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Showing posts with label noncash. Show all posts
Showing posts with label noncash. Show all posts

Monday, July 1, 2024

A Charitable Deduction To An Estate

 

I had a difficult conversation with a client recently over an issue I had not seen in a while.

It involves an estate. The same issue would exist with a trust, as estates and trusts are (for the most part) taxed the same way.

Let’s set it up.

Someone passed away, hence the estate.

The estate is being probated, meaning that at least some of its assets and liabilities are under court review before payment or distribution. The estate has income while this process is going on and so files its own income tax return.

Many times, accountants will refer to this tax return as the “estate” return, but it should not be confused with the following, also called the “estate” return:

What is the difference?

Form 706 is the tax – sometimes called the death tax – on net assets when someone passes away. It is hard to trigger the death tax, as the Code presently allows a $13.6 million lifetime exclusion for combined estate and gift taxes (and twice that if one is married). Let’s be honest: $13.6 million excludes almost all of us.

Form 1041 is the income tax for the estate. Dying does not save one from income taxes.

Let’s talk about the client.

Dr W passed away unexpectedly. At death he had bank and brokerage accounts, a residence, retirement accounts, collectibles, and a farm. The estate is being probated in two states, as there is real estate in the second state. The probate has been unnecessarily troublesome. Dr W recorded a holographic will, and one of the states will not accept it.

COMMENT: Not all estate assets go through probate, by the way. Assets passing under will must be probated, but many assets do not pass under will.

What is an example of an asset that can pass outside of a will?

An IRA or 401(k).

That is the point of naming a beneficiary to your IRA or 401(k). If something happens to you, the IRA transfers automatically to the beneficiary under contract law. It does not need the permission of a probate judge.

Back to Dr W.

Our accountant prepared the Form 1041, I saw interest, dividends, capitals gains, farm income and … a whopping charitable donation.

What did the estate give away?

Books. Tons of books. I am seeing titles like these:

·       Techniques of Chinese Lacquer

·       Vergoldete Bronzen I & II

·       Pendules et Bronzes d’Ameublement

Some of these books are expensive. The donation wiped out whatever income the estate had for the year.

If the donation was deductible.

Look at the following:

§ 642 Special rules for credits and deductions.

      (c)  Deduction for amounts paid or permanently set aside for a charitable purpose.

(1)  General rule.

In the case of an estate or trust ( other than a trust meeting the specifications of subpart B), there shall be allowed as a deduction in computing its taxable income (in lieu of the deduction allowed by section 170(a) , relating to deduction for charitable, etc., contributions and gifts) any amount of the gross income, without limitation, which pursuant to the terms of the governing instrument is, during the taxable year, paid for a purpose specified in section 170(c) (determined without regard to section 170(c)(2)(A) ). If a charitable contribution is paid after the close of such taxable year and on or before the last day of the year following the close of such taxable year, then the trustee or administrator may elect to treat such contribution as paid during such taxable year. The election shall be made at such time and in such manner as the Secretary prescribes by regulations.

This not one of the well-known Code sections.

It lays out three requirements for an estate or trust to get a charitable deduction:

  • Must be paid out of gross income.
  • Must be paid pursuant to the terms of the governing instrument.
  • Must be paid for a purpose described in IRC Sec. 170(c) without regard to Section 170(c)(2)(A). 

Let’s work backwards.

The “170(c) without …” verbiage opens up donations to foreign charities.

In general, contributions must be paid to domestic charities to be income-tax deductible. There are workarounds, of course, but that discussion is for another day. This restriction does not apply to estates, meaning they can contribute directly to foreign charities without a workaround.

This issue does not apply to Dr W.

Next, the instrument governing the estate must permit payments to charity. Without this permission, there is no income tax deduction.

I am looking at the holographic will, and there is something in there about charities. Close enough, methinks.

Finally, the donation must be from gross income. This term is usually interpreted as meaning gross taxable income, meaning sources such as municipal interest or qualified small business stock would create an issue.

The gross income test has two parts:

(1)  The donation cannot exceed the estate’s cumulative (and previously undistributed) taxable income over its existence.

(2)  The donation involves an asset acquired by that accumulated taxable income. A cash donation easily meets the test (if it does not exceed accumulated taxable income). An in-kind distribution will also qualify if the asset was acquired with cash that itself would have qualified.

The second part of that test concerns me.

Dr W gave away a ton of books.

The books were transferred to the estate as part of its initial funding. The term for these assets is “corpus,” and corpus is not gross income. Mind you, you probably could trace the books back to the doctor’s gross income, but that is not the test here.

I am not seeing a charitable deduction.

“I would not have done this had I known,” said the frustrated client.

I know.

We have talked about a repetitive issue with taxes: you do not know what you do not know.

How should this have been done?

Distribute the books to the beneficiary and let him make the donation personally. Those rules about gross income and whatnot have no equivalent when discussing donations by individuals.

What if the beneficiary does not itemize?

Understood, but you have lost nothing. The estate was not getting a deduction anyway.


Saturday, August 19, 2017

Keep It Believable

Our protagonists this time are the Ohdes from West Virginia. The issue concerns charitable contributions. The Ohdes claimed they made dozens of trips to Frederick, Maryland and donated over 20,000 distinct items in 2011.

Half of this would have been clothing. There was furniture. There also were over 3,000 books.

They did at least get that minimalist Goodwill receipt that says:
Goodwill does not return goods or services in exchange for donations of property.”
The receipt doesn’t provide detail of the items, their count or their condition, but at least it is a start.

At the end of the year they entered this information into TurboTax.

And according to TurboTax they donated over $146,000.

You know what else?

They should have expected the almost-certain notice from the IRS. Donate a piece of real estate and a $100,000-plus donation makes sense. Donate 20,000-plus items of men’s and women’s clothing – and not so much.

There are rules for noncash donations. The IRS knows the scam. The rules tighten-up as the donations get more expensive.

If you donate property worth $250 or more, you have to get “contemporaneous written acknowledgement” (CWA). This does not mean the same day, but it does mean within a reasonable time. The CWA must include a description of the property.  That Goodwill receipt should be adequate here, as it has pre-printed categories for
·      Clothing
·      Shoes
·      Media
·      Furniture
·      Household items
Go over $500 and there are more requirements. In addition to a description of the property, you also have to provide:

·      How you acquired it
·      When you acquired it
·      How much you paid for it

That Goodwill receipt is no longer enough. You are going to have to supplement it somehow. Some tax practitioners advise taking photographs and including them with the tax records for the year.

Go over $5,000 and you get into appraisal territory, unless you donated publicly-traded stocks.

Where were the Ohdes on this spectrum? Their lowest donation was $830; their highest was $14,999.

They were therefore dealing with the $500 and $5,000 rules.

What did they have?

They had that lean and skinny receipt from Goodwill. You know, the receipt that is good enough for $250 donations.


But they had no $250 donations.

They had a problem. Their paperwork was inadequate. It would help to have a sympathetic Court.

Here is the Court:
Petitioners claimed large deductions for charitable contributions of property, not only for 2011 but also for years before and after 2011.”
Where was the Court going with this?
 For 2007—2010 they claimed deductions in the aggregate amount of $292,143 for noncash charitable contributions."
Are you hearing skepticism?
For 2012-2013 they claimed deductions in the amount of $104,970 for noncash charitable contributions.”
Yep, skepticism.

The Court had a whole range of options to bounce the deduction.
Petitioners did not maintain contemporaneous records establishing any of these facts.”     
That is one option.

Stay within the lines and the Court might cut you some slack.  Deduct half a million dollars over a few years and …. Let’s just say you had better make a lot of money to even get to the realm of possible.
Many of those aggregate dollar figures are suspect on their face.”
The Court spotted them a $250 deduction.

Leaving approximately $33 grand in tax and over $6 grand in penalties.

Keep it believable, folks.