The Uniform Voidable Transactions Act Will Affect Your Practice
To most estate planners, the
The Law Behind the Law
As of the date of this article, eight states have adopted the UVTA—California,
So, how is the UVTA to be applied? As with every statute, it begins with learning the legislative intent. Unlike the Internal Revenue Code, most state laws don’t have secondary sources from which legislative intent can be derived. For such laws, the best guide to intent is a review of the analysis behind the particular legislative bill containing the law. In many instances, there may not be any such analysis, but if the particular statute is modeled from a Uniform Act, the applicable Committee will have enacted official comments (Comments) to the particular uniform law. How important are the Comments? They often become the primary source for legislative interpretation.4 This means that through the Comments, the particular Committee can directly affect how the legislature interprets a statute based on a uniform law. Consider the words of Professor
Wait, though—since Comments aren’t adopted as law, how, then, can they shape the interpretation of the law? While there’s an expansive body of debtor/creditor law, not every potential scenario has a judicial or administrative interpretation or explanation. For these particular scenarios, there’s no current law on point, which means that courts are left to interpret the impact of that particular scenario. A court may look to official Comments for guidance, and thus the court may be swayed by a position advocated by the Comments regardless of whether the Comments substantiate that position (for example, the Comments may say that the color of something is “red” without providing any judicial or legislative proof for the conclusion). The new Comments, therefore, can actually have the effect of creating new law based on the mere thoughts of the Committee.
Four Planning Concerns
From an estate-planning perspective, the Comments take positions that directly affect four commonly used estate-planning techniques. These are: (1) asset substitution; (2) entity formation and conversion; (3) domestic asset protection trusts (DAPTs); and (4) homestead laws.
1. Asset substitution. This is the exchange of an asset that’s more reachable by a creditor for one that’s less reachable.
The analysis begins with a review of (arguably) the most prominent section within the UVTA, which is Section 4(a)(1).6 This section states, in part:
SECTION 4. TRANSFER OR OBLIGATION VOIDABLE AS TO PRESENT OR FUTURE CREDITOR.
(a) A transfer made or obligation incurred by a debtor is voidable as to a creditor, whether the creditor’s claim arose before or after the transfer was made or the obligation was incurred, if the debtor made the transfer or incurred the obligation:
(1) with actual intent to hinder, delay, or defraud any creditor of the debtor …
It’s important to emphasize the basic premise of Section 4—it applies not only to present creditors, but also to future ones. Although the UVTA didn’t modify much within Section 4, it added several pages of new Comments. The third paragraph of new Comment (8) to Section 4 (Paragraph 3) focuses squarely on asset substitution. Paragraph 3 provides:
A transaction that does not place an asset entirely beyond the reach of creditors may nevertheless ‘hinder, delay or defraud’ creditors if it makes the asset more difficult for creditors to reach. Simple exchange by a debtor of an asset for a less liquid asset, or disposition of liquid assets while retaining illiquid assets, may be voidable for that reason.
It’s important to note that Paragraph 3 omits one key word from Section 4(a)(1)—“intent.” The Committee doesn’t inadvertently omit words, so we must presume that this omission is intentional. Will this omission be interpreted to mean that the Committee is stating that “intent” is always present unless proven otherwise? If so, this interpretation is the equivalent of shifting the burden so that, even as to a future creditor, an asset substitution is de facto voidable unless proven otherwise by the debtor. Isn’t this backwards—in the absence of clear intent, shouldn’t the burden be on the creditor to prove that the debtor intended to hinder, delay or defraud future creditors?
While the Committee apparently intended that this paragraph apply to a debtor attempting to avoid a current debt by trying to insert “space” between the debtor and the creditor, the issue for estate planners is that they’ve recommended that their clients engage in this exact technique without even considering creditor avoidance. Consider the estate freezing technique, in which a settlor creates an irrevocable trust, taints the trust for income tax purposes so that he’s the income tax owner of the trust and then sells assets to the trust in exchange for a promissory note. The sale has the effect of “freezing” the value of the estate at the then-value of the transferred assets via the note. The customary provision to attain grantor trust status is the retention by the settlor of the unilateral right to transfer assets into the trust in exchange for other assets of equal value (the IRC Section 675(4)(C) substitution power). The substitution power is usually exercised by transferring cash or high basis assets to a trust in exchange for low basis assets. If, subsequently, the settlor were to unexpectedly die, the low basis assets would receive the step-up in cost basis under IRC Section 1014(b)(9).
Suppose that this technique is implemented, and the settlor transfers cash into the trust in exchange for low basis membership interests in a limited liability company (LLC). Assuming that the company is a
2. Entity formation and conversion. There are plenty of reasons why individuals form a closely held entity (such as a family limited partnership (FLP) or an LLC) to conduct business, such as tax advantages and ease of transferability. For example, an LLC may afford the membership owners the ability to pay lower overall income taxes than if the entity were formed as a corporation. For the same reasons, individuals owning a corporation may wish to convert the entity into an LLC. One additional reason for the use of an FLP or an LLC may be the charging order protection described above. The key to the charging order protection is that the partner/member retains full ownership and control over the interest; the creditor only receives the distribution rights.
In the sixth paragraph to new Comment (8) to Section 4 (Paragraph 6), the Committee acknowledges the use of a particular state’s entity laws, but continues:
By contrast, if owners of an existing business were to reorganize it as an LLC under such a statute when the clouds of personal liability or financial distress have gathered over some of them, and with the intention of gaining the benefit of that creditor-thwarting feature, the transfer effecting the reorganization should be voidable under Section 4(a)(1), at least absent a clear indication that the legislature truly intended the LLC form, with its creditor thwarting feature, to be available even in such circumstances.
In attempting to define situations in which asset protection shouldn’t be available to a particular member, Paragraph (6) penalizes all of the members regardless of their knowledge of the problems of the particular member and, apparently, without regard to the size of the particular member’s interest. For example, if 10 individuals form an LLC, with nine of them owning 99 percent of the membership interests and one of them owning a 1 percent membership interest, and it’s later discovered that the 1 percent member had “clouds of personal liability” over her at the time of the entity formation, what should happen? Logically, given the size of the 1 percent owner’s interest, the interest—and only that interest—should either be made available for attachment or subject to forced liquidation; the other owners should be unaffected. This, however, isn’t what Paragraph 6 provides. Instead, Paragraph 6 states that so long as some of the owners have creditor issues, then all of them suffer the consequences, that is, the entire transfer is voidable. This is an overly harsh result that could cause havoc for unsuspecting entity owners.
3. DAPTs. The Committee wasn’t so subtle in its intentions regarding the third technique, which involves the DAPT.7 A DAPT is an irrevocable trust created by a settlor whereby the trustee has full discretion to pay trust income or principal back to, among others, the settlor, and applicable state law prohibits the settlor’s creditors from attaching judgments against the trust. As of Jan. 1, 2016, 15 states have enacted full DAPT legislation.8 Through the Comments, the Committee expresses a desire to eradicate DAPTs. For example, in his explanation of the UVTA,
The avoidance laws of some jurisdictions are substantially debased by comparison with the UVTA … Section 10 reflects the committee’s conclusion, which was to include no escape hatch in the statutory text. It addresses asset tourism through a comment stating that a debtor’s ‘principal residence,’ ‘place of business,’ or ‘chief executive office’ should be determined on the basis of genuine and sustained activity, not on the basis of artificial manipulations.9
DAPT states will market themselves to residents of non-DAPT states seeking certain protections from creditors. Until the UVTA, the uncertainty of which state law applies to a transfer to a DAPT allowed a DAPT state to disregard any judgment seeking attachment against one of its trusts for the return of certain assets. That is, the DAPT state wasn’t bound to grant the domiciliary state’s judgment full faith and credit (FF&C) under the
4. Homestead laws. Section 10 not only affects DAPTs, but also may affect a particular state’s homestead laws. In general, homestead laws provide the surviving spouse and descendants with certain protections from creditor attachments (other than those direct obligations, such as secured mortgages).
Under the UVTA, however, it might be possible for one state to determine the effect of another state’s homestead laws. In Havoco, a
Steps for Estate Planners
The UVTA is noteworthy for its attempt to strengthen creditor’s rights, for which no one should take any umbrage. However, in formulating its analysis of the UVTA, the Committee intentionally set forth overly broad mechanics for its interpretation, which can have serious repercussions for estate-planning attorneys.
Estate-planning attorneys must become educated on the UVTA and learn of its ramifications. The estate-planning bars in jurisdictions that haven’t passed the UVTA should press for a “non-acquiescence” of the UVTA-added Comments. In UVTA states, the estate-planning bars should alert their membership as to the potential pitfalls when engaging in some commonly used planning techniques.
Endnotes
1. Portions of this article are based on
2. See
3. Ibid.
4. See, for example, In re Nocita, 914 S.W.2d 358, 359 (Mo. 1996): “When construing uniform and model acts enacted by the
5.
6. Unless otherwise stated, all section references shall be to sections of the Uniform Voidable Transactions Act.
7. A full analysis of domestic asset protection trusts is beyond the scope of this article.
8. Alaska Stat. Section 34.40.110; 12 Del. C. Sections 3536(c)(1), 3570-3576; Haw.
tions 18-9.2-1-18-9.2-7; S.D. Codified Laws Sections 55-1-36, 55-16-1-55-16-17, 55-3-39, 55-3-41, 55-3-47; Tenn. Code Ann. Sections 35-16-101-35-16-112; Utah Code Ann. Section 25-6-14; Va. Code Ann. Sections 64.2-745.1, 64.2-745.2, 64.2-747(A)(2);
Wyo. Stat. Ann. Sections 4-10-103, 4-10-506(b), 4-10-510-4-10-523.
9. Kettering, supra note 5, at pp. 800-801.
10. See Cal. Civil Code Section 3439.10.
11.



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