Title: Estate Planning Council of Delaware
1Estate Planning Council of Delaware By Joseph
V. Falanga, CPA, AEP Sharon H. Goodman,
Esq.
2Introduction
- The Uniform Principal and Income Act (and
relevant state statutes that have adopted the Act
or the unitrust methodology in some form)
controls allocations between principal and income
and who gets what. The Act has absolutely no
significance where the governing instrument gives
the fiduciary sufficient discretion to distribute
principal, allocate between income and principal
and make tax elections. Then, the governing
instrument controls. - This presentation touches on some of the more
pressing issues and complications resulting from
certain provisions of the Act and the unitrust
methodology. These complications and issues
point to the fact that the controlling documents
should be well crafted to give the fiduciary the
ability to act impartially without having to rely
on the Act or state law. - In light of the downturn in the economy, where
expectancies of beneficiaries will be thwarted,
it is essential that, should the governing
instrument not provide the flexibility needed to
insure impartiality, the practitioner understand
the intricacies of the Act and adjustment and
unitrust powers under relevant state law.
1
3Historical Overview of the Revised Uniform
Principal and Income Act (UPIA) and Amendments to
Code Section 643(b)
- The UPIA was revised in 1997 and in 2004,
amendments were made to
the Code Section 643(b) definitions of income. - Factors which played a role in the revisions and
amendments include - New forms of investment
- Modern portfolio theory of investing for total
return replaced the traditional income and
principal approach - The traditional approach generally focused on
investing to produce income - The total return approach diminished the ordinary
income available for distribution to the income
beneficiary - In 2004, in response to the changes to the UPIA,
amendments were made to Code Section 643(b) and
the accompanying Regulations. - The amendments to Code Section 643(b) changed the
definition of income to reflect modern investment
theory.
2
4- The provisions of the old UPIA historically
provided rules regarding the determination of
what constituted a trusts net income. - Over the past few decades, there have been
substantial differences between actual versus
assumed investment returns - The 1970s and early 1980s produced high
inflation. - In more recent years, there has been low to
negligible inflation, and now there is talk
of a recession. - Concurrently, the investment model evolved from
the prudent man standard to an investment
philosophy that encompasses the portfolios total
return. - Total return looks to capital appreciation as
well as the annual return on the investments. - The result of these changes to investment theory
generally had a negative impact on income
beneficiaries who saw a reduction in the income
that could be distributed to them under the
traditional theory of what constituted net
income.
3
5- The revisions to the UPIA and amendments to Code
Section 643(b) have brought complications and
confusion in a number of areas. - Historically, the trusts net income consisted of
income, dividends and rents, but excluded capital
gains. - The total return concept impacted negatively on
what the income beneficiary could receive from
the trust in situations where the trustee did not
have flexibility in distributing principal to the
income beneficiary. - While the total return concept of investing might
have increased the overall value of the trust,
interest and dividend income was dramatically
reduced. - These factors moved the National Commissioners to
issue the 1997 revisions to the UPIA. - The UPIA and Code Section 643(b) revisions
brought some new and innovative concepts,
including - Giving the fiduciary the power to adjust between
principal and income under certain
circumstances (and vice versa), and - The unitrust concept.
4
6Challenges to Fiduciaries What is Net Income?
- Fiduciaries now must confront major challenges in
dealing with the interaction of - (1) the power to adjust between principal and
income, - (2) the unitrust method of determining income and
- (3) the final Treasury Regulations which define
trust income. - It is essential to understand that the power to
adjust controls the income available for
distribution. - This is because the Subchapter J definition of
income, which establishes the tier distribution
system, provides that income when not modified
by such terms as gross, distributable net or
undistributed net is determined under applicable
state law.
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7- The only exception to this rule is if the
governing instrument provisions depart
fundamentally from traditional principles of what
is income versus what is principal in such case,
IRS will not respect the governing instrument
definitions of income and principal. - The UPIA defines income as money or property a
fiduciary receives as current return from a
capital asset and it includes a portion of the
receipts from a sale, exchange or liquidation of
a principal asset, to the extent provided in
Article 4. This is in effect gross income. - Under the UPIA, net income is defined as the
total receipts allocated to income minus the
disbursements made from income during the
accounting period. Significantly, the definition
provides that receipts and disbursements include
items transferred to or from income. The comments
to the UPIA under Section 102 explain that
transfers to or from income include, among other
items, the power to adjust under Section 104(a).
6
8Power to Adjust
- Section 104(a) of the UPIA for the first time
gives the fiduciary the ability to make transfers
from principal to income (and vice versa). - The power to adjust affects various classes of
trust beneficiaries and also affects the tax
treatment of distributions and potentially
impacts the beneficiarys tax liability,
especially under the rules enacted by Code
Section 643(b) and Regulation 1.643(b)-1. - Under modern portfolio theory, an investment that
is made solely in growth stock under the prudent
investor standard and which, accordingly,
produces virtually no dividend income, is the
subject of the adjustment power. - In effect, there is a charge to principal and
credit to income. - The discussion which follows below is based on
the UPIA issued by the Uniform Commissioners.
(Note Many states have adopted the UPIA with
certain modifications so it is essential to
review and understand the local controlling law
before taking any action). - Under Section 104 of the UPIA, the fiduciary is
given the power to adjust when the governing
instrument is silent. - Note The terms of the governing instrument
controls and will override the UPIA provisions.
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9- When a trustee adopts a total return investment
policy, rather than a policy which expressly
addresses the income and principal rights of the
beneficiaries, the trustee is permitted to
transfer amounts from principal to income (and
from income to principal). - The trustees decision must recognize
- What is fair and reasonable to all beneficiaries.
- The trustees duty of impartiality.
- Note Impartiality does not mean equality. It
means that the trustee must treat the
beneficiaries equitably in light of the purposes
and terms of the trust. - The power to adjust becomes operative when the
trust instrument - Fails to contain adequate discretionary
administrative powers, and - Does not clearly show an intention that the
trustee must or may favor a particular
beneficiary. - In effect, the power to adjust is a default
provision - It gives the trustee the ability to override
other provisions of the UPIA regarding
allocations between income and principal. - It is operative when the power to adjust is
necessary to allow the trustee to accomplish its
duties and responsibilities. - So, if the governing instrument is silent in
regard to the determination of what is income and
what is principal, the power to adjust under the
UPIA applies. - The power to adjust is not a power to transfer
capital gains from principal to income. In
determining the amount to adjust, the amount of
realized capital gain is irrelevant. - Code Section 643 and the Regulations sets forth
the income tax treatment of the adjustment.
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10Factors which must be considered under the UPIA
when determining if the Power to Adjust should be
exercised
- Section 104 of the UPIA says that the trustee
must consider the following factors when
considering use of the power to adjust - The nature, purpose and expected duration of the
trust. - The intent of the settlor.
- The identity and circumstances of the
beneficiaries. - The need for liquidity, regularity of income and
preservation and appreciation of capital. - The assets held by the trust, their nature and
the extent they are used by a beneficiary and
whether the asset was transferred to the trust by
the settlor or acquired by the trustee. - The net amount allocable to income under other
provisions of the UPIA and the increase or
decrease in the value of the principal assets. - Whether and to what extent the trustee is given
the power to invade principal or accumulate
income, or is prohibited to do so under the terms
of the trust agreement and the past history in
regard to the use of the adjustment power. - The actual and anticipated effect of economic
conditions on principal and income and the
effects of inflation or deflation, and - The anticipated tax consequences of the
adjustment.
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11When the Trustee cannot exercise a Power to Adjust
- In certain situations, the fiduciary is
explicitly prohibited from exercising a power to
adjust. - The power to adjust may not be exercised when
such exercise would have a negative tax impact,
including causing the loss of part or all of - (1) a federal or state gift tax exclusion,
- (2) an income, gift or state charitable
deduction, or - (3) an inheritance deduction otherwise
available. - The power to adjust is also precluded when
exercise of the power would - diminish an income interest in a marital trust.
- reduce the actuarial value of an income interest
in a transfer intended to qualify for gift tax
exclusion. - change the amount payable to a beneficiary as a
fixed annuity or a fixed fraction of the value of
the trusts assets. - affect any amount permanently set aside for
charitable purposes. - cause an individual to be treated as the owner of
the trust for income tax purposes. - cause all or part of the trust assets to be
included in the gross estate of an individual who
has the power either to remove or appoint a
trustee. - allow the trustee to make an adjustment for
his/her direct or indirect benefit, including the
satisfaction of a legal obligation. - Note A disinterested trustee may make an
adjustment that benefits another trustee.
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12- The power to adjust may not be exercised if the
governing instrument clearly bars the trustee
from exercising an adjustment power. - The comments to Section 104 provide certain
examples of the power to adjust - Investment advisors convince the trustee to shift
to a total return investment policy that involves
solely growth stocks. The change results in a
reduction of dividend and interest receipts from
100,000 in the prior year (and the average of
the past five years) to 10,000. As a result of
the portfolio change, principal value increased
by 300,000. These results indicate to the
trustee that it should exercise its power to
adjust by transferring 90,000 from principal to
income. Accordingly, the income beneficiary
receives 100,000, the determination of trust
accounting income after the adjustment. - Adjustments can also be made from income to
principal where a very high interest return is
obtained in a period of substantial inflation
where part of the interest return is a principal
return in an economic context that represents
loss of principal value due to inflation. Example
2 of the Section 104 comments illustrates this - Inflation returns, and the trustee invests 1
million in U.S. government bonds with a 14
coupon. The inflation rate is 8, so the trustee
decides to adjust by transferring 80,000 from
income to principal, an amount the trustee
considers an appropriate adjustment (other
fiduciaries may choose a larger or smaller
adjustment) to make up for the loss in value due
to inflation and 60,000 is distributed to the
income beneficiary.
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13- Applying the adjustment power may be difficult
and problematic when the governing instrument is
an old trust document that does not provide the
flexibility built into more recent documents. The
comments to Section 104 gives the following
example (Example 4) - When the irrevocable trust was formed and funded,
the state law did not contain the prudent
investor rule. The trust document required all
income to be distributed to a named beneficiary.
The trustee was provided with very narrow
principal invasion powers for dire emergencies
only, and over the term of the trust the
aggregate principal invasion was limited to 6 of
the trusts initial value. The state of the
trusts situs then changed its law by adding the
prudent investor rule. As a result, the trustee
changed the asset allocation from 50/50
percentages for stocks and bonds to 90/10
percentages for stocks and bonds. This change in
the portfolio reduced the annual income from
dividends and interest, but it significantly
increased the total return. This example in the
UPIA concludes that the trustee may adjust by a
transfer from principal to income, but only if
the transfer is exclusively from the capital
appreciation resulting from the switch in the
asset allocation. Even so, the adjustment will be
prohibited if the trustee cannot determine, or
inadequate records exist to assist the trustee in
ascertaining, the application of the 6 invasion
cap.
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14- Additional examples of circumstances of when the
power to adjust can be used - Trust gives A income for life with the remainder
going to B. The settlor funded the trust with a
portfolio consisting of stocks and bonds in a
20/80 ratio. In accordance with his fiduciary
duties, the trustee determines that suitable risk
and investment return objectives indicate that
the portfolio should be invested 50/50 in stocks
and bonds. This investment strategy results in a
decrease in ordinary income. The trustee is
authorized, after considering the factors listed
above, to make an adjustment between principal
and income to the extent it considers it
necessary to increase the amount payable to the
income beneficiary. - Settlor creates a trust that provides income is
paid to the settlors sister, S, for life, with
the remainder payable to charity. The trust terms
allow the trustee to invade principal to provide
for S health and to support her in her
accustomed manner of living but does not
otherwise indicate if the trustee should favor S
or the charity. S is a retired schoolteacher,
with no children. Her income from various sources
is more than enough to provide for her accustomed
standard of living. In applying prudent investor
standards, the trustee determines that the
portfolio should be invested entirely in growth
stocks which provide virtually no dividend
income. While it is not necessary to invade
principal to maintain S accustomed standard of
living, she is entitled to receive the degree of
beneficial enjoyment accorded to a person who is
the only income beneficiary of the trust. The
trustee has the power to adjust between principal
and income to provide S with that degree of
enjoyment.
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15The Unitrust Rules
- The UPIA does not preclude a state from adopting
a unitrust provision. - The unitrust concept is not part of the UPIA.
- The unitrust concept is a provision that allows
trust income to be computed by using a fixed
percentage of the value of the trusts assets
(the unitrust amount) to compute income. - The IRS allows the unitrust amount to range from
3 to 5. Reg.1.643(b)-1. - The unitrust concept permits an income
beneficiary to receive a fixed percentage of the
trusts assets (the valuation base), revalued
annually. - The fixed percentage may be applied to the
valuation base on an annual basis, or as adopted
by some states in a form that uses a three year
moving average of the fair market value of the
assets. - Use of the unitrust methodology eliminates the
need for Trustees to wrestle with the
determination of accounting income and principal. - If the unitrust concept is elected state law may
preclude the trustee from using a power to
adjust.
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16- Once elected (unless otherwise directed by the
Court) state law may provide that the unitrust
methodology must be used in subsequent years. - This mandatory rule make the use of the unitrust
less flexible than the power to adjust. - It is a separate fiduciary accounting income
distribution system and is operative only if a
state independently enacts a unitrust provision. - If state law adopts a unitrust provision, as a
general rule, the trustee must obtain court
approval to use the unitrust methodology if the
governing instrument does not allow for the use
of the unitrust methodology.
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17The Final Income Tax Regulations Under Code
Section 643(b)
- When the UPIA was revised in 1997 giving the
trustee the power to adjust or ability to convert
to a unitrust, there were questions as to whether
the IRS would allow trustees to exercise such
powers (and thereby increase or decrease
accounting income) without, for example - jeopardizing the marital deduction,
- causing any gift tax ramifications and
- jeopardizing grandfathered generation-skipping
transfer trusts. - The Regulations that were effective as of January
2004 answered these concerns in a positive
manner. - If the trustees actions fall within the
Regulations parameters, using a power to adjust
or converting the trust to a unitrust will not - Cause the loss of a federal marital deduction
- Cause a taxable transfer for gift tax purposes
- Cause a taxable sale or exchange
- Undo the grandfathered status of a
generation-skipping transfer tax trust - The new Regulations generally will respect the
trustees determination of income made in
accordance with the trustees power to - (1) adjust between principal and income (and
vice versa) granted under local law, - (2) convert to a unitrust granted under local
law and - (3) allocate capital gain to fiduciary
accounting income.
16
18- The Regulations allow for the conversion of an
existing trust into a unitrust and the use of a
power to adjust when such powers are granted
under state law. - Generally, federal tax law follows local state
law with respect to the definition of income.
State law definitions of income which provide for
a reasonable apportionment between the income and
principal beneficiaries of the total return of
the trust for the year will be respected. - The final Regulations define income as the
amount of income of an estate or trust for the
taxable year determined under the terms of the
governing instrument and controlling local law. - The final Regulations retain the previously
existing rule that trust provisions that depart
from traditional principles in regard to the
characterization of income and principal will
generally not be recognized for federal tax
purposes.
17
19- The Regulations say that allocations between
principal and income pursuant to local law will
be respected if the local law provides for a
reasonable apportionment between the income and
principal beneficiaries of the trusts total
return for the year. - Total return includes ordinary and tax-exempt
income, capital gains and appreciation. - For the allocations to be respected, the
Regulations mandate that the controlling state
law specifically authorize the power to equitably
adjust and/or provide a unitrust definition of
income. - For the unitrust provision to be respected for
federal purposes, the state statute must define
the unitrust amount as being between 3 to 5 of
the trusts fair market value. - The preamble to the Regulations clarifies that if
no statutory law exists, other actions, such as a
decision by the states highest court enunciating
a general principle of law applicable to all
trusts administered in the state may constitute
applicable state law. - A court order applicable only to the specified
trust does not constitute applicable state law
for such purposes.
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20- In regard to the power to adjust, the Regulations
require that such adjustment power be expressly
allowed under state law and that such law
describe the circumstances under which the power
to adjust may be used. - Generally, adjustments are allowed when the
trustee invests under the prudent investor model,
the trust describes the amounts that can be
distributed to the beneficiary by referring to
trust income and the trustee, after applying the
local state rules in regard to the allocation of
principal and income, is not able to administer
the trust impartially. - In certain situations the trustee is expressly
prohibited from using the power to adjust. - IRS will generally recognize an allocation of all
or part of a capital gain to income if the
allocation is made pursuant to - the terms of the governing instrument and local
law, or - a reasonable and impartial exercise of a
discretionary power granted to the fiduciary
under the governing instrument or pursuant to
local law, if not prohibited by applicable law. - The final Regulations dramatically changed the
rules concerning the inclusion of capital gains
in distributable net income (DNI). - The old rule was that generally capital gains
were not included in DNI. - The premise under the new Regulation is that
capital gains are included in DNI. Reg. Section
1.643(a)-3(b).
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21- Capital gains are included in DNI to the extent
they are - required to be included under the terms of the
governing instrument and local law, or - allowed to be allocated to DNI pursuant to a
reasonable and impartial exercise of the
fiduciarys discretion in accordance with a power
granted to the fiduciary by the governing
instrument or local law if not prohibited by
local law - allocated to income (but if income under the
state statute is defined as, or consists of, a
unitrust amount a discretionary power to allocate
gains to income must also be exercised
consistently and the amount so allocated may not
be greater than the excess of the unitust amount
over the amount of DNI) - allocated to corpus but treated consistently by
the fiduciary on the trusts books, records and
tax returns as part of the distribution to the
beneficiary or - allocated to corpus but actually distributed to
the beneficiary or utilized by the fiduciary in
determining the amount that is distributed or
required to be distributed to the beneficiary. - The Preamble to the Regulations says that the
power to adjust does not have to be exercised
consistently as long as it is exercised
reasonably and in an impartial manner. If however
the unitrust provisions are used, the power must
be exercised on a consistent basis.
20
22What does all of this mean and when can Capital
Gain be Included in DNI?
- The Regulations contain some useful illustrations
showing when capital gains are included in DNI. - They show that a pattern is established with the
first act or the first failure of the trustee to
act where the governing instrument gives the
trustee discretionary power. - Two of the illustrations showing the tax
treatment when the fiduciary has discretionary
power are - Example 1 Under the terms of Trusts governing
instrument, all income is to be paid to A for
life. Trustee is given discretionary powers to
invade principal for As benefit and to deem
discretionary distributions to be made from
capital gains realized during the year. During
Trusts first taxable year, Trust has 5,000 of
dividend income and 10,000 of capital gain from
the sale of securities. Pursuant to the terms of
the governing instrument and applicable local
law, Trustee allocates the 10,000 capital gain
to principal. During the year, Trustee
distributes to A 5,000, representing As right
to trust income. In addition, Trustee
distributes to A 12,000, pursuant to the
discretionary power to distribute principal.
Trustee does not exercise the discretionary power
to deem the discretionary distributions of
principal as being paid from capital gains
realized during the year. Therefore, the capital
gains realized during the year are not included
in distributable net income and the 10,000 of
capital gain is taxed to the trust. In future
years, Trustee must treat all discretionary
distributions as not being made from any realized
capital gains.
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23- Example 2 The facts are the same as in Example
1, except that Trustee intends to follow a
regular practice of treating discretionary
distributions of principal as being paid first
from any net capital gains realized by Trust
during the year. Trustee evidences this
treatment by including the 10,000 capital gain
in distributable net income on Trusts federal
income tax return so that it is taxed to A. This
treatment of the capital gains is a reasonable
exercise of Trustees discretion. In future
years Trustee must treat all discretionary
distributions as being made first from any
realized capital gains. - The Regulations also provide illustrations in the
unitrust context - Example 11 The applicable state statute
provides that a trustee may make an election to
pay an income beneficiary an amount equal to four
percent of the fair market value of the trust
assets, as determined at the beginning of each
taxable year, in full satisfaction of that
beneficiarys right to income. State statute
also provides that this unitrust amount shall be
considered paid first from ordinary and
tax-exempt income, then from net short-term
capital gain, then from net-long term capital
gain, and finally from return of principal.
Trusts governing instrument provides that A is
to receive each year income as defined under
state statute. Trustee makes the unitrust
election under state statute. At the beginning
of the taxable year, Trust assets are valued at
500,000. During the year, Trust receives 5,000
of dividend income and realizes 80,000 of net
long-term gain from the sale of capital assets.
Trustee distributes to A 20,000 (4 of 500,000)
in satisfaction of As right to income. Net
long-term capital gain in the amount of 15,000
is allocated to income pursuant to the ordering
rule of the state statute and is included in
distributable net income for the taxable year.
22
24- Example 12 The facts are the same as in Example
11, except that neither state statutes nor
Trusts governing instrument has an ordering rule
for the character of the unitrust amount, but
leaves such a decision to the discretion of
Trustee. Trustee intends to follow a regular
practice of treating principal, other than
capital gain, as distributed to the beneficiary
to the extent that the unitrust amount exceeds
Trusts ordinary and tax-exempt income. Trustee
evidences this treatment by not including any
capital gains in distributable net income on
Trusts Federal income tax return so that the
entire 80,000 capital gain is taxed to Trust.
This treatment of the capital gains is a
reasonable exercise of Trustees discretion. In
future years Trustee must consistently follow
this treatment of not allocating realized capital
gains to income. - Example 13 The facts are the same as in
Example 11, except that neither state statutes
nor Trusts governing instrument has an ordering
rule for the character of the unitrust amount,
but leaves such a decision to the discretion of
Trustee. Trustee intends to follow a regular
practice of treating net capital gains as
distributed to the beneficiary to the extent the
unitrust amount exceeds Trusts ordinary and
tax-exempt income. Trustee evidences this
treatment by including 15,000 of the capital
gain in distributable net income on Trusts
Federal income tax return. This treatment of the
capital gains is a reasonable exercise of
Trustees discretion. In future years Trustee
must consistently treat realized capital gain, if
any, as distributed to the beneficiary to the
extent that the unitrust amount exceeds ordinary
and tax-exempt income.
23
25- The illustrations show that the controlling
factor is if there is a defined ordering rule,
either under the applicable state law or
governing instrument, which determines the
character of the unitrust amount. - In the absence of an ordering rule, the trustees
discretion is considered. If the trustee has a
discretionary power over the decision, capital
gains can be included in DNI, but the discretion
must be exercised consistently. This means that
the way the return is filed in year 1 is the way
future returns must be filed. - Note In all cases, capital gains cannot be
included in DNI to the extent that they exceed
the unitrust amount. For example, if the total
net income of the trust was 100,000, including
25,000 of capital gains, then capital gains
could not be included in DNI if the unitrust
amount was less than or equal to 75,000. If
the unitrust amount was 100,000 all of the
capital gains could be included in DNI. - If there is not an ordering rule and the trustee
has no discretion over the decision, capital
gains cannot be included in DNI.
24
26- The Regulations do have a major shortcoming
they do not include examples that illustrate the
inclusion of capital gains in DNI when the
trustee exercises a power to adjust. - Treasury refused to provide examples and
maintained that there were too many potential
variations in the circumstances and ramifications
of exercising the power to adjust under the
applicable state laws. - While the regulations do not provide guidance in
the context of a power to adjust, some
commentators believe that the unitrust examples
provide analogies for guidance and suggest that
the exercise of a power to adjust will result in
the inclusionof capital gains in DNI when 1)
state law ordering rules allow (or are silent
regarding) inclusion of such gains in DNI, 2)
the trustee determines that inclusion is
appropriate and equitable, 3) Form 1041 reflects
this tax approach and 4) the tax treatment is
followed consistently in subsequent years. If
state law precludes an ordering that includes
capital gains, and the trust document is silent
or it precludes ordering as well, then capital
gains cannot be included in DNI. - Some commentators maintain that since the
Regulations provide no guidance regarding the
inclusion of capital gains in the power to adjust
context, the best course is to obtain a private
letter ruling.
25
27Application to Ownership Interests in
Flow-Through Entities
- Trusts often own interests in flow-through
entities such as partnerships, LLCs and S
corporations. - More often than not these entities show K-1
income reportable by the trust which differs from
the amount of cash or other property distributed
to the trust. - There are many situations where the cash
distribution made from the flow-through entity to
the trust as owner of an interest in the entity
is less than the taxable income allocated to the
fiduciary. - If applicable state law gives the trustee the
power to adjust, the trustee may decide to
transfer from principal to income an appropriate
amount to be reflected as net income and thus
become distributable.
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28Distributions from Flow Through EntitiesTrust
Accounting and Tax TreatmentUPIA Section 505
- For accounting purposes, the trustee must keep an
income account and a separate principal account
to reflect the interest of the two classes of
beneficiaries. - For income tax purposes, no distinction is made
between receipts and disbursements that the
trustee allocates to principal and income. - All taxable receipts, and all deductible
expenses, in both the income and principal
accounts, are combined to determine the trusts
taxable income for the year. - Distributions to beneficiaries generally will
reduce the trusts taxable income. Caveat Under
traditional concepts, capital gains are not
included in distributable income for tax
purposes. - To the extent tax is paid by the Trustee, it is
allocated to the income and principal accounts
under Section 505 of the UPIA. - Trust income, taxable income and distributable
net income are usually different.
27
29- Example
- A Trust that receives dividends of 25,000 and
pays a trustee commission of 3,000, 1,000 of
which is allocated to income under state law has
trust accounting income of 24,000 (25,000 less
1,000) but taxable income of 22,000 (25,000 -
3,000). - Unless the governing instrument provides
otherwise, trust accountings are made on a cash
receipt and disbursement basis. A trusts share
of a partnerships taxable income may be more or
less than the partnerships distribution to the
Trust. The accounting income only includes the
amount received from partnership income. The
trusts share of the partnerships taxable income
is irrelevant for trust accounting purposes. - Distributable Net Income (DNI)
- Places a ceiling on the income distribution
deduction - Determines the amount includable in the
beneficiarys income - Determines the character of the distribution to
the beneficiary - The distribution deduction, and the amount
taxable to the beneficiary, is never larger than
DNI. - If the trusts DNI for the year is less than the
trust income that is distributed or required to
be distributed the portion of the income that
exceeds DNI is not taxable to the income
beneficiary.
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30How is the trusts income tax obligation
calculated when the trust owns a partnership
interest?
- UPIA Rules
- A cash distribution from the partnership is
allocated to income under Section 401(b) if the
distribution is not a partial liquidation - Section 401 (d) of the UPIA allocates money
received in a partial liquidation to principal. - Among other definitions, the UPIA provides that
money is received in partial liquidation if the
total amount of property and money is received in
a distribution or series of related distributions
is greater than 20 of the entitys gross assets
as shown by the entitys year-end financial
statements immediately preceding the initial
receipt. UPIA Section 401 (d) (2). - Comments made by various professional
organizations including the ABA, the AICPA, and
ACTEC suggest that the 20 rule contained in
Section 410 (d)(2) be eliminated. The belief is
that such section as written allows a change in
the character of the return on an investment
simply by placing the investment in a single
member LLC. For example, a trustee could
transfer an investment portfolio into a single
member LLC in order to dispose of certain highly
appreciated assets followed by a distribution of
the proceeds, not in excess of 20 of the
entitys gross assets, and change the character
of the proceeds from principal to income through
the use of the entity. - Net income means total receipts allocated to
income during an accounting period minus
disbursements from income during the period, plus
or minus transfers under the UPIA to or from
income during the period. UPIA Section 102(8)
29
31- Income taxes a trustee must pay on the trusts
share of the partnerships taxable income are
paid from income or principal under the rules of
UPIA Section 505(c) - Section 505(c) provides A tax required to be
paid by a trustee on the trusts share of an
entitys taxable income must be paid
proportionately - From income to the extent the receipts from the
entity are allocated to income and - From principal to the extent that (A) receipts
from the entity are allocated to principal and
(B) the trusts share of the entitys taxable
income exceeds the total receipts described in
paragraph (1) and (2)(A) - If the amount distributed from the partnership
exceeds the trusts share of partnership taxable
income, and if all of the distribution must be
paid to the income beneficiary, the trust will
not bear any tax. - If the amount distributed from the partnership is
less than the trusts share of partnership
taxable income, the trust must bear some or all
of the amount allocated to the trusts income and
perhaps from principal.
30
32- UPIA Sections 505 (c) and (d) pertain to how the
trustee should allocate income tax on the trusts
share of a flow-through entitys taxable income. - The interplay between Sections 505 (c) and (d)
produces different tax results depending upon the
order in which the provisions of such sections
are applied. - The AICPAs comments regarding certain proposed
changes to various sections of the UPIA
illustrates this dynamic. - As pointed out in the AICPAs comments, it is not
clear if Section 505(c) is applied first or if
505(d) is applied first. - James Gamble, co-reporter of the UPIA, apparently
believes that Section 505(c) is applied first. - Under Gambles interpretation, the trusts tax on
its share of the entitys taxable income is
calculated and then the tax is subtracted from
income receipts from the entity. To the extent
the trust receives an income distribution
deduction for paying cash received from the
entity to the beneficiary, the trustee in turn
increases its payment to the income beneficiary
to the extent of its tax savings under UPIA
Section 505(d).
31
33- On the other hand, as reported in the AICPAs
comments, the AICPAs Fiduciary Accounting Income
Task Force takes the opposite approach. The Task
Force believes Section 505(d) should be applied
first. - Under the Task Forces interpretation, receipts
from the entity would be reduced by the amount
for which the trust receives an income
distribution deduction. Then, the trustee would
apply 505(c) by calculating the trusts tax on
taxable income from the entity reduced by the
deductible payments to the beneficiary and
allocating the tax proportionately between a) the
reduced income receipts and b) reduced principal
receipts plus the trusts share of the entitys
undistributable taxable income. - Under the above interpretation, as pointed out in
the AICPAs comments, no taxes would be allocated
to the income beneficiary if all income receipts
from the entity would be deductible by the trust
because income receipts would be zero. - The rule supported by Gamble that requires that
the tax be computed first involves a circular
calculation. The is because the trust's tax
depends on the amount paid to the beneficiary for
which the trust receive an income distribution
deduction. But the amount paid to the income
beneficiary depends on the trusts tax liability
attributable to those receipts. The computation
can be solved by using an algebraic formula to
determine the net amount due to the income
beneficiary.
32
34- The formula is
- D(C - R K) / (1 R)
- D Distribution to Income Beneficiary
- C Cash Paid by the Entity to the Trust
- R Tax Rate on Income
- K Entitys K-1 Taxable Income
- AICPAs comments provide the following
illustrations concerning the above concepts - ABC Trust receives an IRS Schedule K-1 from the
Partnership reflecting taxable income of 1
million. Partnership distributes 500,000 to the
trust. The Partnership represents that the
distribution is income and so the trustee
initially allocates the entire 500,000 to
income. The trust is in the 35 percent tax
bracket. - Note The above formula and solution would
become more complicated if the state also had an
income tax. - In the above example, the partnership
distribution exceeds the trusts 350,000 ( i.e.,
1 million x 35 tax rate) tax liability on the
IRS Schedule K-1 income by 150,000). The excess
is income that the trustee is required to
distribute and for which it receives a
distribution deduction. But the distribution
deduction reduces the trustees tax, which
increases the beneficiarys income and so on.
33
35- As illustrated below, the trustee must pay
230,769 to the income beneficiary so that after
deducting the payment, the trust has exactly
enough to pay its tax on the remaining taxable
income from the entity. - Taxable Income per K-1 1,000,000
- Payment to Beneficiary 230,769
- Trust Taxable Income 769,231
- (35 Tax 269,231)
- Partnership Distribution 500,000
- Tax Allocated to Income (269,231)
- Payable to Beneficiary 230,769
- D(C - R K) / (1 R) (500,000) Cash
- Paid by Entity to the Trust 350,000
- Tax on 1,000,000 K-1 Income at 35 Rate /
(1-.35) 1- tax rate 230,769 Payable to
Beneficiary
34
36- The above circular calculation occurs ONLY when
the entity distributes an amount that is more
than enough to pay the tax on the trusts taxable
income but which is less than its total taxable
income. - When the entity distributes less than a
sufficient amount to pay the tax on the trusts
share of the entitys taxable income, the trust
has to retain the entire distribution to pay the
tax. In this situation, the income beneficiary
gets nothing. - When the distributions from the entity to the
trust are equal to or exceed the K-1 taxable
income, the tax treatment is simple and straight
forward. - When the entity distributes more than its taxable
income, the trusts tax liability attributable to
its share of the entitys taxable income is zero.
This is because the trustee can pay enough to
the income beneficiary to get a full income
distribution deduction which reduces the trusts
tax to zero. - As shown in the AICPAs comments, the result is
much different if Section 505(d) is applied
first. The amount payable to the income
beneficiary would increase to 500,000. - If Section 505(d) is applied first, the trustee
would allocate taxes on the entitys taxable
income between income and principal based on
receipts, reduced by payments to the beneficiary
for which the trustee is entitled to a deduction.
Thus, receipts in the allocation formula are
first reduced by amounts that the trustee can
deduct when paid to the beneficiary. So, the
trustee would first reduce income receipts by
amounts for which the trust receives an income
tax deduction. To the extent this reduce income
receipts to zero, no tax would be allocated to
income receipts.
35
37- Illustration (Assume same facts as above
Taxable Income 1,000,000 Distribution to Trust
500,000) - Taxable Income per K-1 1,000,000
- Payment to Income Beneficiary
500,000 - Trust Taxable Income
500,000 - (35 Tax 175,000)
- Partnership Distribution 500,000
- Tax Allocated to Income
(0) - Payable to Beneficiary
500,000 - The above alternate construct could leave the
trustee in the position of not having sufficient
cash to pay the tax on the entitys
undistributable income. - Another situation which could prove troublesome
is where the entity makes a distribution
precisely for the amount of federal income tax
that is payable on income reflected on Form K-1.
Suppose the trust has a mandatory distribution
requirement. Unless the fiduciary takes further
action, the tax reimbursement is distributable
to the income beneficiary, depriving trust
principal of the ability to discharge the tax
liability from funds received in the
distribution. Here, the fiduciary could use the
power to adjust and allocate the distribution to
principal.
36
38Funding a Marital Trust with an IRAor Defined
Contribution PlanNote All such plans will be
referred to for simplicity as an IRA.
- Relying on UPIA provisions will not secure the
marital deduction. - IRAs are unique
- Income is taxable to the beneficiary when
distributed - Upon the account owners death, the account is a
principal asset to the fiduciary - Nature of IRA has caused concern among
practitioners in regard to securing marital
deduction when funding a marital trust with an
IRA - Securing marital deduction is complicated by
Codes minimum distribution requirement (RMD)
37
39- UPIA Provisions
- UPIA includes models of how marital deduction
could be secured - Section 409 (c)
- 10 Rule If no part of payment from an IRA is
characterized as interest, dividend or an
equivalent payment, and all or part of the
payment is required to be distributed currently,
the trustee must allocate 10 of the payment to
income and 90 to principal - If no part of the payment is required to be paid
currently, the entire payment must be allocated
to principal - UPIA recognized that above provisions could
jeopardize the marital deduction - Q-TIP provisions require payment of net income to
surviving spouse to secure deduction - Section 409 (c) mandated classifications bear no
relationship to IRAs actual income - In an attempt to insure the marital deduction,
UPIA requires an additional allocation to income
if necessary to secure the marital deduction
(Section 409 (d))
38
40- Even with Section 409 (d) savings clause,
practitioner's were concerned that UPIA
retirement plan allocation rules were problematic
in marital deduction situations they were
right! - Revenue Ruling 2006-26
- Answers question of how adoption of UPIA affects
the determination of what is IRA income in
marital deduction situations - The Revenue Ruling is of critical importance in
obtaining the marital deduction for amounts held
in an IRA when the beneficiary is a Q-TIP Trust
and the applicable state law is the UPIA with
power to adjust and/or power to define income as
unitrust amount - Ruling provides three illustrations showing how
IRA income should be computed to satisfy marital
deduction requirements - The three illustrations address the requirement
for income distributions in the context of states
which - have adopted the UPIAs power to adjust and UPIA
Sections 409 (c) and (d) - Have a unitrust definition of income, or
- Have not adopted the UPIAs power to adjust nor a
unitrust definition
39
41- The Ruling acknowledges that each of the below
three methods could produce a sufficient amount
of income to secure the marital deduction - Power to Adjust under UPIA section 104 (c),
(Caution Reliance on UPIA Sections 409 (c) and
(d) will not secure the marital deduction) - Determination on unitrust basis
- Determination under traditional state law
principles - All three illustrations are based on the same
basic facts - The Q-TIP Trust gives the spouse power to require
the trustee to make withdrawals from the IRA in
an amount equal to all income and to distribute
such income to spouse. - The trustee elects to take distributions over the
spouses life expectancy. - The spouse has the right to require that the IRA
be invested in productive assets. - The remaindermen are the account owners
children. - No person other than the spouse and children have
a beneficial interest in the trust. - Illustration 1
- Applies where state laws allows adjustments
between principal and income and the power to
adjust is exercised to administer the trust
fairly - State law also has adopted Section 409 (c) 10
rule and 409 (d) savings clause - Trustee determines total return for all trust
assets other than the retirement plan and
allocates between principal and income in
accordance with UPIA Section 104 (a) - Trustee separately determines the total return
for the plan assets and allocates in accordance
with Section 104 (a)
40
42- This latter allocation is made without regard
to, and independent of, the trustees
determination with respect to trust income and
principal - In other words, the allocation of a payment from
the IRA to trust income or principal under UPIA
Section 409 (c) is irrelevant to the
determination of trust income from non-plan
assets and to the determination of trust income
from the IRA - In summary, the Trustee determines income from
- Non IRA assets
- IRA assets
- The above two components together constitute the
income which must be distributed to the spouse,
or in the case of IRA income, subject to the
spouses power to force distribution - It is critical to note that the method of
computing income sanctioned by IRS entirely
ignores the UPIA rules for allocation of IRA
distributions to income and principal - The ruling explicitly states that the 10
allocation rules of Section 409 (c) does not
satisfy the Q-TIP rules. The 10 rule - Does not reflect a reasonable apportionment of
the total return between the income and remainder
beneficiaries - Does not represent IRA income under applicable
state law without regard to a power to adjust
41
43- The ruling adds that the savings clause of
Section 409 (d) might not save the marital
deduction - Note that even if Section 409 (d) effectively
requires that the entire distribution be
allocated to income this still does not insure
that the surviving spouse will actually receive
all of the IRAs annual income - The RMD in any year is unrelated and is not equal
to the IRAs income - So, the annual income requirement of Code Section
2056 is just not met under Sections 409 (c) and
(d) - Illustration 2
- Applies where income is defined as a unitrust
amount in accordance with state law - The Trust is govern