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Vesting Issues...
To qualify as an exchange under IRC
Section 1031 title to the replacement property must be held in the same manner as title to
the relinquished property. Therefore, the entity beginning the exchange must be the entity
concluding the exchange. The Qualified Intermediary will prepare the exchange documents to
reflect the vesting information as shown on the title commitment or preliminary report for
the Exchanger's relinquished property. For example:
 | Husband relinquishes, then Husband must acquire
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 | Husband and Wife, as Trustees relinquish, then Husband and
Wife, as Trustees must acquire |
 | ACME Corporation relinquishes, then ACME Corporation must
acquire |
 | Johnson LLC relinquishes, then Johnson LLC must acquire
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 | Les Mis Partnership relinquishes, then Les Mis Partnership
must acquire |
Exchangers must anticipate these vesting
issues as part of their advanced planning for the exchange. These vesting issues are
easier to resolve before loan documents are sitting on the closing table. However,
business considerations, liability issues and lender requirements may make it difficult
for the Exchanger to keep the same vesting on the replacement property. For example:
 | If a husband as the only Exchanger is relying on the wife's
income to qualify for replacement property financing, then the lender will
require the
wife to appear on the deed, which may violate the husband's exchange requirements.
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 | Lenders seldom loan to trustees; they loan to individuals,
thereby creating difficulties for a trust as an Exchanger to acquire the replacement
property in the same trust entity that started the exchange. |
 | Exchanger's who dispose of relinquished property in one
entity, such as a corporation, partnership or multi-member LLC and who want to acquire the
replacement property in a different corporation or multi-member LLC for each replacement
property may not do so within the exchange format. |
The following changes in vesting usually do
not destroy the integrity of the exchange:
 | The Exchanger's revocable living trust acquires the
replacement property in the Exchanger as an individual. In certain revocable living trusts
the trust entity is disregarded for Federal tax purposes and the trustee can complete the
exchange by acquiring the replacement property in the trustee's individual capacity.
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 | The Exchanger's estate completes the exchange after the
Exchanger dies following the close of the relinquished property.
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 | The Exchanger relinquished property as an individual and
acquires replacement property as a single-member LLC or acquires multiple replacement
properties in different single-member LLC's. Single-member LLC's are disregarded for
Federal tax purposes under the "check-the-box" rules. |
 | A Corporation that merges out of existence in a tax-free
reorganization after the disposition of the relinquished property may complete the
exchange and acquire the replacement property as the new corporate entity.
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To avoid what the IRS may consider as a
"step transaction," thereby disqualifying the exchange, the Exchanger should not
make any changes in the vesting of the relinquished or replacement properties prior to, or
during the exchange. Exchangers are cautioned to consult with their tax or legal advisors
regarding how their vesting issues will impact the structure of their exchange before they
transfer the relinquished property. Proper planning and negotiation can make the
difference between a successful exchange and a taxable problem.
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