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Harborscape
Professional Building
1524 Alaskan Way, Suite 200
Seattle, WA 98101-1514 |
Phone:
206 | 583.0155
Fax: 206 | 343.5759
www.faolaw.com
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Crummey Powers
Planning for the End of Crummey Powers
Estate Planner Jul-Aug 1999
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Crummey powers are limited rights granted to trust beneficiaries
to withdraw property gifted to a trust. They are often used in an
irrevocable life insurance trust. Cash gifts to the trust by the
grantor used to pay the insurance premiums can then qualify for
the gift tax annual exclusion as gifts of present interests. Even
though recent proposals to eliminate Crummey powers have failed,
planning for their possible elimination is prudent. Therefore, you
may want to consider alternatives to Crummey powers and think about
exit strategies from new and existing insurance trusts.
Direct
Ownership of Insurance
One of the primary objectives of an insurance trust is to remove
insurance proceeds from your and your spouse's taxable estates.
If you intend your adult children to be the sole beneficiaries of
the insurance proceeds, you may not need an insurance trust. Your
children may simply acquire the policies themselves, in which case
the insurance proceeds would not be includable in your estate. Your
payment of the premium generally qualifies for the annual gift tax
exclusion (assuming that your children can independently exercise
ownership rights), and Crummey powers are not needed to pay the
premiums.
Alternatively, you could make cash gifts to your children or grandchildren
for them to pay the premiums. These gifts would not only qualify
for the annual gift tax exclusion but, in the case of gifts to grandchildren,
would also not be subject to generation-skipping transfer tax.
If your intent is to solely benefit your spouse, in certain situations
you can own the policy and simply name your spouse as the beneficiary.
The payment of the insurance proceeds to your spouse will qualify
for the estate tax marital deduction. On your spouse's death, however,
any remaining insurance proceeds will be subject to estate tax.
If you survive your spouse, the proceeds will be subject to estate
tax on your death.
The disadvantages of direct ownership of an insurance policy may
include the beneficiary's loss of protection against the claims
of creditors and the possible loss of protection from statutory
forced share rights of a surviving spouse in the event of your death.
You must look to state law to determine what may happen.
Funding
an Insurance Trust With Income-Producing Property
Another alternative to using Crummey powers is to fund your insurance
trust with income-producing property. The contribution of income-producing
property to the trust incurs gift tax liability to the extent the
contribution exceeds the annual gift tax exclusion. Additional gifts
to the trust would be unnecessary because the income generated by
trust investments pays the insurance premiums. The trust income
is taxed to you if it is used to pay the premiums on policies insuring
you or your spouse.
Existing
Insurance Trusts
If a change in the current law eliminates Crummey powers and does
not exempt existing insurance trusts from the new rules, then several
options will exist:
Make taxable gifts to the insurance trust. Perhaps the simplest
alternative is for you, as grantor of the trust, to make taxable
gifts to the trust to pay the premiums. Note, however, that the
beneficiaries will still have the power to withdraw the trust contributions
unless the trust allows you to prohibit withdrawals at the time
the gifts are made. If you want to avoid making large taxable gifts,
private split-dollar arrangements can reduce the size of the taxable
gifts by allowing two parties to split the costs and benefits of
a life insurance policy.
Collapse the trust. Some insurance trusts contain a "collapse"
provision that allows the collapse of the trust in favor of the
current beneficiaries -- in which case, the beneficiaries will then
own the policy. After the collapse, the beneficiaries may wish to
contribute the policy to a new trust, although the results of such
a transfer are unclear and may result in estate tax inclusion for
the beneficiaries. Rather than collapse the insurance trust, you
may want to transfer the policy into a new insurance trust. Some
insurance trusts contain language that gives the trustee the power
to distribute assets to another trust with similar provisions.
Sell the policy. Another possibility is for the trust to
sell the policy to you, and you make a gift to a new trust. As long
as you are the insured, there will be no adverse tax consequences.
If not, there may be taxable gain on the sale and the proceeds may
be subject to income tax. Use caution with second-to-die policies.
The drawback is that the transfer to a new trust by you as grantor
causes the proceeds to be includable in your estate if you die within
three years. Similar income tax effects can result from the sale
of the policy to a new trust. For the new trust to purchase the
existing policy, a gift would need to be made to the new trust.
Plan
Now
Whether or not Crummey powers are disallowed by future changes
in the law, consider possible exit strategies from irrevocable life
insurance trusts and whether the use of such trusts is needed in
your given situation. Please let us know if we can be of assistance
in determining your best plan of action.
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