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Showing posts with label 6324. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 6324. Show all posts

Sunday, December 20, 2020

Inheriting A Tax Debt

 I am looking at a decision coming from a New Jersey District Court, and it has to do with personal liability for estate taxes.

Clearly this is an unwanted result. How did it happen?

To set up the story, we are looking at two estates.

The first estate was the Estate of Lorraine Kelly. She died on December 30, 2003. The executors, one of whom was her brother, filed an estate tax return in September, 2004. The estate was worth over $1.7 and owed $214 grand in tax. Her brother was the sole beneficiary.

OK.

The estate got audited. The estate was adjusted to $2.6 million and the tax increased to $662 grand.

COMMENT: It does not necessarily mean anything that an estate was adjusted. Sometimes there are things in an estate that are flat-out hard to value or – more likely – can have a range of values. I will give you an example: what is the likeness of Prince (the musician) worth? Reasonable people can disagree on that number all day long.

The estate owed the IRS an additional $448 grand.

The brother negotiated a payment plan. He made payments to the IRS, but he also transferred estate assets to himself and his daughter, using the money to capitalize a business and acquire properties. He continued doing so until no estate assets were left. The estate however still owed the IRS.

OK, this is not fatal. He had to keep making those payments, though. He might want to google “transferee tax liability” before getting too froggy with the IRS.

He instructed his daughter to continue those payments in case something happened to him. There must have been some forewarning, as he in fact passed away.

His estate was worth over a million dollars. It went to his daughter.

The daughter he talked to about continuing the payments to the IRS.

Guess what she did.

Yep, she stopped making payments to the IRS.

She had run out of money. Where did the money go?

Who knows.

COMMENT: Folks, often tax law is not some abstruse, near-impenetrable fog of tax spew and doctrine descending from Mount Olympus. Sometimes it is about stupid stuff – or stupid behavior.

Now there was some technical stuff in this case, as years had passed and the IRS only has so much time to collect. That said, there are taxpayer actions that add to the time the IRS has to collect. That time is referred to as the statute of limitations, and there are two limitations periods, not one:

·      The IRS generally has three years to look at and adjust a tax return.

·      An adjustment is referred to as an assessment, and the IRS then has 10 years from the date of assessment to collect.

You can see that the collection period can get to 13 years in fairly routine situations.

What is an example of taxpayer behavior that can add time to the period?

Let’s say that you receive a tax due notice for an amount sufficient to pay-off the SEC states’ share of the national debt. You request a Collections hearing. The time required for that hearing will extend the time the IRS has to collect. It is fair, as the IRS is not supposed to hound you while you wait for that hearing.

Back to our story.

Mrs. Kelley died and bequeathed to her brother.

Her brother later died and bequeathed to his daughter

Does that tax liability follow all the way to the daughter?

There is a case out there called U.S. v Tyler, and it has to do with fiduciary liability. A fiduciary is a party acting on behalf of another, putting that other person’s interests ahead of their own interests. An executor is a party acting on behalf of a deceased. An executor’s liability therefore is a fiduciary liability. Tyler says that liability will follow the fiduciary like a bad case of athlete’s foot if:

(1)  The fiduciary distributed assets of the estate;

(2)  The distribution resulted in an insolvent estate; and

(3)  The distribution took place AFTER the fiduciary had actual or constructive knowledge of the unpaid taxes.

There is no question that the brother met the Tyler standard, as he was a co-executor for his sister’s estate and negotiated the payment plan with the IRS.

What about his daughter, though?

More specifically, that third test.

Did the daughter know – and can it be proven that she knew?

Here’s how: she filed an inheritance tax return showing the IRS debt as a liability against her father’s estate.

She knew.

She owed.

Our case this time was U.S. v Estate of Kelley, 126 AFTR 2d 2020-6605, 10/22/2020.

Sunday, April 7, 2019

You Inherit. Can You Owe Estate Tax?


I came across an estate tax lien case the other day.

It has become unlikely that one will owe estate tax, as the lifetime exclusion has now gone over $11 million. Still, it can and does happen.

The federal estate tax is an odd beast. It is a combination of assets owned or controlled at death, increased by an addback for reportable lifetime gifts. This system is called a “unified” tax, and the intent is to not avoid the estate tax by giving property away to family over the course of a lifetime. In truth, the addback is necessary, as tax planners (including me) would drive an 18-wheeler through the estate tax if the lifetime-gift addback did not exist.

There is a potential trap if the estate tax kicks-in.

Let me give you a scenario, very loosely based on the case.  

Mr Arshem was successful. He created and funded a family limited partnership with real estate, stock and securities. He began a multi-year gifting sequence to his children, each time claiming a generous discount for lack of control and marketability. He had cumulatively gifted away $5 million in this manner.

He passed away early in 2019. He died with an estate of $6 million.

On first pass, $6 million plus $5 million equals $11 million. He is just under the threshold, so he should not have an estate tax issue – right?

Not so fast.

The IRS audits one or more of those gift tax returns. They argue that the discounts were too generous, and the reportable gifts were actually $8 million. The estate disagrees; they go to Court; the estate loses.

Now we have $8 million plus $5 million for $13 million.

There is an estate tax filing requirement.

And estate tax due.

Let’s say that the estate had been probated and closed. There no estate assets remaining.

Who pays the tax?

Look over this little beauty:
§ 6324 Special liens for estate and gift taxes.
(a)  Liens for estate tax.
Except as otherwise provided in subsection (c) -
(1)  Upon gross estate.
Unless the estate tax imposed by chapter 11 is sooner paid in full, or becomes unenforceable by reason of lapse of time, it shall be a lien upon the gross estate of the decedent for 10 years from the date of death, except that such part of the gross estate as is used for the payment of charges against the estate and expenses of its administration, allowed by any court having jurisdiction thereof, shall be divested of such lien.
(2)  Liability of transferees and others.
If the estate tax imposed by chapter 11 is not paid when due, then the spouse, transferee, trustee (except the trustee of an employees' trust which meets the requirements of section 401(a) ), surviving tenant, person in possession of the property by reason of the exercise, nonexercise, or release of a power of appointment, or beneficiary, who receives, or has on the date of the decedent's death, property included in the gross estate under sections 2034 to 2042 , inclusive, to the extent of the value, at the time of the decedent's death, of such property, shall be personally liable for such tax.

It is not the easiest of reading.

What (a)(2) means is that the IRS can after the transferees – the children of Mr Arshem in our example. There is also a sneaky twist. Income tax liens have to be recorded; estate tax liens do not. They are referred to as “silent” liens and can create unexpected – and unpleasant – surprises.  You cannot go to the courthouse and research if one exists.

What if Arshem’s children received his assets and thereafter sold them? What happens to the lien?

The children are “transferees.” They are personally liable for the estate tax.
COMMENT: There are procedures to possibly mitigate this consequence, but we will pass on their discussion in this post.
The case is U.S. v Ringling. The moral of the story is – if the estate is large enough to draw the wrath of the federal estate tax – please consult an experienced professional. Think of it as insurance.