Karl Hendricks was a man with the
golden touch. Throughout his life,
it seemed every investment idea that
he touched turned to gold. By far,
Karl was most successful with real
estate investments. It was
definitely his passion.
Amazingly, Karl continued to buy and
sell real estate at the age of 85.
For instance, about three months
ago, Karl discovered a great
investment property. It was a
"fixer-upper" commercial building in
a great area. While other nearby
buildings sold for over $2 million,
the seller needed to sell quickly
and was asking just $1 million.
The condition of the building turned
many buyers away. It was being sold
"as-is." But Karl was not deterred.
He could see great potential with
the building and knew it would not
take much to get it to market
condition. Therefore, Karl swooped
in, bought the building for $1
million and instantly hired
contractors to refurbish the place.
After three months of hard work
refurbishing the building, the place
looked like new! In the end, Karl
invested $250,000 in the building
bringing his total investment in the
property to $1.25 million. One month
after the completion of the work,
Karl was contacted informally by a
company that expressed an interest
in the building - a $2 million
interest! This was no surprise to
Karl. He knew the building was
another great buy.
There was one downside to the idea
of selling, however. Karl held the
property only 4 months which meant
the gain from the sale would be
short-term capital gain. In other
words, the applicable tax rate would
be 35%, not 15%. Karl cringed at the
thought of paying a 1/3 of his gain
to the government. At the same time,
Karl knew the real estate market
could change direction in the next
year. So, although Karl wanted the
15% tax rate, Karl did not want to
risk holding the property another 8
months.
Question
Karl wanted a zero tax sale exit
strategy. In other words, he wanted
to sell and pay no tax. Can Karl
sell the building, bypass the tax on
the sale of the property and receive
cash?
Solution
Based upon Karl's situation and
goals, a "Sale and FLIP CRUT" would
be an excellent option. Prior to any
binding sale agreement, Karl could
transfer an undivided interest in
his property into the FLIP CRUT. In
this case, the potential buyer
merely expressed an interest in the
property. Because there was no
legally binding agreement between
Karl and any buyer, there was no
prearranged sale problem.
Once the undivided interest in the
property was transferred into the
FLIP CRUT, the trust would list and
sell the property. It would be
advisable for the trust to handle
the sale of Karl's portion as well.
(See GiftLaw Pro 4.7.5 for a full
discussion on this issue.)
The trust would owe no taxes on the
portion of the property it sold
because the trust would be exempt
from income taxes. Accordingly, the
FLIP CRUT would meet Karl's first
goal - avoiding an immediate 1/3 tax
bite. However, Karl would have
taxable income from the sale of his
portion of the property. Thus, the
goal was to use the FLIP CRUT
charitable deduction to offset any
taxable income from his sale of the
property.
The key question for Karl was what
percentage to transfer to the FLIP
CRUT and what percentage to retain.
Pursuant to IRC Section 170(e), Karl
would receive a charitable income
tax deduction based upon the cost
basis in the property, not its fair
market value. Section 170(e) does
not allow a donor to claim a
charitable income tax deduction for
a property's non-long term gain
element. In this case, all of the
gain on the property would be short
term capital gain, so Section 170(e)
would apply. The reduced deduction
would ultimately affect the zero tax
calculation.
Based upon these considerations,
Karl decided to transfer 45% of his
property into the FLIP CRUT and
retain 55% of the property. Upon the
sale of the property for $2 million,
the trust received $900,000 ($2M x
45%) and Karl received $1,100,000
($2M x 55%). Karl's deduction was
$424,401 and saved him about
$148,540. The deduction was subject
to the 50% AGI limitation since it
was a basis deduction. But, given
Karl's enormous AGI for this year,
the limitation would not pose a
problem.
Karl owed $144,375 as a result of
the sale of his portion of the
property. However, Karl's $148,540
of tax savings from his charitable
deduction fully offset his $144,375
tax liability resulting in a zero
tax sale. Exactly what he wanted!
The zero tax sale plan clearly met
all of Karl's objectives. In the
end, Karl walked away with
$1,100,000, a $900,000 FLIP CRUT and
no tax payment to the government. He
thought, "Not bad for only 4 months'
work!"