I have a client who is an executor of his mom's estate and a trustee of a Qualified Revocable Trust. I made the election on Form 8855 to treat the Qual. Rev. Trust as Part of the Estate. In the Trust document, it states the following:
Upon the death of, Deceased Mom, the remaining balance of the trust estate including any accumulated but undistributed net income and capital gains distribution shall be distributed as follows (this return will be an initial and a final):
30% Beneficiary one
30% Beneficiary two
The remaining balance shall be distributed in equal shares as follows:
(1) equal share to Charity One
(2) equal shares to Charity Two
(1) equal share to Charity Three
(1) equal share to Charity Four
The Charities are defined and an address is also stated in the trust document.
The total amount distributed to the four charities is more than the total income by almost $32,000. At first I thought that since the charitable distributions were more than the adjusted total income, I wouldn't need to show distributions to beneficiary one or two and I could report the trust income and distributions to charities only. I determined this would be proper reporting after reading the following:
"Distributions from a trust to charitable organizations are not considered distributions to beneficiaries for purposes of the distribution deduction (Regs. Sec. 1.663(a)-2). Rather, distributions to charities are deductible only if they meet the requirements of Sec 642(c).
Under Sec. 642(c)(1), a trust is allowed a deduction in computing its taxable income for any amount of gross income, without limitation, that under the terms of the governing instrument is, during the tax year, paid for a charitable purpose. Because a charitable deduction is available only if the source of the contribution is gross income, tracing the contribution is required to determine its source."
Due to concerns that I may be looking at this too simply, I reached out to a trust department at a large bank to confirm that I could show all income was distributed to charities and therefore no tax would be due. They agreed that I was preparing the return correctly.
However I am concerned that I was given bad advice. After reading IRS Final Regulations on Sec 642(c), I now believe that the interest, dividends, cap gains, and other income has to be allocated pro rata shares.
Any guidance would be greatly appreciated.
Upon the death of, Deceased Mom, the remaining balance of the trust estate including any accumulated but undistributed net income and capital gains distribution shall be distributed as follows (this return will be an initial and a final):
30% Beneficiary one
30% Beneficiary two
The remaining balance shall be distributed in equal shares as follows:
(1) equal share to Charity One
(2) equal shares to Charity Two
(1) equal share to Charity Three
(1) equal share to Charity Four
The Charities are defined and an address is also stated in the trust document.
The total amount distributed to the four charities is more than the total income by almost $32,000. At first I thought that since the charitable distributions were more than the adjusted total income, I wouldn't need to show distributions to beneficiary one or two and I could report the trust income and distributions to charities only. I determined this would be proper reporting after reading the following:
"Distributions from a trust to charitable organizations are not considered distributions to beneficiaries for purposes of the distribution deduction (Regs. Sec. 1.663(a)-2). Rather, distributions to charities are deductible only if they meet the requirements of Sec 642(c).
Under Sec. 642(c)(1), a trust is allowed a deduction in computing its taxable income for any amount of gross income, without limitation, that under the terms of the governing instrument is, during the tax year, paid for a charitable purpose. Because a charitable deduction is available only if the source of the contribution is gross income, tracing the contribution is required to determine its source."
Due to concerns that I may be looking at this too simply, I reached out to a trust department at a large bank to confirm that I could show all income was distributed to charities and therefore no tax would be due. They agreed that I was preparing the return correctly.
However I am concerned that I was given bad advice. After reading IRS Final Regulations on Sec 642(c), I now believe that the interest, dividends, cap gains, and other income has to be allocated pro rata shares.
Any guidance would be greatly appreciated.
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