New Regulations Change Allocation of Partnership Liabilities
On October 4, 2016, the Treasury Department and Internal Revenue Service (IRS) issued revised regulations governing how recourse partnership liabilities are allocated among partners. These temporary regulations, which are binding on taxpayers immediately, relate to so-called “bottom-dollar payment obligations” (BDPOs). Generally, if a partner guarantees a recourse partnership liability, the liability will be allocated to that partner and will increase his basis in his partnership interest—thereby increasing the amount of money or property the partner may receive in distributions from the partnership, or the amount of partnership losses that he can be allocated, without incurring income tax. Under the new regulations, certain guarantees, indemnities and similar arrangements (collectively, “guarantees”) classified as BDPOs will be disregarded for purposes of characterizing partnership liabilities as recourse obligations and instead such liabilities will be treated as nonrecourse obligations and allocated amongst the partners accordingly. Although the “bottom-dollar” moniker implies that only guarantees of the last dollars of a recourse partnership obligation will be disregarded, the temporary regulations sweep much more broadly. The new rules generally do not apply to obligations in place before October 5, 2016 unless they are modified. Partners and partnerships planning to enter into or modify guarantees should ascertain whether and how the new rules affect their intended structures.
- Changes in the Rules
A partnership’s liabilities are allocated among its partners for purposes of determining each partner’s tax basis in his partnership interest, and accordingly the amount of money or other property that each partner can receive as a distribution from the partnership or the amount of partnership losses that can be allocated to each partner without incurring income tax. The new rules were intended to curb perceived abuses—in particular, the use of guarantees lacking significant non-tax, commercial purposes to characterize obligations as recourse liabilities and thereby artificially increase the guaranteeing partner’s basis in the partnership.
Generally, a recourse partnership liability would be allocated to the partner who, if the partnership were liquidated and the obligation became due and payable, would be obligated to make a payment or a contribution to the partnership with respect to that liability. Formerly, all statutory and contractual obligations relating to a partnership liability were taken into account, including guarantees relating to less than all of the partnership liability, such as a tranche-based or “horizontal slice” guaranty. If, for example, Partner A guaranteed the first $500 of a $1,000 recourse partnership liability, and Partner B guaranteed the second $500, the liability would be allocated 50/50 to Partners A and B.
Under the new rules, because Partner B’s guaranty does not extend to any portion of the first dollar of the liability, it will be disregarded, and the second $500 of the $1,000 liability will be allocated among the partners as if it were a non-recourse liability. The new rules presumptively disregard BDPOs, subject to limited exceptions. They also require disclosure on the partnership’s information return of any BDPO as well as the partnership’s position as to whether (and why) that BDPO should be respected under the rules.
- Bottom-Dollar Payment Obligation
BDPOs are not limited to guarantees of the last dollar of an obligation. A BDPO is any payment obligation on which the obligor-partner would not be liable up to the full amount of his obligation if, and to the extent that, any amount of the partnership’s liability were unsatisfied. Separate prongs of the BDPO definition address indemnities and arrangements involving tiered partnerships, intermediaries, senior and subordinate liabilities and other structures that convert what would otherwise be a single liability into multiple liabilities.
In the simple example above, Partner B’s guaranty is a BDPO because, if the partnership were to satisfy its recourse obligation in part, Partner B would not necessarily be required to make good on any portion of his guaranty. If the partnership failed to satisfy half (or less than half) of its $1,000 liability, for example, Partner A—not Partner B—would be liable for the balance. Alternatively, suppose that Partner B guarantees the full $1,000 of the partnership liability, and instead of guaranteeing a portion of that liability directly, Partner A agrees to indemnify Partner B for the first $500 that Partner B pays out on his guaranty. Partner B’s guaranty is again a BDPO because Partner B is liable only to the extent that any amount beyond $500 of the partnership liability is not satisfied; Partner A is on the hook for the first $500, albeit indirectly.
As these examples illustrate, the BDPO definition generally captures payment obligations with respect to horizontal slices of a partnership liability. A guaranty of any slice that does not include a portion of the first dollar of the partnership’s obligation is a BDPO. However, a guaranty will not qualify as a BDPO merely because it does not extend to the full amount of the partnership liability, and vertical-slice guarantees (covering a fixed percentage of every dollar of the partnership liability) are generally not BDPOs. Moreover, where partners are co-obligors on a guaranty or indemnity for which they are jointly and severally liable, their proportionate rights of contribution do not cause the guaranty to become a BDPO.
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