DocketNumber: Docket No. 5117-78
Judges: Tannenwald
Filed Date: 2/19/1981
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
*168
In litigation between the petitioner and the decedent's widow (who was a beneficiary under decedent's will) relating to the ownership of certain property transferred to her by the decedent prior to his death, the State court approved a compromise agreement which required that petitioner pay the widow's attorneys' fees.
*369 OPINION
Respondent determined a deficiency of $ 18,392.26 in petitioner's Federal estate taxes. Concessions having been made by both parties, the sole issue remaining is whether attorneys' fees are deductible under
Petitioner is the Estate of Peter W. Reilly, deceased, by its executor, Lawrence K. Reilly. *171 The decedent died testate on April 16, 1974. The estate tax return was timely filed with the Internal *370 Revenue Service Center at Andover, Mass. Lawrence K. Reilly resided in Wellesley, Mass., at the time the petition was filed.
Marion D. Reilly (Mrs. Reilly) was the decedent's wife at the time of his death. She was also the life beneficiary of a testamentary trust created by the decedent's will which, except for $ 5,000 and decedent's tangible personal property, was given all of the decedent's property. The remainder interest in the testamentary trust was given to the decedent's four children, namely, Peter W. Reilly III, Lawrence K. Reilly, Grace R. Conway, and Ann L. Gervais.
After the decedent's death, litigation ensued between Mrs. Reilly, Lawrence K. Reilly, individually and as petitioner's executor, Peter W. Reilly III, individually and as a named trustee of the aforesaid testamentary trust, the Union National Bank, as a named trustee of said testamentary trust, and Grace R. Conway and Ann L. Gervais. That litigation involved:
(a) Ownership of certain marketable securities transferred by the decedent to himself and Mrs. Reilly in joint ownership in October 1971.
*172 (b) Ownership of 8,000 shares of Courier Corp. common stock transferred by the decedent to Mrs. Reilly in July 1972.
(c) The validity of a gift made by decedent to Mrs. Reilly in July 1972 consisting of the proceeds of the sale of certain shares of Newco, Inc.
(d) Ownership of a Lowell Five-Cent Savings Bank savings account established in the joint ownership of the decedent and Mrs. Reilly in December 1972.
(e) Ownership of real property located in York County, Maine (the Drake Island property), transferred by decedent to himself and Mrs. Reilly in joint ownership in January 1973.
(f) The status of certain inter vivos trusts established by the decedent in May 1973 and the ownership of certain property held thereunder.
(g) Decedent's mental state at the times of the transfers listed above, and whether the decedent was subjected to undue influence at the time of the transfers.
(h) The propriety of Lawrence K. Reilly's being executor of the decedent's estate and of Peter W. Reilly III's being a trustee of the testamentary trust.
(i) The failure of the trustees of the testamentary trust to make distributions to Mrs. Reilly pursuant to its provisions.
*371 (j) Payment of attorneys' *173 fees.
(k) Certain tax liabilities of the decedent.
The litigation took the form of (1) an action by Mrs. Reilly against the previously named persons in the Superior Court of Middlesex County, Mass., for a declaratory judgment that she was entitled to sole title and ownership of the marketable securities (see item (a) above) and the Drake Island property (see item (e) above), and to remove Peter W. Reilly III as cotrustee of the testamentary trust and (2) an action by Lawrence K. Reilly, as executor of decedent's estate, against Mrs. Reilly in the Probate Court of Middlesex County, Mass., asking for a restraining order, an accounting for property which she held or controlled and which belonged to the estate, and a declaration that various transactions between her and the decedent be declared null and void. The litigation was settled prior to any trial, and a formal compromise agreement was executed by all the parties and filed in, and approved by, the Middlesex County Probate Court. The action in the Middlesex County Superior Court was dismissed.
The approved compromise agreement provided that Mrs. Reilly would retain some of the disputed property and that she would transfer the *174 rest to a newly created trust (the Peter Reilly II Trust), which would also receive the corpus of the decedent's testamentary trust. Respondent has conceded that the attorneys' fees*175 attributable to counsel for petitioner, et al., are properly deductible. We infer from this concession and the arguments on brief that respondent accepts that the payments for attorneys' fees made by the Peter Reilly II Trust may be treated, for the purposes of this case, as if *372 made by petitioner -- at least, respondent does not argue otherwise. infra); (2) that, even if so allowable, the expenses meet the conditions of deductibility set forth in respondent's regulations. In essence, the litigation which gave rise to the disputed attorneys' fees involved the question whether the decedent's *374 estate *180 or Mrs. Reilly owned certain assets. We attach no significance to the fact that the first step in such litigation was the suit to quiet title brought by Mrs. Reilly in the Massachusetts Superior Court. The fact is that a cross-suit, asking for essentially the same relief, was brought by the decedent's executor in his representative capacity in the Massachusetts Probate Court. Thus, we do not think it can fairly be said that the situation involved nothing more than a dispute between "beneficiaries" of a decedent in which the estate merely occupied the position of a stakeholder. Cf. In In Finally, we would add to the foregoing cases, relied upon by petitioner, our decision in Thus far we have focused our attention on the payment in question as a payment of attorneys' fees We also think that, in the "measuring rod" context, the instant case can be viewed as involving a "claim" by Mrs. Reilly against the estate, falling within the ambit of The major thrust of the litigation between Mrs. Reilly and *378 petitioner, et al., concerned the title to property allegedly transferred in whole or in part by the decedent to her while he was alive. The subject of the litigation accordingly had nothing to do with any transfer of property occasioned by the decedent's death, and, in fact, could have been litigated while the decedent remained alive. Thus, it is clear that the litigation concerned itself principally with Mrs. Reilly's claims However, in the instant case, actual transfers of property by the decedent during his lifetime were involved, and the amount paid by the estate was a cost incurred in disposing of the questions relating to the validity of those transfers. Where such questions have arisen, it has been held that a "promise or agreement" is not involved and that the*192 "adequate and full consideration" of The unmistakable purpose of In sum, petitioner should prevail on any of three grounds: (1) The payment of Mrs. Reilly's counsel fees falls within the ambit of section 20.2053-3(c)(3), Estate Tax Regs., as being "essential to the proper settlement of the estate"; (2) such payment was part of the cost of action taken by decedent's executor to discharge his responsibility for "the collection of assets * * * and distribution of the property of the estate" (sec. 20.2053(a), Estate Tax Regs.; compare
1. All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 as amended and in effect at the time of decedent's death.↩
2. It is difficult to determine the dollar values of the trade-off. However, leaving aside certain personal property, it appears from the filed estate tax return and the concession by petitioner that Mrs. Reilly retained approximately $ 150,000 in disputed assets (the shares of Courier Corp., the Lowell Savings Bank account, and a disputed $ 50,000 lifetime gift from the decedent) plus a Central Savings Bank account of undeterminable value, while the estate recovered, in the form of transfers by Mrs. Reilly to the Peter Reilly II Trust, approximately $ 240,000 ($ 133,000 in marketable securities and the Drake Island property worth $ 107,000).↩
3. Compare
4. Petitioner raises no question of the validity of the second prong as the taxpayer did in
5. In reaching this conclusion, we are mindful of the fact that we are not precluded from reexamining a lower State court's allowance of administration expenses.
6.
(a) General Rule. -- For purposes of the tax imposed by section 2001, the value of the taxable estate shall be determined by deducting from the value of the gross estate such amounts -- (1) for funeral expenses, (2) for administration expenses, (3) for claims against the estate, and (4) * * *↩
7. Sec. 20.2053-3(c)(3), Estate Tax Regs., reads:
"Attorneys' fees incurred by beneficiaries incident to litigation as to their respective interests are not deductible if the litigation is not essential to the proper settlement of the estate within the meaning of paragraph (a) of this section. An attorney's fee not meeting this test is not deductible as an administration expense under
The foregoing regulation was adopted in 1979 (
8. Sec. 20.2053-3(a), Estate Tax Regs., provides in pertinent part:
"The expenses contemplated in the law are such only as attend the settlement of an estate and the transfer of the property of the estate to individual beneficiaries or to a trustee, whether the trustee is the executor or some other person. Expenditures not essential to the proper settlement of the estate, but incurred for the individual benefit of the heirs, legatees, or devisees, may not be taken as deductions."↩
9. Indeed, with respect to items (a) through (g) (see p. 370
10. We note that respondent's regulations specify that deductibility turns on whether the
11. The funds "were paid out of the funds of the estate pursuant to a court order required as a direct and unavoidable result of the proceedings instigated by plaintiffs to construe the will they were to administer."
12. We note that petitioner relies upon
13. Respondent has raised no question as to the amount of the payment.↩
14. Since we treat the attorneys' fees as merely a measuring rod for the amount for which the claim was settled, we need not address the question whether decedent could have been held liable for such fees in the event that the litigation had taken place during his lifetime.↩
15.
16. See also
Rosenman v. United States ( 1944 )
Sussman v. United States ( 1962 )
Mosells Silvey Pitner v. United States ( 1967 )
Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Multnomah Operating ... ( 1957 )
Anderson, Clayton & Co., Plaintiff-Appellee-Cross-Appellant ... ( 1977 )
The Fisk University v. National Labor Relations Board ( 1980 )
Estate of Thomas W. Streeter, Deceased v. Commissioner of ... ( 1974 )
Barbara D. Young, Under the Last Will and Testament of ... ( 1977 )
Estate of Sanford v. Commissioner ( 1939 )
john-foster-dulles-edward-h-green-and-eustace-seligman-as-and-only-as ( 1959 )