[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 26, Volume 7]
[Revised as of April 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 26CFR1.565-2]

[Page 305-307]
 
                       TITLE 26--INTERNAL REVENUE
 
    CHAPTER I--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY 
                               (CONTINUED)
 
PART 1_INCOME TAXES--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 1.565-2  Limitations.

    (a) General rule. Amounts specified in consents filed by 
shareholders or other

[[Page 306]]

beneficial owners of a corporation described in Sec. 1.565-1(a) are not 
treated as consent dividends to the extent that--
    (1) They would constitute a preferential dividend or
    (2) They would not constitute a dividend (as defined in section 
316),

if distributed in money to shareholders on the last day of the taxable 
year of the corporation. If any portion of any amount specified in a 
consent filed by a shareholder of a corporation described in the 
preceding sentence is not treated as a consent dividend under section 
565(b) and this section, it is disregarded for all tax purposes. For 
example, it is not taxable to the consenting shareholder, and paragraph 
(c) of Sec. 1.565-1 is not applicable to this portion of the amount 
specified in the consent.
    (b) Preferential Distribution. (1) A preferential distribution is an 
actual distribution, or a consent distribution, or a combination of the 
two, which involves a preference to one or more shares of stock as 
compared with other shares of the same class or to one class of stock as 
compared with any other class of stock. See section 562(c) and Sec. 
1.562-2.
    (2) The application of section 565 (b) (1) and Sec. 1.565-2 (b) may 
be illustrated by the following examples:

    Example 1. The X Corporation, a personal holding company, which 
makes its income tax returns on the calendar year basis, has 200 shares 
of stock outstanding, owned by A and B in equal amounts. On December 15, 
1987, the corporation distributes $600 to B and $100 to A. As a part of 
the same distribution, A executes a consent to include $500 in his gross 
income as a taxable dividend although such amount is not distributed to 
him. The X Corporation, assuming the other requirements of section 565 
have been complied with, is entitled to a consent dividends deduction of 
$500. Although the consent dividend is deemed to have been paid on 
December 31, 1987, the last day of the taxable year of the corporation, 
the total amount of all distributions constitutes a single 
nonpreferential distribution of $1200.
    Example 2. The Y corporation, a personal holding company, which 
makes its income tax returns on the calendar year basis, has one class 
of consent stock outstanding, owned in equal amounts by A, B, and C. If 
A and B each receive a distribution in cash of $5,000 and C consents to 
include $3,000 in gross income as a taxable dividend, the combined 
actual and consent distribution of $13,000 is preferential. See section 
562 (c) and Sec. 1.562-2 (a). Similarly, if no one receives a 
distribution in cash, but A and B each consents to include $5,000 as a 
taxable dividend in gross income and C agrees to include only $3,000, 
the entire consent distribution is preferential.
    Example 3. The Z Corporation, which makes its income tax returns on 
the calendar year basis and is subject, for the taxable year in 
question, to the accumulated earnings tax, has only two classes of stock 
outstanding, each class being consent stock and consisting of 500 
shares. Class A, with a par value of $40 per share, is entitled to two-
thirds of any distribution of earnings and profits. Class B, with a par 
value of $20 per share, is entitled to one-third of any distribution of 
earnings and profits. On December 15, 1987, there is distributed on the 
class B stock $2 per share, or $1,000, and shareholders of the class A 
stock consent to include in gross income amounts equal to $2 per share, 
or $1,000. The entire distribution of $2,000 is preferential, inasmuch 
as the class B stock has received more than its pro rata share of the 
combined amounts of the actual distributions and the consent 
distributions.

    (c) Section 316 Limitation. (1) An additional limitation under 
section 565 (b) is that the amounts specified in consents which may be 
treated as consent dividends cannot exceed the amounts which would 
constitute a dividend (as defined in section 316) if the corporation had 
distributed the total specified amounts in money to shareholders on the 
last day of the taxable year of the corporation. If only a portion of 
such total would constitute a dividend, then only a corresponding 
portion of each specified amount is treated as a consent dividend.
    (2) The application of section 565 (b) (2) and Sec. 1.565-2 (c) may 
be illustrated by the following example:

    Example. The X Corporation, a corporation described in Sec. 1.565-
(a) (1) or (2), which makes its income tax returns on the calendar year 
basis, has only one class of stock outstanding, owned in equal amounts 
by A and B. It makes no distributions during the taxable year 1987. Its 
earnings and profits for the calendar year 1987 amount to $8,000, there 
being at the beginning of such year no accumulated earnings or profits. 
A and B execute proper consents to include $5,000 each in their gross 
income as a dividend received by them on December 31, 1987. The sum of 
the amounts specified in the consents executed by A and B is $10,000, 
but if $10,000

[[Page 307]]

had actually been distributed by the X corporation on December 31, 1987, 
only $8,000 would have constituted a dividend under section 316 (a). The 
amount which could be considered as consent dividends in computing the 
dividends paid deduction for purposes of the accumulated earnings tax is 
limited to $8,000, or $4,000 of the $5,000 specified in each consent. 
The remaining $1,000 in each consent is disregarded for all tax 
purposes. (In the case of a personal holding company, see also the 
example in Sec. 1.565-3(b).)

[T.D. 8244, 54 FR 10539, Mar. 14, 1989]