December Interest Rates for GRATs, Sales to Defective Grantor Trusts, Intra-Family Loans and Split Interest Charitable Trusts
Federal interest rates increased slightly for December of 2021 but remain fairly low historically. The December Section 7520 rate for use with estate planning techniques such as CRTs, CLTs, QPRTs and GRATs is 1.6%, which is 0.2% higher than the November rate. The December applicable federal rate ("AFR") for use with a sale to a defective grantor trust, self-cancelling installment note ("SCIN") or intrafamily loan with a note having a duration of three to nine years (the mid-term rate, compounded annually) is 1.26%, up slightly from 1.08% in November.
The AFRs (based on annual compounding) used in connection with intrafamily loans are 0.33% for loans with a term of three years or less, 1.26% for loans with a term between three and nine years and 1.90% for loans with a term of longer than nine years. With the short and mid-term rates remaining low, clients who have the liquidity to repay loans within three years will likely prefer the short-term rate for their estate planning transactions, and clients seeking a broader time horizon will likely prefer to use the mid-term rate.
Thus, by way of example, if a 10-year loan is made to a child, and the child can invest the funds and obtain a return in excess of 1.90% the child will be able to keep any returns over 1.90%. These same rates are used in connection with sales to defective grantor trusts.
Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals Upholds Finding of Gift Tax Deficiencies After Taxpayer's Failed Attempt to Use Self-Adjusting Formula Clauses. Mary P. Nelson et al. v. Commissioner (5th Cir., No. 20-61068, November 3, 2021)
In Nelson, the federal Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals upheld the IRS's imposition of gift tax deficiencies relating to a client's attempted use of a formula clause to make separate gifts and sales of limited partnership interests. The taxpayer in this case entered into separate transactions where she and her husband sought to sell and gift separate limited partnership interests with a specified fair market value "as determined by a qualified appraiser within ninety days of the effective date of the [Agreement]."
The court acknowledged that self-adjusting formula clauses have been accepted by other courts in various forms. In particular, the court references self-adjusting formula clauses that refer to either (a) a specified fair market value "as finally determined for transfer tax purposes," as in Wandry v. Comm'r, T.C. Memo. 2012-88 (2012 Tax Ct) or (b) a specified fair market value "as finally determined by the willing-buyer/willing-seller" test used in the relevant Treasury regulation in Succession of McCord, 461 F.3d 614 (5th Cir. 2006).
However, the clause used by the taxpayer in Nelson was determined by reference to the initial appraisal, and therefore was not subject to adjustment in the event that the IRS determined that the transferred interests had a different value. Accordingly, once the initial appraisal was finalized, the value of the transferred interest was established for purposes of the transfer instruments. The Court thus held that the IRS's subsequent determination that the value of the transferred interests was greater than the value stated in the initial appraisal properly resulted in the taxpayer being found to have made additional gifts and subject to a corresponding gift tax liability.
Federal District Court Imposed Constructive Trust Over Estate Assets and Granted a Temporary Injunction Preventing Estate Dispositions Based on Allegations of Decedent's Embezzlement From Employer. Van Horn, Metz & Co. v. Crisafulli, 2021 WL 4317186 (D.N.J. Sept. 23, 2021)
The United States District Court for the District of New Jersey held in favor of a decedent's former employer who sued the decedent's New Jersey estate alleging that the decedent embezzled over $4.3 million while working as the employer's Controller.
The employer provided significant evidence that the estate could not refute regarding the decedent's embezzlement, including forensic accounting showing that the decedent took excessive compensation, made improper ACH transfers from the employer and improperly used the employer's credit card without authorization. This evidence of wrongful acts that benefitted the decedent were strong support that the employer would be successful on the merits in its efforts to recover assets from the estate. Moreover, the employer showed that it would suffer irreparable harm without the imposition of a temporary restraining order based on a showing of the executor's (the decedent's surviving spouse) consumption and dissipation of the estate assets, including real estate and tangibles allegedly purchased with the embezzled funds. In particular, the court referred to the executor's sale of the family's second home during the litigation without notice to the court or the employer and directed approximately $500,000 of the proceeds (about 1/3 of the sales price) to be used to pay creditors as the type of consumption that would result in further irreparable harm to the employer.
Ultimately, the court imposed a constructive trust over a significant portion of the decedent's estate and granted a temporary injunction against the estate, preventing the estate from disposing of or otherwise a portion of its assets.
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