[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: 26CFR1.168(j)-1T]

[Page 1071-1084]
 
                       TITLE 26--INTERNAL REVENUE
 
    CHAPTER I--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY 
                               (CONTINUED)
 
PART 1_INCOME TAXES--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 1.168(j)-1T  Questions and answers concerning tax-exempt entity 
leasing rules (temporary).

    The following questions and answers concern tax-exempt entity 
leasing under section 168(j) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as 
enacted by section 31 of the Tax Reform Act of 1984 (``TRA'') (Pub. L. 
98-369):

                  Consequences of Tax-Exempt Use Status

    Q-1. If recovery property is subject to the tax-exempt entity 
leasing provisions of section 168(j), how must the taxpayer compute the 
property's recovery deductions?
    A-1. The taxpayer must compute the property's recovery deductions in 
accordance with section 168(j) (1) and (2); that is, the taxpayer must 
use the straight line method and the specified recovery period. For 
property other than 18-year real property, the applicable recovery 
percentages for the specified recovery period are to be determined with 
reference to the tables contained in Prop. Treas. Reg. Sec. 1.168-
2(g)(3)(iv)(A). For 18-year real property for which a 40-year recovery 
period is required, the applicable recovery percentages are to be 
determined under the following table:

                          40-Year Straight Line Method (Assuming Mid-Month Convention)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                And the month in the first recovery year the property is placed in service is--
  If the recovery year is--  -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                1      2      3      4      5      6      7      8      9      10     11     12
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                    The applicable recovery percentage is--
                             --------
 1..........................    2.4    2.2    2.0    1.8    1.6    1.4    1.1    0.9    0.7    0.5    0.3    0.1
 2..........................    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5
 3..........................    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5
 4..........................    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5
 5..........................    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5
 6..........................    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5
 7..........................    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5
 8..........................    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5
 9..........................    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5
10..........................    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5
11..........................    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5
12..........................    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5
13..........................    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5
14..........................    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5
15..........................    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5
16..........................    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5
17..........................    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5
18..........................    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5
19..........................    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5
20..........................    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5
21..........................    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5
22..........................    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5
23..........................    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5
24..........................    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5
25..........................    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5
26..........................    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5

[[Page 1072]]


27..........................    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5
28..........................    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5
29..........................    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5
30..........................    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5
31..........................    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5
32..........................    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5
33..........................    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5
34..........................    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5
35..........................    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5
36..........................    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5
37..........................    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5
38..........................    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5
39..........................    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5
40..........................    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5    2.5
41..........................    0.1    0.3    0.5    0.7    0.9    1.1    1.4    1.6    1.8    2.0    2.2    2.4
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Q-2. If recovery property that was placed in service after December 
31, 1980 by a taxable entity subsequently becomes tax-exempt use 
property, how are such property's cost recovery deductions under section 
168 affected?
    A-2. A change to tax-exempt use property, as defined in section 
168(j)(3), will cause the cost recovery deductions under the accelerated 
cost recovery system (ACRS) to be recomputed. The allowable recovery 
deduction for the taxable year in which the change occurs (and for 
subsequent taxable years) must be determined as if the property had 
originally been tax-exempt use property. Proper adjustment must be made 
under the principles of Prop. Treas. Reg. Sec. 1.168-2(j)(3)(i)(B) to 
account for the difference between the deductions allowable with respect 
to the property prior to the year of change and those which would have 
been allowable had the taxpayer used the recovery period and method for 
tax-exempt use property under section 168(j) (1) and (2). However, no 
adjustment is made pursuant to the provisions of this A-2 if section 
168(j)(2)(C) applies, that is, if the taxpayer had selected a longer 
recovery period in the year the property was placed in service than the 
recovery period prescribed for such property under section 168(j)(1).

    Example (1). On July 1, 1983, X, a calendar year taxpayer, places in 
service 5-year recovery property with an unadjusted basis of $100. For 
1983, X's allowable deduction is $15 (i.e., .15 x $100). In 1984, the 
property becomes tax-exempt use property. Under section 168(j), assume 
the prescribed recovery period is 12 years. For 1984 (and subsequent 
taxable years), X's allowable deduction is determined as if the property 
had been tax-exempt use property since 1983, that is, the year it was 
placed in service. Thus, taxable year 1984 is the property's second 
recovery year of its 12-year recovery period. Additionally, X must 
account for the excess allowable recovery deduction of $11 (i.e., the 
difference between the recovery allowance for 1983 ($15) and the 
allowance for that year had the property been tax-exempt use property 
($4)) in accordance with the principles of Prop. Treas. Reg. Sec. 
1.168-2(j)(3)(i)(B). Thus, the recovery allowances in 1984 and 1985 are 
$7.97, determined as follows:

Unadjusted basis multiplied by the applicable recovery             $9.00
 percentage for second recovery year ($100x.09................
Excess allowable recovery deduction multiplied by the              -1.03
 applicable recovery percentage for second recovery year
 divided by the sum of the remaining unused applicable
 percentages for tax-exempt use property existing as of the
 taxable year of change (1984) (($11x.09)/.96)................
                                                               ---------
Difference--allowable deduction for 1984......................     $7.97
                                                               =========
Unadjusted basis multiplied by the applicable recovery             $9.00
 percentage for third recovery year ($100x.09)................
Excess allowable recovery deduction multiplied by the              -1.03
 applicable recovery percentage for third recovery year
 divided by the sum of the remaining unused applicable
 percentages for tax-exempt use property existing as of the
 taxable year of change (1984) (($11x.09)/.96)................
                                                               ---------

[[Page 1073]]


Difference--allowable deduction for 1985......................     $7.97
                                                               =========



Additionally, X must make a similar adjustment for the taxable years 
1986 through 1995, that is, his fourth through thirteenth recovery 
years.
    Example (2). Assume the same facts as in Example (1) except that in 
1983, X elected under section 168 (b) (3) with respect to the 5-year 
property to use the optional recovery percentages over a 25-year 
recovery period. Based on these facts, the provisions of this A-2 do not 
apply.

                  Definition of Tax-Exempt Use Property

               Mixed Leases of Real and Personal Property

    Q-3. How is a mixed lease of real property and personal property 
(e.g., a building with furniture) to be treated for purposes of applying 
the rules of section 168(j)(3) defining which property constitutes tax-
exempt use property?
    A-3. The general rule is that 18-year real property and property 
other than 18-year real property are tested separately to determine 
whether each constitutes tax-exempt use property. However, if a lease of 
section 1245 class property is incidental to a lease of 18-year real 
property, and the 18-year real property is not tax-exempt use property, 
then the section 1245 class property also does not constitute tax-exempt 
use property. A lease of section 1245 class property will be considered 
incidental if the adjusted basis of all section 1245 class property 
leased in the same transaction is 1 percent or less of the adjusted 
basis of all 18-year real property leased in such transaction.

          Buildings Which Are Partially Tax-Exempt Use Property

    Q-4. If part of a building is leased to a tax-exempt entity in a 
disqualified lease and part of the building is leased other than to a 
tax-exempt entity in a disqualified lease, to what extent do the tax-
exempt entity leasing rules apply to such building?
    A-4. The taxpaper must determine the amount of the building's 
unadjusted basis that is properly allocable to the portion of the 
building that is tax-exempt use property; the section 168(j) rules apply 
to the allocated amount. Solely for purposes of determining what 
percentage of the building's basis is subject to the tax-exempt entity 
leasing rules, no part of the basis is allocated to common areas.

    Example. A constructs a 3-story building in 1984 at a cost of 
$900,000. Each floor consists of 30,000 square feet. The only common 
area (10,000 square feet) in the building is on the first floor. A 
leases the first floor (other than the common areas) to a firm that is 
not a tax-exempt entity. A leases the top two floors to a tax-exempt 
entity in a 25-year lease. The top two floors constitute tax-exempt use 
property. Assume that square footage is the appropriate method for 
allocating basis in this case. Thus, A must allocate $675,000 of the 
$900,000 basis to the tax-exempt use portion, determined as follows:
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TC05OC91.040


A must compute his recovery deductions on this portion of the basis 
($675,000) in accordance with the rules of section 168(j) (1) and (2).

                         Requirement of a Lease

    Q-5. Can the use of property by a party other than a tax-exempt 
entity result in the property being treated as tax-exempt use property 
within the meaning of section 168(j)(3)?
    A-5. Yes, if based on all the facts and circumstances it is more 
appropriate to characterize the transaction as a lease to a tax-exempt 
entity. A transaction can be characterized as a lease to a tax-exempt 
entity under section 168(j)(6)(A), which provides that ``the

[[Page 1074]]

term `lease' includes any grant of a right to use property''; or under 
the service contract rules of section 7701(e). See Q&A 18 for 
rules regarding service contracts.

    Example. A trust is executed on January 1, 1984, to create a pooled 
income fund (P) that meets the requirements of section 642(c)(5). A 
university (U) that is tax-exempt under section 501(c)(3) is the 
remainderman of the pooled income fund. P's purpose is to construct and 
operate an athletic center on land adjacent to U's campus. Construction 
of the athletic center, which has a 50-year useful life, was completed 
and the center was placed in service on February 1, 1985. The athletic 
center is managed for a fee by M, an unrelated taxable organization 
which operates athletic facilities open to the public. Office space at 
the facility is occupied rent-free by both the U athletic department and 
M. Scheduling of activities at the center is handled jointly by members 
of U's athletic department and M. General operating expenses of the 
athletic center are paid by P. Although the athletic center is open to 
the public for a membership fee, the majority of members are U's 
students who pay membership fees as part of their tuition. These fees 
are remitted by U to P. This arrangement is in substance a grant to U of 
a right to use the facility, and therefore a lease to U under section 
168(j)(6)(A). U, as remainderman, will have obtained title to the entire 
building when the last pooled income fund donor dies. This arrangement 
is a disqualified lease because either (1) U has the equivalent of a 
fixed price purchase option under section 168(j)(3)(B)(ii)(II) (if U 
receives title as remainderman before the end of the useful life of the 
building), or (2) the lease has a term in excess of 20 years under 
section 168(j)(3)(B)(ii)(III) (if U does not receive title as 
remainderman until 20 years have elapsed), or both. Therefore, the 
allowable recovery deductions (without regard to salvage value) must be 
computed in accordance with section 168(j) (1) and (2). In addition, 
because this arrangement is treated as a lease under section 168(j), the 
facility is used by U for purposes of section 48(a)(4), and thus no 
investment tax credit is permitted with respect to any portion of the 
facility. This arrangement also may be treated as a lease to U for all 
purposes of chapter 1 of the Internal Revenue Code under section 7701 
(e).

              ``More Than 35 Percent of the Property'' Test

    Q-6. How is the percentage of 18-year real property leased to a tax-
exempt entity in a disqualified lease to be determined for purposes of 
the ``more than 35 percent of the property'' test of section 
168(j)(3)(B)(iii)?
    A-6. The phrase ``more than 35 percent of the property'' means more 
than 35 percent of the net rentable floor space of the property. The net 
rentable floor space in a building does not include the common areas of 
the building, regardless of the terms of the lease. For purposes of the 
``more than 35 percent of the property'' rule, two or more buildings 
will be treated as separate properties unless they are part of the same 
project, in which case they will be treated as one property. Two or more 
buildings will be treated as part of the same project if the buildings 
are constructed, under a common plan, within a reasonable time of each 
other on the same site and will be used in an integrated manner.
    Q-7. Are disqualified leases to different tax-exempt entities 
(regardless of whether they are related) aggregated in determining 
whether 18-year real property is tax-exempt use property?
    A-7. Yes.

    Example. A tax-exempt entity participates in industrial development 
bond financing for the acquisition of a new building by a taxable 
entity. The tax-exempt entity leases 60 percent of the net rentable 
floor space in the building for 5 years. Sixty percent of the building 
is tax-exempt use property. If the same tax-exempt entity leased only 19 
percent of the net rentable floor space in the building for 5 years, no 
portion of the building would be tax-exempt use property because not 
more than 35 percent of the property is leased to a tax-exempt entity 
pursuant to a disqualified lease. If such tax-exempt entity leased only 
19 percent of the net rentable floor space in the building for 5 years 
and another tax-exempt entity leased 20 percent of the net rentable 
floor space in the building for a term in excess of 20 years (or a 
related entity leased 20 percent of the building for 5 years), 39 
percent of the building would be tax-exempt use property. See A-4 
regarding the determination of the amount of the building's unadjusted 
basis that is properly allocable to the portion of the building that is 
tax-exempt use property.

                       ``Predominantly Used'' Test

    Q-8. What does the term ``predominantly used'' mean for purposes of 
the section 168(j)(3)(D) exception to the tax-exempt use property rules?
    A-8. ``Predominantly used'' means that for more than 50 percent of 
the time used, as determined for each taxable year, the real or personal 
property

[[Page 1075]]

is used in an unrelated trade or business the income of which is subject 
to tax under section 511 (determined without regard to the debt-financed 
income rules of section 514). If only a portion of property is 
predominantly used in an unrelated trade or business, the remainder may 
nevertheless be tax-exempt use property.
    Q-9. How is the ``predominantly used'' test of section 168(j)(3)(D) 
to be applied to a building?
    A-9. The ``predominantly used'' test is to be applied to a building 
in the following manner:
    (i) Identify the discrete portions (excluding common areas) of the 
building which are leased to a tax-exempt entity in a disqualified lease 
under section 168(j)(3)(B)(ii). A discrete portion of a building is an 
area physically separated from other areas. An area is physically 
separated from other areas if separated by permanent walls or by 
partitions serving as room dividers if such partitions remain in place 
throughout the taxable year. A discrete portion can be the entire 
building, floors, wings, offices, rooms, or a combination thereof. For 
example, a building whose entire internal space consists of a single 
large room used as a gymnasium has only one discrete portion. On the 
other hand, if the building has 3 stories with 10 offices on each floor, 
each of the 30 offices is a discrete portion.
    (ii) Determine whether each discrete portion is predominantly used 
in an unrelated trade or business subject to tax under section 511. See 
A-8 for the rules regarding how to make this determination.
    (iii) Once the discrete portions of the building that constitute 
tax-exempt use property have been identified, an appropriate allocation 
of basis must be made to such discrete portions. See A-4 for rules 
regarding how to make such allocation.
    (iv) The application of these rules is illustrated by the following 
example:

    Example. A building, constructed in 1985, is leased in its entirety 
to a tax-exempt entity (E) pursuant to a 25-year lease. The building has 
25,000 square feet of net rentable floor space and consists of an 
auditorium (15,000 square feet), a retail shop (10,000 square feet), 
plus common area of 5,000 square feet. E uses the auditorium 80 percent 
of the time in its exempt activity and 20 percent of the time in an 
unrelated trade or business subject to tax under section 511. The retail 
shop is used 90 percent of the time in an unrelated trade or business 
subject to tax under section 511 and 10 percent of the time in an exempt 
activity. Thus, the auditorium is tax-exempt use property; the retail 
shop is not. An appropriate allocation of basis to the auditorium must 
be made. See A-4.

                     Definition of Tax-Exempt Entity

    Q-10. What elections must be made in order to avoid the ``5-year 
lookback'' rule of section 168(j)(4)(E)(i)?
    A-10. Only organizations which were exempt from tax under section 
501(a) as organizations described in section 501(c)(12) (and which are 
no longer tax-exempt) may avoid the 5-year lookback rule of section 
168(j)(4)(E)(i). In order to avoid the 5-year lookback rule with respect 
to any property, two elections are required. First, the organization 
must elect not to be exempt from tax under section 501(a) during the 
tax-exempt use period (as defined in section 168(j)(4)(E)(ii)(II)) with 
respect to the property. Second, the organization must elect to be taxed 
on the exempt arbitrage profits as provided in section 31(g)(16) of the 
Tax Reform Act of 1984. See Temp. Treas. Reg. Sec. 301.9100-6T(a) for 
the time and manner of making these elections. These elections, once 
made, are irrevocable.
    Q-11. Does the term ``tax-exempt entity'' include tax-exempt plans 
of deferred compensation and similar arrangements?
    A-11. Yes. For purposes of section 168 (j), the term ``tax-exempt 
entity'' includes trusts or other entities that are tax-qualified under 
section 401 (a), individual retirement accounts, simplified employee 
pensions, and other tax-exempt arrangements described in subchapter D of 
chapter 1 of the Internal Revenue Code.

               Special Rules for High Technology Equipment

    Q-12. What effect do the tax-exempt entity leasing provisions have 
on ``qualified technological equipment''?
    A-12. ``Qualified technological equipment'' which is leased to a 
tax-exempt entity for a term of 5 years or less shall

[[Page 1076]]

not constitute tax-exempt use property. If ``qualified technological 
equipment'' which is leased to a tax-exempt entity for a term of more 
than 5 years constitutes tax-exempt use property (as defined in section 
168(j)(3)) and is not used predominantly outside the United States, the 
rules of section 168(j) (1) and (2) apply except that the recovery 
period to be used for such equipment shall be 5 years regardless of the 
length of the lease term. For purposes of section 168(j)(5), ``qualified 
technological equipment'' means (1) any computer or peripheral 
equipment, (2) any high technology telephone station equipment installed 
on the customer's premises, and (3) any high technology medical 
equipment. For definitions of these terms, see A-13 through A-16.
    Q-13. What is a ``computer'' as that term is used in section 
168(j)(5)(C)(i)(I)?
    A-13. Computers are electronically activated devices that are 
programmable by the user and that are capable of accepting information, 
applying prescribed processes to it, and supplying the results of those 
processes with or without human intervention. Computers consist of a 
central processing unit containing extensive storage, logic, arithmetic, 
and control capabilities. A computer does not include any equipment 
which is an integral part of property that is not a user-programmable 
device, any video games or other devices used by the user primarily for 
amusement or entertainment purposes, or any typewriters, calculators, 
adding or accounting machines, copiers, duplicating equipment, or 
similar equipment. A computer does not include any equipment that is not 
tangible personal property.
    Q-14. What is ``peripheral equipment'' as that term is used in 
section 168(j)(5)(C)(i)(I)?
    A-14. Peripheral equipment means tangible personal property such as 
auxiliary machines, whether on-line or off-line, that are designed to be 
placed under the control of the central processing unit of the computer. 
Some examples of peripheral equipment are: card readers, card punches, 
magnetic tape feeds, high speed printers, optical character readers, 
tape cassettes, mass storage units, paper tape equipment, keypunches, 
data entry devices, teleprinters, terminals, tape drives, disc drives, 
disc files, disc packs, visual image projector tubes, card sorters, 
plotters, and collators. Peripheral equipment does not include equipment 
not included in Asset Depreciation Range (ADR) 00.12 listed in section 3 
of Rev. Proc. 83-35, 1983-1 C.B. 745, 746. Peripheral equipment also 
does not include any equipment that is an integral part of property that 
is not a user-programmable device, any video games or other devices used 
by the user primarily for amusement or entertainment purposes, or any 
typewriters, calculators, adding or accounting machines, copiers, 
duplicating equipment, or similar equipment.
    Q-15. What does ``high technology telephone station equipment'' mean 
as that term is used in section 168(j)(5)(C)(i)(II)?
    A-15. High technology telephone station equipment includes only 
tangible personal property described in asset depreciation range (ADR) 
class 48.13 listed in section 3 of Rev. Proc. 83-35, 1983-1 C.B. 745, 
758 that has a high technology content and which, because of such high 
technology content, can reasonably be expected to become obsolete before 
the expiration of its physical useful life. For example, telephone 
booths and telephones which include only a standard dialing feature are 
not high technology equipment. However, telephones with features such as 
an abbreviated dialing short program, an automatic callback, or 
conference call feature may qualify as high technology equipment. High 
technology telephone station equipment may include terminal equipment 
including such extra features but not terminal equipment used in 
conjunction with features offered through central office capacity. There 
are no current plans to utilize the regulatory authority provided in 
section 168(j)(5)(C)(iv).
    Q-16. What is ``high technology medical equipment'' as that term is 
used in section 168 (j)(5)(C)(i)(III)?
    A-16. High technology medical equipment is any electronic, 
electromechanical, or computer-based high technology equipment which is 
tangible personal property used in the

[[Page 1077]]

screening, monitoring, observation, diagnosis, or treatment of human 
patients in a laboratory, medical, or hospital environment. High 
technology medical equipment includes only equipment that has a high 
technology content and which, because of such high technology content, 
can reasonably be expected to become obsolete before the expiration of 
its physical useful life. High technology medical equipment may include 
computer axial tomography (C.A.T.) scanners, nuclear magnetic resonance 
equipment, clinical chemistry analyzers, drug monitors, diagnostic 
ultrasound scanners, nuclear cameras, radiographic and fluoroscopic 
systems, Holter monitors, and bedside monitors. Incidental use of any 
such equipment for othe purposes, such as research, will not prevent it 
from qualifying as high technology medical equipment. There are no 
current plans to utilize the regulatory authority provided in section 
168(j)(5)(C)(iv).

                               Lease Term

    Q-17. What is included in determining the length of a lease term?
    A-17. (i) The lease term starts when the property is first made 
available to the lessee under the lease. The lease term includes not 
only the stated duration, but also any additional period of time which 
is within the ``realistic contemplation of the parties at the time the 
property is first put into service. Hokanson v. Commissioner, 730 F.2d 
1245, 1248 (9th Cir. 1984). A subsequent period of time is included in 
the term of the original lease if the circumstances indicate that the 
parties, upon entering into the original lease, had informally agreed 
that there would be an extension of the original lease.
    (ii) With respect to personal property, the lease term includes all 
periods for which the tax-exempt lessee or a related party (as defined 
under section 168(j)(7)) has a legally enforceable option to renew the 
lease, or the lessor has a legally enforceable option to compel its 
renewal by the tax-exempt entity or a related party. This is true 
regardless of the renewal terms of the lease agreement or whether the 
lease is in fact renewed.
    (iii) With respect to real property, the lease term includes all 
periods for which the tax-exempt lessee or a related party (as defined 
under section 168(j)(7)) has a legally enforceable option to renew the 
lease, or the lessor has a legally enforceable option to compel its 
renewal by the tax-exempt entity or a related party, unless the option 
to renew is at fair market value, determined at the time of renewal. The 
Hokanson facts and circumstances test (see (i) above) may cause the term 
of a fair market value renewal option to be treated as part of the 
original lease term.
    (iv) Successive leases that are part of the same transaction or a 
series of related transactions concerning the same or substantially 
similar property shall be treated as one lease. This rule applies if at 
substantially the same time or as part of one arrangement the parties 
enter into multiple leases covering the same or substantially similar 
property, each having a different term. If so, then the original lease 
term will be treated as running through the term of the lease that has 
the last expiration date of the multiple leases. The multiple lease rule 
will not apply merely because the parties enter into a new lease at fair 
market rental value at the end of the original lease term.
    (v) The application of the above rules is illustrated by the 
following examples:

    Example (1). On December 30, 1984, X, a taxable corporation, and Y, 
a tax-exempt entity, enter into a requirements contract for a period of 
3 years. The requirements contract sets the terms and conditions under 
which X and Y will do business on those occasions when X actually leases 
items of personal property to Y. The requirements contract imposes no 
obligation on either party to actually enter into a lease agreement. 
Pursuant to this requirements contract, on January 1, 1985, X and Y 
enter into three separate leases. Under the leases, Y obtained the use 
of three identical items of personal property, each for a term of six 
months beginning on January 1, 1985. On March 1, 1985, Y entered into a 
fourth lease for the use of a fourth item of personal property 
substantially similar to the other three items for a term of 20 months 
beginning on that date. The mere fact that all 4 leases were entered 
into pursuant to the same requirements contract and involved the same or 
substantially similar property does not require aggregation of the

[[Page 1078]]

terms of such leases under section 168(j)(6)(B).
    Example (2). Assume the same facts as in example (1) except that, 
instead of the 4 leases entered into in example (1), on January 1, 1985, 
pursuant to the requirements contract, X and Y enter into a lease for an 
item of personal property for one year. On January 10, 1986, after the 
end of the one-year lease term, X and Y enter into a second lease with 
respect to the same or substantially similar equipment. Assuming that 
the requirements contract itself is not a lease and assuming that the 
parties did not have any informal or implicit understanding (other than 
the general expectation of doing some business in the future) to enter 
into the second lease when the first lease was entered into, these two 
leases are not aggregated. The mere fact that the parties entered into 
two leases under the requirements contract does not result in the 
application of the section 168(j)(6)(B) rules for successive leases.
    Example (3). The facts are the same as in example (2) except that 
the parties did have an understanding, informal or otherwise, at the 
time of the first lease that they would enter into a second lease of the 
same personal property. The terms of the leases are aggregated.
    Example (4). The facts are the same as in example (2) except that, 
instead of the leases entered into in example (2), on January 1, 1985, X 
and Y enter into two separate leases, each for a term of one year. One 
lease is for the period beginning on January 1, 1985 and ending on 
December 31, 1985. The other lease is for the period beginning on 
January 1, 1986 and ending on December 31, 1986. Both leases involve the 
same or substantially similar personal property. Under the successive 
lease rule, the terms of both leases are aggregated for purposes of 
determining the term of either lease under section 168(j)(6)(B). This 
result occurs because the two leases were entered into as part of the 
same transaction, and they relate to the same or substantially similar 
personal property.

                         Service Contract Issues

    Q-18. How is the treatment of service contracts affected by the 
service contract rules set forth in section 7701(e)?
    A-18. If a contract which purports to be a service contract is 
treated as a lease under section 7701(e), such contract is to be treated 
as a lease for all purposes of Chapter 1 of the Internal Revenue Code 
(including, for example, section 168(j) and section 48(a) (4) and (5)).
    Q-19. Does a contract to provide heating, maintenance, etc. services 
in low-income housing come within the low-income housing exception in 
section 7701(e)(5) to the service contract rules set forth in section 
7701(e)?
    A-19. No. Although certain low-income housing operated by or for an 
organization described in paragraphs (3) or (4) of section 501(c) is not 
subject to the service contract rules in section 7701(e), a contract, 
for instance, to provide heating services to low-income housing units, 
such as by installing and operating a furnace, does not constitute 
``low-income housing'' within the meaning of section 7701(e)(5). Thus, 
the rules of section 7701(e) apply to such contracts in determining 
whether they are properly treated as leases.

                           Partnership Issues

    Q-20. Do the provisions applicable to property leased to 
partnerships, set forth in section 168(j)(8), and the provisions 
applicable to property owned by partnerships, set forth in section 
168(j)(9), apply to pass-through entities other than partnerships?
    A-20. Yes. Rules similar to those provided in paragraphs (8), 
(9)(A), (9)(B), and (9)(C) of section 168(j) and those provided in Q & 
A's 21-26 apply to pass-through entities other than partnerships.
    Q-21. What rules apply to property owned by a partnership in which 
one or more partners is a tax-exempt entity?
    A-21. If property is owned by a partnership having both taxable and 
tax-exempt entities as partners, and any allocation to a tax-exempt 
entity partner is not a ``qualified allocation'' under section 
168(j)(9)(B), then such entity's proportionate share of the property is 
to be treated as tax-exempt use property for all purposes. However, the 
property will not be tax-exempt use property if it is predominantly used 
by the partnership in an activity which, with respect to the tax-exempt 
entity, is an unrelated trade or business. An activity is an unrelated 
trade or business with respect to a tax-exempt entity if such entity's 
distributive share of the partnership's gross income from the activity 
is includible in computing its unrelated business taxable income under 
section 512(c) (determined without regard to the debt-financed income

[[Page 1079]]

rules of section 514). A tax-exempt entity partner's proportionate share 
of property of a partnership equals such partner's share of that item of 
the partnership's income or gain (excluding income or gain allocated 
under section 704(c)) in which the tax-exempt entity has the highest 
share. If the tax-exempt entity partner's share of any item of income or 
gain (excluding income or gain allocated under section 704(c)) may vary 
during the period it is a partner, the previous sentence shall be 
applied with reference to the highest share of any such item that it may 
receive at any time during such period. The application of these rules 
is illustrated by the following example:

    Example. A partnership (P) operates a factory, which consists of a 
building and various items of machinery. P has one tax-exempt entity (E) 
as a partner, and E's proportionate share is 10 percent (i.e., 10 
percent is the largest share of any item of income or gain that E may 
receive during the time E is a partner). Unless P's allocations to E are 
qualified under section 168(j)(9)(B), 10 percent of each item of 
partnership property (including the building) is tax-exempt use 
property, notwithstanding the 35 percent threshold test of section 
168(j)(3)(B)(iii) that is otherwise applicable to 18-year real property. 
However, the property will not be tax-exempt use property if it is 
predominantly used by the partnership in an activity which, with respect 
to E, is an unrelated trade or business (determined without regard to 
the debt-financed income rules of section 514).

    Q-22. What consititutes a ``qualified allocation'' under section 
168(j)(9)(B)?
    A-22. (i) A ``qualified allocation'' means any allocation to a tax-
exempt entity which is consistent with such entity's being allocated the 
same share (i.e., the identical percentage) of each and every item of 
partnership income, gain, loss, deduction, credit, and basis during the 
entire period such entity is a partner. Except as provided in A-23, an 
allocation is not qualified if it does not have substantial economic 
effect under section 704(b). However, for purposes of the two preceding 
sentences, items allocated under section 704(c) (relating to contributed 
property) are not taken into account. An allocation is not a ``qualified 
allocation'' under section 168(j)(9)(B) if the partnership agreement 
provides for, or the partners have otherwise formally or informally 
agreed to, any change (regardless of whether such change is contingent 
upon the happening of one or more events) in the tax-exempt entity's 
distributive share of income, gain, loss, deduction, credit, or basis at 
any time during the entire period the tax-exempt entity is a partner.
    (ii) A change in a tax-exempt entity's distributive share of income, 
gain, loss, deduction, credit, or basis which occurs as a result of a 
sale or redemption of a partnership interest (or portion thereof) or a 
contribution of cash or property to the partnership shall be disregarded 
in determining whether the partnership allocations are qualified, 
provided that such transaction is based on fair market value at the time 
of the transaction and that the allocations are qualified after the 
change. For this purpose, the consideration determined by the parties 
dealing at arm's length and with adverse interests normally will be 
deemed to satisfy the fair market value requirement. In addition, a 
change in a tax-exempt entity's distributive share which occurs as a 
result of a partner's default (other than a prearranged default) under 
the terms of the partnership agreement will be disregarded, provided 
that the allocations are qualified after the change, and that the change 
does not have the effect of avoiding the restrictions of section 
168(j)(9). Any of the above-described transactions between existing 
partners (and parties related to them) will be closely scrutinized.

    Example (1). A, a taxable entity, and B, a tax-exempt entity, form a 
partnership in 1985. A contributes $800,000 to the partnership; B 
contributes $200,000. The partnership agreement allocates 95 percent of 
each item of income, gain, loss, deduction, credit, and basis to A; B's 
share of each of these items is 5 percent. Liquidation proceeds are, 
throughout the term of the partnership, to be distributed in accordance 
with the partner's capital account balances, and any partner with a 
deficit in his capital account following the distribution of liquidation 
proceeds is required to restore the amount of such deficit to the 
partnership. Assuming that these allocations have substantial economic 
effect within the meaning of section 704(b)(2), they are qualified 
because B's distributive share of each item of income, gain, loss, 
deduction, credit, and basis will remain the same during the entire 
period that B is

[[Page 1080]]

a partner. The fact that the liquidation proceeds may be distributed in 
a ratio other than 95 percent/5 percent does not cause the allocations 
not to be qualified.
    Example (2). A, B, and E are members of a partnership formed on July 
1, 1984. On that date the partnership places in service a building and 
section 1245 class property. A and B are taxable entities; E is a tax-
exempt entity. The partnership agreement provides that during the first 
5 years of the partnership, A and B are each allocated 40 percent of 
each item of income, gain, loss, deduction, credit, and basis; E is 
allocated 20 percent. Thereafter, A, B, and E are each allocated 33\1/3\ 
percent of each item of income, gain, loss, deduction, credit, and 
basis. Assume that these allocations meet the substantial economic 
effect test of section 704(b)(2) and E's distributive share of the 
partnership's income is not unrelated trade or business income subject 
to tax under section 511. The allocations to E are not qualified 
allocations under section 168(j)(9)(B) because E's distributive share of 
partnership items does not remain the same during the entire period that 
E is a partner in the partnership. Thus, 33\1/3\ percent of the building 
and 33\1/3\ percent of the section 1245 class property are tax-exempt 
use property from the time each is placed in service by the partnership 
and are thus subject to the cost recovery rules of section 168(j) (1) 
and (2). In addition, no investment tax credit is allowed for 33\1/3\ 
percent of the section 1245 class property because of section 48(a)(4).

    Q-23. In determining whether allocations constitute qualified 
allocations, what rules are applied to test allocations that are not 
governed by the substantial economic effect rules?
    A-23. A-22 provides the general rules to be used in determining 
whether an allocation is a qualified allocation, including the rule that 
the allocation must have substantial economic effect. However, certain 
allocations are not governed by the substantial economic effect rules 
(e.g., an allocation of basis of an oil and gas property is generally 
governed by section 613A(c)(7)(D), rather than section 704(b)), and 
other allocations cannot satisfy the substantial economic effect rules 
(e.g., allocations of credits, allocations of deduction and loss 
attributable to nonrecourse debt, and allocations of percentage 
depletion in excess of basis). Since allocations in either of these 
categories cannot be tested under the substantial economic effect test, 
these allocations, in order to be qualified, must comply with the 
relevant Code or regulation section that governs the particular 
allocation (e.g., in the case of an allocation of basis of an oil and 
gas property, section 613A(c)(7)(D)).
    Q-24. Will the Internal Revenue Service issue letter rulings on the 
issue of whether an allocation is a ``qualified allocation'' for 
purposes of section 168(j)(9)?
    A-24. The Internal Revenue Service will accept requests for rulings 
on the question of whether an allocation is a ``qualified allocation'' 
for purposes of section 168(j)(9). Such requests should be submitted in 
accordance with the appropriate revenue procedure. One requirement of a 
qualified allocation is that such allocation must have substantial 
economic effect under section 704(b)(2). Currently, the Service will not 
rule on the question of whether an allocation has substantial economic 
effect under section 704(b)(2). Therefore, unless and until this policy 
is changed, a ruling request regarding a qualified allocation must 
contain a representation that the subject allocation has substantial 
economic effect (or complies with A-23, if applicable).
    Q-25. Do priority cash distributions which constitute guaranteed 
payments under section 707(c) disqualify an otherwise qualified 
allocation?
    A-25. Priority cash distributions to partners which constitute 
guaranteed payments will not disqualify an otherwise qualified 
allocation if the priority cash distributions are reasonable in amount 
(e.g., equal to the Federal short-term rate described in section 
1274(d)) and are made in equal priorities to all partners in proportion 
to their capital in the partnership. Other guaranteed payments will be 
closely scrutinized and, in appropriate cases, will disqualify an 
otherwise qualified allocation.

    Example. A and B form Partnership AB to operate a manufacturing 
business. A is a tax-exempt entity; B is a taxable person. A contributes 
$500,000 to the partnership; B contributes $100,000. The partnership 
agreement provides that A and B are each entitled to cash distributions 
each year, in equal priority, in an amount equal to 8 percent of their 
capital contribution. Assume that these payments are reasonable in 
amount and constitute guaranteed payments under

[[Page 1081]]

section 707(c). Without taking into consideration the guaranteed 
payments, all allocations constitute qualified allocations under section 
168(j)(9)(B) and A-22. These guaranteed payments will not disqualify 
such allocations.

    Q-26. Can property be treated as tax-exempt use property under both 
the general rule of section 168(j)(3) and the partnership provisions of 
section 168(j)(9)?
    A-26. Yes. For example, a tax-exempt entity may be a partner in a 
partnership that owns a building 60 percent of which is tax-exempt use 
property because it is leased to an unrelated tax-exempt entity under a 
25-year lease. The status of the remaining 40 percent depends on whether 
or not allocations under the partnership agreement are qualified under 
section 168(j)(9). If the allocations are not qualified under section 
168(j)(9), the tax-exempt entity's proportionate share (as determined 
under section 168(j)(9)(C)) of the remaining 40 percent will be tax-
exempt use property. For example, if the tax-exempt entity's 
proportionate share is 30 percent, then 12 percent of the remaining 40 
percent (i.e., .30 times .40) is tax-exempt use property and a total of 
72 percent of the property (60 percent +12 percent) is tax-exempt use 
property.

                        Effective Date Questions

    Q-27. Does an amendment to a lease (or sublease) to a tax-exempt 
entity of property which, pursuant to the effective date provisions of 
section 31(g) of TRA, is not subject to section 168(j) cause such 
property to be subject to the provisions of section 168(j)?
    A-27. An amendment to such a lease (or sublease) does not cause such 
property to be subject to the provisions of section 168(j) unless the 
amendment increases the term of the lease (or sublease). However, if the 
amendment increases the amount of property subject to the lease, the 
additional property must be tested independently under the effective 
date provisions of section 31(g) of TRA. See A-31 for special rules 
regarding improvements to property.

    Example. On May 1, 1983, X, a taxable entity, and E, a tax-exempt 
entity, enter into a lease whereby X will lease to E the top 4 floors of 
a ten-story building for a lease term of 25 years. In 1985, the lease is 
amended to provide that E will lease an additional floor for the balance 
of the lease term. At that time the annual rent due under the lease is 
increased. Pursuant to the provisions of section 31(g)(2)(A) of TRA, 
section 168(j) does not apply to the lease to E of the top 4 floors of 
the building. Assuming that no other provision of section 31(g) of TRA 
provides otherwise, the floor added to the lease in 1985 is subject to 
the provisions of section 168(j).

    Q-28. If property which is not subject to section 168(j) by virtue 
of the effective date provisions of section 31(g) of TRA is sold, 
subject to the lease to the tax-exempt entity, what are the 
consequences?
    A-28. Property to which section 168(j) does not apply by virtue of 
the effective date provisions set forth in section 31(g) (2), (3), and 
(4) of TRA will not become subject to section 168(j) merely by reason of 
a transfer of the property subject to the lease by the lessor (or a 
transfer of the contract to acquire, construct, reconstruct, or 
rehabilitate the property), so long as the lessee (or party obligated to 
lease) does not change. For purposes of the preceding sentence, the term 
``transfer'' includes the sale-leaseback by a taxable lessor of its 
interest in the property, subject to the underlying lease to the tax-
exempt entity. However, if property is transferred to a partnership or 
other pass-through entity after the effective date of section 168(j)(9) 
(see section 31(g) of TRA), such property is subject to the provisions 
of section 168(j)(9).
    Q-29. Can property which was leased to a tax-exempt entity after May 
23, 1983 and acquired by a partnership before October 22, 1983 be tax-
exempt use property?
    A-29. Yes. Because the property was leased to a tax-exempt entity 
after May 23, 1983, it may be tax-exempt use property under section 
168(j)(3) and section 31(g)(1) of TRA. However, if the partnership 
included a tax-exempt entity as a partner, section 168(j)(9) would be 
inapplicable under section 31(g)(3)(B) of TRA because the partnership 
acquired the property before October 22, 1983.
    Q-30. What is a binding contract for purposes of the transitional 
rules in section 31(g) of TRA?
    A-30. (i) A contract is binding only if it is enforceable under 
State law

[[Page 1082]]

against the taxpayer or a predecessor and does not limit damages to a 
specified amount, as for example, by a liquidated damages provision. A 
contract that limits damages to an amount equal to at least 5 percent of 
the total contract price will not be treated as limiting damages for 
this purpose. In determining whether a contract limits damages, the fact 
that there may be little or no damages because the contract price does 
not significantly differ from fair market value will not be taken into 
account. For example, if a taxpayer entered into an irrevocable contract 
to purchase an asset for $100 and the contract contained no provision 
for liquidated damages, the contract is considered binding 
notwithstanding the fact that the property had a fair market value of 
$99 and under local law the seller would only recover the difference in 
the event the purchaser failed to perform. If the contract provided for 
a refund of the purchase price in lieu of any damages allowable by law 
in the event of breach or cancellation, the contract is not considered 
binding.
    (ii) A contract is binding even if subject to a condition, so long 
as the condition is not within the control of either party or a 
predecessor in interest. A contract will not be treated as ceasing to be 
binding merely because the parties make insubstantial changes in its 
terms or because any term is to be determined by a standard beyond the 
control of either party. A contract which imposes significant 
obligations on the taxpayer (or a predecessor) will be treated as 
binding notwithstanding the fact that insubstantial terms remain to be 
negotiated by the parties to the contract.
    (iii) A binding contract to acquire a component part of a larger 
piece of property will not be treated as a binding contract to acquire 
the larger piece of property. For example, if a tax-exempt entity 
entered into a binding contract on May 1, 1983 to acquire a new aircraft 
engine, there would be a binding contract to acquire only the engine, 
not the entire aircraft.
    Q-31. If an improvement is made to a property that is 
``grandfathered'' (i.e., property that is not subject to section 168(j) 
because of the effective date provisions of section 31(g) of TRA), to 
what extent will such improvement be grandfathered?
    A-31. Section 31(g)(20)(B) provides that a ``substantial 
improvement'' to property is treated as a separate property for purposes 
of the effective date provisions of section 31(g) of TRA. As a result, a 
``substantial improvement'' will not be grandfathered unless such 
``substantial improvement'' is grandfathered under a provision other 
than section 31(g)(20)(B). A property that is grandfathered will not 
become subject to section 168(j) merely because an improvement is made 
to such property, regardless of whether the improvement is a 
``substantial improvement''. If an improvement other than a 
``substantial improvement'' is made to property (other than land) that 
is grandfathered, that improvement also will be grandfathered. The 
determination of whether new construction constitutes an improvement to 
property or the creation of a new separate property will be based on all 
facts and circumstances. Furthermore, any improvement to land will be 
treated as a separate property.

    Example. On January 3, 1983, T, a taxable entity, entered into a 
lease of a parking lot to E, a tax-exempt entity. On January 1, 1985, T 
begins construction of a building for use by E on the site of the 
parking lot. The building is completed and placed in service in November 
1985. The building is treated as a separate property, and is thus 
subject to the provisions of section 168(j), unless the building is 
grandfathered under a provision other than section 31(g)(20)(B) of TRA.

    Q-32. What is ``significant official governmental action'' for 
purposes of the section 31(g)(4) transitional rule of TRA?
    A-32. (i) ``Significant official governmental action'' involves 
three separate requirements. First, the action must be an official 
action. Second, the action must be specific action with respect to a 
particular project. Third, the action must be taken by a governmental 
entity having authority to commit the tax-exempt entity to the project, 
to provide funds for it, or to approve the project under State or local 
law.
    (ii) The first requirement of official action means that the 
governing body must adopt a resolution or ordinance, or take similar 
official action, on or

[[Page 1083]]

before November 1, 1983. The action qualifies only if it conforms with 
Federal, State, and local law (as applicable) and is a proper exercise 
of the powers of the governing body. Moreover, the action must not have 
been withdrawn. There must be satisfactory written evidence of the 
action that was in existence on or before November 1, 1983. Satisfactory 
written evidence includes a formal resolution or ordinance, minutes of 
meetings, and binding contracts with third parties pursuant to which 
third parties are to render services in furtherance of the project.
    (iii) The second requirement of specific action is directed at the 
substance of the action taken. The action must be a specific action with 
respect to a particular project in which the governing body indicates an 
intent to have the project (or the design work for it) proceed. This 
requires that a specific project have been formulated and that the 
significant official action be a step toward consummation of the 
project. If the action does not relate to a specific project or merely 
directs that a proposal or recommendation be formulated, it will not 
qualify. The following set of actions with respect to a particular 
project constitute specific action: the hiring of bond counsel or bond 
underwriters necessary to assist inthe issuance and sale of bonds to 
finance a particular project or the adoption of an inducement resolution 
relating to bonds to be issued for such a project; applying for an Urban 
Development Action Grant on behalf of the project described in the 
application, receiving such a grant concerning the project, or the 
recommendation of a city planning authority to proceed with a project; 
the enactment of a State law authorizing the sale, lease, or 
construction of the property; the appropriation of funds for the 
property or authorization of a feasibility study or a development 
services contract with respect to it; the approval of financing 
arrangements by a regulatory agency; the enactment of a State law 
designed to provide funding for a project; the certification of a 
building as a historic structure by a State agency and the Department of 
the Interior; or the endorsement of the application for a certification 
of need with respect to a medical facility by a regulatory agency other 
than the agency empowered to issue such a certificate.
    (iv) The third requirement for significant official governmental 
action is that the action must be taken by a Federal, State, or local 
governing body having authority to commit the tax-exempt entity to the 
project, to provide funds for it, or to approve the project under 
applicable law.

If the chief executive or another representative of a governing body has 
such authority, action by such representative would satisfy the 
requirement of this (iv). A governing body may have the authority to 
commit the tax-exempt entity to a project notwithstanding the fact that 
the project cannot be consummated without other governmental action 
being taken. For example, a city council will be treated as having 
authority to commit a city to do a sale-leaseback of its city hall 
notwithstanding the fact that State law needs to be amended to permit 
such a transaction. Similarly, if a local project cannot be completed 
without Federal approval, either legislative or administrative, the 
obtaining of such approval satisfies the requirements of this (iv).
    (v) Routine governmental action at a local level will not qualify as 
significant official governmental action. Routine governmental action 
includes the granting of building permits or zoning changes and the 
issuance of environmental impact statements.
    (vi) In order to qualify under the transitional rule of TRA section 
31(g)(4), a sale and leaseback pursuant to a binding contract entered 
into before January 1, 1985 must be part of the project as to which 
there was significant official governmental action. Except as provided 
in the following sentence, where there has been significant official 
governmental action on or before November 1, 1983 with respect to the 
construction, reconstruction or rehabilitation of a property, the sale 
and leaseback of such property pursuant to a binding contract entered 
into before January 1, 1985 will be treated as part of the project which 
was the subject of the significant official governmental action. 
However, if the construction, reconstruction or rehabilitation was

[[Page 1084]]

substantially completed prior to January 1, 1983, the sale and leaseback 
of such property will be treated as a separate project, unless the sale 
and leaseback was contemplated at the time of the significant official 
governmental action. Nevertheless, where the sale and leaseback is 
treated as a separate project, section 31(g)(4) may apply if there was 
significant official governmental action on or before November 1, 1983, 
with respect to such sale and leaseback. The application of this 
provision is illustrated by the following example:

    Example. In the summer of 1927, the Board of Aldermen of City C 
passed a resolution authorizing the design and contruction of a new city 
hall and appropriated the funds necessary for such project. Construction 
was completed in 1928. At the time of the significant official 
governmental action, City C had no plan to enter into a sale-leaseback 
arrangement with respect to the facility. On December 15, 1984, City C 
entered into a binding sale-leaseback arrangement concerning the city 
hall. This transaction will not qualify for exclusion from section 
168(j) under the section 31(g)(4) of TRA since construction of the 
facility in question was substantially completed before January 1, 1983. 
If, however, there had been significant official governmental action on 
or before November 1, 1983 with respect to the sale-leaseback project, 
then the transitional rule of section 31(g)(4) of TRA would apply.

[T.D. 8033, 50 FR 27224, July 2, 1985, as amended by T.D. 8435, 57 FR 
43896, Sept. 23, 1992]