Courts split over valuation of lottery prize payments.Two recent district court decisions have been handed down on the issue of whether an estate's rights to a decedent's remaining series of annual lottery lottery, scheme for distributing prizes by lot or other method of chance selection to persons who have paid for the opportunity to win. The term is not applicable when lots are drawn without payment by the interested parties to determine some matter, e.g. prize payments should be valued using the Sec. 7520 annuity annuity: see insurance. annuity Payment made at a fixed interval. A common example is the payment received by retirees from their pension plan. There are two main classes of annuities: annuities certain and contingent annuities. tables. Although both courts held that the lack of marketability Marketability A negotiable security is said to have good marketability if there is an active secondary market in which it can easily be resold. marketability The ease with which an investment may be bought and sold in the secondary market. of remaining lottery payments may justify the use of a valuation method other than the tables in certain circumstances CIRCUMSTANCES, evidence. The particulars which accompany a fact. 2. The facts proved are either possible or impossible, ordinary and probable, or extraordinary and improbable, recent or ancient; they may have happened near us, or afar off; they are public or , the decisions show that it may be difficult for a taxpayer to prove to a court that it is entitled en·ti·tle tr.v. en·ti·tled, en·ti·tling, en·ti·tles 1. To give a name or title to. 2. To furnish with a right or claim to something: to use an alternate method of valuation. See. 7520 In general, the value of any annuity for estate tax purposes must be determined under annuity valuation tables provided by the IRS An abbreviation for the Internal Revenue Service, a federal agency charged with the responsibility of administering and enforcing internal revenue laws. in accordance Accordance is Bible Study Software for Macintosh developed by OakTree Software, Inc.[] As well as a standalone program, it is the base software packaged by Zondervan in their Bible Study suites for Macintosh. with Sec. 7520. A series of lottery prize payments is an annuity that is potentially subject to valuation according to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. Sec. 7520 (see Estate of Gribauskas, 116 TC 142 (2001)). However, if a taxpayer can prove that the value produced by the tables is unreasonable and unrealistic and that there is an available alternate valuation method that produces a more reasonable and realistic value, the alternate method may be used (O'Reilly, 973 F2d 1403 (8th Cir. 1992)). Case Law The circuits have split on the issue of whether the value of remaining lottery prize payments for estate tax purposes must be determined using the Sec. 7520 annuity tables. The key issue in these cases is the effect of the lack of marketability of remaining lottery prize payments on their value in general and their value as determined using the Sec. 7520 annuity tables. The Second and Ninth Circuits have held that the lack of marketability of remaining lottery prize payments may justify the use of a valuation method other than the Sec. 7520 annuity tables (Estate of Gribauskas, 342 F3d 85 (2d Cir. 2003), rev'g 116 TC 142 (2001); Shackleford, 262 F3d 1028 (9th Cir. 2001)). Both courts found that the right to transfer property is one of the most important aspects in determining the value of property and that an asset is worth less if it is nontransferable Adj. 1. nontransferable - incapable of being transferred unassignable, untransferable inalienable, unalienable - incapable of being repudiated or transferred to another; "endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights" than if it is freely transferable. Both courts also found that the Sec. 7520 annuity tables do not take lack of marketability into account. Therefore, they concluded that it is possible that the use of the tables might (but not necessarily would) produce an unreasonable or unrealistic value in the case of remaining lottery prize payments. In both Gribauskas and Shackleford, the courts held that the tables did produce unrealistic and unreasonable valuations based on the facts before them and that a different method of valuation was justified. In contrast, the Fifth Circuit has held that the annuity tables should be used in all cases to value remaining lottery payments (Cook, 349 F3d 850 (5th Cir. 2003)). While marketability is an important factor in the valuation of assets when capital appreciation is an element of the assets' value or the value of the asset is otherwise difficult to ascertain, the court held it was not important in the case of remaining lottery payments because lack of marketability does not alter or jeopardize jeop·ard·ize tr.v. jeop·ard·ized, jeop·ard·iz·ing, jeop·ard·izes To expose to loss or injury; imperil. See Synonyms at endanger. the recipient's entitlement An individual's right to receive a value or benefit provided by law. Commonly recognized entitlements are benefits, such as those provided by Social Security or Workers' Compensation. to receive them. In addition, their value is readily ascertainable as·cer·tain tr.v. as·cer·tained, as·cer·tain·ing, as·cer·tains 1. To discover with certainty, as through examination or experimentation. See Synonyms at discover. 2. by simply aggregating the payments to be received. Although the value must be discounted because the payments are received over time, the court noted that the annuity tables account for this by discounting a stream of annuity payments to present value. Therefore, the annuity valuation tables produce a reasonable and realistic value for remaining lottery payments, and the use of a different valuation method for them is not warranted. Current Cases In Mary C. Davis, Ex'x, D. NH, 6/13/07, the decedent An individual who has died. The term literally means "one who is dying," but it is commonly used in the law to denote one who has died, particularly someone who has recently passed away. won the Massachusetts Massachusetts (măsəch `sĭts), most populous of the New England states of the NE United States. lottery, entitling him to receive a series of annual prize
payments. The decedent (who was then a resident of New Hampshire New Hampshire, one of the New England states of the NE United States. It is bordered by Massachusetts (S), Vermont, with the Connecticut R. forming the boundary (W), the Canadian province of Quebec (NW), and Maine and a short strip of the Atlantic Ocean (E). ) died
before he received all of the annual payments, and the remaining lottery
prize payments became payable to his estate. The estate reported the
remaining lottery prize payments as an asset on his estate tax return at
a value determined by using the Sec. 7520 annuity tables. The estate
later decided that, because the right to receive the remaining lottery
prize payments is nontransferable under state law, the value of the
remaining lottery prize payments was considerably less than the amount
it had determined using the annuity tables, and it filed an informal
claim for refund TO REFUND. To pay back by the party who has received it, to the party who has paid it, money which ought not to have been paid.2. On a deficiency of assets, executors and administrators cum testamento annexo, are entitled to have refunded to them legacies based on the lower value. The IRS denied the refund claim, and the estate filed a refund suit in district court. The district court held that lack of marketability likely reduced the value of the taxpayer's remaining lottery prize payments and that the Sec. 7520 annuity tables did not take into account lack of marketability. However, it further held that lack of marketability probably resulted in a minimal (if any) reduction of the value of the remaining lottery prize payments; at most, their true value was 5% less than their value would be if Freely transferable (in which case they would be valued using the Sec. 7520 annuity tables).The court found that a 5% difference between the true market value for the remaining lottery prize payments and the value determined for them using the Sec. 7520 annuity tables would not render the value determined using the tables unreasonable or unrealistic, and it noted that in the cases in which an alternate method of valuation was allowed, the differences were in excess of 25%. Although the court did not hold that lack of marketability could never cause the value determined under the Sec. 7520 annuity tables for remaining lottery prize payments to be unreasonable and unrealistic, based on the expert testimony Testimony about a scientific, technical, or professional issue given by a person qualified to testify because of familiarity with the subject or special training in the field. in the case, it expressed skepticism skepticism (skĕp`tĭsĭzəm) [Gr.,=to reflect], philosophic position holding that the possibility of knowledge is limited either because of the limitations of the mind or because of the inaccessibility of its object. that lack of marketability would ever cause a large enough reduction in the true value of remaining lottery prize payments for this to occur. In Carol Negron, Ex'x, N.D. OH, 6/4/07, the decedent also died with remaining lottery prize payments (in this case, from Ohio).The estate elected to take a lump-sum payment, calculated using a 9% discount rate, in lieu of Instead of; in place of; in substitution of. It does not mean in addition to. the remaining annual prize payments. On the decedent's estate tax return, the estate reported the remaining lottery prize payments as an asset with a value equal to the gross amount of the lump-sum payment. On audit, the IRS determined a substantially higher value for the remaining lottery prize payments (based on the Sec. 7520 annuity tables) and assessed additional tax to the estate. The estate paid the additional tax and filed a suit for refund in district court. The district court specifically stated that it agreed with the Second and Ninth Circuits that lack of marketability reduced the value of the remaining lottery prize payments, and that the use of the Sec. 7520 annuity valuation tables might therefore not be appropriate in the case (despite the fact that the taxpayer had not specifically based its value of the payments on their marketability). However, the court held that it could not approve the taxpayer's use of the amount of the actual lumpsum payment it received from the state lottery A game of chance operated by a state government. Generally a lottery offers a person the chance to win a prize in exchange for something of lesser value. Most lotteries offer a large cash prize, and the chance to win the cash prize is typically available for one dollar. commission. The taxpayer had not provided sufficient evidence (in the form of expert testimony) to prove that this method of valuing remaining lottery prize payments was more reasonable and realistic than using the Sec. 7520 annuity tables. Reflections Although the FitCh fitch: see polecat. Circuit and the Tax Court (in a case in which it was overruled) have held otherwise, the clear consensus among the courts that have decided remaining lottery prize payment cases is that (1) the lack of marketability of these payments has an effect on the value of the payments, (2) the Sec. 7520 annuity tables do not adequately (or do not at all) account for the reduction in value due to lack of marketability, and (3) under certain circumstances, the tables may produce a result that is so unreasonable and unrealistic that the use of an alternate method of valuation that produces a more reasonable and realistic result is justified. However, all the courts have held that a taxpayer seeking to use an alternate method must prove that the alternate method produces a better result. In addition, there must be a significant percentage difference between the value using the tables and the value using the alternate method. As the Davis case shows, even if a court is open to the idea that lack of marketability can be grounds for using an alternate method, and the difference in values produced by using the Sec. 7520 tables and the estate's proposed alternate method is great, it can be difficult in the face of IRS opposition to convince a court that an alternate method is valid and produces a better result than the tables. In order to prevail in a remaining lottery prize payment case, an estate must be prepared to present credible expert testimony as evidence that the lack of marketability of the remaining payments causes the claimed difference in values. MARY C. DAVIS, EX'X, D. NH, 6/13/07; CAROL NEGRON, EX'X, N.D. OH, 6/4/07. |
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