Source: L. 2000: Entire part R&RE, p. 1134, § 1, effective July 1, 2001.
Terminating income interests and successive income interests. A trust that provides for a single income beneficiary and an outright distribution of the remainder ends when the income interest ends. A more complex trust may have a number of income interests, either concurrent or successive, and the trust will not necessarily end when one of the income interests ends. For that reason, the Act speaks in terms of income interests ending and beginning rather than trusts ending and beginning. When an income interest in a trust ends, the trustee's powers continue during the winding up period required to complete its administration. A terminating income interest is one that has ended but whose administration is not complete.
If two or more people are given the right to receive specified percentages or fractions of the income from a trust concurrently and one of the concurrent interests ends, e.g., when a beneficiary dies, the beneficiary's income interest ends but the trust does not. Similarly, when a trust with only one income beneficiary ends upon the beneficiary's death, the trust instrument may provide that part or all of the trust assets shall continue in trust for another income beneficiary. While it is common to think and speak of this (and even to characterize it in a trust instrument) as a "new" trust, it is a continuation of the original trust for a remainder beneficiary who has an income interest in the trust assets instead of the right to receive them outright. For purposes of this Act, this is a successive income interest in the same trust. The fact that a trust may or may not end when an income interest ends is not significant for purposes of this Act.
If the assets that are subject to a terminating income interest pass to another trust because the income beneficiary exercises a general power of appointment over the trust assets, the recipient trust would be a new trust; and if they pass to another trust because the beneficiary exercises a nongeneral power of appointment over the trust assets, the recipient trust might be a new trust in some States (see 5A Austin W. Scott & William F. Fratcher, The Law of Trusts § 640, at 483 (4th ed. 1989)); but for purposes of this Act a new trust created in these circumstances is also a successive income interest.
Gift of a pecuniary amount. Section 15-1-406 (c) and (d) provide different rules for an outright gift of a pecuniary amount and a gift in trust of a pecuniary amount; this is the same approach used in Section 5(b)(2) of the 1962 Uniform Act.
Interest on pecuniary amounts. Section 15-1-406 (1)(c) provides that the beneficiary of an outright pecuniary amount is to receive the interest or other amount provided by applicable law if there is no provision in the will or the terms of the trust. Many States have no applicable law that provides for interest or some other amount to be paid on an outright pecuniary gift under an inter vivos trust; this section provides that in such a case the interest or other amount to be paid shall be the same as the interest or other amount required to be paid on testamentary pecuniary gifts. This provision is intended to accord gifts under inter vivos instruments the same treatment as testamentary gifts. The various state authorities that provide for the amount that a beneficiary of an outright pecuniary amount is entitled to receive are collected in Richard B. Covey, Marital Deduction and Credit Shelter Dispositions and the Use of Formula Provisions, App. B (4th ed. 1997).
Administration expenses and interest on death taxes. Under Section 15-1-406 (1)(b)(II) a fiduciary may pay administration expenses and interest on death taxes from either income or principal. An advantage of permitting the fiduciary to choose the source of the payment is that, if the fiduciary's decision is consistent with the decision to deduct these expenses for income tax purposes or estate tax purposes, it eliminates the need to adjust between principal and income that may arise when, for example, an expense that is paid from principal is deducted for income tax purposes or an expense that is paid from income is deducted for estate tax purposes.
The United States Supreme Court has considered the question of whether an estate tax marital deduction or charitable deduction should be reduced when administration expenses are paid from income produced by property passing in trust for a surviving spouse or for charity and deducted for income tax purposes. The Court rejected the IRS position that administration expenses properly paid from income under the terms of the trust or state law must reduce the amount of a marital or charitable transfer, and held that the value of the transferred property is not reduced for estate tax purposes unless the administration expenses are material in light of the income the trust corpus could have been expected to generate. Commissioner v. Estate of Otis C. Hubert, 117 S. Ct. 1124 (1997). The provision in Section 15-1-406 (1)(b)(II) permits a fiduciary to pay and deduct administration expenses from income only to the extent that it will not cause the reduction or loss of an estate tax marital or charitable contributions deduction, which means that the limit on the amount payable from income will be established eventually by Treasury Regulations.
Interest on estate taxes. The IRS agrees that interest on estate and inheritance taxes may be deducted for income tax purposes without having to reduce the estate tax deduction for amounts passing to a charity or surviving spouse, whether the interest is paid from principal or income. Rev. Rul. 93-48, 93-2 C.B. 270. For estates of persons who died before 1998, a fiduciary may not want to deduct for income tax purposes interest on estate tax that is deferred under Section 6166 or 6163 because deducting that interest for estate tax purposes may produce more beneficial results, especially if the estate has little or no income or the income tax bracket is significantly lower than the estate tax bracket. For estates of persons who die after 1997, no estate tax or income tax deduction will be allowed for interest paid on estate tax that is deferred under Section 6166. However, interest on estate tax deferred under Section 6163 will continue to be deductible for both purposes, and interest on estate tax deficiencies will continue to be deductible for estate tax purposes if an election under Section 6166 is not in effect.
Under the 1962 Uniform Act, Section 13(c)(5) charges interest on estate and inheritance taxes to principal. The 1931 Uniform Act has no provision. Section 15-1-426 (1)(c) of this Act provides that, except to the extent provided in Section 15-1-406 (1)(b)(II) or (III), all interest must be paid from income.
Structure Colorado Code
Title 15 - Probate, Trusts, and Fiduciaries
Part 4 - Uniform Principal and Income Act
§ 15-1-403. Fiduciary Duties - General Principles
§ 15-1-404. Trustee's Power to Adjust
§ 15-1-404.5. Conversion - Unitrusts - Administration
§ 15-1-406. Determination and Distribution of Net Income
§ 15-1-407. Distribution to Residuary and Remainder Beneficiaries
§ 15-1-408. When Right to Income Begins and Ends
§ 15-1-409. Apportionment of Receipts and Disbursements When Decedent Dies or Income Interest Begins
§ 15-1-410. Apportionment When Income Interest Ends
§ 15-1-411. Character of Receipts
§ 15-1-412. Distribution From Trust or Estate
§ 15-1-413. Business and Other Activities Conducted by Trustee
§ 15-1-414. Principal Receipts
§ 15-1-416. Obligation to Pay Money
§ 15-1-417. Insurance Policies and Similar Contracts
§ 15-1-418. Insubstantial Allocations Not Required
§ 15-1-419. Deferred Compensation, Annuities, and Similar Payments
§ 15-1-421. Minerals, Water, and Other Natural Resources
§ 15-1-421.5. Disposition of Natural Resources
§ 15-1-423. Property Not Productive of Income
§ 15-1-424. Derivatives and Options
§ 15-1-425. Asset-Backed Securities
§ 15-1-426. Disbursements From Income
§ 15-1-427. Disbursements From Principal
§ 15-1-428. Transfers From Income to Principal for Depreciation
§ 15-1-429. Transfers From Income to Reimburse Principal
§ 15-1-431. Adjustments Between Principal and Income Because of Taxes
§ 15-1-432. Uniformity of Application - Construction
§ 15-1-434. Effective Date - Application to Existing Trusts and Estates - Election
§ 15-1-435. Application of Certain Provisions - Notice of Election
§ 15-1-436. Transitional Matters
§ 15-1-452. Source and Prior Enactment - Uniform Application
§ 15-1-453. Definitions - Construction of Terms
§ 15-1-455. Application of This Subpart 7 - Powers of Settlor
§ 15-1-456. Income and Principal - Disposition
§ 15-1-457. Apportionment of Income
§ 15-1-458. Corporate Dividends and Share Rights
§ 15-1-459. Premium and Discount Bonds
§ 15-1-460. Principal Used in Business
§ 15-1-461. Principal Comprising Animals
§ 15-1-462. Principal Subject to Depletion
§ 15-1-463. Unproductive Estate
§ 15-1-464. Disposition of Natural Resources
§ 15-1-464.5. Disposition of Natural Resources - Special Applicability
§ 15-1-465. Expenses - Trust Estates
§ 15-1-466. Expenses - Nontrust Estates