I. Preliminary Remarks
It is an honor to appear before this distinguished Committee to testify regarding portability of
the estate, gift, and generation-skipping tax (“GST”) exemptions[1] to a surviving spouse. Portability
would simplify estate planning and estate administration for married couples; carry out our clients'
nontax goals; and increase consistency with existing tax policy without creating any new tax benefit.
Although I am chair of the Transfer Tax Study Committee of the American College of Trust
and Estate Counsel (“ACTEC”), I am here as an invited witness in my individual capacity. However,
the legislative proposal that appears as Exhibit A to my written testimony was prepared by ACTEC's
Transfer Tax Study Committee and was unanimously approved by ACTEC's Board of Regents on
March 10, 2008. Accordingly, when I speak in support of that proposal, I am authorized to speak on
behalf of ACTEC, as well.
ACTEC is a non-profit professional association of approximately 2,600 trust and estate
lawyers selected on the basis of professional reputation and ability in the field of trusts and estates and
substantial contributions to that field through lecturing, writing, teaching, and bar leadership activities.
ACTEC does not take positions on matters of tax policy and politics, including rates, exemptions,
effective dates, and phase-ins. Nevertheless, on the basis of the extensive experience of our members
in working with the estate, gift and generation-skipping transfer taxes as applied to our clients'
circumstances, ACTEC offers technical observations concerning how the tax laws work and
recommendations for making them operate more effectively to carry out the policies expressed by
Congress.
In my view, portability may be the best estate tax planning idea for a surviving spouse since
the unlimited marital deduction in 1981. Portability has already received significant attention from
Congress. Specifically, portability was an important feature of H.R. 5970, in the 109th Congress,
which was passed by the House of Representatives on July 29, 2006, and set before the Senate as the
subject of the cloture motion that failed by a 56-42 vote on August 3, 2006, as part of the effort of a
number of Senators to work out a compromise on the future of the estate tax.
In my remarks today I will first describe portability, second, discuss reasons that compel me
and my ACTEC Fellows to recommend the passage of estate tax legislation that includes portability,
third, make a few observations regarding the use of portability in practice, and lastly compare
H.R. 5970 to the ACTEC Proposal.
II. The Case for Portability
A. What is “Portability”?
In general, portability is the transfer of a the deceased spouse's unused exemption to the
surviving spouse. Specifically, under current law, each citizen or resident has a $2 million
exemption from estate tax. It is common to say that a married couple has twice that, or
$4 million. That is not an accurate picture of how the estate tax system works. Rather,
under current law, upon the death of the first spouse and the transfer of all assets to the
surviving spouse, the $2 million exemption of the deceased spouse is lost. When the
surviving spouse dies, her estate may contain the assets of both spouses, but the estate of
the surviving spouse will only have a single $2 million exemption. In order to avoid
wasting the deceased spouse's exemption, the deceased spouse must either transfer assets
to someone other than the surviving spouse, or place the exemption amount in an
irrevocable bypass trust. Those two options are often counter to what the couple desires.
Portability solves this dilemma.
B. Evaluation of Portability.
In general, we recommend portability for four important reasons, namely to:
(1) Simplify transfer tax planning and after-death administration;
(2) Satisfy client desires to provide security and flexibility for the surviving spouse;
(3) Achieve greater consistency with existing tax policy that treats a married couple as a
unit; and
(4) Importantly, accomplish by statute the same results that a married couple may
achieve by complicated planning and estate administration.
1. Simplification. The most obvious feature of portability is that it vastly simplifies
estate planning and after-death administration for a married couple.
a. With portability, a married couple would no longer have to create a
bypass trust upon the death of the deceased spouse, in order to use the
exemption of the deceased spouse. Although “bypass” is easy to say, a
number of complications come to mind in the use of a bypass trust.
First, estate planners commonly use a marital deduction formula clause
in drafting a bypass trust. The purpose is to ensure that the bypass trust
receives the greatest amount possible covered by the exemption but does
not go over the exemption thereby triggering estate tax. Instead, any
amount in excess of the exemption amount would go to the survivor's
trust, which qualifies for the marital deduction so that the two trusts
together would make maximum use of the deceased spouse's exemption
while protecting any excess from tax with the marital deduction. The
result of making this optimal use of the exemption by a deceased spouse
is a complicated formula virtually impossible to explain to anyone who
is not an estate planning attorney or other professional.
A second complication is that an irrevocable bypass trust is a separate
taxpayer. This means the bypass trust needs a separate ID number and
a separate income tax return. With portability, there would be no
separate trust, the surviving spouse would continue to use her own social
security number and would not have to file a separate income tax return
in addition to the survivor's individual 1040.
Third, after the death of the first spouse to die, the division of assets
between the marital deduction trust and a bypass trust is typically
accomplished after the filing of a federal estate tax return, due initially
nine months after death. As a result, there needs to be a preliminary
trust to hold the decedent's assets between the date of death and the
funding of the trusts. The administrative trust in turn is a separate
taxpayer, requiring yet another new ID number and an additional income
tax return. With portability, there would be no need for an administrative
trust; the decedent's assets would be treated as transferred to the
surviving spouse on the date of death of the first spouse to die.
b. Another complexity under current law is that the estate of the first
spouse to die must contain sufficient assets to use the exemption of the
deceased spouse. Unless the couple is confident of which spouse will
die first, this means that each spouse must have assets in his or her name
sufficient to use the exemption. The result is that complicated tax
planning drives how a married couple hold title to their property, rather
than nontax, personal reasons. This may require asset transfers from the
spouse with the higher net worth to the other spouse, which might
otherwise be unnecessary, undesirable, impractical, or in some other way
be inconsistent with the couple's overall planning. Even in a community property state, such as California, clients
frequently have inheritances, property brought from a non-community
property state, or assets owned before marriage that are separate property
and create a different net worth for each spouse.
With portability, the deceased spouse's unused exemption would pass
to the surviving spouse, regardless of the value of the deceased spouse's
estate.
2. Conformity to Client Nontax Goals.
A second important reason we support portability is that clients typically prefer
that the surviving spouse be the full owner of the couples' combined estate upon
the death of the first spouse. A bypass trust divides ownership of the deceased
spouse's estate between the income beneficiary and the remaindermen who
receive the assets upon the death of the surviving spouse. Even if the surviving
spouse holds a limited power of appointment over the bypass trust so that the
survivor controls who owns the remainder, the surviving spouse is still faced with
less than outright ownership of the assets in the bypass trust. This separate
ownership raises issues of fiduciary duties owed to the remainder beneficiaries by
the trustee, whether the trustee is the surviving spouse or someone else.
3. Consistency with Existing Tax Policy.
A third reason that portability makes sense is that it is consistent with other ways
the tax law recognizes a married couple as, in effect, a single economic unit, e.g.,
joint income tax returns, gift-splitting for gift tax purposes, and the unlimited
marital deduction.
a. For example, in 1981, when the marital deduction for transfers between
spouses was made unlimited, the Finance Committee stated that “[t]he
committee believes that a husband and wife should be treated as one
economic unit for purposes of estate and gift taxes, as they generally are for
income tax purposes.” S. Rep. No. 97-144, 97th Cong., 1st Sess. 127 (1981).
b. In addition, portability would permit the actual result for a married couple
to match the way the exemption is often viewed and discussed, including
by lawmakers, as, for example “$2 million per person, and $4 million for
a married couple”. Rarely do we hear the exemption referred to as
$2 million per person, and $4 million per married couple who retains legal
counsel and engages in careful, complex planning.
4. Portability Does Not Open a New Door.
Not only are there significant reasons that favor portability, it is important to keep
in mind that portability does not open a new door. Under current law, a married
couple can achieve the same goal of use of the deceased spouse's exemption as
portability does. The difference is that current law (1) requires a married couple
to engage in complicated planning and put up with complex administration; and
(2) impairs the security of sole ownership that a surviving spouse could otherwise
enjoy.
In summary, portability would (I) simplify estate planning and estate administration for
married couples; (2) carry out clients' nontax goals; and (3) increase consistency with existing tax
policy. All these benefits can be obtained without giving a married couple a new tax benefit.
C. Who Will Benefit from Portability?
1. Portability should be most useful to a married couple with a combined estate of more
than $2 million but no more than $4 million at the time of death of the surviving spouse. For
convenience when I refer to $4 million, I am referring to double one exemption, which is currently $2
million per person. In these circumstances, the couple could use portability to both avoid all estate
tax on their combined estate and avoid the use of a bypass trust for estate tax planning.
2. The greater the combined net worth of a married couple, the less useful portability will
be. This is for two reasons: First, the higher the net worth, the more likely the couple will make
distributions to children on the first death thereby using the exemption of the first spouse. Second, the
larger the combined estate, the greater role that appreciation of the deceased spouse's estate in the
survivor's estate will play.
III. H.R. 5970 and the ACTEC Proposal
A. H.R. 5970 and the “Break-through”.
One of the technical challenges to implementing portability was the tracing problem.
Tracing refers to tracking assets from the deceased spouse to the surviving spouse in order to
determine how much unused exemption should be transferred to the surviving spouse's estate.
H.R. 5970 solved this problem by transferring the entire unused exemption of the deceased spouse to
the estate of the surviving spouse but capping the amount of unused exemption the survivor's estate
can use to the same amount as the survivor's exemption. Therefore, the total exemption in the
surviving spouse's estate would never exceed twice the amount of a single exemption.
Moreover, “capping” not only avoids difficult tracing, it also prevents abuse by a surviving
spouse who would marry a series of ill paupers in order to accumulate their unused exemption. The
unused exemption of all predeceased spouses would be capped at the amount of the surviving spouse's
exemption.
ACTEC recognizes this technical break-through in H.R. 5970, and the ACTEC Proposal
incorporates the capping technique.
I will turn now to the differences between H.R. 5970 and the ACTEC Proposal.
B. Relieve Burden of the Required Election.
First, under H.R. 5970, new section 2010(c)(6)(A) permits portability only if the executor of
the deceased spouse's estate so elects. We believe that the election will be desirable in virtually every
situation, and that a required election will be burdensome and a trap for the unwary.
A required election for portability is likely to result in the same confusion produced when we
had a qualified terminable interest property trust (“QTIP”) election for the marital deduction. The IRS
required that simply listing assets on Schedule M of the federal estate tax return was not sufficient to
obtain the marital deduction. An affirmative check-the-box election had to be made. This rule led to
several private letter rulings that disallowed the marital deduction. As a result of these unfavorable
rulings, and approximately 10 years later, a new rule was finally adopted that did not require a box to
be checked to make the QTIP election.
C. Give Option to File Estate Tax Return or Income Tax Return for Deceased Spouse.
H.R. 5970 requires that the unused exemption of a deceased spouse cannot be transferred to
the estate of the surviving spouse unless a federal estate tax return is filed for the deceased spouse. (As
mentioned above, ACTEC recommends that the executor not be required to make an election for
portability to apply.) Although the ACTEC proposal requires the timely filing of an estate tax return
for the deceased spouse, we also suggest that there be an option of filing a special schedule to the
deceased spouse's final income tax return as a substitute for an estate tax return.
The reason for the income tax filing option is that in any situation where portability would
apply, then, by definition there would be no tax due on the deceased spouse's estate, and frequently,
no estate tax return would be necessary, except to establish there was unused exemption. If there were
tax, then there would be no unused exemption to transfer to the survivor's estate. The income tax
option is offered as a less onerous way of complying with the need to notifY the Internal Revenue
Service (IRS) that portability would apply upon the death of the surviving spouse.
Although some might view the income tax return as an inappropriate vehicle for providing the
fair notice the Service needs, the ACTEC proposal does not automatically allow any statement on an
income tax return to suffice. We believe that the concern for fair notice should be addressed by
Treasury, which would be authorized to issue “instructions, regulations, directions or forms”.
D. Extend Portability to the Generation-Skipping Transfer Tax (section 102(a) & (b) of
H.R. 5970 and Section 2631 (c) of the Code).
Second, H.R. 5970 makes the exemption portable for gift and estate taxes, but not for the
generation-skipping tax exemption. Our experience is that taxpayers who make taxable transfers often
consider gifts at death to grandchildren. Moreover, linking the GST exemption to the estate and gift
tax exemption will simplify planning and there is no reason to make the GST exemption different than
the other transfer taxes. Like the gift and estate tax exemption, portability of the GST exemption is
available under current law to taxpayers who engage in sophisticated estate planning. For these
reasons, ACTEC recommends extension of portability to the GST exemption.
E. Clarify Whether Privity is Required.
Privity means that the exemption would only be portable between a married couple. Without
requiring privity, there could be a transfer of an exemption from a deceased husband to a surviving
wife, who would in turn transfer both her unused exemption and her first husband's unused exemption
to a second husband.
H.R. 5970 did not appear to require privity, but that is not entirely clear. We believe if
Congress intends to allow portability without privity, it is not entirely clear that Congress explicitly
considered this issue or its implications. If the policy judgment regarding privity was not considered
in H.R. 5970, that judgment should be made now. While ACTEC acknowledges that this is the type
of judgment call that lawmakers should make, we believe that a privity requirement would adversely
affect very few spouses and that most spouses would find privity to be a natural and acceptable
requirement.
F. Clarify That a Surviving Spouse's Estate Can Receive Unused Exemption from More
than One Deceased Spouse. (Section 102(a) of H.R. 5970 and New Section 2010(c)(4) and (5) of the
Code).
It is relatively clear from H.R. 5970 that a surviving spouse who has lost two or more spouses
to death may use the unused exemption of all such predeceased spouses, subject to a cap of the amount
of the surviving spouse's exemption. Apparently H.R. 5970 permits a surviving spouse to accumulate
exemptions from all prior deceased spouses but caps the amount of exemption that may be
accumulated. We propose clarifying H.R. 5970 by inserting the word “all”.
G. Broaden Treasury's Regulation Authority (Section 102(a) of H.R. 5970 and New Section
2010(c)(7) of the Code).
We recommend that Treasury be given broader authority to issue what are often viewed as
“legislative regulations”. The deliberate process of drafting regulations, with solicitation of public
input through the notice and comment process and otherwise, is well-suited to fleshing out the
administrative rules to govern the details of implementing portability.
In conclusion, portability is a great idea. I sincerely hope that with the support of this
Committee, portability will be a great idea whose time has come.
EXHIBIT A
2008 Report on Study of Statutory Proposal for Simplification of Transfer Tax
Planning for the Unified Credit and GST Exemption
In 1992, the Transfer Tax Study Committee recommended a proposal for the
simplification of federal estate and generation-skipping transfer tax planning and
compliance through the enactment of amendments to sections 2010 and 2631 of the
Internal Revenue Code of 1986. The Committee updated this report in 2004 and is now
further updating the proposal. This proposal is based on HR 5970 and not the version
approved in 1992, except that this Report unlike HR 5970 applies to the GSTT as well as
the gift tax and the estate tax. Like HR 5970, this Report assumes unification of the gift
and estate tax.
The proposal would amend subsections 2010(c) and 2505(a), providing for the transfers
of any unused portion of the applicable credit amount (unified credit) of a deceased
spouse to the surviving spouse. For the most part the proposal adopts the amendments to
section 2010(c) set forth in the “Estate Tax and Extension of Tax Relief Act of 2006,” H.R. 5970 (109th Congress), which the House of Representatives passed on July 29, 2006.
The amount of the transferable credit would not be limited to the tax that the property
transferred to the spouse would generate but instead would be equal to the transferor
spouse's entire (otherwise unused) applicable exclusion amount. This proposal would
also amend subsection 2631 to create a new Section 2631(c) allowing the transfer of any
unused portion of a decedent's GST exemption to the decedent's surviving spouse.
The Committee recommends re-adoption of the proposal as set forth and explained in this
report. The Committee's report first explains the provisions of current law and the need
for change, and then describes the proposed amendments to sections 2010, 2505 and
2631.
Current Law
By operation of the applicable credit amount, each decedent's estate is entitled to exclude
a portion of its assets from estate taxation. The amount that is excludable is known as the
“applicable exclusion amount,” as set forth in section 2010(c)(2).
As amended by the Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001 (“EGTRRA”),
the applicable exclusion amount for estate tax purposes is $2,000,000 in
the case of decedents dying in 2008 and $3,500,000 in the case of decedents dying in
2009 reduced, in effect, however by the amount of the credit used to offset gift taxes
otherwise payable. For gift tax purposes, the credit is equal to the tax generated by the
first $1,000,000 of taxable transfers made by the individual.
Under EGTRRA, no estate taxes are imposed for decedents dying in 2010.
To the extent that the applicable credit amount is not used against taxable transfers by the
individual, it is lost.
Each individual is entitled to a GST tax exemption under section 2631. Since 2003, the
GST exemption is equal to the estate tax applicable exclusion amount. To the extent that
the exemption is not allocable to GST transfers made by the individual during life or at
death, it similarly will be lost.
Marital Deduction Planning
Under sections 2056 and 2523, transfers to the decedent's (surviving) spouse are
deductible from taxable transfers, and thus do not generate a transfer tax against which
the applicable credit amount can be taken. In other words, an individual who transfers all
property to his or her spouse does not pay a tax but does not utilize the otherwise
available credit. On the spouse's subsequent death, however, all of such property then
remaining will be includible in that spouse's estate.
In the case of spousal estates of more than the applicable credit amount, accepted estate
planning makes some of the assets taxable at the death of the first spouse to die, and the
balance at the death of the surviving spouse, so that the applicable credit amount of each
can be used. In the simple case of combined assets of $4,000,000 (in 2008), for example,
the usual plan would result in $2,000,000 being subject to taxation in the estate of the
first spouse to die, but not in the estate of the survivor. This result typically is obtained in
estate planning documents through a formula that takes into account gifts made during
lifetime that reduce the applicable credit amount as well as other adjustments. At least
$2,000,000 is subject to taxation in the estate of the survivor. In each estate, the tax
generated by the transfer tax is sheltered by that individual's applicable credit so no estate
taxes are owed.
This type of transfer tax planning necessitates the creation of trusts to manage some or all
of the family's joint assets. The only practicable way to prevent the property protected
by the applicable credit amount of the deceased spouse from being subject to transfer
taxation in the estate of the surviving spouse is to put the property in a trust over which
the surviving spouse does not have any “strings” that would trigger gross estate inclusion.
Even if the surviving spouse does not need a trust for property management purposes,
such a trust must be created for tax planning reasons.
GST Exemption Planning
Each spouse is entitled to a $2,000,000 GST exemption (in 2008). It therefore is possible
for a husband and wife collectively to shelter $4,000,000 worth of assets from the
generation-skipping transfer tax (the “GST Tax”). In order to do so, however, each
spouse must make a transfer of $2,000,000 that will be subject to the GST tax.
Unless the surviving spouse has sufficient assets to effectively use his or her GST
exemption, the only practicable way to effectively utilize both spouses' GST exemptions,
while preserving the resources for the use of the surviving spouse, is to create trusts.
Generally, one or more trusts are structured so that the transferor's GST exemption can
be applied to them (a credit shelter trust and/or a “Reverse QTIP Trust”). The balance of
the assets then will pass to the surviving spouse in such a way that they will be includible
in his or her gross estate (that is, either outright or in a marital trust), so that the surviving
spouse will be, or will be deemed to be, the “transferor” of those assets under
section 2631(a), allowing his or her GST exemption to be allocated to it.
For both estate tax and generation skipping transfer tax purposes, the amount that can be
potentially sheltered from tax increases to $3,500,000 per individual in 2009. There is no
GST tax for transfers occurring in 2010. The provisions of EGTRRA cease to apply after
2010 in accordance with the “sunset” provisions of EGTRRA.
Reasons for Change
Current transfer tax law can unnecessarily dictate the testamentary plans of decedents
because trusts must be created to take advantage of the applicable credit amount and GST
exemption allocable to the first spouse. Testators who otherwise would want to leave the
entire estate to the surviving spouse outright are forced to put the property in trust in
order to take advantage of these amounts.
In addition, in order for the estate of the first spouse to die to take advantage of the
applicable credit amount, he or she must have in his or her estate assets at least equal to
the “applicable exclusion amount” (that is, the amount of assets sheltered from tax by the
applicable credit amount). This may require asset transfers from the wealthier spouse to
the poorer spouse that might otherwise be unnecessary, undesirable, not practical either
legally or practically, or otherwise inconsistent with the couple's overall planning.
This issue became increasingly acute under EGTRRA because the amount that can
potentially be protected from the estate and GST tax has increased in steps to $2 million
currently and $3,500,000 for 2009. In order to take maximum advantage of these
exclusions, each of the spouses must have at least this amount in each's individual name.
Further, assuming if the “sunset provisions” of EGTRRA take effect, that is, the amounts
that can be protected are reduced to pre-EGTRRA levels after 2010, the amount so
transferred will prove to have been unnecessary.
Married couples should be able to transfer assets with the protection of their combined
applicable credit amounts regardless of the happenstance of who dies first, and regardless
of their level of sophistication.
Couples can continue to utilize credit shelter trust planning if they prefer for tax or other
reasons. Credit shelter trusts can result in somewhat lower overall estate tax costs for a
couple since the appreciation of the assets held in such a trust will not be subject to estate
tax whereas it would be if held by the surviving spouse outright. In addition, couples
may prefer to leave all or a portion of their assets in trust for a survivor for non-tax
reasons, e.g. financial management, protection against remarriage, an improvident spouse
and the like.
Under the proposal, an individual cannot retransfer to a subsequent spouse any applicable
credit amount or GST exemption that such individual acquires from a deceased spouse
and does not use during such individual's lifetime or at his or her own death. The credit
can be used by a surviving spouse only if a United States citizen or resident at time of
death.
Proposed Amendment of Sections 2010(c)
Section 2010(c)
(c) Applicable Credit Amount-
(1) IN GENERAL- For purposes of this section, the applicable credit amount is
the amount of the tentative tax which would be determined under the rate
schedule set forth in section 2001(c) if the amount with respect to which such
tentative tax is to be computed were the applicable exclusion amount.
(2) APPLICABLE EXCLUSION AMOUNT- For purposes of this subsection, the
applicable exclusion amount is the sum of:
(A) the basic exclusion amount, and
(B) in the case of a surviving spouse, the aggregate deceased
spousal unused exclusion amount.
(3) BASIC EXCLUSION AMOUNT-
(A) IN GENERAL- For purposes of this subsection, the basic
exclusion amount is $_________
(B) INFLATION ADJUSTMENT- In the case of any decedent
dying in a calendar year after 2010, the dollar amount in
subparagraph (A) shall be increased by an amount equal to--
(i) such dollar amount, multiplied by
(ii) the cost-of-living adjustment determined under section1(f)(3) for such calendar year by substituting 'calendar year
2009' for 'calendar year 1992' in subparagraph (B) thereof.
If any amount as adjusted under the preceding sentence is not a
multiple of $100,000, such amount shall be rounded to the nearest
multiple of $100,000.
(4) AGGREGATE DECEASED SPOUSAL UNUSED EXCLUSION AMOUNT For
purposes of this subsection, the term .aggregate deceased spousal unused
exclusion amount' means the lesser of--
(A) the basic exclusion amount, or
(B) the sum of all deceased spousal unused exclusion amounts of
the surviving spouse.
(5) DECEASED SPOUSAL UNUSED EXCLUSION AMOUNT- For purposes
of this subsection, the term 'deceased spousal unused exclusion amount of the
surviving spouse' means, with respect to each deceased spouse (of the surviving
spouse) dying after December 31,2009, the excess (if any) of:
(A) the basic exclusion amount of the deceased spouse, over
(B) the amount with respect to which the tentative tax is
determined under section 2001(b)(1) on the estate of such deceased
spouse.
(6) SPECIAL RULES-
(A) RETURN REQUIRED- A deceased spousal unused exclusion
amount may not be taken into account by a surviving spouse under
paragraph (5) unless the executor of the estate of the deceased
spouse files a timely filed (including extensions) estate tax return
or sets forth adequate information on a timely filed (including
extensions) income tax return, as provided in instructions,
regulations or directions, or fon11s prepared by the Secretary, for
the deceased spouse from which one can determine the deceased
spouse's unused exclusion amount.
(B) EXAMINATION OF PRIOR RETURNS AFTER
EXPIRATION OF PERIOD OF LIMITATIONS WITH RESPECT
TO DECEASED SPOUSAL UNUSED EXCLUSION AMOUNT Notwithstanding
any period of limitation in section 6501, after the
time has expired under section 6501 within which a tax may be
assessed under chapter 11 or 12 with respect to a deceased spousal
unused exclusion amount, the Secretary may examine a return of
the deceased spouse to make determinations with respect to such
amount for purposes of carrying out this subsection,
(7) REGULATIONS- The Secretary shall prescribe such regulations as may be
necessary or appropriate to carry out the purposes of this subsection.
Proposed Amendment of 2505(a)
2505(a)
(a) GENERAL RULE.- In the case of a citizen or resident of the United States,
there shall be allowed as a credit against the tax imposed by section 2501 for each
calendar year an amount equal to-
(1) the applicable credit amount under section 2010(c) which would apply
if the donor died as of the end of the calendar year, reduced by
(2) the sum of the amounts allowable as a credit to the individual under
this section for all preceding calendar periods.
Proposed Amendment of Section 2631
Section 2631 (c)
(c) GST EXEMPTION AMOUNT-
(1) IN GENERAL- For purposes of subsection (a), the GST exemption amount
for any calendar year shall be the sum of:
(A) the basic exclusion amount under section 2010(c) for such calendar
year, and
(B) in the case of a surviving spouse, the aggregate deceased spousal GST
unused exemption amount.
(2) AGGREGATE DECEASED SPOUSAL GST UNUSED EXEMPTION
AMOUNT- For purposes of this section, the term 'aggregate deceased spousal
GST unused exemption amount' means the lesser of--
(A) the basic exclusion amount, or
(B) the sum of all deceased spousal GST unused exemption
amounts of the surviving spouse.
(3) DECEASED SPOUSAL GST UNUSED EXEMPTION AMOUNT- For
purposes of this section, the term ' deceased spousal GST unused exemption
amount of the surviving spouse' means. with respect to each deceased spouse (of
the surviving spouse) dying after December 31, 2009, the deceased spouse's
unused GST exemption remaining after application of section 2632(e).
(4) SPECIAL RULES-
(A) RETURN REQUIRED- A deceased spousal GST unused
exclusion amount may not be taken into account by a surviving
spouse under paragraph (3) unless the executor of the estate of the
deceased spouse tiles a timely tiled (including extensions) estate
tax return or sets forth adequate information on a timely filed
(including extensions) income tax return, as provided in
instructions, regulations, directions, or forms prepared by the
Secretary, for the deceased spouse from which one can determine
the deceased spouse's GST unused exclusion amount.
(B) EXAMINATION OF PRIOR RETURNS AFTER
EXPIRATION OF PERIOD OF LIMITATIONS WITH RESPECT
TO DECEASED SPOUSAL UNUSED EXCLUSION AMOUNT Notwithstanding
any period of limitation in section 6501, after the
time has expired under section 650 I within which a tax may be
assessed under chapter 13 with respect to a deceased spousal GST
6
unused exemption amount, the Secretary may examine a return of
the deceased spouse to make determinations with respect to such
amount for purposes of carrying out this subsection.
(5) REGULATIONS- The Secretary shall prescribe such regulations as may be
necessary or appropriate to carry out the purposes of this subsection.
Explanation of Amended Sections 2010 and 2505
Amended sections 2010 and 2505 provide that an individual transfers to the surviving
spouse any unused portion of his or her applicable exclusion amount.
The amount of the credit that can be transferred to a surviving spouse is defined by
proposed section 2010(c) as the basic exclusion amount in excess of the tax imposed on
the transfer of the deceased spouse's estate. A taxpayer can accumulate credits from
prior spouses but cannot transfer those accumulated credits to a surviving spouse. In
other words, transfer of credit is allowed only between spouses who were in privity - that
is, were married to each other. The aggregate amount that can be accumulated is the
amount equal to the exclusion amount at the time of the surviving spouse's death.
The Committee believes that no estate would want to decline the transfer of an available
credit. Accordingly, the proposal presumes that any unused exclusion amount is
transferred to the surviving spouse; that is no election is required.
H.R. 5970 did not appear to require privity between spouses. It is unclear whether the
drafters intended this result. The accompanying explanations do not provide insight into
the drafters' intentions on this issue. The Committee believes that if Congress intends to
allow portability from spouse to spouse to spouse without privity, it should make that
policy judgment explicit. If the policy judgment underlying portability without privity
was not considered in the drafting of H.R. 5970, that judgment should be made now.
While acknowledging that this is a judgment call that lawmakers should make, the
Committee believes that a privity requirement would adversely affect very few spouses
and that most spouses would find privity to be a natural and acceptable requirement.
In some cases, there will be a revenue increase as a result of portability since the assets
transferred outright to a surviving spouse may appreciate during the spouse's lifetime
which appreciation then will be taxed at the death of the surviving spouse. If the first
decedent creates a credit shelter trust the appreciation in the assets of the trust is not taxed
at the death of the surviving spouse. On the other hand, revenue may be lost in the case
of taxpayers who are not currently engaging in estate tax planning, including those whose
estates consist primarily of jointly held property and other non-probate assets that pass
entirely to the surviving spouse.
The examples below illustrate the application of the proposed amendments. Each
example assumes that S has not made any lifetime gifts, unless otherwise stated.
Example (1): The Decedent, D, has made no prior taxable gifts and has a gross
estate of zero. At D's death, the basic exclusion amount as defined in section 2010(c)(3)
is $2,000,000. D's surviving spouse, S, dies un-remarried when the basic exclusion
amount is $2,000,000. S's applicable exclusion amount is $4,000,000, which is the sum
of the basic exclusion amount at S's death plus D's unused exclusion amount.
Example (2): Assume the facts in example (I), except D has separate assets of
$2,000,000, all of which he leaves to S. S's applicable exclusion amount is $4,000,000,
which is the sum of the basic exclusion amount at S's death plus D's unused exclusion
amount.
Example (3): Assume the facts in example (I), except D has separate assets of
$1,000,000 all of which he leaves to his daughter. S's applicable exclusion amount is
$3,000,000 which is the sum of the basic exclusion amount at S's death of $2,000,000
plus D's unused exclusion amount of$I,OOO,OOO.
Example (4): Decedent, D, has made $500,000 of prior taxable gifts and has
separate assets of $500,000, all of which he leaves to his daughter. At D's death, the
basic exclusion amount is $1,000,000. D's surviving spouse, S, dies un-remarried when
the basic exclusion amount is $2,000,000. S's applicable exclusion amount is
$2,000,000, which is S's basic exclusion amount. The deceased spousal unused
exclusion amount is zero because the basic exclusion amount at D's death was
$1,000,000, all of which was consumed by the $500,000 of prior taxable gifts and the
$500,000 bequest to D's daughter.
Example (5): Assume the same facts in example (4), except after D's death, S
marries D2. D2 has made no prior taxable gifts, and has a gross estate of $1,000,000 all
of which he leaves to his daughter. At D2' s death, the basic exclusion amount is
$2,000,000. S's applicable exclusion amount is $3,000,000 which is the sum of S's basic
exclusion amount of $2,000,000 plus D2's unused exclusion amount of$I,OOO,OOO.
Example (6): Decedent, D, has made no prior taxable gifts and has separate assets
of $2,000,000, all of which he leaves to his spouse S. At D's death, the basic exclusion
amount is $2,000,000. After D's death, S marries D2. D2 has made no prior taxable gifts
and has separate assets of $2,000,000, all of which he leaves to S. At D2's death, the
basic exclusion amount is $2,000,000. S dies when the basic exclusion amount is
$2,000,000. S's applicable exclusion amount is $4,000,000, which is the sum of S's
basic exclusion amount of $2,000,000 plus the aggregate deceased spousal unused
exclusion amount of $2,000,000. The aggregate deceased spousal unused exclusion
amount as defined in section 2010(c)(4) is capped at the basic exclusion amount of
$2,000,000 at S's death.
Example (7): Assume the same facts as in example (6), except the basic exclusion
amount is $4,000,000 at S's death. S's applicable exclusion amount is $8,000,000, which
is the sum of S's basic exclusion amount of $4,000,000 plus D's unused exclusion
amount of $2,000,000 plus D2's unused exclusion amount of $2,000,000.
Example (8): Decedent, D, has made no prior taxable gifts and has separate
property of $2,000,000 all of which he leaves to his spouse, S. At D's death, the basic
exclusion amount is $2,000,000. S dies un-remarried with an estate of $3,000,000. At
S's death the basic exclusion amount is $1,000,000. S's applicable exclusion amount is
$2,000,000, which is the sum of the basic exclusion amount of $1,000,000 at S's death
and the aggregate deceased spousal unused exclusion amount as defined in section 2010(c)(4) of $1,000,000, which is capped at the basic exclusion amount at S's death of
$1,000,000 even though D had an unused exclusion amount of $2,000,000.
Example (9): Decedent has made no prior taxable gifts and has separate property
of $2,000,000, all of which he leaves to his spouse, S. At D's death the basic exclusion
amount is $2,000,000. After D's death, S marries D2. S has made no prior taxable gifts
and has separate property of $4,000,000, all of which she leaves to D2. At S's death the
basic exclusion amount is $2,000,000, and therefore S's applicable exclusion amount is
$4,000,000, which is the sum of S's basic exclusion amount of $2,000,000 plus D's
unused exclusion amount of $2,000,000. D2 dies un-remarried. At D2's death the basic
exclusion amount is $3,000,000. D2's applicable exclusion amount is $5,000,000, which
is the sum ofD2's basic exclusion amount of $3,000,000 plus S's unused basic exclusion
amount of $2,000,000. This assumes D's unused exclusion amount is not carried over to
D2, with whom D had no privity. If privity were not required, then D2's applicable
exclusion amount would be $6,000,000, which is the sum ofD2's basic exclusion amount
of $3,000,000 plus the lesser ofD2's basic exclusion amount of$3,000,000 or S's unused
applicable exclusion amount of $4,000,000.
Example (10): Decedent has made no prior taxable gifts and has a gross estate of
zero. At D's death the basic exclusion amount is $2,000,000. After D's death, D's
surviving spouse, S, gifts $4,000,000 during a year when the basic exclusion amount is
$2,000,000. S's applicable exclusion amount is $4,000,000, which is the sum of the basic
exclusion amount at the time of the gift and D's unused basic exclusion amount of
$2,000,000. S incurs no gift tax in the year of the gift.
Explanation of Amended Section 2631
Amended Section 2631 would allow for the transfer of the decedent's unused GST
exemption. The proposal allows a decedent to bequeath the entire estate to the surviving
spouse and leave to the surviving spouse the making of generation-skipping transfers.
The proposal thus avoids the necessity for decedents to create GST trusts in which the
surviving spouse has an interest, in order to utilize the GST exemption.
The proposal does not prevent the creation of GST trusts by the decedent to take
advantage of leveraging inherent in the time value of money.
The Committee believes that most estates with significant GST tax exposure already take
advantage of the planning opportunities to avoid the GST tax. Thus, the proposal should
merely simplifY the planning process, without significant loss oftax revenue.
The following examples illustrate the application of amended section 2631:
Example (1): Decedent D has made no prior gifts and dies owning $1,500,000, all
of which D leaves to D's spouse S. D dies when the basic exclusion amount is
$2,000,000. S dies un-remarried when the basic exclusion amount is $2,000,000. S's
GST exemption is $4,000,000, which is the sum of the basic exclusion amount of
$2,000,000 in the year of her death and D's unused GST exemption of $2,000,000.
Example (2): Assume the same facts in example (I), except D dies with no assets.
S's GST exemption is $4,000,000, which is the sum of the basic exclusion amount of
$2,000,000 in the year of her death and D's unused GST exemption of $2,000,000.
Example (3): Decedent D has made no prior gifts and dies owning $2,000,000, of
which D leaves $1,000,000 to D's grandchild GC (the child of D's son) and $1,000,000
to D's spouse S. D's son survives D. D dies when the basic exclusion amount is
$2,000,000. D's executor does not affirmatively allocate D's GST exemption instead
relying on the GST deemed allocation rules. S dies un-remarried when the basic
exclusion amount is $2,000,000. S's GST exemption is $3,000,000, which is the sum of
the basic exclusion amount of $2,000,000 in the year of S's death and D's unused GST
exemption of $1 ,000,000 remaining after the deemed allocation of $1 ,000,000 left to GC.
Example (4): Decedent, D, has made no prior gifts and dies owning $2,000,000,
all of which he leaves to a trust which provides all the net income to his son for life with
the trust assets passing to D's grandchild GC upon D's son's death. D dies when the
basic exclusion amount is $2,000,000. D's executor does not affirmatively allocate GST
exemption and affirmatively elects out of the GST deemed allocation rules as permitted
by section 2632. D's spouse, S, dies un-remarried when the basic exclusion amount is
$2,000,000. S's GST exemption is $4,000,000, which is the sum of the $2,000,000 basic
exclusion of $2,000,000 and D's unused GST exemption of $2,000,000. S or S's
executor cannot allocate S's GST exemption to the testamentary trust established by D
since S is not the transferor of that trust.
Example (5): Decedent D has made no prior gifts and dies owning $2,000,000 all
of which he leaves to his spouse S. D dies when the basic exclusion amount is
$2,000,000. After D's death, S marries D2. S dies with $4,000,000, all of which she
leaves to D2. S made no prior gifts. At S's death, the basic exclusion amount is
$2,000,000, and therefore S's GST exemption is $4,000,000, which is the sum of S's
basic exclusion amount of $2,000,000 plus D's unused exclusion amount of $2,000,000.
D2 dies un-remarried when the basic exclusion amount is $3,000,000. D2's GST
exemption is $5,000,000, which is the sum of the basic exclusion amount of $3,000,000
at D2's death and S's unused GST exemption (traceable to her own basic exclusion
amount) of $2,000,000. This assumes that D's unused GST exemption goes unused and
cannot be transferred to D2, with whom D had no privity. If privity were not required,
then D2's GST exemption would be $6,000,000, which is the sum of D2's basic
exclusion amount of $3,000,000 plus the lesser of D2's basic exclusion amount of
$3,000,000 or S's GST exemption of $4,000,000.
BIOGRAPHY FOR SHIRLEY L. KOVAR
FOR SENATE FINANCE COMMITTEE
HEARING ON PORTABILITY, APRIL 3, 2008
Shirley L. Kovar is a trusts and estates attorney with the law firm of Branton & Wilson in San
Diego, California. She is a certified specialist by the State Bar of California in trusts and estates law,
and she speaks and writes on trusts and estates subjects. She is a Fellow in the American College
of Trusts and Estates Counsel where she chairs the Transfer Tax Study Committee. Shirley is an
academician in the International Academy of Estate and Trust Law. Shirley has also served as a
member and adviser to the Executive Committee of the California State Bar Section on Trusts and
Estates, where she chaired the Litigation Committee and served as Liaison of the Executive
Committee to the California Law Revision Commission on the no contest clause. Shirley is past
chair of the Trusts and Estates Section of the San Diego County Bar Association. Shirley is listed
in Super Lawyer Magazine as among the top 5% of trusts and estates lawyers in Southern California,
Shirley graduated from the University of Kansas Law School in 1974, where she served as Editor in-
Chief of the Kansas Law Review and was a member of the Order of the Coif. Shirley lives in
Coronado, California with her husband of37 years, Linn S. Kovar.
[1] The estate, gift and GST exemptions technically operate as a “unified (cumulative)
credit” against the tax, but for simplicity they are commonly referred to as exemptions and in
most cases operate exactly as exemptions would. |