Fiduciary non-pro rata distributions involving real property

Excerpt from California "Change in Ownership" Handbook suggesting 3rd-party lender when one beneficiary wants to hang onto the estate real property.

Equalizing Trust Distributions

Equalization issues may arise when a single property is the primary trust asset and that asset is distributed to one beneficiary. If the trustee has the authority to make a non-pro rata distribution and thus allocate specific assets to an individual beneficiary and the value of the property does not exceed that beneficiary's share of the trust estate, the transfer is considered to be made from the trustor to the beneficiary and eligible for the parent-child exclusion. The value of the property is the market value on the date of the parent-child transfer (typically date of death), less any encumbrances on the property.

Furthermore, unless prohibited by the trust, a trustee who makes a non-pro rata distribution may encumber the property with a loan prior to distributing the property to one beneficiary. The trustee may then distribute the loan proceeds to the other beneficiaries to equalize the value of the distributions to all of the beneficiaries. However, the trustee must be the party encumbering the property and the trustee may not encumber the property with a loan from the beneficiary who will receive the property. The trustee may obtain a loan secured by the property from a third-party lender, such as a bank*, or a beneficiary who will not receive the property as part of the trust distribution.

 Example 12-6

X transfers her unencumbered principal residence to her trust, to be distributed on a share-and-share-alike basis to B and C upon X's death. The trustee is authorized to make non-pro rata distributions.

As of X's date of death, the real property is the only asset and has a fair market value of $500,000. If the trustee decides to distribute the entire residence to B, the trustee may first borrow $250,000 from a third party, secured by the residence, and may distribute the loan proceeds to C. The trustee may then distribute the residence, encumbered by the $250,000 deed of trust, to B; B would have to repay the loan. The encumbrance would equalize the non-pro rata distribution.

If B and C are the children of X, the transfer of the principal residence to B qualifies for the parent-child exclusion if all other requirements are satisfied.

Example 12-7

D transfers his real property to his trust to be distributed on a share-and-share-alike basis to children B and C upon D's death. The trustee is authorized to make non-pro rata distributions. Upon D's death, the only asset is the real property with a fair market value of $500,000. The trustee distributes property to B; B gets a $250,000 loan and pays C from loan proceeds or pays C $250,000 from personal funds.

The transfer of the real property to B qualifies for the parent-child exclusion as to B's 50 percent interest in the trust assets. The other 50 percent is a change in ownership as a sibling transfer.