[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 26, Volume 11]
[Revised as of April 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 26CFR1.1231-2]

[Page 280-282]
 
                       TITLE 26--INTERNAL REVENUE
 
    CHAPTER I--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY 
                               (CONTINUED)
 
PART 1_INCOME TAXES--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 1.1231-2  Livestock held for draft, breeding, dairy, or sporting 
purposes.

    (a)(1) In the case of cattle, horses, or other livestock acquired by 
the taxpayer after December 31, 1969, section 1231 applies to the sale, 
exchange, or involuntary conversion of such cattle, horses, or other 
livestock, regardless of age, held by the taxpayer for draft, breeding, 
dairy, or sporting purposes, and held by him:
    (i) For 24 months or more from the date of acquisition in the case 
of cattle or horses, or
    (ii) For 12 months or more from the date of acquisition in the case 
of such other livestock.
    (2) In the case of livestock (including cattle or horses) acquired 
by the taxpayer on or before December 31, 1969, section 1231 applies to 
the sale, exchange, or involuntary conversion of such livestock, 
regardless of age, held by the taxpayer for draft, breeding, or dairy 
purposes, and held by him for 12 months or more from the date of 
acquisition.
    (3) For the purposes of section 1231, the term livestock is given a 
broad, rather than a narrow, interpretation and includes cattle, hogs, 
horses, mules, donkeys, sheep, goats, fur-bearing animals, and other 
mammals. However, it does not include poultry, chickens, turkeys, 
pigeons, geese, other birds, fish, frogs, reptiles, etc.
    (b)(1) Whether or not livestock is held by the taxpayer for draft, 
breeding, dairy, or sporting purposes depends upon all of the facts and 
circumstances in each case. The purpose for which the animal is held is 
ordinarily shown by the taxpayer's actual use of the animal. However, a 
draft, breeding, dairy, or sporting purpose may be present if an animal 
is disposed of within a reasonable time after its intended use for such 
purpose is prevented or made undesirable by reason of accident, disease, 
drought, unfitness of the animal for such purpose, or a similar factual 
circumstance. Under certain circumstances, an animal held for ultimate 
sale to customers in the ordinary course of the taxpayer's trade or 
business may be considered as held for draft, breeding, dairy, or 
sporting purposes. However, an animal is not held by the taxpayer for 
draft, breeding, dairy, or sporting purposes merely because it is 
suitable for such purposes or merely because it is held by the taxpayer 
for sale to other persons for use

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by them for such purposes. Furthermore, an animal held by the taxpayer 
for other purposes is not considered as held for draft, breeding, dairy, 
or sporting purposes merely because of a negligible use of the animal 
for such purposes or merely because of the use of the animal for such 
purposes as an ordinary or necessary incident to the other purposes for 
which the animal is held. See paragraph (c) of this section for the 
rules to be used in determining when horses are held for racing purposes 
and, therefore, are considered as held for sporting purposes.
    (2) The application of this paragraph is illustrated by the 
following examples:

    Example 1. An animal intended by the taxpayer for use by him for 
breeding purposes is discovered to be sterile or unfit for the breeding 
purposes for which it was held, and is disposed of within a reasonable 
time thereafter. This animal is considered as held for breeding 
purposes.
    Example 2. The taxpayer retires from the breeding or dairy business 
and sells his entire herd, including young animals which would have been 
used by him for breeding or dairy purposes if he had remained in 
business. These young animals are considered as held for breeding or 
dairy purposes. The same would be true with respect to young animals 
which would have been used by the taxpayer for breeding or dairy 
purposes but which are sold by him in reduction of his breeding or dairy 
herd, because of, for example, drought.
    Example 3. A taxpayer in the business of raising hogs for slaughter 
customarily breeds sows to obtain a single litter to be raised by him 
for sale, and sells these brood sows after obtaining the litter. Even 
though these brood sows are held for ultimate sale to customers in the 
ordinary course of the taxpayer's trade or business, they are considered 
as held for breeding purposes.
    Example 4. A taxpayer in the business of raising horses for sale to 
others for use by them as draft horses uses them for draft purposes on 
his own farm in order to train them. This use is an ordinary or 
necessary incident to the purpose of selling the animals, and, 
accordingly, these horses are not considered as held for draft purposes.
    Example 5. The taxpayer is in the business of raising registered 
cattle for sale to others for use by them as breeding cattle. It is the 
business practice of this particular taxpayer to breed the offspring of 
his herd which he is holding for sale to others prior to sale in order 
to establish their fitness for sale as registered breeding cattle. In 
such case, the taxpayer's breeding of such offspring is an ordinary and 
necessary incident to his holding them for the purpose of selling them 
as bred heifers or proven bulls and does not demonstrate that the 
taxpayer is holding them for breeding purposes. However, those cattle 
held by the taxpayer as additions or replacements to his own breeding 
herd to produce calves are considered to be held for breeding purposes, 
even though they may not actually have produced calves.
    Example 6. A taxpayer, engaged in the business of buying cattle and 
fattening them for slaughter, purchased cows with calf. The calves were 
born while the cows were held by the taxpayer. These cows are not 
considered as held for breeding purposes.

    (c)(1) For purposes of paragraph (b) of this section, a horse held 
for racing purposes shall be considered as held for sporting purposes. 
Whether a horse is held for racing purposes shall be determined in 
accordance with the following rules:
    (i) A horse which has actually been raced at a public race track 
shall, except in rare and unusual circumstances, be considered as held 
for racing purposes.
    (ii) A horse which has not been raced at a public track shall be 
considered as held for racing purposes if it has been trained to race 
and other facts and circumstances in the particular case also indicate 
that the horse was held for this purpose. For example, assume that the 
taxpayer maintains a written training record on all horses he keeps in 
training status, which shows that a particular horse does not meet 
objective standards (including, but not limited to, such considerations 
as failure to achieve predetermined standards of performance during 
training, or the existence of a physical or other defect) established by 
the taxpayer for determining the fitness and quality of horses to be 
retained in his racing stable. Under such circumstances, if the taxpayer 
disposes of the horse within a reasonable time after he determined that 
it did not meet his objective standards for retention, the horse shall 
be considered as held for racing purposes.
    (iii) A horse which has neither been raced at a public track nor 
trained for racing shall not, except in rare and unusual circumstances, 
be considered as held for racing purposes.
    (2) This paragraph may be illustrated by the following examples:


[[Page 282]]


    Example 1. The taxpayer breeds, raises, and trains horses for the 
purpose of racing. Every year he culls some horses from his racing 
stable. In 1971, the taxpayer decided that in order to prevent his 
racing stable from getting too large to be effectively operated he must 
cull six horses from it. All six of the horses culled by the taxpayer 
had been raced at public tracks in 1970. Under subparagraph (1)(i) of 
this paragraph, all these horses are considered as held for racing 
purposes.
    Example 2. Assume the same facts as in example (1). Assume further 
that the taxpayer decided to cull four more horses from his racing 
stable in 1971. All these horses had been trained to race but had not 
been raced at public tracks. The taxpayer culled these four horses 
because the training log which the taxpayer maintains on all the horses 
he trains showed these horses to be unfit to remain in his racing 
stable. Horse A was culled because it developed shin splints during 
training. Horses B and C were culled because of poor temperament. B 
bolted every time a rider tried to mount it, and C became extremely 
nervous when it was placed in the starting gate. Horse D was culled 
because it did not qualify for retention under one of the objective 
standards the taxpayer had established for determining which horses to 
retain since it was unable to run a specified distance in a minimum 
time. These four horses were disposed of within a reasonable time after 
the taxpayer determined that they were unfit to remain in his stable. 
Under subparagraph (1)(ii) of this paragraph, all these horses are 
considered as held for racing purposes.

[T.D. 7141, 36 FR 18792, Sept. 22, 1971]