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Chapter 7: Charitable Giving

367

available after the participant’s death (see

¶ 4.2.04 (

C); if the problem is discovered while

the client is still living, urge the client to roll over the money to an IRA to avert the problem.

Pecuniary bequests:

The foregoing rationale applies to the transfer of retirement benefits,

intact, from a trust (or estate) to the residuary beneficiary(ies) of the trust (or estate). This

approach is recommended

only

with respect to a sole residuary beneficiary or (if there are

multiple residuary beneficiaries) to any of mults. It may not work with respect to a

pecuniary (fixed-dollar) gift or bequest. The IRS Chief Counsel has opined that a trustee’s

transfer of retirement benefits in fulfillment of a

pecuniary

gift (in contrast to a fractional

or percentage gift) is treated as a “sale” of such benefits, triggering immediate realization

of income to the funding trust unde

r § 691(a)(2) .

See Chief Counsel Advice (CCA) 2006-

44020, discussed at

¶ 6.5.08 .

7.4.06

How to name a charity as beneficiary through a trust

Here are guidelines to follow if retirement benefits are to be paid to a trust at the client’s

death, and the trust is to make distributions to charities, and you want the gross income resulting

from the retirement plan distributions not to be taxable to the trust, and you also want the maximum

estate tax benefit for making the charitable gifts.

These guidelines assume that all or most of the retirement benefits will pass to charity, so

that there is no need to be concerned about preserving a “life expectancy of the oldest trust

beneficiary” payout for the trust. Preserving a life expectancy payout for noncharitable

beneficiaries under a trust when part of the retirement benefits are to be paid to charity is addressed

at

¶ 7.3 .

Specify that no estate taxes are to be charged against or paid out of the charity’s share.

This is required IF you do not want the estate tax charitable deduction to be reduced by the

amount of the estate taxes paid out of the charity’s share. Since reducing the charitable

deduction would further increase the estate taxes, paying estate taxes out of the charity’s

share requires a circular calculation to determine the deduction.

Specify that the retirement plan benefits must be used first to fund the charitable

bequests

, and that nonretirement assets are to be used for this purpose only if there are no

other assets available. This assures that the trustee will not be required (by state law

equitable apportionment principles, the “separate share rule” of

§ 663 ,

or otherwise) to

assign proportionate shares of the retirement benefits and other assets to all beneficiaries;

see

¶ 7.4.05 .

Specify that the trustee has authority to distribute assets in kind.

This will assure that

the trustee can transfer the retirement plans directly to the charities to fulfill their shares,

rather than being compelled to withdraw funds from the retirement plans and then distribute

funds to the charities. See

¶ 7.4.05 .