CHARITABLE LEAD TRUSTS
LONG TERM CARE INSURANCE
CHARITABLE
LEAD TRUSTS: USES AND ADVANTAGES FOR PHILANTHROPICALLY-MINDED
PERSONS
by Brian E. Lacey, Esq.
Fashions come and go … even with trust and transfer
tax planning. Currently, charitable lead trusts (“CLT”s)
are popular and for good reason. With historically low interest
rates, charitably-inclined persons can achieve multiple goals
such as providing a steady stream of income over a period
of time to charity and then offering a significant remainder
interest to one’s family or even to oneself and one’s
spouse.
In 1989, Congress enacted discount rates that float at 120
percent of the federal mid-term funds rate. Over the last
several years, the federal discount rate has fallen below
four percent. With such current discount rates, a donor can
establish a high payout rate to charity while later transferring
more funds to family at little or even no gift tax.
Here are some examples of persons who might consider using
a CLT:
• Donor
wants to provide money to charity yet also benefit her children
and grandchildren when they are older and, presumably, wiser.
She funds a CLT which provides a remainder to her family members
following a specified term of years or her life.
• Donor
wants to “zero-out” the gift tax value of remainder
gifts to his children by creating a CLT with a high payout
rate over his lifetime. In a low-interest rate environment,
he can pass the remainder interest to his children with little
or no gift tax cost.
• For
generation-skipping purposes, a donor establishes a CLT that
pays out an annuity or unitrust interest to named charities
for a term of years and then pays out a remainder interest
to her grandchildren calculated to the generation-skipping
exemption amount.
Interestingly, CLTs are often considered the converse of
charitable remainder trusts (“CRT”s). While true
in some respects, CLTs have important differences. For example,
CRTs are tax-exempt entities whereas CLTs are not.
Types of CLTs:
Donors can create one of two types of CLTs:
First, a charitable lead annuity trust (“CLAT”)
is one in which a guaranteed annuity of a determinable amount
is paid periodically, but not less often than annually, for
a specified term of years or for the life or lives of certain
individuals, each of whom must be living at the date of transfer
for a gift or the date of a decedent’s death if a testamentary
transfer. A CLAT’s annuity rate may fluctuate as long
as the annuity payment is determinable from when the trust
commences. It is very important that a CRAT’s governing
instrument contain an explicit prohibition against additional
contributions.
Second, a charitable lead unitrust (“CLUT”)
is a qualified CLT in which a payment equal to a fixed percentage
of the net fair market value of the trust property, valued
annually, is distributed at least annually to a qualified
charitable organization or organizations, for a term of years
or for the life or lives of identified persons. Further, payments
of a unitrust interest may be paid for a specified term of
years or for the life or lives of certain individuals, each
of whom must be alive at the date of a decedent’s death
(if a testamentary trust) and can be ascertained at such date
for estate tax purposes or at the date of gift for gift tax
purposes. If explicitly permitted in the governing instrument,
CLUTs can receive additional contributions.
CLTs have multiple parties, including a donor, a trustee,
a charitable (or “lead”) beneficiary and non-charitable
remainder beneficiaries.
Donor:
First, the CLT has a donor who establishes and funds a CLT
during life (inter vivos) or creates and funds it at death
by will or trust (testamentary).
Trustees:
The CLT has a trustee who can be the donor, the donor’s
spouse, a family member or a disinterested person or entity,
including the charitable lead person, if state law permits.
Also, the donor can be the trustee, subject to certain tax
consequences. The drafter must be careful that the donor not
retain powers that would cause the trust to be includable
in his or her estate for federal estate tax purposes under
IRC sec. 2036(a)(2). For example, if the donor serves as trustee
and the remainder persons are the donor or the donor’s
estate, then the principal reverts to the donor and will be
included in his or her estate for federal estate tax purposes.
Income tax considerations warrant that the valuation of assets
that do not have readily ascertainable market valuations should
be made by an independent trustee or by a qualified appraiser.
Treas. Reg. 1.664-1(a)(7). This will be of particular benefit
where grantor CLTs are involved. An independent trustee is
a trustee other than the donor, the donor’s spouse,
a non-charitable beneficiary or a party related to or subordinate
to either of them. Treas. Reg. 1.664-1(a)(7)(iii). A co-trustee
who is independent may value assets that do not have readily
ascertainable market values.
A party is related or subordinate if the person is a non-adverse
party and is also the donor’s spouse, parent, issue
or sibling. IRC sec. 672(c). Subordinate parties also include
an employee of the donor, a corporation in which the donor’s
interests are significant ones with respect to corporate control
or in which the donor is an officer, director or key executive.
IRC sec. 672(c)(2).
A non-adverse party is any person not adverse. It includes
any person who has a substantial beneficial interest in the
trust, such as one with a general power of appointment, since
such interest would be adversely affected by the exercise
or not of the power.
If a related party to the Donor is a trustee of the CLT,
the better practice would be to exclude the trustee from having
discretion to pay the lead interest to charitable organizations
that the related party controls. See Priv. Ltr. Rul. 93-31-015
(May 6, 1993).
Lead Charities:
The “lead” beneficiaries must be one or more
charities, transfers to which are deductible under IRC secs.
2055 and 2522 for estate and gift tax purposes. Lead beneficiaries
may be domestic or foreign charitable organizations or private
foundations. However, the type of CLT chosen will limit what
type of lead beneficiary is permitted. For example, for grantor
CLTs, the lead beneficiaries must be domestic charities for
favorable income tax deductions to be available. Non-charitable
persons cannot receive distributions during the period of
the lead interest.
While, the trustees can select the lead beneficiaries, the
trust instrument should designate alternate lead beneficiaries
or a mechanism by which such lead beneficiaries will be selected
in the event that the named beneficiaries fail to qualify
as organizations pursuant to IRC secs. 2055 or 2522.
Non-charitable Remainderpersons:
Non-charitable remainder beneficiaries can include one or
more of the donor, the donor’s estate, spouse, family
members or other non-charitable remainder persons. However,
a reverter to the donor’s estate results in the inclusion
of the trust property in the donor’s estate for federal
estate tax purposes. The trust will be treated as a grantor
trust, allowing an income tax charitable deduction on funding
and income tax liability for income earned by the trust.
Payout of Lead Interest:
A CLT must make distributions of the lead interests to charitable
lead beneficiaries not less frequently than annually. For
CLUTs, there is no requirement of a minimum percentage to
be paid out as there is with CRUTs. Likewise, CLTs contrast
with charitable remainder unitrusts in that CLTs have no maximum
payout rules.
If a CLT is created by a Donor at death, such as by means
of a will or pour-over trust, then the payment of the lead
interest may be deferred until the end of the tax year in
which the trust is fully funded. Priv.Ltr.Rul. 90-47-053.
While the lead term lasts, CLTs cannot make payments to non-charitable
lead beneficiaries. Two caveats exist with this rule: First,
if the amount payable for a private purpose is in the form
of a unitrust interest and the trust instrument does not provide
for any preference or priority in the payment of the private
unitrust as opposed to the charitable unitrust interest; Second,
if under the trust instrument the amount that may be paid
for a private purpose is payable only from a group of assets
that are devoted exclusively to private purposes and to which
certain private foundation restrictions do not apply.
Finally, the lead interest payout period cannot be commuted.
Term of the Lead Interest:
The terms for lead interests may be for a period of years
or for the life or lives of one or more designated individuals
alive and in being when the trust is established. Treasury
Regulations require that the measuring life or lives be limited
to one or more of the donor, the donor’s spouse, or
a lineal ancestor or spouse of a lineal ancestor of all of
the remainder beneficiaries. Interestingly, there is no requirement
that a term of years be limited to 20 years, as there is with
CRTs. Rev. Rul. 85-49, 1985-1 C.B. 330. Priv.Ltr.Rul. 96-31-021.
Also, an interest of a specified term of years will also qualify
where the trust instrument contains a “savings”
clause with reference to the rule against perpetuities.
Grantor versus Non-Grantor Lead Trusts:
Unlike with CRTs, CLTs have one further important distinction:
that between a grantor CLT ands a non-grantor CLT. The choice
between these types of CLTs will determine the availability
and extent of income and transfer tax benefits.
First, a non-grantor lead trust is fully a taxable
entity. As a CLT pays out the lead interest to charity, the
lead interest amount is deductible. Unless the trust has unrelated
business taxable income (“UBTI”), the deduction
is unlimited. If the trust has UBTI, then the charitable deduction
for income tax purposes is constrained by the percentage limitations
that apply to individuals. IRC sec. 681(a). A CLT will be
taxed on undistributed income in excess of the amount necessary
to pay the lead interest.
Distributions of appreciated property to satisfy the lead
interest results in realization of gain for which the CLT
may take a deduction. IRC sec. 642(c); Rev. Rul. 83-75, 1983-1,
C.B. 114.
The drafter is advised that the trust instrument should allocate
to the trust any deductions permitted for depletion and depreciation.
The Donor will not receive an income tax charitable deduction
for contributions to the CLT. IRC sec. 170(f). The Donor may
receive a gift tax charitable deduction when assets are contributed
to the CLT with such deduction based on the present value
of the lead interest payments to the lead charities. If the
donor or a non-adverse party has the power to direct the beneficial
enjoyment of trust principal or income because of a power
of disposition, then the donor is treated as the owner of
the portion of the CLT over which he or she possesses such
power. IRC sec. 674(a).
A grantor lead trust differs from a non-grantor
lead trust significantly. IRC secs. 671 – 678 apply
to grantor lead trusts. With such a CLT, all items of income,
deductions and credits are attributable to the grantor and
taxed to the grantor and not to the trust. Generally, the
trust’s principal will be included in the donor’s
gross estate for federal estate tax purposes. IRC secs. 2036,
2038 and 2035.
A donor can take an income tax deduction for the payment
of the CLT’s lead interest. IRC sec. 170(f)(2)(B). The
donor’s deduction is limited to the 30 percent AGI limit
for cash gifts. IRC sec. 170(b)(1)(B)(i). Recapture if the
donor dies during the trust’s term. IRC sec. 170(f)(2)(B);
Treas. Reg. 1.170A-6(c)(4). The donor may take a charitable
gift tax deduction.
A grantor CLT must be an inter vivos trust.
A CLT drafter faces two other important planning considerations.
Alas, the first of these is that the generation skipping transfer
tax (“GSTT”) also applies to CLTs if the remainder
persons include “skip” beneficiaries (those who
are two or more generations below the donor), yet with mixed
results depending upon the type of CLT in question. CLUTs
work most easily with the GSTT since the value of the property
transferred to the CLUT is determined on the date of transfer
or funding. CLATs do not have this benefit.
The drafter must consider also the application of certain
laws pertaining to private foundations such as those concerning
self-dealing, excess business holdings, jeopardizing investments
and taxable expenditures. The CLT’s governing instrument
must expressly prohibit the foundation from engaging in acts
that would violate these prohibitions.
Conclusion:
CLTs are remarkable entities that permit donors to achieve
multiple goals. CLTs can be effective tools for such donors
as those interested in lifetime gifts to charities with gifts
over to their families, persons who have otherwise exhausted
their ability to deduct charitable gifts because of applicable
percentage limitations and/or others who wish to train family
members in charitable dispositions before receiving money
in their own right.
CLTs have critical distinctions and benefits depending upon
whether a CLT is a grantor or non-grantor type, whether a
CLT is a CLAT or a CRUT. CLTs also will provide varying levels
of benefits to charities and families depending upon whether
a charitable lead interest is for a term of years or for a
lifetime.
Particularly in a milieu of low interest rates, CLTs can
be effective and laudable components of a family’s wealth
management program and can constitute a win-win arrangement
for individuals, families and charities.
As
published in the Massachusetts Bar Association Section Review,
Probate Law, vol. 6, No. 3, 2004. © Brian E. Lacey, Esq.,
2004. All rights reserved.
LONG
TERM CARE INSURANCE
by Lauren R. Killman, Esq.
A long term care insurance policy can provide important safeguards
in the event of serious health problems. Many people now look
to these policies as their alternitive to nursing home care.
When considering a long term care insurance policy, keep
in mind the following:
• In
most instances, policies with home care coverage will provide
care sufficient to allow the policy holder to stay at home
and avoid the need for a long term care facility
• It
is important to anticipate greater medical needs and the rising
cost of medical services when purchasing the policy to insure
adequate coverage.
• If
the coverage is insufficient, MassHealth (formerly Medicaid)
may still cover unmet medical needs.
Because it is difficult to predict future medical needs and
costs, there is the possibility that the policy may fall short
of providing care sufficient to both meet your medical needs
and keep you at home.
In most circumstances, MassHealth will place a lien on your
estate to recoup funds advanced for health care ("Estate Recovery").
Should you need MassHealth to supplement those costs, the
right long term care policy may protect your family and your
estate from having Estate Recovery.
To qualify for this protection, the policy must meet statutory
requirements that are best explained by a qualified professional.
If your policy provider is not aware of the requirements,
you should contact an attorney to make sure your policy meets
these standards.
130 CMR 515.014 -- Long term Care Insurance Minimum Coverage
Requirements;
130 CMR 515.011(B) -- Exemption of treating former home as
an asset;
130 CMR 515.012 -- Exemption from Estate Recovery
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