Court Opinion

ID: 4590201
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-11-20 19:03:10.464686+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:50:25.923493
License: Public Domain

FIDELITY & COLUMBIA TRUST CO., EXECUTOR, ESTATE OF JAMES A. SHUTTLEWORTH, PETITIONER, v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, RESPONDENT.Fidelity & Columbia Trust Co. v. CommissionerDocket No. 40672.United States Board of Tax Appeals20 B.T.A. 203; 1930 BTA LEXIS 2183; July 3, 1930, Promulgated *2183 Held that the securities in the trust created by decedent which were purchased with income from the original securities in the trust which was payable to decedent's wife are not a part of the decedent's gross estate.  William Marshall Bullitt, Esq., for the petitioner.  L. S. Pendleton, Esq., for the respondent.  TRAMMELL *203  This is a proceeding for the redetermination of a deficiency in estate tax in the amount of $53,924.  The deficiency arises from the action of the respondent in including as a part of the gross estate the following trusts created by the decedent during his lifetime: Trust No. 2629$648,314.94Trust No. 2700153,530.63Trust No. 2701152,553.13FINDINGS OF FACT.  By two deeds of trust dated January 24, 1905, and July 8, 1905, respectively, which were subsequently consolidated into one trust agreement referred to as Trust No. 2629, the decedent created a trust containing the following provisions: SECOND: The net income therefrom shall be paid by the party of the second part to Monnie M. Shuttleworth in quarterly, semi-annual or annual installments, as she may prefer, so long as said property*2184  remains under the control of the party of the second part, or at her option the income may be invested and added to the principal as collected.  The decedent reserved the right to revoke the trust in whole or in part.  The above mentioned trust further provided that if Monnie M. Shuttleworth should survive the decedent, the trust property should be turned over to her as her absolute estate, but if she failed to survive the decedent, the property should pass as provided in her last will and testament, or, in the absence of testamentary disposition, to the estate of James A. Shuttleworth, the creator of the trust.  Monnie M. Shuttleworth survived the decedent, who died March 12, 1925.  The value of the property held in trust at the time of decedent's death under Trust No. 2629 above mentioned was $648,314.93.  Of this amount, $376,139.07 represented the value of securities originally placed in the trust, and the balance, $272,175.87, represented income that had been collected and reinvested and held by the trust.  It was *204  the practice of the trustee from 1905 to credit the income as collected to an income account for Mrs. Shuttleworth.  She drew against this account*2185  for personal needs and the accumulated income beyond her needs was transferred from time to time and reinvested in various securities which were held as a part of the trust fund.  Prior to the decedent's death he took certain securities from the trust fund represented by Trust No. 2629, to the approximate amount of $300,000.  There was not included in the estate-tax return of the decedent any amount with respect to the trusts here involved.  OPINION.  TRAMMELL: The deficiency notice of the respondent included in addition to Trust No. 2629, Trust No. 2700 and Trust No. 2701, having assets of a value of $153,530.63 and $152,553.13, respectively, as a part of the decedent's gross estate.  In the petition there were no allegations of fact relating to these two trusts and the testimony contained no reference thereto.  While there is testimony that the decedent during his lifetime took approximately $300,000 from Trust No. 2629, the testimony does not indicate that Trusts Nos. 2700 and 2701 here involved included any property or securities which had been included in the original trust or the income therefrom.  This is left for inference.  It may be true and it may not.  If it were*2186  a fact the petitioners' testimony should have disclosed it.  The respondent has determined that he assets included in Trusts Nos. 2700 and 2701 should be included in the decedent's gross estate.  The determination of the respondent is prima facie correct and will be taken by us as correct unless evidence is introduced by the petitioner to show that this action is incorrect.  In the absence of evidence on this question, we affirm the action of the respondent with respect to Trusts Nos. 2700 and 2701.  With respect to Trust No. 2629, it appears that this trust at the time of decedent's death included $272,175.87 representing this investment of the income of the original trust.  This income had previously been credited to an income account for Mrs. Shuttleworth.  Under the provisions of the trust the net income therefrom was to be paid to Mrs. Shuttleworth in quarterly, semiannual or annual installments, as she might prefer, or, at her option, it might have been invested and added to the principal as collected.  There was no evidence that Mrs. Shuttleworth exercised her option to have the income invested and added to the principal as collected.  On the other hand, in the absence of*2187  such an election on her part, the income was in fact credited to her and that part which she did not use was invested and added to the principal not as collected as provided in the second *205  paragraph of the trust set out in our findings, but as it accumulated and as she did not use it.  This income was treated by Mrs. Shuttleworth as her own and she paid income tax thereon during all the years since the Revenue Act of 1913, the officers of the trust having prepared these returns for her.  If the income from the trust once became the property of Mrs. Shuttleworth it did not become the property of the trust to be included in the gross estate of the decedent, nor would the creator of the trust have had a right to withdraw any portion of this accumulated income or investments therefrom.  The creator of the trust apparently considered that the investments of the income belonged to the trust and, acting upon that assumption, apparently removed from the trust a portion of the securities purchased with the income.  On this question the evidence, however, is not clear whether the amount taken from the original trust was in fact the income, or investments thereof, or a portion of*2188  the original principal.  On the other hand, the income had already been credited to the income account of Mrs. Shuttleworth and made subject to her disposition and, considering it as her own, she used what she needed of it and the balance not actually used was invested.  The record discloses that the trust had received no written communication from Mrs. Shuttleworth that she had exercised her option to have the income reinvested in accordance with the second paragraph of the trust, but, on the contrary, she had, with the knowledge of the decedent, the creator of the trust, since 1905 permitted the trust to credit to her account the income.  The income having been credited to her and made subject to her disposal and use, under the terms of the trust it became hers and when the trust invested the income in other securities it was investing the property of Mrs. Shuttleworth.  The fact that it was commingled with and treated as a part of the trust does not deprive her of the ownership thereof.  She had the option either to receive the income or to permit it to be reinvested and added to the principal of the trust as collected, but when she permitted it first to come to her before being*2189  invested as above stated, it became hers and the investment thereof was her investment.  We think, therefore, that the amount of $272,175.87 which was included in Trust No. 2629 at the time of the decedent's death should not be considered a part of the decedent's estate.  No question is raised by the petitioner that the property included in the original trust was properly included by the respondent in the decedent's gross estate on account of the reserved rights of the decedent in the trust.  Judgment will be entered under Rule 50.