Family Limited Partnerships as Estate Planning Vehicles: All Vehicles Should Be Driven Defensively
October 23, 2003
William R. "Bill" Lane- Tampa
“Defensive drivers” exhibit behaviors that enhance their
safety: scanning the road, gripping the steering wheel at 10 and 2 (o’clock) and
anticipating the actions of other drivers. In a number of recent cases, the IRS
has challenged the estate and gift tax benefits offered by family limited
partnerships (FLPs). In each of these cases, family members failed to respect
the integrity of the entity and drove a perfectly good estate planning vehicle
into a ditch. A review of these cases provides a number of defensive driving
techniques to increase the chances that your FLP will stay safely on the
road.
Recently, the IRS has attacked FLPs by challenging
valuation discounts claimed by taxpayers for lack of marketability and lack of
control and by seeking to invalidate the FLP altogether for federal transfer tax
purposes. While the former situation is a “pothole,” the latter is a “car
wreck.”
Challenges to Valuation Discounts –Kicking the Tires
Valuation discounts result from the fact that the fair
market value of an interest in a FLP is worth less than a corresponding share of
the fair market value of its underlying assets. For instance, assume that a FLP
owns assets valued at $10 million. A limited partner with a one-percent
interest in the FLP might perceive that she owns one percent of the underlying
assets with a net asset value of $100,000. If that limited partner transfers
her one-percent interest to another party in a transaction subject to federal
gift or estate taxes, its fair market value is determined based upon the price
that a hypothetical buyer would pay to a hypothetical seller.
Most FLPs restrict the liquidation and distribution rights
of their limited partners and, therefore, a hypothetical buyer of the
partnership interest is not likely to pay an amount equal to the net asset value
of the partnership interest. In addition, unlike the owner of publicly traded
securities, an owner of an interest in a FLP does not have an established market
to facilitate the sale of these
privately held property interests and thus a partner wishing to sell her
partnership interest could not count on immediate liquidity. Both of these
factors make it appropriate to discount the underlying assets of the FLP when
valuing a partner’s interest. To complete the foregoing example, if the fair
market value of the one-percent partnership interest (having a net asset value
of $100,000) is found to be $60,000, it can be said that the “discount” applied
to the partnership interest is 40 percent.
In the absence of recent sales, the best available evidence
of the fair market value of a FLP partnership interest is the expert opinion of
a qualified business appraiser. The IRS is most successful in challenging the
valuation of FLP interests when the taxpayer has no objective basis for the
value he reported on a gift or estate tax return or where the taxpayer hired an
appraiser who failed to provide sufficient information and objective analysis to
persuade the court that his opinion on the FLP’s value is more accurate than
that reached by the appraiser retained by the IRS. A recent decision
illustrates this point very well.
In Peracchio (2003), the taxpayer offered the testimony of
two expert witnesses in support of discounts he claimed on gift tax returns for
transfers of FLP interests. The taxpayer’s experts testified that discounts of
35 to 40 percent for lack of marketability and five to 7.7 percent for lack of
control were appropriate measures. Meanwhile, the expert for the IRS arrived at
discounts of 15 percent for lack of marketability and 4.4 percent for lack of
control. While the Court found deficiencies with the analysis offered by all
three experts, the Court ultimately split the difference and sustained discounts
of 25 percent for lack of marketability and six percent for lack of control.
In the final analysis, it comes down to a battle of
appraisers, and the defensive driver who anticipates IRS challenge will take
care to hire the best appraiser he can find.
Challenges to Validity of
FLP – Pull Over Buddy
In a number of recent cases where the courts have allowed
the IRS to completely ignore the existence of the FLP for federal transfer tax
purposes, the creator of the partnership or members of her family failed to
respect the partnership as an entity separate and apart from the family members
who own it.
In Strangi ‘III’ (2003), the Tax Court held that the FLP
should be ignored for transfer tax purposes, largely because the family did not
manage it as a legitimate independent entity. The Court found an implied
agreement between Mr. Strangi and his family that he could retain the right to
the income from the assets contributed by him to the partnership because he
transferred virtually all of his assets to the partnership and had retained
virtually no assets for his own support. His residence was among the assets
contributed to the FLP and he paid no rent to the partnership for his use of the
property. Furthermore, the partnership paid Mr. Strangi’s personal living
expenses.
In Kimbell (2003), the U.S. District Court for the Northern
District of Texas found that Mrs. Kimbell had retained the enjoyment of the
property transferred to the FLP because she had retained sufficient voting
interests to replace the general partner of the partnership with herself or
anyone else of her choosing. Together with the unlimited discretion granted to
the general partner to make distributions, this meant that Mrs. Kimbell had
either retained the power to personally benefit from the income of the
partnership or to designate the persons who would benefit from the partnership.
Enabling the court’s decision in Kimbell was a provision of the partnership
agreement that the general partner did not owe any fiduciary duties to the other
partners.
In Harper (2002), the Tax Court found that the partnership
had a history of making disproportionate distributions in favor of Mr. Harper
and to the detriment of his children, ignoring their respective partnership
interests. In addition, FLP assets were commingled with Mr. Harper’s personal
assets.
In Thompson (2002), the Tax Court found an implied
agreement between Mr. Thompson and his family that he could continue to use and
enjoy the assets contributed to the partnership by reference to the
distributions of partnership assets made to him to facilitate his prior history
of annual cash gifts to the family. Also, funds from the partnership were used
directly to pay his personal expenses.
In Reichardt (2000), the Tax Court allowed the IRS to
ignore the FLP where the senior partner of the FLP had transferred virtually all
of his property, including his residence, to the FLP, for which he paid no
rent. Additionally, partnership income was deposited directly into his personal
accounts, and the partnership checking account was used as one of his personal
accounts.
In Schauerhamer (1997), the Tax Court allowed the IRS to
ignore the partnership where the partnership’s income was deposited not into its
bank accounts, but directly into Mrs. Schauerhamer’s personal accounts. Checks
were written from those personal accounts to pay both personal and partnership
expenses.
Read the Operator’s Manual
As demonstrated by these recent decisions, the IRS is
likely to succeed in its efforts to invalidate a FLP for transfer tax purposes
where the family failed to properly operate the partnership. The IRS will
examine FLP books and records, bank statements and documents conveying property
into the FLP in exchange for partnership interests in an effort to challenge its
validity. It will review distributions to assure that distributions from the
partnership were made in accordance with the partnership agreement. Thus, the
second important defensive driving technique for your FLP is to operate the
vehicle in accordance with the operator’s manual.
Ask for Directions
IRS agents around the country cite these recent cases as
evidence that valuation discounts should be reduced to a nominal amount or that
FLPs should be ignored altogether for transfer tax purposes. In the absence of
a court decision clearly intended to have much broader application than any such
holding to date, nothing could be further from the truth. However, these cases
do reinforce the importance of getting good directions prior to departure with
your FLP and periodically checking to see that you remain on course. The
following checklist may serve as a reference:
- Follow all formalities in forming and operating the FLP.
- The FLP should maintain its own checking account and
maintain good books and records.
- The creator of the FLP should retain sufficient assets
to pay for living expenses.
- If the creator transfers his personal residence to the FLP and continues to occupy the residence, he should pay fair market rent in a
timely manner.
- Partnership distributions should be made on a pro-rata
basis.
- Partnership distributions should not be keyed to the
needs of the creator or his estate.
- The FLP should be formed well in advance of the
creator’s death.
- The FLP should have a bona fide, non-tax business
purpose.
- Each family member should contribute sufficient assets
in exchange for an interest in the FLP where the interest is being purchased and
not gifted.
Many tax practitioners are troubled by the apparent breadth
of the recent holdings in the Strangi ‘III’ and Kimbell decisions, which are
being appealed. These decisions are uniformly viewed by practitioners as the
latest examples of IRS success in dealing with FLPs that were poorly operated.
Some practitioners view these decisions as an ill wind for all FLPs, but it may
be too early to reach that conclusion. It is important to monitor these cases
as they progress through the appeals courts to see if their rationales will be
more broadly applied providing a permanent roadblock to the transfer tax
benefits afforded by FLPs.
Arrive Alive
In summary, defensive driving of the FLP can be practiced
by obtaining a qualified, well-reasoned and objective valuation report when an
interfamily transfer of FLP interests takes place. It is also essential that
the entity be respected and operated in accordance with the terms of the
partnership agreement. Finally, for federal estate tax purposes, it may be
prudent to have the senior family member cede control of the partnership (either
as general partner or as the controlling owner of an entity that is the general
partner) before death, while assuring that the remaining FLP interests held are
not sufficient to allow the senior family member to participate in the power to
remove and replace the general partner at the time of death. Some practitioners
argue that all partnership interests should be divested, but that seems overly
cautious.
Nevertheless, those families where the senior members are
prepared to deal with a real change in their relationship to their assets, and
in fact do so, are driving defensively. Those families who treat the FLP as
merely a recycling or repackaging of assets, may be on their way to a head-on
collision with the IRS. On the other hand, those who drive their FLP
defensively should arrive at their destination safe and financially sound.
For more information, e-mail William R. Lane, Jr. at
william.lane@hklaw.com or call toll free, 1-888-688-8500.