Reg
1.643(a)-8

§1.643(a)-8., Certain distributions by charitable remainder trusts
(a) Purpose and
scope. --This section is intended to prevent
the avoidance of the purposes of the charitable
remainder trust rules regarding the
characterizations of distributions from those trusts
in the hands of the recipients and should be
interpreted in a manner consistent with this
purpose. This section applies to all charitable
remainder trusts described in section 664 and the
beneficiaries of such trusts.
(b) Deemed sale
by trust
(1) For
purposes of section 664(b), a charitable remainder
trust shall be treated as having sold, in the year
in which a distribution of an annuity or unitrust
amount is made from the trust, a pro rata portion of
the trust assets to the extent that the distribution
of the annuity or unitrust amount would (but for the
application of this paragraph (b)) be characterized
in the hands of the recipient as being from the
category described in section 664(b)(4) and exceeds
the amount of the previously undistributed
(i) Cash
contributed to the trust (with respect to which a
deduction was allowable under section 170, 2055,
2106, or 2522); plus
(ii) Basis in any
contributed property (with respect to which a
deduction was allowable under section 170, 2055,
2106; or 2522) that was sold by the trust.
(2) Any
transaction that has the purpose or effect of
circumventing the rules in this paragraph (b) shall
be disregarded.
(3) For
purposes of paragraph (b)(1) of this section, trust
assets do not include cash or assets purchased with
the proceeds of a trust borrowing, forward sale, or
similar transaction.
(4) Proper
adjustment shall be made to any gain or loss
subsequently realized for gain or loss taken into
account under paragraph (b)(1) of this section.
(c) Examples.
--The following examples illustrate the rules of
paragraph (b) of this section:
Example 1. Deemed
sale by trust. Donor contributes stock having a
fair market value of $2 million to a charitable
remainder unitrust with a unitrust amount of 50
percent of the net fair market value of the trust
assets and a two-year term. The stock has a total
adjusted basis of $400,000. In Year 1, the trust
receives dividend income of $20,000. As of the
valuation date, the trust's assets have a net fair
market value of $2,020,000 ($2 million in stock,
plus $20,000 in cash). To obtain additional cash to
pay the unitrust amount to the noncharitable
beneficiary, the trustee borrows $990,000 against
the value of the stock. The trust then distributes
$1,010,000 to the beneficiary before the end of Year
1. Under section 664(b)(1), $20,000 of the
distribution is characterized in the hands of the
beneficiary as dividend income. The rest of the
distribution, $990,000, is attributable to an amount
received by the trust that did not represent either
cash contributed to the trust or a return of basis
in any contributed asset sold by the trust during
Year 1. Under paragraph (b)(3) of this section, the
stock is a trust asset because it was not purchased
with the proceeds of the borrowing. Therefore, in
Year 1, under paragraph (b)(1) of this section, the
trust is treated as having sold $990,000 of stock
and as having realized $792,000 of capital gain (the
trust's basis in the shares deemed sold is
$198,000). Thus, in the hands of the beneficiary,
$792,000 of the distribution is characterized as
capital gain under section 664(b)(2) and $198,000 is
characterized as a tax-free return of corpus under
section 664(b)(4). No part of the $990,000 loan is
treated as acquisition indebtedness under section
514(c) because the entire loan has been
recharacterized as a deemed sale.
Example 2.
Adjustment to trust's basis in assets deemed sold.
The facts are the same as in Example 1.
During Year 2, the trust sells the stock for
$2,100,000. The trustee uses a portion of the
proceeds of the sale to repay the outstanding loan,
plus accrued interest. Under paragraph (b)(4) of
this section, the trust's adjusted basis in the
stock is $1,192,000 ($400,000 plus the $792,000 of
gain recognized in Year 1). Therefore, the trust
recognizes capital gain (as described in section
664(b)(2)) in Year 2 of $908,000.
Example 3.
Distribution of cash contributions. Upon the
death of D, the proceeds of a life insurance policy
on D's life are payable to T, a charitable remainder
annuity trust. The terms of the trust provide that,
for a period of three years commencing upon D's
death, the trust shall pay an annuity amount equal
to $x annually to A, the child of D. After the
expiration of such three-year period, the remainder
interest in the trust is to be transferred to
charity Z. In Year 1, the trust receives payment of
the life insurance proceeds and pays the appropriate
pro rata portion of the $x annuity to A from the
insurance proceeds. During Year 1, the trust has no
income. Because the entire distribution is
attributable to a cash contribution (the insurance
proceeds) to the trust for which a charitable
deduction was allowable under section 2055 with
respect to the present value of the remainder
interest passing to charity, the trust will not be
treated as selling a pro rata portion of the trust
assets under paragraph (b)(1) of this section. Thus,
the distribution is characterized in A's hands as a
tax-free return of corpus under section 664(b)(4).
(d) Effective
date. --This section is applicable to
distributions made by a charitable remainder trust
after
October 18, 1999
. [Reg. §1.643(a)-8.]
.01 Historical Comment: Proposed
10/18/99
. Adopted
1/4/2001
by T.D.
8926.
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