Utah Code § 75A-5-507

Adjustment between income and principal because of taxes
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(1) A fiduciary may make an adjustment between income and principal to offset the shifting
of economic interests or tax benefits between current income beneficiaries and successor
beneficiaries that arises from:
(a) an election or decision the fiduciary makes regarding a tax matter, other than a decision to
claim an income tax deduction to which Subsection (2) applies;
(b) an income tax or other tax imposed on the fiduciary or a beneficiary as a result of a
transaction involving the fiduciary or a distribution by the fiduciary; or
(c) ownership by the fiduciary of an interest in an entity, a part of whose taxable income,
regardless of whether the taxable income is distributed, is includable in the taxable income of
the fiduciary or a beneficiary.
(2)
(a) If the amount of an estate tax marital or charitable deduction is reduced because a fiduciary
deducts an amount paid from principal for income tax purposes instead of deducting
the amount for estate tax purposes and, as a result, estate taxes paid from principal are
increased and income taxes paid by the fiduciary or a beneficiary are decreased, the fiduciary
shall charge each beneficiary that benefits from the decrease in income tax to reimburse the
principal from which the increase in estate tax is paid.
(b) The total reimbursement must equal the increase in the estate tax, to the extent that the
principal used to pay the increase would have qualified for a marital or charitable deduction
but for the payment.
(c) The share of the reimbursement for each fiduciary or beneficiary whose income taxes are
reduced shall be the same as the fiduciary's or beneficiary's share of the total decrease in
income tax.
(3) A fiduciary that charges a beneficiary under Subsection (2) may offset the charge by
obtaining payment from the beneficiary, withholding an amount from future distributions to the
beneficiary, or adopting another method or combination of methods.
Renumbered and Amended by Chapter 364, 2024 General Session

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