Kirk Bertino
Estate Planning Problem
Assume summer 2014
and no change in law.
The Client:
John
Kay, 56, married to Susan Kay, 41. They are U.S. citizens and reside in San
Antonio, Texas. They have two children, Steve, 11, and Mary, 8. John also has a
married son Gary, 24, from a previous marriage. Gary is married to Debi, 32,
and they have a child aged 2. Debi also has a 6 year old child from a previous
relationship. Gary once had a coke and alcohol problem, but he is “much better”
now. Gary and Debi live in Taos and make a modest living selling pottery.
John is
a vice-president of the technology company “Cloudshare” and earns a salary of
$440,000 annually. Susan owns a gymnastics business where she teaches classes
and has open practice time for workouts. She operates the business as a
partnership with Teri Ray. Susan receives approximately $50,000 per year from
the partnership. The current value of the partnership is $150,000.
Both
John and Susan are in good health.
The Financial
Position:
Assets Value
Checking $ 5,000
Stock (Basis)
Intel ($20,000) $ 110,000
Cree ($15,000) $ 405,000
Zynga ($20,000) $ 45,000
Yahoo ($15,000) $ 175,000
Dell ($20,000) $ 160,000
HP ($45,000) $ 25,000
Cisco ($15,000) $ 305,000
Cloudspace ($50,000) $6,200,000
·
John’s Group Term Life Insurance Face Value
$50,000 with Susan as named beneficiary.
·
John’s 401(k) with Susan as beneficiary:
$1,900,000
·
Residence – Basis $270,000, FMV $980,000
·
Vacation Condominium – Basis $280,000, FMV $240,000
·
Lake Cabin in Michigan (John’s property prior to
Marriage) – Basis $60,000, FMV
$185,000
·
Ranch in New Mexico – Basis $500,000 FMV
$3,830,000
(Inherited by John from his father.
The ranch breaks even most years.)
Personal Property $190,000
Honda (S2000) $ 32,000
Suburban $ 20,000
Susan’s Property (as previously mentioned) $150,000
Liabilities:
Mortgage on personal residence $510,000
Mortgage on Florida Condo $120,000
Credit Card Debt $ 90,000
Auto Loan $ 32,000
The Problem:
1)
What further questions do you want to ask John
and Susan before you give them estate-planning advice?
2)
Feel Free to make any reasonable assumptions. Be
sure and tell what assumptions you are relying on.
3)
What estate tax and estate problems would occur
if John were to die today? Susan? Both?
4)
John currently has a simple will leaving
everything to Susan and Susan has no will. What
estate/tax/financial/personal/other advice do you have for John and Susan?
Write a plan of action for them.
5)
Explain why you chose the plan of action you
selected.
6)
What Group did John Kay perform with? “Steppenwolf”
Answers:
What further
questions do you want to ask John and Susan before you give them
estate-planning advice?
·
Personal information of client:
·
First, middle, and last names as well as alias
(a/k/a)
·
Date of birth
·
Primary address (domicile)
·
Phone numbers (cell, work, and home)
·
Email
·
Employer (Husband, Wife, Occupation, title,
employer, address, phone number)
·
Business Associates (Name, business, buy-sell agreements)
·
Military Service (Husband, wife, current status,
disability)
·
Children and dependents (Name, date of birth,
parents)
·
Parents (Husband’s Wife’s) (Name, age, address,
phone number, email)
·
Additional Family members (Names, age, address,
phone numbers, email)
·
Special needs of family members or beneficiaries
·
Sketch a family tree
·
Citizenship
·
Marital agreements (obtain copies)
·
Business agreements (obtain copies)
·
Existing documents (obtain copies)
·
Assets (husband, wife, joint with spouse, joint
with other than spouse)
[Residence(s),
mortgage(s)]
·
Banks and accounts
·
Investment accounts
·
Business interests
·
Annuities (Owner/Beneficiary-Primary/Contingent)
·
Life Insurance (Owner/Beneficiary –
Primary/Contingent)
·
Advisors (Guardian of the children and their property,
individual/corporate fiduciary to serve as personal representative after death
of testator, Alternatives for both guardians and executors, Attorneys,
Accountants, banker/trust officer, insurance advisor, investment
advisor/broker, other) (Names, Addresses, Phone numbers and Email)
·
Documents to bring to interview (Wills, 3 years
of personal income tax returns – fed and state, 3 years of business tax returns
– include profit and loss and balance sheets, insurance policies –
life/health/disability/casualty, Employee benefit plan descriptions –
pension/profit sharing/group insurance/etc., business buy-sell agreements and
employment contracts, pre/post-nuptial agreements and divorce decrees/property
settlements, trust documents – created by you for you or members of your
family, gift tax returns, homeowner’s policy and personal property floaters,
deed to real estate, other)
·
Financial Acumen (on a scale of 1-10 the
emotional maturity and financial acumen of the children)
·
Funeral/burial arrangements (Husband/wife -
religious services, disposition of body, limitation on costs, other
instructions)
·
Social Security status (reviewed in recent
history?)
·
Homestead filed on the home?
·
Safe Deposit boxes (Number, institution, name in
which is held)
·
Annual Income (Husband, Wife, dependent children
– source – real property, interest, securities, other investments, trusts,
pensions, Salary, other)
Family Financial Goals - On a scale of 1-5 have the client
list the importance of the following:
·
Take care of family upon the client’s death.
·
Take care of family upon the event of
disability.
·
College education for children.
·
Enjoy a comfortable retirement.
Estate Planning Goals – indicate if the following goals are
desired by the client or issues are present:
·
Specific bequests – Add or delete a specific
bequest to an individual or charity. Change the amount of a bequest.
·
Changes in valuation – In the last two years the
value of the estate has changed by more than 20%.
·
Change in health – The client’s, the client’s
spouse’s health or their children’s health has changed substantially in the
last year.
·
Birth – A child or grandchild has been born
since the making/last update of the estate plan.
·
Disability – A child/grandchild/dependent has
become disabled/injured/incompetent since the making/last update of the estate
plan.
·
Divorce/remarriage – A divorce or remarriage
since the making/last up of the estate plan.
·
Cancellation of obligations or equalization of
inheritance – The client would like to discharge a loan owed to him/her in the will.
The client would like to add a clause to the will estate plan to equalize any
gifts made in the past to certain children/grandchildren.
·
Life insurance - $100,000 or more of life
insurance has been assed/dropped since the estate plan was made/last updated.
The client would like to change a beneficiary in a policy. The client desires
more life insurance, but is unsure what kind to get and how much.
·
Gifts to minors – The client would like to make
a substantial gift to minor children/grandchildren.
·
Business Interests – The client has entered in
to a stock/business buy-sell agreement since the making/last update of the
estate plan. The business situation of the client has change significantly
since the making/last update of the estate plan.
·
Guardians/Executors/Trustees – The client would
like to name a specific individual as advisor to the executor(s) and
trustee(s). The client would like to change the names of the
guardians/executors/trustees.
·
Review of estate plan – The client would like to
review his/her estate plan. The client would like to know how a change in tax
law affects his/her estate plan.
Information to be kept in a Safe Deposit Box:
·
Birth Certificates
·
Marriage Certificates (including artifacts or
documentation from any prior marriages or divorces.)
·
The clients and the client’s spouse’s will and
trust agreements.
·
Listing of insurance policies or certificates
·
The clients and the client’s spouse’s social
security numbers.
·
Military discharge papers.
·
Bonds, Stocks, and other securities.
·
Real estate deeds.
·
Business (buy-sell) agreements.
·
Automobile title insurance policies.
·
Property insurance policies.
What estate tax
and estate problems would occur if John were to die today? Susan? Both?
If Susan were to
die today her estate would pass intestate:
Intestate Succession – If the
decedent does not have a will, property will pass according to state law.
Typically a spouse with children would receive either (1) some dollar amount
plus a fraction of the estate, or (2) some fraction of the estate. The fraction
received by the spouse is often one third or one half of the estate. The
children would receive the balance of the estate.
TEXAS ESTATES CODE
TITLE 2. ESTATES OF
DECEDENTS; DURABLE POWERS OF ATTORNEY
SUBTITLE E. INTESTATE SUCCESSION
CHAPTER 201. DESCENT AND
DISTRIBUTION
Sec. 201.002. SEPARATE
ESTATE OF AN INTESTATE. (a) If a person who dies intestate leaves a
surviving spouse, the estate, other than a community estate, to which the person
had title descends and passes as provided by this section.
(b) If the person has one
or more children or a descendant of a child:
(1) the surviving spouse
takes one-third of the personal estate;
(2) two-thirds of the
personal estate descends to the person's child or children, and the descendants
of a child or children; and
(3) the surviving spouse is
entitled to a life estate in one-third of the person's land, with the remainder
descending to the person's child or children and the descendants of a child or
children.
(c) Except as provided by
Subsection (d), if the person has no child and no descendant of a child:
(1) the surviving spouse is
entitled to all of the personal estate;
(2) the surviving spouse is
entitled to one-half of the person's land without a remainder to any person;
and
(3) one-half of the
person's land passes and is inherited according to the rules of descent and
distribution.
(d) If the person described
by Subsection (c) does not leave a surviving parent or one or more surviving
siblings, or their descendants, the surviving spouse is entitled to the entire
estate.
Sec. 201.003. COMMUNITY
ESTATE OF AN INTESTATE. (a) If a person who dies intestate leaves a
surviving spouse, the community estate of the deceased spouse passes as
provided by this section.
(b) The community estate of
the deceased spouse passes to the surviving spouse if:
(1) no child or other
descendant of the deceased spouse survives the deceased spouse; or
(2) all of the surviving
children and descendants of the deceased spouse are also children or
descendants of the surviving spouse.
(c) If the deceased spouse
is survived by a child or other descendant who is not also a child or
descendant of the surviving spouse, one-half of the community estate is retained
by the surviving spouse and the other one-half passes to the deceased spouse's
children or descendants. The descendants
inherit only the portion of that estate to which they would be entitled under
Section 201.101. In every case, the
community estate passes charged with the debts against the community estate.
Sec. 201.059. PERSON WHO
DIES BY CASUALTY. Death by casualty does
not result in forfeiture of estate.
SUBCHAPTER C. DISTRIBUTION
TO HEIRS
Sec. 201.101. DETERMINATION OF
PER CAPITA WITH REPRESENTATION DISTRIBUTION.
(a) The children, descendants,
brothers, sisters, uncles, aunts, or other relatives of an intestate who stand
in the first or same degree of relationship alone and come into
the distribution of the intestate's estate take per capita, which means by
persons.
(b) If some of the persons
described by Subsection (a) are dead and some are living, each descendant of
those persons who have died is entitled to a distribution of the intestate's
estate. Each descendant inherits only
that portion of the property to which the parent through whom the descendant
inherits would be entitled if that parent were alive.
Sec. 201.103. TREATMENT OF
INTESTATE'S ESTATE. All of the estate to
which an intestate had title at the time of death descends and vests in the
intestate's heirs in the same manner as if the intestate had been the original
purchaser.
If John were
to die today with a will leaving everything to Susan his estate would pass as
follows:
TEXAS ESTATES CODE
TITLE 2. ESTATES OF
DECEDENTS; DURABLE POWERS OF ATTORNEY
SUBTITLE C. PASSAGE OF
TITLE AND DISTRIBUTION OF DECEDENTS' PROPERTY IN GENERAL
CHAPTER 101. ESTATE ASSETS IN
GENERAL
Sec.
101.001. PASSAGE OF ESTATE ON DECEDENT'S
DEATH. (a) Subject to Section 101.051, if a person dies leaving a lawful will:
(1) all of the person's
estate that is devised by the will vests immediately in the devisees;
(2) all powers of
appointment granted in the will vest immediately in the donees of those powers;
and
(3) all of the person's
estate that is not devised by the will vests immediately in the person's heirs
at law.
(b) Subject to Section 101.051, the estate of a person who dies intestate vests immediately in
the person's heirs at law.
Liabilities
for the debts of John and Susan would continue have to be paid in accordance
with the following terms:
SUBCHAPTER B. LIABILITY OF
ESTATE FOR DEBTS
Sec.
101.051. LIABILITY OF ESTATE FOR DEBTS
IN GENERAL. (a) A decedent's estate vests in accordance with
Section 101.001(a) subject to the payment of:
(1) the debts of the
decedent, except as exempted by law; and
(2) any court-ordered child
support payments that are delinquent on the date of the decedent's death.
(b) A decedent's estate
vests in accordance with Section 101.001(b) subject to the payment of, and is still liable for:
(1) the debts of the
decedent, except as exempted by law; and
(2) any court-ordered child
support payments that are delinquent on the date of the decedent's death.
Sec.
101.052. LIABILITY OF COMMUNITY PROPERTY
FOR DEBTS OF DECEASED SPOUSE. (a) The community property subject to the sole or
joint management, control, and disposition of a spouse during marriage
continues to be subject to the liabilities of that spouse on death.
(b) The interest that the
deceased spouse owned in any other nonexempt community property passes to the
deceased spouse's heirs or devisees charged with the debts that were
enforceable against the deceased spouse before death.
(c) This section does not
prohibit the administration of community property under other provisions of
this title relating to the administration of an estate.
In the event
once spouse predeceases the other the Homestead would be treated as follows:
TEXAS ESTATES CODE
TITLE 2. ESTATES OF
DECEDENTS; DURABLE POWERS OF ATTORNEY
SUBTITLE C. PASSAGE OF
TITLE AND DISTRIBUTION OF DECEDENTS' PROPERTY IN GENERAL
CHAPTER 102. PROBATE
ASSETS: DECEDENT'S HOMESTEAD
Sec.
102.001. TREATMENT OF CERTAIN
CHILDREN. For purposes of determining
homestead rights, a child is a child of his or her mother and a child of his or
her father, as provided by Sections 201.051, 201.052, and 201.053.
Sec.
102.002. HOMESTEAD RIGHTS NOT AFFECTED
BY CHARACTER OF THE HOMESTEAD. The
homestead rights and the respective interests of the surviving spouse and
children of a decedent are the same whether the homestead was the decedent's
separate property or was community property between the surviving spouse and
the decedent.
Sec.
102.003. PASSAGE OF HOMESTEAD. The homestead of a decedent who dies leaving
a surviving spouse descends and vests on the decedent's death in the same
manner as other real property of the decedent and is governed by the same laws
of descent and distribution.
Sec. 102.004. LIABILITY OF
HOMESTEAD FOR DEBTS. If the decedent was
survived by a spouse or minor child, the homestead is not liable for the
payment of any of the debts of the estate, other than:
(1) purchase money for the
homestead;
(2) taxes due on the
homestead;
(3) work and material used
in constructing improvements on the homestead if the requirements of Section 50(a)(5), Article XVI, Texas Constitution, are met;
(4) an owelty of partition
imposed against the entirety of the property by a court order or written
agreement of the parties to the partition, including a debt of one spouse in
favor of the other spouse resulting from a division or an award of a family
homestead in a divorce proceeding;
(5) the refinance of a lien
against the homestead, including a federal tax lien resulting from the tax debt
of both spouses, if the homestead is a family homestead, or from the tax debt
of the decedent;
(6) an extension of credit
on the homestead if the requirements of Section 50(a)(6), Article XVI, Texas Constitution, are met; or
(7) a reverse mortgage.
Sec. 102.005. PROHIBITIONS
ON PARTITION OF HOMESTEAD. The homestead
may not be partitioned among the decedent's heirs:
(1) during the lifetime of
the surviving spouse for as long as the surviving spouse elects to use or
occupy the property as a homestead; or
(2) during the period the
guardian of the decedent's minor children is permitted to use and occupy the
homestead under a court order.
Sec.
102.006. CIRCUMSTANCES UNDER WHICH
PARTITION OF HOMESTEAD IS AUTHORIZED.
The homestead may be partitioned among the respective owners of the
property in the same manner as other property held in common if:
(1) the surviving spouse
dies, sells his or her interest in the homestead, or elects to no longer use or
occupy the property as a homestead; or
(2) the court no longer
permits the guardian of the minor children to use and occupy the property as a
homestead.
Community
Property shall be controlled as follows in the event one spouse predeceases the
other:
STATES CODE
TITLE 2. ESTATES OF DECEDENTS;
DURABLE POWERS OF ATTORNEY
SUBTITLE C. PASSAGE OF
TITLE AND DISTRIBUTION OF DECEDENTS' PROPERTY IN GENERAL
CHAPTER 112. COMMUNITY PROPERTY WITH RIGHT OF SURVIVORSHIP
SUBCHAPTER A. GENERAL PROVISIONS
Sec.
112.001. DEFINITION OF COMMUNITY PROPERTY
SURVIVORSHIP AGREEMENT. In this chapter,
"community property survivorship agreement" means an agreement
between spouses creating a right of survivorship in community property.
SUBCHAPTER B. COMMUNITY PROPERTY SURVIVORSHIP AGREEMENTS
Sec.
112.051. AGREEMENT FOR RIGHT OF
SURVIVORSHIP IN COMMUNITY PROPERTY. At
any time, spouses may agree between themselves that all or part of their
community property, then existing or to be acquired, becomes the property of
the surviving spouse on the death of a spouse.
Sec.
112.052. FORM OF AGREEMENT. (a) A
community property survivorship agreement must be in writing and signed by both
spouses.
(b) A written agreement
signed by both spouses is sufficient to create a right of survivorship in the
community property described in the agreement if the agreement includes any of
the following phrases:
(1) "with right of
survivorship";
(2) "will become the
property of the survivor";
(3) "will vest in and
belong to the surviving spouse"; or
(4) "shall pass to the
surviving spouse."
(c) Notwithstanding
Subsection (b), a community property survivorship agreement that otherwise
meets the requirements of this chapter is effective without including any of
the phrases listed in that subsection.
(d) A survivorship agreement
may not be inferred from the mere fact that an account is a joint account or
that an account is designated as JT TEN, Joint Tenancy, or joint, or with other
similar language.
Sec. 112.053. ADJUDICATION
NOT REQUIRED. A community property
survivorship agreement that satisfies the requirements of this chapter is
effective and enforceable without an adjudication.
Sec. 112.252. LIABILITIES
OF DECEASED SPOUSE NOT AFFECTED BY RIGHT OF SURVIVORSHIP. (a)
Except as expressly provided by Section 112.251, the community property subject to the sole or joint management,
control, and disposition of a spouse during marriage continues to be subject to
the liabilities of that spouse on that spouse's death without regard to a right
of survivorship in the surviving spouse under an agreement made in accordance
with this chapter.
(b) The surviving spouse is
liable to account to the deceased spouse's personal representative for property
received by the surviving spouse under a right of survivorship to the extent
necessary to discharge the deceased spouse's liabilities.
(c) A proceeding to assert
a liability under Subsection (b):
(1) may be commenced only
if the deceased spouse's personal representative has received a written demand
by a creditor; and
(2) must be commenced on or
before the second anniversary of the deceased spouse's death.
(d) Property recovered by
the deceased spouse's personal representative under this section shall be
administered as part of the deceased spouse's estate.
In the event
that both parties die simultaneously the following applies:
TEXAS ESTATES CODE
TITLE 2. ESTATES OF
DECEDENTS; DURABLE POWERS OF ATTORNEY
SUBTITLE C. PASSAGE OF
TITLE AND DISTRIBUTION OF DECEDENTS' PROPERTY IN GENERAL
CHAPTER 121. SURVIVAL
REQUIREMENTS
Sec. 121.001. APPLICABILITY
OF CHAPTER. This chapter does not apply
if provision has been made by will, living trust, deed, or insurance contract,
or in any other manner, for a disposition of property that is different from
the disposition of the property that would be made if the provisions of this
chapter applied.
Sec.
121.051. APPLICABILITY OF
SUBCHAPTER. This subchapter does not
apply if the application of this subchapter would result in the escheat of an
intestate estate.
Sec.
121.052. REQUIRED PERIOD OF SURVIVAL FOR
INTESTATE SUCCESSION AND CERTAIN OTHER PURPOSES. A person who does not survive a decedent by
120 hours is considered to have predeceased the decedent for purposes of the
homestead allowance, exempt property, and intestate succession, and the decedent's
heirs are determined accordingly, except as otherwise provided by this chapter.
Sec.
121.053. INTESTATE SUCCESSION: FAILURE TO SURVIVE PRESUMED UNDER CERTAIN
CIRCUMSTANCES. A person who, if the
person survived a decedent by 120 hours, would be the decedent's heir is
considered not to have survived the decedent for the required period if:
(1) the time of death of
the decedent or of the person, or the times of death of both, cannot be
determined; and
(2) the person's survival
for the required period after the decedent's death cannot be established.
Sec.
121.101. REQUIRED PERIOD OF SURVIVAL FOR
DEVISEE. A devisee who does not survive
the testator by 120 hours is treated as if the devisee predeceased the testator
unless the testator's will contains some language that:
(1) deals explicitly with
simultaneous death or deaths in a common disaster; or
(2) requires the devisee to
survive the testator, or to survive the testator for a stated period, to take
under the will.
Sec.
121.102. REQUIRED PERIOD OF SURVIVAL FOR
CONTINGENT BENEFICIARY. (a) If property is disposed of in a manner that
conditions the right of a beneficiary to succeed to an interest in the property
on the beneficiary surviving another person, the beneficiary is considered not
to have survived the other person unless the beneficiary survives the person by
120 hours, except as provided by Subsection (b).
(b) If an interest in
property is given alternatively to one of two or more beneficiaries, with the
right of each beneficiary to take being dependent on that beneficiary surviving
the other beneficiary or beneficiaries, and all of the beneficiaries die within
a period of less than 120 hours, the property shall be divided into as many
equal portions as there are beneficiaries.
The portions shall be distributed respectively to those who would have
taken if each beneficiary had survived.
Sec.
121.151. DISTRIBUTION OF COMMUNITY
PROPERTY. (a) This section applies to community property,
including the proceeds of life or accident insurance that are community
property and become payable to the estate of either the husband or wife.
(b) If a husband and wife
die leaving community property but neither survives the other by 120 hours,
one-half of all community property shall be distributed as if the husband had
survived, and the other one-half shall be distributed as if the wife had
survived.
Sec. 121.153.
DISTRIBUTION OF CERTAIN INSURANCE PROCEEDS. (a) If
the insured under a life or accident insurance policy and a beneficiary of the
proceeds of that policy die within a period of
less than 120 hours, the insured is considered to have survived
the beneficiary for the purpose of determining the rights under the policy of
the beneficiary or beneficiaries as such.
(b) This section does not
prevent the applicability of Section 121.151 to proceeds
of life or accident insurance that are community property.
With regards
to the John’s separate property in New Mexico if John were to predecease with a
will leaving everything to his wife, Susan:
45-3-101.
Devolution of estate at death; administration on deaths of husband and
wife.
A. The power of a person to leave property by
will and the rights of creditors, devisees and heirs to the person's property
are subject to the restrictions and limitations contained in Chapter 45, Article
3 NMSA 1978 to facilitate the prompt settlement of estates.
B. Upon the death of a person, the person's
separate property and the person's share of community property devolves:
(1) to the persons to whom the property is
devised by the person's last will;
(2) to those indicated as substitutes for them in
cases involving revocation, lapse, disclaimer or other circumstances pursuant
to Chapter 45, Article
2 NMSA 1978 affecting the devolution of testate estates; or
(3) in the absence of testamentary disposition,
to the person's heirs or to those indicated as substitutes for them in cases
involving revocation, lapse, disclaimer or other circumstances pursuant to
Chapter 45, Article 2, Parts 3, 4, 10 and 11 NMSA 1978 affecting the devolution
of intestate estates.
C. The devolution of separate property and the
decedent's share of community property is subject to rights to the family
allowance and personal property allowance, to rights of creditors and to
administration as provided in Chapter 45, Article
3 NMSA 1978. The surviving spouse's share of the community property is
subject to administration until the time for presentation of claims has
expired, and thereafter only to the extent necessary to pay community claims.
With regards to the John’s separate property in
Michigan if John were to predecease with a will leaving everything to his wife,
Susan:
A Johns will
is valid as long as the following conditions are met, which will allow the
Michigan lake cabin to pass to Susan:
700.2501 Will; maker; sufficient mental
capacity.
Sec. 2501.
(1) An individual 18 years of age or
older who has sufficient mental capacity may make a will.
(2) An individual has sufficient mental
capacity to make a will if all of the following requirements are met:
(a) The individual has the ability to
understand that he or she is providing for the disposition of his or her
property after death.
(b) The individual has the ability to
know the nature and extent of his or her property.
(c) The individual knows the natural
objects of his or her bounty.
(d) The individual has the ability to
understand in a reasonable manner the general nature and effect of his or her
act in signing the will.
With regards
to the condominium in Florida regardless of which spouse predeceases the
following apply:
689.11 Conveyances between husband and wife direct;
homestead.—
(1) A conveyance of real estate, including homestead, made by
one spouse to the other shall convey the legal title to the grantee spouse in
all cases in which it would be effectual if the parties were not married, and
the grantee need not execute the conveyance. An estate by the entirety may be
created by the action of the spouse holding title:
(a) Conveying to the other by a deed in which the purpose to
create the estate is stated; or
(b) Conveying to both spouses.
(2) All deeds heretofore made by a husband direct to his wife
or by a wife direct to her husband are hereby validated and made as effectual
to convey the title as they would have been were the parties not married;
(3) Provided, that nothing herein shall be construed as
validating any deed made for the purpose, or that operates to defraud any
creditor or to avoid payment of any legal debt or claim; and
(4) Provided further that this section shall not apply to any
conveyance heretofore made, the validity of which shall be contested by suit
commenced within 1 year of the effective date of this law
689.15 Estates by survivorship.—The doctrine of the right of survivorship in cases of
real estate and personal property held by joint tenants shall not prevail in
this state; that is to say, except in cases of estates by entirety, a devise,
transfer or conveyance heretofore or hereafter made to two or more shall create
a tenancy in common, unless the instrument creating the estate shall expressly
provide for the right of survivorship; and in cases of estates by entirety, the
tenants, upon dissolution of marriage, shall become tenants in common.
Under these conditions either spouse
should receive the property through the right of survivorship by tenancy by the
entirety.
Additional Considerations
if John were to die today? Susan? Both?
A will does not take effect until
the testator dies. The testator is generally free to revoke or change his will
up until death. A will can provide three types of legacies: Specific, General,
and residual.
- A Specific Legacy disposes of a specific piece of pieces of property.
- A General legacy disposes of a certain amount or value of property.
- A residual legacy disposes of all property that has not been disposed of through specific or general legacy.
- A legatee is a person who receives a legacy from the testator.
Limitations on disposition of
property at death – The surviving spouse is generally given the right to elect
to take against the will. This amount is usually one third or one half the
estate, but can be as much as all of the estate. This right can be waived by
agreement during lifetime. The spouse may also be given a homestead right which
would allow the spouse to live in the home during the life of the surviving
spouse. Some states give children this right as well. Most states give an
allowance for the surviving spouse and the children for a period of time after
the decedent’s death.
Some states provide that a will
executed before marriage is revoke upon marriage.
A mortmain statute is a statue some
states have that restricts the amount that may go to a charity if a decedent is
survived by a spouse or child.
Intestate Succession – If the
decedent does not have a will, property will pass according to state law.
Typically a spouse with children would receive either (1) some dollar amount
plus a fraction of the estate, or (2) some fraction of the estate. The fraction
received by the spouse is often one third or one half of the estate. The
children would receive the balance of the estate.
A will can set out the terms of a
trust in which the named trustee can manage assets on behalf of the
beneficiaries. Such trust is referred to as a “testamentary” trust. The trust
starts to exist at the probate of the will.
When
there are minor children the will can name a “guardian of the person” who
provides care and custody of the child and a “guardian of the estate” who
manages the child’s estate.
It is important for the client to
mention all heirs in a will especially if the client intends not to leave that
person any assets.
Pour
Over provision – Provision in a will which transfers and assets not in a trust
to that trust when the testator dies.
At
death, federal estate taxes are imposed on property that is transferred to the
beneficiaries. However, each U.S. resident has a unified credit that eliminates
the estate tax on the first $5,250,000 in 2013 (The amount is adjusted annually
for inflation).
State
Taxes need to be estimated as they can cause serious liquidity drain of the
estate.
Deductions allowed for estate tax:
·
Marital deduction;
·
Charitable deduction;
·
Debts of decedent;
·
Administration expenses;
·
Funeral expenses; and
·
If a married individual wishes to minimize taxes
at his death, his will should provide for all assets in excess of the unified
credit exemption above to pass to his spouse or to a trust for the benefit of
his spouse, so a marital deduction can be taken for those assets.
·
The law currently provides that that surviving
spouses will be able to use the amount of the estate tax exemption which the
deceases spouse did not use. This is often referred to as “portability of the
estate tax exemption”.
Most assets in the decedent’s
gross estate receive a new income tax basis equal to the fair market value of
each asset at the time of the decedent’s death.
If the assets increase in value that asset receives a “step-up” in
basis.
However, any asset that would been
taxed as income had the decedent lived long enough to receive it does not
receive a step up in basis. These assets are generally termed “income in
respect of decedent” and they retain whatever income tax basis the testator had
in them.
Advantages of probate – Going
through probate involves stricter supervision of the management and disposition
of assets. Another benefit of probate is that it has a cut-off period for
creditors. As part of the probate process, a notice of death is given to all
creditors. With an inter vivos trust, generally these claims are not cut off.
State apportionment statutes – the
state law will allocate the burden of the taxes among beneficiaries. Many
states require beneficiaries pay a share of estate taxes unless the will
provides otherwise. The will should state who pays the tax on probate and
non-probate property.
Who is
to pay the tax on a generation-skipping transfer? Some draftsmen will
specifically provide that such taxes are not to be imposed on the
“skip-person’s” estate.
Personal
property – the client may want to take pictures of personal property and
indicate how the property is to be disposed of.
If an
item is not in the will at the time of death has a provision been made to
compensate the intended beneficiary with a comparable piece of property or
insurance if the property was lost, stolen or destroyed?
The
client should allowing the executor of the estate to take possession of
property located in many different locations “as and where is” at the expense
of the estate.
Specific
items of tangible property should be mentioned. “All other tangible personal
property” should dispose of any residual property.
A will
should not “incorporate by reference” an instrument outside the will as it
leads to litigation.
Does
the will make so many specific bequests of cash that the residuary estate
doesn’t have enough to pay estate taxes?
A tangible
personal property clause should nearly always be used where the residue of the
estate will be paid to a trust.
Residuary clause – (1) transfers all assets not disposed of
up to this point, (2) can provide a mechanism for “pouring over” assets from
the will to a previously established (inter vivos) trust, and (3) provide an
alternative disposition in case a primary beneficiary has dies or the trust to
which the assets were to be poured over to was for some reason invalid, revoked
or never came into existence. Including “per stirpes” reference insures that if
the intended beneficiary dies the bequest will pass to his/her children.
Marital
Deduction formula clause – Such clauses are typically divide the client’s
estate into two parts, one “marital” and one “non-marital”. The marital portion
passes property to the client’s surviving spouse as part of the marital
deduction and may contain an outright disposition or trust disposition. The
non-marital portion is designed to set aside property exempt from federal
estate tax by reason of the client’s available unified credit and passes
property to persons other than the surviving spouse. While assets are passing
to a “bypass trust” as opposed to the surviving spouse, this does not mean that
the spouse cannot be a beneficiary of the bypass trust.
For the
years beginning in 2011 surviving spouses can use the so-called “portability”
provisions which allow them to add the unused estate tax exemption of the
spouse who died most recently to their own. This provision, plus an increase in
the exemption amount to $5.25 million per person, enables married couples to
transfer as much as $10.5 million tax free to their children or other heirs.
Particular attention must be paid to not over pack the bypass trust and pay
less than expected or desired into the marital trust. Use of the bypass trust
will often require that some of the client’s assets be retitled.
A
“savings clause” should be considered that would nullify any power, duty, or
discretionary authority that might jeopardize the marital deduction.
A
“common disaster” clause provides the presumption that the testator’s spouse is
deemed to survive the testator’s death to prevent a loss of the estate tax
marital deduction in the event of a simultaneous death.
The
will should have alternative beneficiaries if there is the possibility that a
beneficiary will disclaim an interest in the estate.
Estate Tax:
The federal estate tax is a tax on
the transfer of property when a person dies. It is a tax on the right to transfer property to others or an
interest in property, rather than a tax on the right to receive property – the basic characteristic of an inheritance tax.
The tax is levied on certain lifetime transfers that in essence are tantamount
to testamentary dispositions and on transfers over which the decedent retained
certain interests or powers.
Computation of the federal estate
tax:
(1)
The gross estate is eh total
value of all the property in which he decedent had an interest and that is
required to be included in the estate either values at the date of death or
under limited circumstances, for up to 6 months from the date of death.
(2)
The adjusted gross estate is
determined by subtracting allowable funeral and administrative expenses from
the gross estate.
(1)
The taxable estate is determine
by subtracting from the adjusted gross estate any allowable marital deduction,
charitable deduction, or state death tax deduction for state death taxes
actually paid.
(2)
The federal
estate tax payable before credits (or tentative tax) is determined as
follows: (a) the tentative base (or
contribution base) is calculated by adding to the taxable estate any “adjusted
taxable gifts”; (b) the tax rate is the applied to determine the tentative tax;
(c) the aggregate amount of gift tax which would have been payable with respect
to gifts made by the decedent after 1976.
(3)
To determine the federal estate tax,
the estate tax is reduced, dollar-for-dollar, by subtracting the amount of any
allowable: (a) unified credit, (b) Credit for pre-1977 gift tax, (c) credit for
tax paid on prior transfers (or
previously taxed property credit), (d) credit for foreign death taxes.
Ascertaining the Gross Estate – The
following equals the gross estate before exclusions for federal estate tax
purposes:
(1)
Property owned outright;
(2)
Certain property transferred gratuitously within
three years of death and all gift taxes paid on all gifts made within three
years of death;
(3)
Certain lifetime transfers where the decedent
retained the income or control over the income from the property transferred;
(4)
Certain gratuitous lifetime transfers where the
transferee’s possession or enjoyment of the property is contingent on surviving
the decedent;
(5)
Gratuitous lifetime transfers over which the
decedent retained the right to alter, amend, or revoke the gift;
(6)
Annuities or similar arrangements purchased by
the decedent and payable for life to both the annuitant and to a specified survivor
(joint and survivor annuities);
(7)
Certain jointly held property where another
party will obtain the decedent’s interest at death by survivorship;
(8)
General powers of appointment;
(9)
Life insurance in which the decedent possessed
incident of ownership (economic benefits in the policy) or which was payable to
or for the benefit of the decedent’s estate;
(10) Qualified Terminable
Interest Property (QTIP) in the estate of the surviving spouse.
Except for Qualified Terminable
Interest Property in the estate of the surviving spouse, no inclusion is
required for property in which the decedent’s interest was obtained from
someone else and was limited to lifetime enjoyment.
Generally, gifts made within three
years of death are not includable in a decedent’s gross estate, regardless of
the size of the gift or the manner in which it was transferred.
Two major classes of exceptions:
(1)
Transfer with retained life estate; transfer
taking effect at death; revocable transfer; or life insurance.
(2)
Property given away within three years of death
may be brought back into the estate to determine if decedent’s estate qualifies
for a §303 stock redemption, §6166 installment payout, or special use
valuation.
Jointly held property with right to
survivorship held by another – The 50-50 rule provides that on 50% of certain
property titled and held jointly by the decedent and a spouse with rights of
survivorship or by tenants by the entirety will be includable in the decedent’s
estate regardless of the size of his/her contribution. The 50-50 rule applies
to both real and personal property.
If a marital deduction (either gift
or estate tax) was allowed for the transfer of property in which the decedent
had a qualifying income for life, such property must be included in the
decedent’s gross estate. This includes Qualified Terminable interest Property
(QTIP) unless the decedent spouse made a lifetime transfer of his/her
“qualifying income interest for life” (which would have resulted in a gift
subject to gift tax).
Valuation Date – Generally, federal
estate taxes are based on fair market value (FMV) of the transferred property
as of (a) the date the decedent died, or (b) an “alternative valuation date,”
(six months after the date of the decedent’s death) if the both the total
property value within the decedent’s estate and the federal estate liability
both reduce below date of death values. The election must be taken within nine
months of the decedent’s death unless an extension is allowed by the IRS.
Property that normally diminishes
as time passes, such as an annuity, will not be used in calculating a decrease
in property value six months after death. The date of death will be used to
determine the value of such property.
Deductions allowed in arriving at
the gross estate – (1) funeral and administrative expenses; (2) debts
(including certain taxes); and (3) casualty and theft losses.
Determination of the taxable estate
- The adjustable gross estate may be reduced by (1) a marital deduction, (2) a
charitable deduction, and (3) a state death tax deduction. The maximum
allowable marital deduction for federal estate tax purposes is the net value of
the property passing to the surviving spouse in a qualifying manner. Otherwise,
there is no limit to the marital deduction.
Most terminable interests can
qualify for the marital deduction if the executor makes the appropriate QTIP
election in a timely manner. A qualifying terminable interest is one which (a)
passes from the decedent, (b) gives the surviving spouse a lifetime income
payable at least annually, and (c) the decedent’s executor makes an irrevocable
election on his estate tax return by listing the property on Schedule M (the
marital deduction schedule) of the return.
The value of the principal is
included in the estate of the life tenant.
Estate tax payable before credits –
Once the taxable estate is found, adjusted taxable gifts are added to arrive at
the tentative tax base (or computation base). Adjusted taxable gifts are
defined as the taxable portion of all post-1976 gifts. A gift is taxable to the
extent it exceeds the sum of any allowable (a) a gift tax annual exclusion, (b)
gift tax exclusion for qualified transfers for educational or medical expenses,
(c) gift tax marital deduction (similar to the estate tax marital deduction,
but for lifetime gifts to a spouse), and (d) gift tax charitable deduction .
Gifts that for any reason have already be included in the decedent’s estate.
Adding adjustable taxable gifts to
the taxable estate makes the estate tax computation part of the unified transfer
tax calculation.
When adjusted taxable gifts are
combined with the taxable estate, the result is the computation base, the
amount upon which the tax rates are based.
The “applicable exclusion amount”
is the sum of the “basic exclusion amount” ($5,250,000 in 2013) and, in the
case of the surviving spouse, the “deceased spousal exclusion amount.” The
“applicable credit amount is $2,045,800.
Determining the federal estate tax
payable – certain tax credits are allowed as a dollar-for-dollar reduction of
the estate tax. These credits are (a) the unified credit, (b) the credit for
pre-1977 gift tax, (c) the credit for taxes on prior transfers, (d) the credit
for foreign, death, taxes.
The unified credit for 2013 is
$2,045,800. The required computation process has the effect of reducing the
credit by requiring the “add back” of adjusted taxable gifts.
Where a prior decedent (the
transferor) transferred property (which was taxed at death) to the decedent and
the property is includable in the present decedent’s estate, a credit will be
allowed for all or part of the estate on the transferred property.
As long as the property was
includable in the transferor’s estate and passed from the transferor to the
present decedent, the method of transfer is irrelevant.
There is no requirement that the
property actually be in existence at the present decedent’s death or, if in
existence, subject to federal estate tax at that time.
The credit is the lower of:
(1)
The federal estate tax attributable to the
transferred property in the transferor’s estate, or
(2)
The federal estate tax attributable to the
transferred property in the estate of the present decedent.
The credit is reduced by 20%
increments every two years, and at the end of ten years after the transferor’s
death no credit is allowable.
Gift Tax:
The gift tax is an excise tax
levied on the right of an individual to transfer money or property to another.
It is not a tax levied directly on the subject of the gift itself or on the
right to receive the property. The gift tax is based on the value of the
property transferred. The tax rates are applied to total lifetime taxable
gifts. Once the lifetime exclusion is used, the gift tax rate is 40%.
Scope – All transactions whereby
property or interests are gratuitously passed or conferred upon another,
regardless of the means or device employed, constitute gifts subject to tax.
The gift tax is imposed on the shifting of property rights, regardless of
whether the property is tangible or intangible. Even forgiveness of indebtedness
constitutes a gift. A gift can be subject to a tax even if the identity of the
done is not known at the date of the transfer and cannot be ascertained.
Tax-Oriented Advantages – Both lifetime and
“deathtime” gifts are subject to the same rate schedule and are taxed
cumulatively, so that gifts made during lifetime push up the rate at which
gifts made at death are taxed. The American Taxpayer Relief Act of 2012 changed
the top rate for gifts made
after 2012. Transfers over $500,00
are taxes at 37%, transfers over $750,000 are taxed at 39%, and transfers over
$1,000,000 are taxed at 40%.
Significant
advantages of making lifetime (inter vivos) gifts –
·
First, an individual can give up to $14,000 (in
2013) gift tax free every year to each person of an unlimited number of donees.
A married couple can transfer gift tax free up to $28,000 (in 2013) per year of
money or other property, multiplied by an unlimited number of donees. One spouse
can make the entire gift if the other spouse consents. This is known as “gift
splitting.”
·
Second, if a gift is made more than three years
prior to a decedent’s death, the amount of any gift tax paid on the transfer is
not brought back into the computation of the gross estate. In the case of a
sizable gift, avoidance of the “gross up rule” can result in a meaningful tax
savings. (Gross up rule means that all gift tax payable on taxable gifts made
within three years of death are included in calculating the value of the gross
estate even if the gift itself is not added back.
·
Third, any appreciation accruing between the
time of the gift and the date of the donor’s death escapes estate taxation. An
excellent way of making use of this advantage is a gift of life insurance to an
adult beneficiary or to an irrevocable trust for adult or minor beneficiaries
more than three years prior to the insured’s death. If the insured lives for
more than three years after the transfer and the premiums are present interest
gifts of $14,000 a year or less, there would be no estate tax inclusion and
none of the appreciation would be in the insured’s estate.
·
Fourth, there are often strong income tax
incentives for making an inter vivos gift. This advantage derives from moving
taxable income from a high-bracket donor to a lower-bracket done age 24 or
over. Since the property, and not just the income from the property, is
transferred, the income tax savings can be even greater after compounding. The
year-in year-out income tax savings may far exceed the estate tax savings.
·
Fifth, gifts of the proper type of assets more
than three years prior to death possibly qualifying for section 303 stock
redemption, 6166 installment payout, and section 2032A special use valuation.
·
Sixth, no gift taxes have to be paid until the
transferor makes a taxable gift in excess of the gift tax unified credit
exemption equivalent or applicable exclusion amount ($5,250,000 in 2013).
Technical Definition of a gift – Under
common law a gift is defined simply as a voluntary transfer without any
consideration, but tax law does not specifically define a gift. The regulations
dealing with valuation of gifts provide that:
Value of property
transferred
Less:
(Consideration received)
= Gift
In cases where property is transferred
for less than adequate and full consideration in money or money’s worth.
Life insurance or life insurance
premiums – These can be the subject of an indirect gift in three situations:
(1) the purchase of a policy for another person’s benefit, (2) the assignment
of an existing policy, and (3) payment of premiums.
If an insured
purchases a policy on his life and
(1)
Names a beneficiary(ies) other than his estate,
and
(2)
Does not retain the right to regain the policy
or the proceeds or revest the economic benefits of the policy (i.e., retains
not reversionary interest in himself or his estate); and
(3)
Does not retain the power to change the
beneficiaries or their proportionate interests (i.e., makes the beneficiary
designation irrevocable)
He has made a gift measurable by
the cost of the policy. All three of these requirements must be met before the
insured will be deemed to have made a taxable gift.
If an insured makes an absolute
assignment of a policy or in some other way relinquishes all his rights and powers
in a previously issued policy, a gift is made. This can lead to a tax trap. If
a wife owns a policy on her husband and names their children as revocable
beneficiaries the IRS is likely to argue that she has made a constructive gift
to her children.
Reductions
on the tax of property transferred as gifts – These reductions include (1) gift
splitting, (2) an annual exclusion, (3) a marital deduction, (4) a charitable
deduction.
Gift
splitting – The law permits a married donor, with the consent of the non-donor
spouse, to elect to treat a gift to a third party as though each spouse has
made half of the gift. Couple cannot split gifts in a period before or after
they were married. This applies only to gifts by a married donor and only with
respect to non-community property. All gifts made during a period must be
split.
The
Annual Exclusion – Generally, the annual exclusion allows the donor to make,
tax free, up to $14,000 (in 2013) worth of gifts (other than “future
interests”) to any number of persons each year. The total maximum excludable
amount is determined by multiplying the number of persons to whom gifts are
made by $14,000.
An
Annual exclusion is allowed only for present interests and is denied to gifts
of future interests. A present interest is one in which the donee’s possession
or enjoyment begins at the time the gift is made. A future interest refers to
any interest or estate in which the donee’s possession or enjoyment will or
might not commence until some period of time after the gift is made. A future
interest includes reversions, remainders, and other interests or estates,
whether vested or contingent, and whether or not supported by a particular
interest or estate, which are limited to commence in use, possession, or
enjoyment at some future date or time.
An easy
was to distinguish between future and present interest is to ascertain:
At the moment of the gift, did the
done have an immediate, unfettered and actuarially ascertainable legal right to
use, possess, or enjoy the property in question?
If the
answer is “yes,” the gift is a present interest. If the answer is “no” the gift
is a future interest.
Summary
of Rules for Ascertaining the Amount and Availability of the Gift Tax Annual
Exclusion -
(1)
In determining the number of annual exclusions
to which a donor is entitled, a gift to a trust is a gift to a trust’s
beneficiaries, and not to the trust.
(1)
If the trustee is required to distribute trust
income at least annually, the value of an income interest in a trust qualifies
for the exclusion even if the value of the remainder interest does not.
(2)
The gift of an interest that is contingent upon
survivorship is a gift of a future interest.
(3)
A gift is one of a future interest if enjoyment
depends on the exercise of a trustee’s discretion.
(4)
A gift must have an ascertainable value to
qualify for the exclusion.
There are three
basic means of qualifying “cared-for-gifts” to minors under Section 2504: (1) a
§ 2503(b) trust, (2) a §2503(c) trust, or (3) the Uniform Gifts to Minors Act
(or the Uniform Transfer to Minors Act).
§2503(b) Trust –
To obtain an annual exclusion for gifts to a trust, an individual can establish
a trust that requires that income must be distributed at least annually to or
for use of the minor beneficiary. A distribution does not have to be made by
age 21.
§2503(c) Trust –
Requires distribution of income and principal when the minor reaches age 21.
But it does not require the trustee to distribute income currently. The trust
must provide: (1) the income and principal may be expended by or on behalf of
the beneficiary; and (2) to the extent not so expended income and principal
will pass to the beneficiary at age 21; or (3) if the beneficiary dies prior to
that time, income and principal will go to the beneficiary’s estate or
appointees under a general power of appointment. It is possible to provide
continued management of the trust assets and, at the same time, avoid
forfeiting the annual exclusion by giving the done, at age 21, a right for a
limited, but reasonable period to require immediate distribution by giving
written notice, the trust can continue automatically for whatever period the donor provided when he established the
trust.
Uniform Gifts
(Transfers) to Minors Act – The Uniform Act is frequently utilized for smaller
gifts because of its simplicity and because it offers the benefits of
management, income and estate ta shifting, and the investment characteristics
of a trust, with little or none of the setup costs. The Uniform Act is
indicated over a trust if the gift consists of stock in an S-corporation.
That’s because generally speaking, a trust cannot hold S corporation stock
without causing a loss of the election privilege.
Crummy Power – A
gift in trust of a life insurance policy or of premiums can be named a present
interest by inserting a Crummy Power. A Crummy Power gives the named
individual(s) an immediate, unfettered, and actuarially ascertainable right; in
short, the absolute right to withdraw a specified amount or portion of the
assets contributed to the trust. The withdrawal rights make the gift in trust
of a life insurance policy or of premiums qualify for the gift tax annual
exclusion.
Gift Tax Marital
Deduction – An individual who transfers property to a spouse is allowed an
unlimited deduction known as the gift tax marital deduction.
No marital
deduction will be allowed where (a) the done-spouse’s interest in the
transferred property will terminate upon lapse of time or at the occurrence or
failure of a specified contingency, (b) where the done-spouse’s interest will
then pass to another person who received his interest in the property from the
donor-spouse, and (c) that person did not pay the donor dull and adequate
consideration for that interest.
The exception is
for a gift of Qualifying Terminable Interest Property (QTIP). If a donor spouse
gives a done spouse a qualifying income interest for life, it will qualify for
a gift (or state) tax marital deduction. To qualify:
(1)
The surviving spouse must be entitled to all
income from the property (and it must be payable annually or more frequently);
(2)
No person can have a power to appoint any part
of the property to any person other than the surviving spouse; and
(3)
The property must be taxable at the
done-spouse’s death.
A life estate with power of appointment
in the done spouse qualifies for the marital deduction.
Relationship
of the Gift Tax System to the Income Tax System – A lack of consistency between
the gift and income tax system forces the practitioners to examine five
different issues:
(1)
Is the transfer one upon which the gift tax will
be imposed?
(2)
Will the transfer constitute a taxable exchange
subject to the income tax?
(3)
If the transfer was made in trust, will the
income from the transferred property be taxable to the donor, or will the
incidence of taxation be shifted to the recipient of the property (the trust of
its beneficiaries)?
(4)
If the income is taxable to the beneficiaries,
will it be taxable at the parent’s rate or at the beneficiary’s tax bracket (as
t would be if (a) the income were earned income no matter what the
beneficiary’s age, or (b) the beneficiary were are 18 (or in certain cases 24)
or older no matter whether the income was earned or unearned)?
(5)
Does the gift constitute a cancellation of debt
which could result in income tax consequences?
The treatment of a transaction for
gift tax purposes is not necessarily consistent with the income tax
consequences.
The relationship of the gift tax
system to the estate tax system – The estate and gift tax system were fully
unified in 2011 going forward. The unification correlates the estate and gift
tax laws in three essential ways:
(1)
Lifetime gifts and testamentary transfers are
taxed by using the same tax rates, rather than separate and different rates.
The exemption for 2013 is $5,250,000, and the top rate is 40%.
(2)
The unified credit can be applied to both
lifetime and death-time gifts. The unified credit is set at $2,045,800 for
2013.
(3)
The estate tax imposed at death is found by
adding the taxable portion of gifts made during lifetime to the taxable estate
to arrive at the tentative tax base.
Factors to consider in selecting
appropriate subject of a gift – Some of the general considerations in selecting
property to give include:
(1)
Is the property likely to appreciate in value?
Planners generally try to pick property that will appreciate substantially in
value from the time of the transfer. The removal from the donor’s estate of the
appreciation in the property should save a meaningful amount of estate taxes.
The best type of property will have a low gift tax value and a high estate tax
value. Life insurance is a, for example, has a low present value, but a high
appreciation potential. If held until the date the insured dies, its
appreciation in value is guaranteed.
(2)
Is the donee in a lower income tax bracket than
the donor? Income splitting between the donor and a done age 18 or older can be
obtained by transferring high income-producing property to a family member in a
lower bracket. High income-producing property is best for this purpose.
Conversely, if the donor is in a lower bracket than the done the use of
low-yield growth type property may be indicated. Typically, gifts to children
under age 24 should emphasize growth.
(1)
Is the property subject to indebtedness? A gift
of property subject to indebtedness that is greater than its cost to the donor
may result in a taxable gain. A gift of such property causes the donor to
realize capital gain on the excess of the debt over basis.
(2)
Is the gift property’s cost basis above, below,
or approximately the same as the property’s fair market value? Income tax law
forbids the recognition of a capital loss if the subject matter if the gift has
a cost basis above the property’s current fair market value. Neither the donor
nor the done can recognize a capital loss with respect to such property.
Sincere there is no appreciation, no gift tax addition would be allowed. Conversely,
if the donor’s cost basis for income tax purposes is very low relative to the
fair market value of the property, it might be advantageous to retain the
property until death because of the stepped-up bass at death rules. A third
possibility is that the donor’s cost basis is approximately the same or only
slightly below fair market value. The addition to basis is limited to gift tax
allocable to appreciation in the property at the time of the gift. One further
factor that should be considered is the likelihood that the done will want or
need to sell the property in the foreseeable future. If this is not likely, the
income tax basis (except for depreciable property) will be relatively
meaningless.
Federal Income Tax
Issues:
Income
taxation of trusts and estates – general scheme of taxation – Trusts and
estates are treated in the tax law as separate taxpayers that are required to
file annual federal income tax returns. The general rule is that the trust or
estate will pay income tax on the amount it retains. Beneficiaries will pay the
tax on the income of the trust or estate actually distributed to them. The
mechanics of obtaining this result are obtained through the utilization of the
Distributable Net Income (DNI) concept. Thus, taxed only, once.
The
concept of DNI is utilized to achieve three main results. First, it ensures
that trust or estate receives a deduction for amounts distributed and provides
a limit for that deduction. Second, DNI limits the proportion of distributions
that is taxable to beneficiaries. The third function of DNI is to ensure that
the character of distributions to a beneficiary remains the same as in the
hands of a trust or estate. Tax-exempt interest received by a trust and
distributed to a beneficiary retains its character as tax-exempt and is exempt
for ordinary income taxation to the beneficiary or heirs. What enters the trust
or estate as ordinary income remains ordinary income when received by
beneficiaries or heirs. This is known as the “conduit” theory.
Income
taxation of trusts – A trust is a tax paying entity. The taxable income of a
trust (or an estate) is computed in basically the same manner as that of an
individual. However, given the same amount of income, a trust or estate will
pay a much higher tax for income it retains than an individual would pay.
In computing tax liability, multiple trusts are treated as
one trust and their incomes are aggregated if the trusts have substantially the
same grantor or grantors; and substantially the same primary beneficiary or
beneficiaries and if the principal purpose for the existence of the trust is
the avoidance of federal income tax. You can’t cut income taxes by creating
“cookie-cutter” replica trusts for the same beneficiaries.
Generally,
for tax purposes trusts are treated as separate entities from the grantor, the
trustee, and the beneficiary. The basic question in the income taxation of
trusts is, “who will be taxed on trust income – the trust, the beneficiary or
the grantor?” Generally, the burden of taxation falls on either the trust
itself or the beneficiary. But it is possible for the income of the trust to be
taxes to the grantor in a so-called “grantor trust” situation where, for income
tax purposes, the trust is deemed the alter ego of the grantor.
Trusts
are categorized for income tax purposes as either simple or complex trusts.
Either type of trust may also be a grantor trust.
A
simple trust has the following characteristics:
·
The trust agreement requires that all trust
income be distributed currently to the beneficiaries;
·
The trust may not make distributions form
amounts other than current income;
·
Principal may not be distributed; and
·
No charitable gifts can be made.
If all income does not have to be
distributed currently or if the trust can make distributions from principal or
if it can make charitable gifts, it will be deemed a complex trust for that
taxable year.
A simple Trust is treated as a
separate tax entity. As such it has the same deductions an individual has,
subject to certain exceptions. It also has a special deduction for income that
is distributable to its beneficiaries. The net result is that a simple trust
does not pay tax on income it pays out. The beneficiary of a simple trust will
report the income that he receives or that is receivable by him.
A
complex Trust is any trust which is not a simple trust, that is, a complex
trust in which the trustee either must – or may – accumulate income. The
trustee of a complex trust, unlike the trustee of a simple trust, can also
distribute corpus (principal) or can also make gifts to charities.
Complex
trust, like a simple trust, is a separate tax entity. It is allowed a special
deduction for actual distributions of income, but pays tax on any income it
does not distribute. Generally, the same rules that govern complex trusts apply
also to the income taxation of a decedent’s estate.
A trust
is not allowed a standard deduction. Further, the personal exemption is limited
to $300 for a simple trust and $100 for a complex trust.
In some
cases the trust itself is disregarded as a taxable entity. Generally, in the
case of either a simple or a complex trust, the trusts beneficiary will be
taxable on the income of the trust. In some cases the grantor is taxed on the
trust income whether or not the grantor actually receives the income.
Substantial
Owner Rules – When the grantor of a trust is treated as the owner of a portion
of the trust corpus for income tax purposes, those items of income, deductions,
and credits that are attributable to that portion of the trust are deemed to be
those of the grantor. Accordingly, the grantor
of the trust is deemed the recipient of trust income and is
allowed a deduction to the extent there are trust expenses and/or credits.
Reversionary
interest rules – For income tax purposes, the grantor is treated as the owner
of that portion of a trust in which the grantor or the grantor’s spouse has a
reversionary interest in either the corpus or the income if, as of the date of
inception of that trust or at the time of an addition to that trust the value
of the reversionary interest exceeds 5% of the value of the property in which
the reversion is retained.
Beneficial
Interest Rules – In general, where a grantor of a trust, a non-adverse party,
or both can control the beneficial enjoyment of a trust, the grantor is taxed
as the owner of the trust for income tax purposes. There are several exceptions
to this broad rule, including a power exercisable only by will or a power to
distribute corpus or income if limited to an ascertainable standard.
Administrative
powers rules – Powers exercisable by the grantor, or even a non-adverse party,
that would cause the income to be attributable to the grantor are:
1)
Powers that would enable the grantor to
purchase, exchange, or otherwise deal with or dispose of the corpus or income
of the trust for less than adequate consideration in money or money’s worth;
2)
Powers that allow the grantor to borrow trust
corpus or income without adequate interest or security or fails to repay money
borrowed by the end of the year.
3)
Powers of administration exercisable in a
non-fiduciary capacity by any person without the approval or consent of any
person in a fiduciary capacity. Powers of administration are such powers as the
power to vote stock of a corporation in which the grantor or the trust has a
significant voting interest, the power to control investment of the trust
funds, and the power to reacquire the trust corpus by substituting other
property of an equivalent value.
The power to
revoke rules – The grantor is treated for income tax purposes as the owner of
any portion of a trust for income tax purposes if he can revoke the trust
either acting alone or with a non-adverse party.
Income for
benefit of grantor rules – The grantor of a trust is treated as the owner of
the trust for income tax purposes if the income of the trust – at the
discretion of the grantor or a non-adverse party, or both – is or may be
distributed to the grantor or the grantor’s spouse, held or accumulated for
future distribution to the grantor’s spouse, or applied to the payments of
premiums on life insurance policies on the life of the grantor or the grantor’s
spouse.
Person’s other
than the grantor – If a person other than the grantor has the power,
exercisable solely by himself, to vest the corpus or income therefrom in
himself, such a person is treated as the owner of the corpus so that trust
income will be taxable to that individual.
Taxation of the
estate – As a taxable entity, an estate must pay tax on its income. Because an
estate is considered a separate tax entity, it has not only income, but also
deductions. An estate is also entitled to a deduction for amounts of income
distributed. An estate may take a $600 personal exemption. The “income first”
rule requires that all distributions are deemed to be paid out of income first,
even if the executor, administrator, or trustee in fact distributes principal
in the form of cash or property.
Basis at death –
Assets owned by a decedent receive a new federal income tax basis equal to the
property’s fair market value for federal estate tax purposes. When the fair
market value of the asset is higher than the pre-death basis, the old basis is
“stepped-up” to the fair market value. This concept is particularly important
in buy-sell agreements where stock is purchased at a shareholder’s death at a
pre-arranged price or under a pre-arranged formula. A step down in basis is
also possible. In such a situation the beneficiary may not take a loss on the
step-down in basis. It may be better to gift loss property prior to death to
preserve the higher tax basis, even though the recipient’s basis will be
limited to the fair market value of the property on the date of the transfer
(plus any gift taxes paid).
No step-up in
basis where decedent had acquired property by gift within a year of death if
property is left to donor or donor’s spouse – The law currently provides that
if (1) the decedent had received appreciated property by gift during the 1-year
period ending on the date of death, and (2) that property was acquired from the
decedent (or passes from the decedent to)the donor of that property (or to the
donor’s spouse), the basis of that
property in the hands of the donor is he adjusted basis of the property in the
property in the hands of the decedent immediately before death. However, if the
done-decedent lives for more than one year after receiving the gift, or if the
gift is left to anyone other than the donor of the donor’s spouse, the property
will receive a stepped-up basis.
Effect of step-up
in basis rules on stock redemption and cross purchase agreements – Stock
includable in the decedent’s estate receives a new basis equal to its value at
death. This is usually close to the redemption value, particularly if the stock
redemption is promptly carried out. Typically, no (or little) gain is recognized
by the estate or other seller of the stock upon the redemption.
Implications and
issues in community property states – If the property is held as community
property, only one-half the property is included in the estate of the first
spouse to die but, equalizing the basis with the separate property arrangement,
both halves receive a new income tax basis.
Step-up in basis
does not occur if the property is held in joint tenancy-in-common. A couple can
take property in co-ownership in four different ways:
1)
As joint-tenants (or tenants by the entirely);
2)
As tenants in common;
3)
As community property; or
4)
As community property with right of
survivorship.
With the reinstatement of the
stepped-up basis rule, where property has been paid for with community property
earnings or if the contribution to the acquisition was otherwise equal, it
again affords a significant advantage as to federal income tax to hold such
property in community property as opposed to either joint-tenancy or
tenancy-in-common.
If there is a buy-sell agreement
entered into the stock receives a new basis if it is still held by the share
holder at death as long as there is not a binding executed contract that did
not depend on death.
John currently has
a simple will leaving everything to Susan and Susan has no will. What
estate/tax/financial/personal/other advice do you have for John and Susan?
Write a plan of
action for them.
The
marital deduction is a deduction for gift or estate tax purposes for property
passing to (or in a qualified trust for) a spouse. The unified credit is a
credit provided to each citizen or resident of the United States, which can be
applied against either gift or estate taxes. The use of the unified credit to
reduce gift taxes correspondingly reduces the amount available for estate
taxes. The goal typically is to avoid “over qualification” of the estate for
the marital deduction because of “underutilization” of the unified credit in
the estate of the first spouse to die.
The
most common arrangement for a marital/bypass trust is to place into the bypass
trust an amount equal to the estate tax unified credit applicable exclusion
(the 2013 unified credit equates to exempting $5,250,000 of assets from the
estate), because the tax on those assets will be eliminated by the unified
credit. The balance of the decedent’s assets will go to the marital trust tax
free because of the unlimited marital deduction. However, assets in the marital
trust will be subject to estate tax at the death of the surviving spouse
because of the broad powers the survivor is given in the trust.
In
general, the marital deduction can be obtained for property passing outright to
a surviving spouse. One type of trust, a general power of appointment trust,
gives the surviving spouse a right to the trust’s income for life coupled with
a power to appoint the trust property during lifetime or at death to anyone the
surviving spouse wishes.
In a
second type of marital deduction trust, an estate trust, the surviving spouse
receives income only, has no right to name the recipient of the remaining
property during her lifetime, but can name the recipient of the remaining
property in her will.
In a
third type of marital deduction trust, a qualifying terminable interest
property (QTIP) trust, the spouse is also given a right to income for life, but
need not be given a power of appointment over the property. The grantor of the
trust specifies the identity of the remainderman. Thus, with a QTIP trust, the first (original
property owning) spouse to die can control where the property goes at the
surviving spouse’s death. This is particularly appealing in second and
late-life marriages.
It may
be desirable to use a QTIP trust for some or all of the estate to ensure that
at least some of the marital deduction property passes to the first decedent
spouse’s chosen beneficiaries at the surviving spouse’s death. The balance of
the marital deduction property would go to a separate trust (often called
“Trust A”) that would be controllable by the surviving spouse as to its
disposition. Particularly for community property, where the survivor already
owns half, it may be very helpful to obtain the marital deduction for all of
the estate in excess of the unified credit equivalent (with the exempt portion
going to the bypass (or “B”) trust to avoid tax at the survivor’s death), but
to still provide that some of the deducted property will ultimately go to the
children.
Thus, a
formula will often provide for putting into the “B” or family trust the amount
of the estate tax applicable exemption ($5,250,000 in 2013) at the death of the
first spouse.
If
it is desired that the survivor have a power of disposition over only a portion
of the assets, then the portion subject to the power can go into the typical
marital “A” trust, and the balance can go into a QTIP trust. Both trusts will
qualify for the marital deduction and be included in the survivor’s
estate at death. Either or both of these trusts can provide
for invasion of principal for the benefit of the survivor, but only the “A”
trust will be subject to the power of disposition, called a power of
appointment, at the survivor’s death.
The
broadest power which can be provided to the spouse, while still keeping the
property subject to this power out of the surviving spouse’s estate is that the
spouse can appoint the property to anyone other than the spouse, his/her
creditors, his/her estate, and the creditors of his/her estate. Assuming the
power of appointment is no broader than that, then such a power could be
inserted in and held in either a bypass or a QTIP trust without adverse tax
consequences.
Often
the revocable A-B or A-B-QTIP trust takes the form of a life insurance trust
coupled with a “pourover will.” Here a revocable insurance trust is created
during the grantor’s lifetime. The trustee is named as the beneficiary of life
insurance policies issued on the grantor’s life. The grantor’s will contains a
provision to the effect that the grantor’s residuary estate, what is left after
payments of debts, expenses, taxes, and specific bequests, is to be “poured
over” into the living trust. The trust instrument provides that upon receiving
the insurance proceeds from the insurance company and the residuary estate
property from the pourover will provisions, the total principal will then be
divided into two (or three) parts: a portion will go to the marital or “A”
trust, a portion will go to the family or “B” trust, and if appropriate, a portion will go to the QTIP
trust, which latter will qualify for the marital deduction, but be distributed
at the survivor’s death as provided by the grantor in the trust instrument.
When is
use of such a device indicated? – If too much property passes to the surviving
spouse and thus may be needlessly taxed at the surviving spouse’s death. The
reason for this result is that the surviving spouse has “ownership” of all of
the family wealth and therefore it is taxable for federal estate tax purposes
at the surviving spouse’s death. In 2011 the concept of portability was
introduced which allows a surviving spouse to use the unused exemption of the
predeceased spouse, or the “Deceased Spouse’s Unused Exemption (DSUS).” While
the portability rules provide an important option in estate planning, it may
not be the best choice for all taxpayers.
If the
decision is made that it is better to implement a tradition estate plan that
incorporates a by-pass trust then the surviving spouse would merely have the
benefit of all of the family wealth (i.e., in an A-B or A-B-QTIP trust
arrangement) and only the portion that qualified for the marital deduction at
the death of the first spouse to die would be subject to federal estate taxes
at the survivor’s subsequent death. The B trust assets would pass to family
member’s estate tax free at the surviving spouse’s death.
In
order to maximize the utility of this technique, the A-B or A-B-QTIP trust can
be designed to pass to the A trust or to the A and QTIP trusts together exactly
enough property to reduce the federal estate tax in the estate of the first
spouse to die to the lowest desirable amount-even to zero. Any additional
property subject to tax at the decedent’s death and passing to the trust would
automatically pass into the B (family or non-marital) trust (portion) and
escape death taxation at the death of the second spouse to die.
Over-qualification
(underutilization of the unified credit) results in passing more to the
surviving spouse in property interests qualifying for the marital deduction
than is necessary to keep the federal estate tax at the decedent’s death to the
minimum. Over-qualification results in wasting (in whole or in part) the
decedent’s unified credit – unless the portability provision can be utilized. A
properly designed A-B or A-B-QTIP trust could eliminate or minimize this
problem.
What are the requirements? – There are three types of trusts
that will qualify for the marital deduction – the “power of appointment” trust,
the “estate” trust, and the QTIP trust.
Power
of appointment Trust – Requirements:
·
The spouse must be entitled to all of the income
produced by the assets of the trust (note that the law states “all of the
income” not “all of the net income”).
·
The income produced by the trust must be payable
at least annually.
·
The surviving spouse must be given a general
power of appointment (during lifetime, death or both) exercisable in favor of
the spouse or the spouse’s estate, or the creditors of the spouse or the
spouse’s estate.
·
The power must be exercisable by the surviving
spouse in all events.
·
No person may have any power to appoint any part
of the trust assets to any person other than the surviving spouse.
The trust property will qualify for
the marital deduction if the spouse is given the power to appoint at death. The
spouse does not have to be given the power to withdraw the principle during
lifetime. A trust should provide that the spouse has the right to demand that
the trust be made income producing.
Estate
Trusts – Requirements:
·
The trust must provide for income to the
surviving spouse for life (payable to, or accumulated for, the surviving
spouse’s benefit).
·
The remainder the trust (both principal and any
accumulated income) must be payable to the surviving spouse’s estate at the
surviving spouse’s death.
Accumulations will be taxed as part
of the surviving spouse’s estate at the surviving spouse’s death along with the
original corpus.
The
estate marital trust is indicated where (a) there is a need or a desire to
invest in non-income producing property, (b) the survivor will not need trust
assets or income during the survivor’s lifetime, and (c) the property placed
into the trust is not likely to appreciate substantially in value.
Qualified
Terminable Interest Property (QTIP) Trust – Requirements:
·
The same requirements regarding “all income to
the surviving spouse and payable at least annually” that apply in the power of
appointment trust apply here. Thus, the survivor must receive all of the
current beneficial interest in the trust.
·
This trust need not have any power in the
surviving spouse to appoint or control the disposition of the property.
·
There must be no power to shift any of the trust
property to anyone other than the spouse during the spouse’s lifetime.
·
The spouse must have the power to require the
trustee to make the assets produce income.
·
The executor must elect to have the trust
treated as a QTIP trust on the estate tax return by showing its value on
schedule M of the estate tax return.
As with the other forms of marital
trusts, at the surviving spouse’s death the remaining corpus must be included
in her estate.
In
the event of a common accident when it is impossible to ascertain who dies
first, the Uniform Simultaneous Death Act would raise a presumption that
neither spouse survived the other and
therefore, would defeat the marital deduction. The
application of such act can be overcome by inserting into the documents
creating a marital trust a survivorship clause that creates a presumption that,
for the purposes of the marital deduction, the spouse is deemed to survive if
it is not possible to establish the order of deaths.
The
life insurance/pourover will combination – In this arrangement, an individual
establishes a trust during lifetime and names the trust as beneficiary of his
insurance policies. When the grantor dies, the insurance maintained on his life
is paid directly to the trust. The grantor’s other assets pass through probate
and are “pour over” by will into the trust. If the trust was an irrevocable
life insurance trust and the grantor-insured never had any incidents of
ownership over the insurance on his life and didn’t transfer insurance on his
life to the trust within three years of his death, the insurance will not be
included in his estate.
The
Survivor’s Property Trust or Power of Appointment Trust – The “A” Trust – This
trust would provide that all income from the trust be paid to the surviving
spouse during his/her lifetime. Where Trust A is used as a marital deduction
trust, the pourover trust in many cases would contain a funding formula to
ensure that the power of appointment trust together with any QTIP Trust, would
receive just enough property to reduce the federal estate tax at the death of
the grantor to zero. The surviving spouse will usually be given the right to
designate by will or other written instrument who will receive the corpus of
the marital trust and such appointment may be made to anyone the surviving
spouse chooses, including the surviving spouse’s estate. The surviving spouse
may also be given the right to withdraw any part of the corpus of the
appointment trust during lifetime.
The
Bypass Trust – The “B” trust – The second trust, often called the “B,” bypass,
non-marital, or family trust, is designed to receive property that is not
allocated to the power of appointment trust, the estate trust, or the QTIP
trust. An amount equal to the estate tax applicable exclusion ($5,250,000 in
2013, assuming no taxable lifetime gifts are made) is place in this trust.
Since the life estate terminates at the death of the surviving spouse, the
surviving spouse did not create the life estate, and the surviving spouse has
no general power of appointment over the trust property, there will be no
transfer of property that is includable in the estate of the surviving spouse
subject to the federal estate tax at death. Thus, this trust “bypasses” the
survivor’s taxable estate and is, therefore, often called a Credit Equivalent
Bypass Trust (CEBT) because it is funded with an amount equal to the exemption
equivalent of the unified credit.
To
enhance the financial security of the surviving spouse without causing later
estate taxation, the surviving spouse can be given a “limited” or “special”
power of appointment under this family trust. A power of appointment will not
be classified as a “general” power and will not subject the corpus of the trust
to federal estate taxes at the death of the holder, so long as the power cannot
be exercised in favor of the older of the power, his estate, his creditors, or
the creditors of his estate.
The
bypass trust can also safely provide the surviving spouse with a noncumulative
limited right of withdrawal. Typically, this provision states that is the A and
Q trusts are depleted, he surviving spouse is given the right to make limited
withdrawals from the bypass or family trust. The surviving spouse is provided with
a noncumulative right to withdraw each year the greater of an IRC specified de
minimus amount equal to the greater of (a) 5 percent of the corpus of the trust
or (b) $5,000. Although this 5 or 5 power will not cause the entire corpus of
the family trust to be subject to estate tax, the amount subject to withdrawal
in the year of the surviving spouse’s death will be included in the surviving
spouse’s estate.
The most common dispositive provision requires that the
corpus of this trust be divided into separate equal trust funds for the benefit
of the grantor’s children. Another popular approach is to keep the amounts
passing to the children in a “common pot” until the children reach the age at
which it is customary to have completed college. As an additional option, and
customarily, with large estates, it might be preferable to continue the trusts
for the lifetime of the children. These types of trusts are known as “dynasty”
or GST Trusts. In this way, the trust assets can pass to the grandchildren and down
to the lower generations while remaining out of the descendants’ estates.
A
greater degree of flexibility may be obtained by utilizing a “spraying” or
“sprinkle” clause. This provision authorizes the trustees (other than a trustee
who is beneficiary), at their discretion, to spray or sprinkle the net income
of the bypass trust among the surviving spouse and the grantor’s children or
other issue in any way the trustees determine.
The
estate tax at the survivor’s death may be reduced by use of an accumulation
provision. Instead of the non-marital income being paid to a surviving spouse,
it may be accumulated in a non-marital trust and pass, free of estate tax, at
the survivor’s death. Meanwhile, the survivor has been permitted to invade the
appointment trust (or the QTIP trust) and consume some of the principal of
those trusts. The downside of this technique is using up marital trust assets
and building up non-marital trust assets that will pass estate tax free at the
surviving spouse’s death is that allowing large amounts of income to accumulate
in the non-marital trust may result in adverse income taxation.
The
“spinkle,” “spray,” or “accumulation” clauses should be avoided where the
bypass trust will be a recipient of stock in an S corporation.
QTIP
Tusts – the “Q” Trust – When it is desired that an amount of estate in excess
of the estate tax unified credit exemption equivalent (applicable exclusion)
amount should produce a marital deduction at the death of the first spouse to
die, but should not be subject to surviving spouse’s control, a QTIP may be
indicated.
All of
the income of this trust must be paid, at least annually, to the surviving
spouse. No provision for invasions of the trust can be made for anyone other
than the surviving spouse or the marital deduction will be lost. Likewise, it
would be lost if there were any condition or power in anyone else that could
prevent the surviving spouse from receiving all the trust income for life.
Additionally, the surviving spouse should be given a power to require the
trustee to make all of the trust assets income producing.
To the extent that the trustee has
elected to take a marital deduction at the first spouse’s death for assets
going into that trust (usually 100%), the assets remaining in the QTIP (Q)
trust at the death of the surviving spouse will be included in the estate of
the surviving spouse. Thus, the marital deduction has merely deferred the tax
on any assets in this trust that are not used up for the benefit of the
surviving spouse
How
do the mechanics of the A-B or A-B-Q trust plan work? – First, an inter vivos
(living) trust instrument can be drafted creating the different trusts to be
used. Although the terms of the trust are determined during the grantor’s
lifetime, it will not become operative until it is funded at the grantor’s
death. The trust is revocable because the grantor possesses the power to alter,
amend, or revoke the
trust until his death. The grantor will provide in his will
that his probate property, after payment of settlement costs any specific
bequests or devices, will be added (poured over) to the trust.
The
essential provision in the A-B or A-B-Q trust is known as the marital deduction
formula. All property included in the decedent’s probate estate or made payable
to the inter vivos trust will be divided in accordance with the formula clause
in the trust agreement. The funding clause would also provide that the amount
of any such marital portion should be reduced by any property includable in the
estate that passes directly to the surviving spouse as a result of the
grantor’s death. Insurance on the life of the grantor is typically the most
efficient and effective way to insure that cash is available to pay the
required tax when it is due.
Family
Limited Partnerships – A family limited partnership is a limited liability
entity created under state law. Ownership of the partnership interests is
typically limited to members of the same family unit. Most states have adopted
the Uniform Limited Partnership Act (ULPA) or some modified version thereof.
There is generally a high degree of uniformity among states.
The
partners designate a general partner (or general partners) who will be given
management responsibility and who will assume personal liability for debts and
other liability for debts and other liabilities that are not satisfied from the
assets of the FLP. In return for giving up their rights of management and
control over the assets of the FLP, the personal liability of the limited
partners generally is limited to the amount of capital that they contribute.
When is
use of such a device indicated? - Family
limited partnerships are often used to fractionalize the ownership of business
assets, investment assets, such as marketable securities, or real estate to
take advantage of gift and estate tax valuation discounts which significantly
reduce transfer taxes. A family limited partnership would be appropriate in the
following circumstances: 1) to reduce the value of an estate for transfer tax
purposes; 2) when it is desired to shift the income tax burden from a parent
who is in a high income tax bracket to a child or other relative who is in a
lower income tax bracket; 3) when it is desirable to conduct a family business
in a form other than a sole proprietorship; 4)Where a parent desires to
maintain control over assets that will be transferred to younger generations
through gifts of limited partner interests; 5) Where it is possible to protect
assets from creditors of the partners; 6) when retention of assets within the
family unit is desired; 7) where a parent desires to protect assets, which are
to be transferred to younger generations, from being dissipated through
mismanagement or divorce; 8) where flexibility in setting the rules for
managing property is desired; 9) to simplify ownership of assets; 10) to ease
the distribution of assets at death among family members without having to
remove the assets from the partnership; 11) to avoid out of state probate
costs; 12) to discourage family members from fighting over Family Limited
Partnership assets, and to provide a forum for the resolution of disputes among
family members f and when such disputes arise.
Many
practitioners recommend use of a family limited partnership for parents who
desire to maintain control of their assets while having transferred away most
of the assets’ economic benefits.
The
general partner should have the necessary willingness, knowledge, and
experience to do the following:
·
Manage and invest partnership assets.
·
Make decisions as to distributions of
partnership income and/or assets.
·
File income tax returns on behalf of the
partnership and understand the income tax law.
·
Furnish annual partnership income tax
information (Schedule k-1) to the partners.
·
Make necessary filings with the state’s
Secretary of State.
·
Give or withhold consent to transfers of
partnership interests and amendment of the family limited partnership
agreement.
Ensuring family ownership –
Continuous family ownership of the family limited partnership is guaranteed by restricting
each partner’s ability to sell or otherwise transfer his interest to non-family
members. In almost all instances, the FLP agreement should prohibit the
partners from selling or transferring their interests in a manner that is
disruptive to the continuation of the family asset arrangement plan or
disruptive to family harmony.
Protecting Assets – Family limited
partnerships provide a limited degree of asset protection to the partners since
underlying assets of the FLP generally cannot be attached to satisfy personal
debts of the limited partners. Mere threat of tax liability without income to
pay that liability is strong incentive for creditors to enter into more
favorable settlement with debtor-partners. A debtor-partner is not necessarily
guaranteed access to the FLP assets if the judgment creditor is insistent upon
collecting its debt. The use of an FLP by itself as an asset protection device
is not a guaranteed means of avoiding creditor liability.
Implications and issues in
community property states – In New Mexico the income from separate property of
one spouse is separate property income. In Texas property of one spouse is
community property income. It is in the former group of states where the FLP
may require extra vigilance if it is owned prior to marriage, is given or
inherited, or is separate property of a spouse for whatever reason. In these
instances, it is necessary to make a distinction between the earnings of the
manager (which is probably community property) and the income received from
ownership of the partnership interest (which is separate property).
Using the separate property income
from the FLP to purchase items that are taken in the names of both spouses
creates a taxable gift (with the exception of real property taken as joint
tenants). This does not create a federal gift tax problem because of the
unlimited marital deduction that applies to both separate property and
community property. Depending upon state gift tax law, however, it may still
create a gift tax problem.
The FLP should consider making an
election under Section 754 to obtain a basis adjustment under Section 743 due
to the death of either spouse. The election will adjust the income tax basis of
the community property interest of both spouses in the FLP. Another frequently
encountered problem in an FLP in community property states is the failure to
designate in the agreement whether the FLP interest is separate property or
community property. In some states, dividends, interest and rents from separate
property are separate property. These states include New Mexico.
Summary of the Plan of action:
Basic overview - Because John has separate
property from before he married Susan, property from when he inherited from his
father as well as a son from a previous marriage I would advise that they set
up a marital deduction and by pass trust. More specifically I would recommend a
marital deduction A-B-Q trust for John and a marital deduction A-B trust for
Susan. Additionally, John can establish a family limited partnership in which
to place the ranch owned by John. Limited partnership ownership of the ranch
would be placed in a QTIP trust. The John inherited the ranch, therefore it is
not
community property even though New
Mexico is a community property state. It is would be possible for the ranch to
hire the son, Gary, to work on the ranch and allow him to become a limited
partner. Limited partnership interest in the ranch can be gifted to Gary, the
QTIP trust, and Steve and Mary while John continues as the general partner.
This would allow John to gift away most of the value of the ranch to his
children while retaining control of the ranch.
First a bypass trust needs to be
established in which can be placed an amount equal to the estate tax unified
credit applicable exclusion (the 2013 unified credit equates to exempting
$5,250,000 of assets from the estate.) The balance of the decedent’s assets
will go into the marital trust tax free because of the unlimited marital
deduction. However, the assets in the marital trust will be subject to tax at
the death of the surviving spouse because of the broad powers the survivor is
given in the trust. Two types of marital deduction trusts should be
established. A general power of appointment trust, gives the surviving spouse a
right to the trusts income for life coupled with a power to appoint the trust
property during lifetime or death to anyone the surviving spouse wishes. Also,
a QTIP trust where the spouse is given a right to income for life, but need not
be given a power of appointment over the property.
The balance of the marital
deduction property would go to a separate trust (often called “Trust A”) that
would be controllable by the surviving spouse as to its disposition.
Particularly for community property, where the survivor already owns half, it
may be very helpful to obtain the marital deduction for all of the estate in
excess of the unified credit equivalent (with the exempt portion going to the
bypass (or “B”) trust to avoid tax at the survivor’s death), but to still provide
that some of the deducted property will ultimately go to the children.
The surviving spouse can be given
the power to appoint the property to anyone other than the spouse, his/her
creditors, his/her estate, and the creditors of his/her estate. Such a power
can be inserted in and held in either a bypass or a QTIP trust without adverse
tax consequences.
A life insurance trust coupled with
a “pourover will” can be set up. Here a revocable insurance trust is created on
the grantor’s life. The grantor’s will contains a provision to the effect that
the grantor’s residuary estate, what is left after payments of debts, expenses,
taxes, and specific bequests, is to be “poured over” into the living trust. The
pourover will also passes any other personal property to the trust. The trust
instrument provides that upon receiving the insurance proceeds from the
insurance company and the residuary estate property from the pourover will
provisions, the total principal will then be divided into two (or three) parts:
a portion will go to the marital or “A” trust, a portion will go to the family
or “B” trust, and a portion will go to the QTIP trust, which latter will
qualify for the marital deduction, but be distributed at the survivor’s death
as provided by the grantor in the trust instrument. John’s group term life
insurance can be changed to have the trust named as beneficiary of the
insurance policy.
There should be inserted into the
documents a marital trust a survivorship clause that creates a presumption that
for the purposes of the marital deduction, the spouse is deemed to survive if
it is not possible to establish the order of deaths.
The survivor’s Property Trust or Power of
appointment Trust – the “A” trust – would provide that all income from the
trust be paid to the surviving spouse during his/her lifetime There trust A is
used as a marital deduction trust, the pourover trust in many cases would
contain a funding formula to ensure that the power of appointment trust
together with any QTIP trust, would receive just enough
property to reduce the federal
estate tax at the death of the grantor to zero. The surviving spouse will
usually be given the right to designate by will or other written instrument who
will receive the corpus of the marital trust and such appointment may be made
to anyone the surviving spouse chooses, including the surviving spouse’s
estate. The surviving spouse may also be given the right to withdraw any part
of the corpus of the appointment trust during lifetime. In this trust can be
placed the stock held by the couple. The couple stock is community property so
only half of it would be subject to the marital deduction. John’s 401(K) can be
placed in here as well. The lake cabin in Michigan can be placed in this trust
as well as it is John’s separate property it will get the advantage of the
marital deduction.
The Bypass Trust, the second trust,
often called the “B,” bypass, non-marital, or family trust, is designated to
receive property that is not allocated to the power of appointment trust, or
the QTIP trust. An amount equal to the estate tax applicable exclusion
($5,250,000 in 2013) assuming no taxable lifetime gifts are made) is placed in
the trust, since the life estate terminates at the death of the surviving
spouse, the surviving spouse did not create the life estate, and the surviving
spouse has no general power of appointment over the trust property, there will
be no transfer of property that is includable in the estate of the surviving
spouse subject to the federal estate tax at death. This, this trust “bypasses”
the survivor’s taxable estate and is, therefore, often called a Credit
Equivalent Bypass Trust (CEBT) because it is funded with an amount equal to the
exemption equivalent of the unified credit.
To enhance the financial security
of the surviving spouse without causing later estate taxation, the surviving
spouse can be given a “limited” or “special” power of appointment under this
family trust. A power of appointment will not be classified as a “general”
power and will not subject the corpus of the trust to federal estate taxes at
the death of the holder, so long as the power cannot be exercised in favor of
the older of the power, his estate, his creditors, or the creditors of his
estate
In the Bypass Trust the surviving
spouse can be provided with a noncumulative right to withdraw each year the
greater of an IRC specified de minimus amount equal to the greater of (a) 5
percent of the corpus of the trust or (b) $5,000. Although this 5 or 5 power
will not cause the entire corpus of the family trust to be subject to estate
tax, the amount subject to withdrawal in the year of the surviving spouse’s
death will be included in the surviving spouse’s estate.
The estate tax at the survivor’s
death may be reduced by use of an accumulation provision. Instead of the
non-marital income being paid to a surviving spouse, it may be accumulated in a
non-marital trust and pass, free of estate tax, at the survivor’s death.
Meanwhile, the survivor has been permitted to invade the appointment trust (or
the QTIP trust) and consume some of the principal of those trusts. The downside
of this technique is using up marital trust assets and building up non-marital
trust assets that will pass estate tax free at the surviving spouse’s death is
that allowing large amounts of income to accumulate in the non-marital trust
may result in adverse income taxation.
The vacation condominium in Florida
should be held as a tenancy by the entirety. This will allow the property to
pass to the surviving spouse without being taxed and cannot be attached by
creditors.
The business partnership should be
changed from a partnership to a limited liability corporation. To protect the
Susan John from any potential liability. Additionally, a buy-sell agreement
should be written by the owners of the gymnastics LLC so in the event of the
death of an owner, particularly Susan, the ownership interest will be bought
out by the surviving owners.
Asset investing as
part of the action plan:
Much of the financial assets held by John and Susan are held
in the same types of stocks. John and Susan should consider the following
method of investing to preserve and promote the growth of their wealth.
John
Meyer gives this advice to the individual investor in a 2004 Business Week interview: “First, get
diversified. Come up with a portfolio that covers a lot of asset classes.
Second, you want to keep you fees low. That means avoiding the most hyped, but
expensive funds, in favor of low cost index funds. And finally, invest for the
long term. Investors should simply have index funds to keep their fees low and
their taxes down.” (Symons, 2oo4)
In short: Diversify, avoid fees
and taxes, index, and take a long term view.
David
Swensen, who rebalances to the policy portfolio as often as daily, offers his
thoughts in Pioneering Portfolio
Management: “Far too many investors spend enormous amounts of time and
energy constructing policy portfolios, only to allow the allocations they
establish to drift with the whims of the markets…. Without a disciplined a
disciplined approach to maintaining policy targets, fiduciaries fail to achieve
the desired characteristics for the institution’s portfolio.”
In
a tax-sheltered account make a point to review the portfolio yearly, and then
rebalance when it strays.
Faber, M.T.,
& Richardson E. (2009) The Ivy
Portfolio: How to Invest Like the Endowments and Avoid Bear Markets.
Hoboken, N.J. John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
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