[Code of Federal Regulations]

[Title 29, Volume 9]

[Revised as of July 1, 2006]

From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access

[CITE: 29CFR2509.94-3]



[Page 363-364]

 

                             TITLE 29--LABOR

 

 CHAPTER XXV--EMPLOYEE BENEFITS SECURITY ADMINISTRATION, DEPARTMENT OF 

                                  LABOR

 

PART 2509_INTERPRETIVE BULLETINS RELATING TO THE EMPLOYEE RETIREMENT 

INCOME SECURITY ACT OF 1974--Table of Contents

 

Sec.  2509.94-3  Interpretive bulletin relating to in-kind contributions 

to employee benefit plans.



    (a) General. This bulletin sets forth the views of the Department of 

Labor (the Department) concerning in-kind contributions (i.e., 

contributions of property other than cash) in satisfaction of an 

obligation to contribute to an employee benefit plan to which part 4 of 

title I of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA) 

or a plan to which section 4975 of the Internal Revenue Code (the Code) 

applies. (For purposes of this document the term ``plan'' shall refer to 

either or both types of such entities as appropriate). Section 

406(a)(1)(A) of ERISA provides that a fiduciary with respect to a plan 

shall not cause the plan to engage in a transaction if the fiduciary 

knows or should know that the transaction constitutes a direct or 

indirect sale or exchange of any property between a plan and a ``party 

in interest'' as defined in section 3(14) of ERISA. The Code imposes a 

two-tier excise tax under section 4975(c)(1)(A) an any direct or 

indirect sale or exchange of any property between a plan and a 

``disqualified person'' as defined in section 4975(e)(2) of the Code. An 

employer or employee organization that maintains a plan is included 

within the definitions of ``party in interest'' and ``disqualified 

person.'' \1\

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    \1\ Under Reorganization Plan No. 4 of 1978 (43 FR 47713, October 

17, 1978), the authority of the Secretary of the Treasury to issue 

rulings under the prohibited transactions provisions of section 4975 of 

the Code has been transferred, with certain exceptions not here 

relevant, to the Secretary of Labor. Except with respect to the types of 

plans covered, the prohibited transaction provisions of section 406 of 

ERISA generally parallel the prohibited transaction of provisions of 

section 4975 of the Code.

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    In Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Keystone Consolidated 

Industries, Inc., ---- U.S. ----, 113 S. Ct. 2006 (1993), the Supreme 

Court held that an employer's contribution of unencumbered real property 

to a tax-qualified defined benefit pension plan was a sale or exchange 

prohibited under section 4975 of the Code where the stated fair market 

value of the property was credited against the employer's obligation to 

the defined benefit pension plan. The parties stipulated that the 

property was contributed to the plan free of encumbrances and the stated 

fair market value of the property was not challenged. 113 S. Ct. at 

2009. In reaching its holding the Court construed section 4975(f)(3) of 

the Code (and therefore section 406(c) of ERISA), regarding transfers of 

encumbered property, not as a limitation but rather as extending the 

reach of section 4975(c)(1)(A) of the Code (and thus section 

406(a)(1)(A) of ERISA) to include contributions of encumbered property 

that do not satisfy funding obligations. Id. at 2013. Accordingly, the 

Court concluded that the contribution of unencumbered property was 

prohibited under section 4975(c)(1)(A) of the Code (and thus section 

406(a)(1)(A) of ERISA) as ``at least both an indirect type of sale and a 

form of exchange, since the property is exchanged for diminution of the 

employer's funding obligation.'' 113 S. Ct. at 2012.

    (b) Defined benefit plans. Consistent with the reasoning of the 

Supreme Court in Keystone, because an employer's or plan sponsor's in-

kind contribution to a defined benefit pension plan is credited to the 

plan's funding standard account it would constitute a transfer to reduce 

an obligation of the sponsor or employer to the plan. Therefore, in the 

absence of an applicable exemption, such a contribution would be 

prohibited under section 406(a)(1)(A) of ERISA and section 4975(c)(1)(A) 

of the Code. Such an in-kind contribution would constitute a prohibited 

transaction even if the value of the contribution is in excess of the 

sponsor's or employer's funding obligation for the plan year in which 

the contribution is made and thus is not used to reduce the plan's 

accumulated funding deficiency for that plan year because the 

contribution would result in a credit against funding obligations which 

might arise in the future.

    (c) Defined contribution and welfare plans. In the context of 

defined contribution pension plans and welfare plans, it is the view of 

the Department that an in-kind contribution to a plan that reduces an 

obligation of a plan



[[Page 364]]



sponsor or employer to make a contribution measured in terms of cash 

amounts would constitute a prohibited transaction under section 

406(a)(1)(A) of ERISA (and section 4975(c)(1)(A) of the Code) unless a 

statutory or administrative exemption under section 408 of ERISA (or 

sections 4975(c)(2) or (d) of the Code) applies. For example, if a 

profit sharing plan required the employer to make annual contributions 

``in cash or in kind'' equal to a given percentage of the employer's net 

profits for the year, an in-kind contribution used to reduce this 

obligation would constitute a prohibited transaction in the absence of 

an exemption because the amount of the contribution obligation is 

measured in terms of cash amounts (a percentage of profits) even though 

the terms of the plan purport to permit in-kind contributions.

    Conversely, a transfer of unencumbered property to a welfare benefit 

plan that does not relieve the sponsor or employer of any present or 

future obligation to make a contribution that is measured in terms of 

cash amounts would not constitute a prohibited transaction under section 

406(a)(1)(A) of ERISA or section 4975(c)(1)(A) of the Code. The same 

principles apply to defined contribution plans that are not subject to 

the minimum funding requirements of section 302 of ERISA or section 412 

of the Code. For example, where a profit sharing or stock bonus plan, by 

its terms, is funded solely at the discretion of the sponsoring 

employer, and the employer is not otherwise obligated to make a 

contribution measured in terms of cash amounts, a contribution of 

unencumbered real property would not be a prohibited sale or exchange 

between the plan and the employer. If, however, the same employer had 

made an enforceable promise to make a contribution measured in terms of 

cash amounts to the plan, a subsequent contribution of unencumbered real 

property made to offset such an obligation would be a prohibited sale or 

exchange.

    (d) Fiduciary standards. Independent of the application of the 

prohibited transaction provisions, fiduciaries of plans covered by part 

4 of title I of ERISA must determine that acceptance of an in-kind 

contribution is consistent with ERISA's general standards of fiduciary 

conduct. It is the view of the Department that acceptance of an in-kind 

contribution is a fiduciary act subject to section 404 of ERISA. In this 

regard, sections 406(a)(1)(A) and (B) of ERISA require that fiduciaries 

discharge their duties to a plan solely in the interests of the 

participants and beneficiaries, for the exclusive purpose of providing 

benefits and defraying reasonable administrative expenses, and with the 

care, skill, prudence, and diligence under the circumstances then 

prevailing that a prudent person acting in a like capacity and familiar 

with such matters would use in the conduct of an enterprise of a like 

character and with like aims. In addition, section 406(a)(1)(C) requires 

generally that fiduciaries diversify plan assets so as to minimize the 

risk of large losses. Accordingly, the fiduciaries of a plan must act 

``prudently,'' ``solely in the interest'' of the plan's participants and 

beneficiaries and with a view to the need to diversify plan assets when 

deciding whether to accept in-kind contributions. If accepting an in-

kind contribution is not ``prudent,'' not ``solely in the interest'' of 

the participants and beneficiaries of the plan, or would result in an 

improper lack of diversification of plan assets, the responsible 

fiduciaries of the plan would be liable for any losses resulting from 

such a breach of fiduciary responsibility, even if a contribution in 

kind does not constitute a prohibited transaction under section 406 of 

ERISA. In this regard, a fiduciary should consider any liabilities 

appurtenant to the in-kind contribution to which the plan would be 

exposed as a result of acceptance of the contribution.



[59 FR 66736, Dec. 28, 1994]