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Tax
Home Sale Exclusion Limited
By Michael Lynch
June 2001

More and more individuals are using living trusts to avoid probate court and transfer their property to named beneficiaries upon their death. A new letter ruling exposes a potential problem if a married couple’s revocable trust becomes irrevocable after the first spouse dies and the trust then sells the surviving spouse’s home.
In letter ruling 200104005, a husband and wife established a revocable living trust and transferred most of their assets to it, including their principal residence. Upon the wife’s death, the revocable trust was split into two: (1) a revocable trust funded with the marital deduction amount and (2) an irrevocable trust that received the balance, including the residence. The surviving husband was the beneficiary of each trust.

The husband had the right to occupy the home and to direct its sale and replacement. The irrevocable trust gave the husband a noncumulative power to withdraw each calendar year, from the principal of the trust, an amount not to exceed the greater of $5,000 or 5% (the “five-or-five” power) of the then aggregate market value of all property included in the trust.

After living in the home for more than 30 years, the husband was forced to move into an assisted living facility. The trustee wanted to sell the residence and asked the IRS if the beneficiary (the husband) could exclude the first $250,000 of gain under IRC section 121.

The husband argued that, since he had the right to occupy the home and the power to force the trustee to rent, lease, sell or replace it, he should be deemed the home’s owner.

The IRS disagreed. Under IRC section 121, the $250,000 exclusion of gain on the sale of a principal residence is available only if the taxpayer owns and uses the home as a principal residence for two of the five years preceding the sale. According to the IRS, there is no question that the husband fulfilled the use requirement. The problem was “Who owns the residence?”

The service ruled the husband could use the home sale exclusion only to the extent he was deemed to own a portion of the residence through his five-or-five power. The rest of the gain was taxable. The IRS said that the power vested a portion of the corpus of the irrevocable trust in the husband. Each year in which he failed to exercise this power resulted in his owning an increased portion of the trust corpus and being, therefore, eligible to exclude a larger portion of the gain.

Observation. This ruling has little effect on taxpayers whose spouses recently died and where a trust obtained the property with a partial or full stepped-up basis. However, for taxpayers who have outlived their spouses for several years or those who have had substantial gains, the gains may not be fully excludable under the home sale rule.
As an alternative, homeowners should consider the advantages of establishing a qualified personal residence trust (QPRT). The home is transferred to the QPRT, but the owner reserves the right to live in it rent-free during the trust’s term. The owner may have to pay a small gift tax, but if he or she survives the term, the home “passes” to his or her children estate tax-free.

If the owner dies during the term of the QPRT, the residence reverts to his or her estate where it would have been taxed anyway. But the probate process is avoided and the home transfers directly to the named beneficiaries.

If the home is sold during the trust’s term, the exclusion amount is still available to the owner. And, for income tax purposes, he or she can still deduct the interest on the mortgage and the real estate taxes.

—Michael Lynch, Esq.,
professor of tax accounting at
Bryant College, Smithfield, Rhode Island.


Tax
Use Annuity Tables to Value Lottery Payments
By James Ozello
June 2001

In a case this year ( Gribauskas, 116 TC no. 12), the Tax Court ruled that future payments of lottery winnings must be valued for estate tax purposes using the IRC section 7520 valuation tables. This ruling specifically rejected a California district court’s 1999 decision in Shackleford Est. v. United States, which held using the section 7520 tables was unreasonable because the lottery winnings’ lack of liquidity was not taken into account ( “Court Rules on Lottery Payoffs,” JofA, May00, page 85 ).

In 1992 Gribauskas and his wife won approximately $16 million in the Connecticut lottery, payable in 20 annual installments of about $790,000 each. After they received the first payment, they divorced; the settlement provided each spouse with one-half of the remaining installment payments. In June 1994, Gribauskas died, still entitled to 18 annual payments of approximately $395,000 each.

Gribauskas’ estate tax return included the lottery payments as an unsecured debt obligation due from Connecticut and listed them with a present value of approximately $2.6 million. Instead of considering the payments to be an annuity, the estate, using the estate tax principle of fair market value, had decided the payments were not marketable because they were nonassignable and could not be accelerated and had, therefore, discounted them.

The IRS determined the present value of the payments should have been $3.5 million, based on the tables. It concluded the installments, regardless of whether they constituted an annuity under the estate tax inclusion rules of IRC section 2039, fell under section 7520. Furthermore, no regulatory exceptions or features—such as lack of marketability—exempted applying the valuation tables to the winnings.

The Tax Court agreed with the IRS, concluding the payments were an annuity under section 7520. The court rejected the estate’s arguments that the annuity table value was unrealistic and unreasonable because it did not take into account the unsecured nature of the payment obligation, the lack of a corpus to draw on or the estate’s inability to assign, sell or transfer the interest.

Furthermore, the Tax Court specifically disagreed with the district court’s decision in Shackleford , stating that it offered no support for considering marketability in valuing annuities and that Congress’ enactment of section 7520 showed it was strongly in favor of standardized actuarial valuation. The court also said that, as a practical matter, the value of an annuity is distinct in nature from interests to which a marketability discount is typically applied, such as closely held stock. The annuity’s value exists solely in the anticipated payments. The inability to liquidate those installments does not diminish the value of an enforceable right to a specific payment for a given number of years.

Observation. In light of this decision by the Tax Court, practitioners should reconsider any planning that relied on Shackleford .

—James Ozello, Esq.,
Ozello Tax and Legal Consulting,
Ringwood, New Jersey.


Tax
Line Items
By Michael Lynch
June 2001
OK to Donate Stock With No Voting Rights

Revenue ruling 81-282 states that, if a taxpayer contributes voting stock to a qualified charitable recipient but retains the right to vote, IRC section 170 (f)(3), which disallows charitable deductions for partial interests in property, will deny a charitable contribution deduction if that right is a substantial interest.

Recently, letter ruling 200108001 outlined when a donation of nonvoting stock qualifies as a charitable contribution. In the ruling, the taxpayer owned stock in a closely held corporation for over a year. Eight years ago, to make the sale of the company easier to negotiate, the taxpayer and other corporate shareholders entered into a voting agreement that required all of them to transfer their voting rights to an unrelated third party. The taxpayer asked the IRS if a donation of the stock subject to the voting agreement was deductible under IRC section 170.

The IRS said the voting rights were a substantial right and ruled that, even though the taxpayer was contributing only a partial interest to the charity, a deduction equal to the full fair market value of the shares (less the value of the rights) would be allowed because the voting rights had been transferred years earlier for a legitimate business purpose and the taxpayer had no tax-avoidance motive in creating the partial interest.

Working in Florida, Living in New Jersey

A taxpayer, who owned a principal residence in New Jersey, in 1982 began spending the winter months with his son in Florida. In 1988 the taxpayer purchased two apartment buildings and two cottages in Florida; one apartment became a home for his son and the other properties were rentals. The son managed the rental properties. During the winter months, the father stayed in the son’s apartment.

In 1992 the taxpayer registered to vote in Florida and got a job that required a Florida commercial driver’s license and a Florida-registered truck. He earned enough money during the winter to stop working in New Jersey, and he did not file a New Jersey tax return. He even listed the Florida residence as his home address on his federal income tax return.

However, from 1992 to 1996, he continued to reside in New Jersey during the spring, summer and part of the fall. He kept all his possessions at the New Jersey residence except for some clothing and a car that remained in Florida.

In 1996 he sold the New Jersey home and moved all his belongings to the Florida apartment. The son moved out, and the taxpayer began to oversee the rental properties.

On his 1996 federal income tax return, the taxpayer excluded the gain from the sale of the residence under IRC section 121. The IRS denied the exclusion stating that, at the time of the sale, the house was no longer the taxpayer’s principal residence.

The Tax Court held that because the taxpayer had never abandoned, rented or held out the New Jersey home to be rented and had consistently owned and used the residence until he sold it, the gain on the sale could be excluded ( Taylor v. Commissioner, TC Summary Opinion 2000-17).

No Ownership Means No Capital Gains Tax

While still married, a woman purchased a home and recorded title in her name only. However, the mortgage was recorded in both her name and her husband’s. Years later when they divorced, the decree stated that the residence “shall remain in the names of both the wife and the husband and that each shall be entitled to one-half of the net proceeds from any future sale. The decree did not require the wife to transfer title in the residence to the husband. In the interim, the wife was granted exclusive possession of the house, and the husband was required to pay the mortgage, taxes and insurance.

After the home was sold, the IRS argued that the language in the divorce decree coupled with the fact that the husband received one-half the sales proceeds meant that the husband owned the residence and was liable for the capital gains tax on one-half of the gain.

The Tax Court stressed that there is a difference between marital property (property either or both spouses acquired and owned during the marriage) and ownership in such property. According to the court, the right to receive proceeds from the sale of property is not an ownership interest in such property.

The court held that since the wife was not forced to transfer title to the husband, he was not an owner of the home and therefore, not liable for the capital gains tax on its sale ( Robert W. Suhr v. Commissioner, TC Memo 2001-28).

Protecting Confidentiality in Domestic Abuse Cases

If a taxpayer files for innocent spouse relief, the law requires the IRS to inform the taxpayer’s spouse (or former spouse) of the request. However, this requirement poses a problem for victims of domestic violence, who may want to apply for relief but also keep their whereabouts a secret to avoid retaliation by an abusive spouse.

In Informational Release 2001-23, the IRS told such taxpayers to write “Potential domestic abuse case” at the top of Form 8857, Request for Innocent Spouse Relief, and explain their concerns in an attached statement. All these cases will be handled at one IRS location so spouses cannot guess the whereabouts of domestic abuse victims through a postmark or local IRS office address.

According to the IRS, agents assigned to these cases will receive special training on how to protect the confidentiality of sensitive information that could endanger victims’ safety.

The IRS stresses that, in deciding a case, it will not give special consideration to the “potential domestic abuse case” designation but will weigh it as a factor for innocent spouse relief. Ultimately, it is still the taxpayer’s responsibility to explain why he or she qualifies for the relief.

Special Features Deductible in Year Home Completed

A taxpayer built a home to accommodate his wife’s medical needs on her doctor’s recommendation. He contracted with an architect in 1992, construction began in 1993 and the house was completed in 1995. The contract called for periodic payments throughout the construction period. The home, which was designed of steel and concrete, had special ventilation and filtering systems; the construction costs for these features exceeded the fair market value of the house by $646,000.

When the house was completed, the taxpayer deducted the $646,000 as a medical expense and claimed a refund of $262,000 on his 1995 return. The IRS only allowed a refund of $20,800 based on the medical expenses that were actually paid in 1995. It stated that the medical expenses should have been deducted in earlier years when paid. However, the 7 12 % AGI limit would have drastically reduced the deduction in those years.

The taxpayer argued that the 7 12 % limit should be applied only once and only in the year the house was completed. The taxpayer’s wife received no medical benefit until the house was habitable, and the amount of the deduction (the excess of the actual construction cost over the fair market value) couldn’t be determined until it was finished.

The court sided with the taxpayer and held that the deduction should be taken in the year the house became habitable ( Laurence S. Zipkin v. United States, no 99-762; DC MN 10-18-00; 86 AFTR2d 2000-5571).

—Michael Lynch, Esq., professor of tax accounting at
Bryant College, Smithfield, Rhode Island.


Tax
Innocent Spouse Provisions
By Edward J. Schnee
June 2001

One of the most important changes Congress introduced recently to make the tax laws more equitable was a revision of the innocent spouse rules. Since their enactment, the courts have been busy determining which taxpayers qualify for relief.

Ellen Hinckley was married for more than 30 years and, for most of that time, she was a homemaker. She had an undergraduate degree in nutrition and a master’s degree in art history. Her husband had a law degree and an LLM in taxation. Starting in 1994 her husband, who prepared the couple’s joint tax returns, omitted his pension from their taxable income. The IRS objected to the omission. In 1995 Hinkley’s husband sent the agency a letter explaining why he omitted the income. He had his wife sign the letter. She divorced him in 1999. The IRS attempted to collect the tax due on the omitted income from Hinkley. She objected, arguing she was entitled to innocent spouse relief.

Result. For the taxpayer. Hinkley argued she was entitled to relief because she did not know there was an understatement of tax—which is provided for in IRC section 6015(b). (The IRS conceded she met the other requirements of that section.) Alternatively, she argued that, even had she known of the understatement, she had signed the return under duress and was entitled to relief under section 6015(c) (3)(C). The court rejected her primary argument, concluding she, in fact, did know of the omission (as she had signed the 1995 letter). Under the applicable subsection, it is sufficient for a taxpayer to have known the income existed. He or she does not have to have understood the proper tax treatment.

A taxpayer is deemed to have knowledge of an omission if a reasonably prudent person could be expected to know of it. This is determined based on a taxpayer’s education, his or her involvement in the business, the presence of lavish expenditures in relation to prior expenditures and whether or not the taxpayer’s spouse hid the family’s finances from him or her. Using these criteria, Hinkley would appear to qualify for relief based on an absence of knowledge. However the fact that she signed a separate letter addressing the omitted item sufficiently outweighs the general factors. In other words, any action a taxpayer takes that could support the existence of actual knowledge will nullify all factors in his or her favor.

Although Hinkley had knowledge of the omitted item, she was entitled to relief because she signed the returns under duress. Duress exists based on either physical abuse or continued mental intimidation. However, duress requires both abuse and a signature obtained because of fear of abuse. The court cited Stanley as an example. In that case the taxpayer had been physically abused for many years. The fact that by signing the returns she avoided additional abuse did not qualify as duress because she did not know of an error on the return that would cause her to fear signing it. There was no reason for her not to sign the return. Hinkley’s case was different. She knew of the omission and signed the return in spite of it because she feared what would happen if she did not. Thus, she signed under duress.

If the courts follow this decision in future cases, a taxpayer will be entitled to innocent spouse relief if he or she

Did not know or have reason to know of the omission.

Knew of the omission but signed the return anyway out of fear of the consequences of refusing.

In re Ellen A. Hinckley, 86 AFTR2d 2000-5614, Bankruptcy Ct, Florida.

Prepared by Edward J. Schnee, CPA, PhD,
Joe Lane Professor of Accounting and director,
MTA program, Culverhouse School of Accountancy,
University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa.


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