DocketNumber: Docket No. 8104
Citation Numbers: 6 T.C. 535, 1946 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 258
Judges: Arundell
Filed Date: 3/20/1946
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 1/13/2023
*258
*535 Respondent has determined deficiencies in petitioner's liability for withholding income tax at the source under
Most of the facts have been stipulated. Those material here, together with others which we find from the evidence, are as follows:
FINDINGS OF FACT.
Petitioner, a resident of Melrose, Massachusetts, is the sole trustee of a trust fund established by the will of Annie B. Webb, late of Salem, *536 Massachusetts, who died in 1925. The tax returns here involved were filed with the collector for the district of Massachusetts.
Clause 18 of the will of Annie B. Webb reads in material part:
Eighteenth. *260 All the rest, residue and remainder of my property, real and personal, at the time of my death within the jurisdiction of the United States, and, should I leave no valid French will, including all my property in any foreign country, I give, devise and bequeath to my Trustees, hereinafter named, but as Trustees, for the following uses and purposes, namely:
From the net income to pay as follows:
* * * *
(c) To Mabel Duncan and Ethel Duncan, now or recently residing at 6 Place St., Sulpice, Paris an annuity of four hundred dollars, one-half to each, and the whole to the survivor for life.
(d) to the following named persons, annuities for their respective lives, namely: Germaine St. Laurent, eight hundred dollars; * * * Fenella Lovell, residing at Hotel Haute Loire, Boulevard Raspail, Paris, * * * five hundred dollars; * * *.
Petitioner, during each of the years 1941 and 1942 paid or deposited to the credit of Ethel Duncan and Germaine St. Laurent $ 200 and $ 800, respectively. Petitioner duly filed withholding tax returns on Form 1042 for each year and paid the taxes shown thereon to be due. The amounts payable to Ethel Duncan and Germaine St. Laurent were not included as income subject*261 to withholding. Payments of $ 200 to Mabel Duncan and $ 500 to Fenella Lovell were reported in each return. These payments were described as "annuities," and tax was withheld and paid by petitioner with respect to them.
Both Ethel Duncan and Germaine St. Laurent were citizens and residents of France during 1941 and 1942. The latter had been in the employ of Annie B. Webb from 1913 until 1925. In the 1941 return petitioner made the following statement:
Ethel Duncan, 52 Ave. de la Motte Piquet, Paris, France, is a naturalized Frenchwoman and a resident of France. Germaine St. Laurent, 3 Rue George Sand, Paris, France, is a native of France, and a citizen and resident of France. They have annuities u/w Annie B. Webb ($ 200 and $ 800 respectively) but as French citizens they are not subject to tax. Their names were included in error in previous withholding returns.
No reference was made to either of these two beneficiaries in the 1942 return.
The income and expenses of the estate of Annie B. Webb during the years in question were as follows:
1941 | 1942 | |
Gross income | $ 15,394.13 | $ 14,412.92 |
Expenses | 2,072.52 | 2,241.19 |
Payments designated in will as annuities | 9,846.32 | 9,841.69 |
Residuary income | 3,475.29 | 2,330.04 |
*262 *537 OPINION.
Article IX of the Convention on Double Taxation Between the United States and The Republic of France, 1 executed April 27, 1932, proclaimed April 16, 1935, and effective January 1, 1936, provides:
The following classes of income paid in one of the contracting States * * * to a citizen of the latter State residing there, are exempt from tax in the former State:
* * * *
(c) private pensions and life annuities.
Petitioner contends that the payments provided in the will of Annie B. Webb for Ethel Duncan constituted a "life annuity" and that those for Germaine St. Laurent constituted both a "private pension" and a "life annuity" within the meaning of the treaty.
The terms are not defined in the convention or in the protocol, and it is apparent to us that neither term has such a well recognized single significance, either in law or as a matter of general language, as to preclude all doubt as to its meaning. Our task, therefore, has been to discover, if possible, in what sense the*263 contracting parties used the terms -- a task which has required an extensive examination into the historical background of the treaty.
In the years following the first World War the problem of international double taxation grew to serious proportions. Both the International Chamber of Commerce and the League of Nations became alarmed over the paralyzing effect of the problem on international trade, and each appointed committees for the purpose of formulating solutions and developing uniform principles. The committees of the two organizations cooperated. In 1927 the League of Nations Committee of Technical Experts on Double Taxation and Tax Evasion submitted a report of their studies and a model bilateral convention on double income taxation, based at least in part upon principles garnered from existing treaties between various European countries. 2 This model draft was thereupon sent by the League to the governments of various members and nonmember States, and in 1928 a meeting of government experts from 27 countries, including the United States and France, was convened at Geneva for the purpose of discussing the technical experts' recommendations and preparing other model texts. *264 The meeting of government experts adopted, with some modifications, the draft recommended by the technical experts and in addition formulated two other model texts, designated as draft conventions *538 Nos. 1a, 1b, and 1c in their report. 3 As a result of the work of the League and the International Chamber of Commerce committees, "uniform definitions were being formulated, the predominant kinds of income were being classified, and an international tax language was being developed." 4
*265 Subsequent to the adoption of the draft conventions by the meeting of governments experts, a number of bilateral conventions embodying the provisions of the drafts were entered into between various European countries. France executed one double taxation treaty with Italy5*266 on June 16, 1930, and another with Belgium6 on May 16, 1931, in each of which provisions were made for the tax treatment of private pensions and life annuities. The present convention between the United States and France was the first bilateral treaty of its kind to which the United States was a party. Mitchell B. Carroll, who, while a special attorney in the Treasury Department, was sent by the State Department in 1930 to assist Ambassador Walter E. Edge in the negotiations of this treaty, reported that the League models afforded the framework for the treaty between the United States and France and that the treaty embodies the language and a number of the basic principals adopted at the Geneva meeting. 7
With this background in mind, we turn to a consideration of the issue whether the payments here in controversey are "life annuities" within the meaning of the treaty. Did the contracting parties have in mind the contractual type of annuity, e. g., a purchased annuity, or should the term be held, as petitioner contends, to include a testamentary annuity? Article 9 of the League draft convention *267 No. 1a and article 8 or draft convention No. 1c provide: 8
*539 Annuities or income from other sources not referred to in the previous paragraphs shall be taxable in the State of fiscal domicile of the creditor of such income.
The principle of taxing annuities at the domicile of the recipient was contrary to the principle of taxing certain other types of income, treated in other articles of the draft conventions, at the source or origin of the income. The official commentary on the above provision is that:
The exception which is thus made for annuities is justified by the special nature of this form of income,
From this commentary it is evident to us that the problem with which the government experts were concerned was the taxation of the contractual type of annuity, for it is apparent that the recipient of a testamentary annuity, for example, would not be "free to select *268 the country which is to be liable for the payment." Since the treaty we are considering was modeled on the League drafts, it is entirely reasonable to limit the term "life annuities" to purchased or contractual annuities. In two Internal Revenue Bureau rulings respondent has taken the position that the term "life annuities," for purposes of the convention, has reference only to the contractual annuity, that is, to "a stated sum payable periodically at stated times during life, or a specified number of years, under an obligation to make the payments in consideration of a gross sum paid for such obligation." See
It is observed, furthermore, that in the double taxation convention between this country and Sweden, 9 proclaimed December 12, 1939, effective January 1, 1940, and in that between this country and Canada, 10 proclaimed June 17, 1942, effective January 1, 1941, the term "life annuities" is expressly defined as contemplating only the contractual type of annuity. Also, in the second tax convention with France, 11 proclaimed January 5, *269 1945, effective January 1, 1945, paragraph IV of the protocol defines "life annuities" as follows:
The term "life annuities" referred to in article 8 of this convention means a stated sum payable periodically at stated times during life, or during a specified number of years to the person who has paid the premiums or a gross sum for such an obligation.
In view of the foregoing history, we think the above definition is not, as petitioner contends, evidence that in the first treaty the term "life annuities" had a scope sufficiently broad to include testamentary *540 annuities, and that in the second treaty the contracting parties were greatly narrowing the scope. On the contrary, it seems to us that although in the second instance the parties, for purposes of clarity, explicitly indicated the meaning to be ascribed to the term, nonetheless the contractual type of annuity, for example, the kind *270 that might be purchased from an insurance company, was likewise contemplated in the first instance.
We come now to a consideration of the issue whether the payments to Germaine St. Laurent constituted a "private pension" within the meaning of the treaty. Webster's New International Dictionary (1939), 2d Ed., gives the following definitions of the term "pension":
A payment regularly made to any person; as * * * [to] one by way of subsidy or allowance, whether as a means of securing good will, co-operation, or the like, or as a gratuity, as to royal favorites or to men of eminence in art, literature, or science.
A stated allowance or stipend made by a government or business organization, in consideration of past services or of the surrender of rights or emoluments, to one retired from service; esp., a regular stipend paid by a government to retired public officers, disabled soldiers, the families of soldiers killed in service, etc.
Both public and private pensions were treated together in the League draft conventions. Article 8 of draft 1a and article 6 of draft 1c provide: 12 "Public or private pensions shall be taxable in the State of the debtor of such income."
*271 At the Geneva meeting of the government experts in 1928, considerable conflict developed over this provision. The representatives of Great Britain and the United States opposed the principle of taxing such income, at least so far as private pensions were concerned, at the source or origin of the income. The minutes of the meeting throw considerable light upon what was contemplated in the use of the term "private pensions." 13 Throughout the debate on this subject repeated reference is made to pensions paid to employees of "companies," of "industrial undertakings," of "private enterprises," and of "private firms."
In the treaty between France and Italy, 14 executed June 16, 1930, the League principle of taxing private pensions in the State of the debtor, that is, the "party liable to pay them," was adopted. In the protocol to that convention it was provided that "As regards the taxation of private pensions * * * it is understood that, if the *272 pension is paid by an
*541 In the convention between the United States and Canada 15 no distinction is made between public and private pensions. Article VI of that treaty provides simply that:
Pensions and life annuities derived from within one of the contracting States and paid to individuals residing in the other contracting State shall be exempt from taxation in the former State.
And, the word "pensions" is defined in paragraph 8 of the protocol as "periodic payments made in consideration for services rendered or by way of compensation for injuries received."
While it would appear from the foregoing that the government*273 experts at the Geneva meeting in 1928, in discussing private pensions, had in mind pensions paid to employees or former employees of business organizations and enterprises, nevertheless we are not disposed to hold, and it is unnecessary for us to hold, in this proceeding, that the term "private pensions" as used in the treaty with France is thus limited. This, because we would not feel warranted, on the basis of the present record, in concluding that the payments to Germaine St. Laurent could properly be characterized as a pension in any event. We have only the stipulated fact that this person had been in the employ of the decedent for a number of years prior to the decedent's death. The will itself contains no indication that the provision for her benefit was made in consideration for past services; it does not even indicate that an employer-employee relationship had existed between her and the decedent. The name of Germaine St. Laurent appears in the will, together with the names of a number of other persons, as but one of many beneficiaries of the testatrix's bounty. There is no evidence of any agreement between the two for the making of such a provision and no evidence as*274 to whether it had been a practice on the part of the decedent to make retiring allowances for other employees, if indeed she had others. Furthermore, the incident which gave rise to the instant payments was the death of the decedent and not the occasion of the employee's disability or reaching an age proper for superannuation. The fact of the employment relationship seems to be purely a matter of coincidence. We think that Germaine St. Laurent was simply the beneficiary of a part of the income from a testamentary trust, and nothing more.
For the reasons stated, we hold that the payments in controversy were not "private pensions" or "life annuities" within the meaning of the tax convention with France, and that they are accordingly not exempt from withholding.
1. 49 Stat. 3145, 3149.↩
2.
3.
4. Mitchell B. Carroll,
5.
6.
7. Mitchell B. Carroll,
8. See note 3,
9. 54 Stat. 1759, 1764, 1776.↩
10. 56 Stat. 1399, 1401, 1409.↩
11. I. R. B. No. 8, Apr. 25, 1945, pp. 17, 19, 24.↩
12. See note 3,
13. See John G. Herndon, Jr., op. cit.,
14. See note 5,
15. See note 10,