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Trust

BUSINESS TRUST


A Business Trust is recognized by the Internal Revenue Service and the courts as a U. B. O. (Unincorporated Business Organization).

 

A Business Trust (U. B. O.) is a powerful entity by which individuals may combine their resources to operate a business for profit without the inherent liabilities of a partnership or the double taxation of corporations.
The U. B. O. is an organization created and managed by ”trustees” for the benefit and profit of persons who hold or may acquire transferable Trust certificates. Similar to stock certificates of a corporation, Trust certificates provide individual holders evidence of interest in the Trust estate (assets/income).

 

A U. B. O. is often called a “Common-law Trust” but this phrase is not descriptive of any of the peculiar characteristics of such organizations. The basis for the terminology “Common-law Trust” is that they are created under the common law of contracts and do not depend upon any statute for its existence. See the United States Constitution, Article 1 Sec. 10, Clause 1.

 

As indicated by its name, a Business Trust is an estate adapted to business or commercial activities. Reduced to its bare essentials the U. B. O. consists of some form of capital vested in trustees who manage the entity profitably for Trust certificate holders.

 

A U.B.O. is created when one or more persons transfer the legal title in property to trustees, with power vested in the latter to manage and control the property and business and to pay the profits of the enterprise to the creators of the Trust or their successors.

 

In its typical and characteristic form the U. B. O. is brought into being by two basic documents: a Declaration of Trust and a Trust Indenture. These two documents make all the provisions of who is who and who is responsible for what, relative to the Trust activities.

 

The U. B. O. which had its beginnings in England in the 18th Century, adapts the ordinary trust to the new purpose of carrying on a business.

 

Two of the most famous early business Trusts in England were Lloyds of London (1811) and the London Stock Exchange (1802). An explanation of their function, under the Common-law of England, can be found in Smith v. Anderson, 15 Chancery Division 247 (1880).

 

The Business Trust made its debut in Massachusetts in 1827. As a result, a U.S. Business Trust today is often called a “Massachusetts Trust” in legal circles. The U.S. Supreme Court defined the Massachusetts Trust as a form of business organization, common in Massachusetts consisting essentially of an arrangement whereby property is conveyed to trustees: in accordance with terms of the Trust. The business is to be held and managed for the benefit of persons who hold transferable certificates issued by the trustees showing the shares into which the beneficial interest in the property is divided. [Hecht v. Malley, 265 U.S. 144 (1924)] [446 U.S. 458, 469]

 

This U. B. O. method of transacting business in commercial enterprises originated in Massachusetts as a result of negative laws prohibiting the development of real estate without a special act of the legislature or in other words, without “permission” of the State . So, the Business Trust was created under Common-law right to contract to obtain legislatively constructed business organizations advantages but without having to gain “permission” to enter into a business activity and suffer under the burdens and restrictions that are placed on “statutorily constructed organizations”.

 

During the last century and through the mid years of this century the tax laws and State regulations strongly favored corporate structures, detrimental and restrictive changes in these laws in the past 10-l5 years have resulted in the resurgence of the use of the U. B. O. For example, in 1985 the Scudder Capital Growth Fund, Inc. and Kemper Money Market Fund, Inc. changed their forms of organization from corporate to a Business Trust Organization.

 

There are nine basic advantages of operating a business as a U. B. O. which cause it to operate lawfully.

1) The U. B. O. is formed by contract between the parties setting forth the purposes, terms and conditions.
2 ) The U. B. O. is a legal entity and an artificial individual, with rights almost equal to a natural person (a human being), able to own property and conduct business like a natural person. It is irrevocable and no one has any reversionary right to its assets.
3) The U. B. O.’s assets are owned and its business activities managed by the trustees who accept such responsibility as fiduciaries on behalf of the beneficiaries.
4) The beneficial interests are divided into Capital Units, evidenced by the issuance of Trust certificates, conveying to the holder the limited rights to receive their pro-rate share of any distributions of income or assets that may be made by the trustees.
5) The Capital Units, are personal property which convey neither legal title to the property nor any voice in the management of the business or the selection of trustees.
6) The U. B. O. is subject to taxation on its distributable net income. The beneficiaries are only taxed on what they receive.
7) The assets of the U. B. O. are never subject to probate or estate tax because, as an artificial person, it never dies. Unlike a will, the U. B. O. is set up in contemplation of life, not death.
8) The Capital Units become void upon the death of the holder and, thus, have no value to be subject to estate tax or probate.
9) The life of the U. B. O. can be extended as deemed advisable or terminated at any time by the trustees in accordance with the Trust Indenture (contract).
Since the Trust Indenture is a contract between the creator and the trustee, the indenture controls the activities, powers and responsibilities of those who administer the Trust. No one has legal authority to change it’s provisions except those so authorized by the indenture. Foremost among the advantages of trustee-ship over the standard legal devices is its flexibility.

 

The document creating the Trust is the law of the Trust, not statutes created by the State.

 

Courts have long since supported the principal of the trustees carrying out the terms of their Trust contract and agreement. Also, Trust property cannot be held under attachment nor sold upon execution, for the trustees personal debts. Personal liability of a trustee cannot be enforced against the Trust property. If the trustee personally owned any amounts of beneficial interest, these Units of Beneficial Interest (Trust Certificates) can be attached.
This doctrine is supported in the case of United States National Bank of Omaha v. Andres Kaminski (Civil Action NO 77 Cv. 1830, District Court of Jefferson County, Colorado, June 16, 1980), the Bank alleged that Kaminski owed them $20,000. When he had no personal assets to seize after they obtained a judgment, they tried to seize the assets of his Trust he had set up several years earlier. The Bank’s action failed and they were unable to penetrate the Trust.

 

Beneficiaries cannot be held liable for debts incurred by the Trust. “If, in fact, a true Trust has been created (and this is very important, i.e. the Trust must correctly be written and executed), the certificate holders are not personally liable on the obligations incurred by the trustees or managing agents appointed by the trustees.

 

Exposure to liability and potential law suits is one of those worries most of us lay awake at night thinking about. Especially if we have a business where liability potential is omnipresent.

 

The past several years has seen the rise of multitudinous bankruptcies being filed. Even many of the long thought of stalwarts of American industry have gone bankrupt. More than we care to count. Big ones (including a big 8 accounting firm) and little ones like those of us who make up 90% of America’s gross national product.

 
 

10 BIG ADVANTAGES OF A BUSINESS TRUST



Although businesses trust are usually organized as corporations, partnerships or sole proprietorships, one even better way to organize a business is as an Unincorporated Business Organization Trust.

 

“A business or common-law trust, commonly known as a Massachusetts trust, is a form of business organization consisting essentially of an arrangement whereby property is conveyed to trustees, in accordance with the terms of an instrument of trust, to be held and managed for the benefit of such persons as may from time to time be holders of transferable certificates issued by the trustees showing the shares into which the beneficial interest is divided, which certificates entitle the holders to share ratably in the income of the property, and on termination of the trust, in the proceeds thereof.” [Corpus Juris Secondum 12A 495.]

 

“The essential attribute of a business trust is that the property is placed in the hands of trustees who manage and deal with it for the use and benefit of the beneficiaries.” Enochs & Plowers v. Roell, 154 So. 299, 170 Miss 44.

 

The U.S. Supreme Court recognized the existence of business trusts and explained their advantages in the case Morrissey v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 56 S. Ct. 289, 296 U.S. 344, 80 L.Ed. 263.

 

Common law trusts are not new. Some major US businesses that were originally organized as common law trusts include: American Express, Pepperell Manufacturing, Massachusetts Electric, Chicago Elevated Railroad and Associated Simmons Hardware.

 

The common law trust is created by a private, written contract. A trust contract is basically created by two or more individuals: trustor or grantor and trustee. The trustor or grantor (the owner of the assets being transferred into the trust), makes an offer to the trustee to manage the trust. The trustor exchanges his or her assets (such as business interests, real estate, stocks and bonds) to the trustee for Certificates of Capital Units (personal property similar to shares of stock in a corporation).

 

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The advantages of a business trust far exceed the benefits of a corporation.

ADVANTAGE No. 1. Because the corporation is created by the state as a privilege, corporate benefits may be diminished, limited or eliminated by the state government, whereas business trusts, or unincorporated business organization’s (UBO) existence and operation are controlled by its contract, not by state corporation law.

 

ADVANTAGE No. 2. The state charges incorporation fees and ongoing annual fees. The UBO, as a privately created entity, does not have these expenses.

 

ADVANTAGE No. 3. A corporation (expect for a Subchapter S corporation that is taxed as a partnership) can be subject to double taxation (income taxes on corporate profits (unless zeroed out), then income taxes on dividends paid now or in the future from those profits to shareholders). In contrast, a UBO does not pay income taxes on its profits if it must distribute all of its net income to its beneficiaries – thereby escaping taxation as a simple trust.

 

ADVANTAGE No. 4. Likewise, capital gains taxes may be entirely avoided by a UBO that sells assets at a profit if the trust contract specifies that all net trust income is to be distributed annually to the certificate holders (beneficiaries) who will be the ones to report the capital gains as taxable income and pay any due taxes.


ADVANTAGE No. 5. Corporate officers and directors (and sometimes shareholder names) and financial dealings are a matter of public record and detailed annual reports. UBO affairs are private and not a matter of public record.

 

ADVANTAGE No. 6. The avoidance of probate administration is one major advantage of a UBO. If one’s assets are all owned by one or more trusts, at one’s death, there are no assets in the deceased person’s name to go through probate. The trustees and successor beneficiaries continue the uninterrupted administration and benefit of the trust assets and income.


ADVANTAGE No. 7. Because the UBO assets do not go through probate, a UBO cannot be challenged by persons falsely claiming to be heirs or creditors of the deceased person.

 

ADVANTAGE No. 8. Assets can often be protected against creditors while beneficiaries are alive because the UBO holds legal title to the trust assets with the result that beneficiaries cannot have their shares of capital units attached by creditors if the trust has valid spendthrift clauses.

 

ADVANTAGE No. 9. Like the initial funding of a new corporation, there is no income or transfer (gift) tax to put initial assets into a business trust (structured to be like a corporation in the initial funding process) because the transferor of the assets receives back a proportionate share of the Certificates of capital Units.

 

ADVANTAGE No. 10. Whereas corporate stock owned by a stockholder is liable for death taxes (to the extent the value exceeds exemptions and deductions), the assets to a properly structured, funded and administered asset preservation trust will not be part of the grantor who originally funded the trust when the trustor/grantor dies.

 
 
 

Is the Unincorporated Business Trust Legal?


 

One of the common questions arising in the formation of Common Law trusts surrounds its legality. The enclosed legal citations are some important cases validating the common law, contractual company, pure Unincorporated Business Organization Trust entity.

 

ARTICLE 1, SECTION 10 of the United States Constitution….
“No state shall pass any law impairing the obligation of contracts.”

 

CONFIRMING THE TRUST CONTRACT

A) Certificate holders are devoid of legal rights, have no officers, are and must remain forever mute as to the selection, approval or disapproval of the trustees and their methods of conduct of business affairs would make the trustee absolute owner.

Bourchard v. First People’s trust, 253 Mas 351, 148 NE 895.

 

B) Right to Contract
Schumman-Heink v. Folsom, 159 NE 250 (1927)

 

C) United States Supreme Court has long held and recognized that freedom to make contracts and have them enforced by the courts is a part of the bundle of rights protected by the “due process” clauses of both the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments.

Paterson v. Bank Eudora (1903) 190 US 169, 47 L Ed 1002, 23 S Ct 821
Muller v. Oregon, 208 US 412, 52 L Ed 551, 38 S Ct 324 1908 v. U.S. 157 US 160, 39 L Ed 657, 15 S Ct 586 (1895)

 

D) The trust contract is established by private parties, for personal purposes, is not registered with the state corporation commissioner to comply with statutes relating to incorporating and does not invalidate the trust organization.
Hodgkiss v. Northland Petroleum Consolidated, 104 Mont 328. 67, P 2d 811

 

E) Certificate holders of a Trust Contract enjoy an even greater immunity from personal liability than is accorded to stockholders of corporations.
Goldwater v. Oltman, 210 Cal 408, 292 P624, 71 ALR 871

 

F) One of the main objectives of a trust contract is to obtain most of the advantages of corporations, but with freedom from the burdens, restrictions, and regulations generally imposed upon them.
Ashworth v. Hagen Estates 165 Va 151, 181 SE 381

 

G) The United States Supreme Court has acknowledged the Trust contract as a “pure or true” trust, citing the Hecht case in Navarro v. Lee.
Hecht v. Malley 265 US 144 (1924) Navarro v. Lee 446 US 458 (1980)

 

H) Business trusts are found in Corpus Juris Secundum and American Jurisprudence, 2d.

 

I) Business trusts are recognized under the term “common law trust”
88 American Law Reports 3d 704, citing Schumann-Heink v. Folsom 328 III 321, 159 NE 250, 50 ALR 485 (1927)

 

J) A Trust is one of several juridical devices whereby one person is enabled to deal with property for the benefit of another person.
Restatement of the Law of Trusts, 2d Introduction Note, Pa. 1

 

K) Any law or procedure materially affecting contract rights necessarily impairs the obligation of the contract upon which right is founded and is, therefore, violative of the United States Constitution.
Smith v. Morse 2 CA 524

 

L) The creation of a Pure Trust is not subject to legislative control. The United States Supreme Court holds that trust relationship comes under the realm of equity, based upon common law, and is not subject to legislative restrictions as are corporations and other organizations created by legislative authority.
Eliot v. Freeman 220 US 178

 

M) The creator of a Pure Trust may mold and give it any shape he chooses, and he chooses, and he or the trustees may provide for the appointment of a successor or successors to the trustee or trustees, upon such terms as he may choose to impose.
Shaw v. Pine 12 Allen (Mass) 293; also in Harwood vs. Tracy, 118 Mo. 631, 24 SW 214

 

N) The court will support the trustees in carrying out the terms of their Trust contract and agreement.
Clews v. Jamison, 182 US 461, 21 S. Ct. 845

 

O) Trust property cannot be held under attachment nor sold upon execution, for the trustees’ personal debts. Personal liability of a trustee cannot be enforced against the trust property.
Mayo v. Moritz, 24 N. E. 1083 (1890)

 

P) If the Trustee owned personally any amounts of beneficial interest, these Certificate Units can be attached.
Hussey v. Arnold 70 N.E. 87 (1904)

 
 
 

CONTRACT TRUST RECOGNIZED BY IRS


A) Internal Revenue Regulations acknowledgement of contract Trust Organization.
IRS Regulations 301, 7701 4 (b) Berry v. McCourt 204 NE 2d 235, 240

B) An “exchange” is a reciprocal transfer of property as distinguished from the transfer of property for a money or consideration only.
TR 118, S. 39.112 (a) 1(e)

C) The owner of Beneficial Certificates is not an owner as a stockholder is an owner; the Certificate Holders have no ownership whatever in property held by the Contract Trust, nor do they have any voice or control over the Trustees.
Becker v. St. Louis Union Trust Co. 296 US 48, 50; 80L ED 35:56 S CT 78

D) “The Internal Revenue Code classifies a Trust as an ‘individual’ for tax purposes.” Trusts are included with persons and “individuals’” in Section 1 which lists entities which are subject to tax. Also Section 3(b)(2) refers to Trusts as individuals. Also the tax forms for trusts clearly illustrate they are not to be Corporations, partnerships, etc.
“A trust certificate, while valuable, has ‘no determinable value’ when exchanged for assets, and thus there is no taxable event because of this exchange, as determined by the U.S. Supreme Court.” Burenett v. Logan 283 U.S. 404), also (Stern v. C.I.R., 747 F. 2d 555 (1984)

 

NO GIFT OR ESTATE TAXES


 

A) Certificates have no ascertainable “Fair Market Value”, and have minimal value to someone else. Bad bargains do not result in taxable gifts. Contract Trust in a genuine business transaction.
Estate of Anderson V. Commissioner of Internal Revenue. 8 Tax Court 706.721

 

B) Rationale of federal estate tax is not a levy on property of the estate but on its transfer at death.
Second National Bank of Newhaven v. U.S. 422 F 2d 49 (1970)

 

NO GIFT OR ESTATE TAXES

 

A) If a bona fide transfer, sale or exchange is made at arm’s length in the ordinary course of business, the transaction will be assumed to be for consideration and not gratuitous. A consideration that is not reducible to a value in money or money’s worth, i.e., love and affection or promise or marriage, is to be wholly disregarded and considered totally gratuitous.
Internal Revenue Service “Federal Estate and Gift Taxation Publication” #488

 

B) The Unites States Circuit Court of Appeals for the First Circuit has long held that full and adequate consideration is met by issuance of trust certificate units in exchange for real and personal property invested in a “pure” trust organization.
Carpenter v. White, CIR, 80 F 2d 145

 

C) The measure of the gain … of an exchange is the difference between the (adjusted) cost … basis of the property transferred … and the fair market value of the property … received.
Internal Revenue Code 1001 (a), (b) Parrington v. Attorney General, LR. H. L. l00. 122

 

D) No “Equitable Construction” of a tax statute. Code must be strictly construed. Gain [is] measured from fair market value of property received.
U.S. v. Merriam, 263 US 179 (1923)
Commissioner v. Harrelson 282 US 55 (1930) Gould v. Gould US 151

 

E) The “fair market value” is the price at which the property would change hands between a willing buyer and a willing seller, neither being under any compulsion to buy or sell, and both having knowledge of all the relevant facts. It may not be determined by a forced sales price, nor is it to be determined by the sale price of the item in a market other than that in which such item is most commonly sold to the public.
Federal Estate and Gift taxation, Publication No. 448
Davis v. U.S. (1961) 287 F 2d 168, 82 S Ct. 805 affirmed in part and reversed in part on other grounds, 370 US 65, 82 S Ct 1190, 8 L Ed 335, Rehearing denied 371 VS 854 , 83 S. Ct 14, 15.F)

 

F) IRC Section 1001 (b) requires that the capital gain be measured by “the fair market value” of the property received (emphasis added) by the taxpayer, not by the fair market value transferred by the taxpayer in exchange for the property received. To say that the fair market value of the property received is the same as the fair market value of the property given up not only ignores realities, but is the use of a formula which is radically different from the recognized formula approved by the courts for determining fair market value.
Commissioner v. Marshman 279 F 2d 27, Cert. den. 364 US 918, 8 S Ct 282, 286; 5 L Ed 2d 259.
Maxfied v. U.S. 152 F 2d 593, Cert. den. 2 Cases 327 US 791, 66 S Ct 821.9

 

G) This definition primarily benefits the Treasury in estate tax situations. However, IRS may not have one definition for “fair market value” at one time when it is beneficial, and a different one for another time when the benefit goes to the taxpayer. The IRS is obliged to keep their conclusion that the fair market value of valuable beneficial units cannot be determined in any forum other than a voluntary sale.
The IRS may not force a sale to determine price where the item displays an inherent yet unsettled value. They may also not force the beneficial units to be sold in a market other than that in which such certificates may commonly be sold to the public. In addition, when the Treasury says “public”, they mean at retail rather than wholesale. The value of the above definition is evident in the point that the client may plan affairs around hard and fast rules not subject to change.
Federal Estate and Gift Taxation, Publication No. 448, p. 39 Burnett v. Logan, 283 US 404, 51 S Ct. 75 LED 1143 (1931)

 

H) Interests which terminate “on” or “before” death are not a proper subject of the Federal Estate Tax.
Knowlton v. Moore, 178 US 41, 20 S Ct 747, 44 L Ed 969 (1900): YMCA V. Davis. 264 US 47 (1924), 44 S Ct 291, 68 LED 564: Goodman v. Grander, 243 F 2d 264 (1957): Babb v. US 349 F Supp 792 (1972)

 

I) Because Code Sec. 644 does not provide a method for determining the basis of property transferred (into a trust), Code Sec. 2516 of the gift tax provisions controls. Under Code Sec. 2516, the distribution of (property) was deemed to be a transfer for full and adequate consideration –. Accordingly, the trust’s basis in the (property) was its fair market value on the date of transfer —.”
(St. Joseph Bank and Trust Co., Ca-7, 83-2 USTC 9586.) – (907 CCH – Standard Federal Tax Reports 46, 191.)

 
 
 

CONTRACT TRUST AS A LEGAL ENTITY




A) The Contract Trust owns the property and is a distinct legal entity. Beneficial Certificate Holders are not treated as co-owners of trust property.
National City Finance v. Lewis (Cal App) 3P 2d 316 (Rehearing denied) 4P2d 163: Beilin v. Krenn & Dato 350 III 284, 183 NE 330:
Hemphil v. Orloff 238 Mich 508, 213 NW 867, 58 ALR 507, aid 277 US
537, 72 L Ed 978. 48 S Ct 577, Annotation 156 ALR 32. Goldwater v.
Oltman, 210 Cal 408: 292 P 624

 

B) The Contract Trust does not escape the necessity of having substance and business motives. “Sham” transactions , having no economic effect other than the creation of income tax losses, cannot be recognized for tax purposes.
Thompson v. Commissioner. 631 F 2d 642. 646 (1980) Cert. Denied 452 US 961 (1981) Edwards v. Commissioner. 415 F 2d 578, 582 Lewis and Talor, Inc. v. Commissioner, 447 F 2d 1074 (1971)

 

C) The fact that transactions of business are so arranged that tax consequences are highly favorable (or altogether avoid taxes) affords no license to the government to recast it into a mold or less advantage.
Gyro Engineering, Inc. v US. F 2d 578, 582 Peter Pan Seafoods, Inc. V. US 417 F 2d 670

 

D) “It (Pure Trust) is established by legal precedent that pure trusts are lawful, Valid Business Organizations.”
Baker vx. Stern 58 A.L.R. 462

 

E) “Trust or trust estate is a legal entity for most all purposes as are common law trust.”
Burnett vs. Smith 240 S.W. 1007 (1922)

 

 

LEGAL AND EQUITABLE TITLE HELD BY CONTRACT TRUST


 

A) Legal and equitable title held by contract trust.
Hecht v. Malley US 144.68 L Ed 949, 44 Ct. 462
Williams v. Milton 215 MASS 2. 102 NE 355
Goldwater v. Oltman, 210 CA 148, 292 P624. 71 ALR 871 Schumann-Heink v. Folsom 328 III 321. 159 NE 250, 58 ALR 485

 

B) When legal and equitable title, possession and control of property are legally and irrevocably passed from the Trustor (contracting investor) to himself as Trustee in legal contemplation, it is as though the trustee receiving the conveyance is another person.
Com. of Internal Revenue v. St. Louis Union Trust Co., 296 US 48, 50 (1935)

 

C) Property invested in the Contract Trust Organization must be fixed and irrevocable. Thus the Trustor (contracting investor) may legally be recognized as a different person even when de facto he/she may be the same human being. Trusteeship is a position created by parties at arm’s length which when established is an office to be occupied by any qualified person.
Becker, Collector Internal Revenue v. St. Louis Union Trust Co.
296 Us 48, 50. 50: 80 L ED 35 56 S Ct 78.

 

D) Genuine contractual obligations control the substance.
Estate of Hilt N. Goodwyn, T.C. Memo 1976-238

 

E) Trustees of the Contractual Trust have the exclusive power to interpret or construe the intent and direction of the Trust Indenture.
Cohen v. US Trust Securities Corporation, 40 NE 2d 282

 

F) Statutes may authorize limited liability of partnerships and corporations, but those statutes do not by implication prohibit the creation of Contract Trusts to enjoy similar immunity by virtue of the Common Law.
Goldwater v. Oltman, 292 P 624. 71 ALR 871 Annotation

 

G) In tax context, “Associated” relates to a joint action and interest of the stock holders and their directors. Contract Trust Trustees and Beneficiaries are not
associated in a joint action.
Elm Street Realty Trust, 76 TC No 68 (1981): Morrissey v. CIR, 296 US 34 (1935); Crocker v. Malley, 249 US 223 (1919); Internal Revenue Regulations 301.7701-1, 2 (a) (2); Schumann Heink v. Folsom. 159 NE 250, annotation 58 ALR 485; Hecht v. Malley, 265 US 144

 

H) IRS Regulations state the term “Person” includes an “Unincorporated Organization or Group”.
Internal Revenue Regulations 301.7701-1 (a) Internal Revenue Ruling 73-254

 

I) It is whether the entities were taxable as associations with the corporation rates applied, or as trusts (with the conduit method applied).
Commissioner v. Brouillard, 70 F 2d 154, 157, Cert. denied 293
US 574 No. 152

 

J) The United States Supreme Court articulated what has become recognized as the standard for determining whether an entity will be taxed as a corporation or as a trust by saying that its the nature of the entity’s dominant functions and attributes which determines whether it is an association for tax purposes.

 

The system and course of procedure approximates much more closely that of an ordinary partnership among personal friends reposing “full confidence” (Pure trust thus a Contract Trust) in each other. The resemblances predominate strongly in favor of a trusts, not associations.
Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Brouillard. Same v. Shepherd Syndicate, and Same v. Pryor & Lockhart Development Co., 70 F 2d 154 Cert. den. 293 US 574 No. 152. Hemphil v. Orloff, 277 US 537, 48 S Ct 277, 72 L Ed 978 cited Ibid.

 

FOREIGN CONDUIT (FOREIGN STRUCTURE), MISCELLANEOUS


 

 

A) (A) Foreign Trust (is a trust) the income of which, from sources without the United States which is not effectively connected with the conduct of a trade or business within the United States, is not includable in gross income under subtitle A (Income Taxes).
Internal Revenue Code Sec. 7701 (a) (31)

 

B) Since 1967 the Internal Revenue Code has actually provided that a blanket exception from federal gift taxation is provided for all gifts made by nonresident alien of intangible property even though the situs or location of that intangible property is within the United States.

 

IRC Sec 2501 (a) (2). All intangibles include stock, bonds, funds, notes or other certificates of indebtedness (not Federal Reserve Notes “green backs” or US currency, or checks drawn on US banks — IRR Sec. 25.2511-3 (b) (4) (IV), bank accounts, or US government bonds, etc.)

 

ADDITIONAL LEGAL OPINIONS


 

“Dignity of contract cannot be set aside because a tax benefit results either by design or accident.”
Edwards v. Commissioner, 415 F 2d 578, 582, 10th Cir. (1969).

 

“A Pure Trust is not illegal if formed for the express purpose of avoiding taxation.”
Weeks vs. Sibley, (D.C.) 269 F. 155

 

“U. S. taxpayers may also use tax havens for tax planning reasons. Some transactions conducted through tax havens have a beneficial tax result for U.S. Taxpayers that is completely within the letter of the U.S. tax laws.”
Federal Tax Guide Reports in official IRS agent’s manual

 

Each taxpayer in our country has the perfect right to do everything within his or her power to legally reduce his or her liability to the least legal limit that can be reached.

 

The government does not contend that the trusts were not valid legal entities, from the people who set them up or from those who held certificate units.
U.S. v. Brownlee

 

The validity and capacity of these contractual companies has been recognized in other “sister states” and would refer your attention, in this regard, to State v. Cosgrove, 210 P. 393 (Supreme Court of Idaho, 1922) and Pacific American Realty Trust v. Lanc Tot, 381 P. 2d 123 (Supreme Court of Washington, 1963).

 

In the celebrated case of United States v. Dahlstrom, 713 F. 2d 1423 (C. A.9, 1983) before the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit. The opinion, decided August 24, 1983, ….dealt a death blow to I.R.S. hopes of utilizing mis-information schemes to terrorize average taxpayers with the spectre of criminal liability and deter them from engaging in creative tax planning.

 

A trust can be a separate, legal profit making, business entity. When trust income is accumulated or distributed at the sole discretion of the Fiduciary (the Board of Trustees), net income so held and accumulated is taxable to the trust. Only the income that is distributed to the beneficiaries is taxable to them. In one case, the IRS claimed that the trust was an association taxable as a corporation. The then Board of Tax Appeals held that the trust was not an association, and, thus, not so taxable. It also held that income earned by the trust in any given year, not distributed, as is the case with incorporated businesses.

Buitar Family Trust Estate v. Commissioner 72 F 2d 544 (1934)

 

And, most important of all, the contractual companies are not trusts under the Code — for trusts, by their very definition, at common law, require a division or split of title (legal and equitable) between the trustees, serving on the corpus of the trust, and the beneficiaries.

 

What is a Revocable Trust


 

A revocable trust is a trust whereby provisions can be altered or canceled dependent on the grantor. During the life of the trust, income earned is distributed to the grantor, and only after death does property transfer to the beneficiaries. This type of agreement provides flexibility and income to the living grantor; he is able to adjust the provisions of the trust and earn income, all the while knowing that the estate will be transferred upon death.

 

BREAKING DOWN Revocable Trust




A revocable trust is a part of estate planning that manages and protects assets as the grantor, or owner, ages. The trust is amended or revoked as the grantor desires and is included in estate taxes. Depending on the trust’s directions, the trustee, or holder of the assets, distributes the assets to the beneficiaries or holds and manages the property. The trust remains private and becomes irrevocable upon the grantor’s death.

 

Characteristics of a Revocable Trust


 

The money or property held by the trustee for the benefit of someone else is the principal of the trust. The principal changes often due to the trustee’s expenses or the investment’s appreciation or depreciation. The collective assets comprise the trust fund. The person or people benefiting from the trust are the beneficiaries. Because a revocable trust lists one or more beneficiaries, the trust avoids probate.

 

Advantages of a Revocable Trust


 

If the grantor experiences health concerns through the aging process, a revocable trust allows the grantor’s chosen manager to take control of the principal. If the grantor owns real estate outside his state of domicile and the real estate is included in the trust, an ancillary probate of the real estate is avoided.

 

If a beneficiary is not of legal age and cannot hold property in his name, the minor’s assets are held in the trust rather than having the court appoint a guardian. If the grantor believes a beneficiary will not use the assets wisely, the trust allows a set amount of money to be distributed on a regular basis.

 

Disadvantages of a Revocable Trust




Implementing a revocable trust involves much time and effort. Assets must be retitled in the name of the trust to avoid probate. The grantor’s entire estate plan must be monitored annually to ensure the trust’s objectives are being met. Costs of maintaining a revocable trust are greater than other estate planning tools such as a will. A revocable trust does not offer the grantor tax advantages. Since not all assets will be included in the revocable trust, the grantor must create a will to designate beneficiaries for the remaining assets, to avoid probate. During the grantor’s lifetime, creditors can still reach the property in a revocable trust.

 

What is an Irrevocable Trust


 

An irrevocable trust cannot be modified, amended or terminated without the permission of the grantor’s named beneficiary or beneficiaries. The grantor, having transferred assets into the trust, effectively removes all of their rights of ownership to the assets and the trust. This is the opposite of a revocable trust, which allows the grantor to modify the trust.

 

BREAKING DOWN Irrevocable Trust


 

The main reasons for setting up an irrevocable trust are for estate and tax considerations. The benefit of this type of trust for estate assets is that it removes all incidents of ownership, effectively removing the trust’s assets from the grantor’s taxable estate. It also relieves the grantor of the tax liability on the income the assets generate. While the tax rules vary between jurisdictions, in most cases, the grantor can’t receive these benefits if they are the trustee of the trust. The assets held in the trust can include – but are not limited to, a business – investment assets, cash and life insurance policies.

 

Setting up a trust of any type can be complicated enough that an attorney is necessary. As such, trusts are thought of as a vehicle for wealthy individuals, and given the attorney fees their setup requires (a few thousand dollars or more), that may be true. However, trusts have a place in the estate and legacy planning for individuals of more modest means. For example, when a trust creator does not trust a beneficiary to receive a large sum of money without rules, any plan for disbursal or consideration of its use.

 

For more on irrevocable and other types of trusts, check out How to Set up a Trust Fund or the Estate Planning Tutorial.

 

Irrevocable Trust Types


 

Irrevocable trusts come in two forms: Living trusts and testamentary trusts.

 

living trust, also known as an ‘inter vivos’ (Latin for ‘between the living’) trust, is originated and funded by an individual during their lifetime. Some living trust examples are:

 

Irrevocable life insurance trust


Grantor-retained annuity trus
t (GRAT), spousal lifetime access trust (SLAT) and

Qualified Personal Residence Trust (QPRT) (all types of lifetime gifting trusts)

Charitable remainder trust and charitable lead trust (both forms of charitable trusts)

By contrast, testamentary trusts are irrevocable by design as they are created after the death of their creator. They are funded from the deceased’s estate according to the terms of their will. The sole way to make changes to a testamentary trust (or cancel it) is to alter the will of the trust’s creator before they die.

 

Irrevocable Trust Basics


 

An irrevocable trust has a grantor, a trustee and a beneficiary or beneficiaries. Once the grantor places an asset in an irrevocable trust, it is a gift to the trust and the grantor cannot revoke it. The grantor can dictate the terms, rules and uses of the trust assets with the consent of the trustee and the beneficiary.

 

Irrevocable trusts can have many applications in planning for the preservation and distribution of an estate, including:

 

To take advantage of the estate tax exemption and remove taxable assets from the estate. Property transferred to an irrevocable living trust does not count toward the gross value of an estate. Such trusts can be especially helpful in reducing the tax liability of very large estates.

To prevent beneficiaries from misusing assets, as the grantor can set conditions for distribution.

To gift assets the estate while still retaining the income from the assets.
To remove appreciable assets from the estate while still providing beneficiaries with a step-up basis in valuing the assets for tax purposes.
To gift a principal residence to children under more favorable tax rules.
To house a life insurance policy that would effectively remove the death proceeds from the estate.

To deplete one’s property to ensure eligibility for government benefits, such as Social Security income and Medicaid (for nursing home care). Such trusts can also be used to help secure benefits and care for a special needs child by preventing disqualification of eligibility.

An irrevocable trust is a more complex legal arrangement than a revocable trust. Because there could be current income tax and future estate tax implications when using an irrevocable trust, seek a tax or estate attorney’s guidance.

 

Irrevocable Trusts and Lawsuits



Irrevocable trusts are especially useful to individuals who work in professions that may make them vulnerable to lawsuits, such as doctors or attorneys. Once property is transferred to such a trust it is owned by the trust for the benefit of the named beneficiaries. Therefore it is safe from legal judgments and creditors, as the trust will not be a party to any lawsuit.

 

Irrevocable Trusts vs. Revocable Trusts



Revocable trusts may be amended or canceled at any time as long as their creator is mentally competent. They do offer the benefit of allowing their creator to cancel them and reclaim property held by the trust at any time before death. However, such trusts do not offer the same protection against legal action or estate taxes as irrevocable trusts. When using revocable trusts government entities will consider that any property held in one still belongs to the trust’s creator and therefore may be included in their estate for tax purposes or when qualifying for government benefits. Once a revocable trust’s creator dies the trust becomes irrevocable.

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