7b. Post Death Changes (variations, disclaimers, precatory trusts) Flashcards
what are the IHT consequences of an original beneficiary giving away their inheritance?
- the original B would be making a PET
- this would be a chargeable transfer if they died within 7 years of the gift
what are the CGT consequences of an original beneficiary giving away their inheritance?
- a gift of a non-cash asset would be a CGT disposal by the original B
- any increase in value of the asset since the date of death would be subject to CGT if the gain exceeds B’s tax-free allowance
what is a variation?
a direction from an original B to the deceased’s PRs to transfer property that B is entitled to under the will or intestacy to another person
why make a formal variation?
- to take advantage of the s142 IHTA and/or s62 CGT provisions
- satiatiate those who may want to make an Inheritance Act claim/expected to inherit
IHT consequences of a variation
- varied inheritance is ‘read back’ to the date of death and treated as having been made by the deceased to the new beneficiary
- therefore original beneficiary will not have to worry about making a PET
- IHT due on the death estate is recalculated on the basis that the property was left to the new beneficiary
advantages of a variation
- can made before or after B accepts the inheritance
- whole or part
- freedom to determine ultimate destination of varied inheritance
- without approval of PRs (unless it results in addl IHT being payable, then sign variation, provide HMRC with a copy of written variation, and pay amount due)
conditions for a variation (s142(1) IHTA)
- made by original B, in writing (a deed is not required, but often used)
- within 2 years following deceased’s death
- express statement that s142 IHTA should apply
- not for consideration in money or money’s worth
when can the PRs refuse to sign the variation/approve the writing back under s142?
if the assets held by them are insufficient to discharge the additional IHT liability
CGT recap
disposal value minus acquisition value = gain
gain minus TFA (3,000) = amount charged to CGT
CGT consequences of a variation
- gift is written back to the date of death and treated as having been made by the deceased
- original beneficiary treated as having not made the disposal
- new beneficiary deemed to acquire assets at date of death value (not date of variation value)
- any increase in value of the assets since date of death will be taxed to the new beneficiary if/when they later dispose of it
which assets do the CGT writing back provisions apply to?
non-cash assets
cash is exempt from CGT
how can minors or those without mental capacity make variations?
- court consent under Variation of Trusts Act 1958
- expensive and time consuming app
limitations on what and how many variations?
- will can be varied unlimited times
- but each asset only once
- cannot vary property where deceased was a life tenant immediately before death (trust deed determines the destination - remainderman)
- cannot vary GROB (because deceased was not the legal owner of the assets. does not form part of distribution estate, BUT is subject to IHT)
what is a disclaimer?
operates as a refusal to accept property to which a beneficiary is entitled, either under the intestacy rules or under the terms of a will.
Consider disclaimer to be rejecting the status as beneficiary under a will, not rejecting the property.
how can a disclaimer be made?
orally or in writing
Note: must be in writing to take advantage of the writing back provisions