All posts by challenyee

About challenyee

Bringing Acupuncture Mainstream - One Talk at a Time

REVERSE 1031 vs PROPERTY TAXES – BEWARE

Planning on consolidating title on an investment property and involving a Reverse 1031 in the process?

For those of you who understand the value of California’s Proposition 13 you may conclude in your tax planning that your portion of a long-held multi-owner investment property is protected from reassessment when you need to consolidate to yourself a portion of the property.

Just a refesher, 1031s only deal with investment properties or properties intended to be used for investment purposes. In general, 1031s are a means by which capital gains from an investment property sale may be deferred as long as they are reinvested into another investment property.

If you are planning to execute a Reverse 1031, then please consider the following info and be aware not only the capital gain benefits but of the potential property tax consequences. The State of California does not look at your escrow transaction as only one property transfer, it will see it as two re-assessable transfers even though it is only in a single escrow.

Let me try to explain this mess that took me awhile to figure out.

In a Reverse 1031, an LLC title holder, which is under the responsibility of a 3rd party neither the buyer nor seller, must be created to hold the title from the consolidation sale until such time the buyer can release the title with funds from another investment property sale.

Here’s the basic difference: A Forward 1031 LLC holds funds. Reverse 1031 LLC holds title (waiting for funds to release it). Property tax doesn’t figure into moving funds between title holders, but it does involve itself with transferring title between separate title holders.

As just a regular tax paying citizen (I am not a real estate professional and I am not a legal professional), the best I can tell, having argued extensively with my County and inquiring to the State Board of Equalization, Reverse 1031s fall within a loophole that gives the State the opportunity to assess your property twice for the percentage of title transferred.

Again, although it may be your intention to consolidate a percentage of an investment property from a co-owner, the necessary deposit of the title into an LLC created by the Reverse 1031 will create two title transfers and interpreted that way by the county (although it is only one escrow).

If within a Reverse 1031 you are transferring a very small portion of the property’s title, the property tax consequences may be insignificant.

However, if you are changing hands of equal shares of the property, presuming the co-owners hold significant percentages, you will be reassessed for an amount that is two times greater than you would normally expect. In simple math, if the seller held 25%, in a Reverse 1031 the county will reassess the property for an equivalent of 50% of the title changing hands based on the market value.

Important note: An assessor in California will reassess the percentage of un-excluded* (see note at bottom) title transferred every time it transfers. In certain transfers, the reassessment may be subject to a legal exclusion, such as parent to child (but not sibling to sibling).

Your situation may be this: Due to pressure from the selling party to expedite the deal, you may be put into a position where you may need to adopt a Reverse 1031 to preserve your capital gain deferring strategy.

Unlike a Forward 1031 where the funds are held from a previously sold investment property and would be used to purchase, in this case, the portion of property to be consolidated, a Reverse 1031 requires non-1031 cash up front, to purchase the property. The seller benefits being able to put the deal behind him while the buyer holds the bag until he can release the consolidation title from the LLC holder using funds from a not-yet-sold investment property.

If a Forward 1031 can be used, the funds held in the LLC holder may be used to purchase the seller’s portion directly and the consolidated title does not have to transfer in and out of an LLC holder. In a Forward 1031, funds, not a title, from a relinquishing property sale are held in LLC.

In other words, in the Forward 1031 situation the consolidated title is not reassessed two times**, because the title is only transferred once and that is directly to you, not through the LLC.

Legally, it seems the crux of the problem lies in, despite the fact that the whole intention of the escrow is for the seller to transfer title to the seller, in spirit, a single transaction, the Reverse 1031 process introduces a bug that is exploited by state and county government, thereby overriding the spirit of protection offered by Proposition 13.

In other words, in using a Reverse 1031 in California, unless there is a successful legal challenge to this practice, expect to have the same title reassessed twice in one act of consolidating. Furthermore, were you to completely consolidate the property to your name, using a Reverse 1031 anywhere in the process, you could end up in a situation where the previous property tax basis that you have enjoyed no longer exists in any percentage.

A 1031 officer can provide a petition that describes the intent of the Reverse 1031 LLC as only a temporary holder, but good luck in trying to convince the county that they ought not to reassess a title transfer that is not specifically excluded in their checklists (i.e. parent to child).

It may be worth your time to explore some alternatives with an experienced and knowledgable 1031 officer well-versed in Forward and Reverse 1031 options.

As a final thought, if a Reverse 1031 becomes applicable in your real estate situation, once substantial long term property tax consequences and the personal sacrifice via losses due to the increased liabilities are understood, they ought to be considered by all parties involved.

Disclaimer: The information in this article is based on the author’s personal opinion and is not intended to be legal advice. The author is not a tax professional, real estate professional or other law professional and the information in this article shall not be construed in any form to be a substitute for certified licensed professional advice.

*Note: You will need to determine which transactions are legally excluded from title transfer reassessment in your county and/or state.

**Note: Ensure in your Forward 1031 process that the title is not transferred into an LLC. Discuss and confirm this detail to legal certainty with a certified 1031 officer.

STOP STEALING LEGACY

STOP STEALING LEGACY – AMEND California PROPOSITION 19 (2020) REFRESH PROP 58

Amid the chaos over the Presidential race of 2020 and California lawmakers planning to travel to Maui for “business” amidst a myriad of COVID restrictions, here in California is Proposition 19, a tragedy in the process of being passed that is, in my humble opinion, a shiny coin with the dark side.

It would seem most of the people who are supportive of this measure are owners of only a single piece of non-income producing real estate (a primary residence) or those who are encouraging people to switch properties to increase the number of commissioned real estate transfers. The problem is, there’s a wicked subtext to this that should not be there.

In this age of American society where family legacies are seemingly held in lesser esteem and the ability to generate short term cash seems to prevail, the ability to hold a property, whether as a primary residence or an investment property is one of the most valuable possessions a parent can pass along to their children or grandchildren, thanks to the provisions of California Proposition 13, the Jarvis Gann Initiative of 1978 and Proposition 58 (1986).

Many people believe, including myself, that property taxes are un-Constitutional to begin with, they can be used as a means through which a government can put pressure on property owners, forcing them to give up their privately held possessions through exorbitant taxes.

 

THE VALUE OF INVESTMENT PROPERTY

As an American citizen, understand the opportunities private ownership of real estate affords you, it’s one of life’s important lessons. Investing in real estate, learning to be or work with a property manager, how to take care of an investment property, to improve the community by offering a safe place to live for those who cannot afford or choose not to buy a house on their own, are all part of a an essential holistic education.

On top of all of this, and this does require the qualities of discipline, measured risk, and work, having an investment property allows you and your family to earn what is known as “passive” income. Passive income is something you do not learn about in public school as most are trained to become a good worker, a good employee, rather than an investor.

 

 

THE DARK SIDE OF PROP 19

 

Because of the insane increases in property values over the last 10 years, a 1 million dollar or less investment is ideally suited for first time investors and long term investments of lower income families. The last decade especially has proven that protecting their investments from future taxation based on market values is crucial and the passage of this kind of taxation will infringe on the child’s ability and their right to maintain ownership of family investment property.

It is interesting to note that campaign contributions as of November 1st , 2020 for Prop 19 were totaled at $47.0 million coming almost exclusively from the California and National Association of Realtors and opponents only raised only $45,000! (Source: Wikipedia).

Another interesting note is that this Prop 19 was sponsored by the California Democratic Party. Yet this Proposition 19 was opposed by a California chapter of the ACLU, Family Business Association of California, the Howard Jarvis Tax Payers Association and the League of Women Voters of California, that’s an interesting combination and I can only imagine that they are against it for differing reasons, but I can add myself into the sum total of this seemingly disparate group. It just goes to show you that there are times when collaboration brings together uncommon allies – the so-called Right Wing and Left Wing are part of the same bird.

I voted NO on Proposition 19, not because I do not agree with Californians over 55 who can save their retirement by not getting hammered with crazy property taxes, but for the hard working and disciplined lower income investors, who chose to plan long term in effort to provide a legacy of a better life for their children.  Having looked closer at the Proposition, it clearly pits one property owner against another when neither should suffer as a consequence.

Who gets hurt the most from losing responsibly-held investment properties? Again, this cannot benefit lower income California descendants because they are the ones who will likely lose their birthright of inherited properties because of the stiff tax rates linked to skyrocketing real estate values (another issue). This increased taxation will have an effect on pushing future generations back into the viscous dependence on salaried or hourly labor, even welfare.

I figure, the people who benefit are short term property flippers whose exposure to property tax is limited or “richer” people (at least richer than the ones who had to sell). The hefty tax burdens resulting from infringing on the right of owners transferring property from parent to child, or grandparent or grandchild are antithetical to family legacy planning. It is another attack on the family as a self-sustaining unit in society.

 

RESTORE AND REFRESH PROPOSITION 58

Short of abolishing property taxes, this is what should have been the highlight. The proper treatment of Proposition 58 would have been to increase the exemption of 1 MIllion dollars based on an average increase of market value properties since 1986. Roughly estimating, if a property in California was in 1986 valued at $50,000 and in 2020 is valued at $1,000,000, then a 20x increase to the exemption limit should have been proposed. A compromise would be a 10x or even 5x increase, so let’s say, the exclusion should be increased to $5 million to $10 million for investment properties transferred to children or grandchildren.

Instead, Prop 58 was scuttled like a sacrificial lamb in order to promote the sale of principle residential property during the life of non-investment holding owners and the sale of investment property after the death of the investment holding owners.

 

WHAT IS THE SOLUTION?

The solution to the tax revenue problem can come from some liberty promoting methods that support law-abiding citizens.

It is better that government control spending through budget reductions and/or generate tax revenue in a way that does not infringe on the private citizen ownership of real estate for private ownership across the income spectrum.

Consider that the State of California has recently been caught carelessly distributing a reported amount of between 140 million in covid relief or 1 billion dollars for unemployment relief to prison inmates. I have to believe, there is probably an enormous amount of money that can be saved by involving much more responsible people in charge of spending existing tax revenue and stop this damned train wreck.

In the founding of the nation, government was intended to be small, necessary, but small. A government in this republic was intended to ensure efficient running of a land of free and responsible citizenry, not an uncontrollable machine with an insatiable appetite to crush private citizens rights and livelihoods.

Another area where tax revenue can be sought is with foreign entities.

Tax foreign owners, private or corporate. They should not qualify for the same rights as a U.S. citizen. Tax to compensate for the increase in market values caused by dramatic influxes of foreign investment capital.

If you can think of any other logical means to resolve this issue and reinstitute Prop 58 and/or abolish property taxes in California, or explain some of the hurdles involved, let me know in the comments.

STOP STEALING LEGACY – AMEND PROP 19 – REFRESH PROP 58

Copyright © 2020 teambetterliving.com