Community Property for Non-Community Property States

30 Pages Posted: 21 Sep 2013

See all articles by Katherine D. Black

Katherine D. Black

Utah Valley University

Mary Black

Brigham Young University

Julie Black

Brigham Young University

Date Written: April 12, 2011

Abstract

Numerous provisions of the Internal Revenue Code ("IRC" or the "Code") treat community property substantially different than marital or separate property. Generally, the determination of whether property is community or non-community property (sometimes referred to as common law property) is a matter of state law.

Before 1948, there was just one tax rate schedule with numerous rates for different levels of income and everyone had to file his or her own tax return. Married couples in community property states were treated dramatically different than married couples in non-community property states. Married couples in community property states were deemed to each have earned one-half of the community income. Filing and reporting only half of the income on two separate returns had the result of taxing the total income at lower overall tax rates. A married couple with only one earner in a common law property state was taxed at far higher marginal rates than their counterparts in community property states.

Several states tried to rectify the disparate tax treatment by creating a form of community property. The laws ranged from elective community property to actual vested interests in the property for both spouses. These measures were met with an onslaught of legislation with varying degrees of success.

The Revenue Act of 1948 provided for a filing status called "married filing jointly" (herein, "jointly" or "joint filing"). Joint filing had the effect of dividing the income and computing the tax on one-half of the income, then multiplying the result by two to get the total. Generally, this resulted in the income being taxed at lower rates. This put married couples in community property and non-community property states in the same relative position with respect to the calculation of income tax. Taxpayers are still treated unfairly if they choose to opt out of joint filing.

However, income tax brackets, rates, and treatment on divorce were never the only tax areas in which there was tax favored treatment for taxpayers in community property states. IRC section 1014 gives favorable tax treatment to community property upon death as well; it provides for a step-up in basis of both halves of community property in which the decedent held an interest, even if only one-half of the property is included in the decedent’s estate. This tax-treatment is not afforded to taxpayers in non-community property states. Those taxpayers get a step-up in basis of only one-half of jointly owned property. Over the decades, the state legislatures have tried to create a version of community property that would provide the beneficial tax treatment of community property for their constituents, without completely revising their whole property system. This Article explores the implications and possibilities of individuals of non-community property states’ ability to define their property rights so as to create a "community of property" for the purpose of obtaining a step-up in basis of both halves of property upon death. One would hope that state legislators would be as passionate about these tax disparities as they were about the income tax disparities during World War II and in the 1960s. However, in the absence of action on the part of state legislators, are there any alternatives for taxpayers?

There is no rationale for providing this favored tax treatment to the surviving spouse in a community property state, yet denying it to the surviving spouse in a non-community property state. In lieu of action by a state to bring about equal treatment, it may be possible for the parties themselves to create community property.

In most non-community property states the courts allow spouses to enter into prenuptial and postnuptial property agreements. Further, if the state has passed the Uniform Probate Code, the parties may choose which state’s laws they would like to have the court apply when interpreting their agreement upon their death. Thus, spouses should be able to create property agreements based on community property laws, and the law should provide favorable tax treatment for those agreements. It would be tragic to discover that we have had this power all along and simply did not know it.

Suggested Citation

Black, Katherine D. and Black, Mary and Black, Julie, Community Property for Non-Community Property States (April 12, 2011). Quinnipiac Probate Law Journal, Vol. 24, No. 3, 2011, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2328521

Katherine D. Black (Contact Author)

Utah Valley University ( email )

800 West University Parkway
Orem, UT 84058-5999
United States

Mary Black

Brigham Young University

Provo, UT 84602
United States

Julie Black

Brigham Young University

Provo, UT 84602
United States

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