Cincyblogs.com
Showing posts with label decedent. Show all posts
Showing posts with label decedent. Show all posts

Sunday, June 4, 2023

The Gallenstein Rule

 

It is a tax rule that will eventually go extinct.

It came to my attention recently that it can – however – still apply.

Let’s set it up.

(1)  You have a married couple.

(2)  The couple purchased real estate (say a residence) prior to 1977.

(3)  One spouse passes away.

(4)  The surviving spouse is now selling the residence.

Yeah, that 1977 date is going to eliminate most people.

We are talking Section 2040(b).

(b)  Certain joint interests of husband and wife.

(1)  Interests of spouse excluded from gross estate.

Notwithstanding subsection (a), in the case of any qualified joint interest, the value included in the gross estate with respect to such interest by reason of this section is one-half of the value of such qualified joint interest.

(2)  Qualified joint interest defined.

For purposes of paragraph (1), the term "qualified joint interest" means any interest in property held by the decedent and the decedent's spouse as-

(A)  tenants by the entirety, or

(B)  joint tenants with right of survivorship, but only if the decedent and the spouse of the decedent are the only joint tenants.

In 1955 Mr. and Mrs. G purchased land in Kentucky. Mr. G provided all the funds for the purchase. They owned the property as joint tenants with right of survivorship.

In 1987 Mr. G died.  

In 1988 Mrs. G sold 73 acres for $3.6 million. She calculated her basis in the land to be $103,000, meaning that she paid tax on gain of $3.5 million.

Someone pointed out to her that the $103,000 basis seemed low. There should have been a step-up in the land basis when her husband died. Since he owned one-half, one-half of the land should have received a step-up.

COMMENT: You may have heard that one’s “basis” is reset at death. Basis normally means purchase cost, but not always. This is one of those “not always.” The reset (with some exceptions, primarily retirement accounts) is whatever the asset was worth at the date of death or – if one elects – six months later.  Mind you, one does not have to file an estate tax return to trigger the reset; rather, it happens automatically. That is a good thing, as the lifetime estate tax exemption is approaching $13 million these days. Very few of us are punching in that weight class.

Someone looked into Mrs. G’s situation and agreed. In May 1989 Mrs. G filed an amended tax return showing basis in the land as $1.8 million. Since the basis went up, the taxable gain went down. She was entitled to a refund.

Three months later she filed a second amended return showing basis in the land as $3.6 million. She wanted another refund.

This time she caught the attention of the IRS. They could understand the first amended but not the second. Where were these numbers parachuting from?

I am going to spare us both a technical walkthrough through the history of Code section 2040.

There was a time when joint owners had to track their separate contributions to the purchase of property, meaning that each owner would have his/her own basis. I suppose there are some tax metaphysics at play here, but the rule did not work well in real life. Sales transactions often occur decades after the purchase, and people do not magically know that they need to start precise accounting as soon as they buy property together. Realistically, these numbers sometimes cannot be recreated decades after the fact. In 1976 Congress changed the rule, saying: forget tracking for joint interests created after 1976. From now on the Code will assume that each tenant contributed one-half.

That is how we get to today’s rule that one-half of a couple’s property is included in the estate of the first-to-die. By being included in an estate, the property is entitled to a step-up in basis. The surviving spouse gets a step-up in the inherited half of the property. The surviving spouse also keeps his/her “old” basis in his/her original one-half. The surviving spouse’s total basis is therefore the sum of the “old” basis plus the step-up basis.

Mr. G died before 1977.

Meaning that Mrs. G was not subject to the new rule.

She was subject to the old rule. Since Mr. G had put up all the money, all the property (yes, 100%) was subject to a step-up in basis when Mr. G died.

That was the reason for the second amended return.

The Court agreed with Mrs. G.

It was a quirk in tax law.

The IRS initially disagreed with the decision, but it finally capitulated in 2001 after losing in court numerous times.

Mind you, the quirk still exists. However, the population it might affect is dwindling, as this law change was 47 years ago. We only live for so long.

However, if you come across someone who owned property with a spouse before 1977, you might have something.

BTW this tax treatment has come to be known by the widow who litigated against the IRS: the tax-nerds sometimes call it “the Gallenstein rule.”

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

Dividing An Inherited IRA



We had a situation where a father left his IRA to his two children. The father was in his 70s, the son was in his 50s and the daughter in her 40s. The tax problem was triggered by having one IRA with two beneficiaries.

There are certain tax no-no's involving an IRA. One is to have your IRA go to your estate. An estate has no “actuarial life expectancy,” as only individuals can have life expectancies. Tax rules require an estate IRA to pay-out much sooner than may be desired or tax-advantageous. A second no-no is what the above father had done.

When there are multiple beneficiaries of an IRA, the IRS requires the IRA to calculate the minimum required distributions (MRD) based on the life of the oldest beneficiary. In our case, it wasn’t too bad, as the siblings were within 10 years of each other. Consider an alternate situation: a son/daughter and a grandchild. In that case the grandchild would be receiving MRDs based on the son/daughter’s life expectancy, which likely would not be in the grandchild’s best financial interest. 

What to do? Split the IRA into two: one for the son and another for the daughter. As long as this is done no later than the last day of the year following the year of death, the IRS will respect the division. This allows the son to use his life expectancy for his withdrawals, and the daughter to use her life expectancy.

 

The jargon for this is “subaccount,” and if you are in this situation (death in 2011), please consider dividing the inherited IRA into subaccounts by December 31.

By the way, there is a tax trap in setting up the subaccounts. These are inherited accounts, and the IRS requires inherited accounts to retain the name of the decedent. What do I mean? Say that Adam Jones passed way, so we would be looking at the “IRA FBO Adam Jones.” When the subaccounts are created, they should be named (something like) “IRA FBO Adam Jones Deceased FBO Benjamin Jones Inherited.” If one does not do this correctly, the IRS can (as has before) consider Benjamin as having withdrawn ALL the inherited IRA and put it into his own separate IRA. Since he withdrew all the inherited IRA, he has to pay tax on all of it, not just the minimum required distribution.

I consider the above tax trap to be unfair, but the IRS has brought down the hammer before. Do not be one of the unfortunate caught in this trap. We have discussed before that even an average person may need a tax pro here and there throughout life. This is one of those moments.