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Treasury Issues Proposed Regs on ESBTs and Nonresident AliensTreasury Issues Proposed Regs on ESBTs and Nonresident Aliens

Amendments relate to closing a gap in the federal tax rules for electing small business trusts.

Treasury Department
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The Treasury Department has issued a notice of proposed rulemaking (April 29, 2019) to amend regulations relating to electing small business trusts (ESBTs) that are grantor trusts deemed owned (in whole or in part) by nonresident aliens.

S corporations (S corps) restrict ownership to certain persons. An S corp must have one class of stock and must not have more than 100 shareholders. All shareholders must be individuals except for certain qualified trusts or organizations. And, under Internal Revenue Code Section 1361(b)(1)(C), a nonresident alien (NRA) isn’t permitted to be a shareholder.

An ESBT is one type of trust that’s a permitted S corp shareholder.  For the purposes of determining whether the shareholder rules are violated, each “potential current beneficiary” (PCB) of an ESBT is treated as a shareholder. A PCB is each person who at any time is entitled to or may receive at the discretion of any person a distribution from the trust (excluding via exercise of a power of appointment).

Wholly or partial grantor trusts may make ESBT elections. If so, the deemed owner of the grantor trust (or any part thereof) is also a PCB. 

As noted above, an NRA isn’t a permitted shareholder of an S corp. If an NRA became a PCB of an ESBT, under prior rules, the ESBT election would terminate, as well as the S corp status. However, recent changes to the statute altered the rule so that for purposes of IRC Section 1361(b)(1)(C)’s residency requirement only, you needn’t look through the ESBT to each PCB. Now, having an NRA as a PCB of an ESBT won’t cause the S corp election to terminate. 

However, this caused a problematic potential consequence: If the ESBT is a grantor trust with an NRA as the grantor, the S corp income would flow through to the NRA and  wouldn’t be subject to U.S. federal income tax (unless that income was U.S. source fixed or determinable or effectively connected with a U.S. trade or business).  Typically, an ESBT is taxed on its S corp income, which would protect against tax avoidance, but the grantor trust rules override the ESBT provisions. 

The Treasury determined that the expansion of the statute to permit an NRA to be an ESBT PCB wasn’t intended to override the statutory goal of subjecting all S corp income to federal income tax. The proposed regulations close the gap by requiring that if a deemed owner of a grantor trust that’s elected to be an ESBT is an NRA, the portion of income otherwise allocable to the grantor must be reallocated to the ESBT. The regulations do so by amending Treasury Regulation Sections 1.641-(c)-1 and 1.1361-1 and are proposed to become effective for all ESBTs after Dec. 31, 2017.

About the Authors

David A. Handler

 

David A. Handler is a partner in the Trusts and Estates Practice Group of Kirkland & Ellis LLP.  David is a fellow of the American College of Trust and Estate Counsel (ACTEC), a member of the NAEPC Estate Planning Hall of Fame as an Accredited Estate Planner (Distinguished), and a member of the professional advisory committees of several non-profit organizations, including the Chicago Community Trust, The Art Institute of Chicago, The Goodman Theatre, WTTW11/98.7WFMT (Chicago public broadcasting stations) and the American Society for Technion - Israel Institute of Technology. He is among a handful of trusts & estates attorneys featured in the top tier in Chambers USA: America's Leading Lawyers for Business in the Wealth Management category, is listed in The Best Lawyers in America and is recognized as an "Illinois Super Lawyer" bySuper Lawyers magazine. The October 2011 edition of Leading Lawyers Magazine lists David as one of the "Top Ten Trust, Will & Estate" lawyers in Illinois as well as a "Top 100 Consumer" lawyer in Illinois. 

He is a member of the Tax Management Estates, Gifts and Trusts Advisory Board, and an Editorial Advisory Board Member of Trusts & Estates Magazine for which he currently writes the monthly "Tax Update" column. David is a co-author of a book on estate planning, Drafting the Estate Plan: Law and Forms. He has authored many articles that have appeared in prominent estate planning and taxation journals, magazines and newsletters, including Lawyer's Weekly, Trusts & Estates Magazine, Estate Planning Magazine, Journal of Taxation, Tax Management Estates, Gifts and Trusts Journal. He is regularly interviewed for trade and news periodicals, including The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, Lawyer's Weekly, Registered Representative, Financial Advisor, Worth and Bloomberg Wealth Manager magazines. 

David is a frequent lecturer at professional education seminars. David concentrates his practice on trust and estate planning and administration, representing owners of closely-held businesses, principals of private equity/venture capital/LBO funds, executives and families of significant wealth, and establishing and administering private foundations, public charities and other tax-exempt entities. 

David is a graduate of Northwestern University School of Law and received a B.S. Degree in Finance with highest honors from the University of Illinois College of Commerce.

Alison E. Lothes

Partner, Gilmore, Rees & Carlson, P.C.

http://www.grcpc.com

 

Alison E. Lothes is a partner at Gilmore, Rees & Carlson, P.C., located in Wellesley, Massachusetts. Ms. Lothes focuses on estate planning for high net worth individuals including estate, gift and generation-skipping transfer tax planning, will and trust preparation, estate and trust administration, and charitable giving.  Ms. Lothes previously practiced at Kirkland & Ellis LLP (Chicago, Illinois) and Sullivan & Worcester LLP (Boston, Massachusetts).