Tax Law, § 619(d)
Exception:
Those modifications, or portions thereof, which are not includible in the New York fiduciary adjustment in accordance with the provisions of paragraph (c)(1) of section 119.1 of this Part must be attributed to the estate or trust in determining its New York taxable income regardless of whether an alternate method provided by this section is used by the fiduciary.
Example:
The estate of a decedent who died on October 31, 1978 collects $26,000 representing income accrued prior to the date of the decedent's death which constituted corpus or principal for probate or trust accounting purposes. The amount so collected is includible in the estate's Federal and New York taxable income for the first taxable year of the estate, ending June 30, 1979, subject to allowance of a deduction, under section 691(c) of the Internal Revenue Code, for the portion of the Federal estate tax attributable to the amount of accrued income included in the Federal gross estate. During the second taxable year of the estate, ended June 30, 1980, the estate pays a New York State personal income tax of $3,587 (rounded off to the nearest whole dollar amount) for the year ended June 30, 1979, its first taxable year. During the taxable year ended June 30, 1980, it distributes to the sole beneficiary $14,425 out of its Federal distributable net income of $27,200 (i.e., 53.033 percent of Federal distributable net income). The New York State personal income tax of $3,587 is the only New York State modification applicable to the estate for the year ended June 30, 1980. Since the beneficiary received 53.033 percent of the Federal distributable net income of the estate, the beneficiary's share of the New York fiduciary adjustment computed under section 119.2(a) of this Part would amount to $1,902 (i.e.,53.033 percent of $3,587).
However, under the method prescribed in this subdivision, the $3,587 modification for the taxable year ended June 30, 1980 would be attributable to the estate and the beneficiary in the following manner:
Data from Fiduciary Return or Fiscal Year Ended June 30, 1979: | ||
Income accrued before death | $26,000 | |
Deduction for Federal estate tax attributable to income accrued before death (under section 691[c] of the Internal Revenue Code) | 2,600 | |
Income accrued before death reduced by deduction attributable thereto | $23,400 | |
Gross income accrued and received after death | $16,000 | |
Deduction for distribution to beneficiary | 3,000 | |
Such income reduced by deduction directly related thereto | 13,000 | |
Total | $36,400 | |
Specific exemption | 600 | |
Federal and New York taxable income of estate | $35,800 | |
New York State personal income tax of estate (see section 602[e] of the Tax Law) | $3,587 | |
Percentage of New York State personal income tax allocated to income accrued before death: | ||
$23,400 = 64.286% | ||
$36,400 | ||
Percentage of New York State personal tax allocated to income accrued after death: | ||
$13,000 = 35.714% | ||
$36,400 | ||
Allocation of New York State Personal Income Tax Modification | ||
Total New York State personal income tax modification | $3,587 | |
Amount of New York State personal income tax deduction modification attributed to the estate under subparagraph (2)(i) of this subdivision-64.286% of $3,587 = | $2,306 | |
Amount of New York State personal income tax deduction to be attributed under subparagraph (2)(ii) of this subdivision-35.714% of $3,587 = | $1,281 | |
Amount attributed to the estate under subparagraph (2)(ii) of this subdivision-46.96% of $1,281 = | $602 | |
Amount attributed to beneficiary under subparagraph (2) (ii) of this subdivision-53.033% of $1,281 = | 679 | |
Total amount of New York State personal income tax deduction | $1,281 | |
Combined Shares of New York Fiduciary Modification | ||
Estate's share under subparagraph (2)(i) of this subdivision | $2,306 | |
Estate's share under subparagraph (2)(ii) of this subdivision | 602 | $2,908 |
Beneficiary's share of modification under subparagraph (2)(ii) of this subdivision | 679 | |
Total New York fiduciary adjustment | $3,587 | |
The inequity requirement defined in subdivision (c) of this section is met because the difference in the amounts (attributable to the beneficiary) referred to in paragraph (1) of subdivision (c) of this section is more than $1,000 as shown in the following computation: | ||
Beneficiary's share pursuant to section 619 (c)(1) of the Tax Law (see section 119.2 of this Part) | $1,902 | |
Beneficiary's share pursuant to alternate method | 679 | |
Difference | $1,223 | |
In addition, $1,223, the difference in amounts, exceeds 15 percent of $3,587, the arithmetic total of all modifications comprising the New York fiduciary adjustment (see subdivision [c] of this section). |
Example:
Under an agreement of trust, the trustee is required to pay A and B, the grantor's children, all interest from tax-exempt State and municipal bonds, including bonds of states other than New York and their political subdivisions. All other income of the trust is to be divided equally among A and B and the grantor's sisters, C and D. During the year 1979, the trust receives $10,000 of interest on obligations of the State of California which, under section 112.2(a) of this Article, constitutes a New York State modification increasing Federal adjusted gross income. This is the only modification applicable to the income of the trust for 1979. In 1979, the trust also received $20,000 of income from dividends. Under the method of attribution prescribed in this section, the entire $10,000 interest from the California bonds represents a modification to be attributed only to beneficiaries A and B, and such modification should be divided between them in proportion to their equal shares of the bond interest under the governing instrument, i.e., 50 percent of the $10,000 modification, or $5,000 to each. No part of the modification is attributable to C or D because the modification is an item attributed solely to A and B under the governing instrument. Except for the permission granted by this section to attribute modifications as described herein, the shares of C and D in the New York fiduciary adjustment computed under section 119.2(a) of this Part would amount to $1,666.67, representing their respective 16 2/3percent shares of the New York fiduciary adjustment of $10,000. (C's and D's respective shares of Federal distributable net income are 16 2/3 percent because each receives $5,000 out of a total trust income of $30,000.)
Example:
The Federal fiduciary income tax return of a trust for 1979 consisted of the following items of income which constitute modifications required by section 612 of the Tax Law (Part 112 of this Article):
United States bond interest-decrease | $15,000 |
California bond interest-increase | 10,000 |
New York fiduciary adjustment-decrease | $5,000 |
The trust has two beneficiaries, A and B. Under the trust agreement, beneficiary A receives all the interest on United States bonds. Beneficiary B receives all the California bond interest. In accordance with section 119.2(a) of this Part, the New York fiduciary adjustment is allocated on the basis of the Federal distributable net income. This results in attributing $3,000 of the net New York fiduciary adjustment to A:
($15,000 × $5,000)/($25,000) = $3,000
and $2,000 to B:
($10,000 × $5,000)/($25,000) = $2,000
Use of the alternate method permitted by this section results in a New York State modification decreasing New York adjusted gross income in the amount of $15,000 to A, and a modification increasing New York adjusted gross income in the amount of $10,000 to B.
The inequities with respect to both A and B are substantial in amount, in that each exceeds $1,000. With respect to A, the inequity amounts to $12,000 ($15,000 - $3,000 = $12,000). With respect to B, the inequity amounts to $12,000 ($10,000 + $2,000 = $12,000).
The inequity is substantial in relation to the amount of the New York fiduciary adjustment, because the inequity to A amounts to $12,000 which exceeds $3,750 which is 15 percent of the arithmetic total of all modifications (15% of $25,000 = $3,750). In this example, the inequity to B is similarly substantial in the amount and in relation to the amount of the New York fiduciary adjustment, but in order for the fiduciary to be entitled to elect the alternate method, a substantial inequity need only be present as to one party, i.e., the estate or trust or one of the beneficiaries.
Note:
The example in paragraph (a)(5) of this section also illustrates a situation where an inequity is considered substantial in amount and in relation to the New York fiduciary adjustment.
The schedule filed by the fiduciary as part of the New York State fiduciary return (form IT-205) must set forth the following information:
N.Y. Comp. Codes R. & Regs. Tit. 20 § 119.3