[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: 26CFR1.817-2]

[Page 663-665]
 
                       TITLE 26--INTERNAL REVENUE
 
    CHAPTER I--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY 
                               (CONTINUED)
 
Determination of Tax Liability--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 1.817-2  Treatment of capital gains and losses.

    (a) In general. For taxable years beginning after December 31, 1958, 
and before January 1, 1962, if the net long-term capital gain (as 
defined in section 1222(7)) of any life insurance company exceeds its 
net short-term capital loss (as defined in section 1222(6)), section 
802(a)(2) prior to its amendment by section 3 of the Act of October 23, 
1962 (76 Stat. 1134), imposes a separate tax equal to 25 percent of such 
excess. For taxable years beginning after December 31, 1961, if the net 
long-term capital gain of any life insurance company exceeds its net 
short-term capital loss, section 802(a)(2) imposes an alternative tax in 
lieu of the tax imposed by section 802(a)(1), if and only if such 
alternative tax is less than the tax imposed by section 802(a)(1). 
Except as modified by section 817 (rules relating to certain gains and 
losses), the general rules of the Code relating to gains and losses, 
such as subchapter O (relating to gain or loss on disposition of 
property), subchapter P (relating to capital gains and losses), etc., 
shall apply with respect to life insurance companies.
    (b) Modification of section 1221 and 1231. (1) In the case of a life 
insurance company, section 817(a)(1) provides that for purposes of 
applying section 1231(a) (relating to property used in the trade or 
business and involuntary conversions), the term property used in the 
trade or business shall be treated as including only:
    (i) Property used in carrying on an insurance business, of a 
character subject to the allowance for depreciation under section 167 
(even though fully depreciated), held for more than 1 year (6 months for 
taxable years beginning before 1977; 9 months taxable years beginning in 
1977), and real property used in carrying on an insurance business, held 
for more than 1 year (6 months for taxable years beginning before 1977; 
9 months taxable years beginning in 1977), and which is not:
    (a) 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;
    (b) Property held by the taxpayer primarily for sale to customers in 
the ordinary course of business; or
    (c) A copyright, a literary, musical, or artistic composition, a 
letter or memorandum, or similar property held by a taxpayer described 
in section 1221(3). In the case of a letter, memorandum, or property 
similar to a letter or memorandum, this subdivision (c) applies only to 
sales and other dispositions occurring after July 25, 1969.
    (ii) The cutting or disposal of timber, or the disposal of coal or 
iron ore, to the extent considered arising from a

[[Page 664]]

sale or exchange by reason of the provisions of section 631 and the 
regulations thereunder.
    (2) In the case of a life insurance company, section 817(a)(2) 
provides that for purposes of applying section 1221(2) (relating to the 
exclusion of certain property from the term capital asset), the 
reference to property used in trade or business shall be treated as 
including only property used in carrying on an insurance business.
    (3) Section 1231(a), as modified by section 817(a)(1) and 
subparagraph (1) of this paragraph, shall apply to recognized gains and 
losses from the following:
    (i) The sale, exchange, or involuntary conversion of the following 
property, if held for more than 1 year (6 months for taxable years 
beginning before 1977; 9 months taxable years beginning in 1977):
    (a) The home office and branch office buildings (including land) 
owned and occupied by the life insurance company;
    (b) Furniture and equipment owned by the life insurance company and 
used in the home office and branch office buildings occupied by the life 
insurance company; and
    (c) Automobiles and other depreciable personal property used in 
connection with the operations conducted in the home office and branch 
office buildings occupied by the life insurance company.
    (ii) The involuntary conversion of capital assets held for more than 
1 year (6 months for taxable years beginning before 1977; 9 months 
taxable years beginning in 1977).
    (iii) The cutting or disposal of timber, or the disposal of coal or 
iron ore, to the extent considered arising from a sale or exchange by 
reason of the provisions of section 631 and the regulations thereunder.
    (4) Section 1221(2), as modified by section 817(a)(2) and 
subparagraph (2) of this paragraph, shall include only the following 
property;
    (i) The home office and branch office buildings (including land) 
owned and occupied by the life insurance company;
    (ii) Furniture and equipment owned by the life insurance company and 
used in the home office and branch office buildings occupied by the life 
insurance company; and
    (iii) Automobiles and other depreciable personal property used in 
connection with the operations conducted in the home office and branch 
office buildings occupied by the life insurance company.
    (5) If an asset described in subparagraph (3) (i)(a), (b), or (c) or 
subparagraph (4) of this paragraph, or any portion thereof, is also an 
``investment asset'' (an asset from which gross investment income, as 
defined in section 804(b), is derived), such asset, or portion thereof, 
shall not be treated as an asset used in carrying on an insurance 
business. Accordingly, the gains or losses from the sale or exchange (or 
considered as from the sale or exchange) of depreciable assets 
attributable to any trade or business, other than the insurance trade or 
business, carried on by the life insurance company, such as operating a 
radio station, housing development, or a farm, or renting various pieces 
of real estate shall be treated as gains or losses from the sale or 
exchange of a capital asset unless such asset is involuntarily converted 
(within the meaning of paragraph (e) of Sec. 1.123-1).
    (c) Illustration of principles. The provisions of section 817(a) and 
this section may be illustrated by the following examples:

    Example 1. L, a life insurance company, has recognized gains and 
losses for the taxable year 1959 from the sale or involuntary conversion 
of the following items:

------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                     Gains      Losses
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Stocks, held for more than 6 months.............    $100,000  ..........
Bonds, held for more than 6 months..............  ..........      $5,000
Housing development, held for more than 6 months  ..........     400,000
Branch office building owned and occupied by L,   ..........     115,000
 held for more than 6 months....................
Furniture and equipment used in the investment        30,000  ..........
 department, held for more than 6 months........
Radio station, held for more than 6 months......     200,000  ..........
Involuntary conversion of apartment building,          7,000  ..........
 held for more than 6 months....................
------------------------------------------------------------------------


The recognized gains and losses from the sale of the stocks, bonds, 
housing development,

[[Page 665]]

and radio station shall be treated as gains and losses from the sale of 
capital assets since such items are capital assets within the meaning of 
section 1221 (as modified by section 817(a)(2)). Accordingly, the 
provisions of section 1231 shall not apply to the sale of such capital 
assets. However, the provisions of section 1231 (as modified by section 
817(a)(1)) shall apply to the sale of the branch office building and the 
furniture and equipment, and the apartment building involuntarily 
converted. Since the aggregate of the recognized losses ($115,000) 
exceeds the aggregate of the recognized gains ($37,000), the gains and 
losses are treated as ordinary gains and losses.
    Example 2. Y, a life insurance company, owns a twenty-story home 
office building, having an adjusted basis of $15,000,000, ten floors of 
which it rents to various tenants, one floor of which is utilized by it 
in operating its investment department, and the remaining nine floors of 
which are occupied by it in carrying on its insurance business. If in 
1960, Y sells the building for $10,000,000, Y must first apportion its 
basis between that portion of the building (one-half) used in carrying 
on an insurance business, and that portion of the building (one-half) 
classified as an ``investment asset'', before it can determine the 
character of the loss attributable to each portion of the building. For 
such purpose, the one floor utilized by Y in operating its investment 
department is treated as used in carrying on an insurance business. 
Assuming that each portion of the building bears an equal (one-half) 
relation to the basis of the entire building, Y (without regard to 
section 817(b)) would have a $2,500,000 ordinary loss on that portion 
used in carrying on an insurance business (assuming that Y had no gains 
subject to section 1231), and a $2,500,000 capital loss on that portion 
of the building classified as an investment asset.

[T.D. 6558, 26 FR 2782, Apr. 4, 1961, as amended by T.D. 6841, 30 FR 
9308, July 27, 1965; T.D. 6886, 31 FR 8689, June 23, 1966; T.D. 7369, 40 
FR 29840, July 16, 1975; T.D. 7728, 45 FR 72650, Nov. 3, 1980]