The sale/leaseback is a financing technique that has been used in the United States since the 1940's. Sale/leaseback transactions provide alternative methods of ownership, investment, financing and risk allocation
The transaction, in its most basic form, involves the sale of a property to an investor who holds title and leases the property back to the former owner. The lease is typically a long-term "net" lease, with the seller/tenant having the option of repurchasing at a later time. The seller/tenant reaps the benefit of favorable 100% "financing" and still retains the use of the property. The buyer/landlord receives the tax benefit of depreciation and a guaranteed long-term rental. A sale/leaseback, however, can turn into a disaster if the seller/tenant files bankruptcy or either party is audited by the IRS. In either case, the transaction can be recharacterized by the Court as a "disguised" financing transaction. This article will attempt to suggest some guidelines for avoiding this recharacterization.
Recharacterization in the Context of Seller/Tenant's Insolvency
If the seller/tenant is unable to make payments on the lease, the buyer/landlord may try to evict the seller/tenant and extinguish his interest. In this case, the seller/tenant can file for protection under the Federal Bankruptcy laws. His attorney will argue that the sale/leaseback should be recharacterized as a financing transaction. If the Bankruptcy Court agrees, the buyer/landlord will be considered a mortgagee, and title will revert back to the seller/tenant. The recharacterization, while beneficial to the seller/tenant, will result in unintended, and often disastrous consequences to the buyer/landlord.
The Bankruptcy Court will look to the intent of the parties to the transaction, rather than the actual paperwork, in determining whether the sale/leaseback was intended to be a financing arrangement. The key factors are:
The court will balance all of these factors and take a "substance over form" approach.
Recharacterization for Tax Purposes
If either party to a sale/leaseback is audited, the IRS can recharacterize the sale/leaseback as a financing arrangement. This will result in an immediate recapture of buyer/landlord's depreciation of the property and imputed interest on the seller/tenant's rental payments. The seller/tenant will lose the deduction for his rental payments, since the payments will be reclassified and principal repayment of a loan.
The guidelines for IRS recharacterization are not as clear as those for Bankruptcy recharacterizations, and it is clearly a case-by-case analysis. The United States Supreme Court, in the landmark case of Frank Lyon Co. v. United States, stated the following factors to be considered for recharacterization:
Guidelines for Structuring the Transaction
There is no real way to guarantee that a Court or IRS auditor will agree with your characterization of a transaction as a sale/leaseback. Use your best judgment, follow the guidelines set forth by the courts and remember . . . if it looks like a duck, and it quacks like a duck - well, you know the rest.
by William Bronchick




