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IRS Notice
2003-77

Notice
2003-77 --Revised , December 1, 2003.
The Internal Revenue Service and Treasury Department
are aware of certain transactions that use contested
liability trusts improperly to attempt to accelerate
deductions for contested liabilities under §461(f)
of the Internal Revenue Code. This notice alerts
taxpayers and their representatives that these
transactions are tax avoidance transactions and
identifies these transactions, and substantially
similar transactions, as listed transactions for
purposes of §1.6011-4(b)(2)
of the Income Tax Regulations and §§301.6111-2(b)(2)
and 301.6112-1(b)(2) of the Procedure and
Administration Regulations. This notice also alerts
parties involved with these transactions of certain
responsibilities that may arise from their
involvement with these transactions.
LAW
Section
461(f) provides an exception to the
general rules of tax accounting by allowing a
taxpayer to deduct a contested liability in a year
prior to the resolution of the contest if the
following conditions are satisfied: (1) the taxpayer
contests an asserted liability; (2) the taxpayer
transfers money or other property to provide for the
satisfaction of the asserted liability; (3) the
contest with respect to the asserted liability
exists after the time of transfer; and (4) but for
the fact that the asserted liability is contested, a
deduction would be allowed for the taxable year of
the transfer (or for an earlier taxable year)
determined after the application of the economic
performance rules. If these requirements are
satisfied, a taxpayer may deduct the liability in
the taxable year of the transfer.
On November 19, 2003, the Service and Treasury
Department filed with the Federal Register proposed
and temporary regulations under §461(f).
Section
1.461-2T(c)(1) of these temporary
regulations, which replaces and restates §1.461-2(c)(1),
provides that a transfer for the satisfaction of an
asserted liability is a transfer of money or
property beyond the taxpayer's control to: (1) the
person asserting the liability; (2) an escrowee or
trustee pursuant to a written agreement (among the
escrowee or trustee, the taxpayer, and the person
who is asserting the liability) providing that the
money or other property be delivered in accordance
with the settlement of the contest; (3) an escrowee
or trustee pursuant to an order of a court or
government entity providing that the money or other
property be delivered in accordance with the
settlement of the contest; or (4) a court with
jurisdiction over the contest. An account is in the
taxpayer's control unless the taxpayer has
relinquished all authority over the money or other
property transferred.
Section
1.461-2T(c)(1)(iii) provides that the
following actions are not transfers to provide for
the satisfaction of an asserted liability: (1) the
purchase of a bond to guarantee payment of the
asserted liability; (2) an entry on the taxpayer's
books of account; and (3) a transfer to an account
in the taxpayer's control. The temporary regulations
clarify that a transfer in taxable years beginning
after December 31, 1953, and ending after August 16,
1954, of any indebtedness of a taxpayer or any
promise by the taxpayer to provide services or
property in the future is not a transfer to provide
for the satisfaction of an asserted liability. In
addition, the temporary regulations provide the
express rule that a transfer (other than to the
person asserting the liability) of a taxpayer's
stock, or the indebtedness or stock of a person
related to the taxpayer (as defined in section
267(b)), is not a transfer to provide for
the satisfaction of an asserted liability.
Section
461(h)(2)(C) provides that, if a workers
compensation or tort liability requires a payment to
another person, then economic performance occurs as
payments to the person are made. The Conference
Report accompanying enactment of §461(h)
states:
In the
case of worker's compensation or tort liabilities of
the taxpayer requiring payments to another person,
economic performance occurs as payments are made to
that person. Since payment to a section
461(f) trust is not a payment to the
claimant and does not discharge the taxpayer's
liability to the claimant, such payment does not
satisfy the economic performance test.
H.R. Rep. No. 861, 98 th Cong., 2d Sess.
871, 876 (1984).
Section
461(h)(2)(D) provides that in the case of
other liabilities, economic performance occurs at
the time determined under regulations prescribed by
the Secretary. Section
1.461-4(g)(2) through (7) describes other
liabilities for which payment is economic
performance.
Section
1.461-4(g)(1)(ii)(A) provides that
payment does not include the furnishing of a note or
other evidence of indebtedness of the taxpayer.
Section
1.461-4(g)(1)(i) provides that, for
certain liabilities for which payment is economic
performance, economic performance does not occur as
a taxpayer makes payments in connection with the
liability to any other person, including a trust,
escrow account, court-administered fund, or any
similar arrangement, unless the payments constitute
payment to the person to which the liability is
owed. In Maxus Energy Corporation and
Subsidiaries v.
United States
, 31 F.3d 1135, 1144, 1145 (Fed. Cir. 1994), the
taxpayer's payment to a settlement fund effectively
constituted payment to the person to which the
liability was owed because the claimants agreed to
look solely to the fund to satisfy their claims and,
therefore, the taxpayer's payment to the fund
discharged its liability to the claimant.
Section
1.461-2T(e)(2) provides that, except as
provided in §468B
or the regulations thereunder, economic performance
does not occur when a taxpayer transfers money or
other property to a trust, escrow account, or court
to provide for the satisfaction of a contested
workers compensation, tort, or other liability
designated in §1.461-4(g)
unless the trust, escrow account, or court is the
claimant or the taxpayer's payment to the trust,
escrow account, or court discharges the taxpayer's
liability to the claimant.
ANALYSIS
The Service and Treasury Department have become
aware of transactions in which taxpayers have
established trusts purported to qualify under §461(f),
but that fail to comply with the requirements of §461(f)
or the regulations by reason of: (1) retention of
powers over the trust assets (such as the power to
substitute assets, to pay the contested liabilities
out of assets other than those in the trust, or to
limit the trustee's ability to sell the taxpayer's
assets that the taxpayer transferred to the trust),
contrary to the requirement that the taxpayer
relinquish control over the property transferred;
(2) transfer to the trust of related party notes
under circumstances indicating the liability is not
genuine or that there is no intent between the
parties to enforce the obligation, which is not a
valid transfer to provide for the satisfaction of an
asserted liability; or (3) establishment of trusts
for contested tort, workers compensation, or other
liabilities designated in §1.461-4(g),
for which economic performance requires payment to
the claimant.
Transactions that are the same as, or substantially
similar to, the following transactions are
identified as "listed transactions" for
purposes of §§1.6011-4(b)(2),
301.6111-2(b)(2) and 301.6112-1(b)(2):
(1) transactions in which a taxpayer transfers money
or other property in taxable years beginning after
December 31, 1953, and ending after August 16, 1954,
to a trust purported to be established under §461(f)
to provide for the satisfaction of an asserted
liability and retains any one or more of the
following powers over the money or other property
transferred: to pay any liabilities ultimately due
to the claimant out of assets other than those
transferred to the trust; to substitute money or
other property for property transferred to the
trust; to prohibit payment to the claimant by the
trustee until instructed by the taxpayer; to
prohibit notification to the claimant of the trust's
establishment; to limit the trustee's ability to
sell the property after it is transferred to the
trust; and to limit the trustee's ability to enforce
notes or rights relating to other property
transferred to the trust;
(2) transactions in which a taxpayer transfers any
indebtedness of the taxpayer or any promise by the
taxpayer to provide services or property in the
future in taxable years beginning after December 31,
1953, and ending after August 16, 1954, to a trust
purported to be established under §461(f)
to provide for the satisfaction of an asserted
liability;
(3) transactions in which a taxpayer using an
accrual method of accounting transfers money or
other property after July 18, 1984, to a trust
purported to be established under §461(f)
to provide for the satisfaction of a workers
compensation or tort liability (unless the trust is
the person to which the liability is owed, or
payment to the trust discharges the taxpayer's
liability to the claimant);
(4) transactions in which a taxpayer using an
accrual method of accounting transfers money or
other property in taxable years beginning after
December 31, 1991, to a trust purported to be
established under §461(f)
to provide for the satisfaction of a liability for
which payment is economic performance under §1.461-4(g)
(unless the trust is the person to which the
liability is owed, or payment to the trust
discharges the taxpayer's liability to the
claimant), other than a liability for workers
compensation or tort; and
(5) transactions in which a taxpayer transfers stock
issued by the taxpayer, or indebtedness or stock
issued by a party related to the taxpayer (as
defined in §267(b)),
on or after November 19, 2003, to a trust purported
to be established under §461(f)
to provide for the satisfaction of any asserted
liability.
Independent of their classification as listed
transactions, transactions that are the same as, or
substantially similar to, the transactions described
in this notice may already be subject to the
disclosure requirements of §6011
( §1.6011-4),
the tax shelter registration requirements of §6111
( §§301.6111-1T, 301.6111-2), or the list
maintenance requirements of §6112
( §301.6112-1).
Persons required to register these tax shelters
under §6111
who have failed to do so may be subject to the
penalty under §6707(a).
Persons required to maintain lists of investors
under §6112
who have failed to do so (or who fail to provide
such lists when requested by the Service) may be
subject to the penalty under §6708(a).
In addition, the Service may impose penalties on
parties involved in these transactions or
substantially similar transactions, including the
accuracy-related penalty under §6662.
Transactions that are the same as, or substantially
similar to, the transactions described in this
notice are identified as "listed
transactions" for purposes of §§1.6011-4(b)(2),
301.6111-2(b)(2) and 301.6112-1(b)(2) effective
November 19, 2003, the date this notice is released
to the public. The references to specific taxable
years and dates in the description of transactions
covered by this notice are intended to provide
consistency with the temporary and proposed
regulations under §461(f)
filed with the Federal Register on November 19,
2003. Only those transactions covered by the
provisions (including the effective date provisions)
of the disclosure, tax shelter registration, and
list maintenance requirements under §§6011,
6111, and 6112 and the regulations thereunder will
be subject to those requirements.
DRAFTING INFORMATION
The principal author of this notice is Norma Rotunno
of the Office of the Associate Chief Counsel (Income
Tax & Accounting). For further information
regarding this notice, contact Ms. Rotunno at (202)
622-7900 (not a toll-free number).
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