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Column: Connecticut’s controlling interest transfer tax

Westfair Online by Westfair Online
September 24, 2015
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If you buy or sell real property in Connecticut, you”™re familiar with Connecticut”™s real estate conveyance tax. The deed can”™t be recorded unless conveyance tax is paid, so you can”™t overlook the tax.

However, a lesser-known controlling interest transfer tax (CITT) may apply to transfer of a controlling interest in an entity that directly or indirectly owns Connecticut real property valued at $2,000 or more. Transfer documents don”™t have to be recorded and no recording officer demands payment of CITT, which is easily disregarded. Acquisition of an entity with multiple tiers of subsidiaries poses particular peril; lower-tier subsidiaries may be “out of view,” but if they own real property, CITT will be payable.

Transfer of controlling interest in property-owning entity: Corporation F owns Parcel X. Shareholder S transfers 50.1 percent of F”™s shares to Buyer B. For CITT purposes, controlling interest in a corporation means more than 50 percent of the “combined voting power of all classes of stock.”

The CITT is 1.11 percent of the “actual true and present value” of Parcel X. If F had owned a half-interest in Parcel X, CITT would have been imposed on the value of the half-interest, but if any controlling interest in the property-owning entity is transferred, CITT is imposed on the total value of the property.

However, if F wants to sell only a fractional interest in Parcel X, F could deed the fractional interest to its wholly owned subsidiary. That transfer is exempt from conveyance tax, and ordinarily has no income tax consequences. When the subsidiary sells its fractional interest, CITT would be imposed on the value of the fractional interest.

Transfer of controlling interest in entity that indirectly owns property: Company J owns 40 percent of Company K, and K owns Parcel X. Member M sells a 60 percent (controlling) interest in J. Because control of the direct owner of the property (K) was not transferred, CITT is imposed on the “applicable ownership percentage” in Parcel X indirectly owned by J. Here, the percentage is 40 percent (J”™s stake in K), so CITT is imposed on 40 percent of the value of Parcel X.

For CITT purposes, “controlling interest” in an LLC or other noncorporate entity means more than 50 percent of the “capital, profits or beneficial interest.” An interest holder”™s percentages for these interests may not be identical, or may change over time.

The rate differential: Conveyance tax consists of a state portion, which is either 0.75 percent or 1.25 percent depending on the type of property, and a local portion, which ranges from 0.25 percent to 0.5 percent depending on location. For example, the aggregate rate applicable to a sale of improved, nonresidential property in most larger cities is 1.75 percent. The difference between this aggregate rate and the 1.11 percent CITT rate is important.

Example: Company P owns an office park. P could deed the office park to Buyer A, and pay conveyance tax at 1.75 percent. Or, P could deed the office park to its wholly owned subsidiary, Company R. When P then sells a 100 percent interest in Company R to A, P will pay CITT 1.11 percent of the office park”™s value. If that value is $100,000, the “no deed” scenario saves $640 ”” not enough to justify the complications. If the value is $100 million, the CITT scenario saves $640,000. The CITT scenario will prevent the transaction from qualifying as part of a tax-deferred exchange.

Related transactions: CITT will apply to a series of related transactions; transactions within a six-month period are presumed to be related. If a transfer of interest in a property-owning entity, followed by acquisition of an interest in the same entity (say, after a reorganization), the taxpayer could “net out” the transfers. This might allow the taxpayer to claim that there had been no net transfer of a controlling interest, or that CITT applied to less than 100 percent of the property”™s value.

There are many issues beyond the scope of this article, such as which transactions are exempt and how value is determined. Published administrative guidance regarding CITT is scarce. In 2003, the Connecticut Department of Revenue Services published a Special Notice that provides a good summary but doesn”™t address the creative possibilities offered by CITT.

Andrew A. Glickson is a member of Pullman & Comley”™s real estate and land use practice areas, representing developers and real estate investors in Connecticut and New York. He can be reached at aglickson@pullcom.com.

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