Posts Tagged Dan Duncan
Steinbrenner Heirs Face Uphill Battle to Win $600 Million Estate Tax Loophole
Posted by Jerry Cooper in News on July 17, 2010
Public outrage and political theater over billionaires dying tax-free this year have prompted lawmakers to put a lid on this issue quickly while Democrats are still in charge.
Billionaire George Steinbrenner, owner of the New York Yankees, died this week at the age of 80. He was a man with the Midas touch and possessed a perfect instinct for impeccable timing.
Timing again was on his side for dying in a year with no federal estate taxes on the books. News reports from NBC, the Washington Post and the New York Times brought this to the public’s attention.
The Trust Advisor Blog ran a story in January on this topic. At the time, many of our readers and our contributors said this was too good to be true. And as often is the case, when something is too good to be true, it seldom is.
Now that the genie of public outrage is out of the bottle, there will certainly be an argument over whether Steinbrenner’s heirs will avoid up to $600 million in estate tax. Lawmakers in Washington are already using his good name to prevent billion-dollar estates from passing tax-free.
Senator Bernard Sanders (I-VT) and four co-sponsors have introduced a bill that would retroactively return the estate tax to the 2009 exemption level of $3.5 million with a progressive tax rate structure starting at 45% with a 10% surcharge on billionaires.
The debate started last March following the death of Texas pipeline mogul Dan Duncan, who died at 77 with an estimated net worth of $9 billion, ranking him as the 74th wealthiest person in the world. Under the Sanders proposal, that $9 billion would generate billions of dollars in government revenue.
Lawmakers had a chance to fix the estate tax several months ago, saving Duncan and Steinbrenner’s heirs millions, in a proposal that would have given Republicans just about everything they asked for, including a $5 million exemption rising with inflation and a maximum of 35% maximum rates. But because of party bickering, lawmakers couldn’t agree—and here we are.
Public outcry over billionaire dying tax-free makes great political theater, matching the fuss created in 1995 when President Bill Clinton and Congress plugged the expatriation loophole that let billionaires like Ken Dart escape U.S. estate taxes by renouncing their citizenship and moving to Belize.
Some of the strongest outrage has come from Congress itself. When asked to summarize Senator Sanders’ position, aide Michael Briggs pointed me to a speech he made the day Steinbrenner died.
“We have a situation now where the very wealthiest people in this country are seeing that when someone in their family dies, the estate tax is zero,” the senator said, concluding with “In my view, it is immoral it is unfair that while the middle class struggles to survive, millionaires and billionaire’s get tax breaks.”
Where the rhetoric meets the road
Given that sentiment, it’s not surprising that Sanders and his allies are pushing a bill that would retroactively tax Steinbrenner and others who have died in the last seven months. Meanwhile, Blanche Lincoln of Arkansas and John Kyl have revived their bipartisan proposal, and more would-be fixes and compromises will probably emerge over the next few months.
Right now, it’s all still political theater, says estate planner Phil Kavesh.
“I think this is definitely not going to get resolved until the November election, and at this point will probably be pushed back to January when the new Congress takes office,” he says.
The logic is a little cynical, Kavesh admits, but everyone I talked to agrees.
On one hand, every billionaire who dies is an embarrassment for lawmakers who were supposed to close the loophole last year.
But on the other, the longer the Senate keeps us all in suspense, the more time both Democrats and Republicans have to collect contributions from the upper-middle-class families that will be exposed to the estate tax next year if nothing happens.
“If the estate tax came back next year with only a $1 million exemption, that would be devastating for a lot of relatively middle-class people,” Kavesh notes.
More complicated than it looks
While some members of Congress may think it will be easy to bang out an amendment that raises the exemption back to $3.5 million, by the time November rolls around the budget could tie their hands.
Thanks to “pay as you go” rules, in order to exempt more estates from the tax means finding about $60 billion in additional revenue, or cutting that much from federal spending. Neither is an especially attractive option, but Sanders, Lincoln, Kyl and others are working on solutions.
The Sanders bill, for example, would create a special “billionaire’s tax” designed to spare 99.7% of all families from paying any estate tax at all, while skimming off 65% of what high rollers like Steinbrenner leave behind.
Retroactive headaches
“If I were the executor for the estate of Art Linkletter, George Steinbrenner, Dennis Hopper or any of the other wealthy people who’ve passed away in the past six months, I would be stalling any distributions until I got some clarity,” says Bill Ahern, policy director of the non-profit Tax Foundation.
That’s because Sanders wants to make his tax retroactive to the beginning of 2010 to bring in revenue from the billionaire deaths we’ve seen so far this year—assuming, of course, that they left any taxable assets behind and not in trusts or other tax-shielded vehicles.
“Sad but true, when people mention these billionaires dying in a year of no estate tax, I wonder in the back of my mind how much they would have paid last year,” Phil Kavesh says. “These people can afford very sophisticated legal counsel to avoid estate tax, but this topic has such political cachet that it may trap people in the upper middle class as well.”
Although Max Baucus and the Senate Finance Committee have backpedaled away from retroactivity as the year drags on, it’s anything but a dead issue, Bill Ahern says. As long as it gets the votes, it has a good shot at fending off any constitutional concerns.
“The Supreme Court has been very kind to retroactive taxation, especially within one year,” says Ahern.
Phil Kavesh isn’t so sure. “Quite frankly, retroactivity might not be a workable solution at this point in the year,” he says. “Enough big estates have been affected so far that there is a lot of money at stake, and that means a lot of money to fund fights in the court system that could go on for years.”
The silver lining for estate planners
As a result, Kavesh suspects we could end up with the $1 million exemption after all, at least for as long as it takes to work out a budget-neutral compromise.
Either way, he says it’s the best of times and the worst of times for estate planners. Those who can cope with all the moving parts in play can book a lot of business.
“What with the tax environment shifting as it is, a lot of my clients are seriously looking at taking measures before the end of the year,” he says.
“There’s a lot of rumbling about additional restrictions on certain types of trusts going forward, so whatever happens to the exemption, the time for them to act is now.”
Jerry Cooper, senior editor, The Trust Advisor Blog. Steven Maimes and Scott Martin contributed to the research and reporting.
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Billionaire’s Heirs First to Win 2010 Estate Tax Jackpot
Posted by Scott Martin in News on April 10, 2010
Washington lawmakers’ estate tax hiatus has now potentially cost the IRS billions in lost tax collections. Experts say death of Texas billionaire Dan Duncan makes retroactive reinstatement of the death tax less likely because the stakes are now a lot higher.
Houston gas pipeline mogul Dan Duncan was the 74th richest person in the world when he died on March 28. If he’d passed away three months earlier or ten months later, his $9 billion estate could have generated up to $4 billion for the IRS. But because there’s no federal estate tax this year, the government gets nothing.
As the first billionaire to die in this year without an estate tax, Duncan presents a tempting opportunity for a revenue-strapped Congress to follow through on threats to reinstate the tax for 2010 and possibly even make it retroactive to the beginning of the year.
However, probate gurus say the sheer amount of money on the table makes a retroactive tax more unlikely. Big estates mean big lawyers ready to fight to see those billions of dollars go to the deceased’s heirs, and the headaches could go on for years.
“I never imagined it would get this far,” Joel Dobris, an estate planning professor at University of California-Davis, told me.
“The longer they wait, the stronger the ‘no retroactivity’ argument sounds,” he added. “Maybe they waited too long.”
The lack of clarity has already weighed on less monumental estates for months, says Don Ford, founder of Houston law firm Ford & Mathiason.
“We’ve had two clients fall into this already,” he told me. “They’ve died this year and would have had taxable estates under either last year’s rule or next year’s rule. But now we’ve just got to hang on and see what happens.”
Ticking Clock, High Stakes
Ford has heard that all the movers and shakers in Washington agree that the hole in the estate tax has got to be fixed, but nobody can agree on how to do it.
If nothing happens, the tax will reset in 2011 with an exemption of $1 million and a maximum rate of 50%. That would make a lot of upper-middle-class voters unhappy, Joel Dobris says, so the prospect of doing nothing isn’t popular in Congress.
Late last year, the House approved an eleventh-hour plan to keep the tax alive in 2010 under the 2009 rules, which impose a maximum 45% tax rate on estates worth over $3.5 million. But the bill went nowhere in the Senate, feeding speculation that when and if Congress reinstates the tax for this year, it would be on a retroactive basis to cover those who died after January 1.
Back in January, estate planner Phil Kavesh told me that whatever happens, making the tax retroactive would be a bit like Russian roulette: the longer the game goes on, the more dangerous it gets.
“Sooner or later, some billionaire will die this year, and then there’s a real incentive to argue that any kind of retroactive law is invalid,” he said.
Not a Big Revenue Source
Nobody in Congress really expected a billionaire of Dan Duncan’s caliber to die this year without significant estate protection already in place.
In fact, the Congressional Joint Committee on Taxation estimated last year that restoring the estate tax at 2009 levels would have only added about $468 million to the federal government’s 2010 revenue.
That kind of cash really wouldn’t have made much more than a symbolic difference in a $3.5 trillion operating budget. But symbolism matters a lot in Washington these days, UC-Davis professor Joel Dobris told me.
Duncan gave away hundreds of millions of dollars over his lifetime to local hospitals, schools, community groups, and other charitable organizations. Details of his estate plan aren’t available, but it’s likely he made huge additional bequests to be paid after his death.
If his advisors were up to the job, the bulk of his remaining wealth was probably held in trust, so it probably wouldn’t be subject to estate tax either way. (There’s no Texas estate tax, so that’s not an issue in this case.)
However, a significant slice—about $362 million, according to my math—of his fortune was locked up in a controlling stake of the energy partnerships he’d built or bought over the years.
The absence of federal estate tax this year frees his heirs from the need to liquidate that equity in order to pay the IRS. As a result, the Duncan family has already announced that it won’t be selling out soon.
Looking Ahead
For the rest of us, the clock is ticking and the spring and summer Congressional recesses are ahead. It’s theoretically possible that gridlock and inertia will leave the door open for more billionaires to leave tax-free estates this year, in which case Houston lawyer Don Ford worries that the retroactivity issue could come back in 2011.
“Does this get pushed back to next year when it becomes a real issue, and then they try to make the new exemption and rates retroactive?” he wonders. “That’s when it becomes a little unsettling.”
No matter what happens to the estate tax, Ford told me that his clients take comfort in the trusts and other estate planning instruments he’s put in place for them. “Uncertainty like this only demonstrates the value of what we do,” he told me
Scott Martin, contributing editor, The Trust Advisor Blog. Steven Maimes contributed to the research.
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