Powers of Appointment
Powers of Appointment
Powers of Appointment
YOURSELF
YOUR CREDITORS
YOUR ESTATE
YOUR ESTATE CREDITORS
General Special
As to nature.
DONEE has power to appoint any person he chooses who shall possess or enjoy the property without restriction DONEE must
appoint successor to the property only within a limited group or class of persons
As to tax implications.
Makes appointed property, for all legal intents, the property of the DONEE
(
includible
in his estate)
Not includible
in the gross estate of the DONEE when he dies
As to effects.
DONEE holds the appointed property with all the attributes of ownership, under the concept of owner DONEE holds the
appointed property in trust, or under the concept of trustee
http://www.law.cornell.edu/cfr/text/26/20.2041-1
in fact, be a creditor of the decedent or his estate. A power of appointment is not a general power if
by its terms it is either
(a) Exercisable only in favor of one or more designated persons or classes other than the decedent or
his creditors, or the decedent's estate or the creditors of his estate, or
(b) Expressly not exercisable in favor of the decedent or his creditors, or the decedent's estate or the
creditors of his estate.
A decedent may have two powers under the same instrument, one of which is a general power of
appointment and the other of which is not. For example, a beneficiary may have a power to withdraw
trust corpus during his life, and a testamentary power to appoint the corpus among his descendants.
The testamentary power is not a general power of appointment.
Example (1).
A created a revocable trust before October 22, 1942, providing for payment of income to B for life
with remainder as B shall appoint by will. Even though A dies after October 21, 1942, without having
exercised his power of revocation, B's power of appointment is considered a power created before
October 22, 1942.
Example (2).
C created an irrevocable inter vivos trust before October 22, 1942, naming T as trustee and providing
for payment of income to D for life with remainder to E. T was given the power to pay corpus to D
and the power to appoint a successor trustee. If T resigns after October 21, 1942, and appoints D as
successor trustee, D is considered to have a power of appointment created before October 22, 1942.
Example (3).
F created an irrevocable inter vivos trust before October 22, 1942, providing for payment of income
to G for life with remainder as G shall appoint by will, but in default of appointment income to H for
life with remainder as H shall appoint by will. If G died after October 21, 1942, without having
exercised his power of appointment, H's power of appointment is considered a power created before
October 22, 1942, even though it was only a contingent interest until G's death.
Example (4).
If in example (3) above G had exercised his power of appointment by creating a similar power in J,
J's power of appointment would be considered a power created after October 21, 1942.
http://www.poynerspruill.com/publications/Pages/UsingPowersofAppointmentandOtherPowersinTruststoAddFlexibilityandRedu
ceTransferTaxes.aspx
Historically, estate planning attorneys have used trusts to eliminate or reduce transfer taxes for their clients and their families, and/or to address a clients
non-tax concerns for his or her beneficiaries, and trusts will continue to be used to address these tax and non-tax concerns. However, in light of the
significant tax and non-tax uncertainty our clients and their families will likely face in the future, it is critical for us as estate planning attorneys to draft our
clients trusts with provisions that are flexible enough to deal with this greater uncertainty. Through the use of powers of appointment granted to trust
beneficiaries, limited trust beneficiary powers of withdrawal, and trustee termination provisions, clients can accomplish their goal of preserving their
wealth for their family while at the same time giving persons whom they trust the ability to make changes to the trusts plan of distribution in order to deal
with future changes in the transfer tax laws or the circumstances of a clients family.
A. Powers of Appointment.
Where a client will be establishing trusts for his or her family, prudent estate planning requires that the estate planning attorney consider at the outset of
the engagement whether powers of appointment should be incorporated into the clients trusts. The estate planning attorney should discuss in the initial
meeting with the client the advantages and disadvantages of giving powers of appointment to the beneficiaries of the trusts to add flexibility from both a
tax and non-tax standpoint. Although it may be somewhat difficult to explain to a client the complexities of a testamentary special (or general) power of
appointment, clients appreciate an estate planning attorney who is thorough and who can give the client more options when it comes to the clients
disposition of his or her estate.
In situations where a generation-skipping transfer may occur upon the termination of a trust that might result in the imposition of GST tax, powers of
appointment should be incorporated in the trust in order to eliminate these GST taxes. For example, often clients create trusts (either during the clients
lifetime or at the clients death) for their children until the children reach some age in adulthood (for example, until age 40). If the child lives until age 40
and receives all of the assets in the trust at that time, there is, of course, no generation-skipping transfer. However, if the child dies before the trust
terminates at age 40 and the terms of the trust provide in such event that the deceased childs children are to receive the trust assets, then the
distribution of those assets to the deceased childs children will constitute a taxable termination under I.R.C. Section 2612, and if the trust has not be
exempted from the GST tax by the allocation of the clients GST exemption (either because the client had allocated all his GST exemption to other trusts
he created, or he did not have enough GST tax exemption available to allocate GST exemption to all of his trusts), then the taxable termination will result
in the assessment of GST taxes which could consume a substantial portion of the assets in the trust. This result can be avoided, however, by giving a
child a testamentary general power of appointment over the assets in the trust which would cause the trust to be includible in the deceased childs estate
under I.R.C. Section 2041 for estate tax purposes, therefore making the deceased child the transferor under I.R.C. Section 2652 (a) of the trust property
for GST tax purposes. Since the deceased child is considered the transferor for GST tax purposes because of the childs testamentary general power of
appointment over the trust, the distribution of the trust assets to the deceased childs children at the childs death is not considered a generation-skipping
transfer. Often, the child will not have a substantial estate, and with the larger estate tax exemptions that we have now (and hopefully will be in
existence going forward), the inclusion of the trust in the deceased childs estate for estate tax purposes will result in no estate taxes in the childs estate
and therefore the property in the trust will pass to the childs children without any additional transfer taxes.
This possible inadvertent GST tax issue can arise in multiple situations, such as in irrevocable trusts established by a client during his or her lifetime (for
example, trusts created for a clients children under an irrevocable life insurance trust or under an irrevocable trust created by a client as a vehicle for
making gifts to the clients children). Often, the client does not choose to allocate any of his GST tax exemption to these trusts since it is more likely than
not that the child will survive until the time he or she reaches the designated trust termination age, and the client prefers to preserve his or her GST tax
exemption for trusts that will be created at the clients death that will have intentional generation-skipping transfers.
To deal with this possible adverse transfer tax consequence, the estate planning attorney should include the following power of appointment language in
the childs trust:
Distribution Upon Death of Child. Upon the death of the child before receiving or withdrawing his or her entire trust, the remaining principal, as then
constituted, and all accrued or undistributed income of the childs trust shall:
i. With respect to any portion of such trust which may be exempt for purposes of the generation-skipping transfer tax, or with respect to which said tax
is not applicable, be distributed by the Trustee to such of the childs issue, in such amounts or proportions, either outright or in trust, as the child may
have appointed by specific reference to this power in the childs Will.
ii. With respect to any portion of such trust which may be nonexempt for purposes of the generation-skipping transfer tax and with respect to which a
generation-skipping transfer would occur but for the existence of this power of appointment, be distributed by the Trustee to such appointee or
appointees, including the childs estate, in such amounts or proportions, either outright or in trust, as the child may have appointed by specific reference
to this power in the childs Will.
The Trustee is authorized to rely, and is relieved of liability in so relying, upon any instrument admitted to probate in common or solemn form as the Will
of the child. If no instrument is admitted to probate within sixty (60) days after the death of the child, the Trustee may assume that the child died
intestate and shall be protected in acting in accordance with such assumption.
If any power of appointment hereunder is not effectively or fully exercised, principal of the childs trust in an amount sufficient to pay all additional death
taxes incurred by the inclusion of this trust in the gross estate of the child, if any, shall be paid to, or upon the order of, the personal representative of the
childs estate upon receipt of written request from the childs personal representative. For purposes of this Subparagraph, such additional death
taxes shall mean the excess of (1) all estate, inheritance, and other death taxes computed on the childs taxable estate over (2) the amount of such
taxes computed on the childs taxable estate that would have been imposed if no portion of this trust had been included in the childs gross estate. To
whatever extent such property is not effectively appointed by the child, or paid as provided above, the same shall be paid over and distributed to the
childs then living issue, per stirpes, subject to the provisions hereinafter made for holdback trusts for beneficiaries under the age of thirty (30) years.
It should be noted that the above language only gives the child a general power of appointment if it is necessary to avoid the imposition of GST tax on
the trust upon the death of the child. If the distribution of the childs trust at the childs death does not constitute a generation-skipping transfer (perhaps
because the GST tax has been repealed at some point in the future), or if it does constitute a generation-skipping transfer but is not a taxable transfer
because of the allocation of the parents GST exemption to the trust, then the child can only appoint the trust property to a limited group of beneficiaries
(the childs own issue).
If the parent is concerned about giving the child the broadest possible general power of appointment, then the permissible appointees of the childs
general power of appointment can be limited to the creditors of the childs estate.
It should also be noted that the above language also provides that any estate taxes caused by the inclusion of the trust property in the childs estate as a
result of the general power of appointment shall be paid from the trust and not from the childs estate. This has the advantage of clarifying exactly how
these estate taxes are to be paid, thereby avoiding any disruption of the childs own estate plan.