Oregon Code § 130.240·Enacted ·Last updated March 01, 2026
Statute Text
Marital deduction gifts.
(1) As used in this section:
(a) Marital
deduction means the federal estate tax deduction allowed for transfers under
section 2056 of the Internal Revenue Code, as in effect on January 1, 2008, or
the federal gift tax deduction allowed for transfers under section 2523 of the
Internal Revenue Code, as in effect on January 1, 2008.
(b) Marital
deduction gift means a transfer of property that the settlor intended to
qualify for the marital deduction.
(2) If a trust
contains a marital deduction gift:
(a) The
provisions of the trust, including any power, duty or discretionary authority
given to a fiduciary, must be construed as necessary to comply with the marital
deduction provisions of the Internal Revenue Code.
(b) The fiduciary
may not take any action or have any power that impairs the tax deduction for
the marital deduction gift.
(c) The marital
deduction gift may be satisfied only with property that qualifies for the tax
deduction.
(3) If a trust
executed before September 12, 1981, indicates the settlor intended that a gift
provide the maximum allowable marital deduction, the trust gives the recipient
an amount equal to the maximum amount of the marital deduction that would have
been allowed as of the date of the gift under federal law as it existed before
September 12, 1981, with adjustments for:
(a) The
provisions of section 2056(c)(1)(B) and (C) of the Internal Revenue Code in
effect immediately before September 12, 1981.
(b) Reduction of
the amount passing under the gift by the final federal estate tax values of any
other property that passes under the trust, or by other means, that qualifies
for the marital deduction. This paragraph does not apply to qualified terminable
interest property under section 2056(b)(7) of the Internal Revenue Code, as in
effect on January 1, 2008.
(4) If a marital
deduction gift is made in trust:
(a) The settlors
spouse is the only beneficiary of income or principal of the marital deduction property
as long as the spouse lives. Nothing in this paragraph prevents exercise by the
settlors spouse of a power of appointment included in a trust that qualifies
as a general power of appointment marital deduction trust.
(b) Subject to
paragraph (d) of this subsection, the settlors spouse is entitled to all of
the income of the marital deduction property at least once a year, as long as
the spouse is alive.
(c) The settlors
spouse has the right to require that the trustee of the trust make unproductive
marital deduction property productive or convert it into productive property
within a reasonable time.
(d)
Notwithstanding any provision of ORS chapter 129, upon the death of the settlors
spouse all remaining accrued or undistributed income from qualified terminable
interest property under sections 2056(b)(7) or 2523(f) of the Internal Revenue
Code, as in effect on January 1, 2008, passes to the estate of the settlors
spouse, unless the trust provides a different disposition that qualifies for
the marital deduction.
(5)(a) Except as
provided in paragraph (b) of this subsection, if a trust that makes a marital
deduction gift includes a requirement that the settlors spouse survive the
settlor by a period of more than six months, or contains provisions that could
result in a loss of the spouses interest in the trust if the spouse fails to
survive the settlor by at least six months, the spouse need only survive the
settlor by six months to receive the marital deduction gift.
(b) If a trust
that makes a marital deduction gift includes a requirement that the settlors
spouse survive a common disaster that results in the death of the settlor, the
spouse need only survive until the final audit of the federal estate tax return
for the settlors estate, if any, to receive the marital deduction gift.
(6) A trustee is
not liable for a good faith decision whether to make any election referred to
in sections 2056(b)(7) or 2523(f) of the Internal Revenue Code, as in effect on
January 1, 2008.
(7) Subsections
(4) and (6) of this section do not apply to a trust that qualifies for the
marital deduction under 26 U.S.C. 2056, as described in 26 C.F.R.
2056(c)-2(b)(1), as in effect on January 1, 2008. [Formerly 128.398; 2009 c.275
§14]
CREDITORS CLAIMS;
SPENDTHRIFT AND DISCRETIONARY TRUSTS