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bearing note — known as a “sale to a defective grantor trust” — the sale does not trigger capital gains taxes and the grantor is not taxable on the trust’s interest payments to him. Such transactions can pass significant potential appreciation to the grantor’s heirs free of gift tax and generation-skipping transfer tax. To eliminate this planning technique, the proposal provides that if the deemed income tax owner of a trust (this could be the grantor or a beneficiary) “engages in a transaction with that trust that constitutes a sale, exchange, or comparable transaction,” then the portion of the trust attributable to this transaction (along with income or appreciation on the property): 1) would be includible in the deemed owner’s estate; 2) would be subject to gift tax if the deemed owner ceased to own the trust during life; and 3) would be treated as a gift from the deemed owner if, during the owner’s life, distributions were made from the trust to another person. Any gift or estate tax triggered by the proposal would be payable from the trust. The proposal would not apply to trusts that are already includible in the grantor’s estate, “rabbi trusts” (non-qualified deferred compensation plans that are subject to claims of the grantor’s creditors) or trusts that are grantor trusts solely because the trust's income can be used to pay insurance premiums on the life of the grantor or the grantor’s spouse (i.e., insurance trusts that are designed to remove insurance proceeds from an insured’s estate). Comments. Last year was the first appearance of this proposal to unify income and transfer tax rules for grantor trusts. It was so broadly worded that it would have caught existing trusts, such as insurance trusts. This new iteration simply targets sales to defective grantor trusts. Extend the lien on estate tax deferrals. The tax law allows the estate tax on certain closely held business interests to be deferred for up to 15+ years from the decedent’s death. Another provision of the tax law imposes what is generally a ten-year lien on the estate’s assets to ensure payment of the estate tax. Because that lien can expire before the estate tax is paid, it may be difficult for the IRS to collect those tax dollars. The proposal would extend the lien through the permitted deferral period. Clarify the GST treatment of “HEETs.” Donors can make direct payments of tuition and medical expenses free of gift tax. If that donor is a grandparent, for example, such payments are also free of generation-skipping transfer tax. Specifically, the tax law provides that the GST will not apply to “any transfer which, if made inter vivos by an individual [i.e., during the donor’s life], would not be treated as a taxable gift” because it is a direct payment for tuition or medical expenses. This language has been read to mean the following: GST will not apply to a trust’s direct payments for, say, a grandchild- beneficiary's tuition or medical expenses, even though the trust is otherwise subject to GST. Some planners have taken this understanding a step further with “HEETs,” or Health and Education Exclusion Trusts. These trusts purportedly are fully protected from GST, despite not having any GST exemption allocated to them. That is, because charity has an ongoing “substantial” income interest in the HEET (say, 10%), gifts into the trust are not subject to GST, and GST won't apply when one generational level of beneficiaries dies off. In addition, trust distributions on behalf of beneficiaries such as grandchildren can only be made for tuition or medical expenses, and are therefore GST-exempt. The proposal says that it would “clarify” that this GST exclusion for direct payments of tuition or medical expenses only applies to payments made by a /iving donor, and not from a trust. The proposal would apply to trusts created after the bill proposing this change is introduced in Congress, and to transfers after that date made to pre-existing trusts. Comments. The desire to "clarify" this special exclusion reflects the perception that HEETs are abusive, given the proposal’s recommended effective date (introduction, rather than enactment, of legislation). Despite this perception, however, it is worth noting that trusts that typically take advantage Tax Topics 04/29/13 3 HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_022363

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Filename HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_022363.jpg
File Size 0.0 KB
OCR Confidence 85.0%
Has Readable Text Yes
Text Length 4,340 characters
Indexed 2026-02-04T16:47:47.192541