Or. Admin. Code § 150-317-0120 - Farm Capital Gain
(1) This
rule is effective July 31, 2010 and applies to all tax years open to
examination.
(2) Definitions. For
purposes of ORS 317.063 and this rule:
(a) "Substantially complete termination"
means the taxpayer is:
(A) No longer
involved, directly or indirectly, in a trade or business engaged in farming, or
(B) No longer owns, directly or
indirectly, property used in the trade or business of farming.
(b) "A trade or business engaged
in farming" means a distinct farming operation separately run from the
taxpayer 's other businesses. Businesses that share employees, equipment,
buildings, or land are not separate businesses. Businesses that share records,
accounts, registration, identification numbers, or a business name are also not
separate businesses.
(3) A taxpayer 's net long-term capital gain
qualifies for the reduced tax rate if all four of the following tests are met:
(a) Asset Test. The gain is derived from
either IRC section 1231 assets or an ownership interest of at least 10 percent
in an entity.
(b) Use Test. The
property that was sold consisted of:
(A) An
ownership interest in an entity engaged in the trade or business of farming; or
(B) Property that was
predominantly used in the trade or business of farming.
(c) Relationship Test. The assets are not
sold to a related taxpayer as defined under IRC section 267.
(d) Termination Test. The sale is a
substantially complete termination of all of the taxpayer 's ownership interests
in:
(A) A trade or business engaged in
farming; or
(B) Property that is
predominantly used in the trade or business of farming.
(4) Asset Test. The part of the
taxpayer 's net long-term capital gain that is eligible for the reduced rate
must be from capital assets under IRC section 1231 or a 10 percent or more
ownership interest in an entity engaged in the trade or business of farming.
Example 1
: Forty years ago,
Corporation A purchased an orchard next to the company's row crop farm. The
company did not regularly harvest the fruit or care for the trees but allowed
its employees and their families to use the fruit. Last year, the urban growth
boundary moved to include the company's parcel. Corporation A wanted to sell
the property to developers so it had all the trees removed and sold the
property. The sale of the orchard does not qualify for the reduced rate because
it was not held as a trade or business; thus, it was not an IRC section 1231
asset. It was land held for investment and personal use.
(5) Use Test. The asset sold must be
predominantly used in the trade or business of farming. Any other use of the
asset must be incidental to, and not interfere with, the primary purpose of
being engaged in the trade or business of farming.
(a) Property used 80 percent or more in the
trade or business of farming is considered and presumed to be predominant use.
Accepted farming practices common to the type of farming activity and region,
such as land lying fallow for one year, are included in the trade or business
of farming.
(b) Property used more
than 50 percent but less than 80 percent in a farming trade or business,
qualifies as predominant if the difference between the actual percentage use in
a farming trade or business and 80 percent use in a farming trade or business
is incidental. Incidental use does not include holding property as an
investment, using property for personal (non-business) use, or using property
for another business. Incidental use includes, but is not limited to:
(A) Farmland that is bordered by or contains
a waterway;
(B) Land that consists
of terrain that cannot be farmed (i.e. marshland, desert);
(C) Land that contains a utility easement
that makes farming impractical or impossible; or
(D) The period of the time when the farm
property or business was "actively for sale" immediately prior to the sale. A
property was "actively for sale" if the property was listed and advertised for
sale for a price comparable to similar properties and the seller did not reject
any reasonable offers.
(c) Property used for personal or business
activities that take place on the land concurrently and do not interfere with
the primary farming trade or business use are considered incidental use.
(d) Allocation. Property that is
used less than 80 percent in a farm trade or business may be allocated between
the actual portion that is predominantly used in the business of farming and
the portion not predominantly used in the business of farming.
Example 2
: BJ Farms raised corn
and beans on 500 acres the entire time it owned the acreage. BJ Farms used the
cornfields as a corn maze after the corn was harvested. BJ Farms sold the 500
acres to CJ Farms and recognized a capital gain. Assuming the gain from the
sale meets the other three tests, the gain from the sale qualifies for the
reduced tax rate because BJ Farms used the property predominantly (80 percent
or more) in the trade or business of farming even though the company used the
farmland for an incidental purpose after the harvest.
Example 3
: D & D, Inc owned
and operated a 30 acre farm. The farm had a waterway and riparian land that was
not farmed, which took up 10 acres of the farm. Assuming the company meets the
other three tests, D & D, Inc qualifies for the reduced tax rate because
the property was predominantly used in the business of farming. The farm use
qualifies as predominant for the entire 30 acres because the farm use was more
than 50 percent, but less than 80 percent and the 33 percent (10 acres/30
acres) not used for farming was incidental.
Example 4
: John B. Dairy, Inc
sold 20 acres of land. The company owned the land and leased out 15 acres to a
farmer who grew crops. The remaining 5 acres was made into baseball fields
where the company allowed local Little League teams to use it for practices and
games. Assuming John B. Dairy, Inc meets the other three tests, the 15 acres
used for farming qualifies for the reduced tax rate.
(6) Relationship test. The gain
from the sale of an asset does not qualify for the reduced tax rate if the
asset is sold to a related taxpayer under IRC section 267 even if all of the
other three tests are met.
Example 5
: Green Beans Inc and Sweet Corn Inc own a farm together as a
partnership. The partnership decides to sell the business to BJ Farms, (the
parent company). Assume the sale meets the other three tests. The Green Beans
Inc and Sweet Corn Inc capital gain does not qualify for the reduced tax rate
because Green Beans Inc and Sweet Corn Inc are related to BJ Farms under IRC
section 267.
(7)
Termination Test. If a taxpayer sold an interest in a trade or business that is
engaged in farming, the taxpayer may not be directly or indirectly engaged in
that farming trade or business after the sale. The sale of the taxpayer 's
interests through an installment sale constitutes a substantially complete
termination for purposes of ORS
317.063 and this rule. A
taxpayer has substantially terminated its interests in the trade or business of
farming even though the taxpayer retained a portion of the farm for personal
use.
Example 6
: Happy Cow Dairy
Inc, (Parent Corporation) owned two subsidiaries, a dairy operation and a hop
farm. The two businesses were completely separate. They had separate employees,
equipment, and records. The two businesses also had different names, records,
and federal identification numbers. Happy Cow Dairy Inc sold the dairy farm.
After selling all of the dairy equipment and dairy cows, the company realized a
capital gain of $350,000. The company decided not to sell the hop farm. The
gain on the sale of the dairy operation qualifies for the reduced tax rate.
Even though the company still owned the hop farm, it had sold the entire dairy
business.
(8)
Depreciation Recapture. IRC section 1231 gain may be treated as ordinary income
under IRC sections 1245 and 1250 recapture rules. If the capital asset is
subject to depreciation recapture under IRC sections 1245 or 1250, the portion
of the gain that is treated as ordinary income does not qualify for the reduced
tax rate.
Example 7
: JD Inc
sold its farm, which included three silos. All four tests were met. The silos
are capital assets subject to IRC section 1245 recapture. The part of the gain
from the sale of the silos that is treated as ordinary income is not eligible
for the reduced tax rate. However, the part of the gain from the sale of the
silos that is treated as long-term capital gain on the federal return is
eligible for the reduced tax rate on the Oregon return.
(9) Capital loss. If all four tests are met
and the taxpayer is reporting a capital loss, it could affect the capital gain
eligible for the reduced tax rate. Compute the net capital gain or loss from
all other property sales or exchanges for the year that are taxable to Oregon.
If it results in a net capital loss, the amount eligible for the reduced tax
rate is the qualifying farm capital gain minus the net capital loss from other
property sales or exchanges that are taxable to Oregon.
Example 8
: B Inc sold a farming
business for a net long-term capital gain of $800,000. During the year, the
company also sold other property for a net capital loss of $150,000. Assuming
the sale of the farm business meets all four tests, B Inc is only eligible for
the reduced tax rate on $650,000 (net farm long-term capital gain minus other
net capital loss) of the taxable income.
(10) Installment Method under IRC section
453. Installment sales are eligible for the reduced tax rate if the sale meets
all four tests as explained in section (2) of this rule. The amount of capital
gain eligible for the reduced tax rate must be determined each year. The
percentage of gain eligible for the reduced tax rate is equal to the qualifying
farm long-term capital gain from the sale divided by all capital gain from the
sale. Apply this percentage to the capital gain from the sale reported each
year to determine the amount that qualifies for the reduced tax rate. If there
is capital loss from the sale of other property as described in section (8) of
this rule, during a tax year that the installment sale is reported, this may
reduce the gain eligible for the reduced tax rate.
Example
9
: Green Acres Inc sells its row crop farm in 2007
and meets all four tests to receive the reduced tax rate. The company elects to
recognize the income from the sale using the installment method under IRC
section 453. Green Acre Inc will receive half of the sale price in 2007 and
one-fourth of the sale price each in 2008 and 2009 plus interest. Of the
capital gain from the sale, $300,000 qualifies for the reduced tax rate and
$100,000 does not. The company's percentage eligible for the reduced tax rate
is $300,000 of eligible capital gain divided by $400,000 of total capital gain,
or 75 percent. The buyer also paid interest to Green Acres Inc, which is
reported separately on the return. In 2007, the company will claim the capital
gain from the sale of $200,000. Of that amount, 75 percent or $150,000 is
eligible for the reduced tax rate. In 2008 and 2009, the company will claim the
farm capital gain rate for $75,000 ($100,000 x 75 percent) of capital gain from
the sale reported each year.
(11) Like-kind Exchanges. Like-kind exchanges
may be eligible for the reduced tax rate when the gain is recognized, assuming
all four tests are met. The taxpayer must keep detailed records to show that
the property would have qualified for the reduced tax rate if it had been a
sale instead of an exchange.
Example 10
: Dee Farms decided to exchange farmland for investment property.
The exchange meets all four tests. Dee Farms deferred $400,000 of capital gain.
Later, Dee Farms sells the investment property and reports capital gain of
$700,000. Of this amount, $400,000 is eligible for the reduced tax rate for
farm capital gain, because it would have been eligible if the company had not
deferred it.
(12) Sale
in more than one tax year. Prior-year sales of farm property, or a farming
business sold over more than one year, may be eligible for the reduced tax
rate. It can take more than one year to sell a farming business or all of a
taxpayer 's property used in farming because the property is sold to more than
one buyer. To qualify for the reduced tax rate, the taxpayer must be actively
trying to sell all farm property (or all property from a farming business) from
the year of the first sale until the year of the final sale. Each sale is
separately considered to see if it meets the requirements to qualify for the
reduced tax rate, but all farm property or property from a farming business
must be sold within a reasonable amount of time (usually no more than three tax
years from the first sale to the final sale of qualifying farm property) for
any of the prior year sales to qualify. The reduced tax rate on the prior year
sales cannot be claimed until the taxpayer has sold all farm property or all
property from a farming business. A property is "actively for sale" if the
property was listed and advertised for sale for a price comparable to similar
properties and the seller did not reject reasonable offers.
Example 11
: Sunshine Grass Seed
Inc owns 1,000 acres of farmland in four different locations. The properties
are treated as one business and all of the property is actively for sale. The
company sells 200 acres to a neighboring farmer in 2006. Sunshine Grass Seed
Inc files its 2006 tax return but cannot claim the reduced tax rate on the gain
because it is not out of the business of farming. In November 2007, the company
sells the remaining 800 acres of farmland to Dees Farms (an unrelated party).
Sunshine Grass Seed Inc, files its 2007 tax return and the long-term capital
gain from the sales qualifies for the reduced tax rate because the property was
actively for sale the entire time. Sunshine Grass Seed Inc may now amend its
tax return for 2006 and claim the reduced tax rate on the qualifying capital
gain from the earlier sale.
(13) If a taxpayer sells farm property and
then buys other farm property, the taxpayer may qualify for the reduced tax
rate. The taxpayer must meet all four tests described in section (3) of this
rule with the sale of farm property before purchasing other farm property to
qualify for the reduced tax rate.
Example 12
: JB Farms, sold the company's farm and equipment to start a
retail business. After some difficulty in getting started, the company decides
to go back to farming and purchased another farm. JB Farms qualifies for the
reduced tax rate because the company had completely terminated its interest in
property used in farming at the time of the sale and met the other tests.
Notes
Publications: Publications referenced are available from the agency.
Stat. Auth.: ORS 305.100, 317.063
Stats. Implemented: ORS 317.063
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