[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: 26CFR1.856-8]

[Page 73-75]
 
                       TITLE 26--INTERNAL REVENUE
 
    CHAPTER I--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY 
                               (CONTINUED)
 
PART 1--INCOME TAXES--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 1.856-8  Revocation or termination of election.

    (a) Revocation of an election to be a real estate investment trust. 
A corporation, trust, or association that has made an election under 
section 856(c)(1) to be a real estate investment trust may revoke the 
election for any taxable year after the first taxable year for which the 
election is effective. The revocation must be made by filing a statement 
with the district director for the internal revenue district in which 
the taxpayer maintains its principal place of business or principal 
office or agency. The statement must be filed on or before the 90th day 
after the first day of the first taxable year for which the revocation 
is to be effective. The statement must be signed by an official 
authorized to sign the income tax return of the taxpayer and must--
    (1) Contain the name, address, and taxpayer identification number of 
the taxpayer,
    (2) Specify the taxable year for which the election was made, and

[[Page 74]]

    (3) Include a statement that the taxpayer, pursuant to section 
856(g)(2), revokes its election under section 856(c)(1) to be a real 
estate investment trust.

The revocation may be made only with respect to a taxable year beginning 
after October 4, 1976, and is effective for the taxable year in which 
made and for all succeeding taxable years. A revocation with respect to 
a taxable year beginning after October 4, 1976, that is filed before 
February 6, 1981, in the time and manner prescribed in Sec. 7.856(g)-1 
of this chapter (as in effect when the revocation was filed) is 
considered to meet the requirements of this paragraph.
    (b) Termination of election to be a real estate investment trust. An 
election of a corporation, trust, or association under section 856(c)(1) 
to be a real estate investment trust shall terminate if the corporation, 
trust, or association is not a qualified real estate investment trust 
for any taxable year (including the taxable year with respect to which 
the election is made) beginning after October 4, 1976. (This election 
terminates whether the failure to be a qualified real estate investment 
trust is intentional or inadvertent.) The term ``taxable year'' includes 
a taxable year of less than 12 months for which a return is made under 
section 443. The termination of the election is effective for the first 
taxable year beginning after October 4, 1976, for which the corporation, 
trust, or association is not a qualified real estate investment trust 
and for all succeeding taxable years.
    (c) Restrictions on election after termination or revocation--(1) 
General rule. Except as provided in paragraph (d) of this section, if a 
corporation, trust, or association has made an election under section 
856(c)(1) to be a real estate investment trust and the election has been 
terminated or revoked under section 856(g)(1) or (2), the corporation, 
trust, or association (and any successor corporation, trust, or 
association) is not eligible to make a new election under section 
856(c)(1) for any taxable year prior to the fifth taxable year which 
begins after the first taxable year for which the termination or 
revocation is effective.
    (2) Successor corporation. The term ``successor corporation, trust, 
or association'', as used in section 856(g)(3), means a corporation, 
trust, or association which meets both a continuity of ownership 
requirement and a continuity of assets requirement with respect to the 
corporation, trust, or association whose election has been terminated 
under section 856(g)(1) or revoked under section 856(g)(2). A 
corporation, trust, or association meets the continuity of ownership 
requirement only if at any time during the taxable year the persons who 
own, directly or indirectly, 50 percent or more in value of its 
outstanding shares owned, at any time during the first taxable year for 
which the termination or revocation was effective, 50 percent or more in 
value of the outstanding shares of the corporation, trust, or 
association whose election has been terminated or revoked. A 
corporation, trust, or association meets the continuity of assets 
requirement only if either (i) a substantial portion of its assets were 
assets of the corporation, trust, or association whose election has been 
revoked or terminated, or (ii) it acquires a substantial portion of the 
assets of the corporation, trust, or association whose election has been 
terminated or revoked.
    (3) Effective date. Section 856(g)(3) does not apply to the 
termination of an election that was made by a taxpayer pursuant to 
section 856(c)(1) on or before October 4, 1976, unless the taxpayer is a 
qualified real estate investment trust for a taxable year ending after 
October 4, 1976, for which the pre-October 5, 1976, election is in 
effect. For example, assume that Trust X, a calendar year taxpayer, 
files a timely election under section 856(c)(1) with respect to its 
taxable year 1974, and is a qualified real estate investment trust for 
calendar years 1974 and 1975. Assume further that Trust X is not a 
qualified real estate investment trust for 1976 and 1977 because it 
willfully fails to meet the asset diversification requirements of 
section 856(c)(5) for both years. The failure (whether or not willful) 
to meet these requirements in 1977 terminates the election to be a real 
estate investment trust made with respect to 1974. (See paragraph (b) of

[[Page 75]]

this section.) The termination is effective for 1977 and all succeeding 
taxable years. However, under section 1608(d)(3) of the Tax Reform Act 
of 1976, Trust X is not prohibited by section 856(g)(3) from making a 
new election under section 856(c)(1) with respect to 1978.
    (d) Exceptions-- Section 856(g)(4) provides an exception to the 
general rule of section 856(g)(3) that the termination of an election to 
be a real estate investment trust disqualifies the corporation, trust, 
or association from making a new election for the 4 taxable years 
following the first taxable year for which the termination is effective. 
This exception applies where the corporation, trust, or association 
meets the requirements of section 856(g)(4)(A), (B) and (C) (relating to 
the timely filing of a return, the absence of fraud, and reasonable 
cause, respectively) for the taxable year with respect to which the 
termination of election occurs. In order to meet the requirements of 
section 856(g)(4)(C), the corporation, trust, or association must 
establish, to the satisfaction of the district director for the internal 
revenue district in which the corporation, trust, or association 
maintains its principal place of business or principal office or agency, 
that its failure to be a qualified real estate investment trust for the 
taxable year in question was due to reasonable cause and not due to 
willful neglect. The principles of Sec. 1.856-7(c) (including the 
principles relating to expert advice) will apply in determining whether, 
for purposes of section 856(g)(4), the failure of a corporation, trust, 
or association to be a qualified real estate investment trust for a 
taxable year was due to reasonable cause and not due to willful neglect. 
Thus, for example, the corporation, trust, or association must exercise 
ordinary business care and prudence in attempting to meet the status 
conditions of section 856(a) and the distribution and recordkeeping 
requirements of section 857(a), as well as the gross income requirements 
of section 856(c). The provisions of section 856(g)(4) do not apply to a 
taxable year in which the corporation, trust, or association makes a 
valid revocation, under section 856(g)(2), of an election to be a real 
estate investment trust.

(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))

[T.D. 7767, 46 FR 11275, Feb. 6, 1981; 46 FR 15263, Mar. 5, 1981]