FIRPTA and Buyer Liability. Until the last few years,  the Foreign Investment in Real Property Tax Act of 1980 (“FIRPTA”) was just an arcane acronym; most residential real estate brokers had no knowledge of what it stood for, what it was, or how it worked. Fewer cared. After all, they had never handled a FIRPTA transaction involving the sale of real property by “foreign persons”.[1]

But during the Great Recession, it was widely believed that as prices plummeted, many foreign persons were purchasing homes in the United States for investment. It was also widely assumed that eventually these buyers would become sellers, so the real estate industry needed to familiarize itself with FIRPTA, since it levies a 15% tax on gross proceeds at closing.

Eventually, alarm bells began to go off when it became known that if the law applied to a transaction, but was ignored, the buyer becomes automatically liable for seller’s tax bill.  Suddenly, real estate agents and their brokerages began to become concerned about their duty to appropriately inform their buyer-clients about the application of FIRPTA if the seller was a foreign person.[2] And how would they know which seller was a foreign person and which one was not?

As many brokers know, the RMLS™ listing form asks sellers whether they are a foreign person.  And until the 2019 OREF Sale Agreement form was published, it contained a representation that the seller was not a foreign person.[3]  So, the question naturally arises, “If FIRPTA applies, and the seller is a foreign person, but says they are not, are the representations in the RMLS™ listing and Sale Agreement sufficient to insulate the buyer from liability for the seller’s taxes?”  Unfortunately, the answer is “No”.

Seller Certification (or Affidavit) of Non-Foreign Status. But the buyer is absolutely protected – like crosses to vampires – if the seller signs a Certification of Non-Foreign Status (“Certificate”). It is a fairly benign document: (a) stating that the seller is not a nonresident alien for purposes of U.S. income taxation; (b) identifying their Social Security Number (or Employer Identification Number); and (c) their home address.

Above the seller’s signature is an acknowledgment that it may be disclosed to the IRS by the buyer, and that if any of the above statements are false, it could be punishable by fine, imprisonment, or both. Then, “under penalties of perjury” the seller signs declaring that they have examined the document and to the best of their knowledge and belief it is true, correct, and complete.

The Rub. Hmmm. Sounds simple enough. Nada. You see, under the FIRPTA law, the Certificate is to be given to the buyer to hold for five years. How many sellers do you suppose would willingly turn over their Social Security Number to their buyers to hold for half a decade?

 Enter the Qualified Substitute Rule. The answer is obvious – find someone else to do so. In 2008, the “Qualified Substitute” law went into effect, which “…means, with respect to a disposition of a United States real property interest— (A) the person (including any attorney or title company) responsible for closing the transaction, other than the transferor’s agent, and (B) the transferee’s agent.”[4] So in Oregon, the buyer’s real estate agent or the title company closing the transaction may serve as the Qualified Substitute for the buyer to hold the Certificate. In that capacity they must deliver to the buyer a signed declaration under penalty of perjury that they are in possession of the Certificate.

The Other Rub.  How many sellers do you suppose would willingly turn over their social security number to their buyer’s real estate agent/brokerage to hold for half a decade?

Role of Oregon Title Insurance Companies as Qualified Substitutes. Though it was not always the case, as of 2019, all major title companies in the Portland Metro area have agreed to serve as Qualified Substitutes. I believe this is also the case in the Bend area of Central Oregon.

This is an accommodation that only makes sense – who is in a better position to electronically retain the Certificate with the seller’s social security number or Tax ID Number than the title company that handled the transaction from the opening to closing of escrow, disbursement of funds, and recorded the deed of conveyance? And we know that sellers do not object to providing escrow with their social security number or Tax ID Number – it is required in order that escrow can complete and submit the 1099-S (Proceeds from Real Estate Transactions) to the IRS.

In short, Oregon title companies are the obvious entities to serve as Qualified Substitutes. And if truth be told, many – if not all of them – have been having sellers sign a Certificate for every transaction they close, regardless of whether they are “foreign persons”. What they haven’t been doing, at least until now, is “formally” acting as the Qualified Substitute, and providing every buyer with a declaration they received the seller’s Certificate and will hold it for the required five-year period of time.  This is no burden, since under Oregon Real Estate Agency regulations, title and escrow companies are required to hold their transactional records for not less than six years.

Why is This Important for Oregon Realtors?  When buyers or sellers are damaged, or believe they have been damaged, or are threatened with damage, the first place they look is to their real estate broker. If a seller lied about being a “foreign person” subject to FIRPTA and the buyer got tagged for the seller’s tax liability, it is likely they would ask their own broker why they weren’t warned about this.  And that broker could likely ask the seller’s broker why it wasn’t vetted at the time of taking the listing.

And what will escrow say when asked why they didn’t vet the issue? They will respond that they act as a “neutral” and do not render advice, and have no duty to vet the FIRPTA issue with sellers and buyers.  And lest you doubt this, sit down in a quiet room free of distractions for an hour, and closely examine the carefully drafted escrow instructions that both parties sign, and the title insurance disclaimers on their policies.

The Solution Going Forward.  Oregon Realtors have no business doing something escrow should be doing when a real estate transaction is first opened: Have the seller and buyer instruct escrow to immediately get the Certificate of Non-Foreign Status signed by the seller, and then provide a declaration to the buyer at closing that it is holding that document and will do so for the required period of time. How difficult is that? Realtors should not want their fingerprints on the Certificate. Let escrow do the job they are used to doing.

Remember, escrow has no duty to proactively vet the “foreign person” issue. That is why it is important for the brokers to make that a priority in every transction – when escrow is opened, have seller and buyer “instruct” it to (a) get a Certificate of Non-Foreign Status signed by the seller, and (b) deliver a declaration to the buyer at closing that they are holding it. If necessary, put this instruction in writing, get seller and buyer to sign, and submit it to escrow.

And an added benefit of this is that 75% of the current FIRPTA section can be eliminated from the OREF Sale Agreement, since Realtors will no longer need to vet the issue in order to protect themselves from liability. With luck, all of the current inventory of FIRPTA forms can be eliminated, since FIRPTA will no longer be the elephant in the (closing) room.

Does This Result in any Added Burden to the Title/Escrow Industry? No, they’ve been quietly getting Certificates signed for years; they already hold them for six years – one year longer than the IRS requires; they already have their seller’s Social Security or Tax ID Number; and since they already collect and disburse funds, if they have to remit the seller’s FIRPTA withholding taxes, it is simply another part of their existing closing protocols[5] – similar to that required for Oregon withholdings for out-of-state sellers.[6]

As for title and escrow companies in small towns, there are anecdotal reports that some of them may be hesitant to act as a Qualified Substitute since they are unfamiliar with the law. However, we know that their title insurance is underwritten by the larger companies.  So, the solution seems to be for the larger companies to educate their smaller brethren about this law. It isn’t complicated: It only requires having sellers sign a Qualified Substitute form and delivering a declaration to their buyers confirming they are holding it. ~Phil

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[1] According to the IRS here, “A payee is subject to nonresident alien (NRA) withholding only if it is a foreign person. A foreign person includes a nonresident alien individual, foreign corporation, foreign partnership, foreign trust, a foreign estate, and any other person that is not a U.S. person. It also includes a foreign branch of a U.S. financial institution if the foreign branch is a qualified intermediary. Generally, the U.S. branch of a foreign corporation or partnership is treated as a foreign person.”

[2] This is not to suggest that FIRPTA makes brokers automatically liable if the withholding law is ignored. But if a buyer ended up having to pay their seller’s FIRPTA withholding, that buyer could quite possibly ask: “Why didn’t my agent inform me about this risk?”

[3] Why it was removed is a mystery to me. It should be put back, along with an affirmative representation that the seller will cooperate with escrow in signing whatever documents and forms escrow requires for closing with a non-foreign person.

[4] See, https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/26/1445

[5] To be clear, title companies have never objected to withholding a seller’s FIRPTA taxes and remitting them to the IRS. The only objection by many of them – until now – has been formally serving as the Qualified Substitute.

[6] Escrow is required to withhold and disburse to the Oregon Department of Revenue taxable gains on real property sold by out-of-state residents. See, discussion here.

In residential real estate transactions, there are two basic forms of policies:

  • The Owner’s Policy. This is the standard policy of title insurance that buyers obtain upon closing. In Oregon, customary practice is that sellers pay for this policy.
  • The Lender’s Policy. This is the policy required by lenders when they make a residential purchase money loan to a buyer. In Oregon, buyers customarily pay for this policy. It covers more risks than those in the Owner’s Policy.

Continue reading “Who’s Going To Review Your Preliminary Title Report Before Closing?”

Discussion: The Portland Ordinance, 30.01.085 (“Portland Renter Additional Protections”) here, now in effect, has identified the occurrence of certain events that, if triggered, would require landlords to pay Relocation Assistance (“RA”) to tenants. [References below to the “Ordinance” will refer to 30.01.085; references to the Oregon Residential Landlord-Tenant Act, ORS Chapter 90, will be referred to as the “Act”; and references to the new state law governing rent increases, will be referred to as “SB 680” here.] 

Apparently, there is some thought that this Ordinance is “preempted” by SB 608. That is not my opinion. I say this because the Portland Ordinance is more restrictive to landlords than SB 608. 

Although I have not conducted any serious research on the subject, SB 608’s rent cap is 7.00% plus the September-to-September average change in CPI for All Urban Consumers. Today that would mean rent increases under SB 608 cannot exceed 10.4%. Portland’s Ordinance limits rent increases to under 10%, without triggering a relocaton assistance charge of several thousands of dollars. If the Portland Ordinance had a rent increase formula resulting in a higher cap than SB 608 (meaning it was more favorable to landlords, i.e. less restrictive than the state law), I would say it was preempted. That is not the case under the present laws. But the content on this website is NOT legal advice. Readers should secure an independant legal opinion from their own attorney or self-proclaimed expert. ~PCQ

The Ordinance applies to all rented Dwelling Units within Portland’s city limits, whether they are managed by an owner, a sublessor, or property management company.  However, not all properties that list Portland as their mailing address are located within the city limits.

Portland Maps” is the official city site used to determine properties subject to the RA policy. See, https://www.portlandmaps.com/. To verify the location of a rental property, click on the Portland Maps link and enter the property address. Once it appears, there are related several links, one of which is “Jurisdiction”. If the Jurisdiction link states “Portland,” the rental property is subject to the mandatory RA policy, unless otherwise exempted, as discussed below.

EVENTS TRIGGERING RELOCATION ASSISTANCE

  1. No-Cause Eviction
    1. Landlord must pay Relocation Assistance (“RA”) to Tenant at least 45 days before termination of the tenancy
  2. Increase of 10% or more in Rent or “Associated Housing Costs”[1]
    1. Tenant must give written notification to Landlord requesting RA within 45 days of Rent Increase Notice
      1. Landlord must pay RA within 31 days of Tenant’s request for RA
    2. Substantial Change of Lease Terms
      1. Tenant must give written notification to Landlord requesting RA within 45 days of substantial change
        1. Landlord must pay RA within 31 days of Tenant’s request for RA
      2. Non-Renewal of Lease
        1. Landlord must pay RA to Tenant at least 45 days before termination of the tenancy

Note:  With the exception of No. 2 (Rent increases of 10% or more) and No. 3 (Substantial Change of Lease Terms) the two remaining events do not require the tenant to make a written request for RA. Payment is simply expected to occur within the required time from the triggering event.

 AMOUNT OF RELOCATION ASSISTANCE

  1. $2,900 for a studio or single room occupancy (“SRO”) Dwelling Unit
  2. $3,300 for a one-bedroom Dwelling Unit
  3. $4,200 for a two-bedroom Dwelling Unit
  4. $4,500 for a three-bedroom or larger Dwelling Unit.

Note:  If a Landlord is paying RA required under the Act, and Relocation Assistance is also required by the Ordinance for the same Termination Notice, the Relocation Assistance required by the Ordinance may be reduced by the relocation assistance required by the Act if both payments are paid at the same time and as a single payment. [2]

TENANT’S RECEIPT OF RELOCATION ASSISTANCE AFTER RENT INCREASE OF 10% OR MORE

  1. Following receipt of the RA, the tenant has 6 months from the date of the increase to either:
    1. Pay it back, and thereafter become obligated to pay the increased rent in accordance with notice of increase; or
    2. Provide the landlord with a notice to terminate the rental agreement in accordance with the Act.
  2. In the event the tenant fails to pay the RA back to the landlord or provided the landlord with the termination notice on or before the expiration of the six-month relocation period, the tenant will be in violation of the ordinance.

Note: A violation of any law or ordinance is also breach under most well-drafted rental agreements or leases, for which landlord may issue a curable notice of default. Accordingly, it appears this would be one method of commencing recovery of the RA should the tenant fail to terminate and repay the RA. The other would be to file a claim in the county Small Claims Court.

Note: The other three triggering events for RA assume the tenancy is terminated, so tenant has no option to accept or reject the landlord’s action – therefore no repayment issue. However, in the event of a substantial change in the lease terms, it would seem possible that the landlord and tenant might  reach agreement to continue the lease under the amended terms, in which case, the tenant would be required to return the RA, just the same as a rent increase of 10% or more.

EXEMPTIONS FROM PAYING RELOCATION ASSISTANCE

Relocation Assistance does not apply to the following, so long as the Landlord has submitted a required exemption application form to Portland Housing Bureau for which it has issued an exemption acknowledgement letter, a copy of which the Landlord must be provided to the Tenant:

  1. Rental agreement for week-to-week tenancies;
  2. Tenants that occupy the same dwelling unit[3] as the landlord;
  3. Tenants that occupy one dwelling unit in a Duplex where the Landlord’s principal residence is the second Dwelling Unit in the same Duplex;
  4. Tenants that occupy an Accessory Dwelling Unit that is subject to the Act in the City of Portland so long as the owner of the Accessory Dwelling Unit lives on the site;
  5. A Landlord who temporarily rents out their principal residence during an absence of not more than 3 years;
  6. A Landlord who temporarily rents out their principal residence during the Landlord’s absence due to active duty military service;
  7. A Dwelling Unit where the Landlord is terminating the Rental Agreement in order for an Immediate Family member[4] to occupy the Dwelling Unit;
  8. A Dwelling Unit regulated or certified as affordable housing by federal, state or local government is exempt from paying Relocation Assistance for a Rent increase of 10 percent or more within a rolling 12-month period:
          a. so long as such increase does not increase a Tenant’s portion of the Rent payment by 10 percent or more within a rolling 12-month period; or
          b. in Lease Agreements where the Rent or eligibility is periodically calculated based on the Tenant’s income or other program eligibility requirements and a Rent increase is necessary due to program eligibility requirements or a change in the Tenant’s income.
    Note: This exemption does not apply to private market-rate Dwelling Units with a Tenant who is the recipient of a federal, state, or local government voucher;
    Note: This exemption applies to Rent Increases and does not apply to Termination Notices.
  9. A Dwelling Unit subject to the federal Uniform Relocation Assistance and Real Property Acquisition Policies Act of 1970; 
  10. A Dwelling Unit rendered immediately uninhabitable not due to the action or inaction of a Landlord or Tenant;
  11. A Dwelling Unit rented for less than 6 months with appropriate verification of the submission of a demolition permit prior to the Tenant renting the unit;
  12. A Dwelling Unit where the Landlord has provided a Fixed Term Tenancy and notified the Tenant prior to occupancy, of the Landlords intent to sell or permanently convert the Dwelling Unit to a use other than as a Dwelling Unit subject to the Act.

Note: Remember that before being entitled to an exemption, the landlord needs to provide a copy of the Portland Housing Bureau’s acknowledgment letter to the Tenant.

LANDLORD DUTIES FOLLOWING PAYMENT OF RELOCATION ASSISTANCE

  1. Landlord must include a Notice of Tenant’s Rights and Obligations (the “Notice”) and the eligible amount of Relocation Assistance with issuance of the following:
    1. Termination Notice;
    2. Any Rent Increase Notice;
    3. Relocation Assistance payment.
  2.  Landlord must notify the Portland Housing Bureau of all payments to tenants of Relocation Assistance within 30 days of making such payments.

ADDITIONAL LANDLORD LIABILITY FOR VIOLATION OF ORDINANCE

  1. Any Tenant claiming to be aggrieved by a Landlord’s noncompliance with the above regulations in the Ordinance, “has a cause of action in any court of competent jurisdiction for Damages and such other remedies as may be appropriate.”
  2. Damages include the following:
  3. An amount up to 3 times the monthly Rent;
  4. Actual damages;
  5. Relocation Assistance; and
  6. Reasonable attorney fees and costs.

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[1]   “Associated Housing Costs.” include, but are not limited to, fees or utility or service charges, means the compensation or fees paid or charged, usually periodically, for the use of any property, land, buildings, or equipment. For purposes of Portland’s rent increase ordinances, housing costs include the basic rent charge and any periodic or monthly fees for other services paid to the Landlord by the Tenant, but do not include utility charges that are based on usage and that the Tenant has agreed in the Rental Agreement to pay, unless the obligation to pay those charges is itself a change in the terms of the Rental Agreement.

[See, https://www.portlandoregon.gov/citycode/28481#cid_708924]

[2] Note: Charges to a landlord for exceeding the Oregon rent cap laws, or for other violations under the recently enacted SB 608, are not identified as “relocation assistance”. That law provides at Section 1: “(9)(a) If a landlord terminates a tenancy in violation of subsection (3)(c)(B), (4)(c), (5), (6) or (7) of this section: (A) The landlord shall be liable to the tenant in an amount equal to three months’ rent in addition to actual damages sustained by the tenant as a result of the tenancy termination; and (B) The tenant has a defense to an action for possession by the landlord. (b) A tenant is entitled to recovery under paragraph (a) of this subsection if the tenant commences an action asserting the claim within one year after the tenant knew or should have known that the landlord terminated the tenancy in violation of this section.”

[3] Under Portland City Code 33.910 a “Dwelling Unit” is a building, or a portion of a building, that has independent living facilities including provisions for sleeping, cooking, and sanitation, and that is designed for residential occupancy by a group of people. Kitchen facilities for cooking are described in Section 29.30.160 of Title 29, Property and Maintenance Regulations. Buildings with more than one set of cooking facilities are considered to contain multiple dwelling units unless the additional cooking facilities are clearly accessory, such as an outdoor grill.

[4] Per the City’s Administrative Rules, the term “Immediate Family” means “… parent, foster parent, step-parent, parent in law, sibling, foster sibling, step sibling, sibling in law, grandparent, grandparent in law, child, step child, foster child, grandchild, aunt, uncle, niece, or nephew. An Immediate Family member cannot be an Owner of the Dwelling Unit, their spouse, or their domestic partner. The Immediate Family member must have reached the age of majority (18) or be a legally recognized emancipated minor.”