Distributable Net Income: Mastering Difficult DNI Calculations for Estates and Complex Trusts

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FOR LIVE PROGRAM ONLY Distributable Net Income: Mastering Difficult DNI Calculations for Estates and Complex Trusts TUESDAY, DECEMBER 5, 2017, 1:00-2:50 pm Eastern IMPORTANT INFORMATION FOR THE LIVE PROGRAM This program is approved for 2 CPE credit hours. To earn credit you must: Participate in the program on your own computer connection (no sharing) if you need to register additional people, please call customer service at 1-800-926-7926 x10 (or 404-881-1141 x10). Strafford accepts American Express, Visa, MasterCard, Discover. Listen on-line via your computer speakers. Respond to five prompts during the program plus a single verification code. To earn full credit, you must remain connected for the entire program. WHO TO CONTACT DURING THE LIVE EVENT For Additional Registrations: -Call Strafford Customer Service 1-800-926-7926 x10 (or 404-881-1141 x10) For Assistance During the Live Program: -On the web, use the chat box at the bottom left of the screen If you get disconnected during the program, you can simply log in using your original instructions and PIN.

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Distributable Net Income Dec. 5, 2017 Jeremiah W. Doyle, IV, Senior Wealth Strategist BNY Mellon Wealth Management, Boston jere.doyle@bnymellon.com Jacqueline Patterson, Partner Buchanan & Patterson, Los Angeles jpatterson@bplawllp.com

Notice ANY TAX ADVICE IN THIS COMMUNICATION IS NOT INTENDED OR WRITTEN BY THE SPEAKERS FIRMS TO BE USED, AND CANNOT BE USED, BY A CLIENT OR ANY OTHER PERSON OR ENTITY FOR THE PURPOSE OF (i) AVOIDING PENALTIES THAT MAY BE IMPOSED ON ANY TAXPAYER OR (ii) PROMOTING, MARKETING OR RECOMMENDING TO ANOTHER PARTY ANY MATTERS ADDRESSED HEREIN. You (and your employees, representatives, or agents) may disclose to any and all persons, without limitation, the tax treatment or tax structure, or both, of any transaction described in the associated materials we provide to you, including, but not limited to, any tax opinions, memoranda, or other tax analyses contained in those materials. The information contained herein is of a general nature and based on authorities that are subject to change. Applicability of the information to specific situations should be determined through consultation with your tax adviser.

Distributable Net Income: Mastering Difficult DNI Calculations for Estates and Complex Trusts Jeremiah W. Doyle IV, Esq. Senior Vice President BNY Mellon Wealth Management One Boston Place Boston, MA Jere.doyle@bnymellon.com Jacqueline A. Patterson, Esq. Buchanan & Patterson, LLP 1000 Wilshire Blvd. Suite 570 Los Angeles, CA 90017 jpatterson@bplawllp.com December 5, 2017 Jeremiah W. Doyle IV 5

Structure of Subchapter J What We ll Cover Basic Rules and Tax Rates Types of Trusts Trust Accounting Income (TAI) Taxable Income Distributable Net Income (DNI) Including Capital Gains in DNI Distribution System - Simple Trusts Distribution System Complex Trusts - How DNI Gets Allocated Tier System Separate Share Rule 65 Day Rule Specific Bequests Distributions in Kind 6

Income Taxation of Trusts and Estates Code Outline PART I, SUBCHAPTER J Subpart A - Sec. 641-646 - General Rules Subpart B - Sec. 651-652 - Simple Trusts Subpart C - Sec. 661-664 - Complex Trusts and CRTs Subpart D - Sec. 665-668 - Accumulation Distributions Subpart E - Sec. 671-679 - Grantor Trusts Subpart F - Sec. 681-685 - Misc. Rules PART II, SUBCHAPTER J Sec. 691-692 - Income in Respect of a Decedent 7

Income Taxation of Trusts and Estates Separate Taxable Entities Taxable Income Computed in Same Manner as Individuals (Sec. 641(b)) Own Tax Year and Method of Accounting Receive Income/Pay Expenses Income Taxed to Entity or Beneficiary 8

2017 Fiduciary Income Tax Rates Over Not Over 0 2,600 15% 2,600 6,100 25% 6,100 9,300 28% 9,300 12,700 33% 12,700 39.6% 9

Non-Deductible Expenses - Sec. 265 Sec. 265 disallows any deduction attributable to T/E income Generally applies to deductions for production of income, usually trustee s fees and executor s fees If trust/estate has T/E income, portion of trustee s and executor s fees are nondeductible No specific allocation formula Fiduciary can use any reasonable method 10

FACTS: Non-Deductible Expenses - Sec. 265 Example Trust has $30,000 taxable interest and $10,000 T/E interest Incurs $20,000 trustee fee Portion of trustee fee attributable to T/E income is nondeductible $10,000 T/E income $40,000 Total income x $20,000 fees = $5,000 non-deductible 11

Types of Trusts Simple Complex Grantor 12

Simple Trust Required to distribute accounting income annually Makes no principal distributions, and Makes no distributions to charity 13

Complex Trust Accumulates income Makes discretionary distributions of income or mandatory or discretionary distributions of principal, or Makes distributions to charity 14

Grantor Trust Grantor or beneficiary has one or more powers described in Sec. 673-678 Result: All income, expenses and credits flow through and are taxed to the Grantor or beneficiary regardless of whether distributions are made Subpart A-D, Subchapter J (rules for taxation of trusts and estates) do not apply to Grantor trusts 15

Trust Accounting Income (TAI) Governs amount of distributions Trustee allocates receipts/disbursements between accounting income and principal Accounting income and principal is determined by governing instrument or, if instrument silent, by state law May be governed by UPIA or unitrust statute 16

Trust Accounting Income (TAI) TAI Taxable Income Corp Bond Int Capital Gains Muni Bond Int Expenses?? 17

Trust Accounting Income - TAI BACKGROUND Prudent Investor Act Modern portfolio theory invest for total return Replaces the traditional notions of income and principal Enactment of the Uniform Principal and Income Act Enactment of Unitrust statutes 18

Trust Accounting Income - TAI TRUST ACCOUNTING INCOME Could be TAI defined under: Traditional definition of income and principal Unitrust statute Must be no less than 3%, no more than 5% of FMV of trust assets Uniform Principal and Income Act Requirements:» Trust is managed under the Uniform Prudent Investor Act» The beneficiary must be eligible for income distributions» The distribution is not favorable to one beneficiary over another 19

Taxable Income of Trust or Estate Computed same as individual Exemptions: $600/$300/$100 Different rules for charitable deductions Depreciation deduction allocated between entity and beneficiary Distribution deduction Administration expenses - some not subject to 2% floor AGI - same as individual reduced by (1) personal exemption, (2) distribution deduction and (3) some administration expenses are subtracted off the top, i.e. subtracted from taxable income to arrive at AGI 20

Income Taxation of Trusts and Estates Income Taxed to Either Entity or Beneficiary If income is accumulated and not deemed distributed, it is taxed to the trust or estate If income distributed: Trust gets deduction for amount of distribution, limited to DNI Beneficiary accounts for income distributed on his own tax return, limited to DNI 21

Income Taxation of Trusts and Estates - Distributable Net Income (DNI) Distributable Net Income (DNI) governs: Amount of trust or estate s distribution deduction Amount beneficiary accounts for on his own return Character of income in beneficiary s hands 22

Income Taxation of Trusts and Estates DNI DNI acts as ceiling on entity s distribution deduction DNI acts as ceiling on amount beneficiary accounts for on his return Trust/Estate Beneficiary 23

DNI - Sec. 643(a) Start With Taxable Income and... Add back the distribution deduction Add back the personal exemption Subtract out capital gains/add back capital losses allocable to principal (except in the year of termination) Subtract out extraordinary dividends and taxable stock dividends allocated to corpus for simple trust Add back net tax-exempt income 25

DNI Easy Example Facts Trust income: Interest $10,000 Dividends $15,000 Trustee s fees 5,000 DNI: Taxable income $19,900 Add: Exemption $100 DNI $20,000 Taxable income: Interest $10,000 Dividends $15,000 Less: Tr fees ($5,000) Net $20,000 Less: exemption ($100) Taxable income $19,900 26

DNI Example with LTCG Facts Trust income: Interest $10,000 Dividends $15,000 LTCG $30,000 Trustee s fees 5,000 DNI: Taxable income $49,900 Less: LTCG ($30,000) Add: Exemption $100 DNI $20,000 Taxable income: Interest $10,000 Dividends $15,000 LTCG $30,000 Less: Tr fees ($5,000) Net $50,000 Less: exemption ($100) Taxable income $49,900 27

DNI Example with LTCG and T/E Interest Facts Trust income: Interest $10,000 Dividends $15,000 LTCG $30,000 T/E Interest $5,000 Trustee s fees $5,000 Taxable income: DNI: Taxable income $50,733 Less: LTCG ($30,000) Add: Net T/E interest $4,167 Add: Exemption $100 DNI $25,000 Interest $10,000 Dividends $15,000 LTCG $30,000 Less: Tr fees ($4,167) Net $50,833 Less: exemption ($100) Taxable income $50,733 Allocation of expenses to T/E interest: T/E Interest $5,000 $5,000 T/E Interest x $5,000 = (833) $30,000 TAI Deductible trustee s fees $4,167 28

DNI - Sec. 643(a) Note: capital gains generally taxed to trust or estate Exceptions: 3 situations under Reg. 1.643(a)-3 Paid to or set permanently set aside for charity. Reg. 1.643(c) year of termination Note: The rules regarding DNI and the distribution deduction are applied differently to simple trusts versus complex trusts and estates Distributions of principal as well as income will carry out DNI Exception: Specific bequests under Sec. 663(a)(1) 29

Include Capital Gains in DNI The Problem Generally, capital gains are allocated to principal and taxed to the estate or trust Compressed tax rate schedule for estates and trusts Short-term capital gains taxed at 39.6% + 3.8% surtax if taxable income exceeds $12,400 (2016) Long-term capital gains taxed at 20% + 3.8% surtax if taxable income exceeds $12,400 (2016) Planning point have gains taxed to beneficiary where gains would most likely be taxed at a lower tax rate For capital gains to be taxed to a beneficiary, the capital gain must be included in DNI 30

Include Capital Gains in DNI In addition to those circumstances mentioned in the regulations, capital gains flowing from a partnership or S corporation K-1 are included in DNI. Crisp v. United States, 34 Fed. Cl. 112 (1995). Planning point: the trustee may want to consider investing through a partnership so that capital gains can be distributed and escape the income tax and the surtax at the trust level Investment p/ship K-1 with gains Trust DNI with p/ship gains Beneficiaries 31

In-Kind Distributions Under 643(e) An estate or trust does not recognize gain or loss on the in-kind distribution of property to a beneficiary. 643(e). The distribution carries out DNI at the lesser of the property s basis or it fair market value. The beneficiary takes a carryover basis in the property. 643(e)(1). The fiduciary may elect to recognize gain as if the property was sold at its fair market value. 643(e) If so, DNI is carried out to the extent of the fair market value of the property distributed and the beneficiary takes a basis in the distributed property equal to the estate or trust s basis plus any gain or minus any loss recognized on the distribution. The election is made year by year and applies to all property distributed during the year. 643(e) allows the fiduciary to determine where the gain will be recognized: at the entity level or at the beneficiary level. This may allow the beneficiary to time the recognition of gain to a time when he will not be subject to the 3.8% surtax. A beneficiary who holds the property until death will get a step-up in basis and avoid the tax on the gain altogether. 32

Grantor Trust Gains taxed to grantor or beneficiary to extent trust is a grantor trust due to powers held under 673-677 or to the extent the trust is a deemed grantor trust under 678. Irrevocable trust may be structured as a grantor trust so capital gains are taxed to the grantor Structure trust for benefit of non-grantor beneficiaries as a grantor trust Beneficiary of irrevocable trust may have withdrawal power so that beneficiary is taxed on some or all of the gains. Crummey withdrawal power 5 x 5 power 33

Include Capital Gains in DNI The regulations describe 3 circumstances under which capital gains can be included in DNI. Reg. 1.643(a)-3(b). Gains are included in DNI where they are, pursuant to the governing instrument and applicable local law, or pursuant to a reasonable and impartial exercise of discretion by the fiduciary in accordance with a power granted to the fiduciary by applicable local law or by the governing instrument if not prohibited by applicable local law: 1. Allocated to income (but if income under the state statute is defined as, or consists of, a unitrust amount, a discretionary power to allocate gains to income must also be exercised consistently and the amount so allocated may not be greater than the excess of the unitrust amount over the amount of DNI determined without regard to this subparagraph 1.643(a)-3(b)); 2. Allocated to corpus but treated consistently by the fiduciary on the trust s books, records and tax returns as part of a distribution to a beneficiary; or 3. Allocated to corpus but actually distributed to the beneficiary or utilized by the fiduciary in determining the amount that is distributed or required to be distributed to a beneficiary. 34

Analyzing Regulation 1.643(a)-3(b) Reg. 1.643(a)-3(b) has specific requirements must be met in order to have capital gains taxed to the beneficiary No pressing the easy button Regulations have: Two prerequisites and Three methods 35

Analyzing Regulation 1.643(a)-3(b) Two prerequisites capital gains included n DNI only if inclusion is pursuant to: Trust agreement and local law; or A reasonable and impartial exercise of discretion by the trustee in accordance with a power granted to the trustee by local law or the trust agreement if not prohibited by local law. Three methods Allocated to income Allocated to corpus, but treated consistently by the fiduciary on the trust s books, records and tax returns as part of distribution to the beneficiary Allocated to corpus, but actually distributed to the beneficiary or utilized by the fiduciary in determining the amount that is distributed or required to be distributed to the beneficiary 36

Method 1-1.643(a)-3(b)(1) Allocated to income Trust agreement must specifically provide that capital gains are allocated to income A mere general boilerplate statement that the trustee has discretion to allocate receipts and disbursements between income and principal may not be enough Solution if trust instrument is silent as to whether capital gains are allocated to income Decant Most states require trustee have significant discretion to distribute principal. Power adjust under UPIA However, 643 regulations don t have an example if or how capital gains enter into DNI if trustee exercises the power to adjust 37

Trust Accounting Income - TAI TRUST ACCOUNTING INCOME Could be TAI defined under: Traditional definition of income and principal Unitrust statute Must be no less than 3%, no more than 5% of FMV of trust assets Uniform Principal and Income Act Requirements:» Trust is managed under the Uniform Prudent Investor Act» The beneficiary must be eligible for income distributions» The distribution is not favorable to one beneficiary over another 38

Method 2-1.643(a)-3(b)(2) Allocated to corpus, but treated consistently by the fiduciary on the trust s books, records and tax returns as part of distribution to the beneficiary Trustee could be given discretion to treat principal distributions consisting of capital gains Trustee must document that capital gains are included in DNI Consistency requirement Term consistency not clearly defined in regulations Once employed, future principal distributions deemed included in DNI May prohibit existing trusts from using this method Examples in regulations make it relatively clear that the establishment of a practice of distributing gains must commence in the first year in which a distribution of principal occurs Solution: decant into a new trust and use Method 2 in first year 39

Method 3-1.643(a)-3(b)(3) Allocated to corpus, but actually distributed to the beneficiary or utilized by the fiduciary in determining the amount that is distributed or required to be distributed to the beneficiary Regulations do not address whether this method may be used if the principal distribution is greater than or less than the actual capital gains for the year Principal distribution required at stated ages (1/3 at 25, 1/3 at 30 and balance at 35), and asset must be sold to make the distribution Method 3 is useful for older or existing trusts which are silent on whether capital gains can be allocated to income 40

Including Capital Gains in DNI Bottom line Best when appropriate discretion is expressly granted in the trust agreement If not, consider: Power to adjust Decanting (if available) 41

Distributions - Simple Trust Beneficiary Taxed on Lower of TAI or DNI Gains Taxed to Trust Trust Gets Distribution Deduction Equal to DNI Simple Trust Gains DNI Beneficiary Accounts for DNI Beneficiary Trust income retains its character in Beneficiary s hands 42

Distributions - Complex Trusts and Estates Trust/Estate Accumulates Income Gains and DNI Taxed to Trust Complex Trust Gains DNI 43

Distributions - Complex Trusts and Estates Beneficiary Taxed on Distributions Up to DNI Gains Taxed to Trust Trust Gets Distribution Deduction Equal to Distributions up to DNI Complex Trust DNI Gains Beneficiary Accounts for Distributions Up to DNI Beneficiary Trust income retains its character in Beneficiary s hands 44

Distribution System Simple Trusts Distribution deduction - trust is entitled to deduct all of its TAI (but not in excess of its DNI) Items of income not included in gross income (e.g. tax-exempt income) are not deductible by the trust Inclusion by beneficiary the TAI (but not in excess of its DNI) is includible in the beneficiary s gross income Items of income not included in gross income (e.g. tax-exempt income) are not includible in the beneficiary s income Example: Simple trust has TAI and DNI for the year is $9,000. The TAI must be distributed to A. The trust gets a distribution deduction of $9,000 and the beneficiary must include $9,000 in his income. 45

Distribution System Simple Trusts Multiple beneficiaries - If there is more than one beneficiary, the DNI is apportioned among them in proportion to the TAI received by each beneficiary. Example: Trust requires one-third of TAI be distributed to A and two-thirds of TAI be distributed to B. TAI and DNI for the year is $9,000. The trust gets a distribution deduction of $9,000. A must report $3,000 (1/3 of $9,000) and B must report $6,000 (2/3 of $9,000). 46

Distribution System Simple Trusts Character of income items of income retain the same character in the hands of the beneficiary as they had in the hands of the trust Example: Trust requires one-third of TAI be distributed to A and two-thirds of TAI be distributed to B. TAI and DNI for the year is $9,000. The TAI and DNI consists of $6,000 of dividends and $3,000 of interest. The trust gets a distribution deduction of $9,000. A must report $3,000 (1/3 of $9,000) and B must report $6,000 (2/3 of $9,000). A s $3,000 distribution consists of $2,000 of dividends and $1,000 is interest. B s $6,000 distribution consists of $4,000 of dividends and $2,000 of interest 47

Complex Trusts - Allocation of DNI Generally, DNI is allocated among beneficiaries proportionately, based on distributions to each beneficiary As with simple trusts, distributions from an estate or complex trust are generally considered to carry out a pro rata part of each item of DNI. In other words, distributions from a complex trust or estate is deemed to consist of the same proportion of each class of items entering into the computation of DNI as the total of each class bears to the total DNI 49

Complex Trusts - Allocation of DNI Example: Trust has $20,000 of DNI Trustee distributes $30,000 to A and $10,000 to B Under normal pro-rata rules, A would include $15,000 of DNI ($30,000 distribution/$40,000 total distribution x $20,000 DNI) Under normal pro-rata rules, B would include $5,000 of DNI ($10,000 distribution/$40,000 total distribution x. $20,000 DNI) 50

Complex Trusts Special Rules in the Allocation of DNI FIVE IMPORTANT CONCEPTS: Tier System Separate Share Rule 65 Day Rule ( 663(b) election) Specific Bequests - 663(a)(1) Distributions in Kind - 643(e) 51

Complex Trust and Estates Tier System Two tiers: First Tier - Distribution of income required to be distributed currently Second Tier - Distribution of all other amounts paid, credited or required to be distributed 52

Complex Trust and Estates Tier System DNI First Tier Beneficiary Second Tier Beneficiary DNI is taxed first to FTB and any balance of DNI is taxed to STB 53

Complex Trust and Estates Tier System - Example Facts: $40,000 DNI and TAI Trust requires A receive 50% of income Trustee makes discretionary distributions of $20,000 to each B and C A is FTB (Gets 50% of $40,000 TAI) B and C are STB (Discretionary Benes) 54

Complex Trust and Estates Tier System - Example $40,000 DNI ($20,000) DNI for FTB $20,000 DNI for STB Divided by 2 STB $10,000 DNI for Each STB 55

Complex Trust and Estates Tier System - Example $40,000 DNI A B C $20,000 DNI FTB $10,000 DNI STB $10,000 DNI STB 56

Complex Trusts Separate Share Rule General rule: DNI is allocated proportionately to beneficiaries based on distributions made to each However, disproportionate distributions to beneficiaries from a trust or estate can lead to different tax treatment for different beneficiaries The separate share rule is designed to cure this inequity The separate share rule allocates DNI among the beneficiaries based on distributions of their share of DNI Distributions to beneficiaries who don t have separate shares are allocated DNI based on distributions made to them over the total distributions made to all the beneficiaries in a particular year i.e. a proportionate share of DNI 57

Complex Trusts - Separate Share Rule Solely for purposes of computing DNI, substantially separate and independent shares of different beneficiaries of a trust are treated as separate trusts. Effect: Treat multiple beneficiaries of single trust or estate as if each were the sole beneficiary of a single trust solely for determining how much DNI each distribution carries out. Result: beneficiary is not taxed on more than his share of DNI. 58

Complex Trusts Separate Share Rule Example: Trust has $20,000 of DNI Trustee distributes $30,000 to A and $10,000 to B Under normal pro-rata rules, A would include $15,000 of DNI ($30,000 distribution/$40,000 total distribution x $20,000 DNI) Under normal pro-rata rules, B would include $5,000 of DNI ($10,000 distribution/$40,000 total distribution x $20,000 DNI) Added fact: separate share rule applies. A s separate share earns $10,000 of DNI and B s separate share earns $10,000 of DNI 59

Complex Trusts Separate Share Rule A s Separate Share DNI: $10,000 Distribution: $30,000 Amount included in A s income: $10,000, limited to his share of DNI B s Separate Share DNI: $10,000 Distribution: $10,000 Amount included in B s income: $10,000, limited to his share of DNI Trust files one income tax return, takes a $20,000 distribution deduction, A includes $10,000 in income (even though he received $30,000 in distributions) and B includes $10,000 in income. 60

Complex Trusts - Separate Share Rule Applies to estates and trusts DNI computed separately for each share Mandatory, not elective Only affects share of DNI Doesn t allow filing multiple returns Doesn t allow separate calculation of tax Want to avoid separate share rule? Draft as a spray trust Provide in trust document that the shares subdivide into separate trusts 61

65 Day Rule aka Sec. 663(b) Election Applies to complex trusts and estates Allows fiduciary to treat distribution made within 65 days of Y/E as being made on 12/31 of preceding year Election must be made by due date of return Election is irrevocable Year by year election (e.g. good for 1 year only) Limited to > DNI less current year distributions or TAI not distributed 62

65 Day Rule aka Sec. 663(b) Election 65 Days 2014 2015 12/31 63

Facts: $10,000 DNI for 2014 65 Day Rule aka Sec. 663(b) Election Distributes $6,000 in 2014, $4,000 in 2015 65 Days $6,000 2014 $4,000 2015 12/31 64

Specific Bequests - Sec. 663(a)(1) Bequest of specific sum of money or specific property do not carry out DNI Requirements: Paid all at once, or Paid in not more than 3 installments Not paid from income Amount of bequest must be ascertainable at focal date e.g. date of death Not deductible by trust/estate or taxable to beneficiary 65

Summary Trust or estate is a separate taxable entity Income is taxed to either estate/trust or beneficiary Concept of distributable net income (DNI) determines Amount of distribution deduction Amount included in beneficiary s income Character of income DNI affected by Tier system of allocating DNI Separate share rule 65 day rule Section 663(a)(1) for specific bequests Section 643(e) rules for distributions in kind This stuff is really complicated 66

Resources Federal Income Taxation of Estates, Trusts and Beneficiaries, 3 rd Edition by Ferguson, Freeland and Ascher (Aspen/CCH) 1041 Deskbook (Practitioners Publishing Co) Income Taxation of Trusts and Estates, 852-3rd (BNA portfolio Estate, Gift and Trust series) Federal Income Taxation of Decedents, Estates and Trusts, David A. Berek (2013 Edition) (CCH) Federal Income Taxation of Trusts and Estates, by Zaritsky and Lane, 3 rd Edition (RIA/Thompson/West) Income Taxation of Fiduciaries and Beneficiaries by Byrle M. Abbin, 2 volumes, 2013 Edition (CCH) 67

Thank You! 68