This is the $64 question. Most participants in the TIC world believe that the sale of a TIC interest constitutes the sale of a security. It is important to differentiate between the definition of ‘security’ in the tax world and ’security’ in the securities world. For tax purposes you must exchange into real property, not a ‘security’, such as a REIT, partnership, LLC or other similar entity (when properly structured, TIC’s are real property). In the securities world, the SEC is concerned with how something is sold. The basic test for whether the sale of something constitutes a security was established over 60 years ago in a US Supreme Court case known as the ‘Howey Case’. In Howey, the Court set three standards under which the sale of something would be treated as the sale of a security. The standards are:
- An investment of money has been made by a group of investors in a common enterprise;
- The investors have a reasonable expectation of profit;
- The profits are expected to arise solely, or substantially, from the entrepreneurial efforts of the promoter or third party.
If we look at the sale of a TIC interest, we see that, generally, all three of the standards are present; a group of investors has invested in a common enterprise (the ownership of the property); they certainly have a reasonable expectation of profits and (in most cases) the sole or substantial efforts to obtain those profits will come from the promoter (sponsor). In fact, it is hard to imagine an example of a TIC transaction where these elements would not be present. One could argue that a building leased on a long-term, absolute net basis, to a high-credit tenant does not require any effort by a sponsor to obtain the profits.
But, a number of states, including California, have repeatedly stated that entrepreneurial efforts start well before the property is sold to the investors: Who used their expertise to find the property? Who negotiated its purchase? Who conducted the due diligence? Who negotiated the Loan? Since each of these activities requires entrepreneurial efforts and expertise, the argument has been made that there is no way to sell a TIC interest in states like California outside of a securities structure.
TICA recently issued “Position Statement Number One”, which states (in part): “The Tenant in Common Association (TICA) recognizes that all tenant-in-common (“TIC”) interests are real property. It is TICA’s position that sales of TIC interests are subject to federal and state security laws when the TIC interests are structured to be sold to unrelated persons, who will not be actively involved in the management of the property, and who have an expectation of income and profits to be derived primarily from the efforts of others.”
At the end of the day, no one has issued a grand proclamation stating definitively that the sale of TIC interests are or are not a security. For most of us in the business, however, the preponderance of evidence suggests that the process of selling a TIC interest constitutes a securities-related activity.
Jim
James G. Shaw
President and Chief Executive Officer
CapHarbor, Inc.
www.capharbor.com