Just Leave It Alone?

As many will recall, then candidate Trump promised to eliminate the estate tax. That was then. This is now–he’s the President. What will he actually do? Will he also eliminate the estate tax’s two siblings: the gift tax and the generation skipping tax? No one knows, though many people care, especially those who preach tax fairness.

Given that married couples currently have to be worth almost $11 million dollars before  the estate tax kicks in–it’s more complicated than that, but still–eliminating the estate tax is going to help only the very, very wealthy. And maybe that’s a bad (or a good) thing.

I’m here to argue for the advisor. Estate planning attorneys, life insurance and investment advisors, CPAs and financial planners. I’m betting that each and every one of them agree with the following:

Because the estate tax generates a meager 0.005 percent of annual tax collections, according to I.R.S. figures, it generates far more political debate than federal revenue. And among many tax planners, the calls aren’t so much for reform as for stability, or at least a period of benign neglect.

“Just leave it alone so we can plan,” Mr. Jenney said. “But every administration seems to want to put their own twist on the estate tax.”

Estate Planning Seminar at Pleasant Grove Library

I’ll be presenting a seminar on DIY — Do It Yourself — Estate Planning at the Pleasant Grove Library on Wednesday, March 8, 2017 at 7 PM. Come an enjoy the discussion. The address is 30 E Center St, Pleasant Grove.

If you have a question about wills, trusts, and other aspects of estate planning, maybe I can answer it.

A “True” Story Retold

IMG_0968As anyone who’s read my profile knows, I once wrote for Bloomberg–for three Bloomberg magazines, in fact. One of them was Bloomberg Wealth Manager, which was later sold and then sold again. I continued to write for the magazine in all its iterations. The other day, I stumbled upon a list of some of my articles for one of the later iterations. Since most of the articles are still (mostly) timely, I’m going to start posting them here. Here’s the first, called “A ‘True’ Story” about Casper, Wyoming’s Dave True and the family business. Enjoy, but with this one caveat: As I said, these stories are still (mostly) timely; the basic law underlying them is still (mostly) valid.

I’ll be posting a number of them. If one of them discusses a subject near and dear to your legal problems, don’t rely on the story as legal advice. Use it instead to prompt you to talk to an attorney about the problem to get more current insight on the subject.

Estate & Business Planning: Facts Matter. If They’re Not on Your Side, You’re in Trouble.

Just Facts_2016-03-14_1519I’ve just finished reading the Estate of Purdue case, a tax court case decided in December. The case is interesting as an introduction to sophisticated tax planning strategies–FLLC, trusts, and all that. However, the real lesson from this case–and others like it–is that facts matter to courts.

In this case, the IRS was contending that the Purdue family used various strategies solely to avoid taxes. And the tax court disagreed with the IRS each time it threw a theory against the wall, hoping it would stick and support its argument. More importantly, in each and every case, the reason the IRS’s theory didn’t stick was the facts. The facts did not support the theory–and let me tell you, the tax court looked very closely at those facts.

Take just one example. The IRS argued that the Decedent’s transfer of some property to the Purdue Family LLC was not a “bona fide sale for adequate consideration” or value. The court first stated the rule:

In the context of family limited partnerships [and LLCs], the bona fide sale for adequate and full consideration exception is met where the record establishes the existence of a legitimate and significant nontax reason for creating the family limited partnership and the transferors received partnership interests proportional to the value of the property transferred. (emphasis supplied)

It then stated that “the objective evidence [ie, facts] must indicate that a nontax reason was a significant factor that motivated the partnership’s [LLC’s] creation” and that reason must be “an actual  motivation, not a theoretical justification.”

Having laid out the rule, the court proceeded to examine whether in their planning, the Purdue family satisfied a list of factors that would suggest the family was motivated by nontax reasons, including did the taxpayer

  • Stand on both sides of the transaction?
  • Depend financially on distributions from the partnership?
  • Commingle partnership funds with their own?
  • Fail to transfer the property to the partnership?
  • Discount the value of the partnership interests relative to the value of the property contributed?
  • Create the partnership  because of their old age or poor health?

But before addressing these six factors, the court looked at the evidence and agreed with the taxpayer that there were actually seven nontax motives for doing what they had done. For example, before the transfer to the FLLC, the taxpayer had five different brokerage accounts at three management firms. The Purdue Family LLC would enable them to consolidate accounts. Now her accounts had been consolidated with just one firm, “subject to an overall, well-coordinated . . . investment strategy.” Importantly, that strategy was in writing and acted upon.

One after the other, the court looked at the taxpayer’s seven motives and found that each reason was supported by actual evidence that the reason was not a mere sham. The taxpayer said she had wanted to simplify management. The evidence showed that management was simpler. The taxpayer wanted a mechanism to resolve disputes. The evidence showed that the family had used the dispute resolution mechanism in the plan. Etc. Etc.

Having approved each of the taxpayer’s seven motives, the court began its factor analysis:

  • Yes, the taxpayers stood on both sides of the transaction, but, the court said, “we have also stated that an arm’s-length transaction occurs when mutual legitimate and significant nontax reasons exist for the transaction and the transaction is carried out in a way in which unrelated parties to a business transaction would deal with each other.” Since the court had already agreed that legitimate nontax motives existed and because the decedent had received an interest in the FLLC “proportional to the property she contributed,” the “both sides now” argument carried no weight.
  • No, the decedent was not financially dependent on the distributions from the FLLC.
  • No, the decedent had not commingled funds.
  • Yes, the formalities of the FLLC had been respected–the FLLC maintained its own bank accounts, held at least annual meetings with written agendas, minutes, and summaries.
  • Yes, the decedent and her husband had transferred the property to the FLLC.
  • Yes, both dependent and her husband were in good health when they did the deal.

Do you get the picture? The court sided with the taxpayer because she and her family not only had a plan, they executed the plan in detail.

Imagine the result had the taxpayer set up the plan but 1. commingled funds, 2. didn’t observe business formalities, 3. hadn’t consolidated accounts, 4. etc.

My point: It’s great to have a plan that will save you taxes, BUT (and notice that’s a big but) if you don’t have good nontax reasons for doing what you want to do AND if you don’t execute your plan in most every detail, the tax court will see through you like a thin glass window. And the court will slap you down.

 

 

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