The Star Late Edition

Making distributi­ons to trust beneficiar­ies to save tax at all costs |

- Phia van der Spuy

A TRUST CAN hold and distribute trust funds at any time, but this must be done in accordance with both the terms of the trust instrument and the purpose for which the trust was created.

This may involve distributi­ng the income of the trust among family members in a tax-effective way over many years, or providing capital from the trust at a time when it will most benefit the beneficiar­ies in the future, for example when purchasing a home.

In practice, often trustees disregard the purpose for which the trust was set up, as reflected in its objective in the trust instrument, and blindly allocate all income and capital gains to beneficiar­ies (without making any payment to them) in an attempt to avoid or save tax.

Little do they realise that they are slowly undoing the purpose of the trust. The tax tail should never wag the estate plan dog.

The vesting of trust assets in beneficiar­ies may negate the benefit of asset protection. It was held in the ITC 76 case of 1927 that a “vested right was something substantia­l; something which could be measured in money; something which had a present value and could be attached”.

The benefit arising from a vested right will therefore be exposed to the risk of attacks from creditors in the event of financial difficulty on the part of a beneficiar­y thereby negating one of the main benefits of using a trust for asset protection.

Creditors can, however, only have the same rights as a beneficiar­y where payment or delivery is to be made at the discretion of the trustees.

A creditor will not be able to demand immediate payment or delivery or to be given preferenti­al treatment over the beneficiar­y in any way.

Many trust instrument­s stipulate that in the event of a beneficiar­y’s insolvency, the beneficiar­y will be deemed to have died, and the amount will cease to be payable to the beneficiar­y, and, by consequenc­e, their creditors.

This is not allowed.

A “vested right” is defined as a “right accrued to a possessor with no conditions”, or the legal definition being “a right belonging completely and unconditio­nally to a person as a property interest which cannot be impaired or taken away without the consent of the owner”.

A vested right cannot be conditiona­l, it then never existed in the first place.

The trustees must carefully consider the provisions of the trust instrument when establishi­ng what their specific powers are regarding the making of distributi­ons – are they allowed to retain distributi­ons once they have been made, and are they allowed to invest such retained distributi­ons in the name of the trust, or must they invest it in the name of the relevant beneficiar­y?

Even though the ownership of such distributi­on lies with the beneficiar­y once it “vests” for tax purposes, often trustees retain it in the trust and invest it in the name of the trust, rather than in the name of the beneficiar­y.

This equates to a loan to the trust from the beneficiar­y, to the extent of the amount that “vested” in that beneficiar­y.

In these circumstan­ces, a loan agreement should be drawn up which stipulates the repayment terms, as well as whether it is interest-bearing or interest-free.

If the loan is interest-free or attracts interest at a rate below the variable official rate of interest, Donations Tax will be payable on the interest “donated” in terms of Section 7C of the Income Tax Act, which taxes loans to trusts from connected persons in relation to those trusts – beneficiar­ies of those trusts or connected persons in relation to such beneficiar­ies – with interest rates charged at below the variable official rate of interest.

The SA Revenue Service confirmed this view in a Binding Private Ruling (BPR 350) on August 26 last year, dealing with the tax treatment of the vesting of a capital gain in a beneficiar­y of a trust where payment of the capital gain is deferred at the discretion of the trustees and the capital gain is invested on behalf of the beneficiar­y and not the trust for its benefit.

If the investment or money is being held on behalf of the beneficiar­y, then no loan account exists since the beneficiar­y has a “vested” right in the investment or money, and any income or benefits arising from such investment will accrue directly to the beneficiar­y.

Since Section 1 of the Income Tax Act defines “gross income” as “the total amount in cash or otherwise, received by or accrued to or in favour of that resident”, any income earned on the vested amount will be deemed income in the hands of the beneficiar­y and will accrue to the beneficiar­y.

If no income is declared, it will, in all probabilit­y, be necessary to prove that the asset did not yield income.

It is, therefore, essential that trustees carefully word resolution­s when amounts are awarded to beneficiar­ies, especially when these amounts are not actually paid over to beneficiar­ies at the time.

It should stipulate all the terms of the decision in alignment with the trust instrument. Trustees’ actions should also be in alignment with the resolution to avoid any unintended tax consequenc­es.

There are also consequenc­es when a beneficiar­y has amounts owed to them resulting from distributi­ons made, but dies before such amounts are paid. Trust benefits vested in the deceased beneficiar­y, which remain unpaid, is “property” for the purposes of the Estate Duty Act.

This may lead to unforeseen taxes and liquidity issues in a deceased estate if not taken into account during a person’s estate planning.

 ?? PHIA VAN DER SPUY ??
PHIA VAN DER SPUY

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