ATO Interpretative Decision
ATO ID 2004/458
Income Tax
Capital Gains Tax: CGT event K3 - assets pass to a tax exempt testamentary trustFOI status: may be released
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This document incorporates revisions made since original publication. View its history and amending notices, if applicable.
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Issue
Does CGT event K3 in section 104-215 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (ITAA 1997) happen if assets, owned by a deceased person at the date of their death, pass to a trust established under their will which is an exempt entity and, under the terms of the trust, the assets are to be held in the trust in perpetuity with the trust income to be applied for public charitable purposes?
Decision
Yes. CGT event K3 happens if assets owned by a deceased person at the date of their death pass to a beneficiary in their estate that is an exempt entity when the assets pass. In the circumstances of this case, the testamentary trust is a beneficiary of the estate.
Facts
The deceased died in the 2004 income year.
Under the deceased's will, the residue of their estate is to be held by their executors and trustees on trust (in perpetuity) to apply the income from the trust for public charitable purposes.
The testamentary trust has been endorsed by the ATO under Subdivision 50-B of the ITAA 1997 as an exempt entity, effective upon its commencement, on the basis that it is a registered charity.
The executor has asked whether CGT event K3 happens when the administration of the estate is completed and the residue passes to the testamentary trust.
Reasons for Decision
When a person dies, any capital gain or loss made by them in respect of a CGT asset they owned just before dying is disregarded, unless CGT event K3 applies (sections 128-10 and 104-215 of the ITAA 1997).
CGT event K3 happens if a CGT asset owned by a deceased person just before they died passes to a beneficiary in their estate that is an exempt entity when the asset passes (paragraph 104-215(1)(a) of the ITAA 1997). The time of the event is just before the deceased died which means that any resulting capital gain or loss is accounted for in the final income tax return lodged on behalf of the deceased (referred to as the 'date of death' return) (subsection 104-215(3) of the ITAA 1997).
For these purposes, an exempt entity is an entity whose ordinary and statutory income is exempt because of Division 50 of the ITAA 1997 (subsection 995-1(1) of the ITAA 1997). A trust that is a registered charity will only be exempt if it is endorsed as such by the ATO (section 50-52 of the ITAA 1997).
An asset passes to a beneficiary in an estate if the beneficiary becomes the owner of the asset under the will or in one of the other ways set out in subsection 128-20(1) of the ITAA 1997.
In the circumstances, it is considered that the charitable trust set up under the deceased's will is a beneficiary in the deceased's estate. The trust is a 'purpose' trust in that the assets will be held by the trust in perpetuity and the income of the trust will be used for public charitable purposes. That is, there are no other persons to whom the assets of the trust will eventually pass. Therefore, the testamentary trust is the beneficiary.
The trust will commence at the completion of the administration of the estate. As the trust is an exempt entity from its commencement, CGT event K3 happens when the assets pass to it. The time of the event is just before the deceased died.
Note 1: Law Administration Practice Statement PS LA 2003/12 sets out the Commissioner's practice for 'treating the trustee of a testamentary trust in the same way as a legal representative for capital gains tax purposes'. PS LA 2003/12 has no application in this case because the trust created under the will of the deceased is itself the ultimate beneficiary. In any event, PS LA 2003/12 contains the proviso that the practice is subject to the normal operation of CGT event K3.
Note 2: Any capital gain or loss made as a result of CGT event K3 happening may be disregarded if the testamentary trust is a deductible gift recipient: section 118-60 of the ITAA 1997.
Amendment History
Date | Part | Comment |
---|---|---|
9 June 2017 | Reason for Decision | Minor punctuation |
Legislative references | section 118-60(1) updated to section 118-60 | |
13 April 2017 | All | Changed references to 'Tax Office' to 'ATO' as per the ATO Style Guide |
Reasons for Decision | Pinpointed legislative references
Updated reference in PS LA 2003/12 to reflect the current Practice Statement |
|
1 September 2014 | Facts | Remove and update terms from superseded legislation |
Reasons for Decision | Remove and update terms from superseded legislation | |
Legislative references | Remove reference to superseded legislation |
Year of income: Year ended 30 June 2004
Legislative References:
Income Tax Assessment Act 1997
Division 50
Subdivision 50-B
section 50-52
section 104-215
subsection 104-215(1)(a)
subsection 104-215(3)
section 118-60
section 128-10
subsection 128-20(1)
subsection 995-1(1)
Other References:
Law Administration Practice Statement PS LA 2003/12
Keywords
Capital gains
Capital gains tax
Capital losses
CGT assets
CGT deceased estates
CGT events K1-K6 - other events
Charitable trusts
Deductible gift recipients
Date reviewed: 2 June 2017
ISSN: 1445-2782
Date: | Version: | |
14 May 2004 | Original statement | |
1 September 2014 | Updated statement | |
13 April 2017 | Updated statement | |
You are here | 9 June 2017 | Updated statement |
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