Estates, Trusts, and Gift Tax Flashcards

1
Q

What is considered remainder in trusts and estates?

A
Principal of trust:
All assets contributed
Property acquired in exchange for corpus
Proceeds from sale of corpus
Capital gains
Stock dividends
Mortgage premiums and payments
Capital improvements
Insurance proceeds
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2
Q

What is considered income in trusts and estates?

A
Earnings of trust:
Cash dividends
Interest income
Rental income and expense
Property taxes
Insurance premiums
Depreciation
Municipal bond interest
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3
Q

What are the five conditions to be a Valid Express Trust?

A

BRATS
Beneficiary - must have one
Reasonable intent - must have valid purpose
Assets - must contain corpus
Trustee - not considered a tax preparer
Specified life - length of life + 21 years

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4
Q

What is a spendthrift trust?

A

Prohibits assets from being pledged to pay debts of a beneficiary

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5
Q

What is a resulting trust?

A

Created by courts due to failure of an express trust

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6
Q

What is a cy press trust?

A

Established due to failure of a charitable trust that has served its purpose

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7
Q

What is a totten or tentative trust?

A

Created when settlor opens a bank account in his own name “as trustee” for another

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8
Q

What is a constructive trust?

A

Imposed by courts when there has been an abuse of a confidential relation

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9
Q

What is per capita distribution?

A

Allocation is equal to each beneficiary
3 children - each get 1/3
One child with 2 children dies - each get 1/4

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10
Q

What is per stripes distribution?

A

Allocation is equal at the level of the first generation
3 children - each get 1/3
One child with 2 children dies - 2 surviving still get 1/3, deceased child’s children is 1/6

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11
Q

What is a grantor trust?

A

Revocable trust that is considered income of grantor

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12
Q

What is a simple trust?

A

Trust that makes annual distributions equal to DNI
Cannot make charitable contributions
Exemption = $300

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13
Q

What is a complex trust?

A
Satisfies one of these:
1) Less than DNI is distributed OR
2) Amounts are permanently set aside for charitable gifts OR
3) Distribution was made from principal
Exemption = $100
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14
Q

What is Distributable Net Income?

A

Maximum amount that can be taxed to the beneficiary
Includes tax exempt income
Excludes capital gains

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15
Q

What are examples of a present interest gift?

A

Annuity starting now
Outright ownership of property
Right to immediately receive dividends, rents, etc.
Cash in joint account once beneficiary withdraws money

$14K exclusion per person, $28K MFJ

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16
Q

What are excluded from the definition of gifts?

A

Transfers to spouses
Support minors
Payments directly to school for tuition for another, does not include room and board
Payment directly to health care providers for another
Charitable contributions
Political contributions

17
Q

What is the lifetime gift and estate exclusion amount?

A

$5,450,000 @ 40%

18
Q

What is included in gross estate?

A

Cash and property owned by decedent
All gifts reported on tax returns made after 1976
Receivables, such as IRD
Revocable trusts
Life insurance proceeds that either are paid to estate or decedent retained power of ownership
1/2 property help jointly with spouse
All property held jointly with other, only reduced by amount other can prove they paid

19
Q

What is the valuation of assets of the gross estate?

A

Usually FMV at the time of death, unless executor elects AVD

If elect AVD, assets are valued at FMV at the earlier of distribution date or 6 months from date of death

20
Q

What are allowable deductions for an estate?

A

State death taxes paid
Marital deduction - anything transferred to surviving spouse
Charitable deduction - must be authorized in will
Funeral expenses
Casualty and theft loss
Administrative expenses, unless executor waives right in order to deduct on 1041
Liabilities of the estate, include medical expenses owed unless executor waives right in order to deduct on 1040

21
Q

Where can medical bills of decedent be deducted?

A

Either Individual Return 1040 OR Estate Return 706

Normally goes on 706 but can be waived to go on 1040

22
Q

Where can executor fees be deducted?

A

Either Estate Income Return 1041 OR Estate Return 706

23
Q

Where can Income in Respect of Decedent be deducted?

A

Estate Income Return 1041 AND Estate Return 706

24
Q

What are differences between trusts and estates?

A

Trust - calendar year, due 4/15, quarterly estimates, exemptions = $300 simple/$100 complex

Estate - calendar or fiscal year, due 3.5 months after end of year, no estimates for first 2 years, exemption = $600