DocketNumber: Docket No. 3970-77
Citation Numbers: 72 T.C. 1180, 1979 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 52
Judges: Scott
Filed Date: 9/25/1979
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
*52
Decedent had a general power of appointment over assets left in trust by her husband's will which, absent her exercise, went into a trust with a remainder interest passing to a charity. Her husband died on May 30, 1969. Decedent, who died on Feb. 22, 1974, had not exercised this power in her will executed on Jan. 24, 1969. She was not incompetent at any time prior to her death. The trust into which the assets went upon decedent's failure to exercise the power of appointment created by the will of decedent's husband was not a charitable remainder annuity trust or a unitrust under
*1180 OPINION
Respondent determined a deficiency in the *1181 Federal estate tax of the Estate of Vera S. Sorenson, deceased, Lola L. Bonner, executrix, in the amount of $ 41,534.40.
The issues for decision are: (1) Whether the Estate of Vera S. Sorenson is entitled to a deduction under
Lola L. Bonner, the executrix of the Estate of Vera S. Sorenson, resided in Rockport, Tex., at the time of the filing of the petition in this case. A timely estate tax return (Form 706) was filed on behalf of the Estate of Vera S. Sorenson with the Internal Revenue Service Center, Austin, Tex.
Vera S. Sorenson, decedent, died testate on February 22, 1974. At death, she was a Harris County, Tex., resident. She was the widow of Ira L. Sorenson, who had died testate on May 30, 1969. Mr. Sorenson was a resident of Rockport, Tex., at the time of his death.
To dispose of all assets in his residuary estate, Mr. Sorenson's last will and testament, dated January 24, 1969, created two separate trusts, entitled "Wife's Share" and "Charitable Share." Under the latter testamentary trust, a split-interest trust, a contingency remainder interest was left to the State University of Iowa Foundation, which was organized and operated exclusively for educational purposes within the meaning of
All the Rest and Residue of the property which I may*57 own at the time of my death, real, personal and mixed, tangible and intangible, of whatsoever nature and wheresoever situated, including all property which I may acquire or become entitled to after the execution of this Will, including all lapsed legacies and devises, I give, devise and bequeath unto The State University of Iowa Foundation, a corporation not for pecuniary profit, In Trust, nevertheless, for the uses and purposes hereinafter enumerated. The Trust Estate shall be held *1182 in two (2) undivided shares, each of which shares is to be considered a SEPARATE TRUST, although the Trustee may, for purposes of administration, hold the Trust Assets as a single unit if it so desires; however, my said Trustee shall have the right and power to partition said shares, when, and if, in its judgment it is considered to be necessary, wise, expedient or economic.
A. One of such shares, which is hereby designated as WIFE'S SHARE, shall consist of an amount equal to the maximum marital deduction allowable in determining the federal estate tax payable by reason of my death, diminished by the value of all other property interests included in my gross estate for federal estate tax purposes*58 and which pass or have passed from me to my said wife either under any other provision of this Will or in any other manner outside of this Will, in such manner as to qualify for said marital deduction under the Federal Internal Revenue Code. Only assets which qualify for the marital deduction shall be included in such share by my Trustee. The assets to be allocated to the WIFE'S SHARE shall have an aggregate fair market value representative of the appreciation or depreciation in value, if any, to the date or dates of allocation of all of the assets available for allocation from my estate.
1. During the lifetime of my beloved wife, VERA S. SORENSON, all the income derived from this trust shall be paid to my wife or applied for her benefit in convenient, but not less frequently than semi-annual, installments.
2. If the income distributable to my wife in accordance with the provisions of Paragraph 1 above, supplemented by income (other than capital gains) available from other sources to her, shall not be sufficient to enable her to maintain substantially the standard of living to which she was accustomed at the time of my death -- as to which the judgment of my Trustee shall be conclusive*59 -- then, and in that event, I authorize my Trustee to pay to or apply for the benefit of my wife, so much of the corpus of this trust as my Trustee in its sole discretion shall from time to time deem requisite or desirable for such purpose even to the full extent of the entire corpus of this trust.
3. Upon the death of my said wife, the corpus remaining in this trust shall be distributed by the Trustee free of the trust, to or for the benefit of one or more persons or corporations, in such manner and in such proportions, whether outright, in trust or otherwise, as my said wife may by her Last Will and Testament direct and appoint, including the right in my wife to appoint said property to her estate. Such Power of Appointment shall be exercisable by my said wife exclusively and in all events but shall be exercisable only by specific reference to said power in her Last Will and Testament. To the extent that my wife fails to exercise effectively the power of appointment herein conferred upon her, then upon her death, the assets comprising this trust, or any part thereof not effectively appointed, shall become a part of CHARITABLE TRUST and be held and distributed as provided in Article*60 VI-B hereof, in all respects as if it had originally been a part of same.
4. In the event that my wife, VERA S. SORENSON, shall predecease me, then, in that event, that part of the Trust Estate which is herein designated as WIFE'S SHARE, shall lapse, and immediately become a part of the Trust Estate designated as CHARITABLE SHARE.
b. The other share of the Trust Estate, to be designated as the CHARITABLE *1183 SHARE, shall consist of all of the remaining Trust Assets. During the term of this Trust, my Trustee is directed as follows:
1. My Trustee shall pay to my two brothers, DR. A. C. SORENSON, who resides in Davenport, Iowa, and DR. OTTO J. SORENSON, who resides in Greenwich, Connecticut, the net income from TWO THOUSAND (2,000) shares of stock in STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF NEW JERSEY; such net income shall be paid in equal shares to my said brothers in convenient, but not less frequently than annual, installments.
2. In the event that either or both of my said brothers should predecease me, or in the event that either or both of my said brothers should die during the term of this trust, then, in any of said events, the gift of income which said deceased brother would have received*61 hereunder shall lapse and shall be distributed in accordance with Article VI-C following.
3. The term "income" as used herein shall be construed to be cash dividends only, from such stock, and shall not include any additional shares which may accrue to the trust by virtue of corporate re-organization of "stock split" or "stock dividend" as the terms are commonly used.
C. 1. The balance of the net income from the CHARITABLE SHARE, my Trustee shall pay to or for the benefit of my said wife, VERA S. SORENSON, for so long as she shall live. In addition to the net income to which my wife shall be entitled she shall have the absolute power and right if she so desires, but she shall not be required to demand, obtain and withdraw from the principal of the CHARITABLE SHARE trust fund, in any or each calendar year during the existence of such trust, a sum or sums up to but not exceeding a total in any one calendar year of the following amount: 1) FIVE THOUSAND DOLLARS ($ 5,000.00), or 2) FIVE PER CENT (5%) of the aggregate value of the entire assets of such trust fund in the year of such withdrawal, calculated on the lowest total value attained by such assets (including the portion withdrawn) *62 at any time during such calendar year, after deducting all liabilities of such trust fund. This shall be a non-cumulative right of withdrawal, and if it is not exercised or only partially exercised, in any one calendar year, the amount permitted to be but not withdrawn shall not be carried over to a later year. In the event that my said wife is survived by both or either of my forenamed brothers, the net income which she was entitled to receive during her lifetime under this paragraph of my Will shall be paid to her two children, or to the survivor of them if one of them is deceased, or if both of such children predecease both or either or [sic] my brothers, then accumulated in accordance with the provisions of Article VI, Paragraph C, 2 hereof during the period of time that both or either of my forenamed brothers shall survive my wife and her two children.
2. Following the death of my said wife and two brothers, the net income from the CHARITABLE SHARE trust fund shall be paid not less frequently than semi-annually to my wife's two children, SANDRA ECCLES EDWARDS and TERRANCE EUGENE ECCLES, for so long as they shall live, in equal shares during their joint lives, and upon the death*63 of either of them, thereafter to the survivor of them for so long as the survivor of them shall live. In the event that both or either of my two forenamed brothers survive my wife and her two children, the net income otherwise payable hereunder to my wife or to her two children shall be accumulated and added to the principal of this trust *1184 during the period of time that both or either of my forenamed brothers shall survive my wife and her two children.
3. Upon the death of the survivor of the class composed of my two forenamed brothers, my wife, and the two forenamed children of my wife, this trust shall terminate and the entire remaining assets thereof shall be paid over and distributed to THE STATE UNIVERSITY OF IOWA FOUNDATION, a corporation not for pecuniary profit, free and clear of this trust, to establish the IRA L. and VERA S. SORENSON FUND for the benefit of the Department of Geology at the State University of Iowa, with the principal and the income thereof to be used for the purpose of providing and maintaining a distinguished speakers program consisting of representatives from both academic and industrial sources. The designation of the purpose for which said*64 fund is to be used shall not be construed as requiring its administration as a trust, the furnishing of bond or other security, or the making of periodic or other reports to any court, and said fund shall be devoted to the purposes herein stated as the Board of Directors of said FOUNDATION may from time to time determine.
Decedent executed her last will and testament on January 24, 1969, wherein under article VI she specifically declined to exercise the general power of appointment granted to her under her husband's will. *65 On the estate tax return for decedent's estate, $ 119,807.90 was shown as decedent's total gross estate and $ 53,764.61 as the taxable estate. The value of the gross estate as shown did not include the $ 142,949.06 value of the assets in the "Wife's Share" trust under the Will of Ira L. Sorenson, or the $ 6,393.06 value of the amount of assets of the "Charitable Share" trust over which decedent held a power of appointment at the date of her death. Respondent, in his notice of deficiency, increased the value of the estate as reported by the $ 149,342.12 values at the date of *1185 decedent's death of the assets in the "Wife's Share" trust and the portion of the assets of the "Charitable Share" trust over which decedent held a power of appointment. In the petition, it is admitted that this $ 149,342.12 is properly includable in decedent's gross estate, but alleged that the estate is entitled to a charitable deduction under (2) Where an interest in property (other than a remainder interest in a personal residence or farm or an individual portion of the decedent's entire interest in property) passes or has passed from the decedent to a person, or for a use, described in subsection (a), and an interest (other than an interest which is extinguished upon the decedent's death) in the same property passes or has passed (for less than an adequate and full consideration in money or money's *1186 worth) from the decedent to a person, or for a use, not described in subsection (a), no deduction shall be allowed under this section for the interest which passes or has passed to the person, or for the use, described in subsection (a) unless -- (A) in the case*68 of a remainder interest, such interest is in a trust which is a charitable remainder annuity trust or a charitable remainder unitrust (described in The parties have stipulated that neither of the trusts created by Mr. Sorenson's will is a charitable remainder annuity trust nor a charitable remainder unitrust as described in *1187 (ii) if the decedent at no time after*69 October 9, 1969, had the right to change the portions of the will which pertain to the passing of the property to, or for the use of, an organization described in (iii) if the will is not republished by codicil or otherwise before October 9, 1972, and the decedent is on such date and at all times thereafter under a mental disability to republish the will by codicil or otherwise. *70 Petitioner argues that We do not question that Congress amended *1188 The rules of present law for determining the amount of a charitable contribution deduction in the case of gifts of remainder interests in trust do not*72 necessarily have any relation to the value of the benefit which the charity receives. This is because the trust assets may be invested in a manner so as to maximize the income interest with the result that there is little relation between the interest assumptions used in calculating present values and the amount received by the charity. For example, the trust corpus can be invested in high-income, high-risk assets. This enhances the value of the income interest but decreases the value of the charity's remainder interest. Section 201(g)(4)(B) of the Tax Reform Act of 1969 was added to provide individuals an opportunity to modify existing arrangements and provide for those circumstances in which a charitable remainder created prior to the enactment of the Tax Reform Act of 1969 could not be changed. Hearings on H.R. 13270 before the Senate Comm. on Finance, 91st Cong., 1st Sess. 91 (1969). Otherwise, all estates were to be subject to the new provision. By its terms, Petitioner argues that the words of The problem is that the language of *75 In reading the plain meaning of Petitioner alternatively argues that decedent does fall within *1190 the scope of section 201(b)(4)(B)(ii) (Tax Reform Act of 1969) and is therefore rescued from the negative effects of We cannot agree with respondent's first reading of section 201(g)(4)(B)(ii) of the Tax Reform Act of 1969. The cornerstone of that interpretation would necessarily rely on a principle that a testator lacks the right to change his own*78 will. Certainly, *1191 Congress did not propose that result since a testator with capacity always has the right to modify his own will. Even in the event that one testator formally or informally agrees with another testator to include certain provisions in a will, well-settled law mandates that a testator with capacity later may change his will to delete or amend that provision. (E.g., Instead, in light of the purpose served by the 1969 amendments to *1192 This decision does not contravene petitioner's point that it is the duty of courts to assure that a testator's wishes are upheld and enforced. Petitioner cites from In passing on the questions thus raised, it will be well to keep in mind the suggestion of Petitioner's reliance on this well-accepted principle of law is misplaced in *81 this case. In our view, our interpretation of section 201(g)(4)(B)(ii) of the Tax Reform Act of 1969 in no way hinders Mr. Sorenson's testamentary purpose. Mr. Sorenson specifically gave his wife a general power of appointment over the "Wife's Share" trust and a power of appointment over a portion of the "Charitable Share" trust assets. Upon execution of his will, Mr. Sorenson, without a doubt, knew that decedent had the ability to redirect the remainder interest to any person by exercising her general power of appointment. Indeed, it is our opinion that Mr. Sorenson anticipated that decedent would have a "right to change the portions of the will which pertain to the passing of the property" at issue. Petitioner next seeks to persuade this Court that section 201(g)(4)(B)(ii) of the Tax Reform Act of 1969 should be interpreted in light of State law. Numerous Texas and Iowa cases are cited for the proposition that a remainderman, who is subject to a prior donee's power of appointment, takes directly from the creator of the power rather than from the donee-power holder. *82 Ira Sorenson to the charitable remainderman. That approach would render the disposition to the State University of Iowa Foundation as a pre-October 9, 1969, transfer, wholly exempt from the amendments of the Tax Reform Act of 1969. Respondent's objection to *1193 this position is well founded. As stated in The intention of Congress controls what law, Federal or state, is to be applied. * * * Since the Federal revenue laws are designed for a national scheme of taxation, their provisions are not to be deemed subject to state law "unless the language or necessary implication of the section involved" so requires. In *84 By adopting the methodology of the Supreme Court, this Court should use State law only to interpret the terms of Mr. Sorenson's will, including the nature of decedent's power of appointment. The language of In That other values, whether worth more or less as to some of the beneficiaries, would have ripened into enjoyment if a testator had not exercised his privilege of transmitting property does not alter the fact that he and no one else did transmit property which it was his to do with as he willed. And that is precisely what the federal estate tax hits -- an exercise of the privilege of directing the course of property after a man's death. Whether for purposes of local property law testamentary dominion over property is deemed a "special" or a "general" power of appointment. Whether by a testamentary exercise of a general power of appointment property passed under sec. 302(f) is a question of federal law, once state law has made clear, as it has here, that the appointment had legal validity and brought into being new interests in property. See Here, We have carefully considered the facts before us and find that as a result of her power of appointment decedent had the right to change the disposition of the assets of the "Wife's Share" trust. Because decedent consciously chose to refrain from exercising her power, the assets remaining in the "Wife's Share" trust flowed into the "Charitable Share" trust, a split-interest trust under
1. Unless otherwise indicated, all statutory references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as amended and in effect in the year in issue.↩
2. "I am the recipient of a general power of appointment contained in the Will of my husband, IRA L. SORENSON, executed on January 24th, 1969, which power of appointment I do hereby specifically decline to exercise."↩
3. The Tax Reform Act of 1976 deleted
4. This stipulation is clearly a correct interpretation of the statutes.
A charitable remainder unitrust is a trust from which an annuity, of a fixed percentage (greater than or equal to 5 percent) of the net fair market value of trust assets as revalued yearly, is paid no less than annually to one or more persons, at least one of which is not a charitable organization.
A pooled income fund is a trust to which numerous donors transfer property, whereby an irrevocable remainder interest in such property is contributed to or for the use of a charitable organization.
5.
(2) Special rule for certain bequests subject to power of appointment. -- For purposes of this section, in the case of a bequest in trust, if the surviving spouse of the decedent is entitled for life to all of the net income from the trust and such surviving spouse has a power of appointment over the corpus of such trust exercisable by will in favor of, among others, organizations described in subsection (a)(2), such bequests in trust, reduced by the value of the life estate, shall, to the extent such power is exercised in favor of such organizations, be deemed a transfer to such organizations by the decedent if -- (A) no part of the corpus of such trust is distributed to a beneficiary during the life of the surviving spouse; (B) such surviving spouse was over 80 years of age at the date of the decedent's death; (C) such surviving spouse by affidavit executed within 6 months after the death of the decedent specifies the organizations described in subsection (a)(2) in favor of which he intends to exercise the power of appointment and indicates the amount or proportion each such organization is to receive; and (D) the power of appointment is exercised in favor of such organization and in the amounts or proportions specified in the affidavit required under subparagraph (C).↩
6. "In addition, the new rules are not to apply in the case of property passing under a will in existence on October 9, 1969, or property transferred in trust on or before that date, if the will or trust was not modified by the individual prior to October 9, 1972, and could not be modified thereafter by the decedent because he was under a mental disability on that date and at all times thereafter. It also is provided that the new rules are not to apply to property passing under a will in existence on October 9, 1969, where the individual did not have at any time thereafter the right to change the will as it relates to the charitable gift. [Tax Reform Act of 1969, Pub. L. 91-172, 83 Stat. 549, 565, S. Rept. 91-552, pp. 1732-1733,
7. Petitioner relies on the following cases:
In Re Estate of Nugen , 223 Iowa 428 ( 1937 )
Grabbe v. St. Vincent's Home , 232 Iowa 640 ( 1942 )
Chanler v. Kelsey , 27 S. Ct. 550 ( 1907 )
Morgan v. Commissioner , 60 S. Ct. 424 ( 1940 )
Crecelius v. Smith , 255 Iowa 1249 ( 1964 )
Bussing v. Hough , 237 Iowa 194 ( 1946 )
Bash v. Bash , 1848 Pa. LEXIS 225 ( 1848 )
Grohn v. Marquardt , 1972 Tex. App. LEXIS 2411 ( 1972 )
Lyeth v. Hoey , 59 S. Ct. 155 ( 1938 )
Helvering v. Stuart , 63 S. Ct. 140 ( 1942 )
Fred D. Pitt and E. H. McVey Trustees of the Estate of ... , 319 F.2d 564 ( 1963 )
Krausse v. Barton , 1968 Tex. App. LEXIS 3040 ( 1968 )
United States v. Pelzer , 61 S. Ct. 659 ( 1941 )