Charitable Remainder Annuity Trust Listed Transaction, 20569-20577 [2024-06156]
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 58 / Monday, March 25, 2024 / Proposed Rules
airspace extending from the surface for
Boire Field Airport, Nashua, NH by
replacing the reference to ‘‘Manchester
VOR/DME’’ which is scheduled to be
decommissioned September 5, 2024.
This action would not change the
airspace boundaries or operating
requirements.
Controlled airspace is necessary for
the safety and management of
instrument flight rules (IFR) operations
in the area.
Regulatory Notices and Analyses
The FAA has determined that this
proposed regulation only involves an
established body of technical
regulations for which frequent and
routine amendments are necessary to
keep them operationally current. It,
therefore: (1) is not a ‘‘significant
regulatory action’’ under Executive
Order 12866; (2) is not a ‘‘significant
rule’’ under Department of
Transportation (DOT) Regulatory
Policies and Procedures (44 FR 11034;
February 26, 1979); and (3) does not
warrant preparation of a regulatory
evaluation as the anticipated impact is
so minimal. Since this is a routine
matter that will only affect air traffic
procedures and air navigation, it is
certified that this proposed rule, when
promulgated, will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities under the
criteria of the Regulatory Flexibility Act.
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PART 71—DESIGNATION OF CLASS A,
B, C, D, AND E AIRSPACE AREAS; AIR
TRAFFIC SERVICE ROUTES; AND
REPORTING POINTS
1. The authority citation for part 71
continues to read as follows:
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Authority: 49 U.S.C. 106(f), 106(g); 40103,
40113, 40120; E.O. 10854, 24 FR 9565, 3 CFR,
1959–1963 Comp., p. 389.
[Amended]
2. The incorporation by reference in
14 CFR 71.1 of FAA Order JO 7400.11H,
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ANE NH E4 Nashua, NH [Amended]
Boire Field Airport, NH
(Lat. 42°46′57″ N, long. 71°30′51″ W)
That airspace extending upward from the
surface within 1.1 miles on each side of the
Boire Field Airport 67° bearing extending
from the 5-mile radius to 8.4 miles northeast
of Boire Field Airport.
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Issued in College Park, Georgia, on March
18, 2024.
Patrick Young,
Manager, Airspace & Procedures Team North,
Eastern Service Center, Air Traffic
Organization.
[FR Doc. 2024–06102 Filed 3–22–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–13–P
DEPARTMENT OF TREASURY
Internal Revenue Service
26 CFR Part 1
[REG–108761–22]
RIN 1545–BQ58
Internal Revenue Service (IRS),
Treasury.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking
and public hearing.
The Proposed Amendment
In consideration of the foregoing, the
Federal Aviation Administration
proposes to amend 14 CFR part 71 as
follows:
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AGENCY:
Lists of Subjects in 14 CFR Part 71
Airspace, Incorporation by reference,
Navigation (air).
■
Paragraph 6004 Class E Airspace Areas
Extending Upward From the Surface of the
Earth.
Charitable Remainder Annuity Trust
Listed Transaction
Environmental Review
This proposal will be subject to an
environmental analysis in accordance
with FAA Order 1050.1F,
‘‘Environmental Impacts: Policies and
Procedures’’, prior to any FAA final
regulatory action.
§ 71.1
Airspace Designations and Reporting
Points, dated August 11, 2023, and
effective September 15, 2023, is
amended as follows:
This document contains
proposed regulations that would
identify certain charitable remainder
annuity trust (CRAT) transactions and
substantially similar transactions as
listed transactions, a type of reportable
transaction. Material advisors and
certain participants in these listed
transactions would be required to file
disclosures with the IRS and would be
subject to penalties for failure to
disclose. The proposed regulations
would affect participants in these
transactions as well as material advisors
but provide that certain organizations
whose only role or interest in the
transaction is as a charitable
remainderman will not be treated as
participants in the transaction or as
parties to a prohibited tax shelter
transaction subject to excise taxes and
disclosure requirements. Finally, this
document provides notice of a public
hearing on the proposed regulations.
SUMMARY:
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20569
DATES:
Comments: Electronic or written
comments must be received by May 24,
2024.
Public Hearing: A public hearing on
the proposed regulation is scheduled for
July 11, 2024, at 10 a.m. ET. Requests
to speak and outlines of topics to be
discussed at the public hearing must be
received by May 24, 2024. If no outlines
are received by May 24, 2024, the public
hearing will be cancelled. Requests to
attend the public hearing must be
received by 5 p.m. on July 9, 2024.
ADDRESSES: Commenters are strongly
encouraged to submit public comments
electronically via the Federal
eRulemaking Portal at https://
regulations.gov (indicate IRS and REG–
108761–22) by following the online
instructions for submitting comments.
Requests for a public hearing must be
submitted as prescribed in the
‘‘Comments and Requests for a Public
Hearing’’ section. 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
availability any comments submitted to
the IRS’s public docket. Send paper
submission to CC:PA:01:PR (REG–
108761–22) room 5203, Internal
Revenue Service, P.O. Box 7604, Ben
Franklin Station, Washington, DC
20044.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Concerning the proposed regulations,
Charles D. Wien of the Office of
Associate Chief Counsel (Passthroughs
& Special Industries), (202) 317–5279;
concerning submissions of comments
and requests for hearing, Vivian Hayes
at (202) 317–6901 (not toll-free
numbers) or by sending an email to
publichearings@irs.gov (preferred).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
This document contains proposed
additions to 26 CFR part 1 (Income Tax
Regulations) under section 6011 of the
Internal Revenue Code (Code). The
additions identify certain transactions
as ‘‘listed transactions’’ for purposes of
section 6011.
I. Disclosure of Reportable
Transactions by Participants and
Penalties for Failure To Disclose
Section 6011(a) generally provides
that, when required by regulations
prescribed by the Secretary of the
Treasury or her delegate (Secretary),
‘‘any person made liable for any tax
imposed by this title, or with respect to
the collection thereof, shall make a
return or statement according to the
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forms and regulations prescribed by the
Secretary. Every person required to
make a return or statement shall include
therein the information required by
such forms or regulations.’’
Section 1.6011–4(a) provides that
every taxpayer that has participated in
a reportable transaction within the
meaning of § 1.6011–4(b) and who is
required to file a tax return must file a
disclosure statement within the time
prescribed in § 1.6011–4(e). Reportable
transactions are identified in § 1.6011–
4 and include listed transactions,
confidential transactions, transactions
with contractual protection, loss
transactions, and transactions of
interest. See § 1.6011–4(b)(2) through
(6). Section 1.6011–4(b)(2) defines a
listed transaction as a transaction that is
the same as or substantially similar to
one of the types of transactions that the
IRS has determined to be a tax
avoidance transaction and identified by
notice, regulation, or other form of
published guidance as a listed
transaction.
Section 1.6011–4(c)(4) provides that a
transaction is ‘‘substantially similar’’ if
it is expected to obtain the same or
similar types of tax consequences and is
either factually similar or based on the
same or similar tax strategy. Receipt of
an opinion regarding the tax
consequences of the transaction is not
relevant to the determination of whether
the transaction is the same as or
substantially similar to another
transaction. Further, the term
substantially similar must be broadly
construed in favor of disclosure. For
example, a transaction may be
substantially similar to a listed
transaction even though it may involve
different entities or use different Code
provisions.
Section 1.6011–4(c)(3)(i)(A) provides
that a taxpayer has participated in a
listed transaction if the taxpayer’s tax
return reflects tax consequences or a tax
strategy described in the published
guidance that lists the transaction under
§ 1.6011–4(b)(2). Published guidance
may identify other types or classes of
persons that will be treated as
participants in a listed transaction.
Published guidance also may identify
types or classes of persons that will not
be treated as participants in a listed
transaction.
Section 1.6011–4(d) and (e) provide
that the disclosure statement Form
8886, Reportable Transaction Disclosure
Statement (or successor form), must be
attached to the taxpayer’s tax return for
each taxable year for which a taxpayer
participates in a reportable transaction.
A copy of the disclosure statement must
be sent to the IRS’s Office of Tax Shelter
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Analysis (OTSA) at the same time that
any disclosure statement is first filed by
the taxpayer pertaining to a particular
reportable transaction.
Section 1.6011–4(e)(2)(i) provides
that, if a transaction becomes a listed
transaction after the filing of a
taxpayer’s tax return reflecting the
taxpayer’s participation in the listed
transaction and before the end of the
period of limitations for assessment for
any taxable year in which the taxpayer
participated in the listed transaction,
then a disclosure statement must be
filed with OTSA within 90 calendar
days after the date on which the
transaction becomes a listed transaction.
This requirement extends to an
amended return and exists regardless of
whether the taxpayer participated in the
transaction in the year the transaction
became a listed transaction. The
Commissioner of Internal Revenue
(Commissioner) also may determine the
time for disclosure of listed transactions
in the published guidance identifying
the transaction.
Participants required to disclose these
transactions under § 1.6011–4 who fail
to do so are subject to penalties under
section 6707A of the Code. Section
6707A(b) provides that the amount of
the penalty is 75 percent of the decrease
in tax shown on the return as a result
of the reportable transaction (or which
would have resulted from such
transaction if such transaction were
respected for Federal tax purposes),
subject to minimum and maximum
penalty amounts. The minimum penalty
amount is $5,000 in the case of a natural
person and $10,000 in any other case.
For a listed transaction, the maximum
penalty amount is $100,000 in the case
of a natural person and $200,000 in any
other case.
Additional penalties also may apply.
In general, section 6662A of the Code
imposes a 20 percent accuracy-related
penalty on any understatement (as
defined in section 6662A(b)(1))
attributable to an adequately disclosed
reportable transaction. If the taxpayer
had a requirement to disclose
participation in the reportable
transaction but did not adequately
disclose the transaction in accordance
with the regulations under section 6011,
the taxpayer is subject to an increased
penalty rate equal to 30 percent of the
understatement. See section 6662A(c).
Section 6662A(b)(2) provides that
section 6662A applies to any item that
is attributable to any listed transaction
and any reportable transaction (other
than a listed transaction) if a significant
purpose of such transaction is the
avoidance or evasion of Federal income
tax.
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Participants required to disclose listed
transactions who fail to do so also are
subject to an extended period of
limitations under section 6501(c)(10) of
the Code. That section provides that the
time for assessment of any tax with
respect to the transaction shall not
expire before the date that is one year
after the earlier of the date the
participant discloses the transaction or
the date a material advisor discloses the
participation pursuant to a written
request under section 6112(b)(1)(A) of
the Code.
II. Disclosure of Reportable
Transactions by Material Advisors and
Penalties for Failure To Disclose
Section 6111(a) provides that each
material advisor with respect to any
reportable transaction shall make a
return setting forth: (1) information
identifying and describing the
transaction, (2) information describing
any potential tax benefits expected to
result from the transaction, and (3) such
other information as the Secretary may
prescribe. Such return shall be filed not
later than the date specified by the
Secretary.
Section 301.6111–3(a) of the
Procedure and Administration
Regulations provides that each material
advisor with respect to any reportable
transaction, as defined in § 1.6011–4(b),
must file a return as described in
§ 301.6111–3(d) by the date described in
§ 301.6111–3(e).
Section 301.6111–3(b)(1) provides
that a person is a material advisor with
respect to a transaction if the person
provides any material aid, assistance, or
advice with respect to organizing,
managing, promoting, selling,
implementing, insuring, or carrying out
any reportable transaction, and directly
or indirectly derives gross income in
excess of the threshold amount as
defined in § 301.6111–3(b)(3) for the
material aid, assistance, or advice.
Under § 301.6111–3(b)(2)(i) and (ii), a
person provides material aid, assistance,
or advice if the person provides a tax
statement, which is any statement
(including another person’s statement),
oral or written, that relates to a tax
aspect of a transaction that causes the
transaction to be a reportable
transaction as defined in § 1.6011–
4(b)(2) through (7).
Material advisors must disclose
transactions on Form 8918, Material
Advisor Disclosure Statement (or
successor form), as provided in
§ 301.6111–3(d) and (e). Section
301.6111–3(e) provides that the material
advisor’s disclosure statement for a
reportable transaction must be filed
with the OTSA by the last day of the
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month that follows the end of the
calendar quarter in which the advisor
becomes a material advisor with respect
to a reportable transaction or in which
the circumstances necessitating an
amended disclosure statement occur.
The disclosure statement must be sent
to the OTSA at the address provided in
the instructions for Form 8918 (or
successor form).
Section 301.6111–3(d)(2) provides
that the IRS will issue to a material
advisor a reportable transaction number
with respect to the disclosed reportable
transaction. Receipt of a reportable
transaction number does not indicate
that the disclosure statement is
complete, nor does it indicate that the
transaction has been reviewed,
examined, or approved by the IRS.
Material advisors must provide the
reportable transaction number to all
taxpayers and material advisors for
whom the material advisor acts as a
material advisor as defined in
§ 301.6111–3(b). The reportable
transaction number must be provided at
the time the transaction is entered into,
or, if the transaction is entered into
prior to the material advisor’s receipt of
the reportable transaction number,
within 60 calendar days from the date
the reportable transaction number is
mailed to the material advisor.
Section 6707(a) of the Code provides
that a material advisor who fails to file
a timely disclosure, or files an
incomplete or false disclosure
statement, is subject to a penalty.
Pursuant to section 6707(b)(2), for listed
transactions, the penalty is the greater of
(A) $200,000, or (B) 50 percent of the
gross income derived by such person
with respect to aid, assistance, or advice
that is provided with respect to the
listed transaction before the date the
return is filed under section 6111.
Additionally, section 6112(a) provides
that each material advisor with respect
to any reportable transaction shall
(whether or not required to file a return
under section 6111 with respect to such
transaction) maintain a list (1)
identifying each person with respect to
whom such advisor acted as a material
advisor with respect to such transaction
and (2) containing such other
information as the Secretary may by
regulations require. Material advisors
must furnish such lists to the IRS in
accordance with § 301.6112–1(e).
A material advisor may be subject to
a penalty under section 6708 of the
Code for failing to maintain a list under
section 6112(a) and failing to make the
list available upon written request to the
Secretary in accordance with section
6112(b) within 20 business days after
the date of such request. Section 6708(a)
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provides that the penalty is $10,000 per
day for each day of the failure after the
20th day. However, no penalty will be
imposed with respect to the failure on
any day if such failure is due to
reasonable cause.
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The amount of the section 4965 tax
owed by a tax-exempt entity depends on
whether the tax-exempt entity knows, or
has reason to know, that a transaction is
a prohibited tax shelter transaction at
the time the entity becomes a party to
the transaction. A tax-exempt entity is
treated as knowing or having reason to
know that a transaction is a prohibited
tax shelter transaction if one or more of
its entity managers knew or had reason
to know that the transaction was a
prohibited tax shelter transaction at the
time the entity manager(s) approved the
tax-exempt entity as (or otherwise
caused the entity to be) a party to the
transaction.1 The tax-exempt entity also
is attributed the knowledge or reason to
know of certain entity managers—those
persons with authority or responsibility
similar to that exercised by an officer,
director, or trustee of an organization—
even if the entity manager does not
approve the entity as (or otherwise
cause the entity to be) a party to the
transaction.
Section 53.4965–4(a)(1) provides that
a tax-exempt entity is a ‘‘party’’ to a
prohibited tax shelter transaction if it
facilitates a prohibited tax shelter
transaction by reason of its tax-exempt,
tax-indifferent, or tax-favored status. In
addition, under § 53.4965–4(a)(2) and
(b), the Secretary may issue published
guidance to identify tax-exempt entities
by type, class, or role that will or will
not be treated as parties to a prohibited
tax shelter transaction.
If the tax-exempt entity unknowingly
becomes a party to a prohibited tax
shelter transaction, the section 4965 tax
generally equals the greater of (1) the
product of the highest rate of tax under
section 11 of the Code (currently 21
percent) and the tax-exempt entity’s net
income attributable to the prohibited tax
shelter transaction, or (2) the product of
the highest rate of tax under section 11
and 75 percent of the proceeds received
by the tax-exempt entity that are
attributable to the prohibited tax shelter
transaction. If the tax-exempt entity
knew or had reason to know that the
transaction was a prohibited tax shelter
transaction at the time the tax-exempt
entity became a party to the transaction,
the section 4965 tax increases to the
greater of (1) 100 percent of the taxexempt entity’s net income attributable
to the prohibited tax shelter transaction,
or (2) 75 percent of the tax-exempt
entity’s proceeds attributable to the
prohibited tax shelter transaction.
The terms ‘‘net income’’ and
‘‘proceeds’’ are defined in § 53.4965–8.
In general, a tax-exempt entity’s net
income attributable to a prohibited tax
shelter transaction is its gross income
derived from the transaction, reduced
by those deductions that are attributable
to the transaction and that would be
allowed by chapter 1 of the Code
(chapter 1) if the tax-exempt entity were
treated as a taxable entity for this
purpose, and further reduced by the
taxes imposed by subtitle D of the Code
(other than the section 4965 tax) with
respect to the transaction. In the case of
a tax-exempt entity that is a party to the
transaction by reason of facilitating a
prohibited tax shelter transaction by
reason of its tax-exempt, tax-indifferent,
1 Section 53.4965–6 of the Foundation and
Similar Excise Tax Regulations (26 CFR part 53)
provides factors to be considered in determining
whether an entity manager knows or has reason to
know that a transaction is a prohibited tax shelter
transaction.
III. Tax-Exempt Entities as Parties to
Prohibited Tax Shelter Transactions
Section 4965 of the Code is intended
to deter certain ‘‘tax-exempt entities’’ (as
defined in section 4965(c)) from
facilitating ‘‘prohibited tax shelter
transactions,’’ which include listed
transactions. Section 4965(a)(1), in part,
imposes an excise tax on a tax-exempt
entity for the taxable year in which the
tax-exempt entity becomes a party to a
transaction that is a ‘‘prohibited tax
shelter transaction’’ at the time it
becomes a party to the transaction, and
for any subsequent taxable year, in the
amount determined under section
4965(b)(1) (section 4965 tax). Taxexempt entities subject to the section
4965 tax are listed in section 4965(c)(1)
through (3) and include, among others,
entities and governmental units
described in sections 501(c) and 170(c)
of the Code (other than the United
States). A tax-exempt entity that is a
party to a prohibited tax shelter
transaction generally also is subject to
various reporting and disclosure
obligations.
Additionally, section 4965(a)(2)
imposes an excise tax on an ‘‘entity
manager’’ if the manager approves the
tax-exempt entity as a party (or
otherwise causes the tax-exempt entity
to be a party) to a prohibited tax shelter
transaction and knows or has reason to
know that the transaction is a prohibited
tax shelter transaction. The amount of
this excise tax is determined under
section 4965(b)(2) (entity manager tax).
A. The Section 4965 Tax
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or tax-favored status, the term
‘‘proceeds,’’ solely for purposes of
section 4965, means the gross amount of
the tax-exempt entity’s consideration for
facilitating the transaction, not reduced
for any costs or expenses attributable to
the transaction. Published guidance
with respect to a particular prohibited
tax shelter transaction may designate
additional amounts as proceeds from
the transaction for purposes of section
4965. In addition, for all tax-exempt
entities that are parties to a prohibited
tax shelter transaction, any amount that
is a gift or a contribution to a tax-exempt
entity and that is attributable to a
prohibited tax shelter transaction is
treated as proceeds for purposes of
section 4965, unreduced by any
associated expenses.
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B. Entity Manager Tax
The amount of the entity manager tax
determined under section 4965(b)(2) on
an entity manager (as defined in section
4965(d)) equals $20,000 for each
instance that the manager approves the
tax-exempt entity as (or otherwise
causes such entity to be) a party to a
prohibited tax shelter transaction and
knows or has reason to know that the
transaction is a prohibited tax shelter
transaction. This liability is not joint
and several.
C. Disclosures
Section 53.6011–1 requires that a taxexempt entity subject to the section
4965 excise tax must file Form 4720,
Return of Excise Taxes Under Chapters
41 and 42 of the Internal Revenue Code,
to report the liability and pay the tax
due under section 4965(a)(1). Under
§ 1.6033–5, a tax-exempt entity that is a
party to a prohibited tax shelter
transaction must file Form 8886–T,
Disclosure by Tax-Exempt Entity
Regarding Prohibited Tax Shelter
Transaction, to disclose that it is a party
to a prohibited tax shelter transaction,
the identity of any other party (whether
taxable or tax-exempt) to such
transaction that is known to the taxexempt entity, and certain other
information. Under § 1.6033–2, if the
tax-exempt entity is required to file
Form 990, Return of Organization
Exempt From Income Tax, it must
disclose on that form that it is a party
to a prohibited tax shelter transaction,
whether any taxable party notified the
tax-exempt entity that it was or is a
party to a prohibited tax shelter
transaction, and whether the tax-exempt
entity filed Form 8886–T.
Section 6011(g) and § 301.6011(g)–1
provide that any taxable party to a
prohibited tax shelter transaction must
disclose to each tax-exempt entity that
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the taxable party knows or has reason to
know is a party to such transaction that
the transaction is a prohibited tax
shelter transaction.
IV. Charitable Remainder Annuity
Trusts (CRATs)
For purposes of section 664 of the
Code, section 664(d)(1) provides that a
charitable remainder annuity trust
(CRAT) is a trust:
(A) From which a sum certain (which
is not less than 5 percent nor more than
50 percent of the initial fair market
value (FMV) of all property placed in
trust) is to be paid, not less often than
annually, to one or more persons (at
least one of which is not an organization
described in section 170(c), and, in the
case of individuals, only to an
individual who is living at the time of
the creation of the trust) for a term of
years (not in excess of 20 years) or for
the life or lives of such individual or
individuals;
(B) From which no amount other than
the payments described in section
664(d)(1)(A) and other qualified
gratuitous transfers described in section
664(d)(1)(C) may be paid to or for the
use of any person other than an
organization described in section 170(c);
(C) Whose remainder interest,
following the termination of the
payments described in section
664(d)(1)(A), is to be transferred to, or
for the use of, an organization described
in section 170(c) or is to be retained by
the trust for such a use or, to the extent
the remainder interest is in qualified
employment securities (as defined by
section 664(g)(4)), all or part of such
securities are to be transferred to an
employee stock ownership plan (as
defined in section 4975(e)(7) of the
Code) in a qualified gratuitous transfer
(as defined by 664(g)); and
(D) Whose remainder interest has a
value (determined under section 7520)
of at least 10 percent of the initial net
FMV of all property placed in the trust.
Section 664(b) provides, in part, that
amounts distributed by a CRAT are
considered as having the following
characteristics in the hands of a
beneficiary to whom the annuity
described in section 664(d)(1)(A) is
paid:
(1) First, as amounts of income (other
than gains, and amounts treated as
gains, from the sale or other disposition
of capital assets) includible in gross
income to the extent of such income of
the trust for the year and such
undistributed income of the trust for
prior years;
(2) Second, as a capital gain to the
extent of the capital gain of the trust for
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the year and the undistributed capital
gain of the trust for prior years;
(3) Third, as other income to the
extent of such income of the trust for the
year and such undistributed income of
the trust for prior years; and
(4) Fourth, as a distribution of trust
corpus.
Under section 664(c)(1), a CRAT is
not subject to any tax imposed by
subtitle A of the Code. Section 664(c)(2),
in part, imposes an excise tax on a
CRAT that has unrelated business
taxable income (within the meaning of
section 512, determined as if part III of
subchapter F of chapter 1 applies to
such trust) for a taxable year. That
excise tax is equal to the amount of such
unrelated business taxable income.
V. Tax Avoidance Transactions Using a
CRAT
The Treasury Department and the IRS
are aware of transactions in which
taxpayers attempt to use a CRAT and a
single premium immediate annuity
(SPIA) to permanently avoid recognition
of ordinary income and/or capital gain.
Taxpayers engaging in these
transactions claim that distributions
from the trust are not taxable to the
beneficiaries as ordinary income or
capital gain under section 664(b)
because the distributions constitute the
trust’s unrecovered investment in the
SPIA, thus claiming that a significant
portion of the distributions is excluded
from gross income under section
72(b)(2) of the Code. Taxpayers also
claim that the trust qualifies as a CRAT
and thus is not subject to tax on the
trust’s realized ordinary income or
capital gain under section 664(c)(1),
even though the trust may not meet all
of the requirements of section 664(d)(1).
In these transactions, a grantor creates
a trust purporting to qualify as a CRAT
under section 664. Generally, the
grantor funds the trust with property
having a FMV in excess of its basis
(appreciated property) such as interests
in a closely-held business, and/or assets
used or produced in a trade or business.
The trust then sells the appreciated
property and uses some or all of the
proceeds from the sale of the
contributed property to purchase an
annuity. On a Federal income tax
return, the beneficiary of the trust treats
the annuity amount payable from the
trust as if it were, in whole or in part,
an annuity payment subject to section
72,2 instead of as carrying out to the
beneficiary amounts in the ordinary
2 Section 72 governs the tax treatment of
payments received as an annuity, and generally
causes only the portion of each payment in excess
of the investment in the contract (basis) to be
included in the recipient’s gross income.
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income and capital gain tiers of the trust
in accordance with section 664(b).
As result of treating section 72 as
applying to the amounts received
(typically paid by an insurance
company) as part of the annuity amount,
the beneficiary reports as income only a
small portion of the amount the
beneficiary received from the SPIA. The
beneficiary treats the balance of the
annuity amount as an excluded portion
representing a return of investment.3
The beneficiary thus claims that the
beneficiary is taxed as if the beneficiary
were the owner of the SPIA, rather than
the SPIA being an asset owned by the
CRAT, which the trustee purchased to
fund the annuity amount payable from
the trust. Under the beneficiary’s theory,
until the entire investment in the SPIA
has been recovered, the only portion of
the annuity amount includable in the
beneficiary’s income is that portion of
the SPIA annuity required to be
included in income under section 72.
The beneficiary also maintains that the
distribution is not subject to section
664(b), which would treat a substantial
portion of the annuity amount as gain
attributable to the sale of the
appreciated property contributed to the
CRAT.
The trustee also might take the
position that the transfer of the
appreciated property to the purported
CRAT gives those assets a step-up in
basis to FMV as if they had been sold
to the trust. The transfer of property to
a CRAT, however, does not give those
assets a step-up in basis to FMV, as if
they had been sold to the trust, giving
the trust a cost basis under section 1012
of the Code. Instead, the transfer to the
CRAT is a gift for Federal tax purposes.
When a grantor transfers appreciated
property to a CRAT, the CRAT’s basis in
the assets is determined under section
1015 of the Code. Under section 1015(a)
and (d), property transferred by gift
(whether or not in trust) retains its basis
in the hands of the donor, increased (but
not above FMV) by any gift tax paid on
the transfer.
The claimed application of sections
664 and 72 to the transaction is
incorrect. Proper application of the rules
of sections 664 and 72 to the transaction
results in annual ordinary income from
the annuity payments from the SPIA
being added to the section 664(b)(1)
(ordinary income) tier of the CRAT’s
income each year, and a one-time
amount being added to the section
664(b)(2) (capital gains) tier at the time
of the sale of the property by the CRAT
3 The beneficiary also claims that section 72(u)
does not apply because the SPIA is an ‘‘immediate
annuity’’ under section 72(u)(3)(E).
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(assuming the asset is of a kind to
produce capital gain). Assuming no
other activity in the CRAT, under
section 664(b), the beneficiary of the
CRAT must treat the annuity amount
each year as first consisting of the
ordinary income portion of the annuity
payments from the SPIA. The balance of
the annuity amount must be treated as
consisting of any accumulated ordinary
income of the CRAT, then accumulated
capital gain, and then other income of
the CRAT, only reaching non-taxable
corpus to the extent these three
accounts have been exhausted.
In addition, certain features of the
trust may cause the trust to fail to meet
all of the requirements of section
664(d)(1). While the trust instrument
generally resembles one of the eight
sample CRAT forms provided in Rev.
Proc. 2003–53, 2003–2 C.B. 230; Rev.
Proc. 2003–54, 2003–2 C.B. 236; Rev.
Proc, 2003–55, 2003–2 C.B. 242; Rev.
Proc. 2003–56, 2003–2 C.B. 249; Rev.
Proc. 2003–57, 2003–2 C.B. 257; Rev.
Proc. 2003–58, 2003–2 C.B. 262; Rev.
Proc. 2003–59, 2003–2 C.B 268; and
Rev. Proc. 2003–60, 2003–2 C.B. 274
(Sample CRAT Revenue Procedures), it
might have one or more significant
modifications. For example, the trust
instrument might provide that, in each
taxable year of the trust, the trustee
must pay to the beneficiary during the
annuity period, an annuity amount
equal to the greater of (1) an amount
which meets the requirements of section
664(d)(1)(A) or (2) the payments
received by the trustee from one or more
SPIAs purchased by the trustee.
The trust instrument also might
provide for a current payment to an
organization described in section 170(c)
(Charitable Remainderman) in lieu of
the payment of the remainder interest
described in section 664(d)(1)(C). For
example, the trust instrument might
state that, in lieu of transferring the
remainder amount required pursuant to
section 664(d)(1)(C) (Remainder
Interest) to the Charitable
Remainderman, the trustee, upon the
availability of adequate funding,
currently may pay to the Charitable
Remainderman a cash sum equal to at
least 10 percent of the initial FMV of the
trust property plus a nominal amount of
cash. The trust agreement also might
provide that the trustee cannot make a
distribution in kind to satisfy this cash
distribution. This payment, equal to at
least 10 percent of the initial FMV of the
trust property, would be the only
payment to the Charitable
Remainderman. The governing
instrument of a CRAT may provide for
an amount other than the annuity
amount described in § 1.664–2(a)(1) to
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be paid (or to be paid in the discretion
of the trustee) to an organization
described in § 170(c) provided that, in
the case of distributions in kind, the
adjusted basis of the property
distributed is fairly representative of the
adjusted basis of the property available
for payment on the date of payment. See
§ 1.664–2(a)(4). However, nowhere in
section 664(d)(1)(D) does it permit a
current payment, determined based on
the value of the trust at its funding, to
be made in lieu of, and as a substitute
for, the required payment of the
remainder interest (that is, the entire
corpus of the trust at termination of the
annuity period) described in section
664(d)(1)(C) to the Charitable
Remainderman.
The significant modifications
identified in the prior paragraphs
deviate from the Sample CRAT Revenue
Procedures in ways that prevent the
qualification of the trust as a valid
CRAT under section 664, regardless of
the actual administration of the CRAT.
These modifications are made in these
transactions in order to effectuate the
structure. Specifically, a provision
authorizing the payment of an annuity
amount in excess of the amount
described in section 664(d)(1)(A), and a
provision authorizing a current payment
in lieu of the payment of the remainder
interest described in section
664(d)(1)(C), violate mandatory
requirements of a valid CRAT.
VI. Purpose of Proposed Regulations
On March 3, 2022, the Sixth Circuit
issued an order in Mann Construction v.
United States, 27 F.4th 1138, 1147 (6th
Cir. 2022), holding that Notice 2007–83,
2007–2 C.B. 960, which identified
certain trust arrangements claiming to
be welfare benefit funds and involving
cash value life insurance policies as
listed transactions, violated the
Administrative Procedure Act (APA), 5
U.S.C. 551–559, because the notice was
issued without following the noticeand-comment procedures required by
section 553 of the APA. The Sixth
Circuit reversed the decision of the
district court, which held that Congress
had authorized the IRS to identify listed
transactions without notice and
comment. See Mann Construction, Inc.
v. United States, 539 F.Supp.3d 745,
763 (E.D. Mich. 2021).
Relying on the Sixth Circuit’s analysis
in Mann Construction, three district
courts and the Tax Court have
concluded that IRS notices identifying
listed transactions were improperly
issued because they were issued
without following the APA’s notice and
comment procedures. See Green Rock,
LLC v. IRS, 2023 WL 1478444 (N.D. AL.,
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February 2, 2023) (Notice 2017–10);
GBX Associates, LLC, v. United States,
1:22cv401 (N.D. Ohio, Nov. 14, 2022)
(same); Green Valley Investors, LLC, et
al. v. Commissioner, 159 T.C. No. 5
(Nov. 9, 2022) (same); see also CIC
Services, LLC v. IRS, 2022 WL 985619
(E.D. Tenn. March 21, 2022), as
modified by 2022 WL 2078036 (E.D.
Tenn. June 2, 2022) (Notice 2016–66,
identifying a transaction of interest).
The Treasury Department and the IRS
disagree with the Sixth Circuit’s
decision in Mann Construction and the
subsequent decisions that have applied
that reasoning to find other IRS notices
invalid and are continuing to defend the
validity of notices identifying
transactions as listed transactions in
circuits other than the Sixth Circuit. At
the same time, however, to avoid any
confusion and to ensure consistent
enforcement of the tax laws throughout
the nation, the Treasury Department and
the IRS are issuing these proposed
regulations to identify certain charitable
remainder trust transactions as listed
transactions for purposes of all relevant
provisions of the Code and Treasury
Regulations.
These proposed regulations propose
to identify the charitable remainder
trust transactions described in proposed
§ 1.6011–15(b), and substantially similar
transactions, as listed transactions for
purposes of § 1.6011–4(b)(2) and
sections 6111 and 6112. In addition,
they inform taxpayers that participate in
these transactions, and persons who act
as material advisors with respect to
these transactions, that they would need
to disclose the transaction in accordance
with the final regulations and the
regulations issued under sections 6011
and 6111. Material advisors must also
maintain lists as required by section
6112.
Explanation of Provisions
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I. Charitable Remainder Annuity Trust
Transaction
Proposed § 1.6011–15(a) would
identify a transaction that is the same
as, or substantially similar to, the
transaction described in proposed
§ 1.6011–15(b) as a listed transaction for
purposes of § 1.6011–4(b)(2).
‘‘Substantially similar’’ is defined in
§ 1.6011–4(c)(4) to include any
transaction that is expected to obtain the
same or similar types of tax
consequences and that is either factually
similar or based on the same or a similar
tax strategy.
A transaction is described in
proposed § 1.6011–15(b) if it includes
the following elements:
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(i) The grantor creates a trust
purporting to qualify as a CRAT under
section 664;
(ii) The grantor funds the trust with
property having a FMV in excess of its
basis (contributed property);
(iii) The trustee sells the contributed
property;
(iv) The trustee uses some or all of the
proceeds from the sale of the
contributed property to purchase an
annuity; and
(v) On a Federal income tax return,
the beneficiary of the trust (Beneficiary)
treats the amount payable from the trust
as if it were, in whole or in part, an
annuity payment subject to section 72,
instead of as carrying out to the
Beneficiary amounts in the ordinary
income and capital gain tiers of the trust
in accordance with section 664(b).
II. Participants
Whether a taxpayer has participated
in the listed transaction described in
proposed § 1.6011–15(b) is determined
under § 1.6011–4(c)(3)(i)(A).
Participants include any person whose
tax return reflects tax consequences or
a tax strategy described in proposed
§ 1.6011–15(b). These tax consequences
include those tax consequences
described in proposed § 1.6011–15(b)
that would affect any gift tax return,
whether or not such gift tax return was
filed. See § 25.6011–4. A taxpayer also
has participated in a transaction
described in proposed § 1.6011–15(b) if
the taxpayer knows or has reason to
know that the taxpayer’s tax benefits are
derived directly or indirectly from tax
consequences, or a tax strategy,
described in proposed § 1.6011–15(b).
III. Material Advisors
Material advisors who make a tax
statement with respect to transactions
identified as listed transactions in
proposed § 1.6011–15(b) would have
disclosure and list maintenance
obligations under sections 6111 and
6112. See §§ 301.6111–3 and 301.6112–
1. One of the requirements to be a
material advisor under section
6111(b)(1) is that the person must
directly or indirectly derive gross
income in excess of the threshold
amount provided in 6111(b)(1)(B) for
providing material aid, assistance, or
advice with respect to the listed
transaction. That threshold in the case
of a listed transaction is reduced to
$10,000 if substantially all of the tax
benefits are provided to natural persons
(looking through any partnerships, S
corporations, or trusts), or to $25,000 for
any other transaction. See § 301.6111–
3(b)(3)(i)(B). The regulations under
section 6111 provide that gross income
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includes all fees for a tax strategy, for
services for advice (whether or not tax
advice), and for the implementation of
a reportable transaction. See
§ 301.6111–3(b)(2)(ii). However, a fee
does not include amounts paid to a
person, including an advisor, in that
person’s capacity as a party to the
transaction. See § 301.6111–3(b)(3)(ii).
IV. Effect of Participating in Listed
Transaction Described in Proposed
§ 1.6011–15(b)
Participants required to disclose these
transactions under § 1.6011–4 who fail
to do so will be subject to penalties
under section 6707A. Such disclosure
also must include any gift tax
consequences. See § 25.6011–4.
Participants required to disclose these
transactions under § 1.6011–4 who fail
to do so also are subject to an extended
period of limitations under section
6501(c)(10). Material advisors required
to disclose these transactions under
section 6111 who fail to do so are
subject to penalties under section 6707.
Material advisors required to maintain
lists of investors under section 6112
who fail to do so (or who fail to provide
such lists when requested by the IRS)
are subject to penalties under section
6708(a). In addition, the IRS may
impose other penalties on persons
involved in these transactions or
substantially similar transactions,
including accuracy-related penalties
under section 6662 or section 6662A,
the penalty under section 6694 for
understatements of a taxpayer’s liability
by a tax return preparer, the penalty
under section 6700 for promoting
abusive tax shelters, and the penalty
under section 6701 for aiding and
abetting understatement of tax liability.
In addition, material advisors have
disclosure requirements with regard to
transactions occurring in prior years.
However, notwithstanding § 301.6111–
3(b)(4)(i) and (iii), material advisors are
required to disclose only if they have
made a tax statement on or after [DATE
6 YEARS BEFORE DATE OF
PUBLICATION OF FINAL RULE].
Because the IRS will take the position
that taxpayers are not entitled to the
purported tax benefits of the listed
transactions described in the proposed
regulations, taxpayers who have filed
tax returns taking the position that they
were entitled to the purported tax
benefits should consider filing amended
returns or otherwise ensure that their
transactions are disclosed properly.
V. Role of Charitable Remainderman in
the Transaction
As stated in section 1 of this
Explanation of Provisions, the
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transaction described in proposed
§ 1.6011–15(b) attempts to use a CRAT
under section 664 to permanently avoid
recognition of ordinary income and/or
capital gain on the sale of contributed
property having a FMV in excess of its
basis. Under the mandatory
requirements of section 664(d), a trust
does not qualify as a CRAT unless,
following the termination of the annuity
payments described in section
664(d)(1)(A), the Remainder Interest is
to be transferred to or for the use of an
organization described in section 170(c).
A. Charitable Remainderman as a Party
to a Transaction Under Section 4965
As stated in section III of the
Background, section 4965 provides, in
part, that, if a transaction is a prohibited
tax shelter transaction at the time a taxexempt entity (which includes an
organization described in section 170(c),
other than the United States) becomes a
party to the transaction, the entity must
pay the section 4965 tax for the taxable
year and any subsequent taxable year as
determined under section 4965(b)(1).
Section 4965(e)(1) provides in part that
the term ‘‘prohibited tax shelter
transaction’’ means any listed
transaction (within the meaning of
section 6707A(c)(2)). A tax-exempt
entity that is a party to a prohibited tax
shelter transaction generally is subject
to various reporting and disclosure
obligations. Additionally, an entity
manager is subject to the entity manager
tax imposed by section 4965(a)(2) if the
entity manager approves the tax-exempt
entity as a party (or otherwise causes the
entity to be a party) to a prohibited tax
shelter transaction and knows or has
reason to know that the transaction is a
prohibited tax shelter transaction.
Section 53.4965–4(a) provides in part
that a tax-exempt entity is a ‘‘party’’ to
a prohibited tax shelter transaction if it
facilitates a prohibited tax shelter
transaction by reason of its tax-exempt,
tax-indifferent, or tax-favored status.
The trust used in a transaction
identified as a listed transaction in
proposed § 1.6011–15(a) would not
qualify as a CRAT unless the entire
Remainder Interest is required to be
transferred to or for the use of a
Charitable Remainderman. Thus, the
tax-exempt entity that the CRAT
designates for the Remainder Interest
facilitates the transaction by reason of
its tax-exempt status because, absent
that status, the CRAT would not satisfy
the mandatory requirement of section
664(d)(1)(C). Accordingly, that
designated tax-exempt entity would
meet the definition of a party to a
prohibited tax shelter transaction in
§ 53.4965–4(a)(1).
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However, notwithstanding the general
rule in § 53.4965–4(a), § 53.4965–4(b)
provides that published guidance may
identify, by type, class, or role, which
tax-exempt entities will or will not be
treated as parties to a prohibited tax
shelter transaction. The Treasury
Department and the IRS understand
that, in a transaction described in
proposed § 1.6011–15(b), an
organization described in section 170(c)
that is designated as the Charitable
Remainderman might not become aware
of its Remainder Interest in the
purported CRAT until it receives a
distribution from the trust. In that
situation, it may be difficult for the
organization described in section 170(c)
to determine when section 4965 excise
taxes and related reporting requirements
apply. For this reason, these proposed
regulations would provide that an
organization described in section 170(c)
that the purported CRAT designates as
the recipient of the Remainder Interest
will not be treated as a party under
section 4965 to the listed transaction
described in proposed § 1.6011–15
solely by reason of its status as a
Charitable Remainderman.
B. Participation by a Charitable
Remainderman
As stated in section II of the
Background, a taxpayer has participated
in a listed transaction if the taxpayer’s
tax return reflects tax consequences or
a tax strategy described in this proposed
regulation. See § 1.6011–4(c)(3)(i)(A).
Published guidance may identify other
types or classes of persons that will be
treated as participants in a listed
transaction. Published guidance also
may identify types or classes of persons
that will not be treated as participants
in a listed transaction. In general, the
Treasury Department and the IRS do not
expect that an organization described in
section 170(c), whose only role or
interest in the transaction described in
these proposed regulations is as a
Charitable Remainderman, would meet
the definition of a participant under
§ 1.6011–4(c)(3)(i)(A). Nevertheless, to
avoid potential uncertainty, the
proposed regulations provide that an
organization described in section 170(c)
that the purported CRAT designates as
the recipient of the Remainder Interest
is not treated as a participant in the
listed transaction described in these
proposed regulations solely by reason of
its status as a Charitable Remainderman.
C. Charitable Remainderman as a
Material Advisor
As stated in section III of the
Background, a person is a material
advisor with respect to a transaction if
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the person provides any material aid,
assistance, or advice with respect to
organizing, managing, promoting,
selling, implementing, insuring, or
carrying out any reportable transaction,
and directly or indirectly derives gross
income in excess of the threshold
amount for the material aid, assistance,
or advice. See section 6111(b)(1)(A). The
regulations provide that gross income
includes all fees for a tax strategy, for
services or advice (whether or not tax
advice), and for the implementation of
a reportable transaction. However, a fee
does not include amounts paid to a
person, including an advisor, in that
person’s capacity as a party to the
transaction. See § 301.6111–3(b)(3)(ii)).
The Treasury Department and the IRS
request comments on whether the
Charitable Remainderman ever provides
material aid, assistance, or advice with
respect to transactions described in
proposed § 1.6011–15(b) and the nature
of the services being provided. The
Treasury Department and the IRS also
request comments on what fees the
Charitable Remainderman receives,
either directly or indirectly, for
providing such material aid, assistance
or advice.
Comments and Public Hearing
Before these proposed amendments to
the regulations are adopted as final
regulations, consideration will be given
to comments regarding the notice of
proposed rulemaking that are submitted
timely to the IRS as prescribed under
the ADDRESSES section. The Treasury
Department and the IRS request
comments on all aspects of the proposed
regulations. All comments will be made
available at https://
www.regulations.gov. Once submitted to
the Federal eRulemaking Portal,
comments cannot be edited or
withdrawn.
A public hearing has been scheduled
for July 11, 2024, beginning at 10 a.m.
ET, in the Auditorium at the Internal
Revenue Service Building, 1111
Constitution Avenue NW, Washington,
DC. Due to the building security
procedures, visitors must enter at the
Constitution Avenue entrance. In
addition, all visitors must present photo
identification to enter the building.
Because of access restrictions, visitors
will not be admitted beyond the
immediate entrance area more than 30
minutes before the hearing starts.
Participants alternatively may attend the
public hearing by telephone.
The rules of 26 CFR 601.601(a)(3)
apply to the hearing. Persons who wish
to present comments at the hearing must
submit an outline of the topics to be
discussed and the time to be devoted to
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 58 / Monday, March 25, 2024 / Proposed Rules
each topic by May 24, 2024. A period
of 10 minutes will be allocated to each
person for making comments. An
agenda showing the scheduling of the
speakers will be prepared after the
deadline for receiving outlines has
passed. Copies of the agenda will be free
of charge at the hearing. If no outline of
topics to be discussed at the hearing is
received by May 24, 2024, the public
hearing will be cancelled. If the public
hearing is cancelled, a notice of
cancellation of the public hearing will
be published in the Federal Register.
Individuals who want to testify in
person at the public hearing must send
an email to publichearings@irs.gov to
have your name added to the building
access list. The subject line of the email
must contain the regulation number
(REG–108761–22) and the language
‘‘TESTIFY In Person’’. For example, the
subject line may say: Request to
TESTIFY In Person at Hearing for REG–
108761–22.
Individuals who want to testify by
telephone at the public hearing must
send an email to publichearings@irs.gov
to receive the telephone number and
access code for the hearing. The subject
line of the email must contain the
regulation number REG–108761–22 and
the language ‘‘TESTIFY
Telephonically’’. For example, the
subject line may say: Request to
TESTIFY Telephonically at Hearing for
REG–108761–22.
Individuals who want to attend the
public hearing in person without
testifying also must send an email to
publichearings@irs.gov to have their
names added to the building access list.
The subject line of the email must
contain the regulation number REG–
108761–22 and the language ‘‘ATTEND
in Person’’. For example, the subject
line may say: Request to ATTEND
Hearing In Person REG–108761–22.
Requests to attend the public hearing
must be received by 5 p.m. ET on July
9, 2024.
Individuals who want to attend the
public hearing by telephone without
testifying also must send an email to
publichearings@irs.gov to receive the
telephone number and access code for
the hearing. The subject line of email
must contain the regulation number
(REG–108761–22 and the language
‘‘ATTEND Hearing Telephonically’’. For
example, the subject line may say:
Request to ATTEND Hearing
Telephonically for REG–108761–22.
Requests to attend the public hearing
must be received by 5 p.m. ET on July
9, 2024.
Hearings will be made accessible to
people with disabilities. To request
special assistance during a hearing,
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please contact the Publication and
Regulations Section of the Office of
Associate Chief Counsel (Procedure and
Administration) by sending an email to
publichearings@irs.gov (preferred) or by
telephone at (202) 317–6901 (not a tollfree number) at least July 8, 2024.
Applicability Date
Proposed § 1.6011–15 would identify
charitable remainder annuity trust
transactions described in proposed
§ 1.6011–15(b), and transactions that are
substantially similar to those
transactions, as listed transactions,
effective as of the date the final
regulations are published in the Federal
Register.
Special Analyses
I. Paperwork Reduction Act
The estimated number of taxpayers
impacted by these proposed regulations
is between 50 to 100 per year. No
burden on these taxpayers is imposed
by these proposed regulations. Instead,
the collection of information contained
in these proposed regulations is
reflected in the collection of information
for Forms 8886 and 8918 that have been
reviewed and approved by the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) in
accordance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act (44 U.S.C. 3507(c)) under
control numbers 1545–1800 and 1545–
0865.
To the extent there is a change in
burden as a result of these regulations,
the change in burden will be reflected
in the updated burden estimates for
Forms 8886 and 8918. The requirement
to maintain records to substantiate
information on Forms 8886 and 8918
already is contained in the burden
associated with the control number for
the forms and remains unchanged.
An agency may not conduct or
sponsor, and a person is not required to
respond to, a collection of information
unless the collection of information
displays a valid OMB control number.
II. Regulatory Flexibility Act
When an agency issues a proposed
rulemaking, the Regulatory Flexibility
Act (5 U.S.C. chapter 6) (Act) requires
the agency to ‘‘prepare and make
available for public comment an initial
regulatory flexibility analysis’’ that
‘‘describe[s] the impact of the proposed
rule on small entities.’’ 5 U.S.C. 603(a).
The term ‘‘small entities’’ is defined in
5 U.S.C. 601 to mean ‘‘small business,’’
‘‘small organization,’’ and ‘‘small
governmental jurisdiction,’’ which are
also defined in 5 U.S.C. 601. Small
business size standards define whether
a business is ‘‘small’’ and have been
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established for types of economic
activities, or industry, generally under
the North American Industry
Classification System (NAICS). See Title
13, Part 121 of the Code of Federal
Regulations (titled ‘‘Small Business Size
Regulations’’). The size standards look
at various factors, including annual
receipts, number of employees, and
amount of assets, to determine whether
the business is small. See Title 13, Part
121.201 of the Code of Federal
Regulations for the Small Business Size
Standards by NAICS Industry.
Section 605 of the Act provides an
exception to the requirement to prepare
an initial regulatory flexibility analysis
if the agency certifies that the proposed
rulemaking will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. The Treasury
Department and the IRS hereby certify
that these proposed regulations will not
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities.
This certification is based on the fact
that the majority of the effect of the
proposed regulations falls on trusts.
Further, the Treasury Department and
the IRS expect that the reporting burden
is low; the information sought is
necessary for regular annual return
preparation and ordinary recordkeeping.
Pursuant to section 7805(f) of the
Code, this notice of proposed
rulemaking has been submitted to the
Chief Counsel for the Office of
Advocacy of the Small Business
Administration for comment on its
impact on small business.
III. 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 (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.
IV. 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. This proposed rule
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 58 / Monday, March 25, 2024 / Proposed Rules
does not have federalism implications
and does not impose substantial direct
compliance costs on State and local
governments or preempt State law
within the meaning of the Executive
order.
V. Regulatory Planning and Review
Pursuant to the Memorandum of
Agreement, Review of Treasury
Regulations under Executive Order
12866 (June 9, 2023), tax regulatory
actions issued by the IRS are not subject
to the requirements of section 6 of
Executive Order 12866, as amended.
Therefore, a regulatory impact
assessment is not required.
Statement of Availability of IRS
Documents
Guidance cited in this preamble is
published in the Internal Revenue
Bulletin and is available from the
Superintendent of Documents, U.S.
Government Publishing Office,
Washington, DC 20402, or by visiting
the IRS website at https://www.irs.gov.
Drafting Information
The principal author of these
proposed regulations is Charles D.
Wien, Office of Associate Chief Counsel
(Passthroughs & Special Industries).
However, other personnel from the IRS
and the Treasury Department
participated in the development of these
regulations.
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 * * *
*
*
*
*
*
Section 1.6011–15 also issued under 26
U.S.C. 6001 and 26 U.S.C. 6011 * * *
*
*
*
*
*
Par. 2. Section 1.6011–15 is added to
read as follows:
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with PROPOSALS
■
§ 1.6011–15 Charitable Remainder Annuity
Trust Listed Transaction.
(a) In general. Transactions that are
the same as, or substantially similar to,
a transaction described in paragraph (b)
of this section are identified as listed
transactions for purposes of § 1.6011–
4(b)(2).
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:13 Mar 22, 2024
Jkt 262001
(b) Charitable remainder annuity
trusts. A transaction is described in this
paragraph (b) if:
(1) The grantor creates a trust
purporting to qualify as a charitable
remainder annuity trust under section
664(d)(1) of the Internal Revenue Code
(Code);
(2) The grantor funds the trust with
property having a fair market value in
excess of its basis (contributed
property);
(3) The trustee sells the contributed
property;
(4) The trustee uses some or all of the
proceeds from the sale of the
contributed property to purchase an
annuity; and
(5) On a Federal income tax return,
the beneficiary of the trust treats the
annuity amount payable from the trust
as if it were, in whole or in part, an
annuity payment subject to section 72 of
the Code, instead of as carrying out to
the beneficiary amounts in the ordinary
income and capital gain tiers of the trust
in accordance with section 664(b).
(c) Participation—(1) In general. A
taxpayer has participated in a
transaction identified as a listed
transaction in paragraph (a) of this
section if the taxpayer’s tax return
reflects tax consequences or a tax
strategy described in this section as
provided under § 1.6011–4(c)(3)(i)(A).
These tax consequences include those
tax consequences that would affect any
gift tax return, whether or not such gift
tax return was filed. See § 25.6011–4 of
this chapter.
(2) Treatment of charitable
remainderman. An organization
described in section 170(c) of the Code
that the purported Charitable Remainder
Annuity Trust designates as a recipient
of the remainder interest described in
section 664(d)(1) is not treated as a
participant under § 1.6011–4(c)(3)(i)(A)
in the transaction described in this
section solely by reason of its status as
a recipient of the remainder interest
described in section 664(d)(1).
(d) Treatment of charitable
remainderman under section 4965. A
tax-exempt entity (as defined in section
4965 of the Code) that is an organization
described in section 170(c) and that the
purported Charitable Remainder
Annuity Trust designates as a recipient
of the remainder interest described in
section 664(d)(1) is not treated as a party
to the transaction described in this
section for purposes of section 4965
solely by reason of its status as a
recipient of the remainder interest
described in section 664(d)(1).
(e) Applicability date. This section’s
identification of transactions that are the
same as, or substantially similar to, the
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20577
transaction described in paragraph (b) of
this section as listed transactions for
purposes of § 1.6011–4(b)(2) is effective
on [date of publication of final
regulations in the Federal Register].
Douglas W. O’Donnell,
Deputy Commissioner for Services and
Enforcement.
[FR Doc. 2024–06156 Filed 3–22–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4830–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
SECURITY
Coast Guard
33 CFR Part 100
[Docket Number USCG–2024–0177]
RIN 1625–AA08
Special Local Regulation; Red River,
Shreveport, LA
Coast Guard, DHS.
Notice of proposed rulemaking.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
The Coast Guard is proposing
to establish a temporary special local
regulation (SLR) for certain navigable
waters of the Red River. This action is
necessary to provide for the safety of life
on these navigable waters near
Shreveport, Louisiana, during highspeed powerboat races from May 24,
2024 through May 26, 2024. This
proposed rulemaking would prohibit
persons and vessels from being in the
regulated unless authorized by the
Captain of the Port Sector Lower
Mississippi River or a designated
representative. We invite your
comments on this proposed rulemaking.
DATES: Comments and related material
must be received by the Coast Guard on
or before April 9, 2024.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments
identified by docket number USCG–
2024–0177 using the Federal DecisionMaking Portal at https://
www.regulations.gov. See the ‘‘Public
Participation and Request for
Comments’’ portion of the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section for
further instructions on submitting
comments. This notice of proposed
rulemaking with its plain-language, 100word-or-less proposed rule summary
will be available in this same docket.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: If
you have questions about this proposed
rulemaking, call or email MSTC Lindsey
Swindle, Waterways Management, U.S.
Coast Guard; telephone 571–610–4197,
email Lindsey.M.Swindle@uscg.mil.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\25MRP1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 89, Number 58 (Monday, March 25, 2024)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 20569-20577]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2024-06156]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF TREASURY
Internal Revenue Service
26 CFR Part 1
[REG-108761-22]
RIN 1545-BQ58
Charitable Remainder Annuity Trust Listed Transaction
AGENCY: Internal Revenue Service (IRS), Treasury.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking and public hearing.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This document contains proposed regulations that would
identify certain charitable remainder annuity trust (CRAT) transactions
and substantially similar transactions as listed transactions, a type
of reportable transaction. Material advisors and certain participants
in these listed transactions would be required to file disclosures with
the IRS and would be subject to penalties for failure to disclose. The
proposed regulations would affect participants in these transactions as
well as material advisors but provide that certain organizations whose
only role or interest in the transaction is as a charitable
remainderman will not be treated as participants in the transaction or
as parties to a prohibited tax shelter transaction subject to excise
taxes and disclosure requirements. Finally, this document provides
notice of a public hearing on the proposed regulations.
DATES:
Comments: Electronic or written comments must be received by May
24, 2024.
Public Hearing: A public hearing on the proposed regulation is
scheduled for July 11, 2024, at 10 a.m. ET. Requests to speak and
outlines of topics to be discussed at the public hearing must be
received by May 24, 2024. If no outlines are received by May 24, 2024,
the public hearing will be cancelled. Requests to attend the public
hearing must be received by 5 p.m. on July 9, 2024.
ADDRESSES: Commenters are strongly encouraged to submit public comments
electronically via the Federal eRulemaking Portal at https://regulations.gov (indicate IRS and REG-108761-22) by following the
online instructions for submitting comments. Requests for a public
hearing must be submitted as prescribed in the ``Comments and Requests
for a Public Hearing'' section. 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 availability any comments submitted to the IRS's public docket.
Send paper submission to CC:PA:01:PR (REG-108761-22) room 5203,
Internal Revenue Service, P.O. Box 7604, Ben Franklin Station,
Washington, DC 20044.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Concerning the proposed regulations,
Charles D. Wien of the Office of Associate Chief Counsel (Passthroughs
& Special Industries), (202) 317-5279; concerning submissions of
comments and requests for hearing, Vivian Hayes at (202) 317-6901 (not
toll-free numbers) or by sending an email to [email protected]
(preferred).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
This document contains proposed additions to 26 CFR part 1 (Income
Tax Regulations) under section 6011 of the Internal Revenue Code
(Code). The additions identify certain transactions as ``listed
transactions'' for purposes of section 6011.
I. Disclosure of Reportable Transactions by Participants and Penalties
for Failure To Disclose
Section 6011(a) generally provides that, when required by
regulations prescribed by the Secretary of the Treasury or her delegate
(Secretary), ``any person made liable for any tax imposed by this
title, or with respect to the collection thereof, shall make a return
or statement according to the
[[Page 20570]]
forms and regulations prescribed by the Secretary. Every person
required to make a return or statement shall include therein the
information required by such forms or regulations.''
Section 1.6011-4(a) provides that every taxpayer that has
participated in a reportable transaction within the meaning of Sec.
1.6011-4(b) and who is required to file a tax return must file a
disclosure statement within the time prescribed in Sec. 1.6011-4(e).
Reportable transactions are identified in Sec. 1.6011-4 and include
listed transactions, confidential transactions, transactions with
contractual protection, loss transactions, and transactions of
interest. See Sec. 1.6011-4(b)(2) through (6). Section 1.6011-4(b)(2)
defines a listed transaction as a transaction that is the same as or
substantially similar to one of the types of transactions that the IRS
has determined to be a tax avoidance transaction and identified by
notice, regulation, or other form of published guidance as a listed
transaction.
Section 1.6011-4(c)(4) provides that a transaction is
``substantially similar'' if it is expected to obtain the same or
similar types of tax consequences and is either factually similar or
based on the same or similar tax strategy. Receipt of an opinion
regarding the tax consequences of the transaction is not relevant to
the determination of whether the transaction is the same as or
substantially similar to another transaction. Further, the term
substantially similar must be broadly construed in favor of disclosure.
For example, a transaction may be substantially similar to a listed
transaction even though it may involve different entities or use
different Code provisions.
Section 1.6011-4(c)(3)(i)(A) provides that a taxpayer has
participated in a listed transaction if the taxpayer's tax return
reflects tax consequences or a tax strategy described in the published
guidance that lists the transaction under Sec. 1.6011-4(b)(2).
Published guidance may identify other types or classes of persons that
will be treated as participants in a listed transaction. Published
guidance also may identify types or classes of persons that will not be
treated as participants in a listed transaction.
Section 1.6011-4(d) and (e) provide that the disclosure statement
Form 8886, Reportable Transaction Disclosure Statement (or successor
form), must be attached to the taxpayer's tax return for each taxable
year for which a taxpayer participates in a reportable transaction. A
copy of the disclosure statement must be sent to the IRS's Office of
Tax Shelter Analysis (OTSA) at the same time that any disclosure
statement is first filed by the taxpayer pertaining to a particular
reportable transaction.
Section 1.6011-4(e)(2)(i) provides that, if a transaction becomes a
listed transaction after the filing of a taxpayer's tax return
reflecting the taxpayer's participation in the listed transaction and
before the end of the period of limitations for assessment for any
taxable year in which the taxpayer participated in the listed
transaction, then a disclosure statement must be filed with OTSA within
90 calendar days after the date on which the transaction becomes a
listed transaction. This requirement extends to an amended return and
exists regardless of whether the taxpayer participated in the
transaction in the year the transaction became a listed transaction.
The Commissioner of Internal Revenue (Commissioner) also may determine
the time for disclosure of listed transactions in the published
guidance identifying the transaction.
Participants required to disclose these transactions under Sec.
1.6011-4 who fail to do so are subject to penalties under section 6707A
of the Code. Section 6707A(b) provides that the amount of the penalty
is 75 percent of the decrease in tax shown on the return as a result of
the reportable transaction (or which would have resulted from such
transaction if such transaction were respected for Federal tax
purposes), subject to minimum and maximum penalty amounts. The minimum
penalty amount is $5,000 in the case of a natural person and $10,000 in
any other case. For a listed transaction, the maximum penalty amount is
$100,000 in the case of a natural person and $200,000 in any other
case.
Additional penalties also may apply. In general, section 6662A of
the Code imposes a 20 percent accuracy-related penalty on any
understatement (as defined in section 6662A(b)(1)) attributable to an
adequately disclosed reportable transaction. If the taxpayer had a
requirement to disclose participation in the reportable transaction but
did not adequately disclose the transaction in accordance with the
regulations under section 6011, the taxpayer is subject to an increased
penalty rate equal to 30 percent of the understatement. See section
6662A(c). Section 6662A(b)(2) provides that section 6662A applies to
any item that is attributable to any listed transaction and any
reportable transaction (other than a listed transaction) if a
significant purpose of such transaction is the avoidance or evasion of
Federal income tax.
Participants required to disclose listed transactions who fail to
do so also are subject to an extended period of limitations under
section 6501(c)(10) of the Code. That section provides that the time
for assessment of any tax with respect to the transaction shall not
expire before the date that is one year after the earlier of the date
the participant discloses the transaction or the date a material
advisor discloses the participation pursuant to a written request under
section 6112(b)(1)(A) of the Code.
II. Disclosure of Reportable Transactions by Material Advisors and
Penalties for Failure To Disclose
Section 6111(a) provides that each material advisor with respect to
any reportable transaction shall make a return setting forth: (1)
information identifying and describing the transaction, (2) information
describing any potential tax benefits expected to result from the
transaction, and (3) such other information as the Secretary may
prescribe. Such return shall be filed not later than the date specified
by the Secretary.
Section 301.6111-3(a) of the Procedure and Administration
Regulations provides that each material advisor with respect to any
reportable transaction, as defined in Sec. 1.6011-4(b), must file a
return as described in Sec. 301.6111-3(d) by the date described in
Sec. 301.6111-3(e).
Section 301.6111-3(b)(1) provides that a person is a material
advisor with respect to a transaction if the person provides any
material aid, assistance, or advice with respect to organizing,
managing, promoting, selling, implementing, insuring, or carrying out
any reportable transaction, and directly or indirectly derives gross
income in excess of the threshold amount as defined in Sec. 301.6111-
3(b)(3) for the material aid, assistance, or advice. Under Sec.
301.6111-3(b)(2)(i) and (ii), a person provides material aid,
assistance, or advice if the person provides a tax statement, which is
any statement (including another person's statement), oral or written,
that relates to a tax aspect of a transaction that causes the
transaction to be a reportable transaction as defined in Sec. 1.6011-
4(b)(2) through (7).
Material advisors must disclose transactions on Form 8918, Material
Advisor Disclosure Statement (or successor form), as provided in Sec.
301.6111-3(d) and (e). Section 301.6111-3(e) provides that the material
advisor's disclosure statement for a reportable transaction must be
filed with the OTSA by the last day of the
[[Page 20571]]
month that follows the end of the calendar quarter in which the advisor
becomes a material advisor with respect to a reportable transaction or
in which the circumstances necessitating an amended disclosure
statement occur. The disclosure statement must be sent to the OTSA at
the address provided in the instructions for Form 8918 (or successor
form).
Section 301.6111-3(d)(2) provides that the IRS will issue to a
material advisor a reportable transaction number with respect to the
disclosed reportable transaction. Receipt of a reportable transaction
number does not indicate that the disclosure statement is complete, nor
does it indicate that the transaction has been reviewed, examined, or
approved by the IRS. Material advisors must provide the reportable
transaction number to all taxpayers and material advisors for whom the
material advisor acts as a material advisor as defined in Sec.
301.6111-3(b). The reportable transaction number must be provided at
the time the transaction is entered into, or, if the transaction is
entered into prior to the material advisor's receipt of the reportable
transaction number, within 60 calendar days from the date the
reportable transaction number is mailed to the material advisor.
Section 6707(a) of the Code provides that a material advisor who
fails to file a timely disclosure, or files an incomplete or false
disclosure statement, is subject to a penalty. Pursuant to section
6707(b)(2), for listed transactions, the penalty is the greater of (A)
$200,000, or (B) 50 percent of the gross income derived by such person
with respect to aid, assistance, or advice that is provided with
respect to the listed transaction before the date the return is filed
under section 6111.
Additionally, section 6112(a) provides that each material advisor
with respect to any reportable transaction shall (whether or not
required to file a return under section 6111 with respect to such
transaction) maintain a list (1) identifying each person with respect
to whom such advisor acted as a material advisor with respect to such
transaction and (2) containing such other information as the Secretary
may by regulations require. Material advisors must furnish such lists
to the IRS in accordance with Sec. 301.6112-1(e).
A material advisor may be subject to a penalty under section 6708
of the Code for failing to maintain a list under section 6112(a) and
failing to make the list available upon written request to the
Secretary in accordance with section 6112(b) within 20 business days
after the date of such request. Section 6708(a) provides that the
penalty is $10,000 per day for each day of the failure after the 20th
day. However, no penalty will be imposed with respect to the failure on
any day if such failure is due to reasonable cause.
III. Tax-Exempt Entities as Parties to Prohibited Tax Shelter
Transactions
Section 4965 of the Code is intended to deter certain ``tax-exempt
entities'' (as defined in section 4965(c)) from facilitating
``prohibited tax shelter transactions,'' which include listed
transactions. Section 4965(a)(1), in part, imposes an excise tax on a
tax-exempt entity for the taxable year in which the tax-exempt entity
becomes a party to a transaction that is a ``prohibited tax shelter
transaction'' at the time it becomes a party to the transaction, and
for any subsequent taxable year, in the amount determined under section
4965(b)(1) (section 4965 tax). Tax-exempt entities subject to the
section 4965 tax are listed in section 4965(c)(1) through (3) and
include, among others, entities and governmental units described in
sections 501(c) and 170(c) of the Code (other than the United States).
A tax-exempt entity that is a party to a prohibited tax shelter
transaction generally also is subject to various reporting and
disclosure obligations.
Additionally, section 4965(a)(2) imposes an excise tax on an
``entity manager'' if the manager approves the tax-exempt entity as a
party (or otherwise causes the tax-exempt entity to be a party) to a
prohibited tax shelter transaction and knows or has reason to know that
the transaction is a prohibited tax shelter transaction. The amount of
this excise tax is determined under section 4965(b)(2) (entity manager
tax).
A. The Section 4965 Tax
The amount of the section 4965 tax owed by a tax-exempt entity
depends on whether the tax-exempt entity knows, or has reason to know,
that a transaction is a prohibited tax shelter transaction at the time
the entity becomes a party to the transaction. A tax-exempt entity is
treated as knowing or having reason to know that a transaction is a
prohibited tax shelter transaction if one or more of its entity
managers knew or had reason to know that the transaction was a
prohibited tax shelter transaction at the time the entity manager(s)
approved the tax-exempt entity as (or otherwise caused the entity to
be) a party to the transaction.\1\ The tax-exempt entity also is
attributed the knowledge or reason to know of certain entity managers--
those persons with authority or responsibility similar to that
exercised by an officer, director, or trustee of an organization--even
if the entity manager does not approve the entity as (or otherwise
cause the entity to be) a party to the transaction.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Section 53.4965-6 of the Foundation and Similar Excise Tax
Regulations (26 CFR part 53) provides factors to be considered in
determining whether an entity manager knows or has reason to know
that a transaction is a prohibited tax shelter transaction.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 53.4965-4(a)(1) provides that a tax-exempt entity is a
``party'' to a prohibited tax shelter transaction if it facilitates a
prohibited tax shelter transaction by reason of its tax-exempt, tax-
indifferent, or tax-favored status. In addition, under Sec. 53.4965-
4(a)(2) and (b), the Secretary may issue published guidance to identify
tax-exempt entities by type, class, or role that will or will not be
treated as parties to a prohibited tax shelter transaction.
If the tax-exempt entity unknowingly becomes a party to a
prohibited tax shelter transaction, the section 4965 tax generally
equals the greater of (1) the product of the highest rate of tax under
section 11 of the Code (currently 21 percent) and the tax-exempt
entity's net income attributable to the prohibited tax shelter
transaction, or (2) the product of the highest rate of tax under
section 11 and 75 percent of the proceeds received by the tax-exempt
entity that are attributable to the prohibited tax shelter transaction.
If the tax-exempt entity knew or had reason to know that the
transaction was a prohibited tax shelter transaction at the time the
tax-exempt entity became a party to the transaction, the section 4965
tax increases to the greater of (1) 100 percent of the tax-exempt
entity's net income attributable to the prohibited tax shelter
transaction, or (2) 75 percent of the tax-exempt entity's proceeds
attributable to the prohibited tax shelter transaction.
The terms ``net income'' and ``proceeds'' are defined in Sec.
53.4965-8. In general, a tax-exempt entity's net income attributable to
a prohibited tax shelter transaction is its gross income derived from
the transaction, reduced by those deductions that are attributable to
the transaction and that would be allowed by chapter 1 of the Code
(chapter 1) if the tax-exempt entity were treated as a taxable entity
for this purpose, and further reduced by the taxes imposed by subtitle
D of the Code (other than the section 4965 tax) with respect to the
transaction. In the case of a tax-exempt entity that is a party to the
transaction by reason of facilitating a prohibited tax shelter
transaction by reason of its tax-exempt, tax-indifferent,
[[Page 20572]]
or tax-favored status, the term ``proceeds,'' solely for purposes of
section 4965, means the gross amount of the tax-exempt entity's
consideration for facilitating the transaction, not reduced for any
costs or expenses attributable to the transaction. Published guidance
with respect to a particular prohibited tax shelter transaction may
designate additional amounts as proceeds from the transaction for
purposes of section 4965. In addition, for all tax-exempt entities that
are parties to a prohibited tax shelter transaction, any amount that is
a gift or a contribution to a tax-exempt entity and that is
attributable to a prohibited tax shelter transaction is treated as
proceeds for purposes of section 4965, unreduced by any associated
expenses.
B. Entity Manager Tax
The amount of the entity manager tax determined under section
4965(b)(2) on an entity manager (as defined in section 4965(d)) equals
$20,000 for each instance that the manager approves the tax-exempt
entity as (or otherwise causes such entity to be) a party to a
prohibited tax shelter transaction and knows or has reason to know that
the transaction is a prohibited tax shelter transaction. This liability
is not joint and several.
C. Disclosures
Section 53.6011-1 requires that a tax-exempt entity subject to the
section 4965 excise tax must file Form 4720, Return of Excise Taxes
Under Chapters 41 and 42 of the Internal Revenue Code, to report the
liability and pay the tax due under section 4965(a)(1). Under Sec.
1.6033-5, a tax-exempt entity that is a party to a prohibited tax
shelter transaction must file Form 8886-T, Disclosure by Tax-Exempt
Entity Regarding Prohibited Tax Shelter Transaction, to disclose that
it is a party to a prohibited tax shelter transaction, the identity of
any other party (whether taxable or tax-exempt) to such transaction
that is known to the tax-exempt entity, and certain other information.
Under Sec. 1.6033-2, if the tax-exempt entity is required to file Form
990, Return of Organization Exempt From Income Tax, it must disclose on
that form that it is a party to a prohibited tax shelter transaction,
whether any taxable party notified the tax-exempt entity that it was or
is a party to a prohibited tax shelter transaction, and whether the
tax-exempt entity filed Form 8886-T.
Section 6011(g) and Sec. 301.6011(g)-1 provide that any taxable
party to a prohibited tax shelter transaction must disclose to each
tax-exempt entity that the taxable party knows or has reason to know is
a party to such transaction that the transaction is a prohibited tax
shelter transaction.
IV. Charitable Remainder Annuity Trusts (CRATs)
For purposes of section 664 of the Code, section 664(d)(1) provides
that a charitable remainder annuity trust (CRAT) is a trust:
(A) From which a sum certain (which is not less than 5 percent nor
more than 50 percent of the initial fair market value (FMV) of all
property placed in trust) is to be paid, not less often than annually,
to one or more persons (at least one of which is not an organization
described in section 170(c), and, in the case of individuals, only to
an individual who is living at the time of the creation of the trust)
for a term of years (not in excess of 20 years) or for the life or
lives of such individual or individuals;
(B) From which no amount other than the payments described in
section 664(d)(1)(A) and other qualified gratuitous transfers described
in section 664(d)(1)(C) may be paid to or for the use of any person
other than an organization described in section 170(c);
(C) Whose remainder interest, following the termination of the
payments described in section 664(d)(1)(A), is to be transferred to, or
for the use of, an organization described in section 170(c) or is to be
retained by the trust for such a use or, to the extent the remainder
interest is in qualified employment securities (as defined by section
664(g)(4)), all or part of such securities are to be transferred to an
employee stock ownership plan (as defined in section 4975(e)(7) of the
Code) in a qualified gratuitous transfer (as defined by 664(g)); and
(D) Whose remainder interest has a value (determined under section
7520) of at least 10 percent of the initial net FMV of all property
placed in the trust.
Section 664(b) provides, in part, that amounts distributed by a
CRAT are considered as having the following characteristics in the
hands of a beneficiary to whom the annuity described in section
664(d)(1)(A) is paid:
(1) First, as amounts of income (other than gains, and amounts
treated as gains, from the sale or other disposition of capital assets)
includible in gross income to the extent of such income of the trust
for the year and such undistributed income of the trust for prior
years;
(2) Second, as a capital gain to the extent of the capital gain of
the trust for the year and the undistributed capital gain of the trust
for prior years;
(3) Third, as other income to the extent of such income of the
trust for the year and such undistributed income of the trust for prior
years; and
(4) Fourth, as a distribution of trust corpus.
Under section 664(c)(1), a CRAT is not subject to any tax imposed
by subtitle A of the Code. Section 664(c)(2), in part, imposes an
excise tax on a CRAT that has unrelated business taxable income (within
the meaning of section 512, determined as if part III of subchapter F
of chapter 1 applies to such trust) for a taxable year. That excise tax
is equal to the amount of such unrelated business taxable income.
V. Tax Avoidance Transactions Using a CRAT
The Treasury Department and the IRS are aware of transactions in
which taxpayers attempt to use a CRAT and a single premium immediate
annuity (SPIA) to permanently avoid recognition of ordinary income and/
or capital gain. Taxpayers engaging in these transactions claim that
distributions from the trust are not taxable to the beneficiaries as
ordinary income or capital gain under section 664(b) because the
distributions constitute the trust's unrecovered investment in the
SPIA, thus claiming that a significant portion of the distributions is
excluded from gross income under section 72(b)(2) of the Code.
Taxpayers also claim that the trust qualifies as a CRAT and thus is not
subject to tax on the trust's realized ordinary income or capital gain
under section 664(c)(1), even though the trust may not meet all of the
requirements of section 664(d)(1).
In these transactions, a grantor creates a trust purporting to
qualify as a CRAT under section 664. Generally, the grantor funds the
trust with property having a FMV in excess of its basis (appreciated
property) such as interests in a closely-held business, and/or assets
used or produced in a trade or business. The trust then sells the
appreciated property and uses some or all of the proceeds from the sale
of the contributed property to purchase an annuity. On a Federal income
tax return, the beneficiary of the trust treats the annuity amount
payable from the trust as if it were, in whole or in part, an annuity
payment subject to section 72,\2\ instead of as carrying out to the
beneficiary amounts in the ordinary
[[Page 20573]]
income and capital gain tiers of the trust in accordance with section
664(b).
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\2\ Section 72 governs the tax treatment of payments received as
an annuity, and generally causes only the portion of each payment in
excess of the investment in the contract (basis) to be included in
the recipient's gross income.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As result of treating section 72 as applying to the amounts
received (typically paid by an insurance company) as part of the
annuity amount, the beneficiary reports as income only a small portion
of the amount the beneficiary received from the SPIA. The beneficiary
treats the balance of the annuity amount as an excluded portion
representing a return of investment.\3\ The beneficiary thus claims
that the beneficiary is taxed as if the beneficiary were the owner of
the SPIA, rather than the SPIA being an asset owned by the CRAT, which
the trustee purchased to fund the annuity amount payable from the
trust. Under the beneficiary's theory, until the entire investment in
the SPIA has been recovered, the only portion of the annuity amount
includable in the beneficiary's income is that portion of the SPIA
annuity required to be included in income under section 72. The
beneficiary also maintains that the distribution is not subject to
section 664(b), which would treat a substantial portion of the annuity
amount as gain attributable to the sale of the appreciated property
contributed to the CRAT.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ The beneficiary also claims that section 72(u) does not
apply because the SPIA is an ``immediate annuity'' under section
72(u)(3)(E).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The trustee also might take the position that the transfer of the
appreciated property to the purported CRAT gives those assets a step-up
in basis to FMV as if they had been sold to the trust. The transfer of
property to a CRAT, however, does not give those assets a step-up in
basis to FMV, as if they had been sold to the trust, giving the trust a
cost basis under section 1012 of the Code. Instead, the transfer to the
CRAT is a gift for Federal tax purposes. When a grantor transfers
appreciated property to a CRAT, the CRAT's basis in the assets is
determined under section 1015 of the Code. Under section 1015(a) and
(d), property transferred by gift (whether or not in trust) retains its
basis in the hands of the donor, increased (but not above FMV) by any
gift tax paid on the transfer.
The claimed application of sections 664 and 72 to the transaction
is incorrect. Proper application of the rules of sections 664 and 72 to
the transaction results in annual ordinary income from the annuity
payments from the SPIA being added to the section 664(b)(1) (ordinary
income) tier of the CRAT's income each year, and a one-time amount
being added to the section 664(b)(2) (capital gains) tier at the time
of the sale of the property by the CRAT (assuming the asset is of a
kind to produce capital gain). Assuming no other activity in the CRAT,
under section 664(b), the beneficiary of the CRAT must treat the
annuity amount each year as first consisting of the ordinary income
portion of the annuity payments from the SPIA. The balance of the
annuity amount must be treated as consisting of any accumulated
ordinary income of the CRAT, then accumulated capital gain, and then
other income of the CRAT, only reaching non-taxable corpus to the
extent these three accounts have been exhausted.
In addition, certain features of the trust may cause the trust to
fail to meet all of the requirements of section 664(d)(1). While the
trust instrument generally resembles one of the eight sample CRAT forms
provided in Rev. Proc. 2003-53, 2003-2 C.B. 230; Rev. Proc. 2003-54,
2003-2 C.B. 236; Rev. Proc, 2003-55, 2003-2 C.B. 242; Rev. Proc. 2003-
56, 2003-2 C.B. 249; Rev. Proc. 2003-57, 2003-2 C.B. 257; Rev. Proc.
2003-58, 2003-2 C.B. 262; Rev. Proc. 2003-59, 2003-2 C.B 268; and Rev.
Proc. 2003-60, 2003-2 C.B. 274 (Sample CRAT Revenue Procedures), it
might have one or more significant modifications. For example, the
trust instrument might provide that, in each taxable year of the trust,
the trustee must pay to the beneficiary during the annuity period, an
annuity amount equal to the greater of (1) an amount which meets the
requirements of section 664(d)(1)(A) or (2) the payments received by
the trustee from one or more SPIAs purchased by the trustee.
The trust instrument also might provide for a current payment to an
organization described in section 170(c) (Charitable Remainderman) in
lieu of the payment of the remainder interest described in section
664(d)(1)(C). For example, the trust instrument might state that, in
lieu of transferring the remainder amount required pursuant to section
664(d)(1)(C) (Remainder Interest) to the Charitable Remainderman, the
trustee, upon the availability of adequate funding, currently may pay
to the Charitable Remainderman a cash sum equal to at least 10 percent
of the initial FMV of the trust property plus a nominal amount of cash.
The trust agreement also might provide that the trustee cannot make a
distribution in kind to satisfy this cash distribution. This payment,
equal to at least 10 percent of the initial FMV of the trust property,
would be the only payment to the Charitable Remainderman. The governing
instrument of a CRAT may provide for an amount other than the annuity
amount described in Sec. 1.664-2(a)(1) to be paid (or to be paid in
the discretion of the trustee) to an organization described in Sec.
170(c) provided that, in the case of distributions in kind, the
adjusted basis of the property distributed is fairly representative of
the adjusted basis of the property available for payment on the date of
payment. See Sec. 1.664-2(a)(4). However, nowhere in section
664(d)(1)(D) does it permit a current payment, determined based on the
value of the trust at its funding, to be made in lieu of, and as a
substitute for, the required payment of the remainder interest (that
is, the entire corpus of the trust at termination of the annuity
period) described in section 664(d)(1)(C) to the Charitable
Remainderman.
The significant modifications identified in the prior paragraphs
deviate from the Sample CRAT Revenue Procedures in ways that prevent
the qualification of the trust as a valid CRAT under section 664,
regardless of the actual administration of the CRAT. These
modifications are made in these transactions in order to effectuate the
structure. Specifically, a provision authorizing the payment of an
annuity amount in excess of the amount described in section
664(d)(1)(A), and a provision authorizing a current payment in lieu of
the payment of the remainder interest described in section
664(d)(1)(C), violate mandatory requirements of a valid CRAT.
VI. Purpose of Proposed Regulations
On March 3, 2022, the Sixth Circuit issued an order in Mann
Construction v. United States, 27 F.4th 1138, 1147 (6th Cir. 2022),
holding that Notice 2007-83, 2007-2 C.B. 960, which identified certain
trust arrangements claiming to be welfare benefit funds and involving
cash value life insurance policies as listed transactions, violated the
Administrative Procedure Act (APA), 5 U.S.C. 551-559, because the
notice was issued without following the notice-and-comment procedures
required by section 553 of the APA. The Sixth Circuit reversed the
decision of the district court, which held that Congress had authorized
the IRS to identify listed transactions without notice and comment. See
Mann Construction, Inc. v. United States, 539 F.Supp.3d 745, 763 (E.D.
Mich. 2021).
Relying on the Sixth Circuit's analysis in Mann Construction, three
district courts and the Tax Court have concluded that IRS notices
identifying listed transactions were improperly issued because they
were issued without following the APA's notice and comment procedures.
See Green Rock, LLC v. IRS, 2023 WL 1478444 (N.D. AL.,
[[Page 20574]]
February 2, 2023) (Notice 2017-10); GBX Associates, LLC, v. United
States, 1:22cv401 (N.D. Ohio, Nov. 14, 2022) (same); Green Valley
Investors, LLC, et al. v. Commissioner, 159 T.C. No. 5 (Nov. 9, 2022)
(same); see also CIC Services, LLC v. IRS, 2022 WL 985619 (E.D. Tenn.
March 21, 2022), as modified by 2022 WL 2078036 (E.D. Tenn. June 2,
2022) (Notice 2016-66, identifying a transaction of interest).
The Treasury Department and the IRS disagree with the Sixth
Circuit's decision in Mann Construction and the subsequent decisions
that have applied that reasoning to find other IRS notices invalid and
are continuing to defend the validity of notices identifying
transactions as listed transactions in circuits other than the Sixth
Circuit. At the same time, however, to avoid any confusion and to
ensure consistent enforcement of the tax laws throughout the nation,
the Treasury Department and the IRS are issuing these proposed
regulations to identify certain charitable remainder trust transactions
as listed transactions for purposes of all relevant provisions of the
Code and Treasury Regulations.
These proposed regulations propose to identify the charitable
remainder trust transactions described in proposed Sec. 1.6011-15(b),
and substantially similar transactions, as listed transactions for
purposes of Sec. 1.6011-4(b)(2) and sections 6111 and 6112. In
addition, they inform taxpayers that participate in these transactions,
and persons who act as material advisors with respect to these
transactions, that they would need to disclose the transaction in
accordance with the final regulations and the regulations issued under
sections 6011 and 6111. Material advisors must also maintain lists as
required by section 6112.
Explanation of Provisions
I. Charitable Remainder Annuity Trust Transaction
Proposed Sec. 1.6011-15(a) would identify a transaction that is
the same as, or substantially similar to, the transaction described in
proposed Sec. 1.6011-15(b) as a listed transaction for purposes of
Sec. 1.6011-4(b)(2). ``Substantially similar'' is defined in Sec.
1.6011-4(c)(4) to include any transaction that is expected to obtain
the same or similar types of tax consequences and that is either
factually similar or based on the same or a similar tax strategy.
A transaction is described in proposed Sec. 1.6011-15(b) if it
includes the following elements:
(i) The grantor creates a trust purporting to qualify as a CRAT
under section 664;
(ii) The grantor funds the trust with property having a FMV in
excess of its basis (contributed property);
(iii) The trustee sells the contributed property;
(iv) The trustee uses some or all of the proceeds from the sale of
the contributed property to purchase an annuity; and
(v) On a Federal income tax return, the beneficiary of the trust
(Beneficiary) treats the amount payable from the trust as if it were,
in whole or in part, an annuity payment subject to section 72, instead
of as carrying out to the Beneficiary amounts in the ordinary income
and capital gain tiers of the trust in accordance with section 664(b).
II. Participants
Whether a taxpayer has participated in the listed transaction
described in proposed Sec. 1.6011-15(b) is determined under Sec.
1.6011-4(c)(3)(i)(A). Participants include any person whose tax return
reflects tax consequences or a tax strategy described in proposed Sec.
1.6011-15(b). These tax consequences include those tax consequences
described in proposed Sec. 1.6011-15(b) that would affect any gift tax
return, whether or not such gift tax return was filed. See Sec.
25.6011-4. A taxpayer also has participated in a transaction described
in proposed Sec. 1.6011-15(b) if the taxpayer knows or has reason to
know that the taxpayer's tax benefits are derived directly or
indirectly from tax consequences, or a tax strategy, described in
proposed Sec. 1.6011-15(b).
III. Material Advisors
Material advisors who make a tax statement with respect to
transactions identified as listed transactions in proposed Sec.
1.6011-15(b) would have disclosure and list maintenance obligations
under sections 6111 and 6112. See Sec. Sec. 301.6111-3 and 301.6112-1.
One of the requirements to be a material advisor under section
6111(b)(1) is that the person must directly or indirectly derive gross
income in excess of the threshold amount provided in 6111(b)(1)(B) for
providing material aid, assistance, or advice with respect to the
listed transaction. That threshold in the case of a listed transaction
is reduced to $10,000 if substantially all of the tax benefits are
provided to natural persons (looking through any partnerships, S
corporations, or trusts), or to $25,000 for any other transaction. See
Sec. 301.6111-3(b)(3)(i)(B). The regulations under section 6111
provide that gross income includes all fees for a tax strategy, for
services for advice (whether or not tax advice), and for the
implementation of a reportable transaction. See Sec. 301.6111-
3(b)(2)(ii). However, a fee does not include amounts paid to a person,
including an advisor, in that person's capacity as a party to the
transaction. See Sec. 301.6111-3(b)(3)(ii).
IV. Effect of Participating in Listed Transaction Described in Proposed
Sec. 1.6011-15(b)
Participants required to disclose these transactions under Sec.
1.6011-4 who fail to do so will be subject to penalties under section
6707A. Such disclosure also must include any gift tax consequences. See
Sec. 25.6011-4. Participants required to disclose these transactions
under Sec. 1.6011-4 who fail to do so also are subject to an extended
period of limitations under section 6501(c)(10). Material advisors
required to disclose these transactions under section 6111 who fail to
do so are subject to penalties under section 6707. Material advisors
required to maintain lists of investors under section 6112 who fail to
do so (or who fail to provide such lists when requested by the IRS) are
subject to penalties under section 6708(a). In addition, the IRS may
impose other penalties on persons involved in these transactions or
substantially similar transactions, including accuracy-related
penalties under section 6662 or section 6662A, the penalty under
section 6694 for understatements of a taxpayer's liability by a tax
return preparer, the penalty under section 6700 for promoting abusive
tax shelters, and the penalty under section 6701 for aiding and
abetting understatement of tax liability.
In addition, material advisors have disclosure requirements with
regard to transactions occurring in prior years. However,
notwithstanding Sec. 301.6111-3(b)(4)(i) and (iii), material advisors
are required to disclose only if they have made a tax statement on or
after [DATE 6 YEARS BEFORE DATE OF PUBLICATION OF FINAL RULE].
Because the IRS will take the position that taxpayers are not
entitled to the purported tax benefits of the listed transactions
described in the proposed regulations, taxpayers who have filed tax
returns taking the position that they were entitled to the purported
tax benefits should consider filing amended returns or otherwise ensure
that their transactions are disclosed properly.
V. Role of Charitable Remainderman in the Transaction
As stated in section 1 of this Explanation of Provisions, the
[[Page 20575]]
transaction described in proposed Sec. 1.6011-15(b) attempts to use a
CRAT under section 664 to permanently avoid recognition of ordinary
income and/or capital gain on the sale of contributed property having a
FMV in excess of its basis. Under the mandatory requirements of section
664(d), a trust does not qualify as a CRAT unless, following the
termination of the annuity payments described in section 664(d)(1)(A),
the Remainder Interest is to be transferred to or for the use of an
organization described in section 170(c).
A. Charitable Remainderman as a Party to a Transaction Under Section
4965
As stated in section III of the Background, section 4965 provides,
in part, that, if a transaction is a prohibited tax shelter transaction
at the time a tax-exempt entity (which includes an organization
described in section 170(c), other than the United States) becomes a
party to the transaction, the entity must pay the section 4965 tax for
the taxable year and any subsequent taxable year as determined under
section 4965(b)(1). Section 4965(e)(1) provides in part that the term
``prohibited tax shelter transaction'' means any listed transaction
(within the meaning of section 6707A(c)(2)). A tax-exempt entity that
is a party to a prohibited tax shelter transaction generally is subject
to various reporting and disclosure obligations. Additionally, an
entity manager is subject to the entity manager tax imposed by section
4965(a)(2) if the entity manager approves the tax-exempt entity as a
party (or otherwise causes the entity to be a party) to a prohibited
tax shelter transaction and knows or has reason to know that the
transaction is a prohibited tax shelter transaction. Section 53.4965-
4(a) provides in part that a tax-exempt entity is a ``party'' to a
prohibited tax shelter transaction if it facilitates a prohibited tax
shelter transaction by reason of its tax-exempt, tax-indifferent, or
tax-favored status.
The trust used in a transaction identified as a listed transaction
in proposed Sec. 1.6011-15(a) would not qualify as a CRAT unless the
entire Remainder Interest is required to be transferred to or for the
use of a Charitable Remainderman. Thus, the tax-exempt entity that the
CRAT designates for the Remainder Interest facilitates the transaction
by reason of its tax-exempt status because, absent that status, the
CRAT would not satisfy the mandatory requirement of section
664(d)(1)(C). Accordingly, that designated tax-exempt entity would meet
the definition of a party to a prohibited tax shelter transaction in
Sec. 53.4965-4(a)(1).
However, notwithstanding the general rule in Sec. 53.4965-4(a),
Sec. 53.4965-4(b) provides that published guidance may identify, by
type, class, or role, which tax-exempt entities will or will not be
treated as parties to a prohibited tax shelter transaction. The
Treasury Department and the IRS understand that, in a transaction
described in proposed Sec. 1.6011-15(b), an organization described in
section 170(c) that is designated as the Charitable Remainderman might
not become aware of its Remainder Interest in the purported CRAT until
it receives a distribution from the trust. In that situation, it may be
difficult for the organization described in section 170(c) to determine
when section 4965 excise taxes and related reporting requirements
apply. For this reason, these proposed regulations would provide that
an organization described in section 170(c) that the purported CRAT
designates as the recipient of the Remainder Interest will not be
treated as a party under section 4965 to the listed transaction
described in proposed Sec. 1.6011-15 solely by reason of its status as
a Charitable Remainderman.
B. Participation by a Charitable Remainderman
As stated in section II of the Background, a taxpayer has
participated in a listed transaction if the taxpayer's tax return
reflects tax consequences or a tax strategy described in this proposed
regulation. See Sec. 1.6011-4(c)(3)(i)(A). Published guidance may
identify other types or classes of persons that will be treated as
participants in a listed transaction. Published guidance also may
identify types or classes of persons that will not be treated as
participants in a listed transaction. In general, the Treasury
Department and the IRS do not expect that an organization described in
section 170(c), whose only role or interest in the transaction
described in these proposed regulations is as a Charitable
Remainderman, would meet the definition of a participant under Sec.
1.6011-4(c)(3)(i)(A). Nevertheless, to avoid potential uncertainty, the
proposed regulations provide that an organization described in section
170(c) that the purported CRAT designates as the recipient of the
Remainder Interest is not treated as a participant in the listed
transaction described in these proposed regulations solely by reason of
its status as a Charitable Remainderman.
C. Charitable Remainderman as a Material Advisor
As stated in section III of the Background, a person is a material
advisor with respect to a transaction if the person provides any
material aid, assistance, or advice with respect to organizing,
managing, promoting, selling, implementing, insuring, or carrying out
any reportable transaction, and directly or indirectly derives gross
income in excess of the threshold amount for the material aid,
assistance, or advice. See section 6111(b)(1)(A). The regulations
provide that gross income includes all fees for a tax strategy, for
services or advice (whether or not tax advice), and for the
implementation of a reportable transaction. However, a fee does not
include amounts paid to a person, including an advisor, in that
person's capacity as a party to the transaction. See Sec. 301.6111-
3(b)(3)(ii)).
The Treasury Department and the IRS request comments on whether the
Charitable Remainderman ever provides material aid, assistance, or
advice with respect to transactions described in proposed Sec. 1.6011-
15(b) and the nature of the services being provided. The Treasury
Department and the IRS also request comments on what fees the
Charitable Remainderman receives, either directly or indirectly, for
providing such material aid, assistance or advice.
Comments and Public Hearing
Before these proposed amendments to the regulations are adopted as
final regulations, consideration will be given to comments regarding
the notice of proposed rulemaking that are submitted timely to the IRS
as prescribed under the ADDRESSES section. The Treasury Department and
the IRS request comments on all aspects of the proposed regulations.
All comments will be made available at https://www.regulations.gov.
Once submitted to the Federal eRulemaking Portal, comments cannot be
edited or withdrawn.
A public hearing has been scheduled for July 11, 2024, beginning at
10 a.m. ET, in the Auditorium at the Internal Revenue Service Building,
1111 Constitution Avenue NW, Washington, DC. Due to the building
security procedures, visitors must enter at the Constitution Avenue
entrance. In addition, all visitors must present photo identification
to enter the building. Because of access restrictions, visitors will
not be admitted beyond the immediate entrance area more than 30 minutes
before the hearing starts. Participants alternatively may attend the
public hearing by telephone.
The rules of 26 CFR 601.601(a)(3) apply to the hearing. Persons who
wish to present comments at the hearing must submit an outline of the
topics to be discussed and the time to be devoted to
[[Page 20576]]
each topic by May 24, 2024. A period of 10 minutes will be allocated to
each person for making comments. An agenda showing the scheduling of
the speakers will be prepared after the deadline for receiving outlines
has passed. Copies of the agenda will be free of charge at the hearing.
If no outline of topics to be discussed at the hearing is received by
May 24, 2024, the public hearing will be cancelled. If the public
hearing is cancelled, a notice of cancellation of the public hearing
will be published in the Federal Register.
Individuals who want to testify in person at the public hearing
must send an email to [email protected] to have your name added to
the building access list. The subject line of the email must contain
the regulation number (REG-108761-22) and the language ``TESTIFY In
Person''. For example, the subject line may say: Request to TESTIFY In
Person at Hearing for REG-108761-22.
Individuals who want to testify by telephone at the public hearing
must send an email to [email protected] to receive the telephone
number and access code for the hearing. The subject line of the email
must contain the regulation number REG-108761-22 and the language
``TESTIFY Telephonically''. For example, the subject line may say:
Request to TESTIFY Telephonically at Hearing for REG-108761-22.
Individuals who want to attend the public hearing in person without
testifying also must send an email to [email protected] to have
their names added to the building access list. The subject line of the
email must contain the regulation number REG-108761-22 and the language
``ATTEND in Person''. For example, the subject line may say: Request to
ATTEND Hearing In Person REG-108761-22. Requests to attend the public
hearing must be received by 5 p.m. ET on July 9, 2024.
Individuals who want to attend the public hearing by telephone
without testifying also must send an email to [email protected] to
receive the telephone number and access code for the hearing. The
subject line of email must contain the regulation number (REG-108761-22
and the language ``ATTEND Hearing Telephonically''. For example, the
subject line may say: Request to ATTEND Hearing Telephonically for REG-
108761-22. Requests to attend the public hearing must be received by 5
p.m. ET on July 9, 2024.
Hearings will be made accessible to people with disabilities. To
request special assistance during a hearing, please contact the
Publication and Regulations Section of the Office of Associate Chief
Counsel (Procedure and Administration) by sending an email to
[email protected] (preferred) or by telephone at (202) 317-6901
(not a toll-free number) at least July 8, 2024.
Applicability Date
Proposed Sec. 1.6011-15 would identify charitable remainder
annuity trust transactions described in proposed Sec. 1.6011-15(b),
and transactions that are substantially similar to those transactions,
as listed transactions, effective as of the date the final regulations
are published in the Federal Register.
Special Analyses
I. Paperwork Reduction Act
The estimated number of taxpayers impacted by these proposed
regulations is between 50 to 100 per year. No burden on these taxpayers
is imposed by these proposed regulations. Instead, the collection of
information contained in these proposed regulations is reflected in the
collection of information for Forms 8886 and 8918 that have been
reviewed and approved by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) in
accordance with the Paperwork Reduction Act (44 U.S.C. 3507(c)) under
control numbers 1545-1800 and 1545-0865.
To the extent there is a change in burden as a result of these
regulations, the change in burden will be reflected in the updated
burden estimates for Forms 8886 and 8918. The requirement to maintain
records to substantiate information on Forms 8886 and 8918 already is
contained in the burden associated with the control number for the
forms and remains unchanged.
An agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required
to respond to, a collection of information unless the collection of
information displays a valid OMB control number.
II. Regulatory Flexibility Act
When an agency issues a proposed rulemaking, the Regulatory
Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. chapter 6) (Act) requires the agency to
``prepare and make available for public comment an initial regulatory
flexibility analysis'' that ``describe[s] the impact of the proposed
rule on small entities.'' 5 U.S.C. 603(a). The term ``small entities''
is defined in 5 U.S.C. 601 to mean ``small business,'' ``small
organization,'' and ``small governmental jurisdiction,'' which are also
defined in 5 U.S.C. 601. Small business size standards define whether a
business is ``small'' and have been established for types of economic
activities, or industry, generally under the North American Industry
Classification System (NAICS). See Title 13, Part 121 of the Code of
Federal Regulations (titled ``Small Business Size Regulations''). The
size standards look at various factors, including annual receipts,
number of employees, and amount of assets, to determine whether the
business is small. See Title 13, Part 121.201 of the Code of Federal
Regulations for the Small Business Size Standards by NAICS Industry.
Section 605 of the Act provides an exception to the requirement to
prepare an initial regulatory flexibility analysis if the agency
certifies that the proposed rulemaking will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial number of small entities. The Treasury
Department and the IRS hereby certify that these proposed regulations
will not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of
small entities. This certification is based on the fact that the
majority of the effect of the proposed regulations falls on trusts.
Further, the Treasury Department and the IRS expect that the reporting
burden is low; the information sought is necessary for regular annual
return preparation and ordinary recordkeeping.
Pursuant to section 7805(f) of the Code, this notice of proposed
rulemaking has been submitted to the Chief Counsel for the Office of
Advocacy of the Small Business Administration for comment on its impact
on small business.
III. 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 (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.
IV. 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. This proposed rule
[[Page 20577]]
does not have federalism implications and does not impose substantial
direct compliance costs on State and local governments or preempt State
law within the meaning of the Executive order.
V. Regulatory Planning and Review
Pursuant to the Memorandum of Agreement, Review of Treasury
Regulations under Executive Order 12866 (June 9, 2023), tax regulatory
actions issued by the IRS are not subject to the requirements of
section 6 of Executive Order 12866, as amended. Therefore, a regulatory
impact assessment is not required.
Statement of Availability of IRS Documents
Guidance cited in this preamble is published in the Internal
Revenue Bulletin and is available from the Superintendent of Documents,
U.S. Government Publishing Office, Washington, DC 20402, or by visiting
the IRS website at https://www.irs.gov.
Drafting Information
The principal author of these proposed regulations is Charles D.
Wien, Office of Associate Chief Counsel (Passthroughs & Special
Industries). However, other personnel from the IRS and the Treasury
Department participated in the development of these regulations.
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 * * *
* * * * *
Section 1.6011-15 also issued under 26 U.S.C. 6001 and 26 U.S.C.
6011 * * *
* * * * *
0
Par. 2. Section 1.6011-15 is added to read as follows:
Sec. 1.6011-15 Charitable Remainder Annuity Trust Listed Transaction.
(a) In general. Transactions that are the same as, or substantially
similar to, a transaction described in paragraph (b) of this section
are identified as listed transactions for purposes of Sec. 1.6011-
4(b)(2).
(b) Charitable remainder annuity trusts. A transaction is described
in this paragraph (b) if:
(1) The grantor creates a trust purporting to qualify as a
charitable remainder annuity trust under section 664(d)(1) of the
Internal Revenue Code (Code);
(2) The grantor funds the trust with property having a fair market
value in excess of its basis (contributed property);
(3) The trustee sells the contributed property;
(4) The trustee uses some or all of the proceeds from the sale of
the contributed property to purchase an annuity; and
(5) On a Federal income tax return, the beneficiary of the trust
treats the annuity amount payable from the trust as if it were, in
whole or in part, an annuity payment subject to section 72 of the Code,
instead of as carrying out to the beneficiary amounts in the ordinary
income and capital gain tiers of the trust in accordance with section
664(b).
(c) Participation--(1) In general. A taxpayer has participated in a
transaction identified as a listed transaction in paragraph (a) of this
section if the taxpayer's tax return reflects tax consequences or a tax
strategy described in this section as provided under Sec. 1.6011-
4(c)(3)(i)(A). These tax consequences include those tax consequences
that would affect any gift tax return, whether or not such gift tax
return was filed. See Sec. 25.6011-4 of this chapter.
(2) Treatment of charitable remainderman. An organization described
in section 170(c) of the Code that the purported Charitable Remainder
Annuity Trust designates as a recipient of the remainder interest
described in section 664(d)(1) is not treated as a participant under
Sec. 1.6011-4(c)(3)(i)(A) in the transaction described in this section
solely by reason of its status as a recipient of the remainder interest
described in section 664(d)(1).
(d) Treatment of charitable remainderman under section 4965. A tax-
exempt entity (as defined in section 4965 of the Code) that is an
organization described in section 170(c) and that the purported
Charitable Remainder Annuity Trust designates as a recipient of the
remainder interest described in section 664(d)(1) is not treated as a
party to the transaction described in this section for purposes of
section 4965 solely by reason of its status as a recipient of the
remainder interest described in section 664(d)(1).
(e) Applicability date. This section's identification of
transactions that are the same as, or substantially similar to, the
transaction described in paragraph (b) of this section as listed
transactions for purposes of Sec. 1.6011-4(b)(2) is effective on [date
of publication of final regulations in the Federal Register].
Douglas W. O'Donnell,
Deputy Commissioner for Services and Enforcement.
[FR Doc. 2024-06156 Filed 3-22-24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4830-01-P