ࡱ> `b]^_E@ GVbjbj A~Ml VVVV8&LrLʋʋʋʋʋ+++ """=_w$ҵR$C "+CCVVʋʋ?CRVRʋʋ C Yf"ʋ \tƳ0v7<4VVVV+͎Y+++Dqʅ$sʅ CHAPTER 28 INCOME TAXATION OF TRUSTS AND ESTATES SOLUTIONS TO PROBLEM MATERIALS Status:Q/PQuestion/Presentin PriorProblemTopicEditionEdition 1 Issue ID Unchanged 1 2 Parties to a fiduciary entity Unchanged 2 3 Trusts and income shifting Unchanged 3 4 Fiduciaries and the AMT Unchanged 4 5 Simple versus complex trust; personal exemptions Unchanged 5 6 Determining taxable income: five-step approach Unchanged 6 7 Distributions of appreciated property Unchanged 7 8 Disallowance of 212 deductions Unchanged 8 9 Cost recovery deductions of a fiduciary Unchanged 9 10 Charitable contributions of a fiduciary Unchanged 10 11 Issue ID Unchanged 11 12 Grantor trust rules Unchanged 12 13 Fiduciary tax planning New 14 Fiduciary tax planning New 15 Fiduciary tax planning New 16 Fiduciary AMT computations Unchanged 13 17 Attributes of trusts and estates Unchanged 14 18 Charitable contributions Unchanged 15 19 Computing DNI, taxable income Unchanged 16 20 Computing DNI, taxable income Unchanged 17 21 Separate share rule Unchanged 18 22 Tier distributions Unchanged 19 23 Constitution of DNI Unchanged 20 24 Computing DNI, taxable income Unchanged 21 25 Income in respect of a decedent Unchanged 22 26 Termination year losses Unchanged 23 Status:Question/PresentProblemTopicEdition 1 Trusts deduction of investment adviser fees Unchanged 2 Fiduciaries and passive activities New 3 Internet activity Unchanged CHECK FIGURES 16. 18. 19.a. 19.b. 19.c. 19.d. 20.a. 20.b. 20.c. 20.d. 21.a. 21.b. $18,850. $0; $7,500; $15,000. $25,000. $66,000. $14,700. $22,000. $30,000. $81,000. ($300). $27,000. $25,000. $15,000. 22.a. 23. 24.a. 24.b. 24.c. 24.d.$50,000 first-tier, $70,000 total gross income. $12,000 (div.), $8,000 (taxable int.), $4,000 (exempt int.), $6,000 (passive); same for both. $100,000. $90,000. $37,900. Lydia $16,000; Kent $12,000 taxable part of distribution. Discussion Questions 1. Taxpayers create trusts for a variety of reasons. Some trusts are established primarily for tax purposes, while others are designed to accomplish a specific financial goal or to provide for the orderly management of assets in case of an emergency. The most commonly encountered reasons for creating a fiduciary entity include the following. To hold life insurance policies on the decedent, as part of an estate plan to remove such policies from the gross estate. To manage assets, reduce probate costs, and assure the privacy of the distribution of assets near the end of the grantors life. To provide funds for an advanced education, accumulating income at a lower tax rate than that to which the grantor is subject. To hold or manage the assets of the grantor while he or she is in the military, governmental service, overseas, or in some other way divorced from the daily management of the assets. To manage the assets of a tax-sheltered retirement fund, corporate liquidation, or divorcing couple in an objective manner. Table 28-1 2. The parties to a trust include a grantor, trustee, and one or more beneficiaries. The parties to an estate include the decedent, the executor or administrator, and one or more beneficiaries. In each case, at least two different parties should be involved. Figure 28-1 3. Fiduciary taxation has fallen prey to the soak the rich approach to tax reform. Congress wants to prevent taxpayers from using fiduciary entities to shelter taxable income at low tax rates. The compressed rates apply, though, regardless of the motivation for creating the trust. On $50,000 of taxable income, a married couple and a C corporation pay $7,000 of Federal income tax, while a single individual pays about $9,000 and a trust pays about $17,000. p.28-8 and Tax in the News on p. 28-8 4. A fiduciary entity is subject to the alternative minimum tax. The entity then restates its income and passes through AMT income, preferences, and adjustments to its beneficiaries. Given the nature of most fiduciary operations, though, it is unlikely to encounter this tax. No ACE adjustment need be computed by a fiduciary entity. The entity must make estimated tax payments with respect to any AMT. The small-corporation exception does not apply to a trust or estate. A fiduciary claims a $22,500 AMT exemption, which phases out at a rate of one-fourth of the amount by which AMTI exceeds $75,000. The AMTI of the entity is subject to a 26% tax rate, which reaches 28% when AMTI exceeds $175,000. p. 28-9 5. a. All income is required to be distributed currently to the granddaughter of the grantor. No corpus distributions are made. b. All income is required to be distributed currently to State University, a qualifying charity. No corpus distributions are made. c. Income can be sprinkled at the discretion of the trustee; or, same as a. or b., except that a corpus distribution is made during the year. p. 28-8 and Example 3 6. Step One Determine entity accounting income. Step Two Compute entity taxable income before the distribution deduction. Step Three Determine distributable net income (DNI) and the distribution deduction. Step Four Compute entity taxable income [Step 2] [Step 3]. Step Five Allocate DNI and its character to the beneficiaries, applying the tier system if needed. Figure 28-2 7. With respect to a distribution of appreciated property by a fiduciary, no taxable income generally is recognized. Basis of the asset carries over to the recipient. DNI and the distribution deduction reflect an amount for the distribution equal to the lesser of the assets basis or its fair market value. DNI and distribution deduction $65.000 Gross income to Lopez $0 Basis to Judith $65,000 Upon election, though, the distribution can become a taxable event. The gain would be recognized by the fiduciary, and the beneficiary would take a basis in the asset equal to its fair market value. DNI and the distribution deduction both would reflect the assets fair market value. DNI and distribution deduction $100,000 Gross income to Lopez $35,000 Basis to Judith $100,000 Examples 7 to 10 8. The default application of the deduction for fiduciary fees is to the estate tax return. Section 212 expenses of this sort are deductible on an income tax return only if a waiver of the estate tax deduction is filed. Here, the deductions are more valuable on the estate tax return, because of the great disparity of marginal rates. Moreover, if the payments were claimed on the estates income tax return, only five-sevenths would be deductible, due to the presence of the exempt income. Nonetheless, the executor could split the deduction between the estate tax return and the estates income tax return, but probably within the following bounds. CaseDeduction Assigned to Estate Tax Return Deduction Assigned to Estates Income Tax ReturnMost favorable to estates income tax return $857 $2,143Least favorable to estates income tax return$3,000 $0 p. 28-15 and Tax in the News on p. 28-14 9. Cost recovery deductions related to the assets of a fiduciary are assigned proportionately among the recipients of entity accounting income. Examples 14, 15, and 167(h) and 611(b)(3) and (4) 10. If the gift is determinable in both existence and amount to the controlling will or trust agreement, the entity is allowed a deduction for the gift that is paid from gross income. See 265 for disallowance possibilities. The deduction is allowed even if the payment is made during the following tax year. Qualifying charitable organizations for gifts by fiduciaries include all of those so recognized for gifts by individuals, and certain non-U.S. charities. Examples 17 and 18 11. ( How much of the loss carryforwards will remain upon termination of the trust, for pass-through to Amy? How many years will remain for the carryforwards? Will Amys other income sources be of the proper nature and amount so that the carryforwards can be used immediately? Should the trust sell the investment assets, or should the trustee distribute the portfolio to Amy in-kind and let her sell them off? Examples 31, 34 and 35 12. TAX FILE MEMORANDUM Date: November 3, 2004 From: Deron Johnson Subject: Grantor trust rules Carols ideas are contrary to the tax law. Life insurance premiums, since they generate exempt income, are nondeductible. 265 By using a trust as a fiduciary entity in this plan, Carol also brings into play the grantor trust rules of 671 679. Where the grantor retains the right to make investment and distribution decisions, the trust is ignored for tax purposes. Thus, trust income and deductions are attributed directly to Carol, the owner of the trust assets. The donor can retain the following powers without making the entity a grantor trust. Invade corpus for the benefit of a beneficiary. Withhold income from a beneficiary, during the beneficiarys disability or minority. Allocate items between entity accounting income and corpus. Choose charitable beneficiaries. But if the grantor retains the income of the trust (or the right to designate who is to receive such income), the grantor trust rules apply. 13. Because the marginal Federal income tax rates for trusts and estates are the most progressive in the Code, the top rates are attained earlier than for any other taxpayer. Thus, it usually makes more sense to shift taxable income away from the fiduciary entity. p. 28-26 Trusts generally cannot adopt any tax year other than the calendar year, while estates have more freedom to pick their tax year. It usually makes sense for the executor to choose a short first tax year, ending before the first bunching of taxable income is recognized. Later, the final tax year also should be short, but not such that the beneficiaries recognize more than twelve months taxable income on one tax return. pp. 28-7 and 28-27 The default is to assign the deduction to the estate tax return (Form 706). If a waiver is filed, however, the deduction is shifted to the fiduciarys income tax return (Form 1041). The estates income tax return is subject to steeply progressive rates, and the annual personal exemption is low. Therefore, the deduction will be more beneficial on Form 706. As larger estates will be subject to marginal tax rates approaching 50%, no waiver in favor of Form 1041 should be filed. In addition, where an item is nondeductible on one of the returns (e.g., an income-tax 265 disallowance for generating exempt income), the deduction should be shifted to the other return. pp. 28-28 and 28-29 Problems 16. AMT income ($35,000 + $60,000) $95,000 AMT exemption (22,500) AMT tax base $72,500 AMT rate for fiduciaries X 26% Tentative minimum tax $18,850 Estimated tax payments must include AMT liability. p. 28-9 AttributeEstateTrustSeparate income tax entityYesYesControlling documentWill; not insurance contracts, joint ownership statutes, installment notes, or other items concerning nonprobate assetsTrust instrumentTermination date is determinable from controlling documentNo; termination occurs when the estates activities are completed. This might be a substantial period of time (e.g., where a 6166 election is made).Yes, although such date might be contingent upon other events, such as the grantors death, the beneficiarys graduation from school, or the completion of some contractual duty.Legal owner of assets under fiduciarys controlBeneficiaries immediately, although the executor has a fiduciary and management duty during the administration period. Indeed, the identity of some of the heirs may not be apparent immediately upon the decedents death, but legal title passes immediately.Trustee during trust term, beneficiaries thereafterDocument identifies both income and remainder beneficiariesYesYesSeparate share rules applyYesYesGenerally must use calendar tax yearNoYes pp. 28-3 to 28-6 and Figure 28-1 18.Assumption2004 Deduction for ContributionBrown is a cash-basis individual $0 No deduction until 2005, when payment is madeBrown is an accrual-basis corporation $7,500 Limited to 10% of TI, with 2 1/2 month grace period; no loss of deduction due to exempt incomeBrown is a trust $15,000 Limited to 75/100 of gift, due to exempt income; one-year grace period allowed pp. 2-15 to 28-17 19. a. $25,000 (1/3 of $75,000 accounting income). b. $66,000. c. $14,700. d. $22,000 (1/3 of $66,000). Item Totals Accounting Income Taxable Income Distributable Net Income/ Distribution DeductionOrdinary income $75,000 $75,000 $75,000Net long-term capital gain 15,000 15,000Fiduciary fees 9,000 (9,000)Personal exemption (300)Accounting Income/Taxable Income Before the Distributions Deduction  $75,000 STEP 1 $80,700 STEP 2 $80,700Exemption 300Corpus Capital Gain/Loss (15,000)Net Exempt IncomeDistributable Net Income $66,000Distribution Deduction (66,000) STEP 3Entity Taxable Income $14,700 STEP 4 PROOF: The trust should be taxed on its $15,000 long-term capital gain less the $300 personal exemption. Figure 28-3 and Examples 20 and 21 20. a. $30,000 (1/3 of $90,000 accounting income). b. $81,000. c. ($300). d. $27,000 (1/3 of $81,000 DNI). Item Totals Accounting Income Taxable Income Distributable Net Income/ Distribution DeductionOrdinary income $75,000 $75,000 $75,000Net long-term capital gain 15,000 15,000 15,000Fiduciary fees 9,000 (9,000)Personal exemption (300)Accounting Income/Taxable Income Before the Distributions Deduction  $90,000 STEP 1 $80,700 STEP 2 $80,700Exemption 300Corpus Capital Gain/LossNet Exempt IncomeDistributable Net Income $81,000Distribution Deduction (81,000) STEP 3Entity Taxable Income ($300) STEP 4 OBSERVATION: A simple trust with no corpus capital gains recognized for the year wastes the personal exemption of the fiduciary. Figure 28-3 and Examples 20 and 21 21. a. $25,000. Under the separate share rule of 663(c), a single trust that has more than one beneficiary and that operates using substantially separate and independent shares for each beneficiary of the trust is treated as multiple separate trusts. Therefore, Willie is taxed only on his share of the trusts distributable net income. The second-tier distribution of $10,000 from corpus to Willie is not subject to current income tax. b. $15,000. The separate share rule of 663(c) applies. Sylvias distributable net income is limited to $10,000the portion of the distribution that is not accumulated. c. Zero. Doris distributable net income has been accumulated; as a result of the separate share rule, Doris recognizes no current year gross income. $35,000. The trust is taxed on the total distributable income that is accumulated (i.e., Sylvias $10,000 and Doris $25,000 respective income shares). Proof: $75,000 DNI $25,000 taxed to Willie $15,000 taxed to Sylvia. Example 28 22. a. After the first tier distributions are accounted for, $2,000 DNI remains to be assigned to the beneficiaries on the second tier ($102,000 DNI $100,000 DNI used for first tier distributions. Results for Clare are as follows. Amount ReceivedDNI Received = Gross Income, Portfolio IncomeFirst Tier$50,000$50,000Second Tier$25,000$20,000 DNI remaining Totals$75,000$70,000 b. Results for David are as follows. Amount ReceivedDNI Received = Gross Income, Portfolio IncomeFirst Tier$50,000$50,000Second Tier$0$0Totals$50,000$50,000 c. First-tier distributions are the first $100,000 in required payments. First-tier distributions are those distributions which are composed of trust accounting income that is required to be distributed currently. Claire receives all of the tax free payments in excess of DNI. Examples 25 and 26 23. AmountIncome TypeBeneficiaryReceived DividendsTaxable InterestExempt InterestPassive Brenda $30,000 $12,000( $8,000$4,000 $6,000 Del $30,000$12,000 $8,000$4,000 $6,000 Totals in DNI$30,000 $20,000 $10,000 $15,000 (($30,000 distribution/$75,000 total DNI) X $30,000 dividends in DNI. All other calculations by income type are similarly computed. Example 29 24. a. $100,000. b. $90,000. c. $37,900. d. Allocated as indicated below. ItemTotalsAccounting IncomeTaxable IncomeDistributable Net Income/ Distribution DeductionTaxable interest income$40,000$40,000 $40,000 Exempt interest income60,00060,000Net long-term capital gain30,000 30,000 Fiduciary fees10,000 (4,000) *Personal exemption (100) Accounting Income/Taxable Income Before the Distributions Deduction$100,000 STEP 1 $65,900 STEP 2 $65,900Exemption  100Corpus Capital Gain/Loss  (30,000)Net Exempt Income  54,000 **Distributable Net Income  $90,000Distribution Deduction  (28,000) ( STEP 3Entity Taxable Income  $37,900 STEP 4 ($36,000 Deductible portion of DNI (taxable interest of $40,000 $4,000 allocable fees) X 7/9 ($70,000 distribution/$90,000 DNI) portion of DNI distributed. Fiduciary fees allocation: *Taxable income ($40,000 ( $100,000) X $10,000 **$60,000 nondeductible exempt income ($60,000 ( $100,000) X $10,000 PROOF: The trust is taxed on: Retained portion, deductible DNI (2/9 X $36,000) $ 8,000 Corpus capital gain 30,000 Exemption (100) Fiduciary taxable income $37,900 Income Type [Step 5]BeneficiaryAmount ReceivedTaxable InterestExempt InterestLydia$40,000 $16,000($24,000Kent$30,000$12,000$18,000 (($40,000 distribution/$90,000 total DNI) X $36,000 taxable interest in DNI (assigning the fiduciary fees proportionately to the two types of accounting income). Figure 28-3 and Example 29 25. DorasReported on (X) Item IncurredForm 1040 Income TaxJoss Estate: First Form 1041 Income TaxJoss Estate: Form 706 Estate Taxa. Last paycheckXXb. State income tax withheld on last paycheckXXc. Capital gain portion of installment payment receivedXXd. Ordinary income portion of installment payment receivedXXe. Dividend income, record date was two days prior to Joss deathXX f. Unrealized appreciation, securitiesNo gross income. Basis step-up.Xg. Depreciation recapture accrued as of date of deathNot reported on any return. Recapture potential disappears at death.h. Medical expenses of last illness X(i. Apartment building, rents accrued but not collected as of deathXXj. Apartment building, property tax accrued and assessed but not paid as of deathXX (Executor could elect to claim this on Joss last Form 1040. pp. 28-13 to 28-16 26. 2003 No flow-through of either the negative taxable income or the capital loss incurred. The $300 negative taxable income, due solely to the entitys personal exemption, is lost forever, while the unused capital loss carries forward. 2004 Flow-through of $20,000 negative taxable income, deductible by Yellow Jr. as a miscellaneous itemized deduction, subject to the 2% of AGI floor. 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