FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF ATLANTA
8-K, EX-4, 2000-08-08
ASSET-BACKED SECURITIES
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                                                          Exhibit 4.3



                                          August 1, 2000



To the Addressees Listed on
Schedule A Attached Hereto

            Re:   Wachovia Credit Card Master Trust $637,500,000
                  Class A Floating Rate Asset Backed Certificates,
                  Series 2000-1
                  ------------------------------------------------

Ladies and Gentlemen:

            You have requested our opinion as to certain federal and state
income tax consequences of the issuance of certificates pursuant to the
Amended and Restated Pooling and Servicing Agreement dated as of June 4,
1999 (the "Agreement")*, as amended to the date hereof and the Series
2000-1 Supplement thereto dated as of August 1, 2000 (the "Supplement"),
between The First National Bank of Atlanta (the "Bank"), as Transferor and
Servicer, and The Bank of New York (Delaware), as trustee (the "Trustee").
Specifically, you have asked us whether the Class A Floating Rate Asset
Backed Certificates, Series 2000-1 (the "Certificates") purchased by
investors will be characterized as indebtedness for federal income tax
purposes and for Delaware state income tax purposes and whether Wachovia
Credit Card Master Trust (the "Trust") will be classified as an association
(or a publicly traded partnership) taxable as a corporation.

            In connection with your request, we have examined and relied
upon (i) the prospectus dated July 21, 2000, and a prospectus supplement
dated July 25, 2000, for the Certificates (such prospectus and prospectus
supplement being hereinafter referred to as the "Prospectus"); (ii) the
Agreement; (iii) the Supplement; (iv) the Participation Agreement between
the Transferor and Wachovia Bank, N.A. (the "Participant") dated April 1,
1992 (as amended, the "Participation Agreement"); (v) the Loan Agreement
among the Bank, the Trustee, the Collateral Investors and the agent acting
on their behalf, dated August 1, 2000 (the "Loan Agreement"); and (v) such
other documents as we have deemed material to the opinions set forth
herein. Our opinions are based on, among other things, the initial and
continued accuracy of the information, statements, representations, and
covenants contained in the Agreement, the Supplement, and the other
documents referred to herein, and we have assumed that all parties to such
documents will comply with their obligations thereunder and that all such
documents are enforceable according to their terms.

--------
*           All capitalized terms used below that are not otherwise defined
            have the same meaning as set forth in the Agreement and the
            Supplement.

            Our opinion is also based upon the Internal Revenue Code of
1986, as amended (the "Code"), administrative rulings, judicial decisions,
proposed, temporary, and final Treasury regulations, and other applicable
authorities. The statutory provisions, regulations, and interpretations
upon which our opinions are based are subject to change, and such changes
could apply retroactively. In addition, there can be no assurance that
positions contrary to those stated in our opinion may not be asserted by
the Internal Revenue Service.

            This opinion is based upon the terms and characteristics of the
Certificates solely in the form such Certificates have been issued by the
Trust to initial purchasers pursuant to the Agreement and does not in any
way address the characterization of any derivative investments in any such
Certificates or of any securities collateralized or otherwise supported by
any such Certificates. This opinion is also based upon the Transferor's
representation that it has not participated in the structuring, terms or
characteristics of any such derivative investments or securities
collateralized by the Certificates and that the obligation of the purchaser
with respect to the Certificates is not in any way dependent upon the
structuring, terms or characteristics of such derivative investments or
securities.

            In our opinion, under current law as of the date hereof (i) the
Certificates will constitute indebtedness for federal income tax purposes
and for Delaware state income tax purposes and (ii) the Trust will not be
classified as an association (or a publicly traded partnership) taxable as
a corporation for federal income tax purposes.

VI.   Federal Income Tax Characterization of the Certificates.

      A.  Economic Substance of the Transaction.  If the economic substance
of a transaction differs from the form in which it is cast, except in
certain limited circumstances (see discussion below), the substance, rather
than the form, governs the federal income tax consequences of the
transaction. Gregory v. Helvering, 293 U.S. 465 (1935); Helvering v. F. &
R. Lazarus & Co., 308 U.S. 252, aff'g, 101 F.2d 728 (6th Cir. 1939); Gatlin
v. Commissioner, 34 B.T.A. 50 (1936).

            Whether the Certificates are in substance debt or ownership
interests in the Receivables is based on a determination of which party to
the transaction holds the "substantial incidents of ownership." The courts
have identified a variety of factors that must be considered in making that
determination. See, Town & Country Food Co. v. Commissioner, 51 T.C. 1049
(1969), acq., 1969-2 C.B. xxv; United Surgical Steel Co. v. Commissioner,
54 T.C. 1215 (1970), acq., 1971-2 C.B. 3; G.C.M. 39584 (December 3, 1986).
In the context of this transaction, the most important considerations are:
(i) whether the Transferor bears the burdens of ownership (i.e., the risk
of loss from the Receivables) and (ii) whether the Transferor retains the
benefits of ownership (i.e., the potential for gain from the Receivables).
The following discussion considers these as well as other relevant factors
and demonstrates that each factor supports characterization of the
Certificates as debt.

            1. The Burdens of Ownership are Not Borne by
Certificateholders. The principal burden of ownership with respect to the
Receivables is risk of loss arising from defaulted payments and changes in
interest rates. These risks, under all reasonable default scenarios, are
not borne by Certificateholders.

            Defaults on the Receivables that are allocable to the
Certificateholders will first be absorbed by Excess Spread and Reallocated
Principal Collections. Based on historical performance of the assets, a
present value calculation prepared by Lehman Brothers Inc. (based on
variables generally suggested by us) indicates that the net present value
of the Excess Finance Charge Collections, discounted at the weighted
average of the Class A Certificate Rate, the Class B Certificate Rate and
the rate used to determine Collateral Monthly Interest pursuant to Section
4.6(c) of the Supplement, and assuming that LIBOR remains at its rate as of
the date of such present value calculation, would be as much as 15.62 % of
the sum of the outstanding principal balances of the Class A Certificates,
the Class B Certificates and the Collateral Interest plus such net present
value.

            If Excess Spread were insufficient to cover defaults allocated
to the Class A Certificates, Reallocated Principal Collections allocable
first to the Collateral Interest and then to the Class B Investor Interest
would be available to protect the Class A Certificateholders against
default losses. If Reallocated Principal Collections are insufficient to
fund the remaining Class A Required Amount, then the Collateral Interest
will be reduced (but not below zero). In the event that such reduction
would cause the Collateral Interest to be a negative number, the Class B
Investor Interest will be reduced by the amount which the Collateral
Interest would have been reduced below zero (but not below zero).

            If Excess Spread were insufficient to cover defaults allocated
to the Class B Certificates, Reallocated Principal Collections allocable to
the Collateral Interest not required to fund the Class A Required Amount
would be available to protect the Class B Certificateholders against
default losses. If such Reallocated Principal Collections are insufficient
to fund the remaining Class B Required Amount, then the Collateral Interest
will be reduced (but not below zero).

            In reasonable interest rate scenarios, the Transferor bears the
risk that the difference between the amount of interest earned on the
Receivables and the interest payable on the Certificates will decline
because the Transferor is ultimately entitled to receive Excess Spread. In
addition, a Series 2000-1 Pay Out Event will occur if the average Portfolio
Yield for any three consecutive Monthly Periods is reduced to a rate which
is less than the average Base Rate for such period. The "Base Rate", in
general terms, is the rate that would be necessary to fund interest on the
Class A Certificates, the Class B Certificates, the Collateral Interest,
and the portion of the Servicing Fee allocable to investors, and "Portfolio
Yield" is, in general terms, the yield allocable to the Investor Interest
for the month, calculated on a cash basis after taking into account
defaults. Thus, a Series 2000-1 Pay Out Event will occur if the portfolio
does not continue to provide sufficient funds allocable to investors to
make payments on the Certificates.

            Finally, the likelihood of the Certificateholders bearing any
actual loss is remote, since such losses would occur only if Excess Spread
as well as Reallocated Principal Collections allocable to the Collateral
Interest were exhausted. Furthermore, the Class A Certificates will be
rated Aaa by Moody's Investors Service, Inc., AAA by Standard & Poor's
Ratings Services, and AAA by Fitch, Inc. Such ratings indicate a strong
likelihood that all interest and principal will be paid and that the
Certificateholders do not bear the risk of loss associated with ownership
of the Receivables.

            2. The Benefits of Ownership are not Transferred to
Certificateholders. If market interest rates for comparable receivables
decrease in relation to the yield on the Receivables, the Receivables will
increase in value. If interest rates remain constant, but customers take a
longer period of time to pay their principal balances, the value of the
Receivables will also increase because the Transferor will continue to
receive the yield on the Receivables over a longer period of time.
Regardless of interest rates, a change in customer payment patterns
resulting in fewer defaults than expected based on historical experience
will also increase the value of the Receivables. Any increase (to the
extent permitted by applicable law and the terms of the Agreement) in the
rate at which interest is assessed on the Accounts will also increase the
value of the Receivables and the amount of Excess Finance Charge
Collections.

            The Agreement provides that the rate of return to the
Certificateholders (a floating rate based on a spread of 0.15 % over LIBOR
in the case of the Class A Certificates) is set at the time of the issuance
of the Certificates; in contrast, finance charges payable with respect to
certain Receivables are fixed at annual percentage rates that range from
12.00 % to 17.98 % and others carry variable rates that range from prime to
prime plus 9.9 % per annum. The Transferor receives the remaining proceeds
from the Receivables (after payment of fixed costs); consequently, all of
the benefit of any increase in the value of the Receivables or in the
Excess Finance Charge Collections will inure to the Transferor rather than
to the holders of the Certificates.

            3. Other Factors. A number of other factors support the
conclusion that the Certificates are in substance debt. The terms of the
Receivables differ materially from the terms of the Certificates with
regard to their respective interest rates and maturity dates. The
Transferor will retain control and possession of the Receivables. The Bank,
as Servicer, is responsible for servicing, management, collection and
administration of the Receivables and will bear all costs and expenses
incurred in connection with such activities, although an amount to
compensate the Servicer for collection activity is permitted by the
Agreement to be periodically withdrawn by the Bank from the assets held by
the Trust to secure the Certificates. The obligors on the Receivables will
not be notified of the transfer of the Receivables to the Trust and will at
all times treat the Bank as the owner of such Receivables. In addition, the
Bank will agree to indemnify the Trust for the entire amount of losses,
claims, damages or liabilities arising out of the activities of the Bank as
Servicer. The Trustee, on behalf of the Certificateholders, has the right
to inspect the Servicer's documentation on the Receivables, a right which
is common in loan transactions. In addition, the Bank, as Servicer,
collects the Receivables without significant supervision by the Trustee or
Certificateholders. The foregoing additional factors support the conclusion
that the transaction described in the Agreement and in the Supplement
constitutes a loan from the Certificateholders to the Transferor.

      B.  Form versus Economic Substance.  There is a series of cases
that have been interpreted to stand for the proposition that the Internal
Revenue Service may require a taxpayer to be bound by the form of a
transaction and which preclude the taxpayer from arguing that the form of a
transaction should be disregarded in favor of the economic substance of the
transaction. See, e.g., Commissioner v. Danielson, 378 F.2d 771 (3rd Cir.),
cert. denied, 389 U.S. 858 (1967)(purchase agreement expressly allocated
consideration to a covenant not to compete; however, taxpayer reported the
entire amount as proceeds from the sale of capital assets; held: the
taxpayer could not contradict the form of the agreement and attack the
allocation to the covenant not to compete except in cases of fraud, duress
or undue influence); Spector v. U.S., 641 F.2d 376 (5th Cir. 1981)(pursuant
to a written agreement, a partnership deducted Section 736 guarantee
payments to a withdrawing partner but the partner, contrary to the terms of
the agreement treated such payments as Section 741 capital gain payments
realized upon the sale of the partnership interest; held: payments were
Section 736 ordinary income); Sullivan v. U.S., 618 F.2d 1001 (3d Cir.
1980)(taxpayer disavowed original allocation of purchase price between land
and agreements to lease space in a shopping mall to be built on the land
when, upon audit, the gain on the sale of the leases was held to be
short-term capital gain; held: contract allocations must be respected).

            The Danielson line of cases covers diverse transactions that
are highly fact specific and difficult to summarize. In general, these
cases involve taxpayers who, contrary to the written documents, later adopt
inconsistent positions regarding (i) the allocation of purchase price, (ii)
the valuation of assets or (iii) the character of income or gain to the
detriment of the Treasury. None of these cases is directly applicable,
however, to the facts of the transactions described in the Agreement.
Unlike the Danielson line of cases, the Certificateholders, the Servicer,
and the Transferor do not have adverse economic interests with respect to
the Certificates.

            In addition, the form of the transaction is consistent with
characterization of the Certificates as debt. Accordingly, these
authorities are not applicable to the transaction and will not cause the
transaction to be treated as a sale of an interest in the Receivables to
the holders of the Certificates. An analysis of the following demonstrates
that the form of the transaction is consistent with the characterization of
the transaction as an issuance of debt and not as a sale of the Receivables
to Certificateholders.

            1. The Prospectus, the Agreement and the Certificates will
state that the Certificateholders, Certificate Owners, the Bank, and the
Holder of the Transferor Certificate (including the Participant) will treat
the transaction as a financing for federal and state income tax purposes.

            2. The Certificates will state that they represent an
"undivided interest" in the Trust. However, the rights of a
Certificateholder are only to receive payments of interest at the
applicable Certificate Rate on the outstanding amount of the Certificates
and repayment of the par amount of the Certificates on or prior to their
maturity dates. The Certificates will not provide the Certificateholders
with any specific rights in any Receivable, but rather will provide only
for rights to cash flow from the Receivables pool. Moreover, upon
fulfillment of certain conditions, the Transferor may add additional
accounts to, or remove accounts from, the pool of accounts the Receivables
in which secure the Certificates.

            3. Although the Certificates state that they represent an
"undivided interest" in the Trust, during the Amortization Period, the
allocation of Principal Receivables to the Certificates will be
disproportionately large in comparison to the Investor Interest. In
addition, certain collections of principal allocable to other Series of
certificates may be available to make payments of principal on the
Certificates.

            Furthermore it is difficult to distinguish clearly between
"form," "substance," and nomenclature. The language in the Agreement that
could be read to suggest that a sale to the Trust is intended has no effect
on the contractual rights of the parties. Regardless of whether "sale"
language or "pledge" language is employed in the Agreement, the economic
rights of the Certificateholders are not affected. See Frank Lyon Co. v.
U.S., 435 U.S. 561, 583-84 (1978)(form is the structure of the underlying
economic transaction); Freesen v. Commissioner, 798 F.2d 195 (7th Cir.
1986), rev'g 84 T.C. 920("form" must be distinguished from nomenclature);
Coulter Electronics, Inc. v. Commissioner, 59 T.C.M. 350 (1990), aff'd, 943
F.2d 1318 (11th Cir. 1991).

            If certain aspects of the transaction should be determined to be
inconsistent with treatment of the Certificates as debt and the form of the
transaction is therefore ambiguous, numerous cases hold that the economic
substance of the transaction controls the transaction's characterization.
Elrod v. Commissioner, 87 T.C. 1046, 1065 (1986); Smith v. Commissioner, 82
T.C. 705, 713 (1984); Morrison v. Commissioner, 59 T.C. 248, 256 (1972),
acq., 1973-2 C.B. 3; Kreider v. Commissioner, 762 F.2d. 580,588 (7th Cir.
1985); Comdisco, Inc. v. United States, 756 F.2d. 569, 578 (7th Cir. 1985).
In such a circumstance, it would be inappropriate to restrict taxpayers to
the "four corners" of their document, since the written instrument by its
own terms, is unclear. "The Danielson rule ...[is not] applicable to
exclude parol evidence offered with respect to an ambiguous document."
Elrod, supra at 1066. Accordingly, if the form of the transaction is deemed
to be ambiguous, a court would look to evidence of the transaction's
economic substance to determine its character.

      C. Divergent Accounting Treatment. In Notice 94-47, 1994-1 C.B. 357,
the Internal Revenue Service has taken the position that the fact that an
instrument is intended to be treated differently for tax purposes than for
other purposes, including regulatory accounting purposes, is a key factor
to be considered in determining whether the instrument should be
characterized as debt or equity for federal income tax purposes. That
factor, however, does not by itself determine the classification of the
instrument for tax purposes; accordingly, the fact that the Transferor
intends to report the transaction as a sale of the Receivables to
Certificateholders for certain regulatory and financial accounting purposes
does not by itself control the result for tax purposes.

            Indeed, the Supreme Court has frequently rejected the proposition
that the financial accounting treatment of a transaction controls its tax
treatment. For example, in Cottage Savings Ass'n v. Commissioner, 499 U.S.
554 (1991) rev'g 890 F.2d 848 (6th Cir. 1989), rev'g 90 T.C. 372 (1988),
reciprocal "sales" of mortgage loans were respected as sales for federal
income tax purposes (permitting thrifts to realize losses that produced
loss carrybacks and tax refunds) even though such transactions were not
treated as sales for regulatory accounting purposes. Thus, thrifts were
able to generate tax losses without such losses being reflected on their
financial statements for regulatory accounting purposes.*
--------
*           It should be noted that in Cottage Savings the legal form of
            the transaction (which was a sale) was respected. Thus, the
            taxpayer was not asserting a tax position inconsistent with the
            form of the transac tion. Here, the language describing the
            transfer of the Receivables to the Trust is ambiguous.

            Several other Supreme Court cases demonstrate that divergence
between tax and financial accounting is not uncommon. Thor Power Tool Co.
v. Commissioner, 439 U.S. 552, 538-44 (1979)(company's inventory deductions
for financial accounting purposes were disallowed for federal income tax
purposes--"any presumptive equivalency between tax and financial accounting
would be unacceptable"); Commissioner v. Hansen, 360 U.S. 446
(1959)(reserve to cover contingent liability in event of nonperformance of
guaranty); Lucas v. American Code Co., 280 U.S. 445 (1930)(reserve to cover
expected liability on contested lawsuit). See also Frank Lyon Co. v. United
States, supra, at 577 (financial accounting treatment of a mortgage
reflected the taxpayer's proper tax treatment of a sale-leaseback
transaction although tax and accounting treatment "need not necessarily be
the same").

                                     *

            Based on the foregoing, although there is no authority directly
applicable to the facts of this transaction, in our opinion the substance
of the transaction is consistent with the characterization of the
Certificates as debt and the Certificates will properly be treated as debt
for federal income tax purposes.


VII. Characterization of the Trust.

            The use of a trust form of issuer raises a number of issues
regarding its proper characterization for federal income tax purposes. In
many respects, the Trust is similar to trusts established to hold
collateral pledged as security in connection with lending transactions. If
interests in the Trust which are not held by the Bank are treated as debt
for federal income tax purposes, the Trust will be disregarded for federal
income tax purposes, and will be characterized instead as a mere security
arrangement. Treas. Reg.ss.1.61-13(b); Rev. Rul. 76-265, 1976-2 C.B. 448;
see also Rev. Rul. 73-100, 1973-1 C.B. 613 (domestic corporation's
transfer of securities to Canadian security holder, to secure liabilities
to policyholders in Canada, does not create a trust where discretionary
powers retained by corporation); Rev. Rul. 71-119, 1971-1 C.B. 163
(settlement fund administered by "trustee" not a trust).

            The Trust will, however, also issue certificates, or other
interests, that may not be classified as debt for federal income tax
purposes. The Transferor Participation issued to the Participant, for
example, is not intended to be treated as debt. Such interest could cause
the Trust to be subject to the rules of entity classification under Section
7701 of the Code and the Treasury regulations thereunder. Under these
rules, an entity that was in existence on December 31, 1996 "will have the
same classification that the entity claimed" under prior rules. Treas. Reg.
ss. 301.7701-3(b)(3). Under prior rules, the Trust claimed that if any
interest in the Trust was properly characterized as equity, the Trust was a
partnership. Thus, the Trust would continue to be classified as a
partnership under the current rules.

            Alternatively, if no interest in the Trust was properly
characterized as equity prior to January 1, 1997, but an interest in the
Trust is properly characterized as equity after January 1, 1997, the Trust
will be classified as a partnership under current rules. Under these rules,
a "business entity" with at least two members is classified as a
partnership unless (i) it is required to be classified as a corporation or
(ii) it affirmatively elects to be classified as an association taxable as
a corporation. Treas. Reg. ss. 301.7701-3(a). In this case, the Trust would
have at least two members: the Transferor and the holder of any interest in
the Trust not characterized as indebtedness for federal tax purposes. In
addition, the Trust is not one of the kind of entities which are required
to be classified as a corporation under Treas. Reg. ss. 301.7701-2(b).
Thus, assuming the Trust would not elect to be classified as an association
taxable as a corporation, it would be classified as a partnership.*

                                     *

            Accordingly, based on the foregoing and assuming the Trust does
not elect to be classified as an association taxable as a corporation, the
Trust would be characterized as a partnership for federal income tax
purposes.


      A.  Publicly Traded Partnership.

            Under Section 7704 of the Code, a partnership will constitute a
"publicly traded partnership" taxable as a corporation if interests in the
partnership are traded on an established securities market or are readily
tradable on a secondary market (or the substantial equivalent thereof).

--------
*        This discussion also assumes that the Trust is a "business entity."
     Generally, the term "business entity" means an entity recognized for
     federal tax purposes as a separate entity which is not classified as a
     trust under the Code. Treas. Reg.ss.301.7701-2(a).


            Treas. Reg. ss. 1.7704-1 provides a "safe harbor" from
treatment as a publicly traded partnership if (i) no interest in the
partnership is "traded on an established securities market," (ii) (subject
to certain exceptions) all interests in the partnership were issued in a
transaction (or transactions) that was not required to be registered under
the Securities Act of 1933 and (iii) (subject to certain exceptions) the
partnership does not have more than one hundred partners at any time during
the taxable year of the partnership. Based on a representation of the
Transferor, it is our understanding that there are not today, and have not
been at any time during the current taxable year, more than one hundred
holders of collateral interests (or interests therein) or of other
interests in the Trust with respect to which an opinion was not rendered
that such interests will be treated as debt for federal income tax purposes
nor are such interests "traded on an established securities market."
Moreover, the Supplement and the Collateral Interest contain provisions
intended to limit the total number of holders of the Collateral Interest
and the collateral interests of other Series, and the Collateral Interest
Holder covenants to restrict transfers of the Collateral Interest so that
there will never be more than 100 holders of interests in the Trust for
which no opinion has been rendered that such interest is "debt" for federal
income tax purposes and to prevent the Collateral Interest from being
"traded on an established securities market." Accordingly, as of the date
hereof, the Trust is not a "publicly traded partnership" taxable as a
corporation.

III.  Delaware Income Tax Characterization of the Certificates.

            In rendering the following opinion regarding state taxation in
Delaware, we have considered and relied upon the applicable provisions of
the tax laws of Delaware, the regulations promulgated thereunder, cases and
administrative rulings and such other authorities as we have deemed
appropriate.

            Based on the foregoing, although there is no authority directly
applicable to the facts of this transaction, in our opinion the substance
of the transaction is consistent with the characterization of the
Certificates as debt, and the Certificates will properly be treated as debt
for Delaware income tax purposes.

                                   * * *

            This opinion is being furnished to you solely for your benefit
and is not to be used, circulated, quoted, or otherwise referred to for any
purpose without our express written permission.

                             Very truly yours,

                             SKADDEN, ARPS, SLATE, MEAGHER
                             & FLOM LLP



                                 SCHEDULE A

Wachovia Bank, N.A.
100 North Main Street
Winston-Salem, NC 27150

Lehman Brothers Inc.
Wachovia Securities, Inc.
  as Representatives of  the Several Underwriters
c/o Lehman Brothers Inc.
3 World Financial Center
New York, NY 10285

Commerzbank Aktiengesellschaft,
  New York Branch
2 World Financial Center
New York, NY 10281

Standard & Poor's Rating Services,
  a division of the McGraw-Hill Companies
26 Broadway
New York, New York  10004

Moody's Investors Service, Inc.
99 Church Street, 4th Floor
New York, New York  10007

Fitch, Inc.
One State Street Plaza
New York, New York  10004

The Bank of New York (Delaware), as Trustee
White Clay Center
Route 273
Newark, Delaware 19711

The Bank of New York, as Co-Trustee
101 Barclay Street
New York, New York 10286

Four Winds Funding Corporation
c/o Commerzbank Aktiengesellschaft,
  New York Branch
2 World Financial Center
New York, NY 10281

To the Addressees Listed on
Attached Schedule A




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