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Tax Law Commons

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Taxation-Federal Estate and Gift

University of Michigan Law School

Internal Revenue Code

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Full-Text Articles in Tax Law

Gifts, Gafts And Gefts: The Income Tax Definition And Treatment Of Private And Charitable 'Gifts' And A Principled Policy Justification For The Exclusion Of Gifts From Income, Douglas A. Kahn, Jeffrey H. Kahn Jan 2003

Gifts, Gafts And Gefts: The Income Tax Definition And Treatment Of Private And Charitable 'Gifts' And A Principled Policy Justification For The Exclusion Of Gifts From Income, Douglas A. Kahn, Jeffrey H. Kahn

Articles

Gifts have been given special treatment by the income tax laws since the first post-16th Amendment tax statute was adopted in 1913. The determination of how the income tax law should treat gifts raises a number of issues. For example: should gifts be given special treatment? If so, what should qualify as a gift? Should gifts to a private party be taxable to the donee? Should gifts to a private party be deductible by the donor? Should the donee's basis in a gift of property be determined by reference to the basis that the donor had, and should any modifications …


Taxation-Federal Estate Tax-Application Of Section 2039 To Benefits Paid To Survivor Under A Deferred Compensation Plan, T. K. Carroll Apr 1963

Taxation-Federal Estate Tax-Application Of Section 2039 To Benefits Paid To Survivor Under A Deferred Compensation Plan, T. K. Carroll

Michigan Law Review

Upon decedent's death, his former employer made certain payments to the surviving widow under two voluntarily established benefit plans which were unfunded and non-qualified. The first of these arrangements, the death benefit plan, provided for three months' salary to be paid to an employee's widow, if the employee died before becoming eligible for retirement. The second, the deferred compensation plan, provided payment of a certain stated maximum to an employee's widow in sixty equal monthly installments. This was not a retirement program, however, since the employee himself would receive these payments if, and only if, he were ever to become …


Taxation - Federal Estate Tax - Effect Of Presidential Freezing Orders On The Creation Of Excludable Bank Deposits For Nonresident Aliens, William Y. Webb Feb 1960

Taxation - Federal Estate Tax - Effect Of Presidential Freezing Orders On The Creation Of Excludable Bank Deposits For Nonresident Aliens, William Y. Webb

Michigan Law Review

Decedent, a citizen and resident of France, was the sole income beneficiary of a trust fund held in New York by the plaintiff as trustee. An executive order, issued pursuant to the Trading with the Enemy Act, prohibited remittance of trust income to the decedent from 1940 to the time of her death in 1946. As this income accrued, the plaintiff's trust department transferred it to the plaintiff's general banking department in its own name as trustee and subject to its order out of current banking funds. In an action by the executor of the decedent-beneficiary's estate to recover an …


Taxation - Federal Estate Tax - Deductibility Of Contingent Bequests To Charity, Jack G. Armstrong S.Ed. Jan 1956

Taxation - Federal Estate Tax - Deductibility Of Contingent Bequests To Charity, Jack G. Armstrong S.Ed.

Michigan Law Review

Testator bequeathed a remainder interest to charitable organizations which was contingent upon her sister, age eighty-two, predeceasing two other women, ages sixty-seven and sixty-eight. The Commissioner disallowed a deduction for this bequest on the ground that it was not certain that charity would receive any benefit. In the district court the parties stipulated that there was an eleven to one chance that charity would receive the bequest. On the basis of this stipulation the district court found for the taxpayer. On appeal, held, reversed. In order for a deduction to be allowed the possibility that charity will not take …


Taxation-Federal Estate Tax-Transfers Of Life Insurance In Contemplation Of Death, Ralph E. Hunt S. Ed. Apr 1949

Taxation-Federal Estate Tax-Transfers Of Life Insurance In Contemplation Of Death, Ralph E. Hunt S. Ed.

Michigan Law Review

Insurance policies on the life of a decedent are ordinarily included in his gross estate according to the provisions of section 811 (g) of the Internal Revenue Code. Where the policy is payable to a beneficiary other than the executor, it is taxable under section 811(g)(2): (1) if the decedent paid premiums on the policy, in proportion to the amount of premiums paid by him in relation to the total premiums paid, or (2) if the decedent possessed at his death any of the incidents of ownership. However, these provisions are not exclusive; even though section 811 (g) is inapplicable, …