DocketNumber: Docket No. 8444-91
Judges: Nims
Filed Date: 3/2/1992
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
*21
Trust paid fees in 1987 to an investment counseling firm for investment advice provided to the trustees and claimed deductions in full for said payments.
*228 OPINION
Nims,
This case was assigned to Special Trial Judge James M. Gussis pursuant to the provisions of section 7443A(b) and Rules 180, 181, and 182. All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code in effect for the year in issue. All Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure, unless otherwise indicated. The Court agrees with and adopts the opinion of the Special Trial Judge, which is set forth below.
OPINION OF THE SPECIAL TRIAL JUDGE
*22 Gussis,
Petitioner is a trust which existed under the laws of Ohio at the time the petition herein was filed.
The William J. O'Neill, Jr., Trust (petitioner), was formed in 1965. In 1979, a former cotrustee of petitioner and Allen & Leavy Investment Management, Inc. (Allen & Leavy), executed an "Investment Advisory Agreement". At some point between 1975 and 1991 Allen & Leavy merged with Wall, Patterson, McGrew & Hamilton. The resulting investment counseling firm became Wall, Patterson, Hamilton & Allen (Wall, Patterson). The new firm continued to advise the trustees. During the year at issue none of the cotrustees had expert knowledge in the investment of large sums of money. In addition, none of the past or present cotrustees was*23 willing to serve as cotrustees unless an investment adviser were hired to manage and invest petitioner's assets.
In 1987, the custodian of petitioner's assets, valued in excess of $ 4,500,000, was the Trust & Investment Management Services division of AmeriTrust Co. The rounded aggregate of *229 fees for investment services paid to Wall, Patterson in 1987 by the custodian on behalf of the trust was $ 15,374. The trust deducted in full the $ 15,374 on its Form 1041, U.S. Fiduciary Income Tax Return, for 1987. Respondent determined that the investment counseling fees were subject to the percentage limitation under
Deductions are to be narrowly construed, and petitioner bears the burden of proving that the claimed deduction falls within the ambit of the cited statutory provision.
Petitioner's primary argument is premised upon its interpretation of
The Ohio statutes require trustees to invest trust assets and prescribe the type and quality of investments which a trustee *230 may make.
Given that the Ohio statutes require trustees to invest trust assets and that trustees are held to the prudent person standard, petitioner argues that trustees of an Ohio trust must seek investment advice if they are to fulfill their fiduciary obligations*26 to the extent required by law. Therefore, petitioner concludes, investment advice fees are costs incurred in connection with the administration of a trust which the trust would not incur if property were not held in such trust, and consequently the fees are deductible from the trust's gross income under
Petitioner's argument that the investment advice costs were incurred because they were in effect required under State law is not supported by the record. There is nothing in the record *231 to establish that under Ohio law a trustee must incur investment advice fees in order to avoid a breach of fiduciary duty. In fact, the Ohio statutes provide a fiduciary with a detailed list of preapproved investments which would obviate the need to incur investment advice fees. See
Petitioner also contends that the investment counsel payments made to Wall, Patterson directly from the trust *28 should be given the same tax treatment as if they were made directly by the trustees. No trustee fees were paid to the cotrustees in the period here involved. However, petitioner argues that if the trust did in fact pay trustee fees to the cotrustees, who would then pay the investment counsel fees out of their trustee fees, the trust would be entitled to a full deduction of the amounts paid as trustee fees and the payment of investment counsel fees by the cotrustees would also be fully deductible by them.
Even if we should assume that petitioner's analysis of the tax consequences of this alternative method is wholly correct, the argument is nonetheless without merit. We must consider the tax consequences of the events as they actually transpired. The fact that some other method of meeting the trust objectives might conceivably have a different tax result is not a relevant consideration here.
We conclude, on this record, that the investment advice fees incurred by the trust are not costs incurred in connection with the administration of an estate or trust that would not have been incurred if the property were not held in such estate or trust. We hold, therefore, that the investment*29 advice fees here at issue are subject to the limitations imposed by