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QTIP created under state law not federally binding.


Under IRC (Internet Relay Chat) Computer conferencing on the Internet. There are hundreds of IRC channels on numerous subjects that are hosted on IRC servers around the world. After joining a channel, your messages are broadcast to everyone listening to that channel.  section 2056(a), an estate may claim a marital deduction marital deduction n. when one spouse dies, the survivor may take a tax deduction of half of the value of the estate of the dying spouse. Thus, the minimum value of the estate before there is a possible federal estate tax rises from $600,000 to $1,200,000 at the death  for property passing to the surviving spouse. As a general rule, the law denies a deduction for "terminal interests" (those that will terminate or rail "on the lapse of time, on the occurrence of an event or contingency or on the failure of an event or contingency to occur"). This includes life estates. The Economic Recovery Act of 1981 modified the marital deduction rules by adding section 2056(b)(7), which allows a deduction for qualified terminable interest property (QTIP QTIP Qualified Terminable Interest Property
QTIP Quit Taking It Personally
QTIP Quantum Theory Integral Package
). In a QTIP a 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.  passes to the surviving spouse a "qualifying income interest for life." Generally, when the surviving spouse has such an interest, he or she is entitled to all income from the property, payable annually or at more frequent intervals.

The nature of the interest that passes to the surviving spouse depends on the laws of the state under which the interest passes. However, the IRS An abbreviation for the Internal Revenue Service, a federal agency charged with the responsibility of administering and enforcing internal revenue laws.  is not bound to consider a state court order that modifies a trust interest. In interpreting a will, the decedent's intention is the prime consideration based on a sympathetic reading of the entire document in view of all applicable facts and circumstances. Extrinsic evidence Facts or information not embodied in a written agreement such as a will, trust, or contract.

Extrinsic evidence is similar to extraneous evidence, which is not furnished by the document in and of itself but is derived from external sources.
 should not be considered in the absence of ambiguity in the will.

At the time of his death on December 20, 1996, Charles N. Aronson resided in Cattaraugus County, New York Cattaraugus County is a county located in the U.S. state of New York. As of the 2000 census, the population was 83,955. The county name comes from a Seneca Indian word meaning "bad smelling banks," referring to the odor of natural gas which leaked from seams in rock formations. . He was survived by his wife, Josephine R. Aronson (Jo), and his grandson, Barney P. Aronson (Bar), among others. Bar was the estate's executor. Charles and his wife lived on property referred to as Hundred Acres in a home called the Big House. Bar and his wife also lived on Hundred Acres in the Little House, taking care of Charles, Jo and the land.

The decedent's will was probated on January 9, 1997. Drafted by him and executed in 1993, it was the culmination of wills and codicils written and revoked dating to 1980. Under the 1993 will, Jo was to receive all real property including Hundred Acres and the Big House. Bar would inherit the remainder of the estate, with Jo to receive "as much income from such assets as she needs, for as long as she lives." Charles was concerned about the maintenance of Hundred Acres after his death. His will stipulated "no changes or alteration in the structure of the general makeup of the Big House shall ever be made."

The decedent structured his bequest to assure preservation of Hundred Acres over the long term. As written, the will did not seek to minimize federal estate taxes. A review of extrinsic evidence, correspondence between the decedent and his attorney and the succession of earlier wills indicated Charles was knowledgeable about estate tax laws, had created and revoked QTIPs under earlier wills, had not wished to relinquish control of assets to minimize estate taxes and was aware of the value of his estate after taxes as structured in the 1993 will.

On February 5, 1998, Bar filed a petition in the surrogate's court to reform and construe construe v. to determine the meaning of the words of a written document, statute or legal decision, based upon rules of legal interpretation as well as normal meanings.  the 1993 will as requiring all trust income to be paid to Jo and to split the trust holding the test of the decedent's estate into three parts--a credit shelter trust, a reverse QTIP trust QTIP trust

A marital-deduction trust in which the surviving spouse receives income from the trust's assets for life but the trust's principal is left to someone else, usually children.
 and a residuary LEGACY, RESIDUARY. That which is of the remainder of an estate after the payment of all the debts and other legacies. Madd. Ch. P. 284.  trust. The 1998 petition said the sole purpose of the changes was to "insure that decedent's estate receives a full marital deduction, fully utilizes the decedent's credit shelter amount and reduces substantially the GST GST
abbr.
Greenwich sidereal time


GST (in Australia, New Zealand, and Canada) Goods and Services Tax
 [generation-skipping transfer] tax that will be payable by reason of distributions flora the trust." The petition said Charles always had intended to minimize estate and GST taxes. On March 5, 1998, Bar filed an amended petition to add Scott Haley Aronson, the decedent's great-grandson, as a beneficiary if Bar predeceased Jo. The beneficiaries of the 1993 will did not contest the relief the amended 1998 petition requested.

On March 16, 1998, the surrogate's court entered a decree granting the relief. It construed the 1993 will as requiring all trust income be paid to Jo at least semiannually.

On May 14, 1998, Bar, as executor, timely filed a federal estate tax return on the estate's behalf. The return reported the estate as construed under the surrogate court A tribunal in some states with Subject Matter Jurisdiction over actions and proceedings involving, among other things, the probate of wills, affairs of decedents, and the guardianship of the property of Infants.


surrogate court n.
 decree. It listed Bar as the sole person, other than the surviving spouse, benefiting from the estate. The tax return also reported $1,065,420 as qualified joint interest property. The estate did not elect out of QTIP treatment on the return.

Although the surrogate court granted relief, the IRS questioned whether the trust interest the decedent's will created was eligible for the estate tax marital deduction as qualified terminable interest property within the meaning of section 20560(b)(7).

In Estate of Charles N. Aronson v. Commissioner, TC Memo 2003-189, the court ruled the trust interest the 1993 will created did not qualify for the marital deduction under section 2056(b)(7). While local law prevails in determining the nature of the interest passing to the surviving spouse, the federal government is not bound to give effect to a local court order that modifies a document after the IRS has acquired rights to tax revenues under that document's terms.

Under the 1993 will Jo was not "entitled to all the income from the property, payable annually or at more frequent intervals" as section 2056 (b)(7) requires. The unambiguous language of the 1993 will allowed her only "as much income from such assets as she needs, for as long as she lives" The document did not mention the marital deduction, nor was there any evidence the decedent intended the trust property to qualify for it. The will revealed the decedent's intention that Jo have neither the obligation, nor the right, to demand all of the income or any particular amount of income from the trust.

The estate contended the language of the 1993 will was ambiguous. The Tax Court held that the extrinsic evidence did not support that contention.

The estate argued that after giving proper regard to the surrogate court decree, the trust qualified as a QTIP. The Tax Court disagreed, arguing the surrogate's court decree was not a mere clarification but a substantial change in the 1993 will. Additionally, the Tax Court argued the decree was not a bona fide [Latin, In good faith.] Honest; genuine; actual; authentic; acting without the intention of defrauding.

A bona fide purchaser is one who purchases property for a valuable consideration that is inducement for entering into a contract and without suspicion of being
 evaluation of Jo's rights because there was not a "genuine and active contest." The Tax Court held that the estate filed the petition specifically to affect federal income taxes by engaging in creative postdeath estate tax planning Tax planning

Devising strategies throughout the year in order to minimize tax liability, for example, by choosing a tax filing status that is most beneficial to the taxpayer.
.

Observation. Taxpayers have the right to minimize their estate taxes by taking advantage of provisions the law allows, such as a QTIP. However, if a decedent deliberately relinquishes this right, his or her heirs may not "rewrite" the will. Since the federal government is not bound to recognize a local court order changing a will's terms, CPAs should remind clients that effective estate tax planning takes place before death and should include a will that clearly conveys the taxpayer's wishes to minimize tax or otherwise.

Prepared by Claire Y. Nash, CPA (Computer Press Association, Landing, NJ) An earlier membership organization founded in 1983 that promoted excellence in computer journalism. Its annual awards honored outstanding examples in print, broadcast and electronic media. The CPA disbanded in 2000. , PhD, associate professor of accounting, Christian Brothers University In addition to intercollegiate athletics, CBU offers intramural sports. Types of intramurals, such as volleyball, flag football, and bowling, vary from year to year. Greek life
Fraternity and sorority members comprise 21 - 24% of CBU students.
, Memphis, and Tina Quinn, CPA, PhD, associate professor of accountancy, Arkansas State University Arkansas State University, at Jonesboro; coeducational; chartered 1909; named State Agricultural and Mechanical College, 1925–33. In 1933 the school became Arkansas State College, and in 1967 it achieved university status and adopted its present name. , Jonesboro.

IRS, States Unite Against Tax Abuse

The Internal Revenue Service and 40 states plus the District of Columbia District of Columbia, federal district (2000 pop. 572,059, a 5.7% decrease in population since the 1990 census), 69 sq mi (179 sq km), on the east bank of the Potomac River, coextensive with the city of Washington, D.C. (the capital of the United States).  formed a partnership to combat abusive tax-avoidance transactions. They plan to exchange information and coordinate case management.

Source: IRS, www.irs.gov, 2003.

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Title Annotation:qualified terminable interest property
Author:Quinn, Tina
Publication:Journal of Accountancy
Date:Mar 1, 2004
Words:1249
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