5-1514 - Certain gift transactions; formal requirements; statutory form.

§ 5-1514. Certain  gift  transactions;  formal requirements; statutory  form. 1. If the principal intends to authorize the agent to  make  gifts  other  than  gifts authorized by subdivision fourteen of section 5-1502I  of this title, the principal must expressly grant such authority  either  in  a  statutory gifts rider to a statutory short form power of attorney  or in a  non-statutory  power  of  attorney  executed  pursuant  to  the  requirements of paragraph (b) of subdivision nine of this section.    2.  The  principal  may  authorize  the  agent  to  make  gifts to the  principal's spouse, children and more remote descendents,  and  parents,  not  to  exceed,  for  each donee, the annual federal gift tax exclusion  amount  pursuant  to  the  Internal  Revenue  Code.  For  gifts  to  the  principal's  children  and  more  remote  descendants,  and parents, the  maximum amount of the gift to each donee shall not exceed twice the gift  tax exclusion amount, if the principal's spouse  agrees  to  split  gift  treatment pursuant to the Internal Revenue Code.    3. The principal may also authorize the agent to:    (a)  make  gifts  up  to  a  specified  dollar amount, or unlimited in  amount;    (b) make gifts to any person or persons;    (c) make gifts in any of the following ways:    (1) opening, modifying or terminating a deposit account in the name of  the principal and other joint tenants;    (2) opening, modifying or terminating any other joint account  in  the  name of the principal and other joint tenants;    (3)  opening, modifying or terminating a bank account in trust form as  described in section 7-5.1 of the estates, powers and  trusts  law,  and  designate or change the beneficiary or beneficiaries of such account;    (4)  opening,  modifying or terminating a transfer on death account as  described in part four of article thirteen of the  estates,  powers  and  trusts  law, and designate or change the beneficiary or beneficiaries of  such account;    (5) changing the beneficiary  or  beneficiaries  of  any  contract  of  insurance  on  the  life  of  the  principal or annuity contract for the  benefit of the principal;    (6) procuring new, different or additional contracts of  insurance  on  the  life  of  the principal or annuity contracts for the benefit of the  principal and designate the beneficiary or  beneficiaries  of  any  such  contract;    (7)  designating  or  changing the beneficiary or beneficiaries of any  type of retirement benefit or plan;    (8) creating, amending, revoking or terminating an inter vivos  trust;  and    (9)  opening,  modifying  or  terminating  other property interests or  rights of survivorship, and  designate  or  change  the  beneficiary  or  beneficiaries therein.    A  gift  to  an  individual authorized by this subdivision may be made  outright, by exercise or release of a presently exercisable  general  or  special  power  of  appointment  held  by  the  principal,  to  a  trust  established or created for such individual, to a  Uniform  Transfers  to  Minors  Act  account  for  such  individual  (regardless  of  who is the  custodian), or to a tuition savings account or prepaid tuition  plan  as  defined  under  section 529 of the Internal Revenue Code for the benefit  of such individual (without regard  to  who  is  the  account  owner  or  responsible individual for such account).    4. An agent may not:    (a)  exercise  any  authority described in subdivision two or three of  this section unless such authority is expressly granted in  a  statutory  gifts  rider  to  a  statutory  short  form  power  of  attorney or in anon-statutory power of attorney executed pursuant to the requirements of  paragraph (b) of subdivision nine of this section;    (b)  make a gift to himself or herself or create in himself or herself  an interest in  the  principal's  property  pursuant  to  any  grant  of  authority  described  in subdivision two or three of this section unless  such authority is expressly granted in a  statutory  gifts  rider  to  a  statutory  short  form  power of attorney or in a non-statutory power of  attorney executed pursuant to  the  requirements  of  paragraph  (b)  of  subdivision nine of this section.    5.  Any  authority  granted to an agent pursuant to subdivision two or  three or paragraph (b) of subdivision  four  of  this  section  must  be  exercised according to any instructions in this document or in any other  writing  provided  by  the  principal  regarding  the  exercise  of  any  authority, or otherwise for purposes which the agent reasonably deems to  be in  the  best  interest  of  the  principal,  specifically  including  financial,  estate,  or  tax planning, including minimization of income,  estate, inheritance, generation-skipping transfer or gift taxes.    6. Construction of the provisions of the statutory gifts rider.    (a)  In  a statutory gifts rider to a statutory short form power of attorney,  the language "I grant authority to my agent to make gifts to my  spouse,  children  and  more  remote descendants, and parents, not to exceed, for  each donee, the annual federal gift tax exclusion amount pursuant to the  Internal Revenue  Code.  For  gifts  to  my  children  and  more  remote  descendants,  and  parents, the maximum amount of the gift to each donee  shall not exceed twice the gift  tax  exclusion  amount,  if  my  spouse  agrees  to  split  gift treatment pursuant to the Internal Revenue Code"  must be construed to mean that the principal authorizes the agent:    (1) To make gifts on  behalf  of  the  principal  to  the  principal's  spouse,  children  and  other descendants, and parents. Gifts to a donee  shall not exceed in any calendar year the amount of the federal gift tax  exclusion available to  the  principal  under  section  2503(b)  of  the  Internal  Revenue  Code.  Gifts  may  be made outright or by exercise or  release of a presently exercisable general power  or  special  power  of  appointment held by the principal, to a trust established or created for  such  individual  (provided  that  gifts  to  such trust qualify for the  federal gift tax exclusion under section 2503(b) or (c) of the  Internal  Revenue  Code),  to  a  Uniform Transfers to Minors Act account for such  individual (regardless of who is the custodian), to  a  tuition  savings  account  or  prepaid  tuition  plan  as defined under section 529 of the  Internal Revenue Code for the benefit of such individual (without regard  to who is the account owner of or responsible person for such account);    (2) To make gifts up to twice the annual federal  gift  tax  exclusion  amount  on  behalf  of both the principal and the principal's spouse, to  the principal's children and other  descendants,  and  parents,  if  the  principal's  spouse  consents to the splitting of such gifts pursuant to  section 2513 of the Internal Revenue Code;    (3) To consent, pursuant to Section 2513(a) of  the  Internal  Revenue  Code,  to  the  splitting of gifts made by the principal's spouse to the  principal's children and other descendants in any  amount,  and  to  the  splitting  of  gifts made by the principal's spouse to any other persons  in amounts not exceeding the aggregate annual gift  tax  exclusions  for  both  spouses  under Section 2503(b) of said Code (or cognate provisions  of any successor statute); and    (4) To satisfy pledges made to organizations,  whether  charitable  or  otherwise, by the principal.    (b) Any authority granted to an agent under a statutory gifts rider to  a  statutory short form power of attorney must be construed to mean that  the principal authorizes the agent:(1) To prepare, execute, consent to on behalf of  the  principal,  and  file  any  return, report, declaration or other document required by the  laws of the United States, or by  any  state  or  political  subdivision  thereof,  or  by  any  foreign country or political subdivision thereof,  which  the  agent deems to be desirable or necessary with respect to any  gift made under the authority of this section;    (2) To execute, acknowledge, seal and deliver  any  deed,  assignment,  agreement,  trust  agreement,  authorization, check, or other instrument  which the agent deems useful  for  the  accomplishment  of  any  of  the  purposes enumerated in this section;    (3)  To  prosecute,  defend, submit to alternative dispute resolution,  settle and propose or accept a compromise  with  respect  to  any  claim  existing  in favor of or against the principal based on or involving any  gift transaction or to intervene in any related action or proceeding;    (4) To hire, discharge and compensate any attorney, accountant, expert  witness, or other assistant or assistants  when  the  agent  deems  that  action  to  be desirable for the proper execution by the agent of any of  the authorities described in this section, and for the keeping of needed  records thereof; and    (5) In general, and in addition to but not in contravention of all the  specific acts listed in this section, to do any other act or acts  which  the  agent  deems  desirable  or  necessary to complete any such gift on  behalf of the principal.    (c) The authority explicitly  authorized  in  this  section  shall  be  construed  to include any like authority authorized in any other section  of this title. Accordingly, such like authorities as are  authorized  in  any other section of this title may not be exercised by the agent unless  they  are expressly granted to the agent in the statutory gifts rider or  in  a  non-statutory  power  of  attorney  executed  pursuant   to   the  requirements of paragraph (b) of subdivision nine of this section.    (d)  The  statutory  gifts  rider  may be modified pursuant to section  5-1503 of this title to contain additional  provisions  authorizing  the  agent  to  make  any or all of the transactions specified in subdivision  three of this section.    7. All authority  described  in  this  section  shall  be  exercisable  equally with respect to a gift of any property in which the principal is  interested  at  the  time the power of attorney is given or in which the  principal becomes interested after that time,  and  whether  located  in  this state or elsewhere.    8.  If, after naming the spouse as a permissible recipient of gifting,  the principal's marriage is  terminated  by  divorce  or  annulment,  as  defined  in  subparagraph  two  of paragraph (f) of section 5-1.4 of the  estates, powers and trusts law, the divorce  or  annulment  revokes  the  authority to gift to the former spouse, unless the statutory gifts rider  or  the  non-statutory  power  of  attorney  executed  pursuant  to  the  requirements of paragraph  (b)  of  subdivision  nine  of  this  section  expressly  provides  otherwise.  If  the authority to gift to the former  spouse is revoked solely by this subdivision, it shall be revived by the  principal's remarriage to the former spouse.    9. To be valid, a statutory gifts rider  to  a  statutory  short  form  power of attorney must:    (a)  Be  typed  or printed using letters which are legible or of clear  type no less than twelve point in size, or, if in writing, a  reasonable  equivalent thereof.    (b)  Be  signed  and  dated  by  a  principal  with capacity, with the  signature of the principal duly acknowledged in  the  manner  prescribed  for  the  acknowledgment of a conveyance of real property, and witnessed  by two persons who are  not  named  in  the  instrument  as  permissiblerecipients  of  gifts,  in  the  manner described in subparagraph two of  paragraph (a) of section 3-2.1 of the estates, powers  and  trusts  law.  The  person who takes the acknowledgment, under this paragraph, may also  serve as one of the witnesses.    (c)  Be  accompanied  by  a  statutory short form power of attorney in  which the authority (SGR) is initialed by the principal.    (d) Be executed simultaneously with the statutory short form power  of  attorney and in the manner provided in this section.    10.  The  use  of  the  following shall be construed as the "Statutory  Gifts Rider" for a statutory short form power of attorney:                             "POWER OF ATTORNEY                       NEW YORK STATUTORY GIFTS RIDER                 AUTHORIZATION FOR CERTAIN GIFT TRANSACTIONS    CAUTION TO THE PRINCIPAL: This OPTIONAL rider allows you to  authorize  your  agent  to  make gifts in excess of an annual total of $500 for all  gifts described in  (I)  of  the  Grant  of  Authority  section  of  the  statutory  short  form  Power  of  Attorney  (under  personal and family  maintenance), or certain other gift transactions during  your  lifetime.  You  do  not  have  to execute this rider if you only want your agent to  make gifts described in (I) of the Grant of  Authority  section  of  the  statutory  short  form Power of Attorney and you initialed "(I)" on that  section of that form.  Granting any of the following authority  to  your  agent  gives  your  agent  the  authority  to  take  actions which could  significantly reduce your  property  or  change  how  your  property  is  distributed  at your death. "Certain gift transactions" are described in  section 5-1514 of the General Obligations Law. This Gifts Rider does not  require your agent to exercise granted authority, but  when  he  or  she  exercises   this  authority,  he  or  she  must  act  according  to  any  instructions you provide, or otherwise in your best interest.    This Gifts Rider and the Power of Attorney it supplements must be read  together as a single instrument.    Before signing this document authorizing your agent to make gifts, you  should seek legal advice to ensure that your intentions are clearly  and  properly expressed.    (a) GRANT OF LIMITED AUTHORITY TO MAKE GIFTS    Granting  gifting  authority  to  your  agent  gives  your  agent  the  authority  to  take  actions  which  could  significantly  reduce   your  property.    If  you  wish to allow your agent to make gifts to himself or herself,  you must separately grant that authority in subdivision (c) below.    To grant your agent the gifting authority provided below, initial  the  bracket to the left of the authority.    ( ) I grant authority to my agent to make gifts to my spouse, children  and more remote descendants, and parents, not to exceed, for each donee,  the  annual  federal  gift tax exclusion amount pursuant to the Internal  Revenue Code. For gifts to my children and more remote descendants,  and  parents,  the  maximum amount of the gift to each donee shall not exceed  twice the gift tax exclusion amount, if my spouse agrees to  split  gift  treatment pursuant to the Internal Revenue Code.  This  authority  must  be  exercised  pursuant  to  my  instructions, or  otherwise for purposes which the agent reasonably deems to be in my best  interest.    (b) MODIFICATIONS:    Use this section if you wish to authorize  gifts  in  amounts  smaller  than the gift tax exclusion amount, in amounts in excess of the gift tax  exclusion   amount,   gifts   to  other  beneficiaries,  or  other  gift  transactions.Granting such authority to your agent gives your agent the authority  to  take  actions  which  could  significantly  reduce  your property and/or  change how your property is distributed at your death. If  you  wish  to  authorize  your  agent  to  make  gifts  to himself or herself, you must  separately grant that authority in subdivision (c) below.  (  )  I grant the following authority to my agent to make gifts pursuant  to my instructions, or otherwise for purposes which the agent reasonably  deems to be in my best interest:  (c) GRANT OF SPECIFIC AUTHORITY FOR AN AGENT TO MAKE GIFTS TO HIMSELF OR  HERSELF: (OPTIONAL)  If you wish to authorize your agent to make gifts to himself or herself,  you must grant that authority  in  this  section,  indicating  to  which  agent(s)   the   authorization  is  granted,  and  any  limitations  and  guidelines.  ( ) I grant specific authority for the following agent(s)  to  make  the  following gifts to himself or herself:  This  authority  must  be  exercised  pursuant  to  my  instructions, or  otherwise for purposes which the agent reasonably deems to be in my best  interest.  (d) ACCEPTANCE BY THIRD PARTIES: I agree to indemnify  the  third  party  for  any  claims  that  may  arise  against  the  third party because of  reliance on this Statutory Gifts Rider.  (e) SIGNATURE OF PRINCIPAL AND ACKNOWLEDGMENT:  In Witness Whereof I have hereunto signed my name on  _________________,  20____.  PRINCIPAL signs here:  ________________________________  (acknowledgment)  (f) SIGNATURES OF WITNESSES:  By  signing  as  a  witness, I acknowledge that the principal signed the  Statutory Gifts Rider in my presence  and  the  presence  of  the  other  witness,  or  that the principal acknowledged to me that the principal's  signature was affixed by him or her or at his or her direction.  I  also  acknowledge  that  the  principal  has  stated that this Statutory Gifts  Rider reflects his or her wishes and  that  he  or  she  has  signed  it  voluntarily.  I am not named herein as a permissible recipient of gifts.  ___________________________        _________________________  Signature of witness 1             Signature of witness 2  ___________________________        _________________________  Date                               Date  ___________________________        _________________________  Print name                         Print name  ___________________________        _________________________  Address                            Address  ___________________________        _________________________  City, State, Zip code              City, State, Zip code  (g) This document prepared by: ____________________________"