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Estate
Planners Flip for
Family Limited Partnerships
The
family limited partnership has proven itself an extremely valuable
tool for both business and estate planning. What other tool can
ease or even eliminate the tax bite often associated with transferring
the metal center businessor its incometo family members,
all the while keeping the owners current tax bills to a minimum?
Transferring
assets or income-producing property to children or other family
members can be an invaluable tax planning and tax-reducing tool.
Income can be shifted to an individual in a lower tax bracket than
the donor. Whats more, under our tax rules, the transfer of
an interest in a partnership can represent a future increase in
value. In other words, the legitimate deferral of taxable gain.
Unfortunately,
since 1997, the Internal Revenue Service has been waging war over
the estate and gift tax consequences of family limited partnerships
or FLPs. Initially, the IRS was unsuccessful in attacking these
entities and their tax benefits. Recently, however, the IRS has
achieved some success in the courts, situations that were reviewed
by the appellate courts with mixed results. However, because of
its significant tax and non-tax advantages, the FLP remains a popular
entity, one that every metal center owner should consider. Naturally,
the advice of a competent adviser should be sought, if only to avoid
doing battle with the IRS.
FLP
defined
A Family
Limited Partnership is simply a limited partnership consisting of
the members of a family. A limited partnership has both general
partners (the ones who actually run the partnership) and limited
partners (who are passive or non-involved investors). General partners
have unlimited personal liability for partnership obligations, while
limited partners have no liability beyond their capital contributions.
Typically,
a partnership is formed by the older generation, usually the parents,
who contribute assets to the partnership in return for both general
partnership units and limited partnership units. The parents can
then embark on a plan of giving unlimited partnership units to their
children and grandchildren while retaining the general partnership
units that actually control the partnership.
Any
type of property can be contributed to an FLP. For example, FLPs
have been formed to hold family compounds, rental real property,
marketable securities and, of course, the family metal center business.
Thus, the parents might retain control of the business, draw a salary
or wages from it, all the while sharing the profits with other family
members who are taxed on those profits at a lower tax rate than
the parents/owners.
The
partnership agreement usually governs how partnership income is
divided among the partners. Generally, both the general and the
limited partners will share in income and cash flow based on their
respective share or percentage of interest in the partnership. Of
course, although income tax liability passes through to each partner
automatically, actual cash does not have to be distributed to the
partners until the general partners decide to make a distribution.
In
this manner, the general partners retain control over the assets
in the FLP while the limited partners are granted very limited rights.
Limited partners also have restrictions on their ability to transfer
their partnership units to others so that the general partners can
prevent units from being transferred outside the family.
Value
of FLP discounts
As part of establishing a partnership, property and assets are transferred
into the partnership. Frequently this involves a transfer tax at
the state level. Because of the lack of an established market for
the sale of limited partnerships, not to mention the lack of control
that limited partners have, the limited partnership interests are
often valued at a discount for transfer tax purposesas
well as federal valuation purposes.
Valuation
discounts for limited partnership interestsreductions from
the net asset value of the partnershipcan range from 15 percent
to more than 50 percent.
The
tax benefit of the discounted value of the partnership interests,
coupled with significant non-tax benefits such as liability protection
and centralized management, contributed to the historical popularity
of the limited partnership, as did the ability of the contributing
partner to participate in the management of the partnership as a
general partner.
Say
John Doe owns a metal center business that has been in the family
for over 50 years. The family business consists of a small parcel
of land, some buildings and a couple of vehicles with a value of
about $5 million.
John
Doe is focused on keeping the business in the family and avoiding
the management issues usually associated with fractional ownership.
With the assistance of an experienced professional, John organizes
a limited partnership to hold the physical assets, the land, buildings
and vehicles of the family business. John Doe and his son Ralph,
who will manage the property after Johns death, are the two
general partners, together owning a 1 percent interest equally.
John
contributes the family business to the partnership for a 99-percent
limited partnership interest, while Ralph contributes cash or other
assets for his interest.
Assuming
that a 40-percent discount can be sustained when valuing the partnership
interest, the value of John Does estate is reduced by $2 million
(the difference between the family business being valued at $5 million
and the family limited partnership interest being valued at approximately
$3 million after the 40 percent discount). That can mean estate
tax savings of as much as $1 millionassuming, of course, that
the estate tax remains a factor on the federal level.
Despite
the repeal of the estate tax, temporary as it may be, the benefit
of reduced asset value through significant valuation discounts remains
a factor for gift tax purposes.
FLPs
vs. the IRS
The FLP has not escaped IRS scrutiny, however. As family limited
partnerships grew increasingly more popular, the IRS commenced a
series of attacks on their tax benefits. The initial attacks came
in the form of TAMs or Technical Advice Memorandums,
a series of IRS rulings attacking FLPs with a variety of legal arguments.
Those attacks usually involved extreme situations involving terminally
ill individuals and transfers made by family members by power of
attorney.
Typical
of the arguments used by the IRS was that there was a gift of the
limited partnership interest. Since assets transferred into the
partnership and the limited partnership interest received in exchange
was valued at a discount, the value of the assets transferred into
the partnership usually exceeded the value of the limited partnership
interest. The IRS contended that the reduction in net worth of the
contributing partner was a gift by that partner on creation of the
partnership.
In
2000, not one, but two, rulings by the U.S. Tax Court shot down
that argument as well as several others put forth in the course
of the IRSs FLP crackdown. In one of those cases, the appellate
court, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, upheld the
taxpayers position.
The
appeal revolved around the IRSs contention that the value
of the assets the decedent transferred to the partnership should
have been included in her gross estate because the transfer was
not a bona fide sale for full and adequate consideration. The appeals
court concluded: There is nothing inconsistent in acknowledging
on the one hand that the investors dollars have acquired a
limited partnership interest at arms length for adequate and
full consideration and, on the other hand, that the asset thus acquired
has a present, fair market value, i.e., immediate sale potential,
of substantially less than the dollars just paida classic
informed trade-off.
Also
on appeal, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit agreed
with the Fifth Circuit that it is not always necessary to have a
so-called arms length transaction. According to
the court, while a bona fide sale does not necessarily require
an arms length transaction, it still must be in good faith.
A good faith transfer to a family limited partnership
must provide the transferor some potential for benefit other than
the potential estate tax savings that might result from holding
assets in the partnership form.
Obviously,
using an FLP requires both careful analysis and strict compliance
with IRS regulations. The IRS continues, with mixed success, to
challenge FLPs in the courts. That should not deter any metal center
operator with an honest desire to transfer his or her business,
or its income, to family members. After all, none of those IRS challenges
has been successful in eliminating FLPs, nor have they severely
affected any metal center owner that closely adhered to the rules.
Mark
E. Battersby, Ardmore, Pa., is a freelance writer and editor specializing
in finance and tax-related topics. He can be reached at 610-789-2480
or by e-mail at mebatt12@earthlink.net.
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