For each of the scenarios provided (1-12) answer the following questions:
a. Is the transaction taxable?
b. If not, indicate the type of reorganization.
c. In 2 or 3 sentences, support your decision. For example, if you state the transaction is a Type B reorganization, explain why the transaction qualifies as a Type B reorganization.
Scenario:
Red Corporation owns assets valued at $500,000 and liabilities at $200,000, and White Corporation has assets valued at $1 million and liabilities of $150,000. Red transfers 75% of its voting stock to White in exchange for 90% of its assets. White distributes the Red stock, its own remaining assets, and all of its liabilities to the White shareholders. White then liquidates.
Green Corporation holds assets valued at $600,000 and liabilities of $150,000. Blue Corporation transfers $540,000 of its voting stock for 90% of Green’s assets. Blue assumes none of Green’s liabilities. Green distributes the Blue stock, its own retained assets, and its liabilities to the Green shareholders and then liquidates.
Orange owns assets valued at $400,000 and liabilities of $100,000. Yellow Corporation exchanges $200,000 of its voting stock and land worth $100,000 for all of Orange’s assets and liabilities. Orange distributes the Yellow stock to the Orange stockholders and retains the land.
Apricot Corporation moves its headquarters and incorporation from Rochester, New York, to Santa Fe, New Mexico. It changes its name to Chile Pepper, Inc.
Pink Corporation holds assets valued at $500,000 and liabilities at $100,000. Black Corporation transfers $350,000 of its voting stock and $50,000 of nonvoting stock for all of Pink’s voting and nonvoting stock. Pink becomes a subsidiary of Black.
Gray Corporation’s paperclip division owns assets valued at $300,000 and liabilities of $50,000. The staple division holds assets valued at $900,000 and liabilities of $150,000. Gray would like the two divisions to be separate corporations. It creates Silver Corporation and transfers all of the paperclip division assets and liabilities in exchange for 100% of Silver’s stock. Gray then distributes the Silver stock to its own shareholders in exchange for 25% of their stock in Gray. The divisions have been in existence for 10 years.
Purple holds assets valued at $800,000 and liabilities at $200,000. Brown Corporation transfers $280,000 of its voting stock for 60% of Purple’s assets and all of its liabilities. Purple distributes the Brown stock and its remaining assets to the Purple shareholders. Purple then liquidates.
Rust Corporation holds assets valued at $500,000 and liabilities at $150,000. Beige Corporation transfers $350,000 of its voting stock and $30,000 in cash for all of Rust’s assets and assumes 80% of its liabilities. Rust distributes the Beige stock, cash, and the remaining Rust liabilities to its shareholders and then liquidates.
Gold Corporation owns assets valued at $850,000 and liabilities at $800,000. To keep its creditors from foreclosing, Gold creates a new corporation, Fish, Inc., and transfers all of Gold’s assets to Fish under the guidance of the state court. The creditors received $800,000 of Fish stock, and the former Gold shareholders receive the remaining shares in Fish.
Cyan Corporation holds assets valued at $100,000 with liabilities of $20,000. Coral Corporation has assets valued at $900,000 with liabilities of $100,000. Cyan exchanges 80% of its voting stock for 40% of Coral’s assets and liabilities. Coral distributes the Cyan stock and the remaining Coral assets and liabilities to the Coral shareholders. Coral then liquidates.
Fuchsia Corporation obtained 40,000 shares of Slate Corporation’s stock four years ago. In the current year, Fuchsia exchanges 20% of its stock for 42,000 of the remaining 60,000 shares of Slate stock. After the transaction, Fuchsia owns 82,000 of the 100,000 Slate shares outstanding. Chartreuse Corporation has two lines of business (water purification and mining), which have been conducted for the past 20 years. Chartreuse’s shareholders decide that it would be best to split Chartreuse into two corporations. The assets and liabilities of the water purification plant are transferred to Aqua Corporation in exchange for all of its stock. The mining division’s assets and liabilities are exchanged for all of the stock in Copper Corporation. The Aqua and Copper stock is distributed to the Chartreuse shareholders in return for all of their Chartreuse stock. Chartreuse then liquidates.
Scenario:
- Red Corporation owns assets valued at $500,000 ………liquidates.
Answer:
Acquisitive “Type D” reorganization. White, larger corporation, the transfers its assets to the
Red, target, in the exchange of controlling interest in the Red. White is liquidates.
- Green Corporation …….liquidates.
Answer
“Type C” – reorganization. It does not qualify as “Type A” – reorganization reason is Blue does not assumes all of the Green’s liabilities. The liabilities are not the boot and reason is none of them assumed the Green.
- Orange owns …..retains the land.
It is taxable transaction and does not qualify as “Type A” / “Type C” – reorganization reason is
Orange do not distribute land or not liquidate.
- Apricot Corporation …..Chile Pepper, Inc.
“Type F”- reorganization. F reorganization is apply to corporation when it is changing state where it do the business or we can say that changing in the name / change company corporate character.
Here its changes in the name &e state where it is working..
- Pink Corporation …….subsidiary of Black.
It is taxable transaction. And does not qualify as “Type B” -reorganization because the Black uses of nonvoting stock.
- Gray Corporation’s paperclip ……existence for 10 years.
“Type D” the split-off reorganization. The stock in the Gray relinquished to the receive Silver stock.
- Purple holds assets valued at $800,….. Purple then liquidates.
“Type A”- reorganization. And it does not qualify “Type C” -reorganizationand reason behind this is substantially all of asset are not acquired by the Brown.
- Rust Corporation holds ……then liquidates.
It is taxable transaction and does not qualify “Type A” -reorganization and reason behind this is that all of liabilities are not assumed and does not qualify also “Type C”- reorganization because 80 percent of assets are not acquired with the voting stock. Liabilities are treated as the boot due to cash in transaction.
- Gold Corporation owns …….shares in Fish.
“Type G” -reorganization.Because it involve bankruptcy through permitting transfer of all or some of failing companys assets to the new corporation.
Here the Gold creates new corporation named Fish. Inc.
- Cyan Corporation holds assets…… Coral then liquidates.
It is taxable transaction and not acquisitive “Type D”- reorganization reason behind this is Coral acquiring does not transfer the substantially all its assets.
- Fuchsia Corporation ….Slate shares outstanding.
It is “Type B” reorganization. Because as long as the Fuchsia owns at least 80 percent after restructuring, it is – “Type B.”
- Chartreuse ……Chartreuse then liquidates.
It is “Type D” -split-up reorganization because chartreuse divides into 2 corporations & then
liquidates.