Some taxpayers have taken
aggressive tax positions in order to reduce their income taxes, arguing that
the FMV of the property they inherited was actually greater than the FMV used
in the decedent’s estate tax return. In
response, on July 31, 2015, Congress enacted a basis consistency law and
granted the IRS sweeping powers to carry out the intent of the law. On March 4, 2016, the IRS published temporary
and proposed regulations.
The executor of the estate
must report the FMV of the property to the IRS on Form 8971 and to any person
acquiring ownership in the property on Schedule A to Form 8971. The report must be furnished the earlier
of: 1) 30 days after the estate tax
return due date (including extensions), or 2) 30 days after the filing of the
estate tax return. Any adjustment to the
FMV must also be reported within 30 days of the adjustment. Penalties apply to late or incomplete
reporting, and also to any understatement of income tax from using a tax basis
greater that the FMV as finally determined for the estate tax return. The IRS has extended the due date to March
31, 2016 for all Forms 8971 that were due before then.
For the vast majority of
estates, these reporting rules will not apply.
Reporting is required only if an estate tax return (Form 706) is
required to be filed because the decedent’s gross estate (which includes prior
taxable gifts) exceeds the basic exclusion amount, which is $5,450,000 in 2016. Form 8971 is not required in the following
situations:
· Form 706 is filed only to make the portability
election.
· Form 706 is filed for the sole purpose of making an
allocation or an election for purposes of the generation-skipping transfer tax.
· A protective Form 706 is filed for an estate having a
FMV of less than the basic exclusion amount in order to start the statute of
limitations (SOL) against a potential IRS audit.
If Form 8971 is required
to be filed, not every item included on the estate tax return has to be
reported on Schedule A. Exemptions are:
· Cash and equivalents.
· IRD assets.
· Tangible personal property having a total value of
$3,000 or less.
· Property sold by the estate at a gain or loss.
Some big surprises in the
regulations just published:
· If the executor of the estate has not determined which
specific property each beneficiary will receive, then each beneficiary must
receive a report of all of the estate’s property that could be used to satisfy
the beneficiary’s interest. This
requirement is sure to cause controversy among the beneficiaries when they see
the size of the estate and the types of property that are available to
them! Most of the time the executor will
not make distributions out of an estate until after receiving a “closing letter
(or its current IRS equivalent)” to protect against any personal liability for
additional estate tax from an IRS audit.
· A so-called “zero basis rule” is introduced by the
IRS, and seems contrary to well established tax law. The IRS states that if property is discovered
to have been left off of the estate tax return, and would have increased the
estate tax if included, its income tax basis is zero no matter the
FMV. If the SOL has not expired on the
estate tax return, then the executor can amend the return and add the
overlooked asset and restore the tax basis.
If the SOL has expired, the basis is zero.
· The zero basis rule also applies to an estate tax
return that should have been filed but was not.
The basis of property is zero until the estate tax return is filed and
final values are determined. This means
that assets sold, depreciated, etc. before then may have overstated basis
deductions and tax penalties could result.
Thus a big exposure exists for estates having hard-to-value assets (e.g.
a business interest) claiming valuation discounts, and where the gross estate
FMV is less than the basic exclusion amount and no estate tax return is filed. The IRS has a big incentive to challenge the
valuation discounts to cause a requirement to file an estate tax return. In this situation it will be prudent to file
a protective estate tax return if increasing the asset’s value would cause or
increase estate tax.
· The new tax law requires basis consistency reporting
of executors. The IRS has now exercised
its legislative authority to create a whole new category of people subject to
the reporting requirements:
beneficiaries! Heirs of an estate
who in turn gift or otherwise transfer (other than by sale) property received
from the estate to a related person or entity, must report the basis of the
transferred property to both the IRS and the transferee by filing a Form 8971
within 30 days of the transfer. There
appears to be no time limit on this exposure to report, so in theory the
requirement could apply to a transfer made many decades after the inheritance!
· Some estate plans leave property to one beneficiary
for a period of time (e.g. his or her lifetime) after which the property passes
to another person (the contingent beneficiary).
The proposed regulations require that a supplemental basis report be
provided when the property passes to the contingent beneficiary. Since this can be many years into the future,
one commentator has asked, “Will executors now have lifetime duties?”
Update:
Update:
On March 23, 2016, the IRS issued Notice 2016-27 which further extends the due date from March 31, 2016 to June 30, 2016.
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