[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: 26CFR1.269-3]

[Page 590-592]
 
                       TITLE 26--INTERNAL REVENUE
 
    CHAPTER I--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY 
                               (CONTINUED)
 
PART 1_INCOME TAXES--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 1.269-3  Instances in which section 269(a) disallows a deduction, 
credit, or other allowance.

    (a) Instances of disallowance. Section 269 specifies two instances 
in which a deduction, credit, or other allowance is to be disallowed. 
These instances, described in paragraphs (1) and (2) of section 269(a), 
are those in which:
    (1) Any person or persons acquire, or acquired on or after October 
8, 1940, directly or indirectly, control of a corporation, or
    (2) Any corporation acquires, or acquired on or after October 8, 
1940, directly or indirectly, property of another corporation (not 
controlled, directly or indirectly, immediately before such acquisition 
by such acquiring corporation or its stockholders), the basis of which 
property in the hands of the acquiring corporation is determined by 
reference to the basis in the hands of the transferor corporation.

In either instance the principal purpose for which the acquisition was 
made must have been the evasion or avoidance of Federal income tax by 
securing the benefit of a deduction, credit, or other allowance which 
such person, or persons, or corporation, would not otherwise enjoy. If 
this requirement is satisfied, it is immaterial by what method or by 
what conjunction of events the benefit was sought. Thus, an acquiring 
person or corporation can secure the benefit of a deduction, credit, or 
other allowance within the meaning of section 269 even though it is the 
acquired corporation that is entitled to such deduction, credit, or 
other allowance in the determination of its tax. If the purpose to evade 
or avoid Federal income tax exceeds in importance any other purpose, it 
is the principal purpose. This does not mean that only those 
acquisitions fall within the provisions of section 269 which would not 
have been made if the evasion or avoidance purpose was not present. The 
determination of the purpose for which an acquisition was made requires 
a scrutiny of the entire circumstances in which the transaction or 
course of conduct occurred, in connection with the tax result claimed to 
arise therefrom.
    (b) Acquisition of control; transactions indicative of purpose to 
evade or avoid tax. If the requisite acquisition of control within the 
meaning of paragraph (1) of section 269(a) exists, the transactions set 
forth in the following subparagraphs are among those which, in the 
absence of additional evidence to the contrary, ordinarily are 
indicative that the principal purpose for acquiring control was evasion 
or avoidance of Federal income tax:
    (1) A corporation or other business enterprise (or the interest 
controlling such corporation or enterprise) with large profits acquires 
control of a corporation with current, past, or prospective credits, 
deductions, net operating losses, or other allowances and the 
acquisition is followed by such transfers or other action as is 
necessary to bring the deduction, credit, or other allowance into 
conjunction with the income

[[Page 591]]

(see further Sec. 1.269-6). This subparagraph may be illustrated by the 
following example:

    Example. Individual A acquires all of the stock of L Corporation 
which has been engaged in the business of operating retail drug stores. 
At the time of the acquisition, L Corporation has net operating loss 
carryovers aggregating $100,000 and its net worth is $100,000. After the 
acquisition, L Corporation continues to engage in the business of 
operating retail drug stores but the profits attributable to such 
business after the acquisition are not sufficient to absorb any 
substantial portion of the net operating loss carryovers. Shortly after 
the acquisition, individual A causes to be transferred to L Corporation 
the assets of a hardware business previously controlled by A which 
business produces profits sufficient to absorb a substantial portion of 
L Corporation's net operating loss carryovers. The transfer of the 
profitable business, which has the effect of using net operating loss 
carryovers to offset gains of a business unrelated to that which 
produced the losses, indicates that the principal purpose for which the 
acquisition of control was made is evasion or avoidance of Federal 
income tax.

    (2) A person or persons organize two or more corporations instead of 
a single corporation in order to secure the benefit of multiple surtax 
exemptions (see section 11(c)) or multiple minimum accumulated earnings 
credits (see section 535(c)(2) and (3)).
    (3) A person or persons with high earning assets transfer them to a 
newly organized controlled corporation retaining assets producing net 
operating losses which are utilized in an attempt to secure refunds.
    (c) Acquisition of property; transactions indicative of purpose to 
evade or avoid tax. If the requisite acquisition of property within the 
meaning of paragraph (2) of section 269(a) exists, the transactions set 
forth in the following subparagraphs are among those which, in the 
absence of additional evidence to the contrary, ordinarily are 
indicative that the principal purpose for acquiring such property was 
evasion or avoidance of Federal income tax:
    (1) A corporation acquires property having in its hands an aggregate 
carryover basis which is materially greater than its aggregate fair 
market value at the time of such acquisition and utilizes the property 
to create tax-reducing losses or deductions.
    (2) A subsidiary corporation, which has sustained large net 
operating losses in the operation of business X and which has filed 
separate returns for the taxable years in which the losses were 
sustained, acquires high earning assets, comprising business Y, from its 
parent corporation. The acquisition occurs at a time when the parent 
would not succeed to the net operating loss carryovers of the subsidiary 
if the subsidiary were liquidated, and the profits of business Y are 
sufficient to offset a substantial portion of the net operating loss 
carryovers attributable to business X (see further Example 3 of Sec. 
1.269-6).
    (d) Ownership changes to which section 382(l)(5) applies; 
transactions indicative of purpose to evade or avoid tax--(1) In 
general. Absent strong evidence to the contrary, a requisite acquisition 
of control or property in connection with an ownership change to which 
section 382(l)(5) applies is considered to be made for the principal 
purpose of evasion or avoidance of Federal income tax unless the 
corporation carries on more than an insignificant amount of an active 
trade or business during and subsequent to the title 11 or similar case 
(as defined in section 382(l)(5)(G)). The determination of whether the 
corporation carries on more than an insignificant amount of an active 
trade or business is made without regard to the continuity of business 
enterprise set forth in Sec. 1.368-1(d). The determination is based on 
all the facts and circumstances, including, for example, the amount of 
business assets that continue to be used, or the number of employees in 
the work force who continue employment, in an active trade or business 
(although not necessarily the historic trade or business). Where the 
corporation continues to utilize a significant amount of its business 
assets or work force, the requirement of carrying on more than an 
insignificant amount of an active trade or business may be met even 
though all trade or business activities temporarily cease for a period 
of time in order to address business exigencies.
    (2) Effective date. The presumption under paragraph (d) of this 
section applies to acquisitions of control or property effected pursuant 
to a plan of reorganization confirmed by a court in a

[[Page 592]]

title 11 or similar case (within the meaning of section 368(a)(3)(A)) 
after August 14, 1990.
    (e) Relationship of section 269 to 11 U.S.C. 1129(d). In determining 
for purposes of section 269 of the Internal Revenue Code whether an 
acquisition pursuant to a plan of reorganization in a case under title 
11 of the United States Code was made for the principal purpose of 
evasion or avoidance of Federal income tax, the fact that a governmental 
unit did not seek a determination under 11 U.S.C. 1129(d) is not taken 
into account and any determination by a court under 11 U.S.C. 1129(d) 
that the principal purpose of the plan is not avoidance of taxes is not 
controlling.

[T.D. 6595, 27 FR 3596, Apr. 14, 1962, as amended by T.D. 8388, 57 FR 
345, Jan. 6, 1992]