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Flps with Business Purpose More Likely To Pass Irs Muster |
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Wealthy families thinking of
establishing a family limited partnership in
order to save gift and estate taxes need to
keep one key point in mind: an FLP is more likely
to pass IRS muster if it can demonstrate a bona
fide business purpose and operate in a business-like
manner.
As FLPs (and the family limited
liability company where credit protection is
a concern) have grown in popularity in recent
years, taxpayers and the Internal Revenue Service
have been engaged in a tug of war over whether
an FLP is a legitimate vehicle for the reduction
of gift and estate taxes. Sometimes the IRS
wins, sometimes the taxpayers win. But out of
the tussle guidelines are emerging that may
clarify the issue for taxpayers.
The intent behind most typical
family limited partnerships is straightforward,
even if the FLP itself is complex. A parent
transfers assets, such as a family business,
stock, or real estate, to an FLP and then gifts
most of the shares of the FLP to the children.
The parent typically retains one or two percent
ownership as general partner, effectively controlling
management of the FLP.
Because the children’s
management control and marketability of their
shares are severely limited, the value of their
shares is treated as less than the shares’
proportional net asset value of the FLP. Thus,
the value of the gifted shares is discounted
for tax purposes, sometimes as much as 40 percent
or more. That saves the parent potential gift
taxes, and because the assets have been moved
out of the parent’s estate, it saves potential
estate taxes.
The IRS has generally lost
the gift-tax issue on appeal to tax courts,
but it has had more success in arguing that
a parent never effectively relinquished control
or use of the assets, and thus the assets should
be included at an undiscounted value in the
parent’s taxable estate upon the parent’s
death.
A string of recent court cases
appear to suggest some guidelines that families
and their financial and legal advisors should
consider when deciding whether and how to establish
an FLP that can pass the IRS challenge for both
gift and estate taxes. The key often turns on
whether the facts suggest that the FLP is a
“sham” whose intent is merely to
avoid taxes, or whether it was established for
legitimate business reasons, with a side benefit
of saving taxes. Guidelines suggested by these
cases include
Is an FLP appropriate?
FLPs generally are for people likely
to face gift and estate taxes. But even they
may find other tax-saving strategies more cost
effective, less complex, and less vulnerable
to IRS challenge.
Have a valid business
purpose. This is still a gray area.
Commentators think you’ll be on safest
ground if the FLP includes an active family
business or investments that requires active
management by the FLP’s partners, such
as rental property. One recent ruling went against
a taxpayer in part because the FLP mainly held
mostly marketable securities with no apparent
business purpose for holding them. But in an
another case, an appeals court ruled in favor
of the taxpayer because in addition to active
management of assets, the FLP provided such
valid business purposes as protection against
creditors and a reduction of intra-family disputes
that had previously resulted in litigation.
Spell out the business
purpose. The partnership documents
should spell out in detail the FLP’s business
purposes, and the family should operate it as
a business.
Don’t commingle
personal property. One of the quickest
ways to draw IRS scrutiny is to stuff an FLP
with personal assets such as a primary residence
or vacation property. The taxpayer lost in one
case because the primary residence was gifted
to the FLP, yet the taxpayer continued to live
in it rent free. You may make this work (such
as paying fair-market rent to the FLP), but
be prepared for a challenge.
Don’t use FLP
as your personal piggy bank. It’s
best to retain sufficient personal assets outside
the FLP to live on and avoid drawing on FLP
assets for living expenses.
Avoid death-bed formations
of FLPs. There have been allowable
exceptions to this practice, but it definitely
invites IRS attention.
Maintain the general
partner’s fiduciary responsibility.
Waiving the responsibility in the agreement
raises questions about the partnership’s
validity.
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