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A partnership of any kind is a non-corporate association of two or more people,
each of whom own shares of an undivided interest in the assets of the
partnership. Unless otherwise indicated, it is assumed that partners have an
equal share, but equal ownership is not a requirement. One of the most
convenient features of an undivided interest in assets is that shares can be
allocated to various partners without having to physically divide the property.
Just like when a person buys shares of a company in the stock market, each of
those shares represents a small fraction of the total asset value of the company
– from its current inventory, to the desks and chairs used by employees. When
the principal asset of a partnership is forest land, being able to divide the
asset value of land on the basis of shares is much easier than having to divide
the land and distribute parcels. Forest owning families that form partnerships
often do so to take advantage of the opportunity to keep lands intact while
passing land on to future generations in the form of partnership shares.
A family partnership is usually set up as a ‘limited partnership’
with two types of partners: (1) general partners who make all decisions and are
responsible for day-to-day affairs, and (2) limited partners who have only a
beneficiary interest in the partnership. Although limited partners own an
undivided interest in the assets, they have no authority to make decisions. In
most family partnerships, parents are the general partners and children,
grandchildren and other prospective heirs are the limited partners. When the
principal asset is forests and the business is forest management, the family
forest partnership is a great way to pass well-managed lands intact.
In terms of liability, general partners are fully liable for the
claims against the partnership resulting from the combined acts of the general
partners or even the acts of any one general partner. Although limited partners
are always protected from liability, the general partners’ exposure to liability
is a major failing of family partnerships. For this reason, some family
partnerships have decided to form a ‘limited liability company’ (llC) as an
umbrella for the family partnership which then becomes the principal asset of
the llC.
So how does all this work for a forest-owning family? First, the
parents learn as much as they can about family partnerships. Next, they locate
an attorney who has experience forming partnerships (which may be a more
difficult task than it sounds) to draw up the family partnership ‘charter.’
Forest land and any other assets the family wants to include in the partnership
are appraised and then the parents develop a ‘gifting’ strategy.
Children, grandchildren and other heirs are vested in the family
forest as limited partners using the annual gift exclusion allowed by law. This
year (2007) the gift exclusion is $12,000 per taxpayer to as many different
recipients as he or she chooses. Married couples can double this amount to
$24,000 per taxpayer per gift to each person they want to include in the family
partnership. So long as gift amounts are at or below the limits, there are no
taxes assessed either the parents or the children.
If the family partnership charter limits the marketability of the
gift (as it should, to discourage children from attempting to convert their
ownership interest in forest land into cash), the IRS allows gifts to be
‘discounted.’ In other words, a husband and wife can pass, say, $30,000 in
forest land to create a $24,000 gift for tax purposes. In this case they have
discounted the fair market value of the gift by 20 percent, presumably because
the family partnership charter has strict rules governing limited partners that
want out.
In the world of gift appraisal for discounting
purposes, a 20 percent discount is fairly conservative. But such gifts are
almost always examined by the IRS – regardless of discount rate – so the actual
rate must be justified, usually by experts who have experience doing these kinds
of valuations. Notwithstanding, I have heard of discount rates of up to 95
percent.
Assuming a modest discount rate of 20 percent and an
annual gift exclusion of $12,000, a husband and wife can vest two children into
$600,000 worth of forest land in 10 years. If the discount rate is doubled to 40
percent, this same couple can pass $1.2 million dollars in forest land over the
next decade.
Parents can also pass the land as a single gift so
long as the amount is less than the lifetime exclusion for taxable gifts. For
the period 2005 through 2009, the lifetime gift exclusion is $1 million per
taxpayer, or $2 million per married couple, plus any discounts for lack of
marketability. Also, the estate and generation skipping transfer exemption is
reduced by the amount of the gift tax exemption used.
The primary benefit of a family partnership is that
it allows parents to disperse the value of forest to heirs while keeping land
intact. Because their estate (or a large share of the estate) has been dispersed
to the partnership, little or no estate tax is due when they pass. And the
parents maintain control – even if their share of the partnership is small
compared to that of the children – until new general partners are appointed. The
new general partners are, in the opinion of the parents, prospective heirs best
suited to carry on in the parent’s tradition. Other heirs – the limited partners
– share income and other benefits of owning forests, but they make no decisions.
Forming a family forest partnership and vesting
prospective heirs into it is easy compared to making a decision when it comes
time to appoint a new general partner(s). It isn’t always the oldest child, or
the male, or the smartest, or the nicest. Parents need to pick a person who is
willing to execute the terms of the partnership agreement while treating the
other partners fairly. Even though limited partners do not have a say in
management decisions, a wise general partner allows them to share their ideas.
The key to developing an effective family forest
partnership agreement is open, thorough and candid conversation between spouses.
yet two subjects spouses avoid, almost as if it were a condition of marriage,
are estate planning and children. No one likes to discuss estates because it
necessitates talking about dying, a subject we all try to avoid. And
conversations about children are tough because it usually results in an
expression of favor of one child over another, and everybody knows you should
never show favoritism toward children.
The only way to have these conversations is to focus
on the future, the long-term good of the forest, and to view children with a
hard, cold edge of objectivity. Remember, the goal is to develop a family
partnership that provides guidelines to care for land well into the future, and
to do so in such a way that the result is equitable and agreeable to your heirs.
If heirs don’t accept the premise of a family forest partnership, the chances of
it succeeding after the founders pass away are limited.
One final bit of advice is this: Never under any
circumstances include the spouses of your children in gifts of land. Why?
Because the prospects of divorce, even for the ‘perfect’ couple, are too great
to risk having the family forest treated as a marital asset in a bitterly
contested divorce proceedings. Children of family forest partnerships should
also be encouraged to execute prenuptial agreements with prospective spouses,
just so it clear to all that the family forest is not up for grabs.
McEvoy, T.J. 2006. Family Forest Partnerships.
Farming – The Journal of Northeastern Agriculture. Vol. 9, No. 6. June issue. pp
64 – 66.
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