[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 26, Volume 15]
[Revised as of April 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 26CFR31.3505-1]

[Page 309-311]
 
                       TITLE 26--INTERNAL REVENUE
 
    CHAPTER I--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY 
                               (CONTINUED)
 
PART 31_EMPLOYMENT TAXES AND COLLECTION OF INCOME TAX AT SOURCE--Table of Contents
 
 Subpart F_General Provisions Relating to Employment Taxes (Chapter 25, 
                     Internal Revenue Code of 1954)
 
Sec. 31.3505-1  Liability of third parties paying or providing for wages.

    (a) Personal liability in case of direct payment of wages--(1) In 
general. A lender, surety, or other person--
    (i) Who is not an employer for purposes of section 3102 (relating to 
deduction of tax from wages under the Federal Insurance Contributions 
Act), section 3202 (relating to deduction of tax from compensation under 
the Railroad Retirement Tax Act), or section 3402 (relating to deduction 
of income tax from wages) with respect to an employee or group of 
employees, and
    (ii) Who pays wages on or after January 1, 1967, directly to such 
employee or group of employees, employed by one or more employers, or to 
an agent on behalf of such employee or employees,

shall be liable in his own person and estate for payment to the United 
States of an amount equal to the sum of the taxes required to be 
deducted and withheld from those wages by the employer under subtitle C 
of the Code and interest from the due date of the employer's return 
relating to such taxes for the period in which the wages are paid.
    (2) Example. The provisions of this paragraph may be illustrated by 
the following example:

    Example. Pursuant to a wage claim of $200, A, a surety company, paid 
a net amount of $158 to B, an employee of the X Construction Company. 
This was done in accordance with A's payment bond covering a private 
construction job on which B was an employee. If X Construction Company 
fails to make timely payment or deposit of $42.00, the amount of tax 
required by subtitle C of the Code to be deducted and withheld from, a 
$200 wage payment to B, A becomes personally liable for $42.00 (i.e., an 
amount equal to the unpaid taxes), plus interest upon this amount from 
the due date of X's return.

    (b) Personal liability where funds are supplied--(1) In general. A 
lender, surety, or other person who--
    (i) Advances funds to or for the account of an employer for the 
specific purpose of paying wages of the employees of that employer, and
    (ii) At the time the funds are advanced, has actual notice or 
knowledge (within the meaning of section 6323(i)(1)) that the employer 
does not intend to, or will not be able to, make timely payment or 
deposit of the amounts of tax required by subtitle C of the Code to be 
deducted and withheld by the employer from those wages,

shall be liable in his own person and estate for payment to the United 
States of an amount equal to the sum of the taxes which are required by 
subtitle C of the Code to be deducted and withheld from wages paid on or 
after January 1, 1967, and which are not paid over to the United States 
by the employer, and interest from the due date of the employer's return 
relating to such taxes. However, the liability of the lender, surety, or 
other person shall not exceed 25 percent of the amount supplied by him 
for the payment of wages. The preceding sentence and the second sentence 
of section 3505(b) limit the liability of a lender, surety, or other 
person arising solely by reason of section 3505, and they do not limit 
the liability which the lender, surety or other person may incur to the 
United States as a third-party beneficiary of an agreement between the 
lender, surety, or other person and the employer. The liability of a 
lender, surety, or other person does not include penalties imposed on 
the taxpayer.
    (2) Examples. The provisions of this paragraph may be illustrated by 
the following examples:

    Example 1. D, a savings and loan association, advances $10,000 to Y 
for the specific purpose of paying the net wages of Y's employees. D 
advances those funds with knowledge that Y will not be able to make 
timely payment of the taxes required to be deducted and withheld from 
these wages by subtitle C of the Code, Y uses the $10,000 to pay the net 
wages of his employees but fails to remit withholding taxes under 
subtitle C in the amount of $2,600. D's liability, under this section, 
is limited to $2,500, 25 percent of the amount supplied for the payment 
of wages to Y's employees.
    Example 2. E, a loan company, advances $15,000 to F, a contractor, 
for the specific purpose of paying $20,000 of net wages due to F's 
employees. E advances those funds with knowledge that F will not be able 
to make

[[Page 310]]

timely payment of the taxes required to be deducted and withheld from 
these wages by subtitle C of the Code. F applies $5,000 of its own funds 
toward payment of these wages. The amount of tax required to be deducted 
and withheld from the gross wages is $4,500. The limitation applicable 
to E's liability is $3,750 (25 percent of $15,000). However, because E 
furnished only a portion of the total net wages, E is liable for $3,375 
of the taxes required to be deducted and withheld ($4,500x$15,000/
$20,000).

    (3) Ordinary working capital loan. The provisions of section 3505(b) 
do not apply in the case of an ordinary working capital loan made to an 
employer, even though the person supplying the funds knows that part of 
the funds advanced may be used to make wage payments in the ordinary 
course of business. Generally, an ordinary working capital loan is a 
loan which is made to enable the borrower to meet current obligations as 
they arise. The person supplying the funds is not obligated to determine 
the specific use of an ordinary working capital loan or the ability of 
the employer to pay the amounts of tax required by subtitle C of the 
Code to be deducted and withheld. However, section 3505(b) is applicable 
where the person supplying the funds has actual notice or knowledge 
(within the meaning of section 6323(i)(1)) at the time of the advance 
that the funds, or a portion thereof, are to be used specifically to pay 
net wages, whether or not the written agreement under which the funds 
are advanced states a different purpose. Whether or not a lender has 
actual notice or knowledge that the funds are to be used to pay net 
wages, or merely that the funds may be so used, depends upon the facts 
and circumstances of each case. For example, a lender, who has actual 
notice or knowledge that the withheld taxes will not be paid, will be 
deemed to have actual notice or knowledge that the funds are to be used 
specifically to pay net wages where substantially all of the employer's 
ordinary operating expenses consist of salaries and wages even though 
fund for other incidental operating expenses may be supplied pursuant to 
an agreement described as a working capital loan agreement.
    (c) Definition of other person--(1) In general. As used in this 
section, the term ``other person'' means any person who directly pays 
the wages or supplies funds for the specific purpose of paying the wages 
of an employee or group of employees of another employer. It does not 
include a person acting only as agent of the employer or as agent of the 
employees.
    (2) Examples. The provisions of this paragraph may be illustrated by 
the following examples:

    Example 1. Pursuant to an agreement between L, a labor union, and M, 
an employer, M makes monthly vacation payments (of a sum equal to a 
certain percentage of the remuneration paid to each union member 
employed by M during the previous month) to a union administered pool 
plan under which each employee's rights are fully vested and 
nonforfeitable from the time the money is paid by M. Vacation allowances 
are accumulated by the plan and distributed to eligible employees during 
their vacations. L, acting merely as a conduit with respect to these 
payments, would incur no liability under section 3505.
    Example 2. N, a construction company, maintains a payroll account 
with the O Bank in which N deposits its own funds. Pursuant to an 
automated payroll service agreement between N and O, O prepares payroll 
checks and earnings statements for each of N's employees reflecting the 
net pay due each such employee. These checks are delivered to N for 
signature. After the checks are signed, O distributes them directly to 
N's employees on the regularly scheduled pay day. O, acting only in the 
capacity of a disbursing agent of N's funds, would incur no liability 
under section 3505 with respect to these payroll distributions. However, 
O may incur liability under section 3505 in the capacity of a lender if 
it supplies the funds for the payment of wages.

    (d) Payment of taxes and interest--(1) Procedure for payment. A 
lender, surety, or other person may satisfy the personal liability 
imposed upon him by section 3505 by executing Form 4219 and filing it, 
accompanied by payment of the amount of tax and interest due the United 
States, in accordance with the instructions for the form. In the event 
that the lender, surety, or other person does not satisfy the liability 
imposed by section 3505, the United States may collect the liability by 
appropriate civil proceedings commenced within 10 years after assessment 
of the tax against the employer.
    (2) Effect of payment--(i) In general. A person paying the amounts 
of tax required to be deducted and withheld by

[[Page 311]]

subtitle C of the Code as a result of section 3505 and this section is 
not required to pay the employer's portion of the payroll taxes upon 
those wages, or file an employer's tax return with respect to those 
wages, or furnish annual wage and tax statements to the employees.
    (ii) Amounts paid by a lender, surety, or other person. Any amounts 
paid by the lender, surety, or other person to the United States 
pursuant to this section shall be credited against the liability of the 
employer on whose behalf those payments are made and shall also reduce 
the total liability imposed upon the lender, surety, or other person 
under section 3505 and this section.
    (iii) Amounts paid by the employer. Any amounts paid to the United 
States by an employer and applied to his liability under subtitle C of 
the Code shall reduce the total liability imposed upon that employer by 
subtitle C. Such payments will also reduce the liability imposed upon a 
lender, surety, or other person under section 3505 except that such 
liability shall not be reduced by any portion of an employer's payment 
applied against the employer's liability under subtitle C which is in 
excess of the total liability imposed upon the lender, surety, or other 
person under section 3505. For example, if a lender supplies $1,000 to 
an employer for the payment of net wages, upon which $300 withholding 
tax liability is imposed, a part-payment of $25 by the employer which is 
applied to this liability would reduce the employer's total liability 
under subtitle C of the Code by that amount, but the liability imposed 
upon the lender by section 3505(b) in an amount equal to the withholding 
tax liability of the employer, which is limited to 25 percent of the 
amount supplied by him, would remain $250. However, if the employer 
makes another payment of $200 which is applied to his liability for the 
withholding taxes, the lender's liability under section 3505 
attributable to the withholding taxes is reduced by $175 ($225 less $50 
(the amount by which the employer's liability exceeds the lender's 
liability after application of the limitation)). Thus, after the second 
payment by the employer, the lender's liability under section 3505(b) is 
$75 ($250 less $175), plus interest due on the underpayment for the 
period of underpayment, to a maximum of $250, 25 percent of the funds 
supplied.
    (3) Extensions of the period for collection. Prior to the expiration 
of the 10-year period for collection after assessment against the 
employer, the lender, surety, or other third party may agree in writing 
with the district director, service center director, or compliance 
center director to extend the 10-year period for collection. The period 
so agreed upon may be extended by subsequent agreements in writing made 
before the expiration of the period previously agreed upon. If any 
timely proceeding in court for the collection of the tax and any 
applicable interest is commenced, the period during which such tax and 
interest may be collected shall be extended and shall not expire until 
the liability for the tax (or a judgment against the lender, surety, or 
other third party arising from such liability) is satisfied or becomes 
unenforceable.
    (e) Returns required by employers and statements for employees. This 
section does not relieve the employer of the responsibilities imposed 
upon him to file the returns and supply the receipts and statements 
required under subchapter A, Chapter 61 of the Code (relating to returns 
and records).
    (f) Time when liability arises. The liability under section 3505 and 
this section of a lender, surety, or other person paying or supplying 
funds for the payment of wages is incurred on the last day prescribed 
for the filing of the employer's Federal employment tax return 
(determined without regard to any extension of time) in respect of such 
wages.
    (g) Effective date. These regulations are effective on August 1, 
1995.

[T.D. 7430, 41 FR 35175, Aug. 20, 1976, as amended by T.D. 8604, 60 FR 
39110, Aug. 1, 1995]