DocketNumber: Docket No. 28298-87
Citation Numbers: 1991 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 6, 96 T.C. No. 6, 96 T.C. 134
Judges: Drennen,Chabot,Clapp,Swift,Jacobs,Wright,Parr,Wells,Ruwe,Colvin,Colvin,Drennen,Chabot,Korner,Swift,Jacobs,Wright,Parr,Wells,Ruwe,Whalen,Nims,Hamblen,Cohen,Gerber,Halpern
Filed Date: 1/24/1991
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
*6
P elected to value a ranch owned by decedent at the time of his death under the special use valuation provision of
*134 OPINION
This case was submitted fully stipulated and the facts as stipulated are so found. Respondent determined a deficiency in the estate tax of the Estate of Malcolm McAlpine, Jr., in the amount of $ 333,363.24, subject to credits for payments of State death taxes.
Petitioner is the Estate of Malcolm McAlpine, Jr., deceased. Geraldine McAlpine and Jocelyn McAlpine Greeman are co-independent executrixes.
Malcolm McAlpine, Jr. (hereinafter referred to as decedent), died testate on February 25, 1984. He was a citizen *135 of the United States and a resident of Texas at the time of his death. His will was dated July 28, 1982; a codicil thereto was executed February 24, 1984. Geraldine McAlpine and Jocelyn McAlpine Greeman were named and duly appointed co-independent executrixes of the will. Geraldine resided in Toyak, *8 Texas, and Jocelyn resided in Denning, New Mexico, at the time the petition was filed in this case.
A timely Federal estate tax return was filed for the estate on November 20, 1984, in Austin, Texas, reporting a net taxable estate of $ 602,693 and a net estate tax of $ 83,389.
Decedent owned 8,815.42 acres out of a total of 13,280 acres of a ranch located in Huerfano County, Colorado, at the date of his death.
The issue in this case is whether petitioner is entitled to a special use valuation of decedent's interest in the ranch under
The appropriate Schedule N to elect special use valuation was properly completed and included with decedent's estate tax return, Form 706. Except with respect to the portion of the definition of "qualified real property" referring to the agreement under
A separate notice of election to specially value the ranch required by
The agreement required by
Decedent's will was duly probated in Taylor County, Texas. In addition to Geraldine, his wife, and*10 Jocelyn, his daughter, decedent was survived by three grandchildren, whose names and ages were as follows:
Ages as of | |
Name | Feb. 25, 1984 |
Walter Greeman | 22 |
Adelia Greeman | 20 |
Tammy Jo Greeman | 9 |
All of decedent's title and interest in the ranch passed at his death to a trust, according to section V of the will.
Section V(a) of the will divided the trust into a separate trust for each of the grandchildren according to the terms thereof.
Section V(b) of the will provided for distribution of income and principal in accordance with the terms therein. Section V(c) generally provided conditions for termination of each trust, subject to the provisions of section V(d) of the will. Section V(e) contains a "spendthrift" clause that denies a right or power of any beneficiary to anticipate by assignment or otherwise any income or principal given to such beneficiary by the will and prohibits a transfer, assignment, sale, pledge, encumbrance, or change in any manner, by a beneficiary of the beneficiary's interest in the trust; nor shall a beneficiary's share of income or principal of the trust be subjected to or applied to the payment of such beneficiary's debts.
Section V(h) of*11 the will generally vested the management powers of the trust in the trustees, according to the terms stated therein and in accordance with the Texas Trust Act, as amended by the Texas Trust Code. Section V(1) of the will creates a special power of appointment in Jocelyn as to each of the trusts' corpora according to the terms stated therein.
*137 The ranch was valued at the following special use values and fair market values by the parties in the exhibits so identified:
Special | Fair | ||
Item | use value | market value | Exhibit II |
a. Per 706 | $ 416,667 | $ 1,166,667.00 | 2-B |
b. Per notice of | 1,327,602.25 | 1-A | |
deficiency |
The parties agree that the proper fair market value of the ranch at the date of decedent's death was $ 1,327,602.25. The parties also agree that if petitioner qualifies for special use valuation, the value of decedent's interest in the ranch and includable in the estate should be the following total value:
Item | Amount |
Fair market value, as stipulated | $ 1,327,602.25 |
Less special use value per return | (276,408.00) |
Difference | 1,015,194.25 |
Less maximum sec. 2032A deduction | (750,000.00) |
Excess fair market value | 301,194.25 |
Plus special use value | 276,408.00 |
Total value | 577,602.25 |
*12 On or about September 11, 1985, respondent's agent commenced an examination of petitioner's estate tax return. On the same date respondent advised petitioner that the special use value election was invalid because the agreement attached to the election was signed only by Jocelyn McAlpine Greeman, Trustee, and was not signed by decedent's grandchildren, the individual trust beneficiaries.
On December 10, 1985, petitioner filed an amended notice of election under
*138 A notice of deficiency in estate tax was mailed to petitioner on May 12, *13 1987, and was issued by an officer of the Internal Revenue Service at Dallas, Texas. The notice determined that there was a deficiency in the estate tax due by the estate of $ 403,684.86, less $ 68,321.62 of additional State death tax credit, if substantiated. The principal adjustment in the value of the gross estate, and the only one at issue here, was explained as based on the determination that decedent's interest in the ranch did not qualify for special use valuation under
The remaining 4,464.48 acres of the ranch is owned outright by Jocelyn. The ranch had been owned and operated by decedent's family for over 45 years and decedent was actively engaged in the trade or business of cattle and horse ranching, utilizing the ranch up until his death as he had been during his entire*14 life. The parties agree that the ranch was "qualified real property" as described in
Respondent admits that, except for the omission of individual signatures of the grandchildren as trust beneficiaries, the agreement required by
Several other agreements and concessions made by the parties in the stipulation of facts are accepted and should be reflected in the final computation of the estate tax due from the estate.
The only issue for our decision is whether decedent's interest in the ranch at the time of his death is includable in his gross estate at its fair market value or at its special use value under
*139 More specifically the issue is whether the failure to have the trust beneficiaries themselves sign the notice of election and recapture agreements that were attached to the original estate tax return was such a failure that precluded the executor*15 from taking advantage of the grace period provided by
Normally the value of property includable in the decedent's gross estate is its fair market value at the time of decedent's death unless the executor elects the alternative valuation method under section 2032. Sec. 20.2031-1(b), Estate Tax Regs. However, in 1976 Congress enacted
These provisions were enacted by Congress primarily to permit the families of small family farmers and businessmen to continue using the property for that purpose without having to sell it to pay the greater estate taxes that would probably result if the property was taxed at its fair market value or its highest and best use value. See explanation of Senate Floor Amendment to the Tax Reform Act of 1984, Pub. L. 98-369, 7/18/84, by Mr. Dixon. Par. 120,328.1, P-H Federal Estate and Gift Taxes. See
The specific provisions of the law and regulations with which we are concerned here are those which determine whether the executrix made a valid election of special use valuation and, if not, whether it could be supplemented or perfected to meet all the requirements.
(A) use as a farm for farming purposes, or
(B) use in *18 a trade or business other than the trade or business of farming.
There is no question that the ranch was being used for a qualified purpose at the time of decedent's death. However,
Section 20.2032A-8(a)(3), Estate Tax Regs., provides that an election under
Here Jocelyn checked the box on the timely filed estate tax return that indicated an election of special use valuation. A Schedule N was also attached with the*20 names, addresses, and relationship to decedent of each of the three grandchildren as persons receiving an interest in each item of specially valued property, and also the fair market value and special use value of the interests of each in the specially valued property. An "agreement to special valuation under
*21 Petitioner made a rather extended argument on brief that under local law the trustee of the trust was the interested party required to sign the election and recapture agreement, and the grandchildren, as trust beneficiaries, did not take a vested interest in any of the specially valued property and consequently did not have to be listed as interested parties in the election nor required to execute the agreement required under
Respondent argues that the election was not valid because neither it nor the recapture agreement contained all the information required by the regulations, referring primarily to naming all persons taking an interest in each item of the specially valued property and the value of the property interests passing to each such person.
We disagree. All of the "information" required*22 by the regulations was provided on the original return. Only the signatures of the trust beneficiaries were missing. As noted above, the box on the return indicating election of special use valuation was checked. A Schedule N --
The law itself does not specifically require the beneficiaries to sign the election or the agreement when the return is filed. In fact subparagraph (B)(ii) of
(3) Modification of election and agreement to be permitted. -- The Secretary shall prescribe procedures which provide that in any case in which -- (A) the executor makes an election under paragraph (1) within the time prescribed for filing such election; and (B) substantially complies with the regulations prescribed by the Secretary with respect to such election, but -- (i) the notice of election, as filed, does not contain all required information, or (ii) signatures of 1 or more persons required to enter into the agreement described in paragraph (2) are not included on the*24 agreement as filed, or the agreement does not contain all required information, the executor will have a reasonable period of time (not exceeding 90 days) after notification of such failures to provide such information or agreements.
Section 20.2032A-8(a), Estate Tax Regs., provides:
(1)
*144 * * * *
(3)
Section 20.2032A-8(c), Estate Tax Regs., provides:
(1)
In this case an election was made on the estate tax return and a recapture agreement was also attached to the return. The only problem was that the agreement was signed by the executrix-trustee rather than the heirs. However, an amended agreement was filed within 90 days after notification by respondent's agent which not only contained all the information required by the regulations but also was signed by all of the interested parties (the heirs). This would appear to qualify the election as valid under
Section 1421 of the Tax Reform Act of 1986, Pub. L. 99-514, 100 Stat. 2716, provides further support for this conclusion. Section 1421 of the Tax Reform Act of 1986 is quite similar to
This Court held in
In
Quite recently in
This Court has been faced with the same issue we have here in several other recent cases, in each of which it held the election invalid. In
After reviewing the legislative history of
The land here involved had been used for years as farmland by decedent and his family, and we assume that it will continue to be so used; otherwise the additional estate tax may be imposed. All of the persons in being who have an interest in the land have now joined in the election and recapture agreement and we assume are bound thereby. The amended return was filed within a reasonable time after the original return was filed and it is unlikely that respondent *148 has suffered any loss simply because of that timing. Furthermore, the Government fisc is protected by the agreement now on file and the lien imposed on the ranch.
We conclude that the election of special use valuation and the recapture agreement signed by all interested parties were valid and that petitioner is entitled to use the special use valuation in computing the estate tax due.
Colvin,
When the estate tax return and election for special use valuation under
An executor may elect to value real property used for farming or for closely held business*34 use on the basis of the property's actual use, rather than on its highest or best use, if numerous requirements are met.
*149
Thus,
1. The Secretary was instructed by Congress*35 to prescribe procedures permitting the executor to supply certain information up to 90 days after being notified of the need to do so.
2. One item expressly allowed to be supplied late was the "signatures of 1 or more persons required to enter into the agreement."
The mandate to promulgate these procedures was enacted in 1984. Deficit Reduction Act of 1984, Pub. L. 98-369, sec. 1025(a). To date these regulations have not been issued, which prevents the petitioner here from pointing to prescribed procedures for supplying signatures after filing the election. However, it would be bizarre to hold that the Treasury Department's failure to comply with the Congress' mandate somehow bars petitioner from claiming the relief provided by the statute.
*150 In one case, the IRS has taken the position that an attempt to elect
The conference report accompanying enactment of section after of 2032A(d)(3) states that:
The Senate amendment directs the Treasury Department to develop procedures permitting perfection of notices within 90 days of a request from the Internal Revenue Service. * * * [H. Rept. 98-861 (Conf.), at 1240 (1984), 1984-3 C.B. (Vol. 2) 494.]
The conference report continues:
The conference agreement follows the Senate amendment. The conferees wish to reiterate that, as under the Senate amendment, perfection of notices of election and of agreements to current use valuation elections is to be*37 permitted only in cases where the estate tax return, as filed, evidences substantial compliance with the requirements of the Treasury regulations. For example, merely checking the applicable box on the Federal estate tax return that an election is being made is not sufficient action by the estate to secure the benefits of the current use valuation provision. Both a notice of election and an agreement that themselves evidence substantial compliance with the requirements of the regulations must be included with the estate tax return, as filed, if the estate is to be permitted to perfect its election. [H. Rept. 98-861 (Conf.), at 1240-1241 (1984), 1984-3 C.B. (Vol. 2) 494-495.]
The conference report requires that both a notice of election and an agreement that themselves evidence substantial compliance be included with the estate tax return as filed. Question may arise under this language whether signatures that are not on the original agreement that is filed with the return can be added. However, there should be no basis for doubt since the statute specifically states that the executor may provide "signatures of one or more persons required to enter into*38 the agreement" within a reasonable period of time after notification of the need to do so.
*151 The conference report also states the following:
To be eligible for perfection, the agreement as originally filed must at a minimum be valid under State law and must include the signatures of all parties having a present interest or a remainder interest other than an interest having a relatively small value. guardian ad litem as required under State law, signs the agreement. * * *
*39 The dissenting opinion relies on this report language. The dissenting opinion somehow concludes that the report language does not permit what the statute clearly does permit. I submit that the report language clearly illustrates that a reasonable error in who should sign the document -- in the instant case, the legal titleholder rather than the holders of beneficial interests -- is the sort of error that may be corrected. Thus, the report language confirms the applicability of the statute to the facts of the instant case.
I conclude from the foregoing that the statute makes crystal clear that, under circumstances such as in this case, signatures may be provided after the original election is filed, and that petitioner has properly done so here. Accordingly, I agree with the majority's holding for petitioner.
Nims,
Assuming that the beneficiaries here are qualified heirs, a proposition discussed *41 in detail below, petitioner's reliance on section 20.2032A-8(c)(2), Estate Tax Regs., appears to be misplaced. There can be little doubt that qualified heirs with present interests are considered to have interests in the property under
A qualified heir, as defined in
Interests held through a trust have been eligible for special use valuation since the enactment of
The conferees intend to make it clear that the rules for special valuation apply to property which passes in trust. Trust property shall be deemed to have passed from the decedent to a qualified heir to the extent that the qualified heir has a present interest in that trust property. [S. Rept. 94-1236*43 (Conf.) (1976), 1976-3 C.B. (Vol. 3) 807, 960.]
See
This section 2503 definition, in the view of Congress, unjustifiably precluded special use valuation for property passing from the decedent to a trust in which the interests of all the beneficiaries were subject to the trustee's discretion. H. Rept. 97-215 (Conf.) (1981),
The three trusts involved here are discretionary trusts covered by
(b)
The three beneficiaries, deemed to have present interests under
The wording of
One such provision,
In the first sentence of the original recapture agreement, Mrs. Greeman introduced herself as trustee for the "trusts of the qualified heirs" and as an "other party having interest in the property." She signed the agreement once as trustee under the heading "Qualified Heirs" and once in her individual capacity under the heading "Other Interested Parties." The body of the agreement includes this statement concerning personal liability:
More specifically, the undersigned, trustee for the qualified heirs expressly agrees and consents to personal liability under subsection (c) of 2032A for the additional tax imposed by that subsection with respect to their respective*48 interests in the above-described property in the event of certain early dispositions of the property or early cessation of the qualified use of the property. * * *
Because of the reference to "their respective interests," Mrs. Greeman in executing the agreement may have intended *156 to bind the beneficiaries personally for recapture liability. If this was her intention, however, the intention does not comport with the apparent effect.
(In considering the effect of the original recapture agreement, I initially take a general approach, without reference to specific local law, because of the unclear conflict-of-laws situation in this case. The decedent resided and died in Texas, the trustee and beneficiaries reside in New Mexico, the trustee executed the original recapture agreement in an unspecified location, and the trust property is located in Colorado.)
The well-settled general rule is that trust beneficiaries are not personally subject to liabilities to third persons incurred in the administration of the trust. See 2
Nonetheless, if someone is not merely a trustee but is also an agent for the beneficiaries, she can bind the beneficiaries personally upon contracts properly made in the performance of her duties. See 3A A. Scott & W. Fratcher, The Law of Trusts,
Given the discretion accorded Mrs. Greeman as trustee under the terms of decedent's will, this record does not suggest an ongoing principal/agent relationship between her and the beneficiaries. Moreover, the record does not include "conduct and communications" facts that would support the presence of a more limited agency at the time Mrs. Greeman executed the original recapture agreement. See 1
Granted, the agency doctrine of ratification permits the later adoption or confirmation of an unauthorized act, which amounts to a substitute for prior authority. *51
The foregoing analysis establishes that decedent's grandchildren, the trust beneficiaries, had interests in the property within the meaning of
(3) Modification of*52 election and agreement to be permitted. -- The Secretary shall prescribe procedures which provide that in any case in which -- *158 (A) the executor makes an election under paragraph (1) within the time prescribed for filing such election, and (B) substantially complies with the regulations prescribed by the Secretary with respect to such election, but -- (i) the notice of election, as filed, does not contain all required information, or (ii) signatures of 1 or more persons required to enter into the [recapture] agreement * * * are not included on the agreement as filed, or the agreement does not contain all required information, the executor will have a reasonable period of time (not exceeding 90 days) after notification of such failures to provide such information or agreements.
The majority states that "subparagraph (B)(ii) of
Although the existence of the substantial compliance standard is apparent from the face of the statute, the statute does not define the standard. Consequently, resort to the legislative history is appropriate.
an agreement to the current use valuation election may be perfected under this provision provided the agreement, as filed with the estate tax return, evidences substantial compliance with the requirements of the regulations. To be eligible for perfection, the agreement*54 as originally filed must at a minimum be valid under State law and
*159 In light of this legislative intent, I fail to see how the majority can reach the result it does under
The majority does not explain why it ignores the legislative history of
The majority distinguishes
The quoted passage from the Eighth Circuit opinion is also taken out of context. It arises in a brief discussion of the statutory language, which is merely the starting point in the Eighth Circuit's systematic analysis. The court discusses the legislative history approvingly, and in more *160 detail than it discusses the statute, beginning in the next paragraph.
The majority does not make clear the extent to which its holding for petitioner draws support from section 1421 of the Tax Reform Act of 1986, Pub. L. 99-514, 100 Stat. 2716 (as amended, hereinafter referred to as section 1421). Because I believe that both
SEC. 1421(a). In General. -- In the case of any decedent dying before January 1, 1986, if the executor -- (1) made an election under (2) provided substantially all the information with respect to such election required on such return of tax,
(b) Executor Must Provide Information. -- An election described in subsection (a) shall not be valid if the Secretary of the Treasury or his delegate after the date of enactment of this Act requests information from the executor with respect to such election and the executor does not provide such information within 90 days of receipt of such request.
This Court has considered section 1421 twice recently, in
Based on the foregoing, I cannot join with the majority in holding for petitioner. Although the majority declines to address whether the original recapture agreement fully *161 satisfied the election requirements, I conclude that, because of the omitted beneficiary signatures, it did not. I also conclude that petitioner fails to qualify for relief under either
1. Unless otherwise indicated, section references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 as amended and in effect at the date of decedent's death. All Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.↩
2. See
1. The conferees are aware that the current use valuation provision requires that, when successive interests or concurrent interests are created in specially valued property, all parties with any interest in the property must be qualified heirs and all such parties must enter into the agreement to the election, regardless of the relative values of their interests. The de minimis rule established in this provision is intended to apply solely as a guideline in determining whether perfection of an agreement is to be permitted. The guideline is not intended to give rise to an inference that parties having an interest in specially valued property which has a relatively small value are not required to enter into the agreement or that such persons need not be qualified heirs.
[H. Rept. 98-861 (Conf.), at 1241 (1984), 1984-3 C.B. (Vol. 2) 495.]↩
Grandi v. LeSage , 74 N.M. 799 ( 1965 )
abraham-zion-corporation-and-lebow-clothes-inc-v-harry-p-lebow , 761 F.2d 93 ( 1985 )
gladys-l-mcdonald-v-commissioner-of-internal-revenue-estate-of-john , 853 F.2d 1494 ( 1988 )
Lucille Prussner, as of the Estate of Aileen E. Pfeifer v. ... , 896 F.2d 218 ( 1990 )
Taylor v. Davis' Administratrix , 4 S. Ct. 147 ( 1884 )
Trans Union Leasing Corp. v. Hamilton , 93 N.M. 310 ( 1979 )
Western Electric Co. v. New Mexico Bureau of Revenue , 90 N.M. 164 ( 1976 )