Senwes Scenario Desember - Februarie 2020 | Page 48

FINANSIES | FINANCES Trusts and Capital Gains Tax Many of our clients have a number of trust structures in place. These trusts distribute income and capital gains amongst each other prior to these being finally distributed to a natural person. Such gains are taxed as a capital gain in the hands of the first trust to which they are distributed. This is a blow to all such structures.  Lucas Coetzee Liberty Legal Specialist A ny insurance policies effected as part of such structures may fail to achieve the desired outcome. The bottom line is that as a higher rate of tax than that expected will be payable, the amount of capital ultimately available may be insufficient to meet the actual needs of the natural person. The taxable capital gain of a trust other than a special trust, is taxed at an effective rate of 36%, while that of an individual is taxed at a maximum effective rate of 18%. Fortunately for trusts, trustees and bene­ficiaries, legislation around the tax- ation of trusts has developed what has been termed “attribution rules”, which in certain instances, provide that trust income, including capital gains, can be attributed to a beneficiary if vested in that beneficiary in the same tax year as the year in which the trust acquires the income, or it can be attributed to the donor of the trust. Instead of being taxed 46 at the trust’s rate, such income would therefore be taxed at the beneficiary’s rate, which means that not only could this be a lower rate than that of the trust, but also that any exemptions and rebates that the individual may be entitled to, can be used to further reduce the tax payable. WHEN COULD A TRUST BE LIABLE FOR CAPITAL GAINS TAX? CGT would arise in relation to a domestic trust with resident beneficiaries: When a discretionary trust vests assets in a beneficiary In these instances, capital gains will be ignored in the trust and taxed in the bene- ficiary’s hands at the time of vesting, with the base cost being the market value at the date of vesting. That means that the beneficiary will be liable for the capital gains tax immediately, and then if the beneficiary should sell the asset at a later stage, the base cost for purposes of that sale would be the market value at the date that he received the asset from the trust. SENWES SCENARIO | SOMER • SUMMER 2020 When a trust distributes assets of a capital nature to a beneficiary who had a vested right thereto After the amendments introduced by the Revenue Laws Amendment Act of 2008, the date of disposal of an asset to the beneficiary is when the beneficiary actu- ally acquired the vested right to the asset, and not when the asset is transferred. For example: A bequeaths his fixed property to his son B, with the condition that should B be less than 30 years of age at the time of A’s death, such property will be held in trust until B reaches the age of 30. When A dies, the property is valued at R1 000 000, but when B turns 30 years the property is valued at R1 500 000. On A’s death, the property will be transferred to the trust but B has a vested interest in the property. When B reaches age 30 and the property is transferred to him, he acquires property valued at R1 500 000. His base cost will however, not be R1 500 000 but rather R1 000 000, being the value of the property at the time he acquired a vested interest in the property.