[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: 26CFR1.631-1]

[Page 536-538]
 
                       TITLE 26--INTERNAL REVENUE
 
    CHAPTER I--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY 
                               (CONTINUED)
 
PART 1_INCOME TAXES--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 1.631-1  Election to consider cutting as sale or exchange.

    (a) Effect of election. (1) Section 631 (a) provides an election to 
certain taxpayers to treat the difference between the actual cost or 
other basis of certain timber cut during the taxable year and its fair 
market value as standing timber on the first day of such year as gain or 
loss from a sale or exchange under section 1231. Thereafter, any 
subsequent gain or loss shall be determined in accordance with paragraph 
(e) of this section.
    (2) For the purposes of section 631(a) and this section, timber 
shall be considered cut at the time when in the ordinary course of 
business the quantity of timber felled is first definitely determined.
    (3) The election may be made with respect to any taxable year even 
though

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such election was not made with respect to a previous taxable year. If 
an election has been made under the provisions of section 631(a), or 
corresponding provisions of prior internal revenue laws, such election 
shall be binding upon the taxpayer not only for the taxable year for 
which the election is made but also for all subsequent taxable years, 
unless the Commissioner on showing by the taxpayer of undue hardship 
permits the taxpayer to revoke his election for such subsequent taxable 
years. If the taxpayer has revoked a previous election, such revocation 
shall preclude any further elections unless the taxpayer obtains the 
consent of the Commissioner.
    (4) Such election shall apply with respect to all timber which the 
taxpayer has owned, or has had a contract right to cut, for a period of 
more than 1 year (6 months for taxable years beginning before 1977; 9 
months for taxable years beginning in 1977) prior to when such timber is 
cut for sale or for use in the taxpayer's trade or business, 
irrespective of whether such timber or contract right was acquired 
before or after the election. (For purposes of the preceding sentence, 
the rules with respect to the holding period of property contained in 
section 1223 shall be applicable.) However, timber which is not cut for 
sale or for use in the taxpayer's trade or business (for example, 
firewood cut for the taxpayer's own household consumption) shall not be 
considered to have been sold or exchanged upon the cutting thereof.
    (b) Who may make election. (1) A taxpayer who has owned, or has held 
a contract right to cut, timber for a period of more than 1 year (6 
months for taxable years beginning before 1977; 9 months for taxable 
years beginning in 1977) prior to when the timber is cut may elect under 
section 631(a) to consider the cutting of such timber during such year 
for sale or for use in the taxpayer's trade or business as a sale or 
exchange of the timber so cut. In order to have a contract right to cut 
timber within the meaning of section 631(a) and this section, a taxpayer 
must have a right to sell the timber cut under the contract on his own 
account or to use such cut timber in his trade or business.
    (2) For purposes of section 631(a) and this section, the term timber 
includes evergreen trees which are more than six years old at the time 
severed from their roots and are sold for ornamental purposes, such as 
Christmas decorations. Section 631(a) is not applicable to evergreen 
trees which are sold in a live state, whether or not for ornamental 
purposes. Tops and other parts of standing timber are not considered as 
evergreen trees within the meaning of section 631(a). The term evergreen 
trees is used in its commonly accepted sense and includes pine, spruce, 
fir, hemlock, cedar, and other coniferous trees.
    (c) Manner of making election. The election under section 631(a) 
must be made by the taxpayer in his income tax return for the taxable 
year for which the election is applicable, and such election cannot be 
made in an amended return for such year. The election in the return 
shall take the form of a computation under the provisions of section 
631(a) and section 1231.
    (d) Computation of gain or loss under the election. (1) If the 
cutting of timber is considered as a sale or exchange pursuant to an 
election made under section 631(a), gain or loss shall be recognized to 
the taxpayer in an amount equal to the difference between the adjusted 
basis for depletion in the hands of the taxpayer of the timber which has 
been cut during the taxable year and the fair market value of such 
timber as of the first day of the taxable year in which such timber is 
cut. The adjusted basis for depletion of the cut timber shall be based 
upon the number of units of timber cut during the taxable year which are 
considered to be sold or exchanged and upon the depletion unit of the 
timber in the timber account or accounts pertaining to the timber cut, 
and shall be computed in the same manner as is provided in section 611 
and the regulations thereunder with respect to the computation of the 
allowance for depletion.
    (2) The fair market value of the timber as of the first day of the 
taxable year in which such timber is cut shall be determined, subject to 
approval or revision by the district director upon examination of the 
taxpayer's return, by the taxpayer in the light of the

[[Page 538]]

most reliable and accurate information available with reference to the 
condition of the property as it existed at that date, regardless of all 
subsequent changes, such as changes in surrounding circumstances, 
methods of exploitation, degree of utilization, etc. The value sought 
will be the selling price, assuming a transfer between a willing seller 
and a willing buyer as of that particular day. Due consideration will be 
given to the factors and the principles involved in the determination of 
the fair market value of timber as described in the regulations under 
section 611.
    (3) The fair market value as of the beginning of the taxable year of 
the standing timber cut during the year shall be considered to be the 
cost of such timber, in lieu of the actual cost or other basis of such 
timber, for all purposes for which such cost is a necessary factor. See 
paragraph (e) of this section.
    (4) For any taxable year for which the cutting of timber is 
considered to be a sale or exchange of such timber under section 631(a), 
the timber so cut shall be considered as property used in the trade or 
business for the purposes of section 1231, along with other property of 
the taxpayer used in the trade or business as defined in section 
1231(b), regardless of whether such timber is property of a kind which 
would properly be includible in the inventory of the taxpayer if on hand 
at the close of the taxable year or property held by the taxpayer 
primarily for sale to customers in the ordinary course of his trade or 
business. Whether the gain or loss considered to have resulted from the 
cutting of the timber will be considered to be gain or loss resulting 
from the sale or exchange of capital assets held for more than 1 year (6 
months for taxable years beginning before 1977; 9 months for taxable 
years beginning in 1977) depends upon the application of section 1231 to 
the taxpayer for the taxable year. See section 1231 and the regulations 
thereunder.
    (e) Computaton of subsequent gain or loss. (1) In case the products 
of the timber are sold after cutting, either in the form of logs or 
lumber or in the form of manufactured products, the income from such 
actual sales shall be considered ordinary income. When the election 
under section 631(a) is in effect, the cost of standing timber cut 
during the taxable year is determined as if the taxpayer had purchased 
such timber on the first day of the taxable year. Thus, in determining 
the cost of the products so sold, the cost of the timber shall be the 
fair market value on the first day of the taxable year in which the 
standing timber was cut, in lieu of the actual cost or other basis of 
such timber.
    (2) This is also the rule in case the products of the timber cut 
during one taxable year, with respect to which an election has been made 
under section 631(a), are sold during a subsequent taxable year, whether 
or not the election provided in section 631(a) is applicable with 
respect to such subsequent year. If the products of the timber cut 
during a taxable year with respect to which an election under section 
631(a) was made were not sold during such year and are included in 
inventory at the close of such year, the fair market value as of the 
beginning of the year of the timber cut during the year shall be used in 
lieu of the actual cost of such timber in computing the closing 
inventory for such year and the opening inventory for the succeeding 
year. With respect to the costs applicable in the determination of the 
amount of such inventories, there shall be included the fair market 
value of the timber cut, the costs of cutting, logging, and all other 
expenses incident to the cost of converting the standing timber into the 
products in inventory. See section 471 and the regulations thereunder. 
The fact that the fair market value as of the first day of the taxable 
year in which the timber is cut is deemed to be the cost of such timber 
shall not preclude the taxpayer from computing its inventories upon the 
basis of cost or market, whichever is lower, if such is the method used 
by the taxpayer. Nor shall it preclude the taxpayer from computing its 
inventories under the last-in, first-out inventory method provided by 
section 472 if such section is applicable to, and has been elected by, 
the taxpayer.

[T.D. 6500, 25 FR 11737, Nov. 26, 1960; 25 FR 14021, Dec. 31, 1960, as 
amended by T.D. 7730, 45 FR 72650, Nov. 3, 1980]

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