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Educational Alerts
Educational Alerts are written on topics that effect various aspects of estate planning and the laws that govern it. They are usually published and posted to this site at the end of each month. Occasionally newsworthy events will initiate the release of additional alerts at the time the news breaks. The purpose of an Estate Planning Update is to bring important information to the financial advisors in the community. Our hope is that this information better equips you to assist your clients.

Thompson Law, P.C. releases important estate planning and related articles on a regular basis. Please take a moment to register to receive full access to our Educational Alerts and FYIs.

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Tax Court Issues Favorable Family Limited Partnership Ruling!
In a recent decision, the Tax Court sided with the taxpayer in a case involving a Family Limited Liability Company and a transfer near death.

Congress Passes Economic Stimulus Package - Future of the Estate Tax Will Not Likely Be Resolved Until After the Presidential Elections
This month's alert highlights the recently enacted Economic Stimulus Act. The Alert covers the rebate provisions for individuals as well as the incentives for small business owners and closes with a comment that is unlikely we will see any "fix" of the current estate tax regime until after the election of a new President.

Retirement Asset Update - Non-Spousal Rollovers
The Alert examines two issues. First, it examines Congress' attempt to mandate allowing non-spousal rollovers and how the IRS continues to interpret the law to allow but not mandate such non-spousal rollovers. Second, it examines how new "wash sale" rules do not allow you to get the benefit of a loss if you sell an asset and then quickly re-purchase it in your IRA.

2008: The Calm Before the Storm
The article examines the upcoming uncertainties and scheduled changes in the laws concerning estate and gift taxation.

The Estate That Would Not Die
The recent litigation surrounding the publicity rights of the remainder beneficiary of the estate of Marilyn Monroe illustrates some of the problems with probate administrations and how a trust can help avoid some of these entanglements.

Court Approved Reformation Fails to Gain Approval from the Internal Revenue Service
The article looks at a recent reversal by the IRS on the issue of allowing non-spousal rollovers of retirement plans into IRAs. Then the article examines one private letter ruling in which the IRS did not allow the mistaken omission of a contingent beneficiary to be corrected. The primary beneficiary had predeceased. The result was that the assets in the retirement plan had to be withdrawn more quickly, thus depriving the beneficiary of the full extent of the tax deferral which would have been allowed had the contingent beneficiary been named.

Charitable in Death: Will Leona Helmsley's Testamentary CRTs Qualify for an Estate Tax Charitable Deduction?
This article examines Leona Helmsley's Will and the Trusts which it creates. It examines some of the oddities involved, including gifts to her dog and the disinheriting of some grandchildren.

IRS Rules That Tuition Paid for Special Needs Child is a Deductible Medical Expense
The Alert examines a recent private letter ruling which allowed the taxpayer to deduct school tuition for a special needs child as a medical expense.

Court Reformation of Irrevocable Trust Does Not Cause Trust Assets to be Included in Grantor's Estate
This month's Alert discusses PLR 200730015, which dealt with the judicial reformation of an irrevocable trust and an IRS finding that the changes to the trust did not cause inclusion of the irrevocable trust in the trustor's estate. Often, trustors want to change the terms of their irrevocable life insurance trust, irrevocable trust for gifting to children and/or grandchildren or other irrevocable trusts for advanced estate planning purposes. Depending on whether the trust is a grantor trust or not, this may involve substituting the old trust for a new one, or a judicial reformation, as is the subject of this month's Alert.

Planning for Retirement Assets Requires Special Care--Bad Advice by Financial Planners Causes Tax Penalty to Client
This alert examines a new private letter ruling in which the taxpayer accidentally triggered penalties. The penalties occurred due to a violation of the rules for the "series of substantially equal periodic payments" exception for distributions prior to age 59 1/2.

IRS Uses Payment of Estate Tax to Win Family Limited Partnership Case
This article examines the Tax Court case of Estate of Erickson v. Commissioner. In this case, the IRS prevailed, including a Family Limited Partnership in the estate of the decedent under Section 2036. Various factors led to this defeat for the taxpayer, including the fact that the partnership was used to pay estate taxes, at least indirectly.

Drafting Spousal Trusts to Reduce Estate Taxes
This article examines various strategies using a marital trust and bypass trust. It also looks at using a marital trust to preserve assets of the pre-deceasing spouse in a second marriage situation.

Technical Amendment to Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 Causes Immediate Annuities to Further Lose Their Luster for Medicaid Planning Purposes
This article examines technical corrections to the DRA. The article sets forth that while the technical corrections made annuities less attractive, they are still a viable option in Medicaid planning. It offers examples of how one might structure an annuity differently to avoid rule changes from the technical corrections to the DRA.

IRS Offers Favorable Rulings Regarding Transfers of Life Insurance Policies to an Irrevocable Life Insurance Trust
The article looks at two recent revenue rulings which confirm that transfers of life insurance policies to ILITS that are grantor trusts do not run afoul of the "transfer for value rule."

IRS Disappoints With Guidance for Rollovers of Inherited Company Plans
The article examines Notice 2007-7 which undermined the non-spousal rollover provisions of Retirement Protection Act of 2006.

Lame Duck Congress Passes Last Minute Tax Act
The Alert discusses the Tax Relief and Health Care Act of 2006. It lists the various provisions and highlights the most important one: the modification of the rules of Unrelated Business Taxable Income for a CRT. If a CRT had UBTI prior to the act, it lost tax exempt status. Beginning January 1, 2007, it does not lose tax exempt status, but faces an excise tax equal to 100% of the UBTI. This is often better and can make contributing business assets to a CRT more attractive.

Enrollment Period for Medicare Part D on the Horizon
This article gives a brief explanation of Medicare Part D, the new prescription drug plan. Seniors will begin receiving information about this plan between mid-October and year-end.

2036 Is Not Just for Family Limited Partnerships
In past alerts we have informed you how the IRS has had successes in using IRC § 2036 to pull back transferred partnership assets into the estate of a decedent, thwarting the taxpayer's plans to obtain a discount. These victories have emboldened the IRS to apply the requirements of IRC § 2036 against other types of intra-family transfers.

Taxpayers Using FLPs Continue to Trip Over Section 2036
The article examines three new FLP cases in which the Service was victorious. It stresses the need for clients to have their FLP agreements and practices reviewed.

Chances for Repeal of the Estate Tax Lessen -- Congress May Settle for Permanent Increase in Exemption Amount
The article examines pending legislation concerning potential repeal of the estate tax. It discusses the more likely outcome of an increase of the applicable exclusion amount. It concludes that the need for estate planning will remain greater than ever for non-tax reasons.

Taxpayers Fight and Win State Estate Tax Battles
In 2001, the federal government passed the Economic Growth and Tax Reform Reconciliation Act of 2001 (“EGTRRA”). One of the provisions of EGTRRA was the gradual reduction and then elimination (in 2004) of the state death tax credit on the federal estate tax return. About three-quarters of the states limited the amount of the death taxes they received to the amount of the state death credit. With the reduction in the credit, these “pick-up” states started to see their tax revenues decline and as a result about one-third of them “decoupled” from the federal system. The decoupling states implemented their own estate tax regime based on federal law that was in existence prior to EGTRRA. In some circumstances this resulted in taxpayers paying a higher combined federal and state estate tax than they would have paid under the law before the enactment of EGTRRA, even though EGTRRA was heavily promoted as a tax reduction.

Disclaimer Proves Fatal to Estate Plan
Mr. Katz executed a will in 1991 that called for the creation of a "pecuniary credit shelter trust" equal to the amount of the "aggregate federal estate tax exemption equivalent." The will language further provided that the credit shelter trust "shall not be reduced on account of any disclaimer by my wife." Finally, another provision in the will stated conflicting provision in this will, "if my wife disclaims any interest in any portion of the property otherwise passing outright to her under this Article of my will, such portion shall be added to the [credit shelter] trust." The purpose of the credit shelter trust created under Mr. Katz's will was to place an amount equal to the amount that can pass free of estate tax into trust so that it would eventually pass to his children without being subject to estate taxes in his wife's estate.

IRS Blesses Planning With Grantor Trusts In Revenue Ruling 2004-64
The IRS, with its release of Revenue Ruling 2004-64, has given its approval to the use of grantor trusts as an income and estate planning strategy and it has removed any confusion as to whether the trust must contain a provision for the reimbursement of income taxes paid by the grantor.

Ninth Circuit Includes Gift Tax Paid by Wife in Husband's Estate
The opinion in Brown v. United States, 91 AFTR.2d 2003-2085 (9th Cir. May 1, 2003) opens with the following truism: "The estate tax combines into one sad transaction the only two certainties in life." Brown is very important because it applies the step transaction doctrine to defeat an estate tax planning strategy between husband and wife.

Reformation of Trust Saves Estate Taxes
Joint trusts for married couples have been used in community property states for over a decade. There had been speculation by some attorneys regarding the effectiveness of joint trusts in common law states. However, concerns over recognition of joint trusts by the IRS have largely been put to rest by PLRs 200101021 and 200210051 (see our previous FaxAlert dated April 30, 2001 titled "Joint Trusts in Common Law States" for more on this subject).

Tricks and Traps Concerning Annuities
Because there are many tax traps concerning annuities, it is important for the financial advisor to know the treatment of annuities when advising clients.

IRS Scores Another Victory in Family Limited Partnership Case
On January 14, 2003, Judge Buchmeyer of the United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas decided in favor of the Internal Revenue Service in Kimbell v. United States of America, Civil Action No. 7:01-CV-0218-R, 2003 U.S. Dist. Lexis 523.

IRS Issues Final Regs On Section 645
A living trust becomes irrevocable upon death and, as a separate legal entity, it requires a tax identification number to report income during its period of administration. If the decedent had assets subject to probate outside his or her trust, then the decedent’s estate may also need a tax identification number and an additional fiduciary income tax return (Form 1041) may be required.

Care Must Be Taken When Disinheriting an Heir
It is not uncommon for a person to place provisions in his or her will or trust to exclude an heir from receiving an inheritance. Such was the desire of Mary Bartels, who wished to disinherit her daughter, Deborah Smith, and whose will was the subject of dispute in the case In the Matter of the Estate of Mary Alberta Bartels, Deceased, 184 Or. App. 448, 56 P.3d 501 (October 23, 2002).

Connecticut Department of Social Services is Seeking a Waiver from The Center of Medicare and Medicaid Services
The U.S. Census Bureau predicts that the fastest growing segment of our population over the next fifty years will be those over age eighty-five. Not far behind in growth rate is the segment of the population above age sixty-five. By 2020, the sixty-five and over segment is estimated to comprise fully 20% of the population. With the growing rise in seniors will come a growing need to finance long term stays in nursing homes.

IRS Issues Relief for Taxpayers Taking Pre-Age 59½ Retirement Plan Distributions
On October 3, the IRS released Rev. Rul. 2002-62, 2002-42 IRB, substantially modifying Notice 89-25, 1989-1 C.B. 662, with regards to the “series of substantially equal periodic payments” (“SOSEPP) option for avoiding the IRC § 72(t) 10% early withdrawal penalties from IRAs and retirement plans. (All the options were outlined in a previous Fax Alert. Call for our office for a copy).








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