DocketNumber: Docket No. 27960-92B
Citation Numbers: 103 T.C. 481, 1994 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 70, 103 T.C. No. 27
Judges: Hamblen
Filed Date: 10/11/1994
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
*70
Petitioner, a municipal corporation of the State of New York, seeks a declaratory judgment that the bonds it proposes to issue will be exempt from taxation under
*482 OPINION
Hamblen,
All of the jurisdictional requirements for a declaratory judgment action have been satisfied. See Rule 210(c). The burden of proof is*72 on petitioner, see Rule 217(c)(2)(A), and our decision is based upon the administrative record and the parties' stipulation of facts. See Rule 217(a). We accept as true those facts represented in the administrative record and the parties' stipulation of facts. See Rule 217(b)(1). Only those facts necessary to our decision are set forth.
The issue for decision is whether the proposed bonds are obligations described in
Petitioner City of New York (hereinafter petitioner or the city) is a municipal corporation of the State of New York. In order to combat the deterioration of much of its housing stock in low and moderate income neighborhoods, petitioner has developed a variety of programs. The six such programs involved in the present case are referred to as the programs. *73 Petitioner proposes to issue bonds with a total face amount of $ 100 million. Petitioner will use $ 15 million of the bond proceeds to finance the programs. Petitioner will apply the remaining $ 85 million to projects that have no private use.
The $ 15 million of bond proceeds earmarked for the programs will be advanced by petitioner in the form of loans (advances). No portion of the advances is structured as a grant. Although the specific structure of the advances varies with each program, all the advances share several common characteristics. The advances will be made to homeowners, groups of homeowners, private developers, or court-appointed administrators (collectively, the borrowers), who will use the proceeds to renovate either city-owned or privately owned buildings. All the advances must be repaid to the city over a fixed term (generally 30 years), and bear interest at below-market rates. All advances must be repaid in full by the borrowers, and no portion of the advances will be forgiven. In order to ensure that the purposes of the programs are achieved, borrowers must comply with various city-imposed restrictions on the operation of the buildings, such as rent guidelines.
*74 As the foregoing indicates, two relevant financial transactions are contemplated: (1) The city will receive $ 100 million pursuant to the bond issue, and (2) the city will transfer *484 $ 15 million of the bond proceeds to the borrowers pursuant to the advances. Because the bonds will be general obligation bonds, repayment of the bonds will be made from the city's general revenues. The city will be solely responsible for the payments to the bondholders, and the bondholders will not receive any security interest in the borrowers' repayments of the advances to the city or in the buildings being renovated under the programs.
The actual yield on the bonds will be determined by a bid process. For purposes of its ruling request, petitioner represented that the yield on the bonds will equal 8.5 percent per annum. In contrast, the interest rate on the outstanding advances will range from 0 to 3 percent per annum. The present value of all the payments that the city will receive from the borrowers in repayment of the advances, discounted at the assumed 8.5-percent yield on the bonds, equals $ 4,789,324, which is less than the $ 15 million principal amount of the advances.
*76 In denying petitioner's ruling request, respondent relied on the exception set forth in (1) In general. -- An issue meets the test of this subsection if the amount of the proceeds of the issue which are to be used (directly or indirectly) to make or finance loans * * * to persons other than governmental units exceeds the lesser of -- (A) 5 percent of such proceeds, or (B) $ 5,000,000.
*77 The parties agree that the borrowers under the programs are "persons other than governmental units". Accordingly, if the amount of bond proceeds that is used to make or finance loans under the programs exceeds $ 5 million,
Petitioner concedes that the advances are structured as loans and that the $ 15 million face amount of the advances exceeds the
Petitioner bases this bifurcation argument on the fact that the city allows the borrowers to repay the advances at interest rates below the market rate reflected in the yield on the bonds. Petitioner argues that*79 the loan component of the advances equals the present value of the repayments the borrowers must make on the advances, discounted at the assumed 8.5-percent market rate yield on the bonds. Under this formula, the amount of bond proceeds that will be used to make or finance loans equals $ 4,789,324, which is below the $ 5 million private loan financing test threshold of 1. The present case centers on the proper interpretation of the private loan financing test of As a preliminary matter, we note that this Court has previously addressed the general applicability of time value of money principles under the Code. In Petitioner contends that the present case is distinguishable from 2. Petitioner contends that the primary purpose of Although petitioner's analysis might be an appealing interpretation of the transaction based on economic theory, we do not believe that it is apposite for purposes of the statute before us. As the following analysis demonstrates, Congress enacted detailed statutory provisions to determine when a bond issuance that benefits both private and public interests is entitled to tax-exempt status. While petitioner is correct in asserting that the prevention of conduit financing was a significant concern of*83 Congress in enacting these provisions, the method Congress chose to address this problem does not support petitioner's use of time value of money concepts to bifurcate the advances into a loan portion and an implicit grant portion. As an initial step in addressing petitioner's argument, we must look to the statutory language of *489 Under this general definition, the full $ 15 million of advances constitutes loans. All the advances must be repaid by the borrowers to the city over a fixed term, and no portion of the advances will be forgiven. Moreover, the advances are structured as loans under the detailed written documentation between petitioner and each borrower. The fact that the advances carry a beneficial rate of interest does not, in our opinion, prevent the advances from being loans under the common definition of the term. Accordingly, under the ordinary *85 meaning of the statutory language, the $ 15 million of bond proceeds that is used to fund the advances will exceed the $ 5 million private loan financing threshold of It is well established that we may look to the legislative history of a statute where the statute is ambiguous. The first limitations on the use of tax-exempt bond proceeds to make personal loans were contained in The bill generally denies tax-exemption for interest on consumer loan bonds, which are defined as obligations five percent or more of the proceeds of which are to be used directly or indirectly to make loans to persons other than*87 exempt persons. * * * Loans to enable a borrower to finance any tax or governmental assessment of general application for an essential government function are not taken into account. In addition, consumer loan bonds do not include IDBs [Industrial Development Bonds], qualified mortgage bonds and qualified student loan bonds. [ The Tax Reform Act of 1986*88 (TRA 1986), Pub. L. 99-514, sec. 1301(b), 100 Stat. 2605, increased the restrictions on private loan financing. These new restrictions were codified as As the foregoing committee reports illustrate, Congress was concerned about*89 the use of tax-exempt bonds as a conduit to finance personal loans. However, Congress realized that certain loans to private persons further important public purposes and therefore should not jeopardize the tax-exempt status of the bond issue. In striking a balance between these concerns, Congress chose to concentrate the initial inquiry on the identity of the recipient of the loans, rather than the purposes served by the loans. As a result, the private loan *491 financing test of The statutory inquiry turns to the purpose of the loan only after it is determined that the private loan financing test of Petitioner's bifurcation argument, which focuses at the outset on the purposes served by the advances, is inconsistent with this two-step statutory approach that Congress enacted to limit conduit financing. Because the borrowers under the proposed transactions are not governmental units, the full amount of the advances falls within the scope of Petitioner also cites the following paragraph from the conference committee report on the Tax Reform Act of 1986: The conferees intend that, as under present law, a loan may arise from the direct lending of bond proceeds or may arise from transactions in *492 which indirect benefits that are the economic equivalent of a loan are conveyed. Thus, Petitioner argues that the reference to substance over form in the committee report applies not only to recharacterize as a loan a transaction that is not structured as such, but also to determine that a portion of a transaction is not a loan even when the full transaction is structured as a loan. As applied to the facts of the present case, petitioner contends that the emphasized language mandates that we ignore the fact that the advances are structured in full as loans and that we look to the purported economic substance of the transaction using time value of money principles. We are not persuaded that the emphasized language, *93 taken in the context of the full quoted paragraph, supports petitioner's contention. A more reasonable interpretation of the paragraph indicates that Congress intended that We note that our interpretation of the conference report*94 language is consistent with the prior decisions of this Court holding that a taxpayer generally may not invoke the substance over form principle to disavow the form in which he has structured a transaction. See Although this Court in certain circumstances permits a taxpayer to disavow the structure of his transaction upon a showing of "strong proof" that the transaction does not reflect economic reality, see *96 3. Petitioner also contends that its use of time value of money principles under Petitioner argues that a statutory trend in favor of the application of time value of money concepts existed at the time the predecessor to *99 As discussed above, this Court has previously addressed the inferences to be drawn from the explicit use of time value of money concepts in certain sections of the Code, including those sections enacted by DRA 1984. In Following the reasoning set forth in Petitioner also cites the Supreme Court decision in In The reasoning in In a related argument, petitioner cites respondent's As discussed above, a bond constitutes a "private activity bond" if it meets either: (1) The private loan financing test of *107 In general, the private payment test of This rationale, however, does not extend to the private loan financing test of For the foregoing reasons, we hold that the advances may not be bifurcated, using time value of money principles, into a loan portion and a grant portion for purposes of the private loan financing test of As a final observation, we recognize that the proposed transactions were designed to alleviate significant public problems faced by the city. We emphasize that our decision is not intended as a rebuke of the city's efforts to address these important issues and is not based on the underlying merits of the programs. Rather, our holding is a result of a straightforward application of the test provided by
This Court has observed repeatedly that, while a taxpayer is free to organize his affairs as he chooses, nevertheless, once having done so, he must accept the tax consequences of his choice, whether contemplated or not, and may not enjoy the benefit of some other route he might have chosen to follow but did not. "To make the taxability of the transaction depend upon the determination whether there existed an alternative form which the statute did not tax would create burden and uncertainty." [Citations omitted.]
Similarly, *95 "It would be quite intolerable to pyramid the existing complexities of tax law by a rule that the tax shall be that resulting from the form of transaction taxpayers have chosen or from any other form they might have chosen, whichever is less."
1. Unless otherwise indicated, section references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 as amended, and Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.↩
2. The six programs involved in the present case are the Urban Homesteading Program, the Article 8A Program, the Vacant Building Program, the Participation Loan Program, the SRO Program For-Profit Developers, and the Article 7A Program.↩
3. The relevant part of
(a) Exclusion. -- Except as provided in subsection (b), gross income does not include interest on any State or local bond.
(b) Exceptions. -- Subsection (a) shall not apply to -- (1) Private activity bond which is not a qualified bond. -- Any private activity bond which is not a qualified bond (within the meaning of
* * *
(c) Definitions. -- For purposes of this section and part IV -- (1) State or local bond. -- The term "State or local bond" means an obligation of a state or political subdivision thereof.↩
4. Petitioner does not contend that the proposed bonds are "qualified bonds" within the meaning of
5. Because the amount of proposed bond proceeds equals $ 100 million, the private loan financing test threshold equals $ 5 million under both the 5-percent test of
6. If the actual yield on the bonds is less than the assumed 8.5-percent rate, it is possible that the present value of the repayments on the advances will exceed $ 5 million. Under such circumstances, the bonds would fail to meet the private loan financing test of
7. Respondent concedes that
8. As originally enacted,
9. As part of the Tax Reform Act of 1986, the tax-exempt interest rules contained in
10. Those bond issues that meet one of the specific statutory exceptions are referred to as "qualified" private activity bonds, and, unlike other private activity bonds, the interest thereon is tax-exempt. See
11. We also note that the reasons for allowing petitioner to disavow the form of its transaction appear less clear in the present declaratory judgment action, since petitioner has not yet carried out the proposed transaction and is therefore in a position to change its structure.↩
12.
13. As petitioner notes in its detailed analysis of the cases leading up to the Supreme Court's decision in
14. The coverage of
15. Whereas
16. The relevant part of (1) Private business use test. -- Except as otherwise provided in this subsection, an issue meets the test of this paragraph if more than 10 percent of the proceeds of the issue are to be used for any private business use. (2) Private security or payment test. -- Except as otherwise provided in this subsection, an issue meets the test of this paragraph if the payment of the principal of, or the interest on, more than 10 percent of the proceeds of such issue is (under the terms of such issue or any underlying arrangement) directly or indirectly -- (A) secured by any interest in -- (i) property used or to be used for a private business use, or (ii) payments in respect of such property, or (B) to be derived from payments (whether or not to the issuer) in respect of property, or borrowed money, used or to be used for a private business use.↩
17.
United States v. American Trucking Associations , 60 S. Ct. 1059 ( 1940 )
Commissioner v. Brown , 85 S. Ct. 1162 ( 1965 )
centel-communications-company-successor-in-interest-to-fisk-telephone , 920 F.2d 1335 ( 1990 )
New England Tank Industries of New Hampshire, Inc. v. ... , 413 F.2d 1038 ( 1969 )
Television Industries, Inc. v. Commissioner of Internal ... , 284 F.2d 322 ( 1960 )
Commissioner v. National Alfalfa Dehydrating & Milling Co. , 94 S. Ct. 2129 ( 1974 )