DocketNumber: Docket No. 73934
Citation Numbers: 33 T.C. 1064, 1960 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 185
Judges: Withey
Filed Date: 3/25/1960
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
*185
*1064 OPINION.
The respondent determined an estate tax deficiency in the amount of $ 86,435.05.
Petitioners' present assignments of errors are as follows:
4. * * *
(a) The determination that the decedent retained any interest or power of*186 any character, whether by way of discharge of his legal obligations or otherwise, in a certain trust created by the decedent under trust agreement dated November 23, 1945.
(b) The inclusion of the property constituting said trust under said trust agreement in decedent's gross estate under
* * * *
(d) The failure to allow as deductions for estate tax purposes attorneys' fees and other expenses incurred by the petitioners in the proceedings for the determination of the estate taxes of the decedent prior to and including this case.
The amount of legal fees paid or to be paid by the petitioners for legal services rendered or to be rendered and disbursements will be determined under Rule 50, thereby disposing of item (d),
*1065 The facts are all stipulated by written agreement and are incorporated herein by this reference. So far as necessary to a consideration of the question involved they appear later in this opinion.
The petitioners are the duly qualified executors of the will of William H. Lee, deceased. The Federal estate tax return for the estate of the decedent was filed with the district director of internal revenue*187 for the Buffalo District of New York.
William H. Lee and Elizabeth M. Lee were married in the year 1905, and Raymond J. Lee is an issue of this union, having been born on October 29, 1917.
On November 23, 1945, the decedent, William H. Lee, entered into a trust agreement with the Lockport Exchange Trust Company, a New York banking corporation having its principal office in the city of Lockport, New York, as trustee. On the same date and pursuant to the trust agreement, decedent transferred to the Lockport Exchange Trust Company securities and cash possessing a then fair market value totaling $ 125,000. Manufacturers and Traders Trust Company, the present trustee, is the successor by merger to the Lockport Exchange Trust Company.
Exclusive of the principal of the trust in issue here, the decedent owned, at the date of his death, property includible in his gross estate for Federal estate tax purposes at then prevalent market values of $ 1,359,214.72, and had an adjusted gross estate of $ 1,292,078.09.
Elizabeth M. Lee, decedent's wife, survived the decedent less than a month, dying on May 24, 1954. Decedent's son, Raymond J. Lee, is one of the executors of decedent's estate.
Beyond*188 the clauses usually found in trust indentures measuring the trustee's powers and duties in dealing with the corpus and income, and the usual exculpatory clauses, the trust indenture provides, as may be applicable to this case, that (a) the law of the State of New York should govern the indenture; (b) the settlor, decedent, could from time to time add to the corpus of the trust by the mere granting or conveying of property; (c) the trust was irrevocable and was to terminate only at the death of the latter of the two lives in being -- Elizabeth and Raymond; and (d) the right of the beneficiaries to receive the trust income was inalienable by assignment or other transfer.
Decedent retained within the instrument itself no powers to alter or change any of the provisions thereof and retained no power to control the activities of the trustee. No provisions were made for the invasion of the principal by the trustee.
The dispositive sections of the indenture are in part as follows:
II. The Trustee shall collect the rents, issues, income and profits from the said Trust Fund and after deducting its proper commissions and charges shall pay over and distribute the net income therefrom in monthly, *189 quarterly or other *1066 suitable installments to or for the benefit of ELIZABETH M. LEE, wife of the Grantor,
After the death of the primary and secondary life beneficiaries, the trust was to terminate and the corpus was to be distributed to certain named remaindermen.
At the date of decedent's death, the principal of the trust had a fair market value of $ 157,697.56.
The decedent's wife, during the 9 years of 1945 to and including 1953, had net cash income *190 in the 10-year period of 1944 to and including 1953 decreased from $ 301,113.40 for the year 1944 to $ 116,373.99 for the year 1953. At all times from the creation of the trust on November 23, 1945, to the date of her death, May 24, 1954, decedent's wife received all the net income of the trust, excluding gains on the sale of capital assets.
The sole issue now presented is whether the value of the trust created by decedent in 1945 is includible in decedent's gross estate.
It is respondent's position that the decedent by the terms of the trust retained the enjoyment of the transferred property or the income therefrom during his lifetime, thereby rendering the value of the trust includible in decedent's gross estate under
From the date of the creation of the trust to the date of his death, decedent had a net worth in excess of $ 500,000. His wife, besides her income from the trust, had substantial properties and cash of her own during this same period.
No facts other than those which appear in the trust instrument were introduced at the hearing or included in the stipulation concerning the decedent's motives or his intentions in the creation of *1067 the trust. The parties have come to issue on whether or not the trust in question manifested in its language the purpose of having the income applied toward decedent's support obligations.
It has long been established that a husband can make a gift to his wife and not every such gift discharges a legal obligation of the husband to support his wife.
The crucial question whether a decedent has retained "possession or enjoyment" often hinges on a factual determination of whether or not the income from the transferred property was intended to fulfill, and was limited to the satisfaction of, a support obligation. Respondent's position is that the trust in issue here is so intended and is so limited. The regulation relied upon by respondent states that the possession*193 or enjoyment of property will be considered as having been retained by the decedent "to the extent that during any such period
In dealing with this type of fact situation in the past, this regulation, and particularly the italicized language, has been interpreted to mean that the use of the income from the trust property must be restricted or confined to fulfilling the settlor's obligation to support his beneficiaries. The settlor must possess a right to require that the income be utilized for support purposes as opposed to a permissive or discretionary power in the trustee so to apply it. The ultimate question to be decided is whether the decedent reserved to himself an enforcible right to have the income applied toward his spouse's support.
*1068 Where the above is not readily apparent, resort must be had to the proper interpretation of the instrument of transfer as the best index of decedent's intent.
This precise question was presented in the case of
Our opinion in the
With this background, we may proceed with a discussion of petitioners' position that the decedent retained no enforcible right to have the income applied to his obligation. Petitioners cite such cases as
*1069 The
In the
Petitioners also rely heavily on the recent Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals' opinion in
In the case before us, the restriction is placed in the same sentence as the gift. There are neither intervening clauses nor language which might cast doubt on the meaning of the phrase. We cannot, under the circumstances of this case, properly disregard the plain language of the trust agreement. The phrase in question is not ambiguous and the indenture as a whole contains no terms or intimations which might force a different interpretation from the one adopted by respondent. The fact that the phrase in question also restricted the gift to decedent's son does not cause a different view, even though decedent owed no duty of support to his adult son. The language of the instrument used with reference to decedent's son presents a different problem and need not be considered here. We decide in this case only the meaning of the phrase in reference to the primary life estate, the one which took effect at the creation of the trust.
Petitioners argue that the presence of the phrase in the language used for the*199 gift to decedent's spouse and the gift to the son indicates that the phrase was merely surplusage and habitual draftsman's language. We do not so view it. There is, of course, no requirement that a trust intended for support purposes be confined to those to whom a legal duty of support is owed. We think it is no distortion of the plain language of this trust to say that decedent desired that the income be used in the first instance for his wife's support and after her death be applied toward his son's support. This is the plain meaning of the words.
*1070 Even if we should undertake the task of probing the mind of the deceased, we are prohibited from holding that he intended other than what he so plainly stated in his trust instrument. 2 Scott, Trusts, p. 1158 (2d ed., 1956). We hold, therefore, that the income from this trust was restricted to the fulfillment and satisfaction of the decedent's obligation to support his wife.
Petitioners' second contention is twofold. First, petitioners take issue with the interpretation of the Court of Appeals in certain New York cases cited in its opinion in the
Second, petitioners contend that in any event the recent decision of
Petitioners have presented no proof that the decedent's obligation to support would not, at least, have equaled the amount of income payable to his wife from the trust in question. The petitioners had the burden of proof upon this question and in the light of the decedent's wealth we hold that the decedent's own estimation in the provision of this trust of the extent of his obligation to provide for his wife did not exceed what the law would have required of him. Therefore, the entire value of the trust is includible in his gross estate.
1. Excluding Federal income tax payments and proceeds of sale of capital assets.↩
2. As to the second trust, we admitted evidence which indicated the decedent's intention was not to support his wife but to provide her with income with which to support her two adult invalid daughters and to maintain a Florida home. On appeal to the Second Circuit this evidence was excluded and the corpus of this trust was included in decedent's gross estate.↩