1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 130">*130 Decision will be entered for petitioner.
SUPPLEMENTAL MEMORANDUM OPINION
TANNENWALD, JUDGE: This case is before the Court on remand from the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in
1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 130">*131 The findings of facts are set forth in our previous opinion,
In 1965, the State of Ohio created a fully funded statewide pension fund for police officers and firefighters (the State fund) to replace the unfunded plans maintained by petitioner and other Ohio municipalities. The State fund assumed and guaranteed the pre-1967 pension liabilities of such municipalities, including petitioner (the State fund obligation). State law required each municipality to transfer its pension liabilities and assets to the State fund and to pay the State fund, either immediately or over time with interest, an amount equal to its accrued unfunded pension liability. Petitioner transferred its pension liabilities and assets on January 1, 1967, and chose to pay its accrued unfunded pension liability over time (the city obligation). Petitioner made scheduled payments until November 1993, when it entered into a prepayment agreement with the State fund whereby petitioner paid the balance remaining on the1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 130">*132 city obligation (the remaining obligation) in a lump-sum equal to 65 percent of the outstanding principal balance (plus interest from the time of the prepayment agreement until date of the lump-sum payment). Petitioner made the lump-sum payment on January 31, 1994 (the prepayment).
Petitioner proposed to issue tax-exempt bonds to finance the lump-sum payment and requested a ruling from respondent that the interest on the proposed bonds would be exempt under
The purpose of
It is clear that the threshold question is a narrow one: Does the acquisition of one's indebtedness constitute an acquisition of property so as to bring
It is petitioner's position that the prepayment extinguished its indebtedness to the State fund and that it acquired no property in that transaction. It is respondent's position that petitioner's prepayment1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 130">*134 was investment-type property. Respondent describes the result of petitioner's prepayment as "the city received economic property through this investment use." Respondent argues that to allow petitioner to issue tax-exempt bonds contravenes the intent of
The purpose of
Investment-type property includes any property, 1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 130">*135 other than property described in
Unquestionably, petitioner, by prepaying the remaining city obligation, extinguished its preexisting debt. While petitioner received an economic benefit from prepaying its debt, we do not think it was paying for property. Petitioner purchased or received nothing, beyond the State fund obligation it received under the 1967 transaction, other than the discount for prepaying its obligation to the State. Such discounts normally are considered discharge of indebtedness income, not investments. Sec. 61(a)(12);
Respondent seeks comfort from
The long and short of the matter is that the discount involved herein had economic value but that value cannot be equated with property for which petitioner made the prepayment. Consequently, we answer in the negative the threshold question delineated by the remand.
Since there is no prepayment for property, we hold that the prepayment in and of itself does not constitute investment-type property. 3 Such being the case, petitioner's bonds are not arbitrage bonds. Cf.
1998 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 130">*138 Decision will be entered for petitioner.
1. Unless otherwise indicated, all statutory references are to the Internal Revenue Code, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.↩
2. We left this question aside in our original opinion, and the Court of Appeals did likewise.
3. As the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit stated in
We also have no doubt that the 1994 transaction was a "prepayment." But was the city's prepayment "for property"? Only if it was may the prepayment itself be treated as "investment- type property" under the regulation. * * *↩