{"id":1623,"date":"2022-08-11T07:13:00","date_gmt":"2022-08-11T11:13:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/actec.matrixdev.net\/?post_type=capital-letter&p=1623"},"modified":"2024-01-08T17:20:28","modified_gmt":"2024-01-08T22:20:28","slug":"a-surge-of-administrative-guidance","status":"publish","type":"capital-letter","link":"https:\/\/actec.matrixdev.net\/capital-letter\/a-surge-of-administrative-guidance\/","title":{"rendered":"A Surge of Administrative Guidance"},"content":{"rendered":"\n
In the last four months, administrative guidance Dear Readers Who Follow Washington Developments:<\/p>\n\n\n\n In the last four months the Treasury Department and the IRS have released guidance \u2013 in proposed or final form \u2013 on four topics that significantly affect estate planning:<\/p>\n\n\n\n In my first year as an associate at Miller & Chevalier in the spring of 1976, John Bixler asked me to help him with some of his estate planning clients who would be affected by the estate and gift tax changes in the Tax Reform Act of 1976 then being considered in Congress. Two of those clients passed away the following year, and the managing partner of the firm asked me to step away, at least temporarily, from the corporate tax controversy path I was on and make a nearly full-time commitment to help John in the administration of those estates and the tax issues, including estate tax audits and litigation, that resulted. Well, like any two-year associate would, I said yes. I had never planned to be an estate planner; that\u2019s how it happened. And I never looked back.<\/p>\n\n\n\n Besides drafting documents, John, as the chair of the ABA Tax Section\u2019s Administrative Practice Committee, pulled me into coauthoring, under both our names, a pair of articles for the American Law Institute and American Bar Association on the 1976 Act \u2013 my first articles. He also encouraged and supported my own involvement in the ABA and in due course my election to ACTEC. In 1993, Bill Weinsheimer, the chair of ACTEC\u2019s Editorial Board, asked John (who was then a Regent) to write a quarterly article for ACTEC Notes (now the ACTEC Law Journal) on developments in Washington, following Lloyd Leva Plaine\u2019s decision to step back from her quarterly articles that she had called \u201cView from the Bridge.\u201d John agreed and enlisted me to help him with what he called the \u201cWashington Report.\u201d And as it had always been with us, John made sure it was a collaboration. He never adopted the traditional assumption that I would do the research and the drafting, and he would just review and edit it. Sometimes I would draft the article and he would edit it, but sometimes he would draft the article and I would edit it, and often we shared those roles the same way with various parts of a single article. His mentoring wasn\u2019t just show-and-tell; it always included allow-and-watch. And again John put both our names on the \u201cWashington Reports.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n We kept it up for 13 years \u2013 52 issues \u2013 even after 1998 when we left Miller & Chevalier, John for Ross, Marsh & Foster, and I for McGuireWoods. In the Fall 2004 issue, John insisted that the Journal start putting my name first, and by the Spring of 2006 he had decided to step back himself and take a very well-deserved break from writing. I was uncomfortable with continuing the \u201cWashington Report\u201d in that format without John. But at the 2006 annual ACTEC meeting, incoming Vice President Bjarne Johnson suggested that we take the article completely virtual and name it \u201cCapital Letter,\u201d which continues John\u2019s legacy in that form to this day.<\/p>\n\n\n\n John Bixler, my mentor to whom I owe so much, passed away on June 17, 2022. His wife Mitzi had predeceased him. I thank their three children for sharing their dad with the estate planning profession and with ACTEC. They and their families have my sincerest sympathy. John might have cringed if he had seen some of the technical detail or even some of the policy critique in this Capital Letter, and he might have wondered why I was still writing about the Tax Reform Act of 1976 anyway (see Part 1 below), but he would have encouraged me to do it my way, and thus his legacy of mentoring lives on.<\/p>\n\n\n\n Item 3 under the heading of \u201cGifts and Estates and Trusts\u201d in the 2021-2022 Treasury-IRS Priority Guidance Plan<\/u><\/strong><\/a> is described as \u201cRegulations under \u00a72010 addressing whether gifts that are includible in the gross estate should be excepted from the special rule of \u00a720.2010-1(c).\u201d We had been waiting for those proposed regulations since November 2019 when the final regulations on the \u201canti-clawback\u201d \u201cspecial rule\u201d were published. T.D. 9884, 84 Fed. Reg. 64995 (Nov. 26, 2019). This April we got them. REG-118913-21, 87 Fed. Reg. 24918 (April 27, 2022).<\/p>\n\n\n\n Although neither the statute nor the regulations use the word \u201cclawback,\u201d the regulations carry out the mandate of the 2017 Tax Act in new section 2001(g)(2), which provides that Treasury \u201cshall prescribe such regulations as may be necessary or appropriate to carry out this section with respect to any difference between (A) the basic exclusion amount under section 2010(c)(3) applicable at the time of the decedent\u2019s death, and (B) the basic exclusion amount under such section applicable with respect to any gifts made by the decedent.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n The concern that prompted that mandate for regulations is that the anti-clawback remedy added in 2010 as subsection (g) (now paragraph (1) of subsection (g)) addressed only changes in tax rates, and the 2017 Tax Act did not change any rates when it doubled the basic exclusion amount (\u201cBEA\u201d). New paragraph (2) obviously contemplated that the regulations would reach a similar result for the potential sunset of the doubled exclusion amount, but left the details to the IRS and Treasury.<\/p>\n\n\n\n To illustrate the concern, assume that an unmarried individual made a $9 million gift (the donor\u2019s only lifetime gift) in 2019 when the indexed exclusion amount was $11.4 million. With no change in the law, the donor dies in 2026 with a taxable estate of $20 million. Assume further that the 2026 $5 million exclusion amount (indexed) is $6.8 million. (These numbers \u2013 $9 million, $11.4 million, and $6.8 million \u2013 are the same numbers that are used in the examples in the 2019 regulations and the current proposed addition to the regulations.) With a 40 percent rate and the exclusion amount used up, the intuitively correct estate tax is 40 percent of $20 million, or $8 million. But without anti-clawback relief the estate tax turns out to be $8,880,000, producing a \u201cclawback penalty\u201d of $880,000. Other ways to look at this $880,000 are:<\/p>\n\n\n\n In other words, all the benefit the 2017 Tax Act apparently promised this donor for making a gift before the sunset would be wiped out by the sunset.<\/p>\n\n\n\n The November 2019 regulations added new Reg. \u00a720.2010-1(c) (with the former paragraphs (c), (d), and (e) re-lettered (d), (e), and (f)), stating the heart of the anti-clawback rule as follows (emphasis added):<\/p>\n\n\n\n \u201cIf the total of the amounts allowable as a credit in computing the gift tax<\/em> payable on the decedent\u2019s post-1976 gifts, within the meaning of section 2001(b)(2), to the extent such credits are based solely on the basic exclusion amount as defined and adjusted in section 2010(c)(3), exceeds<\/em> the credit allowable within the meaning of section 2010(a) in computing the estate tax, again only to the extent such credit is based solely on such basic exclusion amount, in each case by applying the tax rates in effect at the decedent\u2019s death, then the portion of the credit allowable in computing the estate tax on the decedent\u2019s taxable estate that is attributable to the basic exclusion amount is the sum of the amounts attributable to the basic exclusion amount allowable as a credit in computing the gift tax payable<\/em> on the decedent\u2019s post-1976 gifts.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n In other words, in the example above, because $9 million of basic exclusion amount used for the 2019 gift (the only post-1976 lifetime gift) is greater than the $6.8 million basic exclusion amount otherwise allowable in computing the 2026 estate tax, that larger amount of $9 million is used instead of $6.8 million to calculate the credit for estate tax purposes.<\/p>\n\n\n\n The approach of the 2010 explicit statutory anti-clawback rule in section 2001(g)(1) \u2013 specifically section 2001(g)(1)(A) \u2013 was that the rates in effect at the time of death would be used to calculate the hypothetical \u201ctax imposed by chapter 12\u201d on pre-2026 adjusted taxable gifts \u2013 in other words, the \u201ctotal gift tax paid or payable\u201d that is deducted on line 7 of the estate tax return<\/u><\/strong><\/a>. Before the proposed regulations were released, therefore, there was speculation that the regulations under section 2001(g)(2) would mirror the regulations under section 2001(g)(1) and provide that line 7 would be changed from zero to $880,000 (which is what the 2019 gift tax would have been if 2026 law had applied in 2019). After subtracting that amount, line 8, and therefore line 12, would be $880,000 smaller, which would exactly eliminate the clawback penalty.<\/p>\n\n\n\n But the regulations take a different approach. The preamble to the 2018 proposed regulations implies that other approaches were considered, but concludes that \u201cin the view of the Treasury Department and the IRS, the most administrable solution would be to adjust the amount of the credit \u2026 required to be applied against the net tentative estate tax\u201d to a credit \u201cbased on the larger amount of BEA \u2026 that was used to compute gift tax payable\u201d \u2013 in other words, by adjusting the basic exclusion amount (\u201cBEA\u201d) entered on line 9a of the estate tax return.<\/p>\n\n\n\n By increasing the amount on line 9a, rather than the amount on line 7, of the estate tax return, the regulations achieve the same result, because both lines 7 and 9a are subtractions in the estate tax calculation. But the estate tax return instructions<\/u><\/strong><\/a> already devoted over two pages (pages 6-9) to line 7, including a 24-line worksheet. An incremental increase of complexity in what already had a reputation for being a challenge might have been easier to process than adding a new challenge to line 9a, which previously required only 21 words of instructions. Needless to say, IRS personnel see more returns than any member of the public does, they see the mistakes, and they hear the complaints. Presumably \u2013 hopefully \u2013 they contributed to the assessment that the line 9a approach is \u201cthe most administrable solution.\u201d And in a way it mirrors section 2001(g)(2) itself, which expresses Congress\u2019s clawback concern in 2017 in terms of the basic exclusion amount.<\/p>\n\n\n\n That approach should work fine if the law is not changed and sunset occurs January 1, 2026. But, although the examples in Reg. \u00a720.2010-1(c)(2) assume that the donor\u2019s \u201cdate of death is after 2025,\u201d the substantive rule in Reg. \u00a720.2010-1(c) applies by its terms whenever \u201cchanges in the basic exclusion amount \u2026 occur between the date of a donor\u2019s gift and the date of the donor\u2019s death.\u201d It is not limited to 2026 or to any other particular time period. The 2010 statutory rule in section 2001(g)(1) and the 2017 statutory call for regulations in section 2001(g)(2) are not limited to any time period either. Therefore, if Congress makes other changes in the law, particularly increases in rates or decreases in exemptions, and doesn\u2019t focus on the potential clawback issue in the context of those changes, the generic anti-clawback regime of section 2001(g)(1) and (2) and these regulations could produce a jigsaw puzzle of adjustments going different directions that may strain the notion of administrability cited in the preamble.<\/p>\n\n\n\n One more point: As noted in Development Number Three in the \u201cTop Ten Estate Planning and Estate Tax Developments of 2021\u201d (Capital Letter Number 55<\/u><\/strong><\/a>), much of the complexity in the tax calculation reflected in the instructions to line 7 of the estate tax return and in the instructions<\/u><\/strong><\/a> (pages 12-17) to Schedule B of the gift tax return<\/u><\/strong><\/a> (as well as in the wording of Reg. \u00a720.2010-1(c) itself quoted above) is traceable to the decision of Congress in the Tax Reform Act of 1976 to replace the separate gift tax and estate tax exemptions with a \u201cunified credit,\u201d which Congress viewed as \u201cmore equitable\u201d because in an environment of graduated rates \u201ca deduction or exemption tends to confer more savings on larger estates.\u201d Staff of the Joint Committee on Taxation, General Explanation of the Tax Reform Act of 1976, 94th Cong., 2d Sess. 531 (1976), copying Tax Reform Act of 1976, Supplemental Report of the Senate Committee on Finance on Additional Committee Amendment to H.R. 10612, 94th Cong., 2d Sess. 13 (July 20, 1976), and Estate and Gift Tax Reform Act of 1976, Report of the House Ways and Means Committee, 94th Cong., 2d Sess. 15 (Aug. 2, 1976). Of course, even then it was necessary to have the concept of an \u201cexemption equivalent\u201d to determine the estate tax return filing requirement under section 6018. Then the Taxpayer Relief Act of 1997 turned the calculation around and started with an \u201capplicable exclusion amount.\u201d Then came portability, temporarily in 2010 and permanently in 2012, and the need to introduce both a \u201cbasic exclusion amount\u201d and a \u201cdeceased spousal unused exclusion amount\u201d as components of the \u201capplicable exclusion amount.\u201d Meanwhile, whatever it\u2019s called, the exemption\/exemption equivalent\/applicable exclusion amount\/basic exclusion amount grew to levels far exceeding the top estate tax bracket, making the 1976 \u201cequity\u201d argument largely moot. Nevertheless, while the conversion to a \u201cunified credit\u201d may have resulted in more complexity in preparing returns, the \u201cclawback\u201d issues could arise in the context of a change to either a credit or an exemption (or rates).<\/p>\n\n\n\n The preamble to the 2019 regulations added:<\/p>\n\n\n\n \u201cA commenter recommended consideration of an anti-abuse provision to prevent the application of the special rule to transfers made during the increased BEA period that are not true inter vivos transfers, but rather are treated as testamentary transfers for transfer tax purposes. Examples include transfers subject to a retained life estate or other retained powers or interests, and certain transfers within the purview of chapter 14 of subtitle B of the Code. The purpose of the special rule is to ensure that bona fide inter vivos transfers are not subject to inconsistent treatment for estate tax purposes. Arguably, the possibility of inconsistent treatment does not arise with regard to transfers that are treated as part of the gross estate for estate tax purposes, rather than as adjusted taxable gifts. An anti-abuse provision could except from the application of the special rule transfers where value is included in the donor\u2019s gross estate at death. Although the Treasury Department and the IRS agree that such a provision is within the scope of the regulatory authority granted in section 2001(g)(2), such an anti-abuse provision would benefit from prior notice and comment. Accordingly, this issue will be reserved to allow further consideration of this comment.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n The commenter the preamble cites is the Tax Section of the New York State Bar Association, in its February 20, 2019, letter<\/u><\/strong><\/a> to Treasury and the IRS.<\/p>\n\n\n\n In April, Treasury proposed to add an exception to the regulations that would do what the 2019 preamble foretold and would address the \u201canti-clawback bonus.\u201d REG-118913-21, 87 Fed. Reg. 24918 (April 27, 2022). The proposal would add a new subparagraph (3) to the anti-clawback paragraph (c) that was added to Reg. \u00a720.2010-1 in 2019. Proposed Reg. \u00a720.2010-1(c)(3)(i) provides exceptions from the special anti-clawback rule for \u201ctransfers includible in the gross estate, or treated as includible in the gross estate for purposes of section 2001(b).\u201d It elaborates such transfers as \u201cincluding without limitation\u201d the following four specific types of transfers:<\/p>\n\n\n\n A. Traditional \u201cString\u201d Gifts. <\/strong>The first type of transfer addressed by the proposed exception is described in Proposed Reg. \u00a720.2010-1(c)(3)(i)(A) as \u201cTransfers includible in the gross estate pursuant to section 2035 [gifts completed by a transfer or by a relinquishment of a power within three years of death], 2036 [transfers with a retained life estate], 2037 [transfers taking effect at death], 2038 [revocable transfers], or 2042 [life insurance proceeds], regardless of whether all or any part of the transfer was deductible pursuant to section 2522 [charitable gifts] or 2523 [gifts to the donor\u2019s spouse].\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n This is as forecast in the 2019 preamble. Although it might appear at first to be harsh and \u201canti-taxpayer,\u201d in fact it would simply preserve the \u201cclawback\u201d that provisions like section 2036 (and their predecessors) have been designed by Congress<\/em> to achieve since at least the 1930s.<\/p>\n\n\n\n The clearest way to illustrate that might be by comparing adaptations of the tables included in Capital Letter Number 55. In the example above, for estate tax purposes the $9 million of basic exclusion amount used for the 2019 gift is substituted for the $6.8 million basic exclusion amount that otherwise would be applicable. The elimination of the clawback penalty by that substitution is illustrated in the following table, based on the estate tax return, by changing the entry on line 9a from $6.8 million (the assumed 2026 basic exclusion amount) to $9 million (the amount of the 2019 basic exclusion amount used for computing the 2019 gift tax).<\/p>\n\n\n\n
has addressed four significant topics.<\/strong><\/em>
<\/p>\n\n\n\n\n
FIRST \u2013 A TRIBUTE TO JOHN BIXLER<\/strong><\/h2>\n\n\n\n
NEXT \u2013 THE ADMINISTRATIVE GUIDANCE<\/strong><\/h2>\n\n\n\n
PROPOSED \u201cANTI-ABUSE\u201d EXCEPTION TO THE ANTI-CLAWBACK REGULATIONS<\/strong><\/h2>\n\n\n\n
Background<\/strong><\/h3>\n\n\n\n
\n
Comments on This Approach<\/strong><\/h3>\n\n\n\n
An Anti-Abuse Warning<\/strong><\/h3>\n\n\n\n
The Proposed \u201cAnti-Abuse\u201d Addition<\/strong><\/h3>\n\n\n\n