RECENT DEVELOPMENTS
Charitable Contributions
By Richard R.
Hammar,
J.D., LL.M., CPA
© Copyright 1991, 1998 by Church Law & Tax Report.
All rights reserved. This publication is designed to
provide accurate and authoritative information in regard to the
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person should be sought. Church Law & Tax Report, PO Box 1098,
Matthews, NC 28106. Reference Code: m08 m50 c0491
Charitable fundraisers occasionally attempt
to raise funds for charity by having individuals purchase life
insurance policies on their own lives naming a charity as the
beneficiary. Such arrangements can create difficulties, as the
IRS observed in a recent ruling. A taxpayer proposed to purchase a
life insurance policy on his own life, transfer the policy to a
charity, and name the charity as beneficiary. This arrangement was
intended to provide the taxpayer with a charitable contribution
deduction in the amount of the premiums he would pay on the policy,
and in addition provide the charity with substantial insurance
proceeds at his death. The IRS ruled that the taxpayer would not be
allowed to deduct any portion of the insurance premiums as a
charitable contribution. It noted that New York law (the taxpayer
was a resident of New York) prohibits anyone without an "insurable
interest" from obtaining an insurance policy on the life of
another. An "insurable interest" refers to a direct financial
interest in the life of the insured. The IRS concluded that since
the charity did not have an insurable interest in the taxpayer's
life, the arrangement probably violated New York law. Accordingly,
at the taxpayer's death the insurance company could refuse to pay
the policy limits to the charity. Further, the taxpayer's estate
could block any attempt to pay the insurance proceeds to the
charity. As a result, there simply was no way to characterize the
taxpayer's payment of the insurance premiums as a charitable
contribution, since there was a strong possibility that the charity
would never receive any of the insurance proceeds at the taxpayer's
death. Persons considering the purchase of a life insurance policy
naming a charity as the beneficiary (and who plan to assign the
policy to the charity) should consider the ramifications of this
ruling. First, does the charity have an insurable interest in the
taxpayer's life under applicable state law? If not, then the
insurance company may never be required to pay the policy amount to
the charity in the event of the taxpayer's death. Second, the
taxpayer may not be entitled to any charitable contribution
deduction. Private Letter Ruling 9110016.
Charitable Contributions