The Honorable Shirley Walters State Representative Post Office Box 1876 Greenwood, Arkansas 72936-1876
Dear Representative Greenwood:
I am writing in response to your request for an opinion on the following question:
An issue has arisen among clerks when filing beneficiary deeds. When beneficiary deeds are mailed to the county or circuit clerks to be filed they are refusing to file the deeds unless an affidavit of revenue stamps is signed and an address is placed on the document for tax statement purposes. Those two things are not required since a beneficiary deed is [sic] only passes title at death and no money changes hands between the grantor and grantee.
Your help in clarifying this issue by an opinion is greatly appreciated.
RESPONSE
In my opinion the filing of a beneficiary deed does not trigger liability for payment of the "Real Property Transfer Tax" levied at A.C.A. §
Some explanation is necessary.
The Arkansas General Assembly recently enacted
Act 1918 of 2005 ("the Act") is intended to allow owners of Arkansas real estate to pass title to that real estate on their deaths directly to their chosen beneficiaries, without making the real estate the subject of probate proceedings, as a devise by will ordinarily would. To do this, the Act creates a new term and type of conveyance, the "beneficiary deed." It permits a grantor to execute and record a deed to an interest in real estate to a third party, but to expressly state that the conveyance becomes effective only upon the grantor's death at a time when the grantee has survived the grantor.
Id. at 20.
The Act states that "A beneficiary deed transfers the interest to the designated grantee beneficiary effective upon the death of the owner" (A.C.A. §
The statute appears to make the well-established concepts of delivery and consideration irrelevant to such deeds, in a major departure from the common law. Only recordation prior to the grantor's death makes the beneficiary deed effective, and delivery to the grantee would be irrelevant without that recordation. No consideration is required for such conveyances and presumably no revenue stamps.2
Id at 21. (Emphasis original).
The "revenue stamps" referred to above are used to establish payment of the "real property transfer tax" levied pursuant to A.C.A. §§
(a) There is levied on each deed, instrument, or writing by which any lands, tenements, or other realty sold shall be granted, assigned, transferred, or otherwise conveyed to, or vested in, the purchaser, or any other person by the purchaser's direction, when the consideration for the interest or property conveyed exceeds one hundred dollars ($100), a tax at the rate of one dollar and ten cents ($1.10) for each one thousand dollars ($1,000) or fractional part thereof.
(b) In addition to the tax levied in subsection (a) of this section on each deed, instrument, or writing by which any lands, tenements, or other realty sold shall be granted, assigned, transferred, or otherwise conveyed to or vested in the purchaser or purchasers or any other person or persons by his or their direction when the consideration for the interest or property conveyed exceeds one hundred dollars ($100), as levied under the provisions of this chapter, there is levied an additional tax of two dollars and twenty cents ($2.20) for each one thousand dollars ($1,000), or fractional part thereof, to be paid by the purchaser and to be allocated and used for the purposes as provided in §
15-12-103 .
A.C.A. §
A number of transfers of property are specifically excluded from application of the tax by a separate statute (A.C.A. §
As can be seen from A.C.A. §
In addition, the subsection immediately following the one above states that:
The tax levied by this chapter applies at the time of transfer, shall be computed on the basis of the full consideration for the real estate transferred, and, unless agreed upon otherwise, shall be paid one-half (1/2) by the grantor or seller and one-half (1/2) by the grantee or purchaser.
A.C.A. §
As you note, with a beneficiary deed, no consideration is required by
In my opinion, therefore, a beneficiary deed is not generally the type of instrument for which liability for payment of the real estate transfer tax arises. Unfortunately, this does not end the inquiry as regards the applicable procedure to be followed and paperwork to be completed at the time of recordation.
The "revenue stamps" you mention, or "documentary stamps," as the applicable subchapter refers to them, are made available to be placed on the face of a conveying instrument to evidence payment of the real estate transfer tax before a deed or other instrument is recorded or filed with the county recorder.3 In this regard A.C.A. §
(b) The county recorder of deeds shall not record any instrument evidencing a transfer of title subject to this chapter unless:
(1) The instrument shall, at the time it is presented for recording, have attached thereto or be accompanied by an affidavit in the form provided in this chapter, containing the information required in this chapter, and have documentary stamps attached to the face of the instrument evidencing full payment of the real property transfer tax on the transaction. The instrument shall contain a notation on its face, which shall be recorded as part of the instrument, that the affidavit was completed; or
(2)(A) In the alternative, the instrument has stamped thereon or attached thereto, in a manner which will cause it to be recorded as a part of the instrument, the following statement:
"I certify under penalty of false swearing that the legally correct amount of documentary stamps have been placed on this instrument."
(B) This statement shall be signed by the grantee or his agent, and the grantee's address shall be clearly shown on the instrument.
(Emphasis added.)
This is presumably the statute giving rise to the reluctance of some clerks to file beneficiary deeds without the paperwork referred to above. The reference in subsection (b)(1) to "an affidavit in the form provided in this chapter" refers to a triplicate form affidavit designed by DFA, requiring information pertinent to the transfer, and a statement of the amount of tax due, or a statement that the tax does not apply to the transfer. See A.C.A. §§
As can be seen in the first line of subsection (b) of A .C.A. §
One of the statutes regarding the now infrequently used DFA triplicate form requires the completion of such form where no tax is due and the transfer is not one specifically and clearly exempted by A.C.A. §
(a)(1) The Director of the Department of Finance and Administration shall design a "Real Property Transfer Tax Affidavit of Compliance Form" which shall be in triplicate.
(2)(A) The form shall contain essentially the information prescribed in this section.
(B) The affidavit portion shall provide space for:
(i) The name and address of the grantor or seller;
(ii) The name and address of the grantee or buyer;
(iii) The date of the real property transfer as reflected on the transfer instrument;
(iv) The name of the county in which the property is located;
(v) The amount of the full consideration for the transaction or a statement giving the reason the real property transfer tax does not apply to the transaction unless it is clearly evident from the contents of the document to be recorded without reference to any other writing or extrinsic evidence that the instrument is exempt from the real property transfer tax under one (1) of the provisions in § 26-60-102, in which case the recorder may record the instrument without such an affidavit. In any case where the recorder doubts the entitlement to the exemption, the recorder shall require the affidavit or a certification, setting out the reasons for the exemption in full to be submitted with the instrument prior to recording the instrument; and
(vi) The value of the documentary stamps attached to the face of the instrument.
(Emphasis added).
This provision was amended in 1985 to provide that if it is clear, from the contents of the document itself, that it is exempt under A.C.A.
(b)(1) If the real property transfer instrument is for a transfer upon which no tax is due but is not clearly exempt under § 26-60-102, the same affidavit shall provide for stating this fact and shall be signed by the grantee, or his agent, whose address shall be included in a space provided on the affidavit and be presented with the transfer instrument to the recorder.
(Emphasis added).
Even though no tax is due under the subchapter, unless the exemption is one clearly appearing under A.C.A. §
The issue is not as clearly addressed with regard to more commonly used "alternative" certification. Again, section
In my opinion, therefore, even though no real estate transfer tax is triggered by the recording of a beneficiary deed, current law nonetheless requires either the DFA "affidavit form" with a statement to this effect, signed by the grantee or his agent and bearing his address, or the more commonly used "alternative" certification set out above. If this procedure is unduly cumbersome with regard to beneficiary deeds, the General Assembly may act to amend it.
Deputy Attorney General Elana C. Wills prepared the foregoing opinion, which I hereby approve.
Sincerely,
MIKE BEEBE Attorney General
