COMMONLY ASKED QUESTIONS ABOUT
TRANSFERS OF CONTROLLING INTEREST
IN REAL PROPERTY ENTITIES
1.) Who
is required to make this new type of filling with the Department of Assessments
and Taxation beginning on July 1, 2008?
The
2007 special session of the Maryland General Assembly enacted legislation requiring
thatrecordation and transfer taxes be collected on transfers of
controlling interests in certain real property entities. The recordation
and transfer taxes are imposed on the transfer of a controlling interest in a
real property entity as if the real property (whether directly or beneficially
owned by the entity) was conveyed by a deed filed in the county land
records.
2.) What
is a “real property entity “subject to these taxes?
Real
Property entity means “a corporation, partnership, association, limited
liability company, limited liability partnership, other unincorporated
form of doing business or trust that directly or beneficially owns real
property in Maryland that constitutes 80% of the value of its assets and that real
property has an aggregate value of at least $1,000,000.” Tax-Property Article,
§12-117 (a)(6). It
does not include land related to agricultural production and subject to an
agricultural use assessment.
3.) What
is a plan of transfer subject to the payment of recordation and transfer taxes?
A
plan of transfer means an intentional plan or program to transfer the
controlling interest in a real property entity in two or more steps. The
taxes will be applied for all of the steps in the plan.
4.) What
is the amount of “controlling interest” where a report must be filed with the
department?
The
report must be filed where more than 80% of the value of the controlling
interest is transferred. The determination of the 80% amount is based
on an accurate statement of value, and generally it is not dependent on
the number of shares, other units of ownership interest, or the par value
assigned to those interests. The Department has created a “permissive” filing
where an entity may submit a report (without the payment of recordation
or transfer taxes) for a determination by the agency and for a record filing that the value is between 50% and the 80%
controlling interest standard.
5.) Is
there a time frame for the completion of the plan of transfer that will affect
whether the recordation and transfer taxes must be paid and does the
report still have to be filed with the Department?
There
are no taxes due if the transfer of a controlling interest effected in more
than one transaction is completed over a period of more than 12 months, and
there is a legitimate business purpose (other than tax avoidance) for
utilizing that time period. The report must be filed with the
Department because this time frame is an exemption under the law, and the real
property entity has the burden of establishing to the satisfaction of the
Department the applicability of that exemption.
6.) Are
there any specific exemptions from recordation and transfer taxes allowed in
this law, and how do the exemptions affect the requirement of filing a
report of a transfer of controlling interest in a real property
entity with the Department?
The
specific exemptions allowed in Tax-Property Article §§ 12-108 and 13-207 when
real properties are transferred by an instrument of writing recorded with
the Clerk of Circuit Court for a county are applicable to transfers
of controlling interests. The Department will allow the same exemptions
that have been permitted by the Clerks of Circuit Court. The Department also
will allow any “local” county exemptions to the county taxes. Any real
property entity claming these types of exemptions must submit the
report of a transfer of controlling interest to the Department.
There
are other exemptions for: (1) multi-step transfers that are not part of the
same plan of transfer; (2) a transfer of a controlling interest in
a real property entity to another business if the ownership interests in the
transferee business entity are held by the same persons and in the same
proportion as in the real property entity being transferred; (3) a transfer of
a controlling interest in a real property entity where each transferor,
each transferee, and each real property entity is a subsidiary
corporation where all of the stock is owned, directly or indirectly by
a common parent corporation; (4) a transfer of a controlling interest in a real
property entity if each transferor, transferee and real property entity in a
partnership where all of the interests are owned, directly or
indirectly, by one or more subsidiaries or the common parent; (5) if transfer
of a controlling interest is a real property entity where each
transferor, transferee or real property is the common parent
corporation; and (6) the transferee of the controlling interest in the real property
entity is a nonstock corporation and a continuing care retirement community.
Again, the claming of these exemptions require the real property entity to
submit a report to the Department.
7.) What
are the exclusions for filing a report of a transfer of controlling interest?
The
law does not apply to: (1) an entity with land holdings (other than homesites
or commercial agricultural production activity) that are entirely subject
to an agricultural assessment; (2) a series of sales of shares of a
publicly traded entity; (3) a pledge of stock or other interest in a real property
entity as a security for a loan; and (4) the admission to the real property
entity of additional shareholders, partners, beneficial owners, or other
members to raise additional capital through the offering of stock where the
management of the real property entity is not substantially changed
and none of the new members participate in the day-to-day management
of the real property entity. These exclusions do not require the real property
entity to submit a report to the Department.
8.) What
effect does this new law have on Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs)?
Most
REITs would not have any requirement to file a report with the Department
because of the exclusion in the law providing that there is no plan of
transfer where there is a series of sales of shares of a publicly
traded entity. Moreover, the separate statutory provision requiring that 80% of
the real property be located in the State of Maryland would exclude most REITs from filing. A REIT
does not have to file a report with the Department to claim either of these
exclusions.
9.) What
effect do mortgages or any other unsecured debt have on the real property entity
or its subsidiaries regarding the amount of consideration being
reported for the imposition of recordation and transfer taxes?
All
debts, including mortgages, deeds of trust, liens, security interests, unsecured
debts or other encumbrances of the real property entity or its subsidiaries,
are part of the consideration subject to the imposition of the
taxes.
10.) What
is the time period for the submitting the report to the Department and the
payment of the applicable taxes?
The
report must be submitted and the taxes paid within thirty (30) days of the date
of the final transfer.
11.) What
happens if a real property entity does not submit a report to the Department as
required by the law?
The
Department will make an assessment of the taxes due, apply a penalty of 10% of
the unpaid amount, and interest will accrue on the unpaid amount at the
rate of 1% per month.
12.) What
are the penalties for a person or representative who willfully submits a false
report to the Department?
There
are misdemeanor penalties and fines provided at Title 14, Subtitle 10 of the
Tax-Property Article, specifically §§ 14-1001- to 14-1004.
Transfer of a controlling interest reporting form and instructions
County and State recordation and transfer tax rates