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United States Court of Appeals,
Fifth Circuit.
No. 94-41125.
SOUTHWEST TEXAS ELECTRICAL COOPERATIVE, INC., Petitioner-
Appellant,
v.
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent-Appellee.
Oct. 19, 1995.
Appeal from the United States Tax Court.
Before SMITH, BARKSDALE and BENAVIDES, Circuit Judges.
JERRY E. SMITH, Circuit Judge:
Southwest Texas Electrical Cooperative, Inc. ("petitioner"),
received a low-interest federal loan to finance an improvement of
its facilities. At the time of construction, petitioner needed and
withdrew only one-half of the approved loan amount; it later
withdrew the remainder, however, and invested it in Treasury Notes.
The Tax Court found that interest income from the Treasury Notes is
debt-financed and therefore subject to federal taxation. We
affirm.
I.
Petitioner, a tax-exempt rural electrical cooperative,
received a $5.148 million loan from the Rural Electrification
Administration ("REA") to finance an expansion and upgrade of its
facilities. The REA permitted petitioner to draw on the approved
loan funds only as reimbursement for construction costs it had
already incurred. Petitioner made six REA loan draws from
1

September 1983 through June 1985, totaling $2.574 million.1
Although petitioner was entitled to withdraw the remaining $2.574
million by July 1986, it chose not to do so, in part because its
financial condition had improved and in part because further debt
would have had a negative effect on its financial indicators.
The REA notified petitioner in March 1989 that its eligibility
for the remaining approved funds would expire in August 1989.
Petitioner requested the $2.574 million in early May 1989 and
received it on May 16, 1989, at an interest rate of five percent.
Petitioner's motivations for borrowing the funds included
uncertainty over whether it could receive another REA loan and the
costs it had already incurred in applying for the loan. Petitioner
placed the borrowed funds in its General Fund Account on May 17,
1989, and withdrew $2,575,735.25 from that account the next day to
purchase two United States Treasury Notes paying more than nine
percent interest.
Petitioner received interest income on the Treasury Notes in
the amount of $146,096.61 in 1989 and $230,938.49 in 1990. It also
incurred related expenses (including interest payments on the REA
loan) of $86,222.29 in 1989 and $134,812.53 in 1990. Petitioner
reported that it had no taxable income in 1989 and 1990; the
Commissioner of Internal Revenue ("the Commissioner") disagreed and
assessed deficiencies for those years, contending that the interest
income from the Treasury Notes, less related expenses, is taxable
1Petitioner also received a concurrent loan from the
National Rural Utilities Cooperative Finance Corporation ("CFC")
and drew $601,900 on the CFC loan in July and September 1985.
2

as business income unrelated to petitioner's tax-exempt purpose.
The Tax Court upheld the deficiencies.
II.
A.
The parties agree that (1) petitioner is generally exempt from
federal income tax under 26 U.S.C. § 501(a); (2) 26 U.S.C. §§
501(b) and 511(a) require petitioner to pay taxes on its "unrelated
business taxable income"; and (3) interest income counts as
"unrelated business taxable income" when it is both earned on
property that is not substantially related to petitioner's tax
exempt purpose, see 26 U.S.C. §§ 512(a)(1) and 513(a), and
debt-financed. See 26 U.S.C. §§ 512(b)(4) & 514(a). The parties
further agree that the improvement of petitioner's facilities is
substantially related to its tax-exempt purpose, and the purchase
of Treasury Notes is not. Accordingly, the question presented is
whether the $2.574 million in debt financing should be attributed
to the facilities or to the purchase of the Treasury Notes.
Petitioner contends that the debt financing should be
attributed to the facilities. The REA approved the loan for the
sole purpose of financing construction. Under the terms of the
loan agreement, petitioner expended general operating funds for the
construction and received corresponding reimbursement from the REA.
Petitioner argues that the legislative history of 26 U.S.C. § 514
evidences an intent to permit non-profit organizations to make
tax-free investments with their own funds, taxing passive
investments only when they are made with borrowed funds. Because
3

the REA releases funds only upon proof of completed construction,
taxing investments made with general funds only because those funds
have been replenished by REA loans could have the effect of taxing
investments that Congress intended to exempt.
The Commissioner conceded at oral argument that the REA loan
proceeds would be attributable to the construction and not the
Treasury Notes if petitioner had drawn on the loan proceeds at the
time of construction. The Commissioner argues that petitioner lost
this tax advantage by its lengthy delay in drawing on the loan,
however. Other circuits have found that § 514 taxes income from a
passive investment when a taxpayer borrows money for the purpose of
making such an investment; the Commissioner argues that this case
falls within those holdings because petitioner made the loan draw
three and one-half years after completing construction and
immediately invested the proceeds in Treasury Notes.
B.
We review the Tax Court's legal conclusions de novo. We
defer to its fact findings unless they are clearly erroneous.
Estate of Clayton v. Commissioner, 976 F.2d 1486, 1490 (5th
Cir.1992).
This is a case of first impression. While other circuits have
held or assumed that indebtedness incurred for the purpose of
making passive investments is attributable to those investments,2
2See, e.g., Kern County Elec. Pension Fund v. Commissioner,
96 T.C. 845, 1991 WL 106265 (1991), aff'd, 988 F.2d 120 (9th
Cir.1993); Mose & Garrison Siskin Memorial Found., Inc. v.
United States, 790 F.2d 480 (6th Cir.1986); Elliot Knitwear
Profit Sharing Plan v. Commissioner, 614 F.2d 347 (3d Cir.1980).
4

reimbursement loans arguably present a different question. The
parties agree that a taxpayer that receives loan funds before
incurring construction expenditures can use the loan proceeds to
finance construction directly while simultaneously investing its
own money tax-free; a similar taxpayer that receives loan funds
only after incurring construction expenditures must use its own
money to pay construction bills and then use the reimbursement
funds for the investment. If we were to hold broadly that the
latter investment is debt-financed merely because the specific
dollars used to make it are traceable to a lender, we would grant
different tax consequences to similar transactions.
C.
We need not resolve the difficulties presented by
reimbursement loans, however, because petitioner's arguments amount
to an attempt to restructure this transaction after the fact. As
noted above, petitioner's Treasury Notes are subject to federal
taxation only if they are debt-financed. Property is debt-financed
if it is held to produce income and there is an "acquisition
indebtedness" attributable to it. See 26 U.S.C. § 514(b)(1).
"Acquisition indebtedness" is defined as follows:
[T]he term "acquisition indebtedness" means, with respect to
any debt-financed property, the unpaid amount of--
(A) the indebtedness incurred by the organization in
acquiring or improving such property;
(B) the indebtedness incurred before the acquisition or
improvement of such property if such indebtedness would
not have been incurred but for such acquisition or
improvement; and
(C) the indebtedness incurred after the acquisition or
5

improvement of such property if such indebtedness would
not have been incurred but for such acquisition or
improvement and the incurrence of such indebtedness was
reasonably foreseeable at the time of such acquisition or
improvement.
26 U.S.C. § 514(c)(1).
Petitioner made a business decision to finance the remaining
construction by spending its own funds, not by drawing on the
remainder of the approved loan; petitioner subsequently decided to
borrow the remainder and invest it in Treasury Notes. Accordingly,
petitioner incurred the indebtedness not for financing the
construction, but for making arbitrage profits on federal lending
and borrowing rates.
Petitioner contends that § 514(c)(1)(C) attributes the
indebtedness to the facilities because petitioner would not have
been eligible for the loan but for the construction. Although
petitioner is correct that the indebtedness could not have been
incurred but for the construction, it does not follow that the
indebtedness "would not have been incurred but for" the
construction. See § 514(c)(1)(C) (emphasis added). In fact, the
record shows that petitioner not only would not have incurred the
debt for the construction, but that in fact it did not.3
Conversely, the indebtedness must be attributed to the
Treasury Notes, as it "would not have been incurred but for such
3The Commissioner further argues that the indebtedness
cannot be attributed to the facilities under § 514(c)(1) because
(1) that subsection applies only to debt-financed property; and
(2) the electrical facilities are substantially related to
petitioner's tax-exempt functions, so § 514(b)(1)(A)(i) therefore
excludes them from the definition of debt-financed property. We
do not reach this argument.
6

acquisition." See § 514(c)(1)(B). Petitioner argues that because
its primary motivation for taking the loan was to secure financing
for future (and presumably tax-exempt) monetary needs, purchase of
the Treasury Notes was not a "but for" cause of the indebtedness.
Petitioner concedes that it drew on the loan only after deciding to
invest the proceeds in Treasury Notes, however. Petitioner's
additional motivations are irrelevant, as it incurred indebtedness
with the intention of immediately investing it in Treasury Notes.
Petitioner's further contention that the Treasury Notes were
purchased from general funds, not indebtedness, is unavailing.
Petitioner cannot evade taxes by depositing funds in a bank account
before forwarding them to their intended use. See 26 C.F.R. §
1.514(c)-1(a)(2) (example 2) (providing that when working capital
is reduced by a non-exempt investment, any indebtedness needed to
restore working capital to the amount necessary to conduct
tax-exempt operations is attributed to the non-exempt investment).4
III.
Years after deciding that its construction projects did not
require further federal financing, petitioner received federal
funds at five percent interest and immediately invested it for more
than nine percent interest. While such arbitrage is an excellent
business opportunity, it is not exempt from federal taxation.
The decision of the Tax Court is AFFIRMED.
4Petitioner argues that it needed the loan proceeds to
restore necessary working capital. This claim is belied by the
fact that petitioner invested the proceeds in Treasury Notes two
days after receiving them and still holds the Notes.
7


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