[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: 26CFR1.281-3]

[Page 741-745]
 
                       TITLE 26--INTERNAL REVENUE
 
    CHAPTER I--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY 
                               (CONTINUED)
 
PART 1_INCOME TAXES--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 1.281-3  Definitions.

    (a) Terminal railroad corporation. The term terminal railroad 
corporation means a corporation which, in the taxable year, meets all of 
the following conditions:
    (1) The corporation and each of its shareholders must be domestic 
corporations. Thus, all of the shareholders of the corporation, as well 
as the corporation itself, must be corporations which were organized or 
created in the United States, including only the States and the District 
of Columbia, or under the law of the United States or of any State or 
territory.
    (2) All of the shareholders must be railroad corporations which are 
subject to Part I of the Interstate Commerce Act. Thus, if any 
shareholder of the corporation, regardless of the class or percentage of 
stock owned, is not subject to the jurisdiction of the Interstate 
Commerce Commission under part I of that Act, the corporation cannot 
qualify as a terminal railroad corporation.
    (3) The corporation must not be a member of an affiliated group of 
corporations (as defined in section 1504), other than as a common parent 
corporation. For this purpose it is immaterial whether or not the 
affiliated group has ever made a consolidated income tax return. Thus, 
if the X railroad corporation owns 80 percent of all of the outstanding 
stock of the Y railroad corporation, the X railroad corporation may 
qualify, but the Y railroad corporation cannot qualify, as a terminal 
railroad corporation.
    (4) The primary business of the corporation must be that of 
providing to

[[Page 742]]

domestic railroad corporations subject to Part I of the Interstate 
Commerce Act and to the shippers and passengers of such railroad 
corporations one or more of the following facilities or services: (i) 
Railroad terminal facilities, (ii) railroad switching facilities, (iii) 
railroad terminal services, or (iv) railroad switching services. The 
designated facilities and services include the furnishing of terminal 
trackage, the operation of stockyards or a union passenger or freight 
station, and the operation of railroad bridges and ferries. The 
providing of the designated facilities includes the leasing of those 
facilities. A corporation shall be considered as having established that 
its primary business is that of providing the designated facilities and 
services if more than 50 percent of its gross income (computed without 
regard to section 281, and excluding dividends and gains and losses from 
the disposition of capital assets or property described in section 
1231(b)) for the taxable year is derived from those sources. The fact 
that income from a service or facility is included within the definition 
of related terminal income is immaterial for purposes of determining 
whether that service or facility is one which is designated in this 
subparagraph. Thus, although income from the operation of a commuter 
railroad line may be related terminal income, a corporation whose 
primary business is the operation of that facility is not a terminal 
railroad corporation, since its primary business is not the providing of 
the designated facilities or services.
    (5) A substantial part of the services rendered by the corporation 
for the taxable year must be rendered to one or more of its 
shareholders. For purposes of this requirement, providing the use of 
facilities shall be considered the rendering of services.
    (6) Each shareholder of the corporation must compute its taxable 
income on the basis of a taxable year which either begins or ends on the 
same day as the taxable year of the corporation.
    (b) Related terminal income--(1) In general. Related terminal income 
is, generally, the type of income normally earned from the operation of 
a railroad terminal. The term related terminal income means the taxable 
income (computed without regard to sections 172, 277, or 281) which the 
terminal railroad corporation derives for the taxable year from the 
sources enumerated in paragraph (b)(2) of this section. Related terminal 
income must be derived from direct provision of the specified facilities 
or services by the terminal corporation itself. Thus, income consisting 
of rent from a lease of a terminal facility by a terminal corporation to 
a railroad user would qualify; but dividends from a corporation in which 
the terminal corporation owned stock and which provided such facilities 
or services to others would not qualify. The term does not include gain 
or loss derived from the sale, exchange, or other disposition of capital 
assets or section 1231 assets, whether or not section 1245 or section 
1250 applies to part or all of that gain. For example, the term does not 
apply to gain from the sale of a terminal building or terminal 
equipment. All direct and indirect expenses and other deductible items 
attributable to related terminal services or facilities shall be 
deducted in determining related terminal income. Attribution shall be 
determined in accordance with customary railroad accounting practices 
accepted by the Interstate Commerce Commission, except that interest 
paid with respect to the indebtedness of a terminal railroad corporation 
shall be deducted from related terminal income to the extent that the 
proceeds from the indebtedness were directly or indirectly applied to 
facilities or activities producing such income. The district director 
may either accept the use of the taxpayer's method of determining the 
application of the proceeds of all indebtedness of such corporation or 
prescribe the use of another method which, under all the facts and 
circumstances, appears to reflect more accurately the probable 
application of such proceeds.
    (2) Sources of related terminal income. The term related terminal 
income includes only income derived from one or more of the following 
sources:
    (i) From services or facilities of a character ordinarily and 
regularly provided by terminal railroad corporations

[[Page 743]]

for railroad corporations or for the employees, passengers, or shippers 
of railroad corporations. Whether the services or facilities are of a 
character ordinarily and regularly provided by terminal railroad 
corporations is to be determined by accepted industry practice. The fact 
that nonterminal businesses may also provide such services or facilities 
is immaterial. However, there must be a direct relationship between the 
service or facility provided and the operation of the terminal, 
including the operation of its trackage and switching facilities. Thus, 
the term related terminal income includes income derived from operating 
or leasing switching facilities and terminal facilities, such as income 
from charges to railroad corporations for the use of a union passenger 
or freight station. Also included for this purpose is income derived 
from charges to railroad shippers, including express companies and 
freight forwarders, for the use of sheds or warehouses, even though not 
directly intended for railroad use. The term includes income derived 
from leasing or operating restaurants, drugstores, barbershops, 
newsstands, ticket agencies, banking facilities, car rental facilities, 
or other similar facilities for passengers, in waiting rooms or along 
passenger concourses. Similarly, the term includes income derived from 
operating or leasing passenger parking facilities, and from renting 
taxicab space, located on or adjacent to the terminal premises. Although 
the term does include income derived from the operation of a small hotel 
operated primarily for and usually occupied primarily by the employees 
of the railroad corporations, it does not include income derived from 
the operation of a hotel for passengers or other persons.
    (ii) From any railroad corporation for services or facilities 
provided by the terminal railroad corporation in connection with 
railroad operations. A service or a facility is provided in connection 
with railroad operations if it is of a character ordinarily and 
regularly availed of by railroad corporations. For purposes of this 
subdivision, the income must be derived from railroad corporations. 
Thus, in addition to the income derived from sources described in 
paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this section, the term related terminal income 
includes income derived from switching facilities or leasing to any 
railroad corporation, or operating for the benefit of such corporation, 
a beltline or bypass railroad leading to or from the terminal premises. 
Also included are income derived from the rental of office space 
(whether or not services are provided to the occupants) in the terminal 
building to any railroad corporation for that corporation's 
administrative or operating divisions, and income derived from tolls 
charged to any railroad corporation for the use of a railroad bridge or 
ferry.
    (iii) From the use by persons other than railroad corporations of a 
portion of a facility, or of a service, which is used primarily for 
railroad purposes. A facility or service is used primarily for railroad 
purposes if the predominant reason for its continued operation or 
provision is the furnishing of facilities or services described in 
either subdivision (i) or (ii) of this subparagraph. The determination 
required by this subdivision is to be made independently for each 
separate facility or service. Two substantial portions of a single 
structure may be considered separate facilities, depending upon the 
respective uses made of each. Moreover, any substantial addition, 
constructed after October 23, 1962, to a facility shall be considered a 
separate facility.

The term related terminal income includes income produced by operating a 
commuter service or by renting tracks and facilities for a commuter 
service to an independent operator. The term also includes the sale or 
rental of advertising space at a terminal facility. If the conditions 
described in this subdivision are satisfied, the term related terminal 
income may include income which has no connection with the operation of 
the terminal. Thus, if a terminal railroad corporation operates a 
railroad bridge primarily to provide railroad corporations a means of 
crossing a river and the lower level of the bridge contains a roadway 
for similar use by automobiles, the term includes income derived from 
the tolls charged to the automobiles for the use of the bridge roadway. 
However, upon the discontinuance of operations of the railroad level of 
the bridge, the term would

[[Page 744]]

cease to include the automobile tolls. If excess steam from a steam 
plant operated primarily to supply steam to the terminal is sold to 
another business in the neighborhood, the term would include the income 
derived from such sale. However, because an oil or gas well or a mine 
constitutes a separate facility, the term related terminal income does 
not include income derived in any form from a deposit of oil, natural 
gas, or any other mineral located on property owned or leased by the 
terminal railroad corporation.

Similarly, while the term includes income derived from the rental of a 
small number of offices located in the terminal building (whether or not 
the lessees are railroad corporations), it does not include income 
derived from the leasing or operation, for the use of the general 
public, of a large number of offices or a large number of rooms for 
lodging, whether or not the space is physically part of the same 
structure as the terminal. Moreover, the term does not include income 
derived from the rental of offices to the general public in an addition 
to the terminal building constructed after October 23, 1962, unless the 
addition is primarily used for railroad purposes and the offices rented 
to the general public do not constitute a separate facility in the 
addition. Whether or not income from the addition is determined to be 
related terminal income, the income from the small number of offices 
which were included in the terminal building before the addition was 
constructed shall continue to be related terminal income.
    (iv) From the United States in payment for facilities or services in 
connection with mail handling. The income must be derived directly from 
the U.S. Government, or any agency thereof (including for this purpose 
the U.S. Postal Service), through the receipt of payments for mail-
handling facilities or services. Thus, the term would include income 
derived from the rental of space for a post office for use by the 
general public on the terminal premises or from the sorting of mail in a 
railroad box car.
    (3) Illustration. The provisions of this paragraph may be 
illustrated by the following example:

    Example. For its calendar year 1973, the R Company, a terminal 
railroad corporation, has taxable income of $36,000, before the 
application of section 281 and taking no account of section 277, 
determined as follows:

Gross income:
  Switching charges.........................................     $50,000
  Express companies.........................................       2,000
  Commuter line.............................................       4,000
  U.S. mail handling........................................       4,000
  Railroad bridge tolls:....................................
    From railroads..........................................       2,000
    From automobiles........................................       1,000
                                                             -----------
      Total.................................................       3,000
  Station and train charges.................................      47,000
  Terminal parking lot......................................       4,000
  Rent from terminal building:
    Passenger facilities (ground level).....................       8,000
    Offices leased to railroads (2d floor)..................       3,000
    Offices leased to others (2d floor).....................       1,000
    Hotel open to public (3d through 6th floors)............      14,000
      Total.................................................      26,000
  Interest received from bond investments...................       1,500
  Dividends received from wholly owned subsidiary...........      10,000
  Amount realized from sale of equipment....................       6,000
  Less:
    Adjusted basis..........................................       1,000
    Expenses of sale........................................         500
                                                             -----------
                                                                   1,500
                                                             -----------
                                                                   4,500
                                                             -----------
                                                                 156,000
Allowable deductions:
  Dividend received deduction...............................       8,500
  Interest paid:
    On loan for hotel furnishings...........................       1,500
    On loan for rolling stock...............................       2,000
                                                             -----------
                                                                   3,500
  Maintenance, depreciation, management and other expenses:
    Attributable to hotel...................................       3,000
    Attributable to parking lot.............................       1,000
    Attributable to U.S. mail handling......................       1,000
    All other...............................................      98,000
                                                             -----------
                                                                 103,000
  Loss from sale of securities..............................       3,000
  Charitable contribution...................................         500
  Net operating loss deduction..............................       1,500
                                                             -----------
                                                                 120,000
                                                             -----------
  Taxable income before the application of sec. 281.........      36,000
                                                             ===========
  The R Co.'s related terminal income for 1973 is $24,000,
   computed as follows:
  Taxable income (before the application of sec. 281).......      36,000
  Less:
    Dividend received.......................................      10,000
    Minus dividend received deduction.......................       8,500
                                                             -----------
                                                                   1,500
  Interest received.........................................       1,500
  Amount realized from sale of equipment....................       6,000
  Less:
    Adjusted basis..........................................       1,000
    Expense of sale.........................................         500
                                                             -----------

[[Page 745]]


                                                                   1,500
                                                             -----------
                                                                   4,500
  Hotel income..............................................      14,000
  Less:
    Interest paid on loan for hotel.........................       1,500
    Other hotel expenses....................................       3,000
                                                             -----------
                                                                   4,500
                                                             -----------
                                                                   9,500
                                                             -----------
                                                                  17,000
                                                             -----------
                                                                  19,000
  Add:
    Loss from sale of securities............................       3,000
    Charitable contribution.................................         500
    Net operating loss deduction............................       1,500
                                                                   5,000
                                                             -----------
  Related terminal income...................................      24,000
                                                             ===========


    (c) Related terminal services. The term related terminal services 
means only the services or the use of facilities, provided by the 
terminal railroad corporation, which are taken into account in computing 
related terminal income. Thus, the term includes the providing of 
terminal and switching services, the furnishing of terminal and 
switching facilities including the furnishing of terminal trackage, and 
the operation of bridges and ferries for railroad purposes. For example, 
upon the facts of the example in the preceding paragraph, the charges 
for related terminal services are $126,000, determined as follows:

Switching charges...........................................     $50,000
Express companies...........................................       2,000
Commuter line...............................................       4,000
U.S. mail handling..........................................       4,000
Railroad bridge tolls.......................................       3,000
Station and train charges...................................      47,000
Terminal parking lot........................................       4,000
Rent from:
  Passenger facilities......................................       8,000
  Offices...................................................       4,000
                                                             -----------
    Total...................................................     126,000


    (d) Agreement. As used in section 281 and Sec. 1.281-2 the term 
agreement means a written contract, entered into before the beginning of 
the terminal railroad corporation's taxable year in question, to which 
all shareholders of the terminal railroad corporation are parties. The 
fact that other railroad corporations or persons are also parties will 
not disqualify an agreement. Section 281 applies only if, and to the 
extent that, the reduction of the liability or charge that would be 
made, as described in paragraph (c) of Sec. 1.281-2, results from the 
agreement. Thus, where the other conditions of the statute are met, 
section 281 applies if a written agreement, to which all of the 
shareholders were parties and which was entered into prior to the 
beginning of the terminal railroad corporation's taxable year, provides 
that the net revenues of the terminal railroad corporation are to be 
applied as a reduction of what would otherwise be the charge for the 
taxable year for related terminal services provided to the shareholders. 
Similarly, section 281 applies, where its other requirements are 
fulfilled, if the agreement provides that the net revenues are to be 
credited against rental obligations resulting from related terminal 
services furnished to shareholders. However, section 281 does not apply 
where the agreement provides that the net revenues are to be divided 
among the shareholders and distributed to them in cash or held subject 
to their unconditional right of withdrawal instead of being applied to 
the computation of charges, or in reduction of liabilities incurred, for 
related terminal services.
    (e) Railroad corporation. For purposes of section 281, Sec. 1.281-
2, and this section, the term railroad corporation means any corporation 
(regardless of whether it is a shareholder of the terminal railroad 
corporation) that is engaged as a common carrier in the furnishing or 
sale of transportation by railroad, or is a lessor of railroad equipment 
or facilities. For purposes of the preceding sentence, a corporation is 
a lessor of railroad equipment or facilities only if (1) it is subject 
to part I of the Interstate Commerce Act, (2) substantially all of its 
railroad properties have been leased to a railroad corporation or 
corporations, (3) each lease is for a term of more than 20 years, and 
(4) 80 percent or more of its gross income for the taxable year is 
derived for such leases.

[T.D. 7356, 40 FR 23735, June 2, 1975]