[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 26, Volume 11]
[Revised as of April 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 26CFR1.1014-4]

[Page 45-46]
 
                       TITLE 26--INTERNAL REVENUE
 
    CHAPTER I--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY 
                               (CONTINUED)
 
PART 1_INCOME TAXES--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 1.1014-4  Uniformity of basis; adjustment to basis.

    (a) In general. (1) The basis of property acquired from a decedent, 
as determined under section 1014(a), is uniform in the hands of every 
person having possession or enjoyment of the property at any time under 
the will or other instrument or under the laws of descent and 
distribution. The principle of uniform basis means that the basis of the 
property (to which proper adjustments must, of course, be made) will be 
the same, or uniform, whether the property is possessed or enjoyed by 
the executor or administrator, the heir, the legatee or devisee, or the 
trustee or beneficiary of a trust created by a will or an inter vivos 
trust. In determining the amount allowed or allowable to a taxpayer in 
computing taxable income as deductions for depreciation or depletion 
under section 1016(a)(2), the uniform basis of the property shall at all 
times be used and adjusted. The sale, exchange, or other disposition by 
a life tenant or remainderman of his interest in property will, for 
purposes of this section, have no effect upon the uniform basis of the 
property in the hands of those who acquired it from the decedent. Thus, 
gain or loss on sale of trust assets by the trustee will be determined 
without regard to the prior sale of any interest in the property. 
Moreover, any adjustment for depreciation shall be made to the uniform 
basis of the property without regard to such prior sale, exchange, or 
other disposition.
    (2) Under the law governing wills and the distribution of the 
property of decedents, all titles to property acquired by bequest, 
devise, or inheritance relate back to the death of the decedent, even 
though the interest of the person taking the title was, at the date of 
death of the decedent, legal, equitable, vested, contingent, general, 
specific, residual, conditional, executory, or otherwise. Accordingly, 
there is a common acquisition date for all titles to property acquired 
from a decedent within the meaning of section 1014, and, for this 
reason, a common or uniform basis for all such interests. For example, 
if distribution of personal property left by a decedent is not made 
until one year after his death, the basis of such property in the hands 
of the legatee is its fair market value at the time when the decedent 
died, and not when the legatee actually received the property. If the 
bequest is of the residue to trustees in trust, and the executors do not 
distribute the residue to such trustees until five years after the death 
of the decedent, the basis of each piece of property left by the 
decedent and thus received, in the hands of the trustees, is its fair 
market value at the time when the decedent dies. If the bequest is to 
trustees in trust to pay to A during his lifetime the income of the 
property bequeathed, and after his death to distribute such property to 
the survivors of a class, and upon A's death the property is distributed 
to the taxpayer as the sole survivor, the basis of such property, in the 
hands of the taxpayer, is its fair market value at the time when the 
decedent died. The purpose of the Code in prescribing a general uniform 
basis rule for property acquired from a decedent is, on the one hand, to 
tax the gain, in respect of such property, to him who realizes it 
(without regard to the circumstances that at the death of the decedent 
it may have been quite uncertain whether the taxpayer would take or gain 
anything); and, on the other hand, not to recognize as gain any element 
of value resulting solely from the circumstance that the possession or 
enjoyment of the taxpayer was postponed. Such postponement may be, for 
example, until the administration of the decedent's estate is completed, 
until the period of the possession or enjoyment of another has 
terminated, or until an uncertain event has happened. It is the increase 
or decrease in the value of property reflected in a sale or other 
disposition

[[Page 46]]

which is recognized as the measure of gain or loss.
    (3) The principles stated in subparagraphs (1) and (2) of this 
paragraph do not apply to property transferred by an executor, 
administrator or trustee, to an heir, legatee, devisee or beneficiary 
under circumstances such that the transfer constitutes a sale or 
exchange. In such a case, gain or loss must be recognized by the 
transferor to the extent required by the revenue laws, and the 
transferee acquires a basis equal to the fair market value of the 
property on the date of the transfer. Thus, for example, if the trustee 
of a trust created by will transfers to a beneficiary, in satisfaction 
of a specific bequest of $10,000, securities which had a fair market 
value of $9,000 on the date of the decedent's death (the applicable 
valuation date) and $10,000 on the date of the transfer, the trust 
realizes a taxable gain of $1,000 and the basis of the securities in the 
hands of the beneficiary would be $10,000. As a further example, if the 
executor of an estate transfers to a trust property worth $200,000, 
which had a fair market value of $175,000 on the date of the decedent's 
death (the applicable valuation date), in satisfaction of the decedent's 
bequest in trust for the benefit of his wife of cash or securities to be 
selected by the executor in an amount sufficient to utilize the marital 
deduction to the maximum extent authorized by law (after taking into 
consideration any other property qualifying for the marital deduction), 
capital gain in the amount of $25,000 would be realized by the estate 
and the basis of the property in the hands of the trustees would be 
$200,000. If, on the other hand, the decedent bequeathed a fraction of 
his residuary estate to a trust for the benefit of his wife, which 
fraction will not change regardless of any fluctuations in value of 
property in the decedent's estate after his death, no gain or loss would 
be realized by the estate upon transfer of property to the trust, and 
the basis of the property in the hands of the trustee would be its fair 
market value on the date of the decedent's death or on the alternate 
valuation date.
    (b) Multiple interests. Where more than one person has an interest 
in property acquired from a decedent, the basis of such property shall 
be determined and adjusted without regard to the multiple interests. The 
basis of computing gain or loss on the sale of any one of such multiple 
interests shall be determined under Sec. 1.1014-5. Thus, the deductions 
for depreciation and for depletion allowed or allowable, under sections 
167 and 611, to a legal life tenant as if the life tenant were the 
absolute owner of the property, constitute an adjustment to the basis of 
the property not only in the hands of the life tenant, but also in the 
hands of the remainderman and every other person to whom the same 
uniform basis is applicable. Similarly, the deductions allowed or 
allowable under sections 167 and 611, both to the trustee and to the 
trust beneficiaries, constitute an adjustment to the basis of the 
property not only in the hands of the trustee, but also in the hands of 
the trust beneficiaries and every other person to whom the uniform basis 
is applicable. See, however, section 262. Similarly, adjustments in 
respect of capital expenditures or losses, tax-free distributions, or 
other distributions applicable in reduction of basis, or other items for 
which the basis is adjustable are made without regard to which one of 
the persons to whom the same uniform basis is applicable makes the 
capital expenditures or sustains the capital losses, or to whom the tax-
free or other distributions are made, or to whom the deductions are 
allowed or allowable. See Sec. 1.1014-6 for adjustments in respect of 
property acquired from a decedent prior to his death.
    (c) Records. The executor or other legal representative of the 
decedent, the fiduciary of a trust under a will, the life tenant and 
every other person to whom a uniform basis under this section is 
applicable, shall maintain records showing in detail all deductions, 
distributions, or other items for which adjustment to basis is required 
to be made by sections 1016 and 1017, and shall furnish to the district 
director such information with respect to those adjustments as he may 
require.