[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 26, Volume 14]
[Revised as of April 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 26CFR25.2511-2]

[Page 536-538]
 
                       TITLE 26--INTERNAL REVENUE
 
    CHAPTER I--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY 
                               (CONTINUED)
 
PART 25_GIFT TAX; GIFTS MADE AFTER DECEMBER 31, 1954--Table of Contents
 
Sec.  25.2511-2  Cessation of donor's dominion and control.

    (a) The gift tax is not imposed upon the receipt of the property by 
the donee, nor is it necessarily determined by the measure of enrichment 
resulting to the donee from the transfer, nor is it conditioned upon 
ability to identify the donee at the time of the transfer. On the 
contrary, the tax is a primary and personal liability of the donor, is 
an excise upon his act of making the transfer, is measured by the value 
of the property passing from the donor, and attaches regardless of the 
fact that

[[Page 537]]

the identity of the donee may not then be known or ascertainable.
    (b) As to any property, or part thereof or interest therein, of 
which the donor has so parted with dominion and control as to leave in 
him no power to change its disposition, whether for his own benefit or 
for the benefit of another, the gift is complete. But if upon a transfer 
of property (whether in trust or otherwise) the donor reserves any power 
over its disposition, the gift may be wholly incomplete, or may be 
partially complete and partially incomplete, depending upon all the 
facts in the particular case. Accordingly, in every case of a transfer 
of property subject to a reserved power, the terms of the power must be 
examined and its scope determined. For example, if a donor transfers 
property to another in trust to pay the income to the donor or 
accumulate it in the discretion of the trustee, and the donor retains a 
testamentary power to appoint the remainder among his descendants, no 
portion of the transfer is a completed gift. On the other hand, if the 
donor had not retained the testamentary power of appointment, but 
instead provided that the remainder should go to X or his heirs, the 
entire transfer would be a completed gift. However, if the exercise of 
the trustee's power in favor of the grantor is limited by a fixed or 
ascertainable standard (see paragraph (g)(2) of Sec.  25.2511-1), 
enforceable by or on behalf of the grantor, then the gift is incomplete 
to the extent of the ascertainable value of any rights thus retained by 
the grantor.
    (c) A gift is incomplete in every instance in which a donor reserves 
the power to revest the beneficial title to the property in himself. A 
gift is also incomplete if and to the extent that a reserved power gives 
the donor the power to name new beneficiaries or to change the interests 
of the beneficiaries as between themselves unless the power is a 
fiduciary power limited by a fixed or ascertainable standard. Thus, if 
an estate for life is transferred but, by an exercise of a power, the 
estate may be terminated or cut down by the donor to one of less value, 
and without restriction upon the extent to which the estate may be so 
cut down, the transfer constitutes an incomplete gift. If in this 
example the power was confined to the right to cut down the estate for 
life to one for a term of five years, the certainty of an estate for not 
less than that term results in a gift to that extent complete.
    (d) A gift is not considered incomplete, however, merely because the 
donor reserves the power to change the manner or time of enjoyment. 
Thus, the creation of a trust the income of which is to be paid annually 
to the donee for a period of years, the corpus being distributable to 
him at the end of the period, and the power reserved by the donor being 
limited to a right to require that, instead of the income being so 
payable, it should be accumulated and distributed with the corpus to the 
donee at the termination of the period, constitutes a completed gift.
    (e) A donor is considered as himself having a power if it is 
exercisable by him in conjunction with any person not having a 
substantial adverse interest in the disposition of the transferred 
property or the income therefrom. A trustee, as such, is not a person 
having an adverse interest in the disposition of the trust property or 
its income.
    (f) The relinquishment or termination of a power to change the 
beneficiaries of transferred property, occurring otherwise than by the 
death of the donor (the statute being confined to transfers by living 
donors), is regarded as the event that completes the gift and causes the 
tax to apply. For example, if A transfers property in trust for the 
benefit of B and C but reserves the power as trustee to change the 
proportionate interests of B and C, and if A thereafter has another 
person appointed trustee in place of himself, such later relinquishment 
of the power by A to the new trustee completes the gift of the 
transferred property, whether or not the new trustee has a substantial 
adverse interest. The receipt of income or of other enjoyment of the 
transferred property by the transferee or by the beneficiary (other than 
by the donor himself) during the interim between the making of the 
initial transfer and the relinquishment or termination of the power 
operates to free such income or other enjoyment from the power, and 
constitutes a gift of

[[Page 538]]

such income or of such other enjoyment taxable as of the ``calendar 
period'' (as defined in Sec.  25.2502-1(c)(1)) of its receipt. If 
property is transferred in trust to pay the income to A for life with 
remainder to B, powers to distribute corpus to A, and to withhold income 
from A for future distribution to B, are powers to change the 
beneficiaries of the transferred property.
    (g) If a donor transfers property to himself as trustee (or to 
himself and some other person, not possessing a substantial adverse 
interest, as trustees), and retains no beneficial interest in the trust 
property and no power over it except fiduciary powers, the exercise or 
nonexercise of which is limited by a fixed or ascertainable standard, to 
change the beneficiaries of the transferred property, the donor has made 
a completed gift and the entire value of the transferred property is 
subject to the gift tax.
    (h) If a donor delivers a properly indorsed stock certificate to the 
donee or the donee's agent, the gift is completed for gift tax purposes 
on the date of delivery. If the donor delivers the certificate to his 
bank or broker as his agent, or to the issuing corporation or its 
transfer agent, for transfer into the name of the donee, the gift is 
completed on the date the stock is transferred on the books of the 
corporation.
    (i) [Reserved]
    (j) If the donor contends that a power is of such nature as to 
render the gift incomplete, and hence not subject to the tax as of the 
calendar period (as defined in Sec.  25.2502-1(c)(1)) of the initial 
transfer, see Sec.  301.6501(c)-1(f)(5) of this chapter.

[T.D. 6334, 23 FR 8904, Nov. 15, 1958, as amended by T.D. 7238, 37 FR 
28728, Dec. 29, 1972; T.D. 7910, 48 FR 40374, Sept. 7, 1983; T.D. 8845, 
64 FR 67771, Dec. 3, 1999]