39-22-653 - Taxpayer Disclosure of Reportable and Listed Transactions
(1)
Content
of Disclosure of Federal Transactions. A taxpayer who is required to
disclose to the department a Federal Transaction shall file with the Department
a copy of the entire IRS form 8886, or any successor form, and any amendments
to the original filing of said form, that the taxpayer files, or should have
filed, with the Internal Revenue Service.
(2)
Content of Disclosure of Colorado
Listed Transactions. A taxpayer who is required to disclose to the
department a Colorado Listed Transaction shall file with the department a
Taxpayer's Colorado Listed Transaction Disclosure Statement. The contents of
the statement shall include the name and address (mailing and physical
location) of each Captive Entity, the name and address (mailing and physical
location) of the Owner, the Captive Entity's estimated total assets and
estimated total income earned prior to dividend distribution for the tax year
in which the disclosure is first due. A taxpayer who is required to disclose a
transaction that is reportable under both subsections 1 and 2 of this rule
shall file IRS form 8886.
(3)
Disclosure by a Pass-through Entity or More Than Fifty Percent
Owner. A taxpayer who is (a) a partner, member, or shareholder (a
"pass-through member") of a pass-through entity, (b) a Captive Entity, or (c)
an entity controlled by the more than fifty percent beneficial owner of a
Captive Entity, and who is required to file a disclosure statement pursuant to
subsection 1 or 2, above, satisfies its disclosure obligation if the
pass-through entity or more than fifty percent beneficial owner is required to
disclose under subsection 1 or 2 of this rule, files on behalf of such taxpayer
an Internal Revenue Service form 8886 or a Taxpayer Colorado Disclosure
Statement, as the case may be, that contains all information that would have
been disclosed had the pass-through member, Captive Entity, or entity
controlled by the more than fifty percent beneficial owner, filed such a
disclosure statement, and the taxpayer does not have reasonable grounds to
believe that the disclosure filed on its behalf is not materially incomplete or
inaccurate.
(a)
Known or Potential
Federal Tax Benefits of Pass-Through Members. A pass-through entity
that does not know the federal tax benefit that inures to the pass-through
member has adequately disclosed a pass-through member's federal tax benefit if
the pass-through entity discloses the potential federal tax benefit(s) that may
inure to the pass-through member. If the pass-through entity does not have
sufficient information on which to disclose the potential federal tax benefit,
the pass-through entity cannot file a disclosure statement on behalf of such
pass-through member. This subsection 3(a) does not apply to an Owner, Captive
Entity, or a taxpayer listed in subsection 4, below, because the taxpayer in
such cases is presumed to have access to the information necessary to disclose
the known tax benefit of those other entities on behalf of whom the disclosure
statement is filed.
(4)
Taxpayer Included in a Colorado Combined Report or Consolidated
Return. A taxpayer that is included, or are required to be included, in
a combined and/or consolidated Colorado income tax return and that is required
to make a disclosure under subsections 1 or 2, above, satisfies the disclosure
requirements of this rule if an IRS form 8886 or Colorado Taxpayer Disclosure
Statement, as the case may be, that contains all information that would have
been disclosed had the taxpayer separately filed such disclosure statement, is
filed with the combined and/or consolidated return on behalf of all such
taxpayer.
Notes
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