Source: https://www.yalelawjournal.org/forum/the-estate-tax-fundamentals-of-celebrity-and-control
Timestamp: 2019-04-19 10:36:26+00:00

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We previously suggested in this Journal that post-death publicity rights could be excluded from the decedent’s estate for tax purposes if state legislation precluded the decedent from exercising post-death control. In other words, if state legislation designated who would hold these rights after the decedent’s death, the value of these rights should not be subject to estate tax. Professor Joshua Tate, in his response to our essay, argues that under current law, estate tax inclusion would be required regardless of the decedent’s ability to exercise control. So, for example, in Professor Tate’s analysis, the estate tax would apply even if the legislation vested those rights in the decedent’s oldest daughter and even if the decedent had no right to alter this outcome. Professor Tate’s analysis misconstrues fundamental estate tax principles and misunderstands the precedents on which he relies.
Let’s start with a bedrock principle that Professor Tate ignores: estate tax inclusion under § 2033 is not appropriate unless the decedent has the right to control the post-death disposition of the interest. Prior to the decision in Connecticut Bank & Trust Co. v. United States, the treatment of wrongful death recoveries for estate tax purposes was uncontroversial. Because the decedent typically could not control the disposition of the damages, there could be no inclusion for federal estate tax purposes.
In Connecticut Bank, the decedent’s executor recovered damages under Connecticut’s wrongful death statute. Unlike traditional wrongful death laws, the Connecticut statute allowed the decedent to determine who received the benefits. Distinguishing earlier administrative rulings, the IRS argued in its brief that the damages should be included in the estate because the decedent could control their disposition. The court held that, despite the decedent’s control, the damages were not taxable because the decedent lacked any ownership rights in the recovery during life. It did not reject the universally accepted principle that § 2033 applies only where the decedent has the ability to exercise post-death control. Rather, the court, in effect, held that such control is necessary but not sufficient for estate tax inclusion under § 2033.
To be sure, after Connecticut Bank, a decedent’s ability to control the disposition of a wrongful death recovery is no longer critical. Where the statute does not give the decedent the ability to control the recovery, it is excluded from the gross estate on that ground. And if the decedent does have such control, as under the Connecticut statute, it is still excluded because the claim did not accrue during the decedent’s life. But–contrary to Professor Tate’s reading–the Connecticut Bank decision does not alter the bedrock principle that § 2033 can apply only where the decedent has post-death control.
We think that the interest Abraham Kramer had in his employment agreement was terminable and therefore the property also is not includable under Section 2033.
Kramer is not aberrational. Rather, it is consistent with the inveterate notion that § 2033 does not apply where the decedent has an interest in a trust that terminates at death. In such a case, as in Kramer, the decedent’s interest evaporates at death, leaving the decedent with no post-death control and making estate tax inclusion under § 2033 inappropriate. Kramer is, of course, also consistent with the pre-Connecticut Bank authorities, which exclude wrongful death recoveries from the estate based on the decedent’s inability to exercise post-death control.
Not able to cite any affirmative authority to support his assertion that post-death control is irrelevant to estate tax inclusion, Professor Tate poses this question: if post-death control is truly essential, how does one explain the treatment of a decedent who is required under Louisiana law to give a portion of the estate to children under the age of twenty-four? To the extent that such rights do not diminish the value of the estate, it is based on a narrow regulatory exception to the pervasive general rule, which is that inclusion hinges on post-death control. Indeed, were it otherwise, § 2034 of the Code–which provides, in effect, that the decedent’s inability to control the surviving spouse’s curtesy- or dower-type rights does not result in a diminution of the estate–would be superfluous.
Professor Tate’s analysis prompts two final comments. First, the implication in his essay that legislation conferring publicity rights might cause estate tax inclusion for a decedent dying prior to the enactment of the legislation is inconsistent with the holding in Connecticut Bank. As two of us have discussed elsewhere, Connecticut Bank and other authorities make clear that an interest in property that is not legally enforceable at the moment of death is excluded from the estate on this ground. Thus, if a celebrity were to die before state law permitted the enforcement of post-death publicity rights, any subsequently enacted legislation could not cause federal estate tax inclusion in that decedent’s gross estate.
Second, as Professor Tate indicates, we did suggest that revised legislation could confer on a celebrity the right to extinguish post-death rights without necessarily causing estate tax inclusion. Professor Tate argues that the celebrity’s ability to eliminate the rights of the people designated in the statute surely translates into estate tax inclusion. Yet, in Kramer, the decedent could have defeated his wife’s rights by terminating his employment (or perhaps by divorcing his wife), and the court nonetheless held that § 2033 did not apply. While we did not, and do not, take a definitive position on this question, we disagree with Professor Tate’s suggestion that the law is unequivocally to the contrary.
In sum, post-death control is an essential prerequisite for estate taxinclusion under § 2033. In its absence, the section cannot as a general rule apply. In suggesting that publicity rights are somehow not subject to this requirement, Professor Tate misreads the significance of Connecticut Bank and ignores well engrained principles of tax law.
Mitchell M. Gans is the Steven A. Horowitz Distinguished Professor of Tax Law at Hofstra University School of Law and an Adjunct Professor at New York University School of Law. Bridget J. Crawford is a Professor of Law and the Associate Dean for Research and Faculty Development at Pace University School of Law. Jonathan G. Blattmachr is a Member of Milbank, Tweed, Hadley & McCloy LLP and the head of that firm’s Trusts & Estates group. The authors welcome comments at lawmmg@hofstra.edu, bcrawford@law.pace.edu, and jblattmachr@milbank.com.
Preferred Citation: Mitchell M. Gans, Bridget J. Crawford & Jonathan G. Blattmaghr, The Estate Tax Fundamentals of Celebrity and Control, 118 Yale L.J. Pocket Part 50 (2008), http://yalelawjournal.org/forum/the-estate-tax-fundamentals-of-celebrity-and-control.

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