[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 26, Volume 8]
[Revised as of April 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 26CFR1.752-2]

[Page 556-562]
 
                       TITLE 26--INTERNAL REVENUE
 
    CHAPTER I--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY 
                               (CONTINUED)
 
Determination of Tax Liability--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 1.752-2  Partner's share of resource liabilities.

    (a) In general. A partner's share of a recourse partnership 
liability equals the portion of that liability, if any, for which the 
partner or related person bears the economic risk of loss. The 
determination of the extent to which a partner bears the economic risk 
of loss for a partnership liability is made under the rules in 
paragraphs (b) through (j) of this section.
    (b) Obligation to make a payment. (1) In general. Except as 
otherwise provided in this section, a partner bears the economic risk of 
loss for a partnership liability to the extent that, if the partnership 
constructively liquidated, the partner or related person would be 
obligated to make a payment to any person (or a contribution to the 
partnership) because that liability becomes due and payable and the 
partner or related person would not be entitled to reimbursement from 
another partner or person that is a related person to another partner. 
Upon a constructive liquidation, all of the following events are deemed 
to occur simultaneously:
    (i) All of the partnership's liabilities become payable in full;
    (ii) With the exception of property contributed to secure a 
partnership liability (see Sec. 1.752-2(h)(2)), all of the 
partnership's assets, including cash, have a value of zero;
    (iii) The partnership disposes of all of its property in a fully 
taxable transaction for no consideration (except relief from liabilities 
for which the creditors's right to repayment is limited solely to one or 
more assets of the partnership);
    (iv) All items of income, gain, loss, or deduction are allocated 
among the partners; and
    (v) The partnership liquidates.
    (2) Treatment upon deemed disposition. For purposes of paragraph 
(b)(1) of this section, gain or loss on the deemed disposition of the 
partnership's assets is computed in accordance with the following:
    (i) If the creditor's right to repayment of a partnership liability 
is limited solely to one or more assets of the partnership, gain or loss 
is recognized in an amount equal to the difference between the amount of 
the liability that is extinguished by the deemed disposition and the tax 
basis (or book value to the extent section 704(c) or Sec. 1.704-
1(b)(4)(i) applies) in those assets.
    (ii) A loss is recognized equal to the remaining tax basis (or book 
value to the extent section 704(c) or Sec. 1.704-1(b)(4)(i) applies) of 
all the partnership's assets not taken into account in paragraph 
(b)(2)(i) of this section.
    (3) Obligations recognized. The determination of the extent to which 
a partner or related person has an obligation to make a payment under 
paragraph (b)(1) of this section is based on the facts and circumstances 
at the time of the determination. All statutory and contractual 
obligations relating to the partnership liability are taken into account 
for purposes of applying this section, including:
    (i) Contractual obligations outside the partnership agreement such 
as guarantees, indemnifications, reimbursement agreements, and other 
obligations running directly to creditors or to other partners, or to 
the partnership;
    (ii) Obligations to the partnership that are imposed by the 
partnership agreement, including the obligation to make a capital 
contribution and to restore a deficit capital account upon liquidation 
of the partnership; and
    (iii) Payment obligations (whether in the form of direct remittances 
to another partner or a contribution to the

[[Page 557]]

partnership) imposed by state law, including the governing state 
partnership statute.

To the extent that the obligation of a partner to make a payment with 
respect to a partnership liability is not recognized under this 
paragraph (b)(3), paragraph (b) of this section is applied as if the 
obligation did not exist.
    (4) Contingent obligations. A payment obligation is disregarded if, 
taking into account all the facts and circumstances, the obligation is 
subject to contingencies that make it unlikely that the obligation will 
ever be discharged. If a payment obligation would arise at a future time 
after the occurrence of an event that is not determinable with 
reasonable certainty, the obligation is ignored until the event occurs.
    (5) Reimbursement rights. A partner's or related person's obligation 
to make a payment with respect to a partnership liability is reduced to 
the extent that the partner or related person is entitled to 
reimbursement from another partner or a person who is a related person 
to another partner.
    (6) Deemed satisfaction of obligation. For purposes of determining 
the extent to which a partner or related person has a payment obligation 
and the economic risk of loss, it is assumed that all partners and 
related persons who have obligations to make payments actually perform 
those obligations, irrespective of their actual net worth, unless the 
facts and circumstances indicate a plan to circumvent or avoid the 
obligation. See Sec. 1.752-2(j).
    (c) Partner or related person as lender--(1) In general. A partner 
bears the economic risk of loss for a partnership liability to the 
extent that the partner or a related person makes (or acquires an 
interest in) a nonrecourse loan to the partnership and the economic risk 
of loss for the liability is not borne by another partner.
    (2) Wrapped debt. If a partnership liability is owed to a partner or 
related person and that liability includes (i.e., is ``wrapped'' around) 
a nonrecourse obligation encumbering partnership property that is owed 
to another person, the partnership liability will be treated as two 
separate liabilities. The portion of the partnership liability 
corresponding to the wrapped debt is treated as a liability owed to 
another person.
    (d) De minimis exceptions--(1) Partner as lender. The general rule 
contained in paragraph (c)(1) of this section does not apply if a 
partner or related person whose interest (directly or indirectly through 
one or more partnerships including the interest of any related person) 
in each item of partnership income, gain, loss, deduction, or credit for 
every taxable year that the partner is a partner in the partnership is 
10 percent or less, makes a loan to the partnership which constitutes 
qualified nonrecourse financing within the meaning of section 465(b)(6) 
(determined without regard to the type of activity financed).
    (2) Partner as guarantor. The general rule contained in paragraph 
(b)(1) of this section does not apply if a partner or related person 
whose interest (directly or indirectly through one or more partnerships 
including the interest of any related person) in each item of 
partnership income, gain, loss, deduction, or credit for every taxable 
year that the partner is a partner in the partnership is 10 percent or 
less, guarantees a loan that would otherwise be a nonrecourse loan of 
the partnership and which would constitute qualified nonrecourse 
financing within the meaning of section 465(b)(6) (without regard to the 
type of activity financed) if the guarantor had made the loan to the 
partnership.
    (e) Special rule for nonrecourse liability with interest guaranteed 
by a partner--(1) In general. For purposes of this section, if one or 
more partners or related persons have guaranteed the payment of more 
than 25 percent of the total interest that will accrue on a partnership 
nonrecourse liability over its remaining term, and it is reasonable to 
expect that the guarantor will be required to pay substantially all of 
the guaranteed future interest if the partnership fails to do so, then 
the liability is treated as two separate partnership liabilities. If 
this rule applies, the partner or related person that has guaranteed the 
payment of interest is treated as bearing the economic risk of loss for 
the partnership liability to the extent of the present value of the 
guaranteed future

[[Page 558]]

interest payments. The remainder of the stated principal amount of the 
partnership liability constitutes a nonrecourse liability. Generally, in 
applying this rule, it is reasonable to expect that the guarantor will 
be required to pay substantially all of the guaranteed future interest 
if, upon a default in payment by the partnership, the lender can enforce 
the interest guaranty without foreclosing on the property and thereby 
extinguishing the underlying debt. The guarantee of interest rule 
continues to apply even after the point at which the amount of 
guaranteed interest that will accrue is less than 25 percent of the 
total interest that will accrue on the liability.
    (2) Computation of present value. The present value of the 
guaranteed future interest payments is computed using a discount rate 
equal to either the interest rate stated in the loan documents, or if 
interest is imputed under either section 483 or section 1274, the 
applicable federal rate, compounded semi-annually. The computation takes 
into account any payment of interest that the partner or related person 
may be required to make only to the extent that the interest will accrue 
economically (determined in accordance with section 446 and the 
regulations thereunder) after the date of the interest guarantee. If the 
loan document contains a variable rate of interest that is an interest 
rate based on current values of an objective interest index, the present 
value is computed on the assumption that the interest determined under 
the objective interest index on the date of the computation will remain 
constant over the term of the loan. The term ``objective interest 
index'' has the meaning given to it in section 1275 and the regulations 
thereunder (relating to variable rate debt instruments). Examples of an 
objective interest index include the prime rate of a designated 
financial institution, LIBOR (London Interbank Offered Rate), and the 
applicable federal rate under section 1274(d).
    (3) Safe harbor. The general rule contained in paragraph (e)(1) of 
this section does not apply to a partnership nonrecourse liability if 
the guarantee of interest by the partner or related person is for a 
period not in excess of the lesser of five years or one-third of the 
term of the liability.
    (4) De minimis exception. The general rule contained in paragraph 
(e)(1) of this section does not apply if a partner or related person 
whose interest (directly or indirectly through one or more partnerships 
including the interest of any related person) in each item of 
partnership income, gain, loss, deduction, or credit for every taxable 
year that the partner is a partner in the partnership is 10 percent of 
less, guarantees the interest on a loan to that partnership which 
constitutes qualified nonrecourse financing within the meaning of 
section 465(b)(6) (determined without regard to the type of activity 
financed). An allocation of interest to the extent paid by the guarantor 
is not treated as a partnership item of deduction or loss subject to the 
10 percent or less rule.
    (f) Examples. The following examples illustrate the principles of 
paragraphs (a) through (e) of this section.

    Example 1. Determining when a partner bears the economic risk of 
loss. A and B form a general partnership with each contributing $100 in 
cash. The partnership purchases an office building on leased land for 
$1,000 from an unrelated seller, paying $200 in cash and executing a 
note to the seller for the balance of $800. The note is a general 
obligation of the partnership, i.e., no partner has been relieved from 
personal liability. The partnership agreement provides that all items 
are allocated equally except that tax losses are specially allocated 90% 
to A and 10% to B and that capital accounts will be maintained in 
accordance with the regulations under section 704(b), including a 
deficit capital account restoration obligation on liquidation. In a 
constructive liquidation, the $800 liability becomes due and payable. 
All of the partnership's assets, including the building, are deemed to 
be worthless. The building is deemed sold for a value of zero. Capital 
accounts are adjusted to reflect the loss on the hypothetical 
disposition, as follows:

------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                     A            B
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Initial contribution..........................       $100         $100
Loss on hypothetical sale.....................       (900)        (100)
                                               --------------
                                                    ($800)          $0
------------------------------------------------------------------------


Other than the partners' obligation to fund negative capital accounts on 
liquidation, there are no other contractual or statutory payment 
obligations existing between the partners, the partnership and the 
lender. Therefore, $800 of the partnership liability is

[[Page 559]]

classified as a recourse liability because one or more partners bears 
the economic risk of loss for non-payment. B has no share of the $800 
liability since the constructive liquidation produces no payment 
obligation for B. A's share of the partnership liability is $800 because 
A would have an obligation in that amount to make a contribution to the 
partnership.
    Example 2. Recourse liability; deficit restoration obligation. C and 
D each contribute $500 in cash to the capital of a new general 
partnership, CD. CD purchases property from an unrelated seller for 
$1,000 in cash and a $9,000 mortgage note. The note is a general 
obligation of the partnership, i.e., no partner has been relieved from 
personal liability. The partnership agreement provides that profits and 
losses are to be divided 40% to C and 60% to D. C and D are required to 
make up any deficit in their capital accounts. In a constructive 
liquidation, all partnership assets are deemed to become worthless and 
all partnership liabilities become due and payable in full. The 
partnership is deemed to dispose of all its assets in a fully taxable 
transaction for no consideration. Capital accounts are adjusted to 
reflect the loss on the hypothetical disposition, as follows:

------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                     C            D
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Initial contribution..........................       $500         $500
                                               --------------
Loss on hypothetical sale.....................     (4,000)      (6,000)
                                                  ($3,500)     ($5,500)
------------------------------------------------------------------------


C's capital account reflects a deficit that C would have to make up to 
$3,500 and D's capital account reflects a deficit that D would have to 
make up of $5,500. Therefore, the $9,000 mortgage note is a recourse 
liability because one or more partners bear the economic risk of loss 
for the liability. C's share of the recourse liability is $3,500 and D's 
share is $5,500.
    Example 3. Guarantee by limited partner; partner deemed to satisfy 
obligation. E and F form a limited partnership. E, the general partner, 
contributes $2,000 and F, the limited partner, contributes $8,000 in 
cash to the partnership. The partnership agreement allocates losses 20% 
to E and 80% to F until F's capital account is reduced to zero, after 
which all losses are allocated to E. The partnership purchases 
depreciable property for $25,000 using its $10,000 cash and a $15,000 
recourse loan from a bank. F guarantees payment of the $15,000 loan to 
the extent the loan remains unpaid after the bank has exhausted its 
remedies against the partnership. In a constructive liquidation, the 
$15,000 liability becomes due and payable. All of the partnership's 
assets, including the depreciable property, are deemed to be worthless. 
The depreciable property is deemed sold for a value of zero. Capital 
accounts are adjusted to reflect the loss on the hypothetical 
disposition, as follows:

------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                     E            F
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Initial contribution..........................     $2,000       $8,000
Loss on hypothetical sale.....................    (17,000)      (8,000)
                                               --------------
                                                 ($15,000)          $0
------------------------------------------------------------------------


E, as a general partner, would be obligated by operation of law to make 
a net contribution to the partnership of $15,000. Because E is assumed 
to satisfy that obligation, it is also assumed that F would not have to 
satisfy F's guarantee. The $15,000 mortgage is treated as a recourse 
liability because one or more partners bear the economic risk of loss. 
E's share of the liability is $15,000, and F's share is zero. This would 
be so even if E's net worth at the time of the determination is less 
than $15,000, unless the facts and circumstances indicate a plan to 
circumvent or avoid E's obligation to contribute to the partnership.
    Example 4. Partner guarantee with right of subrogation. G, a limited 
partner in the GH partnership, guarantees a portion of a partnership 
liability. The liability is a general obligation of the partnership, 
i.e., no partner has been relieved from personal liability. If under 
state law G is subrogated to the rights of the lender, G would have the 
right to recover the amount G paid to the recourse lender from the 
general partner. Therefore, G does not bear the economic risk of loss 
for the partnership liability.
    Example 5. Bifurcation of partnership liability; guarantee of part 
of nonrecourse liability. A partnership borrows $10,000, secured by a 
mortgage on real property. The mortgage note contains an exoneration 
clause which provides that in the event of default, the holder's only 
remedy is to foreclose on the property. The holder may not look to any 
other partnership asset or to any partner to pay the liability. However, 
to induce the lender to make the loan, a partner guarantees payment of 
$200 of the loan principal. The exoneration clause does not apply to the 
partner's guarantee. If the partner paid pursuant to the guarantee, the 
partner would be subrogated to the rights of the lender with respect to 
$200 of the mortgage debt, but the partner is not otherwise entitled to 
reimbursement from the partnership or any partner. For purposes of 
section 752, $200 of the $10,000 mortgage liability is treated as a 
recourse liability of the partnership and $9,800 is treated as a 
nonrecourse liability of the partnership. The partner's share of the 
recourse liability of the partnership is $200.
    Example 6. Wrapped debt. I, an individual, purchases real estate 
from an unrelated seller for $10,000, paying $1,000 in cash and giving a 
$9,000 purchase mortgage note on which I has no personal liability and 
as to which the

[[Page 560]]

seller can look only to the property for satisfaction. At a time when 
the property is worth $15,000, I sells the property to a partnership in 
which I is a general partner. The partnership pays for the property with 
a partnership purchase money mortgage note of $15,000 on which neither 
the partnership nor any partner (or person related to a partner) has 
personal liability. The $15,000 mortgage note is a wrapped debt that 
includes the $9,000 obligation to the original seller. The liability is 
a recourse liability to the extent of $6,000 because I is the creditor 
with respect to the loan and I bears the economic risk of loss for 
$6,000. I's share of the recourse liability is $6,000. The remaining 
$9,000 is treated as a partnership nonrecourse liability that is owed to 
the unrelated seller.
    Example 7. Guarantee of interest by partner treated as part recourse 
and part nonrecourse. On January 1, 1992, a partnership obtains a 
$4,000,000 loan secured by a shopping center owned by the partnership. 
Neither the partnership nor any partner has any personal liability under 
the loan documents for repayment of the stated principal amount. 
Interest accrues at a 15 percent annual rate and is payable on December 
31 of each year. The principal is payable in a lump sum on December 31, 
2006. A partner guarantees payment of 50 percent of each interest 
payment required by the loan. The guarantee can be enforced without 
first foreclosing on the property. When the partnership obtains the 
loan, the present value (discounted at 15 percent, compounded annually) 
of the future interest payments is $3,508,422, and of the future 
principal payment is $491,578. If tested on that date, the loan would be 
treated as a partnership liability of $1,754,211 ($3,508,422x.5) for 
which the guaranteeing partner bears the economic risk of loss and a 
partnership nonrecourse liability of $2,245,789 ($1,754,211 + $491,578).
    Example 8. Contingent obligation not recognized. J and K form a 
general partnership with cash contributions of $2,500 each. J and K 
share partnership profits and losses equally. The partnership purchases 
an apartment building for its $5,000 of cash and a $20,000 nonrecourse 
loan from a commercial bank. The nonrecourse loan is secured by a 
mortgage on the building. The loan documents provide that the 
partnership will be liable for the outstanding balance of the loan on a 
recourse basis to the extent of any decrease in the value of the 
apartment building resulting from the partnership's failure properly to 
maintain the property. There are no facts that establish with reasonable 
certainty the existence of any liability on the part of the partnership 
(and its partners) for damages resulting from the partnership's failure 
properly to maintain the building. Therefore, no partner bears the 
economic risk of loss, and the liability constitutes a nonrecourse 
liability. Under Sec. 1.752-3, J and K share this nonrecourse liability 
equally because they share all profits and losses equally.

    (g) Time-value-of-money considerations--(1) In general. The extent 
to which a partner or related person bears the economic risk of loss is 
determined by taking into account any delay in the time when a payment 
or contribution obligation with respect to a partnership liability is to 
be satisfied. If a payment obligation with respect to a partnership 
liability is not required to be satisfied within a reasonable time after 
the liability becomes due and payable, or if the obligation to make a 
contribution to the partnership is not required to be satisfied before 
the later of--
    (i) The end of the year in which the partner's interest is 
liquidated, or
    (ii) 90 days after the liquidation,

the obligation is recognized only to the extent of the value of the 
obligation.
    (2) Valuation of an obligation. The value of a payment or 
contribution obligation that is not required to be satisfied within the 
time period specified in paragraph (g)(1) of this section equals the 
entire principal balance of the obligation only if the obligation bears 
interest equal to or greater than the applicable federal rate under 
section 1274(d) at the time of valuation, commencing on--
    (i) In the case of a payment obligation, the date that the 
partnership liability to a creditor or other person to whom the 
obligation relates becomes due and payable, or
    (ii) In the case of a contribution obligation, the date of the 
liquidation of the partner's interest in the partnership. If the 
obligation does not bear interest at a rate at least equal to the 
applicable federal rate at the time of valuation, the value of the 
obligation is discounted to the present value of all payments due from 
the partner or related person (i.e., the imputed principal amount 
computed under section 1274(b)). For purposes of making this present 
value determination, the partnership is deemed to have constructively 
liquidated as of the date on which the payment obligation is valued and 
the payment obligation is assumed to be a debt instrument subject to the

[[Page 561]]

rules of section 1274 (i.e., the debt instrument is treated as if it 
were issued for property at the time of the valuation).
    (3) Satisfaction of obligation with partner's promissory note. An 
obligation is not satisfied by the transfer to the obligee of a 
promissory note by a partner or related person unless the note is 
readily tradeable on an established securities market.
    (4) Example. The following example illustrates the principle of 
paragraph (g) of this section.

    Example. Value of obligation not required to be satisfied within 
specified time period. A, the general partner, and B, the limited 
partner, each contributes $10,000 to partnership AB. AB purchases 
property from an unrelated seller for $20,000 in cash and a $70,000 
recourse purchase money note. The partnership agreement provides that 
profits and losses are to be divided equally. A and B are required to 
make up any deficit in their capital accounts. While A is required to 
restore any deficit balance in A's capital account within 90 days after 
the date of liquidation of the partnership, B is not required to restore 
any deficit for two years following the date of liquidation. The deficit 
in B's capital account will not bear interest during that two-year 
period. In a constructive liquidation, all partnership assets are deemed 
to become worthless and all partnership liabilities become due and 
payable in full. The partnership is deemed to dispose of all its assets 
in a fully taxable transaction for no consideration. Capital accounts 
are adjusted to reflect the loss on the hypothetical disposition, as 
follows:

------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                     A            B
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Initial contribution..........................    $10,000      $10,000
Loss on hypothetical sale.....................    (45,000)     (45,000)
                                               --------------
                                                  (35,000)     (35,000)
------------------------------------------------------------------------


A's and B's capital accounts each reflect deficits of $35,000. B's 
obligation to make a contribution pursuant to B's deficit restoration 
obligation is recognized only to the extent of the fair market value of 
that obligation at the time of the constructive liquidation because B is 
not required to satisfy that obligation by the later of the end of the 
partnership taxable year in which B's interest is liquidated or within 
90 days after the date of the liquidation. Because B's obligation does 
not bear interest, the fair market value is deemed to equal the imputed 
principal amount under section 1274(b). Under section 1274(b), the 
imputed principal amount of a debt instrument equals the present value 
of all payments due under the debt instrument. Assume the applicable 
federal rate with respect to B's obligation is 10 percent compounded 
semiannually. Using this discount rate, the present value of the $35,000 
payment that B would be required to make two years after the 
constructive liquidation to restore the deficit balance in B's capital 
account equals $28,795. To the extent that B's deficit restoration 
obligation is not recognized, it is assumed that B's obligation does not 
exist. Therefore, A, as the sole general partner, would be obligated by 
operation of law to contribute an additional $6,205 of capital to the 
partnership. Accordingly, under paragraph (g) of this section, B bears 
the economic risk of loss for $28,795 and A bears the economic risk of 
loss for $41,205 ($35,000 + $6,205).

    (h) Partner providing property as security for partnership 
liability--(1) Direct pledge. A partner is considered to bear the 
economic risk of loss for a partnership liability to the extent of the 
value of any the partner's or related person's separate property (other 
than a direct or indirect interest in the partnership) that is pledged 
as security for the partnership liability.
    (2) Indirect pledge. A partner is considered to bear the economic 
risk of loss for a partnership liability to the extent of the value of 
any property that the partner contributes to the partnership solely for 
the purpose of securing a partnership liability. Contributed property is 
not treated as contributed solely for the purpose of securing a 
partnership liability unless substantially all of the items of income, 
gain, loss, and deduction attributable to the contributed property are 
allocated to the contributing partner, and this allocation is generally 
greater than the partner's share of other significant items of 
partnership income, gain, loss, or deduction.
    (3) Valuation. The extent to which a partner bears the economic risk 
of loss as a result of a direct pledge described in paragraph (h)(1) of 
this section or an indirect pledge described in paragraph (h)(2) of this 
section is limited to the fair market value of the property at the time 
of the pledge or contribution.
    (4) Partner's promissory note. For purposes of paragraph (h)(2) of 
this section, a promissory note of the partner or related person that is 
contributed to the partnership shall not be taken into account unless 
the note is readily

[[Page 562]]

tradeable on an established securities market.
    (i) Treatment of recourse liabilities in tiered partnerships. If a 
partnership (the ``upper-tier partnership'') owns (directly or 
indirectly through one or more partnerships) an interest in another 
partnership (the ``lower-tier partnership''), the liabilities of the 
lower-tier partnership are allocated to the upper-tier partnership in an 
amount equal to the sum of the following--
    (1) The amount of the economic risk of loss that the upper-tier 
partnership bears with respect to the liabilities; and
    (2) Any other amount of the liabilities with respect to which 
partners of the upper-tier partnership bear the economic risk of loss.
    (j) Anti-abuse rules--(1) In general. An obligation of a partner or 
related person to make a payment may be disregarded or treated as an 
obligation of another person for purposes of this section if facts and 
circumstances indicate that a principal purpose of the arrangement 
between the parties is to eliminate the partner's economic risk of loss 
with respect to that obligation or create the appearance of the partner 
or related person bearing the economic risk of loss when, in fact, the 
substance of the arrangement is otherwise. Circumstances with respect to 
which a payment obligation may be disregarded include, but are not 
limited to, the situations described in paragraphs (j)(2) and (j)(3) of 
this section.
    (2) Arrangements tantamount to a guarantee. Irrespective of the form 
of a contractual obligation, a partner is considered to bear the 
economic risk of loss with respect to a partnership liability, or a 
portion thereof, to the extent that:
    (i) The partner or related person undertakes one or more contractual 
obligations so that the partnership may obtain a loan;
    (ii) The contractual obligations of the partner or related person 
eliminate substantially all the risk to the lender that the partnership 
will not satisfy its obligations under the loan; and
    (iii) One of the principal purposes of using the contractual 
obligations is to attempt to permit partners (other than those who are 
directly or indirectly liable for the obligation) to include a portion 
of the loan in the basis of their partnership interests.

The partners are considered to bear the economic risk of loss for the 
liability in accordance with their relative economic burdens for the 
liability pursuant to the contractual obligations. For example, a lease 
between a partner and a partnership which is not on commercially 
reasonable terms may be tantamount to a guarantee by the partner of a 
partnership liability.
    (3) Plan to circumvent or avoid the obligation. An obligation of a 
partner to make a payment is not recognized if the facts and 
circumstances evidence a plan to circumvent or avoid the obligation.
    (4) Example. The following example illustrates the principle of 
paragraph (j)(3) of this section.

    Example. Plan to circumvent or avoid obligation. A and B form a 
general partnership. A, a corporation, contributes $20,000 and B 
contributes $80,000 to the partnership. A is obligated to restore any 
deficit in its partnership capital account. The partnership agreement 
allocates losses 20% to A and 80% to B until B's capital account is 
reduced to zero, after which all losses are allocated to A. The 
partnership purchases depreciable property for $250,000 using its 
$100,000 cash and a $150,000 recourse loan from a bank. B guarantees 
payment of the $150,000 loan to the extent the loan remains unpaid after 
the bank has exhausted its remedies against the partnership. A is a 
subsidiary, formed by a parent of a consolidated group, with capital 
limited to $20,000 to allow the consolidated group to enjoy the tax 
losses generated by the property while at the same time limiting its 
monetary exposure for such losses. These facts, when considered together 
with B's guarantee, indicate a plan to circumvent or avoid A's 
obligation to contribute to the partnership. The rules of section 752 
must be applied as if A's obligation to contribute did not exist. 
Accordingly, the $150,000 liability is a recourse liability that is 
allocated entirely to B.

[T.D. 8380, 56 FR 66351, Dec. 23, 1991; 57 FR 4913, Feb. 10, 1992; 57 FR 
5054, Feb. 12, 1992; 57 FR 5511, Feb. 14, 1992]