Chapter 5-Estates, Trusts & Gift Taxes Flashcards
what are the two artificial entities that also file tax returns?
- trusts
- estates
it is the FIDUCIARY income tax return (form 1041); it must be filed on annual basis for both entities.
what are trust?
typically established for the purpose of benefiting specific individuals or charities without giving them current control of the principal (corpus) of the trust.
what is a trustor?
the person putting assets into the trust; also called grantor, settlor, creator
what is a trustee?
has control of the assets/trust (could be a bank, insurance company or the attorney)
who is a beneficiary
gets the benefits that are of two types:
- income (is on the income statement with the interest, dividends, municipal bond interest, rental income, cash dividends)
- remainderman ( is on the balance sheet with the principal, corpus, capital gain, stock dividends.
who should not be the same person in a trust?
the trustee & the beneficiary. these two = the purpose of the trust and should not be the same person that is the sole trustee.
what does the remainder receive in a trust or estates disbursement?
remainder receives principal of trust (including capital gains allocable to corpus)
- all assets contributed to the trust (trust property)
- property acquired in exchange for trust corpus
- proceeds from the sale of the corpus
- capital gains
- stock dividends
- mortgage premium payments
- capital improvements
- insurance proceeds
how are proceeds from the sale of corpus (all the land, buildings and bonds for ex.) allocated?
entirely to corpus so that gains and losses on asset sales are NOT INCOME
for trust and estates, what is considered income?
- cash dividends
- interest income
- rental income, expense
- property taxes
- insurance premiums
- depreciation
- municipal bond interest
what is corpus?
for example if a trust is formed with cash then the cash would be considered “corpus” and if the cash is used to purchase stock then the stock becomes “corpus”
what is the considered principle in a trust or an estates?
balance sheet items such as the following:
- original property
- bonds (accrued interest)
- capital gains
- mortgage principle payments
- stock dividends/splits
how are trust created?
it must satisfy 5 conditions (BRATS)
- Beneficiary (the trust must identify who will receive the benefits deriving from the trust. a trust often identifies an income beneficiary to receive the earnings of the trust, and a remainder beneficiary to receive the principal of the trust when it terminates
- Reasonable intent (there must be a valid purpose, tax savings do not qualify, for the existence of the trust. this is usually the separation of control of the assets from benefits, so a trust with a single individual serving as both trustee and sole beneficiary will usually fail. a trust will also fail when its purpose is impossible to fulfill.)
- Assets (the trust must contain some corpus or property. a trust without corpus has no earnings for the income beneficiaries or principal for the remainder beneficiaries.
- Trustee (a trustee must be in place to exercise control over the assets in the trust. this person does not need to be named in any legal document, however they can be selected by the court or personal representative of the estate in the case of a testamentary trust. a successor trustee is NOT NEEDED and can simply be selected in the event the trustee can no longer serve.)
- Specified life (a trust must have an identifiable termination point, expressed in years or in the length of a life in being at the time the trust is created
- *** private trust = cannot live forever=lives until purpose is satisfied (ex. established for college, after graduation the trust ends)
- ***charitable trust = lives forever (perpetuity)
what is a inter vivos trust?
trust created between living people
what is a testamentary trust?
created through the execution of a will
what is a spendthrift trust?
a trust that prohibits assets from being pledged to pay the debts of a beneficiary. this arrangement is designed to prevent an irresponsible beneficiary from borrowing money from others and promising to use trust assets to repay the debt thereby defeating the purpose of the trust.
what is a resulting trust?
a trust that is created by the courts due to the failure of an express trust and is intended to achieve a purpose that the creator the express trust might have chosen had they known of the failure. ex. a testamentary trust is established to put the decedents daughter through college, and the daughter dies before completing college, the assets might be placed in a resulting trust that is to benefit the infant son of the daughter.
what is a cy pres trust?
a trust that is established due tot he failure of a charitable trust, and that is designed to achieve a similar goal. ex if a trust is established to find a cure for a particular disease, and a cure is found, the remaining assets might be placed in a trust to find a cure for a similar disease.
what is a totten or tentative trust?
a trust created when the settlor opens a bank account in his own name as “trustee” for another. the trust may be revoked by the settlor by withdrawing the funds from the account. once the settlor dies, the trust becomes irrevocable. if the beneficiary dies before he settlor the trust terminates.
what is a contructive trusts?
a court will impose a constructive trust when there has been abuse of a confidential relation or where actual fraud or duress is considered an equitable ground for creating the trust. ex. if an agent acquired title to property, he is obligated to transfer it back to the principal because the acquisition was by breach of a fiduciary duty
what is a real investment estate trust (REIT)
a trust created by a transfer of the legal title to real estate to a trustee. the trustee manages the trust property for the benefit of specified beneficiaries. the trust doesn’t pay corporate taxes, the beneficiaries do. the major portion of the trusts income must be derived from real estate (rent, interest on mortgages, and gains on sale of real property). the certificates of ownership must be freely transferable. must have a minimum of 100 certificate holders during each year and no fewer than 6 may own 50% or all outstanding certificates.
when can a trust be revoked?
- reserve rights
- end of term
- occurrence of an event (death)
- purpose accomplished
- consent of trustor/grantor/settlor/creator & all beneficiaries, remainderman & courts
what happens when a trust allocates income/ and or remainder to offspring?
the creator must decide if the allocation will be per capita or per stirpes
what is a per capita allocation in a trust?
allocation is equal to each person (each beneficiary). if there are three children, each is allocated 1/3. if one child dies during the term of the trust, and the decedent had two children (grandchildren of the trustor), the allocation is now 1/4 to each of the surviving children and each of the offspring of the deceased child.
what is a per stirpes allocation in a trust?
allocation is equal at the level of the first generation (each group). if there are three children, each is allocated 1/3. if one child dies with two offspring, the allocation to each surviving child remains 1/3, and each of the offspring of the deceased child is allocated a 1/6
what happens when a person dies without a will (intestate)?
the assets will be distributed in the following order:
- spouse
- decedent (children/grandchildren)
- ascendant (parent/grandparents)
- collaterals (brothers/sisters)
what are estates?
they are created at the time of a persons death to temporarily hold the property of the decedent until it can be distributed to the heirs (an estate kicks in when a person kicks out). since the deceased person’s investments will generate interest, dividends and rental income, the estate must pay income taxes on the earnings.
what is an executor in an estate?
the person responsible for filing the income tax return.
the personal representative in charge of the estate. (if named by the decedents will - testate or administrator (if named by the courts). the responsibilities include:
-paying the debts of the decedent out of estate assets
-filing all necessary tax returns
-distributing remaining assets to the appropriate beneficiaries.
what is an intestate?
when someone dies WITHOUT a written will.
what is a testate?
when someone dies WITH a will.
what is the estate of the decedent?
at the time a person dies, their property generally is transferred to a successor legal entity known as the estate of the decedent. this does not apply to property that is held in joint tenancy or some other form of ownership that provides right of survivor-ship. such property automatically goes to the survivors and bypasses the estate.
what is the process of settling an estate?
probate
what do personal representative have to the estate?
fiduciary duties to the estate, its creditors, and beneficiaries. this means the representative must act in a loyal manner in the best interests of these parties. they may not engage in self dealing, which includes personally borrowing money from the estate or entering joint business ventures with it. . they are expected to carry out the wishes of the decedent as expressed in the will to the extent possible, subject to the legitimate claims of creditors (including government tax authorities) if the decedent died intestate (without will), the administrator will distribute assets based on applicable state law in the jurisdiction the decedent resided at the time of death.
what kind of responsibility does a trustee have?
a fiduciary responsibility as well to the trust, just like the personal representative has to the estate. additionally, the trustee is responsible for ensuring that the income and principal of the trust are properly assigned to the income and remainder beneficiaries respectively.
what are the key qualities of a trustee?
- act loyally
- due care
- distribute income and principal according to the trust terms
- keep accurate records
what is a form 1041 tax return?
the fiduciary income tax return; filed annually by estates and trusts to report the income earned by the entity.
- required when estate has gross income of $600 or more and trust $100 or $300 or more
- similar to form 1040 but no standard deduction is given and different exemption exist. since trust are normally planned in advance so federal law requires that they adopt a calendar year for the reporting of taxable income and due 4/15 but trust must pay quarterly estimated taxes.