[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 26, Volume 1]
[Revised as of April 1, 2003]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 26CFR1.50B-2]

[Page 417-418]
 
                       TITLE 26--INTERNAL REVENUE
 
     CHAPTER I--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
 
PART 1--INCOME TAXES--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 1.50B-2  Electing small business corporations.

    (a) General rule--(1) In general. In the case of an electing small 
business corporation (as defined in section 1371 (b)), WIN expenses (as 
defined in paragraph (a) of Sec. 1.50B-1) shall be apportioned pro rata 
among the persons who are shareholders of such corporation on the last 
day of such corporation's taxable year, and shall be taken into account 
for the taxable years of such shareholders within which or with which 
the taxable year of such corporation ends. The WIN expenses for each 
employee shall be apportioned separately. In determining who are 
shareholders of an electing small business corporation on the last day 
of its taxable year, the rules of paragraph (d)(1) of Sec. 1.1371-1 and 
of paragraph (a)(2) of Sec. 1.1373-1 shall apply.
    (2) Shareholder as taxpayer. A shareholder to whom WIN expenses are 
apportioned shall, for purposes of the credit allowed by section 40, be 
treated as the taxpayer who paid or incurred the expenses allocated to 
him. If a shareholder takes into account in determining his WIN expenses 
any WIN expenses with respect to an employee of an electing small 
business corporation, and if the employment of such employee is 
terminated in a termination subject to the rules contained in paragraph 
(a) of Sec. 1.50A-3, or if the electing small business corporation fails 
to pay comparable wages and such failure is subject to the rules 
contained in paragraphs (a) (2) and (3) of Sec. 1.50A-3, then such 
shareholder shall make a recapture determination under the provisions of 
section 50A (c) and (d) of the Code and Sec. 1.50A-3. See Sec. 1.50A-5.
    (3) Computation of the first 12 months of employment. The first 12 
months of employment (whether or not consecutive) and the period 
described in section 50B(c)(4) of any WIN employee for purposes of 
determining the amount of WIN expenses (as defined in paragraph (a) of 
Sec. 1.50B-1) shall not be affected by a change in the shareholders in 
such corporation and shall not be affected by a reduction in any 
shareholder's proportionate stock interest in such corporation (for 
example, by a sale or redemption or by the issuance of additional 
shares). Thus, the first 12 months of employment (whether or not 
consecutive) of any WIN employee shall be the same with respect to any 
shareholder claiming a credit under section 40 for salaries and wages 
paid or incurred for services rendered by such employee. Also, such 
first 12 months of employment and the period described in section 
50B(c)(4), with respect to any WIN employee, shall not be deemed to 
begin again because of the making of a valid election under section 
1372.
    (b) Summary statement. An electing small business corporation shall 
attach to its return a statement showing the apportionment to each 
shareholder of its WIN expenses with respect to each WIN employee.
    (c) Examples. Paragraph (a) of this section may be illustrated by 
the following examples:

    Example 1. (i) X Corporation, an electing small business corporation 
which files its returns on the basis of the calendar year, hired WIN 
employees on July 1, 1972, whose employment was continuous for the next 
24 months. A, a shareholder, has a 10 percent interest in X Corporation. 
X Corporation incurred $24,000 in wages with respect to these WIN 
employees in calendar year 1972, and $48,000 in calendar year 1973. 
Assuming that during 1972 shareholder A did not directly

[[Page 418]]

incur any other WIN expenses and did not own any other interest in other 
electing small business corporations, partnerships, estates, or trusts 
that incurred WIN expenses, for taxable year 1972 shareholder A's credit 
earned of $480 (10 percent (A's ownership interest) multiplied by 
$24,000 of WIN expenses multiplied by 20 percent) was allowed under 
section 40 as a credit against his liability for tax.
    (ii) On March 1, 1973, shareholder A sold all of his interest to B, 
a new shareholder. Therefore, the employment of the WIN employees is 
deemed terminated for purposes of paragraph (a) of Sec. 1.50A-3 with 
respect to shareholder A. For taxable year 1972, A's recomputed credit 
is zero because the termination occurred before the end of the period 
described in paragraph (a)(1) of Sec. 1.50A-3. The income tax imposed by 
chapter 1 of the Code on A for the taxable year 1973 is increased by the 
$480 decrease in his credit earned for the taxable year 1972 (that is, 
$480 original credit earned minus zero recomputed credit earned). Under 
paragraph (a) of this section A has no credit earned for 1973.

    (iii) Under paragraph (a)(1) of this section, assuming that during 
1973 shareholder B did not directly incur any other WIN expenses and 
that he did not own any interest in other electing small business 
corporations, partnerships, estates, or trusts that incurred WIN 
expenses, shareholder B's credit earned is $480 (10 percent (B's 
ownership interest) multiplied by $24,000 of WIN expenses multiplied by 
20 percent) and is allowable under section 40 as a credit against his 
liability for tax. Under paragraph (a)(3) for purposes of determining 
the period of employment that may be taken into account by B the initial 
date of employment of these WIN employees relates back to the date they 
were first employed, i.e., July 1, 1972. Thus, the first 12 months of 
employment ends on June 30, 1973.
    Example 2. (i) Y Corporation, an electing small business corporation 
which files its return on the basis of the calendar year, hires five WIN 
employees in 1972. The WIN expenses incurred with respect to each 
employee are as follows:

------------------------------------------------------------------------
                   WIN employee No.                        WIN expenses
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1.......................................................          $6,000
2.......................................................           5,000
3.......................................................           4,000
4.......................................................           4,000
5.......................................................           3,000
                                                         ---------------
    Total...............................................          22,000
------------------------------------------------------------------------


On December 31, 1972, Y Corporation has 10 shares of stock outstanding 
which are owned as follows: A owns 3 shares, B owns 2 shares, and C owns 
5 shares.

    (ii) Under this section, the WIN expenses are apportioned to the 
shareholders of Y Corporation as follows:

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                      WIN employees                              1               2               3               4               5             Total
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Total WIN expenses....................................          $6,000          $5,000          $4,000          $4,000          $3,000  ..............
                                                         ===============================================================================================
Shareholder A (3/10)....................................           1,800           1,500           1,200           1,200             900           6,600
Shareholder B (2/10)....................................           1,200           1,000             800             800             600           4,400
Shareholder C (5/10)....................................           3,000           2,500           2,000           2,000           1,500          11,000
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Assume that shareholders A, B, and C did not directly incur any other 
WIN expenses during their taxable year in which falls December 31, 1972 
(the last day of Y Corporation's taxable year), and that such 
shareholders did not own any interest in other electing small business 
corporations, partnerships, estates or trust that incurred WIN expenses. 
The total WIN expenses of shareholder A are $6,600, of shareholder B are 
$4,400, and of shareholder C are $11,000.

[38 FR 6162, Mar. 7, 1973]