DocketNumber: Docket No. 20766-81
Citation Numbers: 80 T.C. 705, 1983 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 98, 80 T.C. No. 33
Judges: Tannenwald
Filed Date: 4/11/1983
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
*98
Petitioner, the estate of a nonresident alien, claimed, under the estate tax convention between the United States and Italy, a credit against its estate tax in excess of the credit permitted under
*705 OPINION
Respondent determined a deficiency of $ 4,983.11 in petitioner's Federal estate tax. The sole issue for decision is whether petitioner, the estate of a nonresident alien, is entitled, under the estate tax convention between the United States and the Republic of Italy (the Italian treaty), *706 to estates of citizens or residents of the United States under section 2010 *101 in lieu of the $ 3,600 credit allowed nonresident aliens under
On November 22, 1978, Bankers Trust Co., as a person in possession of property belonging to the decedent, filed a U.S. estate tax return. The return listed decedent's taxable estate at $ 118,882 but claimed no estate tax due by reason of the Italian treaty.
Respondent determined the tentative U.S. estate tax imposed by section 2101 to be $ 8,583.11. Petitioner concedes the tentative tax but contends that it is entitled, under the Italian treaty, to a credit in that amount. *103 Respondent argues that *707 petitioner is limited to the $ 3,600 credit provided for nonresident aliens by *104 We must determine the meaning of the term "specific exemption." *708 tax exemption allowed to estates of citizens and residents of the United States pursuant to section 2052, which was repealed by the Tax Reform Act of 1976. *105 To decide this case, we must examine the following questions. First, does the context of article IV of the Italian treaty require that we define "specific exemption" in any particular way? If not, what is the meaning of "specific exemption" under U.S. tax law? Finally, is the unified credit a "specific exemption" as that term is used in the Italian treaty? We turn first to article IV of the treaty. The basic aim of treaty interpretation is to ascertain the intent of the parties. Under the Internal*107 Revenue Code a specific exemption of $ 60,000 is allowed in cases of decedents who were citizens of or domiciled in the United States at the time of death, whereas an exemption of only $ 2,000 is allowed the estates of nonresident alien decedents. Article IV of the pending convention This article is similar to articles contained in conventions now in effect with Australia, Canada, Finland, Switzerland, Norway, and Greece. [Emphasis added.] Respondent places great emphasis on the phrase "specific exemption of $ 60,000." He contends that this phrase is a direct reference to the predecessor of repealed section 2052 and that there can be "little doubt" that the negotiators of the Italian treaty "were employing that term in the context of its then current usage under United States law." Respondent's position thus appears to be that, since small estates were exempted from paying taxes through the mechanism of a deduction when the treaty was negotiated and since the Joint Committee referred to the amount of the deduction, the negotiators of the treaty intended that a deduction was to be the only method by which estates of nonresident aliens could be exempted*109 from the U.S. estate tax. We do not agree. There is nothing inconsistent between the phrase "specific exemption of $ 60,000" and petitioner's position that "specific exemption" refers to the level at which estate taxation begins. We think that, by employing the phrase "specific exemption," the treaty negotiators did not mean to specify the particular mechanism by which small estates were to be exempted from paying tax (deduction versus some other method). Such a construction comports with the objective to "liberalize" the allowable exemption. Moreover, it is directly supported by the second sentence of the second paragraph of the Joint Committee's analysis, wherein the committee states that "The None of the other treaties which employ or employed either the phrase "specific exemption" or some other phrase which respondent believes to be the equivalent of it *110 discusses "specific exemption" in a manner inconsistent with the foregoing analysis. On the other hand, our analysis is directly supported by the history of the Canadian treaty. Article V of the Canadian treaty, the first estate tax treaty entered*111 into by the United States (in 1944) spoke, inter alia, in terms of a prorated "personal," rather than "specific," exemption. *112 When the treaty was modified in 1950 to provide for a proportionate "specific" exemption, the transmittal letter gave as the reason for the change " We must still resolve the impact of paragraph 2 of article II of the Italian treaty, which mandates us to look at U.S. law with respect to the meaning of a term not otherwise defined in the treaty. See p. 707 We note initially that neither the Internal Revenue Code nor the Treasury Regulations use the term "specific exemption" in the estate tax area. Although section 2521 of the Code as it existed prior to 1977 referred to a gift tax "specific exemption" (presumably to distinguish the $ 30,000 lifetime exemption from the $ 3,000 annual exclusion per donee), the term used in the estate tax area under repealed section 2052*114 was merely "exemption." For the reasons given below, we find "specific exemption" does not have, under U.S. tax law, the narrow meaning respondent suggests. Respondent cites committee reports to the Revenue Act of 1942 using the phrase "specific exemption" which he claims "leave no doubt" that when the Italian treaty was negotiated, "specific exemption" was synonymous with From the inception of the estate tax in 1916 until 1977, the Code has referred to "exemption" rather than "specific exemption" in the estate tax area. We cannot find, as respondent urges, that under*117 U.S. law "specific exemption" is synonymous with repealed section 2052. Instead, we find that "specific exemption" has been employed in U.S. tax law merely to describe the mechanism whereby small estates are excluded from the scope of the U.S. estate tax. We must now decide whether the section 2010 unified credit, which establishes a credit against tax rather than a deduction from the estate and which can be applied against both the estate tax and the gift tax rather than against just the estate tax, is a "specific exemption" under the Italian treaty. Because both parties rely on the law of treaty modification in support of their contentions concerning this issue, we shall first review the effect of subsequent legislation on the vitality of a treaty. It is well settled that a treaty may be modified by a subsequent act of Congress. Petitioner and respondent agree that subsequent legislation does not modify an earlier treaty unless Congress' intent is clear. Respondent contends that the "unified credit" cannot be substituted for the "specific exemption" in the treaty because Congress did not intend to modify the treaty. This contention *714 is based on the theory, which we have already rejected, that "specific exemption" is synonymous with repealed section 2052. Petitioner contends, on the other hand, that the unified credit is a "specific exemption" because Congress did not intend to extinguish the treaty right to a prorated exemption. We agree with petitioner. Respondent contends that the unified credit is not a "specific*119 exemption" because repealed section 2052, which both parties agree was a "specific exemption," and section 2010's unified credit, "By their nature * * * have a dramatically different impact on an estate's ultimate tax liability." *715 Respondent also notes that the unified credit may be applied against both estate tax and gift tax liability whereas repealed section 2052's deduction was applicable only to the estate tax. Although respondent correctly describes the changes made by the 1976 Act, we are not convinced that Congress intended these changes to modify treaties employing the phrase "specific exemption." *120 The impetus behind the movement for estate tax reform in the early 1970's was the opposition to the broader impact, due to inflation, of the estate tax. H. Rept. 94-1380 (1976), 1976-3 C.B. (Vol. 3) 735, 749. This broader impact was viewed as inconsistent with the function of estate and gift taxes to restrain the undue accumulation of wealth and its transmission from generation to generation. Hearings on the General Subject of Federal Estate and Gift Taxes Before the House Comm. on Ways and Means, 94th Cong., 2d Sess. 1176 (1976) (House Hearings), Testimony of Charles M. Walker, Assistant Secretary for Tax Policy, Department of the Treasury. To remedy this situation, President Ford proposed increasing the estate tax exemption from $ 60,000 to $ 150,000. The President's Remarks of March 5, 1976, at Springfield, Ill., 12 Pres. Doc. 339 (1976). Senators Nelson and Packwood proposed, instead, that the estate tax deduction be replaced with a credit. supra at 440. The credit, Senator Nelson explained, would be (1) more efficient and more equitable, because increases in the exemption reduce the progressivity of the tax structure and*121 aid larger estates more than smaller ones, and (2) less costly to the Treasury. Hearings on H.R. 10612 Before the Senate Comm. on Finance, 94th Cong., 2d Sess. 35-36 (1976) (Senate Hearings), Colloquy between Senator Nelson and William E. Simon, Secretary of the Treasury. Subsequently, Charles M. Walker, Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for Tax Policy, testified that the Treasury "considered the This statement indicating that the credit and the exemption *716 should be considered flip sides of the same coin is reinforced by the statement of Representative Al Ullman, Chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, who stated, in an announcement regarding*122 the estate and gift tax reform legislation which was to become the Tax Reform Act of 1976, that the bill "would provide a unified rate schedule for estate and gift taxes and Respondent's argument that the unified credit cannot be a specific exemption under an estate tax treaty because the credit can be applied against gift tax as well as estate tax liability by residents of the United States is not persuasive. The dual tax system was replaced with a unified*123 system to remove the incentive to make lifetime gifts. See statements by Prof. A. James Casner on behalf of the American Law Institute and Gerald R. Jantscher of the Brookings Institution, House Hearings, Respondent also contends, more so in The long and the short of this case is that the term "specific*125 exemption," as used in the Italian treaty, should be construed as including the unified credit. To hold otherwise, as respondent would have us do, would read the "specific exemption" provision out of the Italian treaty; such a result would have the effect of placing nonresident aliens of the United States who are either nationals of, or domiciled in, Italy in the same category as any non-U.S. national domiciled in a foreign country with which the United States has no tax convention. Under these circumstances, one of the objectives of a tax convention, namely, to obtain an advantage for certain nationals of the parties to the convention, would be lost. Indeed, it appears that the treaty provision involved herein was designed to eliminate the discrimination which would otherwise exist against estates of nonresident citizens of the treaty country and in favor of the estates of citizens or residents of the United States. See the analysis of the Joint Comm. on Internal Revenue Taxation quoted on pp. 708-709 We are unimpressed by respondent's argument that petitioner should be remitted to the statutory credit provided for in
1. The treaty's official title is "Convention Between the United States of America and the Italian Republic for the Avoidance of Double Taxation and the Prevention of Fiscal Evasion with Respect to Taxes on Estates and Inheritances." 7 U.S.T. (Part 3) 2977, T.I.A.S. No. 3678.↩
2. Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 as amended and in effect at the time of death, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.↩
3. When the Italian treaty was signed, sec. 2106(a)(3), the predecessor of
4. Burghardt was a citizen of Germany, where she was born, and a resident of Italy, having established her domicile in Merano, Italy, in 1964.↩
5. The estate tax return filed for decedent listed total gross estate wherever situated at $ 154,026. Petitioner concedes, however, that the higher figure is correct.↩
6. The credit nonresident aliens are entitled to under the treaty, petitioner contends, is determined by the following formula:
Gross estate in the United States/Total gross estate wherever situated x Unified credit pursuant to sec. 2010 = Tentative credit
Based upon petitioner's contentions, the computation of the unified credit would be as follows:
$ 124,640.00/$ 165,583.60 x $ 34,000 = $ 25,592.87
This $ 25,592.87 amount would then be limited by the tentative tax of $ 8,583.11.↩
7. Respondent's position on this issue was made public in
8. The complete text of art. IV reads:
"The contracting State which imposes tax in the case of a decedent who at the time of his death was not a national of such State and was not domiciled in that State but was a national of or domiciled in the other State --
"(a) shall allow a specific exemption which would be allowable under its law if the decedent had been domiciled in that State in an amount not less than the proportion thereof which the value of the property subjected to its tax bears to the value of the property which would have been subjected to its tax if the decedent had been domiciled in that State; and
"(b) shall (except for the purposes of subparagraph (a) of this Article and for the purpose of any other proportionate allowance otherwise provided) take no account of property situated outside that State in determining the rate and the amount of tax."↩
9. "Specific exemption" has been used in several estate tax treaties. According to
10. See also
"In choosing between conflicting interpretations of a treaty obligation, a narrow and restricted construction is to be avoided as not consonant with the principles deemed controlling in the interpretation of international agreements. Considerations which should govern the diplomatic relations between nations, and the good faith of treaties, as well, require that their obligations should be liberally construed so as to effect the apparent intention of the parties to secure equality and reciprocity between them. * * * [
11. The latter portion of the quoted language is obviously incorrect. The maximum allowable exemption would have been $ 60,000.↩
12. The Greek treaty allows a proportionate amount of "every abatement, exemption, deduction, or credit (except the marital deduction)." The Senate Foreign Relations Committee report reveals that one of the purposes of this provision was to liberalize the United States rule relating to the $ 2,000 specific exemption given the estates of nonresident aliens. S. Exec. Rept. 1, 82d Cong., 1st Sess. 6-7, reprinted in 1 Legislative History of United States Tax Conventions 590-591 (1962).
13. The transmittal letter from Secretary of State Cordell Hull accompanying the proposed treaty stated that in accepting this provision, the United States was conforming to Canadian practice of allowing a "proportionate exemption." Canada, in turn, agreed to conform to the U.S. practice of determining the tax rate without taking into account the value of property outside the territory of the taxing government. S. Exec. Doc. G., 78th Cong., 2d Sess. 3 (1944), reprinted in 3 Legislative History,
14. Language employed in the French and Greek treaties also supports the distinction drawn between the marital deduction and the method by which small estates are exempted from paying tax. The French treaty permits nonresident aliens to utilize the marital deduction by allowing "every abatement, exemption, deduction, or credit," Convention and Supplementary Protocol between the United States of America and France, Treaties and Other International Acts Series (T.I.A.S.) 1982, at 10, reprinted in 1 Legislative History,
15. Respondent's brief reads as follows:
Pertinent parts of the House Committee Report, H.R. Rep. No. 2333, 77th
1. SPECIFIC EXEMPTION AND INSURANCE EXCLUSION COMBINED
The present law excludes from the gross estate of a decedent the first $ 40,000 of life insurance. In addition, a
* * * *
The bill corrects this inequity by providing a
PROCEEDS OF LIFE INSURANCE
* * * *
The increase in the
SECTION 413. SPECIFIC EXEMPTION.
This section eliminates the life insurance exemption of $ 40,000 and increases the exemption for additional estate tax purposes from $ 40,000 to $ 60,000. (Emphasis Added) H.R. Rep. No. 2333,
INSURANCE EXCLUSION FOR ESTATE TAX
Under the present law, there is excluded from the gross estate of a decedent the first $ 40,000 of life insurance. In addition,
SECTION 404. PROCEEDS OF LIFE INSURANCE
* * * *
the $ 40,000 exemption applicable under existing law to the latter class of proceeds, which was eliminated in the House bill, is restored in your committee bill, along with
Brief for respondent at 10-11.↩
16. Respondent's citation to subsequent legislative references reads in full:
"Subsequent legislative references to the estate tax exemption under Repealed section 2052 as a "specific exemption," confirming that the terms are synonymous, are found in the committee reports to the Foreign Investors Tax Act of 1966, Pub. L. No. 89-809, and the legislative history of the Tax Reform Act of 1976, Pub. L. No. 94-455.
Brief for respondent at 12 n.4.↩
17. Repealed sec. 2052 read as follows:
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 an exemption of $ 60,000.
In 1977, sec. 2010 read as follows:
(a) General Rule. -- A credit of $ 47,000 shall be allowed to the estate of every decedent against the tax imposed by section 2001.
(b) Phase-in of $ 47,000 Credit. --
Subsection (a) shall be applied | |
In the case of decedents | by substituting for "$ 47,000" |
dying in: | the following amount: |
1977 | $ 30,000 |
1978 | 34,000 |
1979 | 38,000 |
1980 | 42,500 |
* * * *
(d) Limitation Based on Amount of Tax. -- The amount of the credit allowed by subsection (a) shall not exceed the amount of the tax imposed by section 2001.
For estates of decedents dying after Dec. 31, 1981, sec. 2010(a) and (b) reads as follows:
(a) General Rule. -- A credit of $ 192,800 shall be allowed to the estate of every decedent against the tax imposed by section 2001.
(b) Phase-in of Credit. --
Subsection (a) shall be applied | |
In the case of decedents | by substituting for "$ 192,800" |
dying in: | the following amount: |
1982 | $ 62,800 |
1983 | 79,300 |
1984 | 96,300 |
1985 | 121,800 |
1986 | 155,800 |
18. Several others submitted proposals as well. See, e.g., Hearings on the General Subject of Federal Estate and Gift Taxes Before the House Comm. on Ways and Means, 94th Cong., 2d Sess. 433 (1976).↩
Factor v. Laubenheimer , 54 S. Ct. 191 ( 1933 )
Edye v. Robertson , 5 S. Ct. 247 ( 1884 )
Pigeon River Improvement, Slide & Boom Co. v. Charles W. ... , 54 S. Ct. 361 ( 1934 )
United States v. Payne , 44 S. Ct. 352 ( 1924 )
Ingemar Johansson v. United States , 336 F.2d 809 ( 1964 )
Moser v. United States , 71 S. Ct. 553 ( 1951 )
Jules Samann v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue , 313 F.2d 461 ( 1963 )
Andre Maximov, as Trustee for the Benefit of H. Robbin ... , 299 F.2d 565 ( 1962 )
Whitney v. Robertson , 8 S. Ct. 456 ( 1888 )