[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: 26CFR1.1312-7]

[Page 635-637]
 
                       TITLE 26--INTERNAL REVENUE
 
    CHAPTER I--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY 
                               (CONTINUED)
 
PART 1_INCOME TAXES--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 1.1312-7  Basis of property after erroneous treatment of a prior 
transaction.

    (a) Paragraph (7) of section 1312 applies if the determination 
establishes the basis of property, and there occurred one of the 
following types of errors in respect of a prior transaction upon which 
such basis depends, or in respect of a prior transaction which was 
erroneously treated as affecting such basis:
    (1) An erroneous inclusion in, or omission from, gross income, or
    (2) An erroneous recognition or nonrecognition of gain or loss, or
    (3) An erroneous deduction of an item properly chargeable to capital 
account or an erroneous charge to capital account of an item properly 
deductible.
    (b) For this section to apply, the taxpayer with respect to whom the 
erroneous treatment occurred must be:
    (1) The taxpayer with respect to whom the determination is made, or
    (2) A taxpayer who acquired title to the property in the erroneously 
treated transaction and from whom, mediately or immediately, the 
taxpayer with respect to whom the determination is made derived title in 
such a manner that he will have a basis ascertained by reference to the 
basis in the hands of the taxpayer who acquired title to the property in 
the erroneously treated transaction, or
    (3) A taxpayer who had title to the property at the time of the 
erroneously treated transaction and from whom, mediately or immediately, 
the taxpayer with respect to whom the determination is made derived 
title, if the basis of the property in the hands of the taxpayer with 
respect to whom the determination is made is determined under section 
1015(a) (relating to the basis of property acquired by gift).

No adjustment is authorized with respect to the transferor of the 
property in a transaction upon which the basis of the property depends, 
when the determination is with respect to the original transferee or a 
subsequent transferee of such original transferee.
    (c) The application of this section may be illustrated by the 
following examples:


[[Page 636]]


    Example 1. In 1949 taxpayer A transferred property which had cost 
him $5,000 to the X Corporation in exchange for an original issue of 
shares of its stock having a fair market value of $10,000. In his return 
for 1949 taxpayer A treated the exchange as one in which the gain or 
loss was not recognizable:
    (i) In 1955 the X Corporation maintains that the gain should have 
been recognized in the exchange in 1949 and therefore the property it 
received had a $10,000 basis for depreciation. Its position is adopted 
in a closing agreement. No adjustment is authorized with respect to the 
tax of the X Corporation for 1949, as none of the three types of errors 
specified in paragraph (a) of this section occurred with respect to the 
X Corporation in the treatment of the exchange in 1949. Moreover, no 
adjustment is authorized with respect to taxpayer A, as he is not within 
any of the three classes of taxpayers described in paragraph (b) of this 
section.
    (ii) In 1953 taxpayer A sells the stock which he received in 1949 
and maintains that, as gain should have been recognized in the exchange 
in 1949, the basis for computing the profit on the sale is $10,000. His 
position is confirmed in a closing agreement executed in 1955. An 
adjustment is authorized with respect to his tax for the year 1949 as 
the basis for computing the gain on the sale depends upon the 
transaction in 1949, and in respect of that transaction there was an 
erroneous nonrecognition of gain to taxpayer A, the taxpayer with 
respect to whom the determination is made.
    Example 2. In 1950 taxpayer A was the owner of 10 shares of the 
common stock of the Z Corporation which had a basis of $1,500. In that 
year he received as a dividend thereon 10 shares of the preferred stock 
of the same corporation having a fair market value of $1,000. On his 
books, entries were made reducing the basis of the common stock by 
allocating $500 of the basis to the preferred stock, and on his return 
for 1950 he did not include the dividend in gross income.
    (i) In 1951 taxpayer A made a gift of the preferred stock of the Z 
Corporation to taxpayer B, an unrelated individual. Taxpayer B sold the 
stock in 1953 and on his return for that year he reported the sale and 
claimed a basis of $1,000, contending that the dividend of preferred 
stock was taxable to A in 1950 at its fair market value of $1,000. The 
basis of $1,000 is confirmed by a closing agreement executed in 1955. An 
adjustment is authorized with respect to taxpayer A's tax for 1950, as 
the closing agreement determines basis of property, and in a prior 
transaction upon which such basis depends there was an erroneous 
omission from gross income of taxpayer A, a taxpayer who acquired title 
to the property in the erroneously treated transaction and from whom, 
immediately, the taxpayer with respect to whom the determination is made 
derived title.
    (ii) Assuming the same facts as in (i) except that the common stock 
instead of the preferred stock was the subject of the gift, and the 
basis claimed by taxpayer B and confirmed in the closing agreement was 
$1,500. An adjustment is authorized with respect to taxpayer A's tax for 
1950, as the closing agreement determines the basis of property, and in 
a prior transaction which was erroneously treated as affecting such 
basis there was an erroneous omission from gross income of taxpayer A, a 
taxpayer who had title to the property at the time of the erroneously 
treated transaction, and from whom, immediately, taxpayer B, with 
respect to whom the determination is made, derived title. The basis of 
the property in taxpayer B's hands with respect to whom the 
determination is made is determined under section 1015(a) (relating to 
the basis of property acquired by gift).
    Example 3. In 1950 taxpayer A sold property acquired at a cost of 
$5,000 to taxpayer B for $10,000. In his return for 1950 taxpayer A 
failed to include the profit on such sale. In 1953 taxpayer B sold the 
property for $12,000, and in his return for 1953 reported a gain of 
$2,000 upon the sale, which is confirmed by a closing agreement executed 
in 1955. No adjustment is authorized with respect to the tax of taxpayer 
A for 1950, as he does not come within any of the three classes of 
taxpayers described in paragraph (b) of this section.
    Example 4. In 1950 a taxpayer who owned 100 shares of stock in 
Corporation Y received $1,000 from the corporation which amount the 
taxpayer reported on his return for 1950 as a taxable dividend. In 1952 
Corporation Y was completely liquidated and the taxpayer received in 
that year liquidating distributions totalling $8,000. In his return for 
1952 the taxpayer reported the receipt of the $8,000 and computed his 
gain or loss upon the liquidation by using as a basis the amount which 
he paid for the stock. The Commissioner maintained that the distribution 
in 1950 was a distribution out of capital and that in computing the 
taxpayer's gain or loss upon the liquidation in 1952, the basis of the 
stock should be reduced by the $1,000. This position is adopted in a 
closing agreement executed in 1955 with respect to the year 1952. An 
adjustment is authorized with respect to the year 1950 as the basis for 
computing gain or loss in 1952 depends upon the transaction in 1950, and 
in respect of the 1950 transaction (upon which the basis of the property 
depends) there was an erroneous inclusion in gross income of the 
taxpayer with respect to whom the determination is made.
    Example 5. In 1946 a taxpayer received 100 shares of stock of the X 
Corporation having a fair market value of $5,000, in exchange for shares 
of stock in the Y Corporation which

[[Page 637]]

he had acquired at a cost of $12,000. In his return for 1946 the 
taxpayer treated the exchange as one in which gain or loss was not 
recognizable. The taxpayer sold 50 shares of the X Corporation stock in 
1947 and in his return for that year treated such shares as having a 
$6,000 basis. In 1952, the taxpayer sold the remaining 50 shares of 
stock of the X Corporation for $7,500 and reported $1,500 gain in his 
return for 1952. After the expiration of the period of limitations on 
deficiency assessments and on refund claims for 1946 and 1947, the 
Commissioner asserted a deficiency for 1952 on the ground that the loss 
realized on the exchange in 1946 was erroneously treated as 
nonrecognizable, and the basis for computing gain upon the sale in 1952 
was $2,500, resulting in a gain of $5,000. The deficiency is sustained 
by the Tax Court in 1955. An adjustment is authorized with respect to 
the year 1946 as to the entire $7,000 loss realized on the exchange, as 
the Court's decision determines the basis of property, and in a prior 
transaction upon which such basis depends there was an erroneous 
nonrecognition of loss to the taxpayer with respect to whom the 
determination was made. No adjustment is authorized with respect to the 
year 1947 as the basis for computing gain upon the sale of the 50 shares 
in 1952 does not depend upon the transaction in 1947 but upon the 
transaction in 1946.

[T.D. 6500, 25 FR 12035, Nov. 26, 1960, as amended by T.D. 6617, 27 FR 
10824, Nov. 7, 1962]