Friday, January 29, 2010

Using QTIP Trusts


Planning With QTIP


With a QTIP trust, the surviving spouse can be given a testamentary power to appoint gifts to a limited class of beneficiaries, including the surviving spouse. No person other than the surviving spouse can appoint any part of the QTIP trust property to any beneficiary or person other than the surviving spouse.

Complex wills often use marital (A) and nonmarital (B) trusts. Some estate planners recommend three trusts rather than two, particularly for planning for larger estates: in addition to the A and B trusts, a QTIP or "C" trust is added to provide additional flexibility with respect to estate tax planning and control over estate assets. A QTIP trust might be used, for example, where the testator is reluctant to leave the bulk of the estate in the control of a surviving spouse, perhaps leaving the surviving spouse the income interest but vesting power in the executor or personal representative to elect marital deduction treatment for trust QTIP assets if circumstances indicate such an election is advisable.

QTIP Trust Defined

A QTIP trust is a testamentary trust (created under the decedent`s will and taking effect on the date of death) creating a life income interest in a surviving spouse with a direction that trust corpus may not be used for anyone other than the surviving spouse during the survivor`s lifetime [I.R.C. §2056(b)(7)].

Recall that qualified terminable interest property must:
  1. pass from the decedent, creating a "qualifying income interest for life" in the surviving spouse (the surviving spouse must be entitled to all income from the property, payable at least annually);
  2. be assets for which an election is made by the executor on the federal estate tax return (the election, once made, is irrevocable); and
  3. comprise assets of the decedent`s estate with respect to which no other person has a power to appoint any part thereof to any person other than the surviving spouse.
The executor must affirmatively elect to have QTIP trust property qualify for the unlimited federal estate tax marital deduction. Where no estate has been opened or there is otherwise no executor or personal representative, a person in actual or constructive possession of QTIP trust assets can make the required election. Fractional or percentage elections are permitted [I.R.C. §§2044, 2519; Temp. Reg. §2.2056-1].

QTIP Trust Elections

Why would an executor or personal representative elect unlimited marital deduction treatment for QTIP assets? Where the election only defers the estate tax until the second death and may increase the aggregate estate tax, for example where the survivor has a larger estate than the first spouse to die, it can be advantageous not to make the QTIP trust election on the federal estate tax return.

The relative size of the two estates, age and other factors should be considered by the executor/personal representative.

Advantages of QTIP Trusts:

QTIP trusts add flexibility to the testator`s estate plans and should be explained to the client in detail by the estate and financial planner during the estate planning process.

The principal advantage lies in increased flexibility. Before 1982, the testator was required to make an outright bequest to a spouse in order for the gifted property to qualify for the marital deduction. The testator was often forced to make a difficult choice between preserving the marital deduction for estate assets and running the risk of those assets ending up in the hands of a surviving spouse`s new family in the event of remarriage.

A QTIP trust allows the testator to direct ultimate control over trust assets by creating lifetime income to a surviving spouse with directions as to disposition of the remainder, for example, to children or grandchildren. The best of both worlds is possible under a QTIP trust by: (a) permitting elective marital deduction treatment for trust assets after the testator`s death at a time when the personal representative can take into consideration changing circumstances of the surviving spouse and other beneficiaries; and (b) by retaining control and flexibility with respect to ultimate disposition of QTIP trust assets to a beneficiary other than the surviving spouse while providing the surviving spouse with lifetime income from the QTIP trust assets. Alternatively, it can be advisable to empower the surviving spouse to assess changing circumstances among ultimate beneficiaries under a special power of appointment to distribute QTIP trust corpus among children or grandchildren according to needs at or near the time of final distribution, i.e. the second death.

Suppose the surviving spouse assigns "qualifying income interest for life." Can the estate tax be avoided? Yes, but Code §2519 provides that the spouse makes a gift of the property that produces the income, rather than just a gift of the remaining income interest. This applies to "qualifying income interests for life" acquired under either the gift tax marital deduction or the estate tax marital deduction.
Code §2207A provides that the ultimate recipient of the property in which the spouse has a terminable interest is liable for any gift tax or estate tax attributable to such property. In the case of the estate tax, the decedent can direct otherwise by will.

Giarmarco, Mullins & Horton, P.C.

Members of the Trusts and Estates Practice Group of Giarmarco, Mullins & Horton, P.C. have written numerous articles appearing in both local journals and national magazines. Following is a sample of some of those articles.



 
 

Greycourt - Pittsburgh, Houston, Portland

Greycourt is a premier provider of financial advisory services to wealthy families and select endowments. They have what look like some interesting white papers - primarily related to money management / investment analysis ...


Some that may be of interest include:

  • Family Investment Partnerships
    Many wealthy families are familiar with family limited partnerships used to discount the value of intra-family gifts. But limited partnerships can also be used as investment vehicles, and this strategy offers many advantages. This white paper discusses family investment partnerships, which represent a kind of private, family “mutual fund” for family members and other family units such as trusts or foundations.
  • Taming Your Trust
    When families consider the prospect of having to establish appropriate provisions in trust instruments for spouses, children or future generations, they naturally approach the matter with trepidation. There is, first of all, the problem of attempting today to design provisions that must work well many years, perhaps many decades, into the future. There is the further problem of dealing with intra-family emotions and stresses that tend to interfere with otherwise good judgment. Finally, there is a natural tendency to be intimidated by the legal and tax complexity that appears to surround the arcane world of trusts.
  • Philanthropy in Estate Planning: Balancing Charity against Personal Spending Needs
    Many wealthy clients have philanthropic goals, but few receive sufficient guidance regarding how best to balance these goals against personal spending needs. Deciding how to distribute wealth can be a complicated and often emotional process. As a result, investment advisors need to understand their clients’ wealth-distribution preferences and must help quantify potential investment risks associated with different levels and forms of gifting. By helping identify who bears residual investment risk under varying gifting regimes, investment advisors can ensure that their clients’ wealth is distributed in a way that fits their client’s individual, family, and philanthropic ambitions.
  • Establishing a Family Office: A Few Basics
    Many families who have experienced a significant liquidity event will consider setting up a family office. The purpose of this white paper is to discuss the reasons families consider establishing an office, to describe the typical duties of such offices and to suggest a basic framework for designing and setting up a successful family office.

Laird Norton Tyee - Wealth Management for Family Business

At Laird Norton Tyee, we are fascinated by family businesses. We were founded more than 40 years ago to serve members of the Laird and Norton families, owners of the Laird Norton Company, a family business now in its seventh generation. We understand family business because our history is family business. To this day, the majority of our clients remain tied to family businesses of their own. We admire the tenacity and ingenuity of these business leaders and families and the commitment they have made to create their own futures.


Laird Norton Tyee authored and present a very interesting resource called Northwest Family Business Survey 2008.

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

The Best States for Trusts


The Best States for Trusts
Tier
State*
State Income Tax
Directed Trust Statute
Asset Protection Trust
Dynasty Trust Ability
Number of Trust Cos.
Time Zone (from NY)
1
No
Yes
Yes
1000 yrs.
3
(-) 4
1
Residents
Yes
Yes
Perpetual
32
(-) 0
1
No
Yes
Yes
365 yrs.
26
(-) 3
1
No
Yes
Yes
Perpetual
39
(-) 1 / 2
2
No
No
No
360 yrs.
9
(-) 0
2
Residents
Yes
Yes
Perpetual
19
(-) 0
2
No
No
Yes
1000 yrs.
2
(-) 2
3
Yes
Yes
Yes
1000 yrs.
7
(-) 2
3
Yes
No
No
Perpetual
3
(-) 2
3
Residents
No
No
Perpetual
2
(-) 0
3
Yes
No
Yes
1000 yrs.
2
(-) 2
3
Residents
No
No
Perpetual
4
(-) 1
*States: links to State Trust Statutes  Data: January 2010  
© 2010   TheTrustAdvisor.com   (781) 319-7748



From the Trust Advisor Blog in a post titled 

America’s Most Wealth Friendly States Continue to Bid for Your Clients’ Trust Business