Court Opinion

ID: 4622220
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-11-21 02:48:55.223911+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:59:50.998850
License: Public Domain

ANNIE B. SMITH, PETITIONER, v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, RESPONDENT.Smith v. CommissionerDocket No. 99900.United States Board of Tax Appeals45 B.T.A. 948; 1941 BTA LEXIS 1051; December 9, 1941, Promulgated 1941 BTA LEXIS 1051">*1051  An elderly woman created trusts for the benefit of her 2 granddaughters, who were 16 years of age, and her 2 grandsons, who were 19 years of age.  The value of the corpus was $19,800, or approximately $5,000 for each grandchild.  The trustees were empowered and directed in their sole discretion to use the "principal and income" for the education of the beneficiaries and their preparation for their positions in life, and to pay over to each his remaining undivided portion when he attained age 24.  Other provisions of the trust directed that in the event of the death of a beneficiary, there should be gift over to the other beneficiary, and upon his death to another, and prevented alienation or anticipation.  Held, that the gifts were of "future interests in property" and therefore exclusions should not be allowed under section 504(b), Revenue Act of 1932, in computing the donor's gift tax.  E. B. Hodges, Esq., for the petitioner.  G. W. Reardon, Esq., for the respondent.  DISNEY45 B.T.A. 948">*948  The Commissioner determined a deficiency in gift taxes for the calendar year 1937 in the amount of $1,487.33.  By amended answer he asks that the deficiency be1941 BTA LEXIS 1051">*1052  determined to be $2,762.33.  The sole issue is whether gifts made by petitioner to trusts for the benefit of her grandchildren are gifts of future interests.  If so, then no exclusions may be allowed and the latter amount is the correct deficiency.  Most of the facts are admitted in the pleadings.  We find the facts to be as admitted, including the trust indentures.  We set out in our findings, however, only the portions necessary to an understanding of the issue.  FINDINGS OF FACT.  Petitioner is an individual residing in Kansas City, Missouri.  Her gift tax return for the year 1937 was duly filed with the collector of internal revenue for the sixth district of Missouri.  On April 14, 1937, petitioner created an irrevocable trust, naming her son, J. Neil Smith, as trustee, and the latter's two children, J. Neil Smith, Jr., age 19, and Deborah Coates Smith, age 16, as beneficiaries.  Petitioner transferred to said trustee 5 shares of capital stock of the Kansas City Life Insurance Co. and 150 shares of capital stock of Employers Reinsurance Corporation, all having a total value of $9,800.  On April 14, 1937, petitioner created another irrevocable trust, naming her daughter, 1941 BTA LEXIS 1051">*1053  margaret S. Wilhelm, as trustee, and the latter's two children, Granville Smith Wilhelm, age 19, and Mary 45 B.T.A. 948">*949  Rachel Wilhelm, age 16, as beneficiaries.  Petitioner transferred to said trustee 15 shares of capital stock of the Kansas City Life Insurance Co. and 50 shares of the Employers Reinsurance Corporation, all having a total value of $10,000.  The trust indentures, hereinafter sometimes referred to as the J. Neil Smith trust and the Margaret S. Wilhelm trust, were identical in all respects save as set forth in the preceding paragraphs.  For present purposes only the J. Neil Smith trust need be specifically referred to.  It, in article first, provides: FIRST: The Trustee shall have full power and authority to collect, receive, and receipt for any and all income that may be derived from any investment or reinvestment, or from any part of the Trust Estate, shall be held, divided and distributed, as follows: (a) The Trustee shall hold said Estate in trust for, and to the use of DEBORAH COATES SMITH and NEIL SMITH, JR., daughter and son of J. Neil Smith, in equal, undivided portions, during their lifetime, or for the duration of this trust.  (b) The said Trustee shall1941 BTA LEXIS 1051">*1054  be and is empowered and directed, in his sole discretion, to use the principal and income from said Estate for the purpose of the education and preparation of the said beneficiaries to attain and occupy an advantageous and desirable position in life.  (c) In case of the death of either of said beneficiaries, then the survivor shall be the beneficiary of the entire remaining portion of the said Estate.  (d) In case of the death of both of said beneficiaries, then said remaining Estate shall be paid to J. Neil Smith.  (e) When said beneficiaries shall reach the age of twenty-four (24) years, said beneficiaries shall be entitled to his or her undivided portion of the Estate then in the hands of the said Trustee, and the said Trustee is hereby authorized and directed to convey said interest to said beneficiary entitled thereto.  Under article second the trustee is authorized to hold, maintain and operate the trust estate and property "according to his own judgment and discretion"; may continue in his discretion to hold indefinitely as investments of the funds of the estate; is not to be liable for any loss resulting from depreciation or shrinkage in value; and is authorized and1941 BTA LEXIS 1051">*1055  empowered in his discretion to vote all shares of stock and unite with owners of similar property in carrying out any plans for reorganization, to pledge, mortgage, or sell the trust property, to use either principal or income for taxes, assessments, improvements or repairs of real estate or leasehold, to determine whether accretions to the trust estate shall be treated as principal or income, to "determine, in his discretion, whether receipts of money or other property shall be treated as principal or income, and whether disbursements made by him for any purpose whatsoever shall be chargeable to principal or income", to divide any portion of the trust estate into shares or parts or distribute it in kind or in money, and to withhold from sale any securities or other property which he may deem expedient to retain; 45 B.T.A. 948">*950  and to purchase real estate at sheriff's sale or at any other sale, public or private, judicial or otherwise.  Paragraph (h) of article second provides: (h) If, at any time, any person entitled to receive a part of the net income or principal of the Trust Estate be a minor, the Trustee may pay such income, or part of the principal of the Trust Estate, direct1941 BTA LEXIS 1051">*1056  to said minor, or to his natural guardian without requiring qualification according to law , or may require the due appointment of a guardian, pursuing in each case the course which the Trustee may deem to be for the best interest of the minor.  The Trustee shall be entitled to full credit and protection for all amounts distributed in the exercise of the discretion hereby give him.  The whole title to the trust property, "both legal and equitable, in fee" is "vested solely and absolutely in the Trustee, and no interest therein whatsoever is or shall be vested in any of the beneficiaries hereunder, it being the intention of the Settlor that the only interests which the beneficiaries hereunder shall or may have are personal property only, consisting of the right and power to enforce the due performance of the terms of this Trust Indenture." The beneficiaries are restrained from selling, pledging, alienating, anticipating or encumbering "his or her claimed beneficial or legal right, title, interest, or estate in or to the net income or principal" and it can not be subjected to his or her liabilities.  The net income of the trust estate is defined to be "the income left after deducting1941 BTA LEXIS 1051">*1057  all charges, disbursements and expenditures authorized hereunder or by law in connection with the administration of the Trust Estate * * *." Article third provides that the trust is irrevocable; article fourth for compensation to the trustee; article fifth for the appointment of a trustee in the event of resignation of the named trustee, and article sixth is as follows: SIXTH: The Trustee is authorized and directed to expend any or all of the principal sum of said Estate, as in his judgment and discretion may be found necessary, for the personal care and maintenance of said beneficiaries herein, and is authorized to provide, furnish and pay for any or all professional or medical services or attendants, during any illness of beneficiaries.  The trust instrument further provides that it shall rest in the absolute discretion of the trustee to use either principal or income of the trust estate for expenses listed "or otherwise for the benefit of the trust estate"; and that the trustee shall determine whether accretions to the trust estate or receipts of money or property shall be treated as principal or income (except that stock dividends or stock rights received shall be principal) 1941 BTA LEXIS 1051">*1058  and whether disbursements for any purpose shall be chargeable to principal or to income, his decisions in good faith to be final and conclusive on all parties.  The trustee is empowered, in case of any division or distribution, to make same in kind or in money, and to allot property at values determined by his judgment 45 B.T.A. 948">*951  to be just and equitable, such determination to be binding on all persons interested.  The trust instrument contains numerous references to the absolute discretion to be exercised by the trustee.  In 1937 petitioner made cash gifts in the sum of $25 directly to each of her four grandchildren and the aggregate amount, or $100, has been excluded by the Commissioner from the "net gifts" of petitioner for the year 1937.  Respondent, in determining the original deficiency, reduced the claimed exclusions from $55,000 to $45,100 and increased the net gifts for preceding years from $77,375 to $87,350 to conform to a decision of this Board.  Petitioner concedes that the last mentioned adjustment is proper.  Respondent now asserts that exclusions aggregating only $35,100 may be allowed.  OPINION.  1941 BTA LEXIS 1051">*1059 DISNEY: In this proceeding the respondent filed amended answer and seeks to increase the deficiency originally determined, on the ground that the gifts involved were of future interests in property.  He relies primarily upon United States v. Pelzer,312 U.S. 399">312 U.S. 399, referring also to Helvering v. Hutchings,312 U.S. 393">312 U.S. 393, and Ryerson v. United States,312 U.S. 405">312 U.S. 405. By separate memorandum he calls our attention to Welch v. Paine, 120 Fed.(2d) 141. The petitioner, of course, contends that the gifts were of present interests and seeks to distinguish the above cases.  In substance, the present case involves trusts under each of which the trustee holds the trust estate for the use of two children, is empowered and directed in his sole discretion to use the principal and income for their education and preparation for their positions in life, and is to convey to each beneficiary upon his reaching the age of 24 years his undivided portion of the estate then in the hands of the trustee, the gift, in case of the death of any beneficiary prior to distribution, to go to the survivor or, in case of the death of both1941 BTA LEXIS 1051">*1060  beneficiaries, to another.  The trustee may in his discretion determine whether receipts and disbursements shall be considered principal or income.  The beneficiaries have no vested interest in the trust estate, except to enforce performance of the trust agreements.  Such provisions, the respondent argues, require us to hold that the gifts are of future interests in property.  The petitioner points to distinguishing features in the cases above named.  The trusts in the Pelzer case provided a definite waiting period of ten years, for during that time the trustee was required to accumulate the income and at the end of the trust divide the corpus and accumulated income among eight beneficiaries and any other after born.  No discretion was vested in the trustee.  The Hutchings case expressly recites that it does not consider whether the gifts are of future interests.  45 B.T.A. 948">*952  In the Ryerson case the trust instrument particularly required income to be accumulated and added to corpus and the Court holds that the participants in the use and enjoyment of the trust principal and income were ascertainable only upon the happening of one or more uncertain events.  No such contingencies1941 BTA LEXIS 1051">*1061  are entailed in the instant proceeding.  In the instant matter, the petitioner points out that the trustee was empowered and directed in his sole discretion to use both principal and income for the education of the beneficiaries and their preparation "to obtain and occupy an advantageous and desirable position in life"; and argues that such discretion in the trustee in effect eliminates the waiting period and leaves no similarity to the Pelzer case, since under general principles of law of trusts the beneficiaries could have compelled the application of at least a minimum amount of the principal and income to their use for the purposes stated in the trust instrument, and that there is no contingency here involved to affect the enjoyment of the gift, as in the Ryerson case.  Without the element of discretion in the trustee as to use of principal and income, the answer here would plainly be the same as in the Pelzer case, since otherwise here, as there, trust corpus is distributable only in the future.  What then is the effect of the absolute discretion vested in the trustee herein as to use of both principal and income for the beneficiaries?  1941 BTA LEXIS 1051">*1062  It is patent that this query is not directly answered by any of the cases above analyzed.  The only cases bearing directly upon this point which have been called to our attention or discovered by us are Welch v. Paine, supra,Commissioner v. Taylor, 122 Fed.(2d) 714, and Helvering v. Blair, 121 Fed.(2d) 945. In Welch v. Paine, supra, the trust instrument provided that income should become a part of principal and be accumulated and paid, with the principal, to the beneficiaries at the age of 21, and in the case of death of a beneficiary to his heirs at the date when he would have become 21 years of age.  The trustee was empowered, however, to advance to the beneficiaries or for their benefit such sums out of their respective shares as he might in his absolute discretion deem necessary or advisable for their support, maintenance, or education.  The court concludes that the interests donated were limited to commence in enjoyment at some future date, in keeping with the explanation of the statute contained in the committee reports.  The court uses the following language: "The payment of such income is not1941 BTA LEXIS 1051">*1063  merely postponed, for accumulation and eventual payment, along with principal, to the beneficiaries in equal shares, rather, the taxpayer reserves the power in his sole discretion to allocate and pay over the income to the beneficiaries in such proportions as he may determine, or to accumulate it." It is to be noted that the trust instrument there involved does not, as in the instant case, specifically provide that the discretion of the trustee extends to the use of principal for the benefit of the beneficiary; yet 45 B.T.A. 948">*953  the same power seems in fact to have been given the trustee, for the decision recites: "The trustee was empowered to advance to the beneficiaries, or for their benefit, such sums out of their respective shares as he might in his absolute discretion deem necessary * * *." Since this expression follows the recitation that income received was to become a part of principal and accumulated, it appears to be fair to conclude that the "shares" were shares of both principal and income and therefore we discern that discretion extended to both, as in the instant case.  Moreover, the provision in the instant proceeding that principal could be distributed can not be given1941 BTA LEXIS 1051">*1064  any particular weight, for the trustee in his discretion could decide whether receipts accretions (except stock dividends and stock rights) should be added to principal or income, and whether disbursements made should be charged to principal or to income.  In other words, principal was such, to a large extent, only dependent upon the trustee's discretion, so the situation is not essentially different from that in Welch v. Paine. In one respect the trust instrument in the present case goes farther to indicate future interests than does the trust instrument in Welch v. Paine - in the latter the death of a beneficiary's heirs becoming beneficiaries.  to any other person, the beneficiary's heirs becoming beneficiaries.  whereas herein there was in case of such death of a beneficiary a gift over to the other beneficiary, or in case of his death, to another not otherwise a beneficiary.  This fact, together with the provision that the trustee might in his discretion continue to hold indefinitely any trust corpus, the provision for absolute discretion in the trustee to use either principal or income for the benefit of the trust estate, the provision that during the entire term1941 BTA LEXIS 1051">*1065  of the trust the whole title, both legal and equitable, in fee to the trust estate or any part thereof, is and shall be vested solely and absolutely in the trustee and no interest shall be vested in any beneficiary, the particular expression that it is the intent of the settlor that the only interest which a beneficiary shall or may have is personal property only, consisting of the right and power to enforce the due performance of the terms of the trust, the provision restraining any beneficiary from alienating his claimed beneficial or legal right to net income or principal, and the provision that such claimed interest shall not be subject to the liabilities, judgments, or legal processes against the beneficiary nor pass or descend by operation of law - all tend to indicate, we think, that the case here at hand is not to be distinguished from Welch v. Paine and that as therein stated in substance there was no mere postponement, but a reservation of right in the trustees either to pay or not to pay the beneficiaries - a limitation to future enjoyment within the congressional intent.  In 1941 BTA LEXIS 1051">*1066 Commissioner v. Taylor, supra, discretion on the part of the trustee is also involved, and the conclusion of the court is that there was a gift of a future interest.  Therein the trust instrument provided 45 B.T.A. 948">*954  life estates in choses in action in named children with powers of appointment and remainders over.  Principal should be held for the use and benefit of the beneficiaries and income should be accumulated and paid to the minor beneficiaries at the age of 21 years unless in the sole discretion of the trustees it should be needed for proper education or support.  Although the life estates given to the minors vested immediately, the court considered that fact to be immaterial and in effect emphasized that it was sufficient if the enjoyment was for the future. That in the consideration of this question effect must be given to discretion vested in the trustees as to permitting enjoyment of the trust by the beneficiary, as held in the two cases last cited, is further emphasized in Helvering v. Blair, supra. There the court disallowed the $5,000 exclusions claimed, holding that the value of the interests conveyed was uncertain during1941 BTA LEXIS 1051">*1067  the period that the trustees held discretionary power and that the enjoyment of the trust was suspended.  Therein property was conveyed in trust for the period of the longer of two lives, those of grantor's wife and his son.  The instrument provided that during the wife's life the trust income should be applied to the use of any one or more of eight people (the wife and seven children) and the lawful issue of any children, in the absolute discretion of the trustees.  Upon the death of the wife the income was to be applied to the use of the lawful issue of the grantor and his wife, but without any discretionary power.  The instrument concluded with a gift of legal remainders upon the termination of the trust to the living lawful issue of the grantor and his wife, per stirpes. The court holds that the interests conveyed are future because of the continued discretionary powers of the trustees to change the original division, rendering it impossible to compute the value of the beneficiary's share at the time of the original division.  It is apparent, of course, that the situation is not wholly analogous to that in the instant matter.  Nevertheless, the case does give weight to the1941 BTA LEXIS 1051">*1068  element of discretion in trustees as to payment to beneficiaries.  The most recent expression upon this subject is found in Commissioner v. Brandegee, 123 Fed.(2d) 58. Therein trustees were given discretionary power to pay the net income from the trust property, in equal shares, to the beneficiaries, and after payment of mortgages or obligations against property acquired, were required to pay the net income to the beneficiaries.  The court considers that the trustees were, in effect, authorized to accumulate the income to pay the encumbrances, with discretionary power to pay the beneficiaries, and says: * * * It is true that the trustees have a discretion to pay the net income to the beneficiaries in equal shares; and the right of the beneficiaries to receive such income at any time the trustees should choose to give it to them is no doubt a kind of interest of which a court of equity may take cognizance.  See Fulham v.45 B.T.A. 948">*955  Commissioner,110 F.(2d) 916, 918 (C.C.A.1st, 1940).  But if it may be called a present interest there is still the difficulty that such an interest is inherently incapable of valuation. 1941 BTA LEXIS 1051">*1069 Helvering v. Blair,121 F.(2d) 945, 947 (C.C.A.2d, 1941) [supra].  Where the absolute right of the beneficiaries to enjoyment of the income is postponed until the happening of a future event, a $5,000 exclusion in respect of each donee is not allowable to the donor under § 504(b) merely because he has invested the trustee with an immediate discretionary power to make advancements. Welch v. Paine, supra; Commissioner v. Taylor, supra; Helvering v. Blair, supra.And this is so whether or not the trustee happens to pay over income to the beneficiaries during the year in which the gift is made.  The nature of the interest of the donees is determined as of the date of the gift, not by what the trustee may subsequently choose to do in the exercise of his discretionary power.  See Helvering v. Blair, supra, at p. 947. If and when the mortgages and encumbrances are discharged in full the interest of the beneficiaries, theretofore contingent upon the trustees' discretion, is succeeded by a more substantial interest, for the trustees in such event come under a mandatory duty to pay1941 BTA LEXIS 1051">*1070  the net income in equal shares to the survivor or survivors of the children and to the issue of any deceased child per stirpes.  But viewed from the date of the 1937 gift, such succeeding interest is clearly a "future interest" under the decided cases.  The unqualified right to income is limited to commence in use and enjoyment at a future date or time.  See definition of "future interests" in Article 11 of Treasury Regulations 79 (1936 ed.).  * * * From the above cases we conclude that there is involved in the discretion of the trustees as to the enjoyment of income by beneficiaries, a contingency or postponement requiring enjoyment of the gift to be considered limited to the future.  Only when and if the discretion is exercised, and exercised to permit enjoyment of the gift, is the gift to be regarded as enjoyed.  Under the facts herein involved, either or both beneficiaries might die before the exercise of discretion by the trustees, the gift would go to another, and neither income nor corpus benefit either beneficiary or his estate.  The answer to petitioner's view that the trustee's failure to devote at least a minimum to the requirements of the beneficiaries would be cognizable1941 BTA LEXIS 1051">*1071  in equity, is found in the expression from Restatement of the Law of Trusts cited by her, for after stating the rule contended for, the Restatement qualifies it by adding "unless otherwise provided by the terms of the trust." The trust instrument here, referring to the trustee's power, reiterates as to "sole discretion"; "according to his own judgment and discretion"; "his absolute discretion"; as to exercise of all of the powers "exercised by persons owning similar property in their own right"; "all decisions made by the trustee in this regard (devoting principal or income to trust purposes) in good faith shall be final and conclusive upon all parties in interest"; that the trustee's judgment (in regard to division and valuation of estate) shall be "final and conclusive upon all persons interested in the estate." "The trustee shall be entitled to full credit and protection for all amounts distributed in the exercise of the discretion hereby given him." Clearly, we think, this trust 45 B.T.A. 948">*956  instrument contemplated no control by a court of equity over the discretion of the trustee.  In the light of the above decisions, we are of the opinion and hold that the interests conveyed1941 BTA LEXIS 1051">*1072  by the trust instrument set up by the petitioner were gifts of future interests in property within the purview of section 504(b) of the Revenue Act of 1932 and that the respondent erred in allowing exclusions with respect thereto under the statute.  Reviewed by the Board.  Decision will be entered under Rule 50.MELLOTTMELLOTT, dissenting: The essence of the test applied in all of the cases cited in the majority opinion is: Did the beneficiaries receive, at the time of the creation of the trust, "a right to the present enjoyment of the corpus or of the income"?  They did not where the income was to be accumulated for ten years at the end of which it was to be distributed to a class, the members of which could not be ascertained until then (United Statesv. Pelzer ); where the enjoyment of the trust fund by the beneficiaries was postponed until such time as they, in their capacity as trustees, should join in the exercise of a power (Ryerson v.United States); where the settlortrustee, in his sole discretion, could hold the trust property for his lifetime and pay over to his children such amounts as he should determine (Welch v. Paine ); 1941 BTA LEXIS 1051">*1073  or where the beneficiaries had no more than contingent interests, dependent upon the trustee's discretion (Helvering v. Blair and Commissioner v. Taylor ).  Under the trust instrument in the instant proceeding the settlor established trusts for the education of her two 16-year old granddaughters and her two 19-year old grandsons and to prepare them "to attain and occupy an advantageous and desirable position in life." The amount set aside for each was approximately $5,000.  That she expected all of it to be expended, commencing immediately, is indicated by several circumstances.  The trustees were to use the "principal and income." The annual income reasonably to be anticipated from a corpus of $5,000 would not exceed $250 or $300.  It is not unreasonable to assume that she realized such a small annual income could not be expected to provide the expenses of a year in college.  The unusual sequence of the words "principal and income" indicates that she expected the principal to be used immediately for the designated purposes.  This view is strengthened when consideration is given to the clause authorizing payment of either principal or income "direct to said minor, 1941 BTA LEXIS 1051">*1074  or to his natural guardian, without requiring qualification according to law." Moreover, the references in other sections of the trust instrument to the discretion of the trustee do not, in my judgment, justify a holding that the gift can 45 B.T.A. 948">*957  "be regarded as realized" only when the trustee has exercised his discretion "to permit enjoyment of the gift." His discretion was "to use the principal and income" for the designated purpose - to determine which should be used rather than to determine whether either should be used.  In other words, the property was to be used for the designated purpose and could not arbitrarily be withheld by the trustee.  Nor should article sixth of the trust instrument be ignored in this connection.  Under it the trustee is authorized to expend any or all of the principal for the personal care and maintenance of the beneficiaries, if in his judgment and discretion necessary, and is also authorized to pay for any or all professional or medical care.  As to the latter no specific discretion or judgment is vested in the trustee.  It seems to me that the beneficiaries had an absolute right, under article first (b) of the trust instrument, to have1941 BTA LEXIS 1051">*1075  the principal and income used for the designated purpose.  Under article sixth they had the absolute right to require the payment of medical attention out of principal and a right, enforceable in equity, to require the expenditure of a reasonable amount for their personal care and maintenance.  The aggregate of all these rights is surely "a right to the present enjoyment of the corpus or income." In spite of the language quoted by the majority from Commissioner v. Brandegee that case is not a very satisfactory authority upon which to rest a conclusion that the gift in the instant proceeding is one of future interest.  The court remanded the proceeding to the Board "on the issue whether the beneficiaries took future interests in property." It held that if petitioner can establish "that when the gift was made in 1937 there were no mortgages or other encumbrances outstanding, the existence of which would postpone the unqualified right of the beneficiaries to enjoyment of the net income", she must prevail in her contention that the gift was of a present interest; for then the trustee would be required to pay the net income to the beneficiaries.  As to this phase the court held1941 BTA LEXIS 1051">*1076  that "the gift of an immediate life interest in income is to be regarded as a present interest", pointing out that "in ordinary usage a life tenant under a trust, having the right to the immediate beneficial enjoyment of the income, is considered as having a present interest, even though possession of the corpus is withheld from him or postponed." Cf. Kinney v. Anglim,43 Fed.Supp. 431. The cited case, therefore, is but an application of the rule enunciated by the Supreme Court in the Pelzer and Ryerson cases.  Being of the opinion that the beneficiaries in the instant proceeding have a present interest in the property placed in trust for them by their grandmother, I respectfully note my dissent.  MURDOCK, VAN FOSSAN, TURNER, and HARRON agree with this dissent.