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from the previous example, this new rule now states
that if Fred and Sue sell the old property in their
own names, they can take title the new property as an
LLC, IF they
are the owners of all the shares of the LLC, and IF
they and the property resides in a community property
state such as Arizona. It does not apply to non-community
property states such as Colorado or Florida. It is not
clear what impact this ruling will have in situations
where the couple lives in a community property state,
but the property is in a non-community state. And it
is also not clear what happens if the property is in
a community property state, but the couple lives in
a non-community state.
There
are a couple of additional angles to this ruling that
I think could greatly impact the Arizona real estate
market. Let's assume that Fred and his friend Jack own
all of the shares of an LLC that owns a large office
building. Sue, Fred's wife, could buy Jack's LLC shares,
which would then make the LLC a disregarded entity.
Buying Jack's LLC shares, rather than the real estate
itself, will usually avoid transfer tax issues in those
areas that impose them. Sue could even buy Jack's shares,
instead of the actual property, to complete a 1031 exchange
of her own, since the end result is that she and her
husband would hold title in a disregarded entity, which
will satisfy the exchange requirements.
Another
angle that would work to their benefit would be if Fred
and Sue bought, as their replacement property in an
exchange, all of the membership interests of XYZ, LLC
from Jack and Jim. Fred and Sue's purchase would satisfy
the exchange requirements and they would have avoided
transfer taxes.
I
think that this is a great ruling for the Arizona real
estate community.
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