[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 26, Volume 1]
[Revised as of April 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 26CFR1.267(a)-2T]

[Page 572-575]
 
                       TITLE 26--INTERNAL REVENUE
 
    CHAPTER I--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY 
                               (CONTINUED)
 
PART 1_INCOME TAXES--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 1.267(a)-2T  Temporary regulations; questions and answers arising 
under the Tax Reform Act of 1984 (temporary).

    (a) Introduction--(1) Scope. This section prescribes temporary 
question and answer regulations under section 267(a) and related 
provisions as amended by section 174 of the Tax Reform Act of 1984, Pub. 
L. No. 98-369.
    (2) Effective date. Except as otherwise provided by Answer 2 or 
Answer 3 in paragraph (c) of this section, the effective date set forth 
in section 174(c) of the Tax Reform Act of 1984 applies to this section.

[[Page 573]]

    (b) Questions applying section 267(a)(2) and (b) generally. The 
following questions and answers deal with the application of section 
267(a)(2) and (b) generally:
    Question 1: Does section 267(a)(2) ever apply to defer the deduction 
of an otherwise deductible amount if the person to whom the payment is 
to be made properly uses the completed contract method of accounting 
with respect to such amount?
    Answer 1: No. Section 267(a)(2) applies only if an otherwise 
deductible amount is owed to a related person under whose method of 
accounting such amount is not includible in income unless paid to such 
person. Regardless of when payment is made, an amount owed to a 
contractor using the completed contract method of accounting is 
includible in the income of the contractor in accordance with Sec. 
1.451-3(d) in the year in which the contract is completed or in which 
certain disputes are resolved.
    Question 2: Does section 267(a)(2) ever apply to defer the deduction 
of otherwise deductible original issue discount as defined in sections 
163(e) and 1271 through 1275 (``the OID rules'')?
    Answer 2. No. Regardless of when payment is made, an amount owed to 
a lender that constitutes original issue discount is included in the 
income of the lender periodically in accordance with the OID rules. 
Similarly, section 267(a)(2) does not apply to defer an otherwise 
deductible amount to the extent section 467 or section 7872 requires 
periodic inclusion of such amount in the income of the person to whom 
payment is to be made, even though payment has not been made.
    Question 3: Does section 267(a)(2) ever apply to defer the deduction 
of otherwise deductible unstated interest determined to exist under 
section 483?
    Answer 3: Yes. If section 483 recharacterizes any amount as unstated 
interest and the other requirements of section 267(a)(2) are met, a 
deduction for such unstated interest will be deferred under section 267.
    Question 4: Does section 267(a)(2) ever apply to defer the deduction 
of otherwise deductible cost recovery, depreciation, or amortization?
    Answer 4: Yes, in certain cases. In general, section 267(a)(2) does 
not apply to defer the deduction of otherwise deductible cost recovery, 
depreciation, or amortization. Notwithstanding this general rule, if the 
other requirements of section 267(a)(2) are met, section 267(a)(2) does 
apply to defer deductions for cost recovery, depreciation, or 
amortization of an amount owed to a related person for interest or rent 
or for the performance or nonperformance of services, which amount the 
taxpayer payor capitalized or treated as a deferred expense (unless the 
taxpayer payor elected to capitalize or defer the amount and section 
267(a)(2) would not have deferred the deduction of such amount if the 
taxpayer payor had not so elected). Amounts owed for services that may 
be subject to this provision include, for example, amounts owed for 
acquisition, development, or organizational services or for covenants 
not to compete. In applying this rule, payments made between persons 
described in any of the paragraphs of section 267(b) (as modified by 
section 267(e)) will be closely scrutinized to determine whether they 
are made in respect of capitalized costs (or costs treated as deferred 
expenses) that are subject to deferral under section 267(a)(2), or in 
respect of other capitalized costs not so subject.
    Question 5: If a deduction in respect of an otherwise deductible 
amount is deferred by section 267(a)(2) and, prior to the time the 
amount is includible in the gross income of the person to whom payment 
is to be made, such person and the payor taxpayer cease to be persons 
specified in any of the paragraphs of section 267(b) (as modified by 
section 267(e)), is the deduction allowable as of the day on which the 
relationship ceases?
    Answer 5: No. The deduction is not allowable until the day as of 
which the amount is includible in the gross income of the person to whom 
payment of the amount is made, even though the relationship ceases to 
exist at an earlier time.
    Question 6: Do references in other sections to persons described in 
section 267(b) incorporate changes made to section 267(b) by section 174 
of the Tax Reform Act of 1984?
    Answer 6: Yes. References in other sections to persons described in 
section

[[Page 574]]

267(b) take into account changes made to section 267(b) by section 174 
of the Tax Reform Act of 1984 (without modification by section 
267(e)(1)). For example, a transfer after December 31, 1983 (the 
effective date of the new section 267(b)(3) relationship added by the 
Tax Reform Act of 1984) of section 1245 class property placed in service 
before January 1, 1981, from one corporation to another corporation, 11 
percent of the stock of which is owned by the first corporation, will 
not constitute recovery property (as defined in section 168) in the 
hands of the second corporation by reason of section 168(e)(4) (A)(i) 
and (D).
    (c) Questions applying section 267(a) to partnerships. The following 
questions and answers deal with the application of section 267(a) to 
partnerships:
    Question 1: Does section 267(a) disallow losses and defer otherwise 
deductible amounts at the partnership (entity) level?
    Answer 1: Yes. If a loss realized by a partnership from a sale or 
exchange of property is disallowed under section 267(a)(1), that loss 
shall not enter into the computation of the partnership's taxable 
income. If an amount that otherwise would be deductible by a partnership 
is deferred by section 267(a)(2), that amount shall not enter into the 
computation of the partnership's taxable income until the taxable year 
of the partnership in which falls the day on which the amount is 
includible in the gross income of the person to whom payment of the 
amount is made.
    Question 2: Does section 267(a)(1) ever apply to disallow a loss if 
the sale or exchange giving rise to the loss is between two partnerships 
even though the two partnerships are not persons specified in any of the 
paragraphs of section 267(b)?
    Answer 2: Yes. If the other requirements of section 267(a)(1) are 
met, section 267(a)(1) applies to such losses arising as a result of 
transactions entered into after December 31, 1984 between partnerships 
not described in any of the paragraphs of section 267(b) as follows, and 
Sec. 1.267(b)-1(b) does not apply. If the two partnerships have one or 
more common partners (i.e., if any person owns directly, indirectly, or 
constructively any capital or profits interest in each of such 
partnerships), or if any partner in either partnership and one or more 
partners in the other partnership are persons specified in any of the 
paragraphs of section 267(b) (without modification by section 267(e)), a 
portion of the selling partnership's loss will be disallowed under 
section 267(a)(1). The amount disallowed under this rule is the greater 
of: (1) The amount that would be disallowed if the transaction giving 
rise to the loss had occurred between the selling partnership and the 
separate partners of the purchasing partnership (in proportion to their 
respective interests in the purchasing partnership); or (2) the amount 
that would be disallowed if such transaction had occurred between the 
separate partners of the selling partnership (in proportion to their 
respective interests in the selling partnership) and the purchasing 
partnership. Notwithstanding the general rule of this paragraph (c) 
Answer 2, no disallowance shall occur if the amount that would be 
disallowed pursuant to the immediately preceding sentence is less than 5 
percent of the loss arising from the sale or exchange.
    Question 3: Does section 267(a)(2) ever apply to defer an otherwise 
deductible amount if the taxpayer payor is a partnership and the person 
to whom payment of such amount is to be made is a partnership even 
though the two partnerships are not persons specified in any of the 
paragraphs of section 267(b) (as modified by section 267(e))?
    Answer 3: Yes. If the other requirements of section 267(a)(2) are 
met, section 267(a)(2) applies to such amounts arising as a result of 
transactions entered into after December 31, 1984 between partnerships 
not described in any of the paragraphs of section 267(b) (as modified by 
section 267(e)) as follows, and Sec. 1.267(b)-1(b) does not apply. If 
the two partnerships have one or more common partners (i.e., if any 
person owns directly, indirectly, or constructively any capital or 
profits interest in each of such partnerships), or if any partner in 
either partnership and one or more partners in the other partnership are 
persons specified in any of the paragraphs of section 267(b) (without 
modification by section 267(e)), a

[[Page 575]]

portion of the payor partnership's otherwise allowable deduction will be 
deferred under section 267(a)(2). The amount deferred under this rule is 
the greater of: (1) The amount that would be deferred if the transaction 
giving rise to the otherwise allowable deduction had occurred between 
the payor partnership and the separate partners of the payee partnership 
(in proportion to their respective interests in the payee partnership); 
or (2) the amount that would be deferred if such transaction had 
occurred between the separate partners of the payor partnership (in 
proportion to their respective interests in the payor partnership) and 
the payee partnership. Notwithstanding the general rule of this 
paragraph (c) Answer 3, no deferral shall occur if the amount that would 
be deferred pursuant to the immediately preceding sentence is less than 
5 percent of the otherwise allowable deduction.

    Example. On May 1, 1985, partnership AB enters into a transaction 
whereby it accrues an otherwise deductible amount to partnership AC. AC 
is on the cash receipts and disbursements method of accounting. A holds 
a 5 percent capital and profits interest in AB and a 49 percent capital 
and profits interest in AC, and A's interest in each item of the income, 
gain, loss, deduction, and credit of each partnership is 5 percent and 
49 percent, respectively. B and C are not related. Notwithstanding that 
AB and AC are not persons specified in section 267(b), 49 percent of the 
deduction in respect of such amount will be deferred under section 
267(a)(2). The result would be the same if A held a 49 percent interest 
in AB and a 5 percent interest in AC. However, if A held more than 50 
percent of the capital or profits interest of either AB or AC, the 
entire deduction in respect of such amount would be deferred under 
section 267(a)(2).

    Question 4: What does the phrase incurred at an annual rate not in 
excess of 12 percent mean as used in section 267(e)(5)(C)(ii)?
    Answer 4: The phrase refers to interest that accrues but is not 
includible in the income of the person to whom payment is to be made 
during the taxable year of the payor. Thus, in determining whether the 
requirements of section 267(e)(5) (providing an exception to certain 
provisions of section 267 for certain expenses and interest of 
partnerships owning low income housing) are met with respect to a 
transaction, the requirement of section 267(e)(5)(C)(ii) will be 
satisfied, even though the total interest (both stated and unstated) 
paid or accrued in any taxable year of the payor taxpayer exceeds 12 
percent, if the interest in excess of 12 percent per annum, compounded 
semi-annually, on the outstanding loan balance (principal and accrued 
but unpaid interest) is includible in the income of the person to whom 
payment is to be made no later than the last day of such taxable year of 
the payor taxpayer.

(98 Stat. 704, 26 U.S.C. 267; 98 Stat. 589, 26 U.S.C. 706; 68A Stat. 
367, 26 U.S.C. 1502; 68A Stat. 917, 26 U.S.C. 7805)

[T.D. 7991, 49 FR 46995, Nov. 30, 1984]