Supreme
Court Hints at TIC Referral-Fee Rules for
Real Estate Brokers
Two
years ago, the IRS issued Revenue
Procedure 2002-22 which blessed Tenant-In-Common,
or "TIC" (rhymes with "pick") properties as qualifying
for Section 1031 as replacement properties. In the
last two years I've watched that industry explode.
For example, a recent search on Google under "Tenants
in Common" returned about 490,000 hits -- most of
them sellers or "sponsors" of TIC properties. Many
of our client's real estate brokers are uncertain
as to what the ramifications are if they accept
a commission or referral fee from a sponsor to whom
they refer clients. A recent Supreme Court case
would seem to answer this question -- and it isn't
pretty!
For
clarification, if you and a couple of your friends
buy a property, you might legally hold title to
the property as "tenants-in-common." Because you
are friends and know each other you are not subject
to the TIC rules. But if you hire a sponsor to help
you find other investors for your project, you've
crossed a line and are subject to the Rev. Proc.
TIC rules.
The issue is whether a referring real estate broker
can accept a commission from the sponsor, (since
the property owned by the TIC is real estate), or
whether the TIC investment represents a security
requiring a NASD Series 7 securities license. One
of the largest TIC sponsors estimates that perhaps
70% of their referrals come from securities brokers
and 30% come from real estate brokers. So, can you,
as a real estate broker, accept a TIC commission
for a referral?