Gift Tax Triggered for Termination of Trust After Death – Houston Tax Attorneys


When someone sets up their estate plan, one would hope that the probate process would result in the terms of the estate plan being carried out. State law often allows beneficiaries and heirs to change the terms of someone’s estate plan after they die.

For example, in Texas, beneficiaries can usually agree to override the terms of a decedent’s will and distribute assets as they see fit. This is usually carried out using a family settlement agreement. The Texas Estates Code has been amended to include more liberal rules that allow trust beneficiaries to amend or reform the terms of trusts.

Even though state law allows for these post-mortem changes, the changes can have significant Federal tax consequences. The taxes can be significant and, in some cases, can result in the probate estate owing back taxes to the IRS. The recent McDougall v. Commissioner, 163 T.C. No. 5 provides an example. The case involves the termination of a trust by the trust beneficiaries after the trust settlor died. The termination triggered a massive gift tax liability.

Facts & Procedural History

The taxpayers in this case were a surviving spouse and his spouse’s adult children. The surviving spouse inherited an interest in a trust from his wife when she died. The interest he inherited was an income interest, so he was entitled to interest earned on the trust assets.

The children inherited remainder interests in the trust assets. These interests entitled the children to ownership of the trust assets when the surviving spouse died.

The surviving spouse was the executor of his wife’s estate. He made a QTIP election, which we’ll address below, which deferred the estate taxes that would have been due on the death of his spouse.

Several years later, the surviving spouse and children entered into an out-of-court agreement to terminate the trust and to distribute the assets to the surviving spouse. The taxpayers filed gift tax returns taking the position that there were two gifts, one from the surviving spouse on termination of the trust to children and then one from the children to transfer the assets to the surviving spouse. According to the taxpayers these transfers essentially offset each other and resulted in no gift tax due.

The IRS audited the gift tax returns, did not agree with the taxpayers reciprocal gift argument, and issued a statutory notice of deficiency. The dispute ended up in the U.S. Tax Court, which issued the tax court opinion that is the basis of this article.

About the QTIP Election

To understand this court case, we have to start with the QTIP election and the general concept for when the QTIP is used. QTIP elections typically involve trusts, so we’ll start with the QTIP trust.

A QTIP trust is one that holds some or all of the trust assets in trust for the surviving spouse. The surviving spouse has to be entitled to all of the income from the trust property and be paid at least annually. The trust also has to limit the power to appoint the property to anyone other than the surviving spouse during their lifetime.

This type of arrangement is often used to ensure that the income of the assets is used for the surviving spouse of the settlor, the person who set up the trust, with the remainder interest passing to the settlor’s children. This helps avoid a situation where assets are used for or transfered to the surviving spouse’s new spouse or the surviving spouse’s children from outside of the marriage. So second marriages and mixed families.

The QTIP election is an election made on the settlor’s estate tax return and is one of several estate tax planning considerations that one has to consider. It is similar to the GST election and tax planning in some ways. It is typically made on the estate tax return of the first spouse to die, which is usually due within 9 months of death (with a possible 6-month extension).

The election creates a legal fiction that the surviving spouse owns the trust assets when really they only have an income interest. This fiction allows the settlor’s estate to claim a 100% marital deduction for estate tax purposes. This marital deduction allows the trust assets to avoid estate tax on the death of the first spouse, which is usually not allowed when the surviving spouse does not actually have an ownership interest in the property in question and the settlor spouse retains control over who gets the property when the second spouse dies. This election and tax planning involving valuation discounts can often significantly reduce ones estate tax liability. Charitable trusts can be used for similar purposes too, if there is a charitable intent involved.

The QTIP trust is an easy way the first spouse to die can limit the surviving spouse’s ability to transfer or control the property while still qualifying for the marital deduction. Similar results can be obtained using a bypass or credit shelter trust. Other strategies usually leave the surviving spouse with some control over who gets the property on their death.

Gift Tax for the Surviving Spouse

The first question in this case was whether executing the settlement agreement to terminate the trust, the surviving spouse and children triggered a gift tax.

The U.S. Tax Court concluded that it did not, which it referenced its prior opinion in Estate of Anenberg v.
Commissioner
, No. 856-21, 162 T.C. (May 20, 2024) from earlier this year. The Estate of Anenberg stands for the proposition that a surviving spouse does not make a taxable gift when a QTIP trust is terminated and all its assets are distributed to the surviving spouse. This makes sense as the marital deduction is generally allowed when property passes to the surviving spouse and the estate tax is imposed when the surviving spouse dies.

The mechanics of the actual statutes are more complex than this. This is why the U.S. Tax Court had to analyze Section 2519 so closely, and then it just applied judicial reasoning instead of a close reading and application of Section 2519. In doing so, it concluded that the surviving spouse did not give away anything of value under Section 2519 and, alternatively, that there was an incomplete gift given that the surviving spouse ended up with the assets.

Thus, in applying these principles to the current case, the tax court concluded that the surviving spouse did not make a taxable gift when the residuary trust was terminated and its assets were distributed to him. This conclusion was reached despite the fact that the termination could be viewed as, and likely was, a disposition that should trigger gift tax under Section 2519.

Gift Tax for to the Children

The tax court then turned to the question of whether the termination of the residuary trust and transfer of the assets to the surviving spouse triggered a gift tax as to the children. The tax court concluded that it did.

The reasoning here is that the children had vested remainder interests in the trust property. They gave away the right to this property by allowing the property to be transferred to the surviving spouse. Thus, when viewed before and after the transfer, the children had a decrease in their net worth. They gave something up. The tax court concluded that this was sufficient to trigger a gift tax.

The tax court did not accept the taxpayer’s arguments about a reciprocal gift which negated any gift tax. The taxpayer’s argument was that the termination of the residuary trust resulted in a taxable gift for the surviving spouse. Then it also resulted in a taxable gift for the children for the transfer back to the surviving spouse. As noted above, the tax court held that the first part of this argument–the gift tax for the surviving spouse–was not a gift and therefore did not trigger a gift tax. Thus, there could be no offsetting gift. The tax court also stated that there was no such concept as a reciprocal gift in the law that can be used to offset gift taxes. It noted that there is a concept of reciprocal trusts, but that that concept does not apply here.

To provide context, we’ll briefly take a detour to discuss reciprocal trusts. The reciprocal trust doctrine is a legal principle that addresses situations where two individuals create similar trusts for each other’s benefit. This doctrine allows the IRS and courts to “uncross” or “unwind” trusts that are interrelated and leave the grantors in approximately the same economic position as they would have been if they had created trusts naming themselves as life beneficiaries. This is similar to the economic substance doctrine that allows the IRS and/or the courts to void certain business transactions. When the IRS and/or courts apply this reciprocal trust doctrine, the result is that the trust assets are included in the settlor’s taxable estate under Sections 2036 or 2038. Again, this is not what we had in this case, so it was not applicable here according to the tax court.

    The Takeaway

    It is getting more common for beneficiaries of trusts to modify and even terminate their trusts. This can trigger significant tax liabilities, as in this case. This case helps to explain when the gift tax applies when one termites a trust. A QTIP trust can be terminated and this will not necessarily trigger gift taxes for the surviving spouse. If the termination results in the children getting their fair share of the trust assets, that may also avoid gift taxes. But as in this case, if the termination results in the surviving spouse getting more than what they otherwise would, the termination will likely trigger a gift tax for the children for the transfer to the surviving spouse.

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When taxpayers weave together various tax rules to produce a favorable outcome, the IRS will often cite various judicial doctrines to avoid the result or to unwind the transaction. This can include economic substance, the step transaction doctrine, etc. These doctrines allow the IRS to effectively reverse the tax treatment of transactions when multiple tax rules are read together to produce a favorable tax outcomes.

The IRS often engages in the very similar conduct with how it interprets and uses our tax laws. This often arises during IRS audits and in tax litigation when the IRS strategically applies multiple rules to produce a favorable outcome. This raises questions about fairness and the balance of power in tax disputes.

The IRS already has the upper hand in tax litigation–from the burden of proof being on the taxpayer to other presumptions that are IRS-favorable. Given these advantages, is it acceptable for the government to craft legal strategies that weave through various complex tax provisions during the course of the tax litigation after the IRS audit has closed or even during an IRS audit?

How far should the IRS be able to go in crafting a strategy that navigates through various tax laws to produce a higher amount of tax? How many steps should the IRS be allowed to take during the course of litigation or on audit? Should the IRS be able to make arguments that apply multiple steps or even take up alternative positions during audits or litigation? Should there be a judicial doctrine, similar to the ones that apply to taxpayers who engage in tax planning, that prevents the IRS from this type of multiple-step or multi-rule strategy?

The recent case of Scenic Trust v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2024-85, provides an opportunity to consider these questions. This case involves a taxpayer who apparently reported all of their income, yet the IRS asserted fraud and developed a multi-step backup plan in the litigation to ensure that the IRS would succeed in increasing the amount of tax owed.

Facts & Procedural History

The case involves a taxpayer who owned a direct-mail subscription business. The business consisted of several related entities, including a trust (the taxpayer trust) and other legal entities.

For the tax years 2012 and 2013, tax returns were filed for the taxpayer, the trust, and related entities. The IRS subsequently initiated an audit of these returns. During the IRS audit, the taxpayer and related entities provided extensive records to the IRS, including:

  1. Organizational documents
  2. Accounting records (including QuickBooks files with general ledgers)
  3. Bank statements and records
  4. Tax returns for various related entities
  5. Balance sheets and receipts

The IRS auditor argued that some of the documents provided by the taxpayer to the IRS were altered or backdated. These included:

  1. A consulting agreement between two of the entities
  2. The trust’s trust agreement
  3. A private annuity agreement between the trust and the taxpayer
  4. Multiple versions of a unit purchase agreement between the trust and the taxpayer, with differing terms

More than three years after the filing of the tax returns for these periods (which is significant due to the general three-year statute of limitations for tax assessments under I.R.C. § 6501(a)), the IRS issued Notices of Deficiency to the taxpayer and the trust for 2012 and 2013. These notices asserted additional tax owed and imposed civil fraud penalties under I.R.C. § 6663.

The case eventually made its way to the U.S. Tax Court. The IRS attorney set a preliminary hearing with the court specifically on the question of whether the taxpayer’s 2013 return was signed by him or by someone authorized to sign on his behalf. This hearing resulted in a written court opinion (Parducci v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2023-75) in which the tax court concluded that the 2013 return was not validly signed.

The tax court opinion we’re primarily discussing in this article is the subsequent decision that disposed of the remaining issues in the case. To fully understand the significance of this opinion and the IRS’s litigation strategy, we need to start with the rules governing tax assessments.

About the IRS Assessment Period

The tax assessment rules are set out in Section 6501 of the tax code. These rules provide a time period within which the IRS can determine and record additional tax liabilities for taxpayers. These rules define the temporal boundaries of the IRS’s authority to assess taxes. Put another way, these rules limit the time the IRS has to conduct an audit and to tell taxpayers that they owe more in taxes.

Section 6501(a) establishes the general rule: the IRS must assess tax within three years after a return is filed. This three-year period is designed to balance the IRS’s need for adequate time to investigate and audit returns with taxpayers’ right to finality and closure of their tax affairs.

Congress also enacted several exceptions to this general rule, allowing for extended assessment periods in specific circumstances. This includes rules for the following situations:

  1. Six-Year Period (Section 6501(e)): For substantial omissions of gross income (generally exceeding 25% of the amount stated in the return).
  2. Unlimited Period (Section 6501(c)):
    a. When no return is filed (Section 6501(c)(3)) (which does not apply to some taxes, and can apply if the taxpayer files the wrong tax form)
    b. In cases of tax fraud (Section 6501(c)(1))
    c. For willful attempts to evade tax (Section 6501(c)(2))

These exceptions are at the heart of the dispute in this case.

The IRS’s Multi-Step Arguments

In the case, the IRS issued its notice of deficiency after the standard three-year audit period had expired. To justify this late assessment, the IRS invoked the fraud exception, even going so far as to assert civil tax fraud penalties under Section 6663. So the IRS could prevail if it could show that the taxpayer committed tax fraud.

While fraud extends the statute and allows the IRS to conduct a late audit and make a late-assessment, so too would an unfiled tax return. So the IRS could also prevail by showing that there was an unfiled tax return.

But there was another factor at play in this case. The taxpayer had a loss from another business for this year. Thus, even if the IRS was to prevail on fraud or no return filed issues and the IRS was able to assess additional tax, the taxpayer could still use his unrelated tax loss to offset or minimize the amount of tax. So the IRS could also prevail by finding a way to argue that the tax loss was not allowable or useable. This brings us to the IRS’s multi-step arguments in this case.

The IRS’s Plan A: A Fraud Extension

The IRS’s first plan was to argue that the taxpayer committed tax fraud and therefore there was no limitation on the statute for assessing tax for 2012 or for 2013.

The tax court opinion addresses the rules for civil tax fraud. As noted by the tax court, to invoke the fraud exception and keep the assessment period open indefinitely, the IRS bears the burden of proving, by clear and convincing evidence, that the taxpayer filed a false or fraudulent return with intent to evade tax (Section 7454(a)). This is a higher standard than the usual preponderance of evidence required in civil tax cases (but the courts have also said that even the tax preparers fraud counts).

Courts have developed a set of “badges of fraud” as circumstantial evidence of fraudulent intent. These so-called “badges” include:

  1. Understating income
  2. Maintaining inadequate records
  3. Failing to file tax returns
  4. Giving implausible or inconsistent explanations
  5. Concealing assets
  6. Failing to cooperate with tax authorities
  7. Engaging in illegal activities
  8. Attempting to conceal illegal activities
  9. Dealing in cash
  10. Failing to make estimated tax payments

In this case, the tax court analyzed these factors. While the tax court noted that some factors were present, such as the taxpayer’s lack of credibility in testimony and an intent to mislead inferred from a pattern of conduct (particularly the presentation of altered documents), most factors were found to be neutral or weighing against a finding of fraud.

The tax court emphasized that the taxpayer had reported all of their income and cooperated with the IRS during the audit. This cooperation, combined with the absence of most badges of fraud, led the tax court to conclude that the IRS had not met its burden of proving fraud by clear and convincing evidence.

So the IRS’s Plan A failed. Likely in anticipation of this holding, the IRS had another plan in the works.

The IRS’s Plan B1: Unfiled Tax Return

Anticipating the possibility that fraud might not be established, the IRS had prepared a backup strategy involving the unfiled tax return rules.

While fraud extends the statute and allows the IRS to conduct a late audit and make a late-assessment, so too would an unfiled tax return. The IRS attorney set this very issue for a hearing with the court as to whether there was a tax return that was filed. This approach created what could be viewed as a win-win situation for the IRS:

  1. If the tax court found no valid return was filed, the IRS would have an unlimited period to assess tax for 2013 under Section 6501(c)(3).
  2. If the tax court found a return was filed but was fraudulent, the IRS would have an unlimited period to assess tax under Section 6501(c)(1).

The tax court considered this issue and determined that the taxpayer did not sign their 2013 tax return. As such, there was no tax return on file for this year. While this position avoided a finding of fraud for 2013, it also resulted in the IRS having an unlimited statute to assess additional tax for this period.

So the IRS’s Plan B1 worked.

The IRS’s Plan B2: Assignment of Income Rules

Perhaps envisioning that the tax court might not find fraud, but might find that there was an unfiled tax return, the IRS also added a tack on argument to its position. This argument involves the assignment of income doctrine.

This doctrine, rooted in the Supreme Court’s decision in Lucas v. Earl, 281 U.S. 111 (1930), holds that income is taxed to the person who earns it, regardless of who ultimately receives it. The doctrine prevents taxpayers from avoiding tax by assigning their income to other persons or entities. It has been expanded over the years to cover various scenarios, including:

  1. Anticipatory assignments of income
  2. Income from personal services
  3. Income from property

In this case, the IRS attorney argued that even if the assessment period had closed for the trust’s 2013 return as the trust filed its 2013 tax return, the income should have been reported by the individual taxpayer personally. Since the taxpayer hadn’t filed a valid 2013 return for himself (as determined in the tax court in its earlier decision in this case), the assessment period for 2013 remained open indefinitely and given the assignment of income doctrine, the income could be assessed against the taxpayer individually.

The tax court agreed with the IRS on this point. It applied the assignment of income doctrine to shift the income from the trust and entities to the individual taxpayer for the open 2013 year. The tax court based this decision on its finding that the taxpayer had full control over these entities, despite the formal ownership structures.

Thus, the IRS’s Plan B2 worked.

The IRS’s Plan B3: The Passive Activity Loss Rules

Perhaps envisioning that the tax court might not find fraud, but might find that there was an unfiled tax return and might agree with the IRS on its assignment of income argument, the IRS added another argument to its position. This one involved the passive activity loss rules.

As noted above, the taxpayer had a loss from an unrelated entity reported on his tax return. Thus, even if the IRS prevailed in the arguments above and the taxpayer’s tax increased, he would have been able to offset the tax increase with his existing and unrelated tax loss.

The passive activity loss rules generally say that one cannot offset certain passive losses with certain types of income from non-passive activities. This is set out in Section 469. Section 469 was intended to prevent taxpayers from using losses from passive activities (such as limited partnerships or rental activities) to offset non-passive income (such as wages or portfolio income). The IRS argued in this case that if income was shifted to the taxpayer’s personal return, his ability to offset this income with losses from related entities should be limited under the passive activity loss rules.

The IRS contended that the losses from the taxpayer’s related entities were subject to these passive activity loss limitations. To deduct these losses against the newly attributed income, the taxpayer would need to establish material participation in the activities.

The tax court agreed with the IRS on this point as well. The tax court found that the taxpayer failed to provide sufficient evidence of material participation in the related entities. This decision effectively increased the taxpayer’s taxable income for the open year by preventing him from offsetting the increased income (resulting from the assignment of income doctrine) with losses from other businesses that were reported on his tax return.

Thus, the IRS’s Plan B3 worked.

Takeaway

As in shown by this case, the IRS can often employ a series of interconnected arguments developed during the litigation process, each serving as a backup to the others, to find a path that results in the highest amount of tax due. This case shows how the IRS can use the tax litigation process to effectively do what taxpayers are barred from doing when they engage in tax planning. Had a taxpayer engaged in a transaction that charted a course through rules like this, the IRS would no doubt have tried to unwinde it using various judicial doctrines. There is no comparable judicial doctrine, such as a government step transaction doctrine, that applies to the IRS and how it chooses to litigate cases.

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