[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: 26CFR25.2514-1]

[Page 552-555]
 
                       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.  25.2514-1  Transfers under power of appointment.

    (a) Introductory. (1) Section 2514 treats the exercise of a general 
power of appointment created on or before October 21, 1942, as a 
transfer of property for purposes of the gift tax. The section also 
treats as a transfer of property the exercise or complete release of a 
general power of appointment created after October 21, 1942, and under 
certain circumstances the exercise of a power of appointment (not a 
general power of appointment) created after October 21, 1942, by the 
creation of another power of appointment. See paragraph (d) of Sec.  
25.2514-3. Under certain circumstances, also, the failure to exercise a 
power of appointment created after October 21, 1942, within a specified 
time, so that the power lapses, constitutes a transfer of property. 
Paragraphs (b) through (e) of this section contain definitions of 
certain terms used in Sec. Sec.  25.2514-2 and 25.2514-3. See Sec.  
25.2514-2 for specific rules applicable to certain powers created on or 
before October 21, 1942. See Sec.  25.2514-3 for specific rules 
applicable to powers created after October 21, 1942.
    (2) [Reserved]
    (b) Definition of ``power of appointment''--(1) In general. The term 
``power of appointment'' includes all powers which are in substance and 
effect powers of appointment received by the donee of the power from 
another person, regardless of the nomenclature used in creating the 
power and regardless of local property law connotations. For example, if 
a trust instrument provides that the beneficiary may appropriate or 
consume the principal of the trust, the power to consume or appropriate 
is a power of appointment. Similarly, a power given to a donee to affect 
the beneficial enjoyment of a trust property or its income by altering, 
amending or revoking the trust instrument or terminating the trust is a 
power of appointment. A power in a donee to remove or discharge a 
trustee and appoint himself may be a power of appointment. For example, 
if under the terms of a trust instrument, the trustee or his successor 
has the power to appoint the principal of the trust for the benefit of 
individuals including himself, and A, another person, has the 
unrestricted power to remove or discharge the trustee at any time and 
appoint any other person, including himself, A is considered as having a 
power of appointment. However, he would not be considered to have a 
power of appointment if he only had the power to appoint a successor, 
including himself, under limited conditions which did not

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exist at the time of exercise, release or lapse of the trustee's power, 
without an accompanying unrestricted power of removal. Similarly, a 
power to amend only the administrative provisions of a trust instrument, 
which cannot substantially affect the beneficial enjoyment of the trust 
property or income, is not a power of appointment. The mere power of 
management, investment, custody of assets, or the power to allocate 
receipts and disbursements as between income and principal, exercisable 
in a fiduciary capacity, whereby the holder has no power to enlarge or 
shift any of the beneficial interests therein except as an incidental 
consequence of the discharge of such fiduciary duties is not a power of 
appointment. Further, the right in a beneficiary of a trust to assent to 
a periodic accounting, thereby relieving the trustee from further 
accountability, is not a power of appointment if the right of assent 
does not consist of any power or right to enlarge or shift the 
beneficial interest of any beneficiary therein.
    (2) Relation to other sections. For purposes of Sec. Sec.  25.2514-1 
through 25.2514-3, the term ``power of appointment'' does not include 
powers reserved by a donor to himself. No provision of section 2514 or 
of Sec. Sec.  25.2514-1 through 25.2514-3 is to be construed as in any 
way limiting the application of any other section of the Internal 
Revenue Code or of these regulations. The power of the owner of a 
property interest already possessed by him to dispose of his interest, 
and nothing more, is not a power of appointment, and the interest is 
includible in the amount of his gifts to the extent it would be 
includible under section 2511 or other provisions of the Internal 
Revenue Code. For example, if a trust created by S provides for payment 
of the income to A for life with power in A to appoint the entire trust 
property by deed during her lifetime to a class consisting of her 
children, and a further power to dispose of the entire corpus by will to 
anyone, including her estate, and A exercises the inter vivos power in 
favor of her children, she has necessarily made a transfer of her income 
interest which constitutes a taxable gift under section 2511(a), without 
regard to section 2514. This transfer also results in a relinquishment 
of her general power to appoint by will which constitutes a transfer 
under section 2514 if the power was created after October 21, 1942.
    (3) Powers over a portion of property. If a power of appointment 
exists as to part of an entire group of assets or only over a limited 
interest in property, section 2514 applies only to such part or 
interest.
    (c) Definition of ``general power of appointment''--(1) In general. 
The term ``general power of appointment'' as defined in section 2514(c) 
means any power of appointment exercisable in favor of the person 
possessing the power (referred to as the ``possessor''), his estate, his 
creditors, or the creditors of his estate, except (i) joint powers, to 
the extent provided in Sec. Sec.  25.2514-2 and 25.2514-3 and (ii) 
certain powers limited by an ascertainable standard, to the extent 
provided in subparagraph (2) of this paragraph. A power of appointment 
exercisable to meet the estate tax, or any other taxes, debts, or 
charges which are enforceable against the possessor or his estate, is 
included within the meaning of a power of appointment exercisable in 
favor of the possessor, his estate, his creditors, or the creditors of 
his estate. A power of appointment exercisable for the purpose of 
discharging a legal obligation of the possessor or for his pecuniary 
benefit is considered a power of appointment exercisable in favor of the 
possessor or his creditors. However, for purposes of Sec. Sec.  25.2514-
1 through 25.2514-3, a power of appointment not otherwise considered to 
be a general power of appointment is not treated as a general power of 
appointment merely by reason of the fact that an appointee may, in fact, 
be a creditor of the possessor or his estate. A power of appointment is 
not a general power if by its terms it is either--
    (a) Exercisable only in favor of one or more designated persons or 
classes other than the possessor or his creditors, or the possessor's 
estate, or the creditors of his estate, or
    (b) Expressly not exercisable in favor of the possessor or his 
creditors, the possessor's estate, or the creditors of his estate.

[[Page 554]]


A beneficiary may have two powers under the same instrument, one of 
which is a general power of appointment and the other of which is not. 
For example, a beneficiary may have a general power to withdraw a 
limited portion of trust corpus during his life, and a further power 
exercisable during his lifetime to appoint the corpus among his 
children. The later power is not a general power of appointment (but its 
exercise may result in the exercise of the former power; see paragraph 
(d) of this section).
    (2) Powers limited by an ascertainable standard. A power to consume, 
invade, or appropriate income or corpus, or both, for the benefit of the 
possessor which is limited by an ascertainable standard relating to the 
health, education, support, or maintenance of the possessor is, by 
reason of section 2514(c)(1), not a general power of appointment. A 
power is limited by such a standard if the extent of the possessor's 
duty to exercise and not to exercise the power is reasonably measurable 
in terms of his needs for health, education, or support (or any 
combination of them). As used in this subparagraph, the words 
``support'' and ``maintenance'' are synonymous and their meaning is not 
limited to the bare necessities of life. A power to use property for the 
comfort, welfare, or happiness of the holder of the power is not limited 
by the requisite standard. Examples of powers which are limited by the 
requisite standard are powers exercisable for the holder's ``support,'' 
``support in reasonable comfort,'' ``maintenance in health and 
reasonable comfort,'' ``support in his accustomed manner of living,'' 
``education, including college and professional education,'' ``health,'' 
and ``medical, dental, hospital and nursing expenses and expenses of 
invalidism.'' In determining whether a power is limited by an 
ascertainable standard, it is immaterial whether the beneficiary is 
required to exhaust his other income before the power can be exercised.
    (3) Certain powers under wills of decedents dying between January 1 
and April 2, 1948. Section 210 of the Technical Changes Act of 1953 
provides that if a decedent died after December 31, 1947, but before 
April 3, 1948, certain property interests described therein may, if the 
decedent's surviving spouse so elects, be accorded special treatment in 
the determination of the marital deduction to be allowed the decedent's 
estate under the provisions of section 812(e) of the Internal Revenue 
Code of 1939. See paragraph (h) of Sec.  81.47a of Regulations 105 (26 
CFR (1939) 81.47a(h)). The section further provides that property 
affected by the election shall be considered property with respect to 
which the surviving spouse has a general power of appointment. 
Therefore, notwithstanding any other provision of law or of Sec. Sec.  
25.2514-1 through 25.2514-3, if the surviving spouse has made an 
election under section 210 of the Technical Changes Act of 1953, the 
property which was the subject of the election shall be considered as 
property with respect to which she has a general power of appointment 
created after October 21, 1942, exercisable by deed or will, to the 
extent it was treated as an interest passing to the surviving spouse and 
not passing to any other person for the purpose of the marital deduction 
in the prior decedent's estate.
    (d) Definition of ``exercise.'' Whether a power of appointment is in 
fact exercised may depend upon local law. However, regardless of local 
law, a power of appointment is considered as exercised for purposes of 
section 2514 even though the exercise is in favor of the taker in 
default of appointment, and irrespective of whether the appointed 
interest and the interest in default of appointment are identical or 
whether the appointee renounces any right to take under the appointment. 
A power of appointment is also considered as exercised even though the 
disposition cannot take effect until the occurrence of an event after 
the exercise takes place, if the exercise is irrevocable and, as of the 
time of the exercise, the condition was not impossible of occurrence. 
For example, if property is left in trust to A for life, with a power in 
A to appoint the remainder by an instrument filed with the trustee 
during his life, and A exercises his power by appointing the remainder 
to B in the event that B survives A, A is considered to have exercised 
his power if the exercise was irrevocable. Furthermore, if a person

[[Page 555]]

holds both a presently exercisable general power of appointment and a 
presently exercisable nongeneral power of appointment over the same 
property, the exercise of the nongeneral power is considered the 
exercise of the general power only to the extent that immediately after 
the exercise of the nongeneral power the amount of money or property 
subject to being transferred by the exercise of the general power is 
decreased. For example, assume A has a noncumulative annual power to 
withdraw the greater of $5,000 or 5 percent of the value of a trust 
having a value of $300,000 and a lifetime nongeneral power to appoint 
all or a portion of the trust corpus to A's child or grandchildren. If A 
exercises the nongeneral power by appointing $150,000 to A's child, the 
exercise of the nongeneral power is treated as the exercise of the 
general power to the extent of $7,500 (maximum exercise of general power 
before the exercise of the nongeneral power, 5% of $300,000 or $15,000, 
less maximum exercise of the general power after the exercise of the 
nongeneral power, 5% of $150,000 or $7,500).
    (e) Time of creation of power. A power of appointment created by 
will is, in general, considered as created on the date of the testator's 
death. However, section 2514(f) provides that a power of appointment 
created by a will executed on or before October 21, 1942, is considered 
a power created on or before that date if the testator dies before July 
1, 1949, without having republished the will, by codicil or otherwise, 
after October 21, 1942. A power of appointment created by an inter vivos 
instrument is considered as created on the date the instrument takes 
effect. Such a power is not considered as created at some future date 
merely because it is not exercisable on the date the instrument takes 
effect, or because it is revocable, or because the identity of its 
holders is not ascertainable until after the date the instrument takes 
effect. However, if the holder of a power exercises it by creating a 
second power, the second power is considered as created at the time of 
the exercise of the first. The application of this paragraph may be 
illustrated by the following examples:
    Example (1). A created a revocable trust before October 22, 1942, 
providing for payment of income to B for life with remainder as B shall 
appoint by deed or will. Even though A dies after October 21, 1942, 
without having exercised his power of revocation, B's power of 
appointment is considered a power created before October 22, 1942.
    Example (2). C created an irrevocable inter vivos trust before 
October 22, 1942, naming T as trustee and providing for payment of 
income to D for life with remainder to E. T was given the power to pay 
corpus to D and the power to appoint a successor trustee. If T resigns 
after October 21, 1942, and appoints D as successor trustee, D is 
considered to have a power of appointment created before October 22, 
1942.
    Example (3). F created an irrevocable inter vivos trust before 
October 22, 1942, providing for payment of income to G for life with 
remainder as G shall appoint by deed or will, but in default of 
appointment income to H for life with remainder as H shall appoint by 
deed or will. If G died after October 21, 1942, without having exercised 
his power of appointment, H's power of appointments is considered a 
power created before October 22, 1942, even though it was only a 
contingent interest until G's death.
    Example (4). If in example (3) above G had exercised by will his 
power of appointment, by creating a similar power in J, J's power of 
appointment would be considered a power created after October 21, 1942.

[T.D. 6334, 23 FR 8904, Nov. 15, 1958, as amended by T.D. 6582, 26 FR 
11861, Dec. 12, 1961, T.D. 9757, 46 FR 6929, Jan. 22, 1981]