[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 26, Volume 9]
[Revised as of April 1, 2002]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 26CFR1.856-7]

[Page 72-73]
 
                       TITLE 26--INTERNAL REVENUE
 
    CHAPTER I--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY 
                               (CONTINUED)
 
PART 1--INCOME TAXES--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 1.856-7  Certain corporations, etc., that are considered to meet the gross income requirements.

    (a) In general. A corporation, trust, or association which fails to 
meet the requirements of paragraph (2) or (3) of section 856(c), or of 
both such paragraphs, for any taxable year nevertheless is considered to 
have satisfied these requirements if the corporation, trust, or 
association meets the requirements of subparagraphs (A), (B), and (C) of 
section 856(c)(7) (relating to a schedule attached to the return, the 
absence of fraud, and reasonable cause).
    (b) Contents of the schedule. The schedule required by subparagraph 
(A) of section 856(c)(7) must contain a breakdown, or listing, of the 
total amount of gross income falling under each of the separate 
subparagraphs of section 856(c) (2) and (3). Thus, for example, the real 
estate investment trust, for purposes of listing its income from the 
sources described in section 856(c)(2), would list separately the total 
amount of dividends, the total amount of interest, the total amount of 
rents from real property, etc. The listing is not required to be on a 
lease-by-lease, loan-by-loan, or project-by-project basis, but the real 
estate investment trust must maintain adequate records on such a basis 
with which to substantiate each total amount listed in the schedule.
    (c) Reasonable cause--(1) In general. The failure to meet the 
requirements of paragraph (2) or (3) of section 856(c) (or of both 
paragraphs) will be considered due to reasonable cause and not due to 
willful neglect if the real estate investment trust exercised ordinary 
business care and prudence in attempting to satisfy the requirements. 
Such care and prudence must be exercised at the time each transaction is 
entered into by the trust. However, even if the trust exercised ordinary 
business care and prudence in entering into a transaction, if the trust 
later determines that the transaction results in the receipt or accrual 
of nonqualified income and that the amounts of such nonqualified income, 
in the context of the trust's overall portfolio, reasonably can be 
expected to cause a source-of-income requirement to be failed, the trust 
must use ordinary business care and prudence in an effort to renegotiate 
the terms of the transaction, dispose of property acquired or leased in 
the transaction, or alter other elements of its portfolio. In any case, 
failure to meet an income source requirement will be considered due to 
willful neglect and not due to reasonable cause if the failure is 
willful and the trust could have avoided such failure by taking actions 
not inconsistent with ordinary business care and prudence. For example, 
if the trust enters into a lease knowing that it will produce 
nonqualified income which reasonably can be expected to cause a source-
of-income requirement to be failed, the failure is due to willful 
neglect even if the trust has a legitimate business purpose for entering 
into the lease.
    (2) Expert advice--(i) In general. The reasonable reliance on a 
reasoned, written opinion as to the characterization for purposes of 
section 856 of gross income to be derived (or being derived) from a 
transaction generally constitutes ``reasonable cause'' if income from 
that transaction causes the trust to fail to meet the requirements of 
paragraph (2) or (3) of section 856(c) (or of both paragraphs). The 
absence of such a reasoned, written opinion with respect to a 
transaction does not, by itself, give rise to any inference that the 
failure to meet a percentage of income requirement was without 
reasonable cause. An opinion as to the character of income from a 
transaction includes an opinion pertaining to the use of a standard form 
of transaction or standard operating procedure in a case where such 
standard form or procedure is in fact used or followed.
    (ii) If the opinion indicates that a portion of the income from a 
transaction will be nonqualifed income, the trust must still exercise 
ordinary business care and prudence with respect to the nonqualified 
income and determine that the amount of that income, in the context of 
its overall portfolio, reasonably cannot be expected to cause a source-
of-income requirement to be failed. Reliance on an opinion is not 
reasonable if the trust has reason to believe that the opinion is 
incorrect

[[Page 73]]

(for example, because the trust withholds facts from the person 
rendering the opinion).
    (iii) Reasoned written opinion. For purposes of this subparagraph 
(2), a written opinion means an opinion, in writing, rendered by a tax 
advisor (including house counsel) whose opinion would be relied on by a 
person exercising ordinary business care and prudence in the 
circumstances of the particular transaction. A written opinion is 
considered ``reasoned'' even if it reaches a conclusion which is 
subsequently determined to be incorrect, so long as the opinion is based 
on a full disclosure of the factual situation by the real estate 
investment trust and is addressed to the facts and law which the person 
rendering the opinion believes to be applicable. However, an opinion is 
not considered ``reasoned'' if it does nothing more than recite the 
facts and express a conclusion.
    (d) Application of section 856(c)(7) to taxable years beginning 
before October 5, 1976. Pursuant to section 1608(b) of the Tax Reform 
Act of 1976, paragraph (7) of section 856(c) and this section apply to a 
taxable year of a real estate investment trust which begins before 
October 5, 1976, only if as the result of a determination occurring 
after October 4, 1976, the trust does not meet the requirements of 
paragraph (2) or (3) of section 856(c), or both paragraphs, as in effect 
for the taxable year. The requirement that the schedule described in 
subparagraph (A) of section 856(c)(7) be attached to the income tax 
return of a real estate investment trust in order for section 856(c)(7) 
to apply is not applicable to taxable years beginning before October 5, 
1976. For purposes of section 1608(b) of the Tax Reform Act of 1976 and 
this paragraph, the rules relating to determinations prescribed in 
section 860(e) and Sec. 1.860-2(b)(1) (other than the second, third, and 
last sentences of Sec. 1.860-2(b)(1)(ii)) shall apply. However, a 
determination consisting of an agreement between the taxpayer and the 
district director (or other official to whom authority to sign the 
agreement is delegated) shall set forth the amount of gross income for 
the taxable year to which the determination applies, the amount of the 
90 percent and 75 percent source-of-income requirements for the taxable 
year to which the determination applies, and the amount by which the 
real estate investment trust failed to meet either or both of the 
requirements. The agreement shall also set forth the amount of tax for 
which the trust is liable pursuant to section 857(b)(5). The agreement 
shall also contain a finding as to whether the failure to meet the 
requirements of paragraph (2) or (3) of section 856(c) (or of both 
paragraphs) was due to reasonable cause and not due to willful neglect.

(Sec. 856(d)(4) (90 Stat. 1750; 26 U.S.C. 856(d)(4)); sec. 856(e)(5) (88 
Stat. 2113; 26 U.S.C. 856(e)(5)); sec. 856(f)(2) (90 Stat. 1751; 26 
U.S.C. (856(f)(2)); sec. 856(g)(2) (90 Stat. 1753; 26 U.S.C. 856(g)(2)); 
sec. 858(a) (74 Stat. 1008; 26 U.S.C. 858(a)); sec. 859(c) (90 Stat. 
1743; 26 U.S.C. 859(c)); sec. 859(e) (90 Stat. 1744; 26 U.S.C. 859(e)); 
sec. 6001 (68A Stat. 731; 26 U.S.C. 6001); sec. 6011 (68A Stat. 732; 26 
U.S.C. 6011); sec. 6071 (68A Stat. 749, 26 U.S.C. 6071); sec. 6091 (68A 
Stat. 752; 26 U.S.C. 6091); sec. 7805 (68A Stat. 917; 26 U.S.C. 7805), 
Internal Revenue Code of 1954); sec. 860(e) (92 Stat. 2849, 26 U.S.C. 
860(e)); sec. 860(g) (92 Stat. 2850, 26 U.S.C. 860(g)))

[T.D. 7767, 46 FR 11274, Feb. 6, 1981, as amended by T.D. 7936, 49 FR 
2106, Jan. 18, 1984]