[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 26, Volume 2]
[Revised as of April 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 26CFR1.71-1T]

[Page 134-141]
 
                       TITLE 26--INTERNAL REVENUE
 
    CHAPTER I--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY 
                               (CONTINUED)
 
PART 1_INCOME TAXES--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 1.71-1T  Alimony and separate maintenance payments (temporary).

    (a) In general.
    Q-1 What is the income tax treatment of alimony or separate 
maintenance payments?
    A-1 Alimony or separate maintenance payments are, under section 71, 
included in the gross income of the payee spouse and, under section 215, 
allowed as a deduction from the gross income of the payor spouse.
    Q-2 What is an alimony or separate maintenance payment?
    A-2 An alimony or separate maintenance payment is any payment 
received by or on behalf of a spouse (which for this purpose includes a 
former spouse) of the payor under a divorce or separation instrument 
that meets all of the following requirements:
    (a) The payment is in cash (see A-5).
    (b) The payment is not designated as a payment which is excludible 
from the gross income of the payee and nondeductible by the payor (see 
A-8).
    (c) In the case of spouses legally separated under a decree of 
divorce or separate maintenance, the spouses are not members of the same 
household at the time the payment is made (see A-9).
    (d) The payor has no liability to continue to make any payment after 
the death of the payee (or to make any payment as a substitute for such 
payment) and the divorce or separation instrument states that there is 
no such liability (see A-10).
    (e) The payment is not treated as child support (see A-15).
    (f) To the extent that one or more annual payments exceed $10,000 
during any of the 6-post-separation years, the payor is obligated to 
make annual payments in each of the 6-post-separation years (see A-19).
    Q-3 In order to be treated as alimony or separate maintenance 
payments, must the payments be ``periodic'' as that term was defined 
prior to enactment of the Tax Reform Act of 1984 or be made in discharge 
of a legal obligation of the payor to support the payee arising out of a 
marital or family relationship?
    A-3 No. The Tax Reform Act of 1984 replaces the old requirements 
with the requirements described in A-2 above. Thus, the requirements 
that alimony or separate maintenance payments be ``periodic'' and be 
made in discharge of a legal obligation to support arising out of a 
marital or family relationship have been eliminated.
    Q-4 Are the instruments described in section 71(a) of prior law the 
same as divorce or separation instruments described in section 71, as 
amended by the Tax Reform Act of 1984?
    A-4 Yes.
    (b) Specific requirements.
    Q-5 May alimony or separate maintenance payments be made in a form 
other than cash?
    A-5 No. Only cash payments (including checks and money orders 
payable on demand) qualify as alimony or separate maintenance payments. 
Transfers of services or property (including a debt instrument of a 
third party or an annuity contract), execution of a debt instrument by 
the payor, or the use of property of the payor do not qualify as alimony 
or separate maintenance payments.
    Q-6 May payments of cash to a third party on behalf of a spouse 
qualify as alimony or separate maintenance payments if the payments are 
pursuant to the terms of a divorce or separation instrument?
    A-6 Yes. Assuming all other requirements are satisfied, a payment of 
cash by the payor spouse to a third party under the terms of the divorce 
or separation instrument will qualify as a payment of cash which is 
received ``on

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behalf of a spouse''. For example, cash payments of rent, mortgage, tax, 
or tuition liabilities of the payee spouse made under the terms of the 
divorce or separation instrument will qualify as alimony or separate 
maintenance payments. Any payments to maintain property owned by the 
payor spouse and used by the payee spouse (including mortgage payments, 
real estate taxes and insurance premiums) are not payments on behalf of 
a spouse even if those payments are made pursuant to the terms of the 
divorce or separation instrument. Premiums paid by the payor spouse for 
term or whole life insurance on the payor's life made under the terms of 
the divorce or separation instrument will qualify as payments on behalf 
of the payee spouse to the extent that the payee spouse is the owner of 
the policy.
    Q-7 May payments of cash to a third party on behalf of a spouse 
qualify as alimony or separate maintenance payments if the payments are 
made to the third party at the written request of the payee spouse?
    A-7 Yes. For example, instead of making an alimony or separate 
maintenance payment directly to the payee, the payor spouse may make a 
cash payment to a charitable organization if such payment is pursuant to 
the written request, consent or ratification of the payee spouse. Such 
request, consent or ratification must state that the parties intend the 
payment to be treated as an alimony or separate maintenance payment to 
the payee spouse subject to the rules of section 71, and must be 
received by the payor spouse prior to the date of filing of the payor's 
first return of tax for the taxable year in which the payment was made.
    Q-8 How may spouses designate that payments otherwise qualifying as 
alimony or separate maintenance payments shall be excludible from the 
gross income of the payee and nondeductible by the payor?
    A-8 The spouses may designate that payments otherwise qualifying as 
alimony or separate maintenance payments shall be nondeductible by the 
payor and excludible from gross income by the payee by so providing in a 
divorce or separation instrument (as defined in section 71(b)(2)). If 
the spouses have executed a written separation agreement (as described 
in section 71(b)(2)(B)), any writing signed by both spouses which 
designates otherwise qualifying alimony or separate maintenance payments 
as nondeductible and excludible and which refers to the written 
separation agreement will be treated as a written separation agreement 
(and thus a divorce or separation instrument) for purposes of the 
preceding sentence. If the spouses are subject to temporary support 
orders (as described in section 71(b)(2)(C)), the designation of 
otherwise qualifying alimony or separate payments as nondeductible and 
excludible must be made in the original or a subsequent temporary 
support order. A copy of the instrument containing the designation of 
payments as not alimony or separate maintenance payments must be 
attached to the payee's first filed return of tax (Form 1040) for each 
year in which the designation applies.
    Q-9 What are the consequences if, at the time a payment is made, the 
payor and payee spouses are members of the same household?
    A-9 Generally, a payment made at the time when the payor and payee 
spouses are members of the same household cannot qualify as an alimony 
or separate maintenance payment if the spouses are legally separated 
under a decree of divorce or of separate maintenance. For purposes of 
the preceding sentence, a dwelling unit formerly shared by both spouses 
shall not be considered two separate households even if the spouses 
physically separate themselves within the dwelling unit. The spouses 
will not be treated as members of the same household if one spouse is 
preparing to depart from the household of the other spouse, and does 
depart not more than one month after the date the payment is made. If 
the spouses are not legally separated under a decree of divorce or 
separate maintenance, a payment under a written separation agreement or 
a decree described in section 71(b)(2)(C) may qualify as an alimony or 
separate maintenance payment notwithstanding that the payor and payee 
are members of the same household at the time the payment is made.

[[Page 136]]

    Q-10 Assuming all other requirements relating to the qualification 
of certain payments as alimony or separate maintenance payments are met, 
what are the consequences if the payor spouse is required to continue to 
make the payments after the death of the payee spouse?
    A-10 None of the payments before (or after) the death of the payee 
spouse qualify as alimony or separate maintenance payments.
    Q-11 What are the consequences if the divorce or separation 
instrument fails to state that there is no liability for any period 
after the death of the payee spouse to continue to make any payments 
which would otherwise qualify as alimony or separate maintenance 
payments?
    A-11 If the instrument fails to include such a statement, none of 
the payments, whether made before or after the death of the payee 
spouse, will qualify as alimony or separate maintenance payments.

    Example (1). A is to pay B $10,000 in cash each year for a period of 
10 years under a divorce or separation instrument which does not state 
that the payments will terminate upon the death of B. None of the 
payments will qualify as alimony or separate maintenance payments.
    Example (2). A is to pay B $10,000 in cash each year for a period of 
10 years under a divorce or separation instrument which states that the 
payments will terminate upon the death of B. In addition, under the 
instrument, A is to pay B or B's estate $20,000 in cash each year for a 
period of 10 years. Because the $20,000 annual payments will not 
terminate upon the death of B, these payments will not qualify as 
alimony or separate maintenance payments. However, the separate $10,000 
annual payments will qualify as alimony or separate maintenance 
payments.

    Q-12 Will a divorce or separation instrument be treated as stating 
that there is no liability to make payments after the death of the payee 
spouse if the liability to make such payments terminates pursuant to 
applicable local law or oral agreement?
    A-12 No. Termination of the liability to make payments must be 
stated in the terms of the divorce or separation instrument.
    Q-13 What are the consequences if the payor spouse is required to 
make one or more payments (in cash or property) after the death of the 
payee spouse as a substitute for the continuation of pre-death payments 
which would otherwise qualify as alimony or separate maintenance 
payments?
    A-13 If the payor spouse is required to make any such substitute 
payments, none of the otherwise qualifying payments will qualify as 
alimony or separate maintenance payments. The divorce or separation 
instrument need not state, however, that there is no liability to make 
any such substitute payment.
    Q-14 Under what circumstances will one or more payments (in cash or 
property) which are to occur after the death of the payee spouse be 
treated as a substitute for the continuation of payments which would 
otherwise qualify as alimony or separate maintenance payments?
    A-14 To the extent that one or more payments are to begin to be 
made, increase in amount, or become accelerated in time as a result of 
the death of the payee spouse, such payments may be treated as a 
substitute for the continuation of payments terminating on the death of 
the payee spouse which would otherwise qualify as alimony or separate 
maintenance payments. The determination of whether or not such payments 
are a substitute for the continuation of payments which would otherwise 
qualify as alimony or separate maintenance payments, and of the amount 
of the otherwise qualifying alimony or separate maintenance payments for 
which any such payments are a substitute, will depend on all of the 
facts and circumstances.

    Example (1). Under the terms of a divorce decree, A is obligated to 
make annual alimony payments to B of $30,000, terminating on the earlier 
of the expiration of 6 years or the death of B. B maintains custody of 
the minor children of A and B. The decree provides that at the death of 
B, if there are minor children of A and B remaining, A will be obligated 
to make annual payments of $10,000 to a trust, the income and corpus of 
which are to be used for the benefit of the children until the youngest 
child attains the age of majority. These facts indicate that A's 
liability to make annual $10,000 payments in trust for the benefit of 
his minor children upon the death of B is a substitute for $10,000 of 
the $30,000 annual payments to B. Accordingly, $10,000 of each of the 
$30,000

[[Page 137]]

annual payments to B will not qualify as alimony or separate maintenance 
payments.
    Example (2). Under the terms of a divorce decree, A is obligated to 
make annual alimony payments to B of $30,000, terminating on the earlier 
of the expiration of 15 years or the death of B. The divorce decree 
provides that if B dies before the expiration of the 15 year period, A 
will pay to B's estate the difference between the total amount that A 
would have paid had B survived, minus the amount actually paid. For 
example, if B dies at the end of the 10th year in which payments are 
made, A will pay to B's estate $150,000 ($450,000-$300,000). These facts 
indicate that A's liability to make a lump sum payment to B's estate 
upon the death of B is a substitute for the full amount of each of the 
annual $30,000 payments to B. Accordingly, none of the annual $30,000 
payments to B will qualify as alimony or separate maintenance payments. 
The result would be the same if the lump sum payable at B's death were 
discounted by an appropriate interest factor to account for the 
prepayment.

    (c) Child support payments.
    Q-15 What are the consequences of a payment which the terms of the 
divorce or separation instrument fix as payable for the support of a 
child of the payor spouse?
    A-15 A payment which under the terms of the divorce or separation 
instrument is fixed (or treated as fixed) as payable for the support of 
a child of the payor spouse does not qualify as an alimony or separate 
maintenance payment. Thus, such a payment is not deductible by the payor 
spouse or includible in the income of the payee spouse.
    Q-16 When is a payment fixed (or treated as fixed) as payable for 
the support of a child of the payor spouse?
    A-16 A payment is fixed as payable for the support of a child of the 
payor spouse if the divorce or separation instrument specifically 
designates some sum or portion (which sum or portion may fluctuate) as 
payable for the support of a child of the payor spouse. A payment will 
be treated as fixed as payable for the support of a child of the payor 
spouse if the payment is reduced (a) on the happening of a contingency 
relating to a child of the payor, or (b) at a time which can clearly be 
associated with such a contingency. A payment may be treated as fixed as 
payable for the support of a child of the payor spouse even if other 
separate payments specifically are designated as payable for the support 
of a child of the payor spouse.
    Q-17 When does a contingency relate to a child of the payor?
    A-17 For this purpose, a contingency relates to a child of the payor 
if it depends on any event relating to that child, regardless of whether 
such event is certain or likely to occur. Events that relate to a child 
of the payor include the following: the child's attaining a specified 
age or income level, dying, marrying, leaving school, leaving the 
spouse's household, or gaining employment.
    Q-18 When will a payment be treated as to be reduced at a time which 
can clearly be associated with the happening of a contingency relating 
to a child of the payor?
    A-18 There are two situations, described below, in which payments 
which would otherwise qualify as alimony or separate maintenance 
payments will be presumed to be reduced at a time clearly associated 
with the happening of a contingency relating to a child of the payor. In 
all other situations, reductions in payments will not be treated as 
clearly associated with the happening of a contingency relating to a 
child of the payor.
    The first situation referred to above is where the payments are to 
be reduced not more than 6 months before or after the date the child is 
to attain the age of 18, 21, or local age of majority. The second 
situation is where the payments are to be reduced on two or more 
occasions which occur not more than one year before or after a different 
child of the payor spouse attains a certain age between the ages of 18 
and 24, inclusive. The certain age referred to in the preceding sentence 
must be the same for each such child, but need not be a whole number of 
years.
    The presumption in the two situations described above that payments 
are to be reduced at a time clearly associated with the happening of a 
contingency relating to a child of the payor may be rebutted (either by 
the Service or by taxpayers) by showing that the time at which the 
payments are to be reduced was determined independently of any 
contingencies relating to the children of the payor. The

[[Page 138]]

presumption in the first situation will be rebutted conclusively if the 
reduction is a complete cessation of alimony or separate maintenance 
payments during the sixth post-separation year (described in A-21) or 
upon the expiration of a 72-month period. The presumption may also be 
rebutted in other circumstances, for example, by showing that alimony 
payments are to be made for a period customarily provided in the local 
jurisdiction, such as a period equal to one-half the duration of the 
marriage.

    Example: A and B are divorced on July 1, 1985, when their children, 
C (born July 15, 1970) and D (born September 23, 1972), are 14 and 12, 
respectively. Under the divorce decree, A is to make alimony payments to 
B of $2,000 per month. Such payments are to be reduced to $1,500 per 
month on January 1, 1991 and to $1,000 per month on January 1, 1995. On 
January 1, 1991, the date of the first reduction in payments, C will be 
20 years 5 months and 17 days old. On January 1, 1995, the date of the 
second reduction in payments, D will be 22 years 3 months and 9 days 
old. Each of the reductions in payments is to occur not more than one 
year before or after a different child of A attains the age of 21 years 
and 4 months. (Actually, the reductions are to occur not more than one 
year before or after C and D attain any of the ages 21 years 3 months 
and 9 days through 21 years 5 months and 17 days.) Accordingly, the 
reductions will be presumed to clearly be associated with the happening 
of a contingency relating to C and D. Unless this presumption is 
rebutted, payments under the divorce decree equal to the sum of the 
reduction ($1,000 per month) will be treated as fixed for the support of 
the children of A and therefore will not qualify as alimony or separate 
maintenance payments.

    (d) Excess front-loading rules.
    Q-19 What are the excess front-loading rules?
    A-19 The excess front-loading rules are two special rules which may 
apply to the extent that payments in any calendar year exceed $10,000. 
The first rule is a minimum term rule, which must be met in order for 
any annual payment, to the extent in excess of $10,000, to qualify as an 
alimony or separate maintenance payment (see A-2(f)). This rule requires 
that alimony or separate maintenance payments be called for, at a 
minimum, during the 6 ``post-separation years''. The second rule is a 
recapture rule which characterizes payments retrospectively by requiring 
a recalculation and inclusion in income by the payor and deducation by 
the payee of previously paid alimony or separate maintenance payment to 
the extent that the amount of such payments during any of the 6 ``post-
separation years'' falls short of the amount of payments during a prior 
year by more than $10,000.
    Q-20 Do the excess front-loading rules apply to payments to the 
extent that annual payments never exceed $10,000?
    A-20 No. For example, A is to make a single $10,000 payment to B. 
Provided that the other requirements of section 71 are met, the payment 
will qualify as an alimony or separate maintenance payment. If A were to 
make a single $15,000 payment to B, $10,000 of the payment would qualify 
as an alimony or separate maintenance payment and $5,000 of the payment 
would be disqualified under the minimum term rule because payments were 
not to be made for the minimum period.
    Q-21 Do the excess front-loading rules apply to payments received 
under a decree described in section 71(b)(2)(C)?
    A-21 No. Payments under decrees described in section 71(b)(2)(C) are 
to be disregarded entirely for purposes of applying the excess front-
loading rules.
    Q-22 Both the minimum term rule and the recapture rule refer to 6 
``post-separation years''. What are the 6 ``post separation years''?
    A-22 The 6 ``post-separation years'' are the 6 consecutive calendar 
years beginning with the first calendar year in which the payor pays to 
the payee an alimony or separate maintenance payment (except a payment 
made under a decree described in section 71(b)(2)(C)). Each year within 
this period is referred to as a ``post-separation year''. The 6-year 
period need not commence with the year in which the spouses separate or 
divorce, or with the year in which payments under the divorce or 
separation instrument are made, if no payments during such year qualify 
as alimony or separate maintenance payments. For example, a decree for 
the divorce of A and B is entered in October, 1985. The decree requires 
A to make monthly payments to B commencing November 1, 1985, but A and B

[[Page 139]]

are members of the same household until February 15, 1986 (and as a 
result, the payments prior to January 16, 1986, do not qualify as 
alimony payments). For purposes of applying the excess front-loading 
rules to payments from A to B, the 6 calendar years 1986 through 1991 
are post-separation years. If a spouse has been making payments pursuant 
to a divorce or separation instrument described in section 71(b)(2) (A) 
or (B), a modification of the instrument or the substitution of a new 
instrument (for example, the substitution of a divorce decree for a 
written separation agreement) will not result in the creation of 
additional post-separation years. However, if a spouse has been making 
payments pursuant to a divorce or separation instrument described in 
section 71(b)(2)(C), the 6-year period does not begin until the first 
calendar year in which alimony or separate maintenance payments are made 
under a divorce or separation instrument described in section 71(b)(2) 
(A) or (B).
    Q-23 How does the minimum term rule operate?
    A-23 The minimum term rule operates in the following manner. To the 
extent payments are made in excess of $10,000, a payment will qualify as 
an alimony or separate maintenance payment only if alimony or separate 
maintenance payments are to be made in each of the 6 post-separation 
years. For example, pursuant to a divorce decree, A is to make alimony 
payments to B of $20,000 in each of the 5 calendar years 1985 through 
1989. A is to make no payment in 1990. Under the minimum term rule, only 
$10,000 will qualify as an alimony payment in each of the calendar years 
1985 through 1989. If the divorce decree also required A to make a $1 
payment in 1990, the minimum term rule would be satisfied and $20,000 
would be treated as an alimony payment in each of the calendar years 
1985 through 1989. The recapture rule would, however, apply for 1990. 
For purposes of determining whether alimony or separate maintenance 
payments are to be made in any year, the possible termination of such 
payments upon the happening of a contingency (other than the passage of 
time) which has not yet occurred is ignored (unless such contingency may 
cause all or a portion of the payment to be treated as a child support 
payment).
    Q-24 How does the recapture rule operate?
    A-24 The recapture rule operates in the following manner. If the 
amount of alimony or separate maintenance payments paid in any post-
separation year (referred to as the ``computation year'') falls short of 
the amount of alimony or separate maintenance payments paid in any prior 
post-separation year by more than $10,000, the payor must compute an 
``excess amount'' for the computation year. The excess amount for any 
computation year is the sum of excess amounts determined with respect to 
each prior post-separation year. The excess amount determined with 
respect to a prior post-separation year is the excess of (1) the amount 
of alimony or separate maintenance payments paid by the payor spouse 
during such prior post-separation year, over (2) the amount of the 
alimony or separate maintenance payments paid by the payor spouse during 
the computation year plus $10,000. For purposes of this calculation, the 
amount of alimony or separate maintenance payments made by the payor 
spouse during any post-separation year preceding the computation year is 
reduced by any excess amount previously determined with respect to such 
year. The rules set forth above may be illustrated by the following 
example. A makes alimony payments to B of $25,000 in 1985 and $12,000 in 
1986. The excess amount with respect to 1985 that is recaptured in 1986 
is $3,000 ($25,000- ($12,000+$10,000)). For purposes of subsequent 
computation years, the amount deemed paid in 1985 is $22,000. If A makes 
alimony payments to B of $1,000 in 1987, the excess amount that is 
recaptured in 1987 will be $12,000. This is the sum of an $11,000 excess 
amount with respect to 1985 ($22,000-$1,000+$10,000)) and a $1,000 
excess amount with respect to 1986 ($12,000-($1,000+$10,000)). If, prior 
to the end of 1990, payments decline further, additional recapture will 
occur. The payor spouse must include the excess amount in gross income 
for his/her taxable year begining with or in the computation year. The 
payee spouse is

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allowed a deduction for the excess amount in computing adjusted gross 
income for his/her taxable year beginning with or in the computation 
year. However, the payee spouse must compute the excess amount by 
reference to the date when payments were made and not when payments were 
received.
    Q-25 What are the exceptions to the recapture rule?
    A-25 Apart from the $10,000 threshold for application of the 
recapture rule, there are three exceptions to the recapture rule. The 
first exception is for payments received under temporary support orders 
described in section 71(b)(2)(C) (see A-21). The second exception is for 
any payment made pursuant to a continuing liability over the period of 
the post-separation years to pay a fixed portion of the payor's income 
from a business or property or from compensation for employment or self-
employment. The third exception is where the alimony or separate 
manitenance payments in any post-separation year cease by reason of the 
death of the payor or payee or the remarriage (as defined under 
applicable local law) of the payee before the close of the computation 
year. For example, pursuant to a divorce decree, A is to make cash 
payments to B of $30,000 in each of the calendar years 1985 through 
1990. A makes cash payments of $30,000 in 1985 and $15,000 in 1986, in 
which year B remarries and A's alimony payments cease. The recapture 
rule does not apply for 1986 or any subsequent year. If alimony or 
separate maintenance payments made by A decline or cease during a post-
separation year for any other reason (including a failure by the payor 
to make timely payments, a modification of the divorce or separation 
instrument, a reduction in the support needs of the payee, or a 
reduction in the ability of the payor to provide support) excess amounts 
with respect to prior post-separation years will be subject to 
recapture.
    (e) Effective dates.
    Q-26 When does section 71, as amended by the Tax Reform Act of 1984, 
become effective?
    A-26 Generally, section 71, as amended, is effective with respect to 
divorce or separation instruments (as defined in section 71(b)(2)) 
executed after December 31, 1984. If a decree of divorce or separate 
maintenance executed after December 31, 1984, incorporates or adopts 
without change the terms of the alimony or separate maintenance payments 
under a divorce or separation instrument executed before January 1, 
1985, such decree will be treated as executed before January 1, 1985. A 
change in the amount of alimony or separate maintenance payments or the 
time period over which such payments are to continue, or the addition or 
deletion of any contingencies or conditions relating to such payments is 
a change in the terms of the alimony or separate maintenance payments. 
For example, in November 1984, A and B executed a written separation 
agreement. In February 1985, a decree of divorce is entered in 
substitution for the written separation agreement. The decree of divorce 
does not change the terms of the alimony A pays to B. The decree of 
divorce will be treated as executed before January 1, 1985 and hence 
alimony payments under the decree will be subject to the rules of 
section 71 prior to amendment by the Tax Reform Act of 1984. If the 
amount or time period of the alimony or separate maintenance payments 
are not specified in the pre-1985 separation agreement or if the decree 
of divorce changes the amount or term of such payments, the decree of 
divorce will not be treated as executed before January 1, 1985, and 
alimony payments under the decree will be subject to the rules of 
section 71, as amended by the Tax Reform Act of 1984.
    Section 71, as amended, also applies to any divorce or separation 
instrument executed (or treated as executed) before January 1, 1985 that 
has been modified on or after January 1, 1985, if such modification 
expressly provides that section 71, as amended by the Tax Reform Act of 
1984, shall apply to the instrument as modified. In this case, section 
71, as amended, is effective

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with respect to payments made after the date the instrument is modified.

(Secs. 1041(d)(4) (98 Stat. 798, 26 U.S.C. 1041(d)(4), 152(e)(2)(A) (98 
Stat. 802, 26 U.S.C. 152(e)(2)(A), 215(c) (98 Stat. 800, 26 U.S.C. 
215(c)) and 7805 (68A Stat. 917, 26 U.S.C. 7805) of the Internal Revenue 
Code of 1954.

[T.D. 7973, 49 FR 34455, Aug. 31, 1984; 49 FR 36645, Sept. 19, 1984]