Marital trusts and the Sec. 754 election.If either a qualified terminable interest property (QTIP QTIP - Qualified Terminable Interest Property QTIP - Quantum Theory Integral Package QTIP - Quit Taking It Personally) trust or a marital general power of appointment power of appointment n. the right to leave property by will, transfer, gift or distribution under a trust. Such a power is often found in a trust in which each of the trustors (the creators of the trust, usually a husband and wife) is empowered to write a will leaving his or her share (or some part) to someone. If the power of appointment is not used then it expires on the death of the person with the power. (GPA) owns a partnership interest at the time a surviving spouse dies, the partnership will not be eligible to adjust its assets' "inside" basis as a result of the death under Sec. 754, even though the value of the interest will be included in the spouse's taxable estate Taxable Estate The total value of a deceased person's assets that are subject to taxation - minus liabilities and minus the prescribed tax-deductible portion of assets left behind by the deceased.Notes: The following items can be deducted to determine the taxable portion of the estate: funeral expenses paid out of the estate, debts owed by the deceased at the time of death and value of the assets passed on to the deceased's spouse. under Sec. 2044. This is because the QTIP is the partner, not the surviving spouse, and a trust cannot die. Background Under Secs. 754 and 743, a partnership can adjust the inside basis of its assets on the sale or exchange of a partnership interest or on a partner's death. Example: Partnership P is owned 60% by J and 40% by K. P owns marketable securities with a $100,000 basis and a $1 million fair market value (FMV). When--J dies, his partnership interest is worth $600,000, creating an additional $540,000 "asset" ($600,000 FMV at death--J's 60% portion of the $100,000 inside basis). Thus, a Sec. 754 election increases the total basis of the marketable securities (in P's hands) from $100,000 to $640,000. The marketable securities are later sold for $1.1 million. As a result, P incurs only $460,000 in gain ($1,100,000--$640,000), rather than $1 million. The QTIP trust provisions were enacted in 1981 for decedents dying after 1981. They included Sec. 2044, under which the assets transferred to a QTIP trust on the first spouse's death are included in the surviving spouse's estate, as long as the latter had a qualifying income interest for life, even if he or she had no power or control over the trust property. If the marital trust Marital trust A trust created to allow one spouse to transfer, during life or upon death, an unlimited amount of property to his/her spouse without incurring gift or estate tax. is a GPA trust, the surviving spouse has the power to appoint the entire trust interest in favor of himself or herself, his or her estate, his or her creditors, or the creditors of his or her estate. A GPA trust is includible in the surviving spouse's estate under Sec. 2041. The Marital Trust Dilemma The triggering event Triggering Event A certain milestone or event that a participant in a qualified plan must experience in order to be eligible to receive a distribution from a qualified plan.Notes: Triggering events are typically characterized by the attainment of retirement age (as defined under the plan), termination of employment, termination of the plan, the participant becoming disabled (as defined under the plan), or the participant being deceased. in the example above is the partner's death. If the partnership interest had instead been owned by a marital trust, there would have been no trigger, because the partner (i.e., the trust) cannot die. This is true even though the surviving spouse (as the marital trust's beneficiary) will have to include the property in his or her taxable estate under Sec. 2044 or 2041 .Thus, the partnership may not be eligible to make a Sec. 754 adjustment to basis, because there has not been either a transfer of a partnership interest by a sale or exchange, or a partner's death. Potential Alternative Nevertheless, the partnership will be able to step up the inside basis of the partnership interest held by the marital trust, but not as of the spouse's date of death. Instead, an "exchange" that qualifies for a step-up under Sec. 754 will occur when the marital trust distributes the partnership interest to the trust's beneficiaries. This is based on Sec. 761(e), Distributions of partnership interests treated as exchanges, which states: Except as otherwise provided in regulations, for purposes of-- (1) section 708 (relating to continuation of partnership), (2) section 743 (relating to optional adjustment to basis of partnership property), and (3) any other provision of this subchapter specified in regulations prescribed by the Secretary, any distribution of an interest in a partnership (not otherwise treated as an exchange) shall be treated as an exchange. Thus, based on Sec. 761(e)(2), the marital trust's distribution of the partnership interest to the trust's beneficiaries will qualify as an exchange under Sec. 743. As a result, there will be a Sec. 754 adjustment, but it will apply only when the marital trust distributes the partnership interest to the beneficiaries, not when the surviving spouse dies. Caveats The main problem is the often typical, significant time delay from when the surviving spouse dies until the trustee distributes the assets to the beneficiaries. For example, the trust provisions may not allow the trustee to distribute the assets until the beneficiaries reach a specified age (e.g., 25, 35 or 45). Even if the marital trust assets are distributed soon after the administration of the surviving spouse's estate, there could be a delay of at least 12-18 months or, perhaps, as long as three or more years, depending on the circumstances. A delay can create a. disparity between the "outside basis" of the partnership interest (which will be stepped up to FMV as of the surviving spouse's date of death under Sec. 1014(b)(10)), and the "inside" basis, which will not be stepped up via Secs. 754 and 761 until the marital trust distributes the partnership interest to the beneficiaries. Another practical problem is that the partnership interest's FMV will have to be redetermined when it is distributed from the marital trust. If the FMV of the assets fluctuates significantly, or a significant period has elapsed since the surviving spouse's death, a new valuation appraisal may be needed. A distribution of the marital trust as soon as possible after the surviving spouse's death is always advantageous, because it limits the difference between the partnership interest's outside and inside bases. FROM SALLY E. DAY, CPA, SOUTH BEND, IN |
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