to PCFederalRegister@usps.gov, with a
subject line of ‘‘DMM Custom
Declaration Exceptions’’. Faxed
comments will not be accepted.
SUMMARY:
Confidentiality
All submitted comments and
attachments are part of the public record
and subject to disclosure. Do not
enclose any material in your comments
that you consider confidential or
inappropriate for public disclosure.
You may inspect and photocopy all
written comments, by appointment
only, at USPS® Headquarters Library,
475 L’Enfant Plaza SW, 11th Floor
North, Washington, DC 20260. These
records are available for review Monday
through Friday, 9 a.m.–4 p.m., by
calling 202–268–2906.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Vlad
Spanu at (202) 268–4180 or Kathy Frigo
at (202) 268–4178.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Postal
Service proposes removing subsection
703.2.3.9, Customs Declarations—
Exceptions, to help align postal
regulations with current customs policy.
The Postal Service also proposes
making minor revisions to the text in
subsections 608.2.4.4 and 703.2.3.8 to
align with the removal of subsection
703.2.3.9.
Associated revisions to the IMM will
be published separately.
Although exempt from the notice and
comment requirements of the
Administrative Procedure Act (5 U.S.C.
553(b), (c)) regarding proposed
rulemaking by 39 U.S.C. 410(a), the
Postal Service invites public comment
on the following proposed revisions to
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Mailing Standards of the United States
Postal Service, Domestic Mail Manual
(DMM), incorporated by reference in the
Code of Federal Regulations. See 39 CFR
111.1.
We will publish an appropriate
amendment to 39 CFR part 111 to reflect
these changes.
List of Subjects in 39 CFR Part 111
Administrative practice and
procedure, Postal Service.
Accordingly, 39 CFR part 111 is
proposed to be amended as follows:
PART 111—[AMENDED]
1. The authority citation for 39 CFR
part 111 continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 552(a); 13 U.S.C. 301–
307; 18 U.S.C. 1692–1737; 39 U.S.C. 101,
401–404, 414, 416, 3001–3018, 3201–3220,
3401–3406, 3621, 3622, 3626, 3629, 3631–
3633, 3641, 3681–3685, and 5001.
2. Revise the Mailing Standards of the
United States Postal Service, Domestic
Mail (DMM) as follows:
■
Mailing Standards of the United States
Postal Service, Domestic Mail Manual
(DMM)
*
*
*
*
*
600 Basic Standards for All Mailing
Services
*
*
*
*
*
608
Postal Information and Resources
*
*
2.0
Domestic Mail
*
*
2.4
Customs Forms Required
*
*
*
*
*
*
2.4.4
*
*
*
*
*
Overseas Military Mail
[Revise the text of 2.4.4 to read as
follows:]
For determining customs declarations’
required usage when mailing to or from
APO, FPO, or DPO addresses, see
703.2.3.6 through 703.2.3.8.
*
*
*
*
*
700
Special Standards
*
*
*
*
*
703 Nonprofit USPS Marketing Mail
and Other Unique Eligibility
*
*
*
*
*
2.0 Overseas Military and Diplomatic
Post Office Mail
*
*
2.3
General Restrictions
*
*
E:\FR\FM\10MYP1.SGM
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*
*
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 88, Number 90 (Wednesday, May 10, 2023)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 30058-30068]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2023-09637]
========================================================================
Proposed Rules
Federal Register
________________________________________________________________________
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER contains notices to the public of
the proposed issuance of rules and regulations. The purpose of these
notices is to give interested persons an opportunity to participate in
the rule making prior to the adoption of the final rules.
========================================================================
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 90 / Wednesday, May 10, 2023 /
Proposed Rules
[[Page 30058]]
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Internal Revenue Service
26 CFR Part 1
[REG-108054-21]
RIN 1545-BQ07
Information Reporting and Transfer for Valuable Consideration
Rules for Section 1035 Exchanges of Life Insurance and Certain Other
Life Insurance Contract Transactions
AGENCY: Internal Revenue Service (IRS), Treasury.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This document contains proposed regulations providing guidance
on the application of the transfer for valuable consideration rules and
associated information reporting requirements for reportable policy
sales of interests in life insurance contracts to exchanges of life
insurance contracts qualifying for nonrecognition of gain or loss, as
well as to certain acquisitions of interests in life insurance
contracts in transactions that qualify as corporate reorganizations.
The proposed regulations affect parties involved in these life
insurance contract transactions, including with respect to payments of
reportable death benefits. This document also invites comments on these
proposed regulations.
DATES: Written or electronic comments and requests for a public hearing
must be received by July 10, 2023. Requests for a public hearing must
be submitted as prescribed in the ``Comments and Requests for a Public
Hearing'' section.
ADDRESSES: Commenters are strongly encouraged to submit public comments
electronically. Submit electronic submissions via the Federal
eRulemaking Portal at www.regulations.gov (indicate IRS and REG-108054-
21) by following the online instructions for submitting comments. Once
submitted to the Federal eRulemaking Portal, comments cannot be edited
or withdrawn. The Department of the Treasury (Treasury Department) and
the IRS will publish for public availability any comments submitted to
the IRS's public docket. Send paper submissions to: CC:PA:LPD:PR (REG-
108054-21), Room 5203, Internal Revenue Service, P.O. Box 7604, Ben
Franklin Station, Washington, DC 20044.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Concerning the proposed regulations,
Kathryn M. Sneade, (202) 317-6995 (not a toll-free number); concerning
submissions of comments or requests for a public hearing, Vivian Hayes,
(202) 317-6902 (not a toll-free number) or by email to
[email protected] (preferred).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
This document contains proposed amendments to the Income Tax
Regulations (26 CFR part 1) under sections 101 and 6050Y of the
Internal Revenue Code (Code). The proposed regulations under sections
101 and 6050Y (proposed regulations) would provide guidance on the
application of the rules for determining the amount of death benefits
excluded from gross income following reportable policy sales of
interests in life insurance contracts under section 101 and the
associated information reporting requirements for reportable policy
sales under section 6050Y to the exchange of a life insurance contract
for another life insurance contract qualifying for nonrecognition of
gain or loss under section 1035 (section 1035 exchange), as well as to
certain acquisitions of interests in life insurance contracts in
transactions that qualify as reorganizations under section 368(a)
(reorganizations). The proposed regulations would amend final
regulations under sections 101 and 6050Y (T.D. 9879) published in the
Federal Register (84 FR 58460) on October 31, 2019, as corrected (84 FR
68042) on December 13, 2019 (final regulations). Following the
publication of the final regulations in the Federal Register, the
Treasury Department and the IRS received letters relating to the
application of sections 101 and 6050Y to section 1035 exchanges and
reorganizations. The proposed regulations would modify the final
regulations to address the issues raised in these letters.
Development of the Final Regulations
The Treasury Department and the IRS published the final regulations
to implement legislative changes to the Code made by sections 13520 and
13522 of Public Law 115-97, 131 Stat. 2054, 2148, 2151 (2017), commonly
known as the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA).
Section 13522 of the TCJA amended section 101 by adding new section
101(a)(3) to the Code, which defines the term ``reportable policy
sale'' and provides rules for determining the amount of death benefits
excluded from gross income following a reportable policy sale.\1\ The
final regulations under section 101 provide definitions applicable
under sections 101 and 6050Y and guidance for determining the amount of
death benefits excluded from gross income. For example, Sec. 1.101-
1(c)(1) of the final regulations defines ``reportable policy sale'' to
mean, subject to certain exceptions, any direct or indirect acquisition
of an interest in a life insurance contract if the acquirer has, at the
time of the acquisition, no substantial family, business, or financial
relationship with the insured apart from the acquirer's interest in the
life insurance contract.
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\1\ Generally, under section 101(a)(1), gross income does not
include amounts received (whether in a single sum or otherwise)
under a life insurance contract if such amounts are paid by reason
of the death of the insured. However, the first sentence of section
101(a)(2) (the transfer for value rule) provides that, in the case
of a transfer for a valuable consideration, by assignment or
otherwise, of a life insurance contract or any interest therein, the
amount excluded from gross income by section 101(a)(1) cannot exceed
an amount equal to the sum of the actual value of such consideration
and the premiums and other amounts subsequently paid by the
transferee. The second sentence of section 101(a)(2) provides that
the transfer for value rule does not apply in the case of transfers
described in section 101(a)(2)(A) or (B). Section 101(a)(2)(A) (the
carryover basis exception) applies if the contract or interest
therein has a basis for determining gain or loss in the hands of a
transferee determined in whole or in part by reference to such basis
of such contract or interest therein in the hands of the transferor.
Section 101(a)(2)(B) applies if the transfer is to the insured, to a
partner of the insured, to a partnership in which the insured is a
partner, or to a corporation in which the insured is a shareholder
or officer. However, section 101(a)(3)(A) provides that the
exceptions in the second sentence of section 101(a)(2) do not apply
in the case of a transfer of a life insurance contract, or any
interest therein, that is a reportable policy sale.
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Section 13520 of the TCJA added section 6050Y to chapter 61
(Information and Returns) in subtitle F of the Code. Section 6050Y(a)
requires
[[Page 30059]]
a person who acquires a life insurance contract or any interest in a
life insurance contract in a reportable policy sale to report certain
information about payments made in the sale. Section 6050Y(b) requires
issuers of life insurance contracts to report certain information upon
notice of a reportable policy sale or a transfer of a life insurance
contract to a foreign person. Section 6050Y(c) requires a payor of
reportable death benefits (defined by section 6050Y(d)(4) as amounts
paid by reason of the death of the insured under a life insurance
contract that has been transferred in a reportable policy sale) to
report certain information about such payments. Section 6050Y provides
that each of the returns required by section 6050Y is to be made ``at
such time and in such manner as the Secretary shall prescribe.'' \2\
The final regulations under section 6050Y implement section 6050Y by
specifying the manner in which and time at which the information
reporting obligations imposed by section 6050Y must be satisfied. The
final regulations also provide definitions and rules that govern the
application of the information reporting obligations.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ Section 7701(a)(11)(B) provides that when used in the Code,
the term ``Secretary'' means the Secretary of the Treasury or her
delegate.
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The final regulations were adopted after consideration of public
comments received on proposed regulations under sections 101 and 6050Y
(REG-103083-18) published in the Federal Register (84 FR 11009) on
March 25, 2019 (2019 proposed regulations), and a public hearing held
on June 5, 2019. Additionally, the Treasury Department and the IRS
received comments in response to Notice 2018-41, 2018-20 I.R.B. 584,
which described the regulations the Treasury Department and the IRS
expected to propose under sections 101 and 6050Y, and considered these
comments in developing the rules in the 2019 proposed regulations.
Development of the Section 1035 Exchange Provisions of the Final
Regulations
Prior to amendment in 2019, the regulations under section 101 did
not explicitly address section 1035 exchanges. Comments received on
Notice 2018-41 suggested that the person to whom a life insurance
contract is issued (that is, the original policyholder) should not be
considered an ``acquirer'' for purposes of section 6050Y(a), which
imposes reporting obligations on any person who acquires a life
insurance contract or any interest in a life insurance contract in a
reportable policy sale. See 84 FR 11009, 11016. In response, Sec.
1.101-1(e)(2) of the 2019 proposed regulations clarified that the
issuance of a life insurance contract to a policyholder, other than the
issuance of a policy in an exchange pursuant to section 1035, is not a
transfer of an interest in a life insurance contract.
The preamble to the 2019 proposed regulations requested comments on
whether the regulations should include additional provisions regarding
the treatment of section 1035 exchanges of life insurance contracts.
See 84 FR 11009, 11019. As described in the preamble to the final
regulations, one commenter on the 2019 proposed regulations recommended
that no additional provisions be added to the regulations for this
circumstance, stating that the acquirer of a life insurance contract in
a reportable policy sale would be unlikely to meet the state law
requirements for an insurable interest in the insured and,
consequently, would not be able to make a section 1035 exchange. See 84
FR 58460, 58465. Another commenter recommended that the statement in
Sec. 1.101-1(e)(2) of the 2019 proposed regulations regarding section
1035 exchanges be deleted or amended to eliminate any suggestion that
such transactions, by themselves, can be reportable policy sales. The
commenter acknowledged that in a section 1035 exchange, the new carrier
acquires an interest in the old policy, but advocated against treating
that acquisition as a reportable policy sale.
As explained in the preamble to the final regulations, the
reference in Sec. 1.101-1(e)(2) to section 1035 exchanges was not
intended to imply that the transfer of a policy to an insurance company
in a section 1035 exchange would be a reportable policy sale. See 84 FR
58460, 58465. Rather, the concern prompting the reference to section
1035 exchanges related to the possibility that a policy transferred in
a reportable policy sale subsequently could be exchanged for a new
policy in an exchange pursuant to section 1035 and that, absent the
reference in Sec. 1.101-1(e)(2), the death benefits paid under the new
policy might not be reported under section 6050Y(c).
Section 1.101-1(e)(2) of the 2019 proposed regulations was adopted
as proposed in the final regulations, but in response to the comments
received on section 1035 exchanges, Sec. 1.101-1(c)(2)(iv) of the
final regulations provides that the acquisition of a life insurance
contract by an insurance company in an exchange pursuant to section
1035 is not a reportable policy sale. Additionally, Sec. 1.101-
1(c)(2)(v) of the final regulations provides that the acquisition of a
life insurance contract by a policyholder in an exchange pursuant to
section 1035 is not a reportable policy sale if the policyholder has a
substantial family, business, or financial relationship with the
insured, apart from its interest in the life insurance contract, at the
time of the exchange. Based on a comment received on the 2019 proposed
regulations, a situation in which the policyholder making a section
1035 exchange does not have a substantial family, business, or
financial relationship with the insured should rarely arise due to
state law insurable interest requirements. Should this situation arise,
however, the final regulations provide certain exceptions to the
reporting requirements that generally apply to reportable policy sales.
See Sec. 1.6050Y-2(f)(3) of the final regulations (providing that,
with respect to the issuance of a life insurance contract in a section
1035 exchange, the acquirer is not required to file the information
return required by section 6050Y(a)(1) and Sec. 1.6050Y-2(a) of the
final regulations); Sec. 1.6050Y-3(f)(3) of the final regulations
(providing that the issuer of a new life insurance contract in a
section 1035 exchange is not required to file a return or furnish a
statement to the seller under section 6050Y(b) and Sec. 1.6050Y-3 of
the final regulations). Additionally, the final regulations provide
certain rules applicable to section 1035 exchanges to clarify the
reporting required with respect to section 1035 exchanges that are
reportable policy sales. See Sec. 1.6050Y-1(a)(8)(ii) (providing that,
in the case of the issuance of a life insurance contract to a
policyholder in an exchange pursuant to section 1035, the issuer of the
new contract is the 6050Y(a) issuer with respect to whom the acquirer
has reporting obligations under section 6050Y(a) and Sec. 1.6050Y-2 of
the final regulations).
Letters Received on the Section 1035 Exchange Provisions of the Final
Regulations
Following the publication of the final regulations in the Federal
Register, the Treasury Department and the IRS received letters relating
to the application of sections 101 and 6050Y to section 1035 exchanges
under the final regulations.
One letter indicated that, in at least some cases, the final
regulations under section 101 regarding reportable policy sales appear
to treat a section 1035 exchange as a transfer for value that can cause
the death benefits to become taxable. The letter said that this
treatment appears to arise even when neither the contract given in the
[[Page 30060]]
exchange nor any predecessor contract has been involved in a reportable
policy sale. The author of the letter requested guidance that the
issuance of a life insurance contract in a section 1035 exchange is not
a transfer of an interest in the contract to the owner for purposes of
the transfer for value rule and provided support for the position that
treating a section 1035 exchange as a transfer for value is
inconsistent with the relevant statutes, congressional intent, sound
tax policy, and long-standing interpretations of the law.
The author of another letter took a contrary position, stating that
a section 1035 exchange has always (before the TCJA was enacted, as
well as after) constituted a transfer of a life insurance contract for
purposes of section 101(a)(2) that qualifies for the exception set
forth in section 101(a)(2)(A) to the transfer for value rule for
contracts held with a transferred basis, commonly referred to as the
``carryover basis'' exception. This author advocated against guidance
concluding that the issuance of a life insurance contract in a section
1035 exchange is not a transfer of an interest in the contract to the
owner for purposes of the transfer for value rule, suggesting that to
do so would be to adopt a policy choice that was specifically rejected
by Congress with the enactment of section 101(j).\3\ The author
remarked that section 101(j) was enacted in response to concerns that
despite state insurable interest rules, companies were acquiring
insurance on persons whose relationship with the company was too
attenuated and were doing so without the consent (or even knowledge) of
such persons.
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\3\ Section 101(j) generally provides that in the case of an
employer-owned life insurance contract, the amount of death benefits
excluded from gross income under section 101(a) is limited, unless
certain notice and consent requirements are met and either an
exception based on the insured's status applies (because the insured
was an employee in the twelve months preceding death or the insured
was, at the time the life insurance contract was issued, a director,
highly compensated employee, or highly compensated individual) or an
exception for amounts paid to the insured's heirs applies.
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Development of Exceptions Related to Ordinary Course Trade or Business
Acquisitions in the Final Regulations
Several commenters on Notice 2018-41 suggested that acquisitions of
life insurance contracts, or interests therein, in ordinary course
business transactions in which one trade or business acquires another
trade or business that owns life insurance on the lives of former
employees or directors should not be reportable policy sales. The 2019
proposed regulations included provisions that exclude certain of these
transactions from the definition of reportable policy sales. Public
comments remarked favorably on these provisions, which were adopted by
the final regulations. See Sec. 1.101-1(d)(2) of the final regulations
(defining the term ``substantial business relationship'' to include the
relationship between an insured and an acquirer in certain
circumstances involving the acquirer's acquisition of an active trade
or business with respect to which the insured is an employee within the
meaning of section 101(j)(5) \4\ or was a director, highly compensated
employee, or highly compensated individual); Sec. 1.101-1(d)(4)(i) of
the final regulations (providing a special rule for indirect
acquisitions that deems the acquirer of an interest in a life insurance
contract to have a substantial business or financial relationship with
the insured if the direct holder of the interest in the life insurance
contract has such a relationship); and Sec. 1.101-1(e)(3)(ii) of the
final regulations (defining the term ``indirect acquisition of an
interest in a life insurance contract'' to exclude an acquisition
through ownership of stock in a C corporation provided that no more
than 50 percent of the gross value of the assets of the C corporation
consists of life insurance contracts).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ Section 101(j)(5) defines the term ``employee'' to include
an officer, director, and highly compensated employee (within the
meaning of section 414(q)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As described in the preamble to the final regulations, one
commenter on the 2019 proposed regulations remarked that Sec. 1.101-
1(e)(3)(ii) results in the disparate treatment of policies transferred
directly in asset reorganizations and indirectly in stock
reorganizations. See 84 FR 58460, 58466-58468. That is, with respect to
policies held by a C corporation, not more than 50 percent of the gross
value of the assets of which consists of life insurance contracts, an
indirect acquisition of the policies, such as through a stock
reorganization under section 368(a)(1)(B), would not result in a
reportable policy sale, but a direct acquisition of the policies, such
as through an asset reorganization under section 368(a)(1)(A), could
result in a reportable policy sale. The commenter asserted that this
disparate treatment is inappropriate and not warranted as a matter of
good tax policy and requested that the 2019 proposed regulations be
revised to provide that any transfer of an interest in a life insurance
contract as part of a reorganization of a C corporation conducted in
the ordinary course of business is eligible for an exception to being
treated as a reportable policy sale under section 101(a)(3)(B),
regardless of whether the target C corporation survives the
reorganization transaction unless, immediately prior to the
acquisition, more than 50 percent of the gross value of the assets of
the C corporation consists of life insurance contracts.
The commenter acknowledged that the 2019 proposed regulations
provide certain exceptions that could apply to mergers qualifying as
reorganizations in which the target goes out of existence and the
surviving corporation continues to hold the life insurance contract,
but asserted that having to determine in these types of mergers whether
a particular exception applies on a contract-by-contract basis is
unduly complex and a trap for the unwary. The commenter further
asserted that this burdensome exercise does not serve the purpose of
the change in the statute.
The commenter's recommendation was not adopted in the final
regulations for reasons further described in the preamble to the final
regulations. Briefly, the final regulations preserve the different
results for stock and asset reorganizations because the Treasury
Department and the IRS concluded that significant differences between
the two types of reorganization justify different treatment for
purposes of sections 101 and 6050Y. For instance, an acquirer of an
interest in an entity may have limited ability to determine what types
of assets an entity owns, or to obtain from the entity information
necessary to report on the entity's assets. Further, the Treasury
Department and the IRS had not identified any clear policy reason why
the complete exclusion of death benefits from policies held by a
corporation should carry over when ownership of the insurance policy is
transferred but a substantial business or financial relationship does
not exist between the acquirer and insured. Regarding the commenter's
remark on the burden of a case-by-case review of policies in certain
types of transactions, the preamble to the final regulations noted
that, in asset reorganizations, it would in any case be necessary to
review the life insurance contracts directly acquired on a contract-by-
contract basis in order to update insurance contract ownership and
beneficiary information with the relevant insurance company.
Letter Received on Exceptions Related to Ordinary Course Trade or
Business Acquisitions in the Final Regulations
Following the publication of the final regulations in the Federal
Register, the
[[Page 30061]]
Treasury Department and the IRS received a letter relating to the
disparate treatment of different types of ordinary course trade or
business acquisitions under the final regulations.
The author noted that, since the issuance of the final regulations,
the life insurance industry has seen a number of circumstances in which
transactions that are wholly unrelated to the transfer of life
insurance are nevertheless subject to negative outcomes under the
reportable policy sale rules as a result of the transactions' legal
form, even though transactions with identical or nearly identical
economic substance but a different legal form would be treated more
favorably. The author noted that the ordinary course acquisitive
transactions of concern do not in any way turn on tax outcomes
pertaining to the meagre amounts of life insurance that are commonly at
issue, and asserted that there are a number of legal, economic, and
business practice reasons why it is highly unlikely that these same
transactions can simply be restructured to meet the form-driven rules
of the final regulations. The author suggested the addition of an
exception from the reportable policy sale rules for acquisitive
transactions involving entities that own a de minimis amount of life
insurance (for example, as a proportion of the total value of the
transaction). More specifically, the author proposed that the Treasury
Department and the IRS consider a further exception for transactions in
which the amount of life insurance acquired as a result of the
acquisitive transaction (and any related acquisitions) is five percent
or less of the value of the stock, assets, or both acquired.
Explanation of Provisions
Section 1035 Exchanges
As stated in the preamble to the final regulations, the concern
prompting the references to section 1035 exchanges in the 2019 proposed
regulations and the final regulations related to the possibility that a
policy transferred in a reportable policy sale subsequently could be
exchanged for a new policy in an exchange pursuant to section 1035 and
that the death benefits paid under the new policy might not be reported
under section 6050Y(c). See 84 FR 58460, 58465. The section 1035
exchange provisions were not intended to change the treatment under
section 101 of the policyholder's new contract if the policyholder's
old contract was never transferred in a reportable policy sale.
However, the Treasury Department and the IRS have determined that
such a change was inadvertently effected by the final regulations.
Prior to the issuance of the final regulations, the transfer for value
rule of section 101(a)(2) did not apply as the result of a section 1035
exchange of a life insurance contract by the original policyholder of
the contract. However, under Sec. 1.101-1(e)(2) of the final
regulations, the issuance of a new policy in a section 1035 exchange is
a transfer of an interest in a life insurance contract. Because the new
policy is issued in exchange for an old policy, the exchange is a
transfer for valuable consideration under Sec. 1.101-1(f)(5) of the
final regulations. Therefore, the new policy is subject to the transfer
for value rule of section 101(a)(2), unless one of the exceptions in
section 101(a)(2)(A) and (B) applies. For either exception to apply,
there must be a substantial business, family, or financial relationship
between the insured and the acquirer of the new policy. The Treasury
Department and the IRS have determined that the carryover basis
exception of section 101(a)(2)(A) would not apply in this case.\5\
Therefore, the application of the transfer for value rule would
generally limit the amount of death benefits excludable under section
101(a)(1), even in the absence of a reportable policy sale, unless one
of the section 101(a)(2)(B) exceptions applies (that is, the transfer
is to the insured, to a partner of the insured, to a partnership in
which the insured is a partner, or to a corporation in which the
insured is a shareholder or officer). The Treasury Department and the
IRS have determined that this result is inconsistent with the prior
treatment of new policies issued in section 1035 exchanges.
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\5\ The Code recognizes two categories of substituted basis
property: transferred basis property and exchanged basis property.
See section 7701(a)(42). Property has a ``transferred basis'' for
Federal tax purposes when the same property is transferred from one
person to another but keeps the same basis. See section 7701(a)(43).
Property has an ``exchanged basis'' for Federal tax purposes when a
person's basis in new property is determined by reference to other
property held by that same person. See section 7701(a)(44). The
section 101(a)(2) ``carryover basis'' exception applies to a
transfer if the transferred life insurance contract or interest
therein has a basis for determining gain or loss in the hands of a
transferee determined in whole or in part by reference to such basis
of such contract or interest therein in the hands of the transferor.
That is, the exception applies if the contract is transferred basis
property. However, the basis of a new policy issued in a section
1035 exchange to the same taxpayer is the same as the basis of the
old policy held by that taxpayer, decreased in the amount of any
money received by the taxpayer and increased in the amount of gain
or decreased in the amount of loss to the taxpayer that was
recognized on such exchange. See sections 1035(d)(2) and 1031(d).
The new policy is thus exchanged basis property, not transferred
basis property. It is therefore ineligible for the carryover basis
exception of section 101(a)(2)(A).
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Accordingly, the proposed regulations are intended to correct the
unintended change effected by the final regulations to the treatment
under section 101 of a life insurance contract issued to a policyholder
in a section 1035 exchange, while continuing to address the concern
that the reporting of death benefits paid under section 6050Y(c) could
be avoided by exchanging a policy transferred in a reportable policy
sale for a new policy in a section 1035 exchange, as well as the
concern that a policyholder could attempt to avoid the limitation on
the excludability of death benefits resulting from the application of
the transfer for value rule through a section 1035 exchange. The
proposed regulations would accomplish these objectives by revising the
final regulations in four ways.
1. Modify Definition of a Transfer of an Interest in a Life Insurance
Contract
First, proposed Sec. 1.101-1(e)(2) would revise the definition of
a transfer of an interest in a life insurance contract in Sec. 1.101-
1(e)(2) of the final regulations to exclude the issuance of a life
insurance contract to a policyholder, without qualification. As such,
any issuance of a life insurance contract to a policyholder, including
in a section 1035 exchange, is not a transfer of an interest in a life
insurance contract and therefore cannot be a reportable policy sale
under Sec. 1.101-1(c)(1) of the final regulations. The Treasury
Department and the IRS do not view this position as inconsistent with
the purpose of section 101(j). See Public Law 109-280, 863(d), 120
Stat. 780, 1024 (2006) (providing that section 101(j) generally applies
to life insurance contracts issued after August 17, 2006, ``except for
a contract issued after such date pursuant to an exchange described in
section 1035 . . . for a contract issued on or prior to that date'');
Notice 2009-48, 2009-1 C.B. 1085 (providing that further notice and
consent is not required by section 101(j) with regard to a contract
received in a section 1035 exchange for an employer-owned life
insurance contract issued after August 17, 2006, for which the notice
and consent requirements were previously satisfied if either (1) the
existing consent remains valid, or (2) the exchange does not result in
a material change in the death benefit or other material change in the
contract).
The proposed regulations make conforming changes to remove the
exception in Sec. 1.101-1(c)(2)(v) of the final regulations (providing
that the
[[Page 30062]]
acquisition of a life insurance contract by a policyholder in a section
1035 exchange is not a reportable policy sale if the policyholder has a
substantial family, business, or financial relationship with the
insured, apart from its interest in the life insurance contract, at the
time of the exchange); to remove Sec. Sec. 1.6050Y-2(f)(3) and
1.6050Y-3(f)(3) of the final regulations (providing certain reporting
requirement exceptions related to section 1035 exchanges that are no
longer necessary); and to remove Sec. 1.6050Y-1(a)(8)(ii) of the final
regulations (providing a definitional rule related to section 1035
exchanges that is no longer necessary).
2. New Rule Addressing Section 1035 Exchanges
Second, proposed Sec. 1.101-1(b)(2)(iv) provides a new rule that
would apply to the exchange of an interest in a life insurance contract
(old interest) in a section 1035 exchange for an interest in a newly
issued life insurance contract (new interest) and provides guidance on
how to determine the amount of the proceeds attributable to the new
interest that is excludable from gross income under section 101(a),
provided the new interest is not subsequently transferred or exchanged.
If the new interest is subsequently transferred or exchanged, the
amount excludable from gross income under section 101(a) would be
determined under the rule in Sec. 1.101-1(b) applicable to the type of
transfer or exchange involved. The limitation (or lack of any
limitation) on the amount of the proceeds attributable to the old
interest that is excludable from gross income applies under proposed
Sec. 1.101-1(b)(2)(iv) to the new interest for which it is exchanged,
just as the basis of the old interest applies to the new interest. See
sections 1031(d) and 1035(d)(2) (providing that a contract acquired in
a section 1035 exchange has the same basis as the contract for which it
was exchanged). The IRS has previously treated certain attributes of
contracts exchanged in section 1035 exchanges as applying to the new
contracts acquired. See, e.g., Rev. Rul. 92-95, 1992-2 C.B. 43 (for
purposes of section 72(q)(2)(I) and 72(u)(4), the ``date of purchase''
of an annuity contract acquired in a section 1035 exchange for another
annuity contract is the date of purchase of the annuity contract that
was exchanged for the new contract). See also section 7702A(a)(2)
(defining a modified endowment contract to include any contract
exchanged for a contract that is a modified endowment contract under
section 7702A(a)(1)).
Proposed Sec. 1.101-1(b)(2)(iv) ensures that the acquirer of an
interest in a life insurance contract in a reportable policy sale
cannot avoid any limit imposed by section 101(a)(2) and (a)(3) on the
amount of the proceeds attributable to the interest that is excludable
from gross income under section 101(a)(1) by simply exchanging the
interest for a new life insurance contract. Under proposed Sec. 1.101-
1(b)(2)(iv)(A), if the entire amount of the proceeds attributable to
the old interest would have been excludable from gross income under
section 101(a) at the time of the section 1035 exchange, the entire
amount of the proceeds attributable to the new interest is excludable
from gross income. Under proposed Sec. 1.101-1(b)(2)(iv)(B), if less
than the entire amount of the proceeds attributable to the old interest
would have been excludable from gross income under section 101(a) at
the time of the section 1035 exchange, the amount of the proceeds
attributable to the new interest that is excludable from gross income
is limited to the sum of the amount of the proceeds attributable to the
old interest that would have been excludable at the time of the section
1035 exchange, and the premiums and other amounts subsequently paid
with respect to the new interest by the policyholder. Proposed Sec.
1.101-1(b)(2)(iv)(B) also provides that, when determining the premiums
and other amounts subsequently paid by the policyholder with respect to
the new interest, the amounts paid by the policyholder are reduced, but
not below zero, by amounts received by the policyholder under the new
life insurance contract that are not received as an annuity, to the
extent excludable from gross income under section 72(e). The proposed
regulations also make conforming changes to Sec. 1.101-1(a)(1) of the
final regulations and the headings of Sec. 1.101-1(b) and (b)(2) of
the final regulations to reflect the addition of proposed Sec. 1.101-
1(b)(2)(iv). The proposed regulations also add two examples to
illustrate the application of the rules set forth in proposed Sec.
1.101-1(b)(2)(iv). See proposed Sec. 1.101-1(g)(17) and (18).
3. Modification to Definition of Reportable Policy Sale
Third, the proposed regulations would modify the definition of
``reportable policy sale'' to address section 1035 exchanges.
Specifically, proposed Sec. 1.101-1(c)(3) addresses situations in
which an old interest is exchanged in a section 1035 exchange for a new
interest, and the old interest was previously transferred for valuable
consideration in a reportable policy sale or is treated, under proposed
Sec. 1.101-1(c)(3), as an interest in a life insurance contract that
was previously transferred for valuable consideration in a reportable
policy sale. In such cases, the new interest is treated, for purposes
of Sec. 1.101-1, as an interest in a life insurance contract that was
previously transferred for valuable consideration in a reportable
policy sale.
Under the proposed rule, the old interest's attribute of having
been previously transferred for valuable consideration in a reportable
policy sale applies to the new interest acquired in a section 1035
exchange. Whether or not an interest in a life insurance policy was
previously transferred in a reportable policy sale is relevant for the
purpose of determining the applicability of certain provisions in the
final regulations. See, e.g., Sec. 1.101-1(b)(1)(ii)(B)(1) of the
final regulations (applies only if the interest was not previously
transferred for valuable consideration in a reportable policy sale);
Sec. 1.101-1(b)(1)(ii)(B)(2) and (3) of the final regulations (apply
if the interest was previously transferred for valuable consideration
in a reportable policy sale); Sec. 1.101-1(b)(2)(i) of the final
regulations (includes a special rule for interests that have not
previously been transferred for value in a reportable policy sale). The
Treasury Department and the IRS have previously treated (and continue
to treat) other attributes of contracts exchanged in section 1035
exchanges as applying to the new contracts acquired, so the new
contract is treated the same as the old contract. See, e.g., Rev. Rul.
92-95. Similarly, the proposed rule ensures that the new interest is
treated the same as the old interest when applying rules that consider
whether an interest in a life insurance contract was previously
transferred in a reportable policy sale. See proposed Sec. 1.101-
1(c)(3).
Proposed Sec. 1.101-1(c)(3) also provides that, for purposes of
Sec. Sec. 1.6050Y-3 and 1.6050Y-4, the section 1035 exchange is
treated as the transfer of an interest in the life insurance contract
in a reportable policy sale if the old interest previously was
transferred for valuable consideration in a reportable policy sale (or
is treated, under proposed Sec. 1.101-1(c)(3), as an interest in a
life insurance contract that previously was transferred for valuable
consideration in a reportable policy sale). Accordingly, the
designation of death benefits as reportable death benefits is an
attribute that transfers from the old interest to the new interest in a
section 1035 exchange. See also proposed Sec. 1.6050Y-1(a)(12). The
Treasury Department and the IRS previously have treated other
attributes of contracts exchanged in section 1035 exchanges as
transferring to the new contracts acquired. In this case, the
[[Page 30063]]
proposed rule ensures that death benefits under the new interest are
treated the same as under the old interest for purposes of reporting
under section 6050Y(c) and Sec. 1.6050Y-4. These rules are necessary
to ensure that the acquirer of an interest in a life insurance contract
in a reportable policy sale cannot avoid the designation of the death
benefits as reportable death benefits and the associated reporting of
the payment of the reportable death benefits by simply exchanging the
interest for a new life insurance contract. The proposed regulations
also make conforming changes to Sec. 1.101-1(c)(1) of the final
regulations to reflect the addition of proposed Sec. 1.101-1(c)(3).
4. Conforming Modifications to Sec. Sec. 1.6050Y-1 Through 1.6050Y-4
Finally, consistent with proposed Sec. 1.101-1(c)(3), the proposed
regulations would modify several definitions in Sec. 1.6050Y-1 of the
final regulations and modify the reporting rules under Sec. Sec.
1.6050Y-3 and 1.6050Y-4 of the final regulations to ensure proper
reporting of reportable death benefits paid under contracts issued in
section 1035 exchanges. Notably, however, the section 1035 exchange
rules of proposed Sec. 1.101-1(c)(3) do not apply for purposes of
Sec. 1.6050Y-2 of the final regulations, and no reporting is required
under Sec. 1.6050Y-2 of the final regulations at the time of a section
1035 exchange, even if the new interest is exchanged for an old
interest that was previously transferred for valuable consideration in
a reportable policy sale.
Proposed Sec. 1.6050Y-1(a)(14) provides that the term ``reportable
policy sale'' has the meaning given to it in Sec. 1.101-1(c)(1),
except as otherwise provided in Sec. 1.6050Y-1. Proposed Sec.
1.6050Y-1(a)(12) provides that the term ``reportable death benefits''
means amounts paid by reason of the death of the insured under a life
insurance contract that are attributable to an interest in the contract
that was transferred in a reportable policy sale described in Sec.
1.101-1(c)(1) of the final regulations or proposed Sec. 1.101-1(c)(3).
Accordingly, payors of such amounts are subject to the reporting
requirements of section 6050Y(c) and Sec. 1.6050Y-4 of the final
regulations. Proposed Sec. 1.6050Y-1(a)(1) and (2) modify the
definitions of ``acquirer'' and ``buyer,'' respectively, to treat as a
buyer for purposes of reporting under section 6050Y(c) and Sec.
1.6050Y-4 a person to whom an interest in a life insurance contract is
issued in a section 1035 exchange treated as the transfer of an
interest in the life insurance contract in a reportable policy sale
under proposed Sec. 1.101-1(c)(3). See Sec. 1.6050Y-4(a)(5) of the
final regulations (requiring a payor of reportable death benefits to
report the payor's estimate of investment in the contract with respect
to the buyer, limited to the payor's estimate of the buyer's investment
in the contract with respect to the interest for which the reportable
death benefits payment recipient was paid).
To ensure proper reporting of reportable death benefits paid under
contracts issued in section 1035 exchanges, proposed Sec. 1.6050Y-3(a)
requires reporting by each ``6050Y(b) issuer'' that is a ``section 1035
issuer'' with respect to each ``seller'' at the time of the exchange.
Proposed Sec. 1.6050Y-1(a)(8)(iii)(C) provides that the term
``6050Y(b) issuer'' includes any person that is a section 1035 issuer
or the designee of a section 1035 issuer. Proposed Sec. 1.6050Y-
1(a)(8)(v) defines the term ``section 1035 issuer'' to include the
issuer of the old interest (old issuer) and the issuer of the new
interest (new issuer) in a section 1035 exchange that is treated as the
transfer of an interest in the life insurance contract in a reportable
policy sale under proposed Sec. 1.101-1(c)(3). The old issuer is a
section 1035 issuer described in proposed Sec. 1.6050Y-1(a)(8)(v)(A),
and the new issuer is a section 1035 issuer described in proposed Sec.
1.6050Y-1(a)(8)(v)(B). However, an issuer is not considered a section
1035 issuer if it never received information indicating that the
interest in a life insurance contract with respect to which it is an
issuer was transferred in a reportable policy sale under Sec. 1.101-
1(c)(1) or (3). See proposed Sec. 1.6050Y-1(a)(8)(v)(A) and (B).
Proposed Sec. 1.6050Y-1(a)(18) provides that, for purposes of
reporting by both the old issuer and the new issuer, the term
``seller'' includes any person that holds an interest in a life
insurance contract that has been transferred in a reportable policy
sale under Sec. 1.101-1(c)(1) or (3) and exchanges that interest for
an interest in a new life insurance contract in an exchange pursuant to
section 1035. The information to be provided by a section 1035 issuer
includes the name, address, and taxpayer identification number of the
seller, the investment in the contract with respect to the seller, and
any other information that is required by the form or its instructions.
It is anticipated that this reporting will be completed on Form 1099-
SB, ``Seller's Investment in Life Insurance Contract'', and the
information to be provided will also include the policy number (old or
new, as applicable) and identification of the transaction as a section
1035 exchange. Under proposed Sec. 1.6050Y-3(a)(3), section 1035
issuers are not required to report the amount the seller would have
received if the seller had surrendered the life insurance contract.
The proposed regulations make conforming changes to Sec. 1.6050Y-
3(c) of the final regulations to provide the time and place for filing
returns required to be made by section 1035 issuers. See proposed Sec.
1.6050Y-3(c) (section 1035 issuers file returns at the same time and
place as other 6050Y(b) issuers). Proposed Sec. 1.6050Y-3(d)(1)
provides that each section 1035 issuer must furnish a statement to each
seller who makes a section 1035 exchange, just as other 6050Y(b)
issuers are required to furnish a statement to sellers, and proposed
Sec. 1.6050Y-3(d)(2) imposes the same deadline for doing so.
Additionally, proposed Sec. 1.6050Y-3(d)(1) requires the old issuer to
furnish a statement to the new issuer in a section 1035 exchange
providing information about the interest being exchanged. This
statement serves to provide notice to the new issuer that the old
interest was transferred in a reportable policy sale and, therefore,
that the new interest will be treated as an interest in a life
insurance contract that has been transferred in a reportable policy
sale and that death benefits paid under the new interest are reportable
death benefits. Proposed Sec. 1.6050Y-3(d)(2) provides that this
statement must be furnished within 30 days of the section 1035
exchange.
The proposed regulations also modify the exception to reporting set
forth in Sec. 1.6050Y-4(e)(3) of the final regulations. Section
1.6050Y-4(e)(3) of the final regulations provides an exception from
reporting under Sec. 1.6050Y-4 of the final regulations if the payor
never received, and has no knowledge of any issuer having received, a
reportable policy sale statement (RPSS) with respect to the interest in
a life insurance contract with respect to which the reportable death
benefits are paid. However, death benefits paid with respect to the new
interest may be reportable death benefits even though an RPSS was never
furnished with respect to the new interest. Accordingly, the existing
exception would apply too broadly in the context of section 1035
exchanges. Proposed Sec. 1.6050Y-4(e)(3) therefore imposes an
additional requirement if the reportable death benefits are paid with
respect to an interest in a life insurance contract issued in a section
1035 exchange. In that case, the exception applies only if the payor
also never received, and has no knowledge
[[Page 30064]]
of any issuer having received, a statement described in Sec. 1.6050Y-
3(d)(1) from a section 1035 issuer or other information indicating that
the issuance of the contract is treated as a transfer of an interest in
the contract in a reportable policy sale under Sec. 1.101-1(c)(3).
Ordinary Course Trade or Business Acquisitions
As noted in the preamble to the final regulations, C corporations
are not frequently used as vehicles for investing in life insurance
contracts covering insureds with respect to which the corporation does
not have a substantial business, financial, or family relationship at
the time the contract is issued because a corporate level income tax
applies to corporate earnings in addition to income tax on
distributions at the shareholder level. See 84 FR 58460, 58467. After
consideration of the comments and letter received on the 2019 proposed
regulations and the final regulations, respectively, regarding ordinary
course trade or business acquisitions, the Treasury Department and the
IRS are proposing an exception for certain direct acquisitions of
interests in life insurance contracts from a C corporation.
Proposed Sec. 1.101-1(c)(2)(v) provides that the direct
acquisition of an interest in a life insurance contract from a C
corporation by a C corporation is not a reportable policy sale if (1)
the acquisition results from a transaction that qualifies as a
reorganization under section 368(a); (2) immediately before the
acquisition, (i) the interest is held by a C corporation that conducts
an active trade or business within the meaning of Sec. 1.367(a)-
2(d)(2) and (3), (ii) the C corporation does not engage in a trade or
business of investing in interests in life insurance contracts, and
(iii) no more than 5 percent of the gross value of the assets of the C
corporation consists of life insurance contracts; and (3) immediately
after the acquisition, (i) the acquiring C corporation does not engage
in a trade or business of investing in interests in life insurance
contracts, and (ii) not more than 5 percent of the gross value of the
assets of the C corporation consists of life insurance contracts. This
exception would provide relief from the reportable policy sale rules
for acquisitions of interests in life insurance contracts through
certain ordinary course trade or business acquisitions while preserving
different treatment for direct and indirect acquisitions of interests
in life insurance contracts in other cases. The proposed regulations
modify Example 11 in Sec. 1.101-1(g)(11) of the final regulations to
reflect the addition of the exception in proposed Sec. 1.101-
1(c)(2)(v). See proposed Sec. 1.101-1(g)(11).
Applicability Dates
Proposed Sec. Sec. 1.101-1(b)(2)(iv) and (c)(3) are proposed to
apply to section 1035 exchanges occurring on or after the date the
Treasury decision adopting these regulations as final regulations is
published in the Federal Register, and proposed Sec. 1.101-1(c)(2)(v)
is proposed to apply to any acquisition of an interest in a life
insurance contract occurring on or after the date the Treasury decision
adopting these regulations as final regulations is published in the
Federal Register. See proposed Sec. 1.101-6(c). However, it is
proposed that a taxpayer may choose to apply Sec. 1.101-1(b)(2)(iv),
(c)(2)(v), and (c)(3) of the regulations set forth in the Treasury
decision adopting these regulations as final regulations to all section
1035 exchanges and acquisitions occurring after December 31, 2017, and
before the date of publication of the Treasury decision adopting these
rules as final regulations in the Federal Register. See section
7805(b)(7) of the Code. Alternatively, a taxpayer may rely on proposed
Sec. 1.101-1(b)(2)(iv), (c)(2)(v), and (c)(3) for all section 1035
exchanges and acquisitions occurring after December 31, 2017, and
before the date of publication of the Treasury decision adopting these
rules as final regulations in the Federal Register.
The reporting obligations under proposed Sec. 1.6050Y-3 are
proposed to apply to any section 1035 exchange treated as a reportable
policy sale under proposed Sec. 1.101-1(c)(3) if the exchange occurs
on or after the date the Treasury decision adopting these regulations
as final regulations is published in the Federal Register. See proposed
Sec. 1.6050Y-1(b)(2). The reporting obligations under proposed Sec.
1.6050Y-4 are proposed to apply to reportable death benefits paid with
respect to an interest in a life insurance contract issued in a section
1035 exchange treated as a reportable policy sale under proposed Sec.
1.101-1(c)(3) if the exchange occurs on or after the date the Treasury
decision adopting these regulations as final regulations is published
in the Federal Register. See proposed Sec. 1.6050Y-1(b)(2). Any person
with a reporting obligation under proposed Sec. 1.6050Y-3 or proposed
Sec. 1.6050Y-4 may, however, rely on the proposed regulations with
respect to all section 1035 exchanges occurring after May 10, 2023, and
before the date of publication of the Treasury decision adopting these
rules as final regulations in the Federal Register.
Special Analyses
I. Regulatory Planning and Review
The proposed regulations are not subject to review under section
6(b) of Executive Order 12866, as amended pursuant to the Memorandum of
Agreement (April 11, 2018) between the Treasury Department and the
Office of Management and Budget regarding review of tax regulations.
II. Paperwork Reduction Act
The additional collection of information relating to this notice of
proposed rulemaking will be submitted to the Office of Management and
Budget for review under OMB Control Number 1545-2281 in accordance with
the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3507(d)). In general,
the additional collection of information is required under section
6050Y. When an interest in a life insurance contract that was
previously transferred in or is treated as having been previously
transferred in a reportable policy sale (original contract) is
exchanged by a policyholder under section 1035 for a new life insurance
contract (new contract), proposed Sec. 1.6050Y-3(a) would require the
issuer of the original contract (original issuer) to notify the issuer
of the new contract (new issuer), the policyholder, and the IRS of the
status of the original contract as a contract transferred in or treated
as having been transferred in a reportable policy sale and to provide
the investment in the contract for the original contract. Proposed
Sec. 1.6050Y-3(a) would also require any new issuer receiving such
notification with respect to a section 1035 exchange to provide the
policyholder and the IRS with the policy number of the new contract and
the investment in the contract. This information is necessary to carry
out the purpose of section 6050Y(c), which requires a payor of
reportable death benefits to report certain information about payments
of reportable death benefits.
The likely respondents to the collection of information are life
insurance companies.
The burden for the additional collection of information contained
in proposed Sec. 1.6050Y-3 will be reflected in the burden on Form
1099-SB, ``Seller's Investment in Life Insurance Contract'', when the
burden is revised to reflect the additional collection of information
in proposed Sec. 1.6050Y-3. The OMB Control Number for this form is
1545-2281.
[[Page 30065]]
Comments on the collection of information should be sent to the
Office of Management and Budget, Attn: Desk Officer for the Department
of the Treasury, Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs,
Washington, DC 20503, with copies to the Internal Revenue Service,
Attn: IRS Reports Clearance Officer, SE:CAR:MP:T:T:SP, Washington, DC
20224. Comments on the collection of information should be received by
July 10, 2023.
Comments are specifically requested concerning:
Whether the proposed collection of information is necessary for the
proper performance of the functions of the IRS, including whether the
information will have practical utility;
The accuracy of the estimated burden associated with the proposed
collection of information;
How the quality, utility, and clarity of the information to be
collected may be enhanced;
How the burden of complying with the proposed collection of
information may be minimized, including through the application of
automated collection techniques or other forms of information
technology; and
Estimates of capital or start-up costs and costs of operation,
maintenance, and purchase of services to provide information.
An agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required
to respond to, a collection of information unless it displays a valid
control number assigned by the Office of Management and Budget.
III. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) requires agencies to ``prepare
and make available for public comment an initial regulatory flexibility
analysis,'' which will ``describe the impact of the proposed rule on
small entities.'' 5 U.S.C. 603(a). Section 605(b) of the RFA allows an
agency to certify a rule, in lieu of preparing an analysis, if the
proposed rulemaking is not expected to have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small entities.
Pursuant to the RFA, it is hereby certified that the proposed
regulations will not have a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities, because any effect on small
entities by the rules proposed in this document flows directly from
section 13520 of the TCJA. In addition, it is anticipated that
requirements in the proposed regulations, which implement the statutory
requirements under section 13520 of the TCJA, will fall primarily on
financial and insurance firms with annual receipts greater than $41.5
million and, therefore, on no small entities. Therefore, the
Commissioner of the IRS hereby certifies that the proposed regulations
will not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of
small entities. The Treasury Department and the IRS request comments on
the impacts of this proposed rule on small entities.
Pursuant to section 7805(f) of the Code, this notice of proposed
rulemaking will be submitted to the Chief Counsel for the Office of
Advocacy of the Small Business Administration for comment on its impact
on small entities.
IV. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
Section 202 of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA)
requires that agencies assess anticipated costs and benefits and take
certain other actions before issuing a final rule that includes any
Federal mandate that may result in expenditures in any one year by a
state, local, or tribal government, in the aggregate, or by the private
sector, of $100 million in 1995 dollars, updated annually for
inflation. This proposed rule does not include any Federal mandate that
may result in expenditures by state, local, or tribal governments, or
by the private sector in excess of that threshold.
V. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
Executive Order 13132 (Federalism) prohibits an agency from
publishing any rule that has federalism implications if the rule either
imposes substantial, direct compliance costs on state and local
governments, and is not required by statute, or preempts state law,
unless the agency meets the consultation and funding requirements of
section 6 of the Executive Order. These proposed regulations do not
have federalism implications and do not impose substantial direct
compliance costs on state and local governments or preempt state law
within the meaning of the Executive Order.
Comments and Requests for a Public Hearing
Before these proposed amendments to the final regulations are
adopted as final regulations, consideration will be given to comments
that are submitted timely to the IRS as prescribed in this preamble
under the ADDRESSES heading. The Treasury Department and the IRS
request comments on all aspects of the proposed regulations. Any
electronic comments submitted, and to the extent practicable any paper
comments submitted, will be made available at www.regulations.gov or
upon request.
A public hearing will be scheduled if requested in writing by any
person who timely submits electronic or written comments. Requests for
a public hearing are also encouraged to be made electronically. If a
public hearing is scheduled, notice of the date and time for the public
hearing will be published in the Federal Register.
Drafting Information
The principal author of these regulations is Kathryn M. Sneade,
Office of Associate Chief Counsel (Financial Institutions and
Products), IRS. However, other personnel from the Treasury Department
and the IRS participated in their development.
Availability of IRS Documents
The revenue rulings, notices, and other guidance cited in this
document are published in the Internal Revenue Bulletin (or Cumulative
Bulletin) and are available from the Superintendent of Documents, U.S.
Government Publishing Office, Washington, DC 20402, or by visiting the
IRS website at www.irs.gov.
List of Subjects in 26 CFR Part 1
Income taxes, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
Proposed Amendments to the Regulations
Accordingly, the Treasury Department and the IRS propose to amend
26 CFR part 1 as follows:
PART 1--INCOME TAXES
0
Paragraph 1. The authority citation for part 1 continues to read in
part as follows:
Authority: 26 U.S.C. 7805 * * *
0
Par. 2. Section 1.101-1 is amended by:
0
1. Adding a heading for paragraph (a) introductory text.
0
2. In paragraph (a)(1), adding a sentence after the fourth sentence.
0
3. In paragraphs (b) introductory text and (b)(2), revising the
headings.
0
4. Adding paragraph (b)(2)(iv).
0
5. Adding a sentence at the end of paragraph (c)(1).
0
6. Revising paragraph (c)(2)(v).
0
7. Adding paragraph (c)(3).
0
8. In paragraph (e)(2), removing ``, other than the issuance of a
policy in an exchange pursuant to section 1035'' in the last sentence.
0
9. In paragraph (g)(11), adding two sentences after the fourth
sentence.
0
10. Adding paragraphs (g)(17) through (g)(19).
The additions and revisions read as follows:
[[Page 30066]]
Sec. 1.101-1 Exclusion from gross income of proceeds of life
insurance contracts payable by reason of death.
(a) Exclusion from gross income--(1) In general. * * * The extent
to which this exclusion applies in cases where life insurance policies
have been gratuitously transferred or issued in an exchange pursuant to
section 1035 (section 1035 exchange) is stated in paragraph (b)(2) of
this section. * * *
* * * * *
(b) Transfers and exchanges of life insurance policies.
* * * * *
(2) Other transfers and exchanges--* * *
* * * * *
(iv) Section 1035 exchanges. When an interest in a life insurance
contract (old interest) is exchanged in a section 1035 exchange for an
interest in a newly issued life insurance contract (new interest),
except as otherwise provided by this section with respect to any
portion of the new interest that is transferred or exchanged subsequent
to the section 1035 exchange, the amount of the proceeds attributable
to the new interest that is excludable from gross income under section
101(a) is determined as follows:
(A) If, at the time of the exchange, the entire amount of the
proceeds attributable to the old interest would have been excludable
from gross income under section 101(a), the entire amount of the
proceeds attributable to the new interest is excludable from gross
income; and
(B) If, at the time of the exchange, less than the entire amount of
the proceeds attributable to the old interest would have been
excludable from gross income under section 101(a), the amount of the
proceeds attributable to the new interest that is excludable from gross
income is limited to the sum of the amount of the proceeds attributable
to the old interest that would have been excludable at the time of the
exchange and the premiums and other amounts subsequently paid with
respect to the new interest by the policyholder, reduced (but not below
zero) by amounts received by the policyholder under the life insurance
contract that are not received as an annuity, to the extent excludable
from gross income under section 72(e).
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(1) * * * See paragraph (c)(3) of this section for special rules
applicable to section 1035 exchanges.
(2) * * *
(v) The direct acquisition of an interest in a life insurance
contract by a C corporation if:
(A) Immediately before the acquisition, the interest is held by
another C corporation (target C corporation) that actively conducts a
trade or business within the meaning of Sec. 1.367(a)-2(d)(2) and (3);
(B) Immediately before the acquisition, the target C corporation
does not engage in a trade or business of investing in interests in
life insurance contracts;
(C) Immediately before the acquisition, no more than 5 percent of
the gross value of the assets (as determined under paragraph (f)(4) of
this section) of the target C corporation consists of life insurance
contracts;
(D) The acquisition results from a transaction that qualifies as a
reorganization under section 368(a) with respect to which the target C
corporation and the acquiring C corporation each is a party to the
reorganization (within the meaning of section 368(b));
(E) Immediately after the acquisition, the acquiring C corporation
does not engage in a trade or business of investing in interests in
life insurance contracts, and
(F) Immediately after the acquisition, no more than 5 percent of
the gross value of the assets (as determined under paragraph (f)(4) of
this section) of the acquiring C corporation consists of life insurance
contracts.
(3) Section 1035 exchanges. This paragraph (c)(3) applies if an
interest in a life insurance contract (old interest) is exchanged in a
section 1035 exchange for an interest in a newly issued life insurance
contract (new interest), and the old interest previously was
transferred for valuable consideration in a reportable policy sale
under paragraph (c)(1) of this section or is treated as an interest in
a life insurance contract that previously was transferred for valuable
consideration in a reportable policy sale under this paragraph (c)(3).
For purposes of this section, the new interest is treated as an
interest in a life insurance contract that previously was transferred
for valuable consideration in a reportable policy sale. For purposes of
Sec. Sec. 1.6050Y-3 and 1.6050Y-4, the section 1035 exchange is
treated as the transfer of an interest in the life insurance contract
in a reportable policy sale.
* * * * *
(g) * * *
(11) * * * Also, the exception in paragraph (c)(2)(v) of this
section applies, provided Corporation X satisfies the requirements of
paragraph (c)(2)(v)(A) through (C) of this section immediately before
the acquisition by Corporation Y, and Corporation Y satisfies the
requirements of paragraph (c)(2)(v)(E) and (F) of this section
immediately after the acquisition. This would be the case even if A
were no longer employed by Corporation X at the time of the transfer. *
* *
* * * * *
(17) Example 17. The facts are the same as in Example 4 in
paragraph (g)(4) of this section except that, before A's death, C
exchanges the policy on A's life for a new policy on A's life in a
section 1035 exchange. The amount of the proceeds C may exclude from
C's gross income under this section is limited under paragraph
(b)(2)(iv)(B) of this section to $6,000 plus any premiums and other
amounts paid by C with respect to the original policy subsequent to the
transfer and any premiums and other amounts paid by C with respect to
the new policy subsequent to the exchange.
(18) Example 18. The facts are the same as in Example 17 in
paragraph (g)(17) of this section except that, before A's death, C
sells the new policy to A for fair market value. A's estate receives
the proceeds of $100,000 on A's death. Under paragraph
(b)(1)(ii)(B)(3)(i) of this section, the amount of the proceeds A's
estate may exclude from gross income is not limited by paragraph (b) of
this section.
(19) Example 19. A is the initial policyholder of a $100,000
insurance policy on A's life. A transfers the policy for $6,000, its
fair market value, to an individual, C, who does not have a substantial
family, business, or financial relationship with A at the time of the
transfer. The transfer from A to C is a reportable policy sale. C also
is the initial policyholder of a $200,000 insurance policy on A's life.
Before A's death, C exchanges the two policies on A's life for a single
new policy on A's life in a section 1035 exchange. C receives the
proceeds from the new policy on A's death. The entire amount of the
proceeds attributable to the interest in the new policy that was issued
in exchange for the policy originally issued to C is excludable from
gross income under paragraph (b)(2)(iv)(A) of this section. The amount
of the proceeds attributable to the interest in the new policy that was
issued in exchange for the policy originally issued to A that is
excludable from gross income is limited under paragraph (b)(2)(iv)(B)
of this section to $6,000 plus any premiums and other amounts paid by C
with respect to the policy originally issued to A subsequent to the
transfer and any premiums and other amounts paid by C with respect to
[[Page 30067]]
the interest in the new policy that was issued in exchange for the
policy originally issued to A.
0
Par. 3. Section 1.101-6 is amended by adding paragraph (c) to read as
follows:
Sec. 1.101-6 Effective date.
* * * * *
(c) Notwithstanding paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section, Sec.
1.101-1(b)(2)(iv) and (c)(3) apply to any interest in a life insurance
contract issued in a section 1035 exchange occurring on or after the
date these regulations are published as final regulations in the
Federal Register, and Sec. 1.101-1(c)(2)(v) applies to any acquisition
of an interest in a life insurance contract occurring on or after the
date these regulations are published as final regulations in the
Federal Register. However, under section 7805(b)(7), a taxpayer may
choose to apply the rules in Sec. 1.101-1(b)(2)(iv), (c)(2)(v), and
(c)(3) to all exchanges and acquisitions occurring after December 31,
2017, and before the date these regulations are published as final
regulations in the Federal Register.
0
Par. 4. Section 1.6050Y-1 is amended by:
0
1. In paragraph (a)(1), adding a sentence at the end of the paragraph.
0
2. In paragraph (a)(2), adding ``under Sec. 1.101-1(c)(1) or treated
as such an interest under Sec. 1.101-1(c)(3)'' before the second
comma.
0
3. In paragraph (a)(8)(ii), removing the last sentence.
0
4. In paragraph (a)(8)(iii)(A), removing ``or'' at the end.
0
5. In paragraph (a)(8)(iii)(B)(2), removing the period at the end of
the paragraph and adding in its place ``; or''.
0
6. Adding paragraph (a)(8)(iii)(C).
0
7. Adding paragraph (a)(8)(v).
0
8. In paragraph (a)(12), adding ``under Sec. 1.101-1(c)(1) or (3)''
before the period at the end of the paragraph.
0
9. In paragraph (a)(14), removing ``Sec. 1.101-1(c)'' before the
period at the end of the paragraph, and adding in its place ``Sec.
1.101-1(c), except as otherwise provided in this section''.
0
10. In paragraph (a)(18)(i), removing ``or'' at the end of the
paragraph.
0
11. In paragraph (a)(18)(ii), removing the period at the end of the
paragraph and adding in its place ``; or''.
0
12. Adding paragraph (a)(18)(iii).
0
13. Redesignating paragraphs (b)(1) through (5) as paragraphs (b)(1)(i)
through (v); redesignating paragraph (b) introductory text as paragraph
(b)(1); adding a heading to paragraph (b) introductory text; revising
the heading for the newly redesignated paragraph (b)(1); revising the
first two sentences of newly redesignated paragraph (b)(1); and adding
paragraph (b)(2).
The additions and revisions read as follows:
Sec. 1.6050Y-1 Information reporting for reportable policy sales,
transfers of life insurance contracts to foreign persons, and
reportable death benefits.
(a) * * *
(1) * * * For purposes of determining the buyer under paragraph
(a)(2) of this section, the term acquirer also includes any person to
whom an interest in a life insurance contract is issued in an exchange
pursuant to section 1035 (section 1035 exchange) that is treated as the
transfer of an interest in the life insurance contract in a reportable
policy sale under Sec. 1.101-1(c)(3).
* * * * *
(8) * * *
(iii) * * *
(C) Any person that is a section 1035 issuer or the designee of a
section 1035 issuer.
* * * * *
(v) Section 1035 issuer. A section 1035 issuer is any person that,
on the date of a section 1035 exchange of an interest in an existing
life insurance contract for an interest in a newly issued life
insurance contract that is treated as the transfer of an interest in a
life insurance contract in a reportable policy sale under Sec. 1.101-
1(c)(3), is:
(A) An issuer with respect to the existing life insurance contract,
provided the issuer received an RPSS, a statement required by Sec.
1.6050Y-3(d)(1), or other information indicating that the existing life
insurance contract or interest therein was transferred in a reportable
policy sale under Sec. 1.101-1(c)(1) or (3); or
(B) An issuer with respect to the newly issued life insurance
contract, provided the issuer receives the statement required by Sec.
1.6050Y-3(d)(1) or other information indicating that existing life
insurance contract or interest therein was transferred in a reportable
policy sale under Sec. 1.101-1(c)(1) or (3).
* * * * *
(18) * * *
(iii) For purposes of reporting under Sec. 1.6050Y-3 by both the
section 1035 issuer described in paragraph (a)(8)(v)(A) of this section
and the section 1035 issuer described in paragraph (a)(8)(v)(B) of this
section, holds an interest in a life insurance contract that has been
transferred in a reportable policy sale under Sec. 1.101-1(c)(1) or
(3) and exchanges that interest for an interest in a new life insurance
contract in a section 1035 exchange.
(b) Applicability date--(1) In general. Except as otherwise
provided in paragraph (b)(2) of this section, this section and
Sec. Sec. 1.6050Y-2 through 1.6050Y-3 apply to reportable policy sales
made after December 31, 2018. Except as otherwise provided in paragraph
(b)(2) of this section, this section and Sec. 1.6050Y-4 apply to
reportable death benefits paid after December 31, 2018. * * *
* * * * *
(2) Section 1035 exchanges. Section 1.6050Y-3 applies to a section
1035 exchange treated as a reportable policy sale under Sec. 1.101-
1(c)(3) if the exchange occurs on or after the date these regulations
are published as final regulations in the Federal Register. Section
1.6050Y-4 applies to reportable death benefits paid with respect to an
interest in a life insurance contract issued in a section 1035 exchange
treated as a reportable policy sale under Sec. 1.101-1(c)(3) if the
exchange occurs on or after the date these regulations are published as
final regulations in the Federal Register.
Sec. 1.6050Y-2 [Amended]
0
Par. 5. Section 1.6050Y-2 is amended by removing paragraph (f)(3).
0
Par. 6. Section 1.6050Y-3 is amended by:
0
1. In paragraph (a) introductory text, removing ``that receives an RPPS
or any notice of a transfer to a foreign person'' in the first sentence
and adding in its place ``that receives an RPSS, receives any notice of
a transfer to a foreign person, or is a section 1035 issuer''.
0
2. In paragraph (a)(3), removing ``The'' at the beginning of the
paragraph and adding in its place ``For 6050Y(b) issuers other than
section 1035 issuers, the''.
0
3. In paragraph (c), removing ``reportable policy sale or the transfer
to a foreign person occurred'' before the period at the end of the
first sentence and adding in its place ``reportable policy sale,
transfer to a foreign person, or section 1035 exchange occurred''.
0
4. In paragraph (d)(1), removing ``is a reportable policy sale payment
recipient or makes a transfer to a foreign person'' in the first
sentence and adding in its place ``is a reportable policy sale payment
recipient, makes a transfer to a foreign person, or makes a section
1035 exchange'', and adding a sentence at the end of the paragraph.
0
5. In paragraph (d)(2), removing ``reportable policy sale or transfer
to a foreign person occurred'' before the period at the end of the
first sentence and adding in its place ``reportable policy sale,
transfer to a foreign person, or section 1035 exchange occurred'', and
adding a sentence after the second sentence.
[[Page 30068]]
0
6. In paragraph (f), removing ``paragraph (f)(1), (2), or (3) of this
section applies'' before the period at the end of the paragraph and
adding in its place ``paragraph (f)(1) or (2) of this section
applies''.
0
7. Removing paragraph (f)(3).
The additions read as follows:
Sec. 1.6050Y-3 Information reporting by 6050Y(b) issuers for
reportable policy sales and transfers of life insurance contracts to
foreign persons.
* * * * *
(d) * * *
(1) * * * In addition, every section 1035 issuer described in Sec.
1.6050Y-1(a)(8)(v)(A) filing a return required by paragraph (a) of this
section with respect to a section 1035 exchange must furnish to each
section 1035 issuer described in Sec. 1.6050Y-1(a)(8)(v)(B) with
respect to that exchange a written statement showing the information
required by paragraph (a) of this section with respect to the seller in
the exchange and the name, address, and phone number of the information
contact of the person filing the return.
(2) Time for furnishing statement. * * * Each statement required by
paragraph (d)(1) of this section to be furnished to any section 1035
issuer described in Sec. 1.6050Y-1(a)(8)(v)(B) must be furnished
within 30 days of the date of the section 1035 exchange. * * *
* * * * *
0
Par. 7. Section 1.6050Y-4 is amended by adding a sentence at the end of
paragraph (e)(3) to read as follows:
Sec. 1.6050Y-4 Information reporting by payors for reportable death
benefits.
* * * * *
(e) * * *
(3) * * * Additionally, if the reportable death benefits are paid
with respect to an interest in a life insurance contract issued in a
section 1035 exchange, the payor never received, and has no knowledge
of any issuer having received, a statement described in Sec. 1.6050Y-
3(d)(1) from a section 1035 issuer or other information indicating that
the issuance of the contract is treated as a transfer of an interest in
the contract in a reportable policy sale under Sec. 1.101-1(c)(3).
* * * * *
Douglas W. O'Donnell,
Deputy Commissioner for Services and Enforcement.
[FR Doc. 2023-09637 Filed 5-9-23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4830-01-P