The tax knight and his merry men rescue a distressed taxpayer…

OK, so it’s a corny title. Yet it sure describes the economic and tax pain of Joe, a 79-year-old widower. Don’t feel sorry for Joe, he’s generally a healthy and happy guy. He hits golf balls, spends lots of time with the grandkids and still goes to work every morning at the successful business he started, which he transferred to his two sons, who now own and run it.

But you should hear Joe howl about the cost of paying the annual insurance premiums on his irrevocable life insurance trust. Joe’s trust owns a $4 million insurance policy on his life with annual payments of $87,000. Yes, he needs the insurance to cover a portion of his potential estate-tax liability. No, he couldn’t buy second-to-die — normally at substantially less premium cost — because his wife was uninsurable when the irrevocable trust bought his policy.

It should be noted that an irrevocable trust protects the death benefits of a life insurance policy from the clutches of the estate tax.

Now, stop for a moment and look at your insurance cost situation. Chances are you’ll find you have one or more of the same complaints as Joe. He’s got three:

• Every year when Joe wrote his check to the trust for $87,000, he got four exclusions of $11,000 each, or $44,000 annually, one for each of his two sons and two grandkids. That left a taxable gift of $43,000 ($87,000 minus $44,000), which eats away at his $1 million lifetime unified credit. No cash gift-tax now. Simply put, the first $1 million of taxable gifts do not require cash to pay the gift tax, but are paid by using your lifetime unified credit. When Joe gets hit by the final bus, those annual taxable gifts will turn into an estate-tax liability (most likely 55 percent of the total of all those annual taxable gifts for Joe). Starting in 2006 the $11,000 is raised to $12,000.

Joe fumes!

• Interest rates are much lower now than when Joe bought the policy. Result, the premiums are much more than the projections made by his insurance agent.

Joe’s expletives are not fit to repeat here.

• Joe’s smart. He figured out that in his tax bracket — state and federal combined — he must earn $145,000 and pay $58,000 in income tax in order to have the $87,000 needed to pay his insurance premium which is actually a gift to the trust. Joe fervently argues that life insurance premiums should be deductible. Good idea. But we need an act of Congress to change the Internal Revenue Code.

Now you know why Joe is a distressed taxpayer.

Readers of this column know I have a network of professionals to help me work my tax magic. So I, the tax knight, and my network of merry men, went to work.

We had Joe’s irrevocable trust restructured with his insurance using a strategy called “premium financing.” Essentially, premium financing is an economic concept where policy premiums are paid by a lending bank. Like before, Joe’s premium financing policy is owned by the trust. When Joe dies the bank loans and accrued interest on the loans will be paid out of the policy proceeds.

Joe’s premium financing is set up for $5 million — net proceeds after paying off the bank — to the trust, and the beneficiaries are his kids and grandkids. Joe’s only potential out-of-pocket costs are $60,000 to initiate the bank loan the year the premium financing is set up. If Joe lives to be 100, the total additional cost will be about $352,000, with varying small amounts to be paid each year to maintain the loan. Of course, if Joe dies sooner, these costs stop.

Now, what are the final results for Joe by using premium financing?

• To start, no more $87,000 annual premium payments — actually, no more premium payments. All three of his complaints disappeared.

• No out-of-pocket costs — not the $60,000 or any portion of the $352,000. Why? Because the cash surrender value of the original $4 million policy owned by his trust was more than enough to cover all of the premium financing costs. The old policy was canceled to free up the cash surrender value and put the premium financing strategy in place without any further out-of-pocket costs to Joe.

Even Joe is happy.

Premium financing is a relatively new concept — easy to understand, complex to implement. It really takes a network of experienced professionals working together. The results create an economic windfall — all tax-free.

But sorry, everyone cannot take advantage of premium financing. You must qualify by bringing two things to the table:

First, you must be insurable or if married, one spouse must be insurable, so your irrevocable trust can buy second-to-die coverage.

Next, you must be worth a minimum of $5 million. The more you are worth and the more investment-type assets such as stocks, bonds or even real estate you have, the more likely you will qualify for this strategy.

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by Irv Blackman

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