[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: 26CFR25.2515-3]

[Page 566-567]
 
                       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.  25.2515-3  Termination of tenancy by the entirety; cases in which entire value of gift is determined under section 2515(b).

    (a) In any case in which--(1) The creation of a tenancy by the 
entirety (including additions in value thereto) was not treated as a 
gift, and
    (2) The entire consideration for the creation of the tenancy, and 
any additions in value thereto, was furnished solely by the spouses (see 
paragraph (c)(1)(ii) of Sec.  25.2515-1),

the termination of the tenancy (other than by the death of a spouse) 
always results in the making of a gift by a spouse who receives a 
smaller share of the proceeds of the termination (whether received in 
cash, property or interests in property) than the share of the proceeds 
attributable to the total consideration furnished by him. See paragraph 
(c) of Sec.  25.2515-1 for a discussion of what constitutes 
consideration and the value thereof. Thus, a gift is effected at the 
time of termination of the tenancy by the spouse receiving less than 
one-half of the proceeds of termination if such spouse (regardless of 
age) furnished one-half or more of the total consideration for the 
purchase and improvements, if any, of the property held in the tenancy. 
Also, if one spouse furnished the entire consideration, a gift is made 
by such spouse to the extent that the other spouse receives any portion 
of the proceeds of termination. See Sec.  25.2515-4 for determination of 
the amount of the gift, if any, in cases in which the creation of the 
tenancy was treated as a gift or a portion of the consideration was 
furnished by a third person. See paragraph (d)(2) of Sec.  25.2515-1 as 
to the acts which effect a termination of the tenancy.
    (b) In computing the value of the gift under the circumstances 
described in paragraph (a) of this section, it is first necessary to 
determine the spouse's share of the proceeds attributable to the 
consideration furnished by him. This share is computed by multiplying 
the total value of the proceeds of the termination by a fraction, the 
numerator of which is the total consideration furnished by the donor 
spouse and the denominator of which is the total consideration furnished 
by both spouses. From this amount there is subtracted the value of the 
proceeds of termination received by the donor spouse. The amount 
remaining is the value of the gift. In arriving at the ``total 
consideration furnished by the donor spouse'' and the ``total 
consideration furnished by both spouses'', for purposes of the 
computation provided for in this paragraph, the consideration furnished 
(see paragraph (c) of Sec.  25.2515-1) is not reduced by any amounts 
which otherwise would have been excludable under section 2503(b) in 
determining the amounts of taxable gifts for calendar quarters or 
calendar years in which the consideration was furnished. (See Sec.  
25.2502-1 (c)(1) for the definition of calendar quarter.) As an example 
assume that in 1955, real property was purchased for $30,000, the 
husband and wife each contributing $12,000 and the remaining $6,000 
being obtained through a mortgage on the property. In each of the years 
1956 and 1957, the husband paid $3,000 on the principal of the 
indebtedness, but did not disclose the value of these transfers on his 
gift tax returns for those years. The total consideration furnished by 
the husband is $18,000, the total consideration furnished by the wife is 
$12,000, and the total consideration furnished by both spouses is 
$30,000.
    (c) The application of this section may be illustrated by the 
following examples:

    Example (1). In 1956 the husband furnished $30,000 and his wife 
furnished $10,000 of the consideration for the purchase and subsequent 
improvement of real property held by them as tenants by the entirety. 
The husband did not elect to treat the consideration furnished as a 
gift. The property later is sold for $60,000, the husband receiving 
$35,000 and his wife receiving $25,000 of the proceeds of the 
termination. The termination of the tenancy results in a gift of $10,000 
by the husband to his wife, computed as follows:

[$30,000 (consideration furnished by husband)/$40,000 (total 
consideration furnished by both spouses)]x$60,000 (proceeds of 
termination)=$45,000
$45,000-$35,000 (proceeds received by husband)=$10,000 gift by husband 
to wife

[[Page 567]]

    Example (2). In 1950 the husband purchased shares of X Company for 
$10,000. In 1955 when those shares had a fair market value of $30,000, 
he and his wife purchased real property from A and had it conveyed to 
them as tenants by the entirety. In payment for the real property, the 
husband transferred his shares of X Company to A and the wife paid A the 
sum of $10,000. They later sold the real property for $60,000, divided 
$24,000 (each taking $12,000) and reinvested the remaining $36,000 in 
other real property under circumstances that satisfied the conditions 
set forth in paragraph (d)(2)(ii) of Sec.  25.2515-1. The tenancy was 
terminated only with respect to the $24,000 divided between them. This 
termination of the tenancy resulted in a gift of $6,000 by the husband 
to the wife, computed as follows:

[$30,000 (consideration furnished by husband)/$40,000 (total 
consideration furnished by both spouses)]x$24,000 (proceeds of 
termination)=$18,000
$18,000-$12,000 (proceeds received by husband)=$6,000 gift by husband to 
wife.


Since the tenancy was terminated only in part, with respect to the 
remaining portion of the tenancy each spouse is considered as having 
furnished that proportion of the total consideration for the remaining 
portion of the tenancy as the consideration furnished by him before the 
sale bears to the total consideration furnished by both spouses before 
the sale. See paragraph (c) of Sec.  25.2515-1. The consideration 
furnished by the husband for the reduced tenancy is $27,000, computed as 
follows:

[$30,000 (consideration furnished by husband before sale)/$40,000 (total 
consideration furnished by both spouses before sale)]x$36,000 
(consideration for reduced tenancy)=$27,000

The consideration furnished by the wife is $9,000, computed in a similar 
manner.

[T.D. 6334, 23 FR 8904, Nov. 15, 1958, as amended by T.D. 7238, 37 FR 
28732, Dec. 29, 1972]