Gift (law)
A gift, in the law of property, is the voluntary and immediate transfer of property from one person (the donor or grantor) to another (the donee or grantee) without consideration. There are several type of gifts in property law, most notably inter vivos gifts which are made in the donor's lifetime and causa mortis (deathbed) gifts which are made in expectation of the donor's imminent death. Both types of gifts share three elements which must be met in order for the gift to be legally effective: donative intent (the intention of the donor to give the gift to the donee), the delivery of the gift to the donee, and the acceptance of the gift. In addition to those elements, causa mortis gifts require that the donor must die of the impending peril that he or she had contemplated when making the gift.
Property law |
---|
Part of the common law series |
Types |
Acquisition |
Estates in land |
Conveyancing |
Future use control |
Nonpossessory interest |
Related topics |
Other common law areas |
Higher category: Law and Common law |
Inter vivos gifts
An inter vivos gift is an ordinary gift of personal property from one living person to another.[1] It can be a gift of a present or future interest in a property. The three elements of an inter vivos gift are donative intent, delivery, and acceptance.[1] The rules governing these elements were historically rigid but in recent years courts have become more lenient in their application by ignoring or circumventing the formal delivery requirement and elevating the importance of donative intent.[2] Acceptance of a valuable gift is typically presumed by courts and thus is rarely a legal issue.[2]
Donative intent
The donor of the gift must have a present intent to make a gift of the property to the donee. A promise to make a gift in the future is unenforceable, and legally meaningless, even if the promise is accompanied by a present transfer of the physical property in question.[1]
Suppose, for example, that a man gives a woman a ring and tells her that it is for her next birthday and to hold on to it until then. The man has not made a gift, and could legally demand the ring back at any time before the woman's birthday because an immediate transfer has not occurred.[1] In contrast, suppose a man gives a woman a deed and tells her it will be in her best interest if the deed stays in his safe-deposit box. The man has made a gift and would be unable to legally reclaim it because he has given her a present interest in the deed.[2] There is a special exception for engagement rings which most states recognize: the transfer of an engagement ring is subject "to an implied condition that the marriage occur", thus if the engagement ends without a marriage, the giver of the engagement ring is entitled to revoke the gift.[1]
Delivery
The gift must be delivered to the donee.[3] If the gift is of a type that cannot be delivered in the conventional sense – a house, or a bank account – the delivery can be effected by a constructive delivery, wherein a tangible item allowing access to the gift – a deed or key to the house, a passbook for the bank account – is delivered instead. Symbolic delivery is also sometimes permissible where manual delivery is impractical, such as the delivery of a key that does not open anything, but is intended to symbolize the transfer of ownership.[1]
Certain forms of property must be transferred following particular formalities described by statute law. In England, real property must be transferred by a written deed.[4] The transfer of equitable interests must be performed in writing by the owner or their agent.
A gift is assumed when property owner deeds real estate as joint tenants with rights of survivorship. Regardless of contribution to purchase price, such a deed guarantees each tenant equal shares upon sale or partition of the property.
Acceptance
The donee must accept the gift in order for the property transfer to take place.[1] However, because people generally accept gifts, acceptance will be presumed, so long as the donee does not expressly reject the gift.[2] A rejection of the gift destroys the gift, so that a donee cannot revive a once-rejected gift by later accepting it. In order for such an acceptance to be effective, the donor would have to extend the offer of the gift again.
Types
Gifts can also be either:
causa mortis
- deathbed gifts (gift causa mortis, donatio mortis causa) - a future gift made in expectation of the donor's imminent death. A gift causa mortis is not effective unless the donor dies of the impending peril that he or she had contemplated when making the gift, i.e. these gifts can only be made when the donor is in a terminal condition.[5]
Gifts can also be:
outright
- outright – made free of any restrictions, such as being subject to a trust;
onerous
- onerous – made with a burden or obligation imposed on the donee; or
remunerative
- remunerative – made to compensate for services rendered
Taxation
In India
In India, previously there was Gift Tax Act under which donor had to pay the gift tax on the amount of gift. However, the said Act has been abolished and from FY 2004–05, a new provision was inserted in the Income Tax Act (1961) under section 56 (2) which provides that if the gift is received by an individual or Hindu undivided family from any relatives or blood relatives or at the time of marriage or as inheritance or in contemplation of death, it will not be taxable. In all other cases if the aggregate of gifts received exceeds Rs 50,000 in a year, the gift will be taxable as income from other source.
United Kingdom
Gifts into a trust above a certain value (known as the nil rate band which is currently £325,000 but this limit may be reduced by certain gifts made in the last 7 years) are generally subject to inheritance tax in the United Kingdom though at the reduced rate of inheritance tax of 20% rather than the full rate of 40%. There are certain reliefs that may apply to reduce or eliminate the IHT due including business property relief and agricultural property relief. Gifts to individuals are generally not subject to inheritance tax unless the donor dies within 7 years of the date of the gift. There is anti-avoidance legislation to prevent assets being gifted but with the donor retaining a benefit from the asset (for example the gift of the main residence while continuing to live in it will be ineffective from an IHT perspective unless market value rent is charged). Gifts in life may be a way to circumvent inheritance tax on death.
In the United States
See also
- Re Cole.
- Johnson v Buttress [1936] HCA 41, (1936) 56 CLR 113 (17 August 1936), High Court (Australia)
- Knapp v Knapp
- Gift tax
- Donation (Catholic canon law)
References
- Sprankling, John; Coletta, Raymond (2018). Property: A Contemporary Approach (4 ed.). St. Paul, MN: West Academic Publishing. pp. 209–225. ISBN 978-1-63460-650-9. OCLC 1051777575.
- Sprankling, John G., 1950– (2017). Understanding Property Law (4 ed.). Durham, North Carolina: Carolina Academic Press. pp. 47–56. ISBN 978-1-5221-0557-2. OCLC 960940360.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - For effective delivery of gift in Australia see: Horsley v Phillips Fine Art Auctioneers Pty Ltd [1995] NSWSC 78 (16 October 1995), Supreme Court (NSW, Australia).
- "Law of Property Act", legislation.gov.uk, The National Archives, 1925 c. 20 s. 52.
- Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 8 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 408.