[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 26, Volume 2]
[Revised as of April 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 26CFR1.141-14]

[Page 665-667]
 
                       TITLE 26--INTERNAL REVENUE
 
    CHAPTER I--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY 
                               (CONTINUED)
 
PART 1_INCOME TAXES--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 1.141-14  Anti-abuse rules.

    (a) Authority of Commissioner to reflect substance of transactions. 
If an issuer enters into a transaction or series of transactions with 
respect to one or more issues with a principal purpose of transferring 
to nongovernmental persons (other than as members of the general public) 
significant benefits of tax-exempt financing in a manner that is 
inconsistent with the purposes of section 141, the Commissioner may take 
any action to reflect the substance of the transaction or series of 
transactions, including--
    (1) Treating separate issues as a single issue for purposes of the 
private activity bond tests;
    (2) Reallocating proceeds to expenditures, property, use, or bonds;
    (3) Reallocating payments to use or proceeds;
    (4) Measuring private business use on a basis that reasonably 
reflects the economic benefit in a manner different than as provided in 
Sec. 1.141-3(g); and
    (5) Measuring private payments or security on a basis that 
reasonably reflects the economic substance in a manner different than as 
provided in Sec. 1.141-4.
    (b) Examples. The following examples illustrate the application of 
this section:
    Example 1. Reallocating proceeds to indirect use. City C issues 
bonds with proceeds of $20 million for the stated purpose of financing 
improvements to roads that it owns. As a part of the same plan of 
financing, however, C also agrees to make a loan of $7 million to 
Corporation M from its general revenues that it otherwise would have 
used for the road improvements. The interest rate of the loan 
corresponds to the interest rate on a portion of the issue. A principal 
purpose of the financing arrangement is to transfer to M significant 
benefits of the tax-exempt financing. Although C actually allocates all 
of the proceeds of the bonds to the road improvements, the Commissioner 
may reallocate a portion of the proceeds of the bonds to the loan to M 
because a principal purpose of the financing arrangement is to transfer 
to M significant benefits of tax-exempt financing in a manner that is 
inconsistent with the purposes of section 141. The bonds are private 
activity bonds because the issue meets the private loan financing test. 
The bonds also meet the private business tests. See also

[[Page 666]]

Sec. Sec. 1.141-3(a)(2), 1.141-4(a)(1), and 1.141-5(a), under which 
indirect use of proceeds and payments are taken into account.
    Example 2. Taking into account use of amounts derived from proceeds 
that would be otherwise disregarded. County B issues bonds with proceeds 
of $10 million to finance the purchase of land. On the issue date, B 
reasonably expects that it will be the sole user of the land. 
Subsequently, the federal government acquires the land for $3 million in 
a condemnation action. B uses this amount to make a loan to Corporation 
M. In addition, the interest rate on the loan reflects the tax-exempt 
interest rate on the bonds and thus is substantially less than a current 
market rate. A principal purpose of the arrangement is to transfer to M 
significant benefits of the tax-exempt financing. Although the 
condemnation action is not a deliberate action, the Commissioner may 
treat the condemnation proceeds as proceeds of the issue because a 
principal purpose of the arrangement is to transfer to M significant 
benefits of tax-exempt financing in a manner inconsistent with the 
purposes of section 141. The bonds are private activity bonds.
    Example 3. Measuring private business use on an alternative basis. 
City F issues bonds with a 30-year term to finance the acquisition of an 
industrial building having a remaining reasonably expected useful 
economic life of more than 30 years. On the issue date, F leases the 
building to Corporation G for 3 years. F reasonably expects that it will 
be the sole user of the building for the remaining term of the bonds. 
Because of the local market conditions, it is reasonably expected that 
the fair rental value of the industrial building will be significantly 
greater during the early years of the term of the bonds than in the 
later years. The annual rental payments are significantly less than fair 
market value, reflecting the interest rate on the bonds. The present 
value of these rental payments (net of operation and maintenance 
expenses) as of the issue date, however, is approximately 25 percent of 
the present value of debt service on the issue. Under Sec. 1.141-3, the 
issue does not meet the private business tests, because only 10 percent 
of the proceeds are used in a trade or business by a nongovernmental 
person. A principal purpose of the issue is to transfer to G significant 
benefits of tax-exempt financing in a manner inconsistent with the 
purposes of section 141. The method of measuring private business use 
over the reasonably expected useful economic life of financed property 
is for the administrative convenience of issuers of state and local 
bonds. In cases where this method is used in a manner inconsistent with 
the purposes of section 141, the Commissioner may measure private 
business use on another basis that reasonably reflects economic benefit, 
such as in this case on an annual basis. If the Commissioner measures 
private business use on an annual basis, the bonds are private activity 
bonds because the private payment test is met and more than 10 percent 
of the proceeds are used in a trade or business by a nongovernmental 
person.
    Example 4. Treating separate issues as a single issue. City D enters 
into a development agreement with Corporation T to induce T to locate 
its headquarters within D's city limits. Pursuant to the development 
agreement, in 1997 D will issue $20 million of its general obligation 
bonds (the 1997 bonds) to purchase land that it will grant to T. The 
development agreement also provides that, in 1998, D will issue $20 
million of its tax increment bonds (the 1998 bonds), secured solely by 
the increase in property taxes in a special taxing district. 
Substantially all of the property within the special taxing district is 
owned by T or D. T will separately enter into an agreement to guarantee 
the payment of tax increment to D in an amount sufficient to retire the 
1998 bonds. The proceeds of the 1998 bonds will be used to finance 
improvements owned and operated by D that will not give rise to private 
business use. Treated separately, the 1997 issue meets the private 
business use test, but not the private security or payment test; the 
1998 issue meets the private security or payment test, but not the 
private business use test. A principal purpose of the financing plan, 
including the two issues, is to transfer significant benefits of tax-
exempt financing to T for its headquarters. Thus, the 1997 issue and the 
1998 issue may be treated by the Commissioner as a single issue for 
purposes of applying the private activity bond tests. Accordingly, the 
bonds of both the 1997 issue and the 1998 issue may be treated as 
private activity bonds.
    Example 5. Reallocating proceeds. City E acquires an electric 
generating facility with a useful economic life of more than 40 years 
and enters into a 30-year take or pay contract to sell 30 percent of the 
available output to investor-owned utility M. E plans to use the 
remaining 70 percent of available output for its own governmental 
purposes. To finance the entire cost of the facility, E issues $30 
million of its series A taxable bonds at taxable interest rates and $70 
million series B bonds, which purport to be tax-exempt bonds, at tax-
exempt interest rates. E allocates all of M's private business use to 
the proceeds of the series A bonds and all of its own government use to 
the proceeds of the series B bonds. The series A bonds have a weighted 
average maturity of 15 years, while the series B bonds have a weighted 
average maturity of 26 years. M's payments under the take or pay 
contract are expressly determined by reference to 30 percent of M's 
total costs (that is, the sum of the debt service required to be paid on 
both the series A and the series B bonds and all other operating costs). 
The allocation of all of M's private business use to the series A bonds 
does

[[Page 667]]

not reflect economic substance because the series of transactions 
transfers to M significant benefits of the tax-exempt interest rates 
paid on the series B bonds. A principal purpose of the financing 
arrangement is to transfer to M significant benefits of the tax-exempt 
financing. Accordingly, the Commissioner may allocate M's private 
business use on a pro rata basis to both the series B bonds as well as 
the series A bonds, in which case the series B bonds are private 
activity bonds.
    Example 6. Allocations respected. The facts are the same as in 
Example 5, except that the debt service component of M's payments under 
the take or pay contract is based exclusively on the amounts necessary 
to pay the debt service on the taxable series A bonds. E's allocation of 
all of M's private business use to the series A bonds is respected 
because the series of transactions does not actually transfer benefits 
of tax-exempt interest rates to M. Accordingly, the series B bonds are 
not private activity bonds. The result would be the same if M's payments 
under the take or pay contract were based exclusively on fair market 
value pricing, rather than the tax-exempt interest rates on E's bonds. 
The result also would be the same if the series A bonds and the series B 
bonds had substantially equivalent weighted average maturities and E and 
M had entered into a customary contract providing for payments based on 
a ratable share of total debt service. E would not be treated by the 
Commissioner in any of these cases as entering into the contract with a 
principal purpose of transferring the benefits of tax-exempt financing 
to M in a manner inconsistent with the purposes of section 141.

[T.D. 8712, 62 FR 2301, Jan. 16, 1997]