Publication 557
taxmap/pubs/p557-037.htm#en_us_publink1000200412If your organization wants to obtain recognition of exemption
from federal income tax as an organization organized for the exclusive purpose
of acquiring, holding title to, and collecting income from real property, and
turning over the entire amount less expenses to member organizations exempt from
income tax, it should file its application on Form 1024. For a discussion of the
procedures for obtaining recognition of exemption, see chapter 1,
Application Procedures.
taxmap/pubs/p557-037.htm#en_us_publink1000200413Organizations recognized as exempt under this section can have
up to 35 shareholders or beneficiaries, in contrast to title-holding
organizations recognized as exempt under section 501(c)(2), which can have only
one controlling parent organization.
taxmap/pubs/p557-037.htm#en_us_publink1000200414A 501(c)(25) organization must be either a corporation or a trust.
Only one class of stock is permitted in the case of a corporation. In the case
of a trust, only one class of beneficial interest is allowed.
Organizations eligible to acquire or hold interests in this type
of title-holding organization are qualified pension, profit-sharing, or stock
bonus plans, governmental plans, governments and their agencies and
instrumentalities, and charitable organizations.
The articles of incorporation or trust instrument must include
provisions showing that the corporation or trust is organized to meet the
requirements of the statute, including compliance with the limitations on
membership and classes of stock or beneficial interest, and compliance with the
income distribution requirements. The organizing document must permit the
organization's shareholders or beneficiaries to dismiss the organization's
investment advisor, if any, upon a vote of the shareholders or beneficiaries
holding a majority interest in the organization.
The organizing document must permit the shareholders or beneficiaries
to terminate their interests by at least one of the following methods.
- By selling or exchanging their stock or beneficial interest
to any organization described in section 501(c)(25)(C), provided that the sale
or exchange does not cause the number of shareholders or beneficiaries to exceed
35.
- By having their stock or beneficial interest redeemed by the
section 501(c)(25) organization upon 90 days notice.
If state law prevents a corporation from including in its articles
of incorporation the above provisions, such provisions must instead be included
in the bylaws of the corporation.
A 501(c)(25) organization can be organized as a nonstock corporation
if its articles of incorporation or bylaws provide members with the same rights
as described above.
taxmap/pubs/p557-037.htm#en_us_publink1000200415A wholly owned subsidiary will not be treated as a separate corporation,
and all assets, liabilities, and items of income, deduction, and credit will be
treated as belonging to the section 501(c)(25) organization. Subsidiaries should
not apply separately for recognition of exemption.
taxmap/pubs/p557-037.htm#en_us_publink1000200416Donations to an exempt title-holding corporation generally are
not deductible as charitable contributions on the donor's federal income tax
return.
taxmap/pubs/p557-037.htm#en_us_publink1000200417In general, the receipt of unrelated business income by a section
501(c)(25) organization will subject the organization to loss of exempt status
since the organization cannot be exempt from taxation if it engages in any
business other than that of holding title to real property and collecting the
income from the property. However, exempt status generally will not be affected
by the receipt of debt-financed income that is treated as unrelated business
taxable income solely because of section 514.
Under section 514(c)(9), certain shareholders or beneficiaries
are not subject to unrelated debt-financed income tax under section 514 on their
investments through the organization. These shareholders are generally schools,
colleges, universities, or supporting organizations of such educational
institutions. Organizations other than these will take into account as gross
income from an unrelated trade or business their pro rata share of income that
is treated as unrelated debt-financed income because section 514(c)(9) does not
apply. These organizations will also take their pro rata share of the allowable
deductions from unrelated taxable income.
taxmap/pubs/p557-037.htm#en_us_publink1000200418Real property can include personal property leased in connection
with real property, but only if the rent from the personal property is not more
than 15% of the total rent for both the real property and the personal property.
Real property acquired after June 10, 1987, cannot include any
interest as a tenant in common (or similar interest) or any indirect interest.