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S 758 104th Congress Senate Taxation Accounting Aliens Business losses Business records Charitable contributions Charities Commerce Corporate liquidations Corporation taxes Debt Dividends Earnings Employee health benefits Employee ownership Families Finance and Financial Sector Foreign Trade and International Finance Foreign corporations Foreign investments

S Corporation Reform Act of 1995

Introduced: May 4, 1995 See on congress.gov
 Everywhere this bill has been 4 steps
Introduced
In committee
Reported out
Passed House
Passed Senate
To President
Became law
Jun 19, 1995
Subcommittee on Taxation & IRS Oversight. Hearings held.
May 4, 1995
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Finance.
May 4, 1995
Sponsor introductory remarks on measure. (CR S6171-6172)
May 4, 1995
Introduced in Senate
 Plain-English summary Congressional Research Service

TABLE OF CONTENTS:

Title I: Eligible Shareholders of S Corporation

Subtitle A: Number of Shareholders

Subtitle B: Persons Allowed as Shareholders

Subtitle C: Other Provisions

Title II: Qualification and Eligibility Requirements for S

Corporations

Subtitle A: One Class of Stock

Subtitle B: Elections and Terminations

Subtitle C: Other Provisions

Title III: Taxation of S Corporation Shareholders

Title IV: Effective Date

S Corporation Reform Act of 1995 - Title I: Eligible Shareholders of S Corporation - Subtitle A: Number of Shareholders - Amends the Internal Revenue Code to increase from 35 to 50 the maximum number of shareholders of an S corporation (electing small business corporation). Allows members of a family to be treated as one shareholder.

Subtitle B: Persons Allowed as Shareholders - Allows the following entities to be shareholders of S corporations: (1) certain tax-exempt organizations; (2) financial institutions that do not use the reserve method of accounting for bad debts; (3) nonresident aliens; and (4) certain small business trusts.

Subtitle C: Other Provisions - Extends the post-death qualification for certain trusts to be permitted as shareholders from 60 days to two years.

Title II: Qualification and Eligibility Requirements for S Corporations - Subtitle A: One Class of Stock - Allows an S corporation to issue qualified preferred stock.

Permits financial institutions to hold safe harbor debt.

Subtitle B: Elections and Terminations - Revises the rules on inadvertent terminations by certain trusts of the election to be an S corporation. Authorizes the Secretary of the Treasury to treat certain late elections as timely and to provide an automatic waiver procedure for certain inadvertent terminations.

Expands the post-termination transition period until 120 days after a determination is made that the election had terminated in a prior year.

Repeals the characterization of excessive passive investment income as a termination event.

Increases the tax imposed on such excessive income.

Subtitle C: Other Provisions - Permits an S corporation to wholly own the stock of a subsidiary.

Provides for the treatment of distributions during loss years.

Provides a consent dividend for S corporation elections to by-pass amounts in the accumulated adjustments account when making distributions.

Eliminates the rule treating an S corporation as an individual in its capacity as shareholder of another corporation for purposes of subchapter C.

Eliminates the pre-1983 earnings and profits accumulated by a corporation that was an S corporation for any taxable year beginning before January 1, 1983, and is so characterized for its first taxable year after December 31, 1995.

Allows S corporations to make charitable contributions of inventory and scientific property.

Repeals the requirement that partnership rules apply for fringe benefit purposes (making C corporation rules applicable). Provides for the application to two-percent shareholders of S corporations of the rules regarding deduction of health insurance costs of self-employed individuals.

Title III: Taxation of S Corporation Shareholders - Applies the exemption from the excise tax on pension plan prohibited transactions to plans providing benefits for S corporation shareholder-employees (as defined before the effective date of the Subchapter S Revision Act of 1982). Treats losses on liquidations of S corporations as ordinary to the extent the loss created by ordinary income pass-through triggered the liquidation.

Title IV: Effective Date - Makes this Act effective for taxable years beginning after December 31, 1995.

What's happening now June 19, 1995

Subcommittee on Taxation & IRS Oversight. Hearings held.

 Committees of jurisdiction 2