DocketNumber: Docket No. 5413-92
Citation Numbers: 70 T.C.M. 229, 1995 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 345, 1995 T.C. Memo. 352
Judges: BEGHE
Filed Date: 7/31/1995
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/20/2020
1995 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 345">*345 Decision will be entered under Rule 155.
A trust established for D's benefit under the will of her husband, H, provided for payment to her of income for life (and principal according to an ascertained standard) and gave her a testamentary general power of appointment. Distributions of trust principal were made to members of D's family, both before and after D, having suffered a stroke, was adjudged incompetent. Those distributions were not authorized by H's will or by court order. All living members of the family, including D, agreed, either personally or through custodians, to the distributions before D's incompetency; D did not agree, even through her guardians, to the distributions after her incompetency, but all the other members of the family did agree.
MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION
BEGHE,
After concessions by both sides, the issues for decision are whether distributions during the years 1982 through 1988 from the marital deduction trust under the will of Julius Halpern (the marital trust) are included in the gross estate of his wife Lillian L. Halpern (decedent) under one or both of
We hold that the distributions made in 1982, 1983, 1984, 1985, and 1986 are not included in decedent's gross estate and that the 1987 and 1988 distributions are so included.
FINDINGS OF FACT
At the time of filing the petition, petitioner's executors resided in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
Decedent's husband, Julius Halpern (Julius), died in 1962. Other family members who figure in what follows are their sons, Bernard M. Halpern (Bernard) and Irving J. Halpern (Irving); Bernard's wife, Ethelmarie A. Halpern; Irving's wife, Caryl A. Halpern; Bernard's children, Richard I. Halpern (Richard) and Eileen L. Lane (Eileen); Eileen's husband, Nicholas D.J. Lane; Eileen's children, Adam J.B. Lane and Erica B. Lane; Richard's wife, Barbara S. Halpern; Richard's children, Stephanie L. Halpern and Alexandra S. Halpern; and Irving's children, Stephen F. Halpern (Stephen) and Jeffrey D. Halpern (Jeffrey). These family members (the family donees) were the only recipients of the questioned distributions, except that some distributions were made to Eiriste Properties (Eiriste), an inter1995 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 345">*348 vivos trust established by Julius for the benefit of his grandchildren, of which Stephen and Jeffrey were the sole beneficiaries in all years relevant to the case at hand.
Julius' will named decedent, Bernard, Irving, and Julius' brother Alfred J. Halpern as trustees of the marital trust. Alfred died in 1975 and was replaced as trustee by Richard. Julius' estate claimed and was allowed the marital deduction under section 2056 for the assets of his estate transferred to the marital trust.
The marital trust provision of Julius' will is as follows: I give, devise and bequeath to my Trustees, without deduction for any estate, inheritance or other tax, a portion of my estate the value of which shall be computed as set forth in paragraph (B) of this clause. Said portion of my estate shall be held by my Trustees, separately, IN TRUST to [sic] my wife during her life all the income of this trust and until her remarriage to pay or apply to her use out of principal, in any year in which the income is insufficient for this purpose, such an amount as when added to the income will exceed by $ 10,000.00 the aggregate of her income taxes, real estate taxes on her residence and the cost of proper1995 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 345">*349 maintenance and repair of her residence; and in addition to pay or apply to her use at any time and from time to time during her life such part or parts of the principal of this trust even to the extent of all thereof as my Trustees may deem necessary or suitable for her comfortable maintenance and welfare in the event of illness or other emergency; and upon her death to dispose of the then remaining principal of this trust, if any, as she may appoint in any manner, outright or otherwise, and in favor of any appointee or appointees she may designate in her sole discretion; and I hereby declare said power to appoint to be exercisable by my wife in favor of her own estate or in favor of any others; and in default of such appointment, I give, devise and bequeath the then principal of this trust to my heirs determined in accordance with the Intestate Laws of the State of Pennsylvania.
After Julius' death in 1962, the income from the substantial assets owned by decedent and held for her benefit in the marital trust were more than sufficient to satisfy her relatively modest needs. Prior to 1982, decedent had made only sporadic gifts to family members in amounts less than the per donee annual gift tax exclusion under section 2503(b). In 1982, decedent's sons, Bernard and Irving, recommended to her that she begin a series of annual gifts that would take advantage of the $ 10,000 per donee annual exclusion, fulfill her interest in providing financially for the family donees during her lifetime, and reduce the estate tax liability of her estate. However, because Bernard's and Irving's families were of unequal size (Stephen and Jeffrey were then unmarried), there was a felt need to create a giving formula that both branches of the family would regard as fair.
On February 4, 1982, Richard, who is an attorney and petitioner's first counsel of record in this case, sent Bernard a letter discussing how to make gifts from the property of decedent and the marital trust that would equalize the1995 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 345">*351 interests of the two branches of the family. Richard's letter makes clear that decedent, Bernard, Irving, and Richard, who were then the trustees of the marital trust, understood that the provisions of the marital trust did not authorize gifts of trust principal during decedent's lifetime. Richard recommended that consents and indemnification agreements be obtained from decedent and the family donees, as the only persons in being who had any present or contingent right or interest in the marital trust. Although Richard advised that distributions from the marital trust without obtaining court approval would be "risk distributions" under Pennsylvania law, 1995 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 345">*352 In a memorandum dated June 9, 1982, Richard recommended a formula for making annual gifts from decedent's own property and from the marital trust. Under the formula, members of Bernard's family each would receive the maximum $ 10,000 annual excludable gift, whereas Irving's sons and Eiriste would receive additional amounts -- encroaching on the unified gift and estate tax credit -- that were intended to provide for the future spouses and children of Irving's sons. Bernard and Irving agreed that the formula was fair and should be implemented. They explained it to decedent, who agreed that the formula was fair and that the contemplated gift-giving program would promote family harmony and should be implemented. Richard thereupon prepared a document entitled "Direction and Consent to Distribution from Trust under the Will of Julius Halpern, Deceased" (First Consent), which provided for gifts by decedent to the family donees of 66 shares of Charles Buildings, Inc. (CBI), held in her own name and the distribution to the family donees of 74 shares of CBI held in the marital trust. On or about July 19, 1982, decedent and all the family donees (or custodians acting on their behalf) signed1995 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 345">*353 the First Consent, and the contemplated distributions occurred in 1982. The First Consent directed the trustees to "promptly distribute gratis" the CBI shares to the family donees in specified amounts, set no conditions to the distributions, provided for no retention by decedent or any of the trustees of any power over the distributed assets, and contained the envisioned consents and indemnification agreements of decedent and all the family donees. The First Consent referred to the marital trust, the trustees' powers, the trust's intent or purpose, and the desires and circumstances of decedent and the family donees. The First Consent made no reference to other assets to be subsequently distributed from the marital trust, nor even to a general intention to make subsequent distributions from the marital trust. A timely filed United States Gift Tax Return was filed on behalf of decedent reporting as gifts all the 1982 transfers of CBI stock, both the shares held by decedent and the shares distributed from the marital trust. The pattern of giving initiated with the First Consent was continued in later years. On January 5, 1983, the same parties signed the Second Consent, under which 1995 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 345">*354 120 shares of CBI were to be distributed from the marital trust to the family donees. On June 11, 1984, the Third Consent was signed, under which 107.46 shares of common stock in Banksville, Inc., were to be distributed from the marital trust to the family donees. On or about February 1, 1985, the Fourth Consent was signed, under which 49.29 shares of common stock in Banksville, Inc., and 170.4 shares of common stock in Halpern Buildings, Inc., were to be distributed from the marital trust to the family donees. On or about January 1, 1986, the Fifth Consent was signed, under which 215.1 shares of common stock in Halpern Buildings, Inc., were to be distributed from the marital trust to the family donees. The terms of each of these Consents were in substance identical with those of the First Consent, except that each of them specified different items of property to be distributed. None of the Consents made any mention or even hint of distributions in future years. The assets that the foregoing Consents directed the trustees to distribute were in each case distributed during the remainder of the calendar year in which the Consent was signed, and the distributions were made without court1995 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 345">*355 authorization or approval. The only Consent after the First Consent that included transfers of decedent's personal property, as well as distributions from the marital trust, was the Fourth Consent, and the amount of decedent's personal property transferred was small, only .11 shares of Banksville, Inc. stock. The Second, Third, and Fifth Consents included only property distributed from the marital trust. United States Gift Tax Returns were timely filed by or on behalf of decedent in respect of the distributions of stock from the marital trust and from decedent herself for each of the years 1983 through 1986. The Sixth Consent mentioned a parallel gift to the family donees of 50 shares of Halpern Buildings, Inc., held personally by decedent. Bernard and Irving, as decedent's guardians, sought and obtained the approval of the Orphans' Court for that parallel gift, which was also made during 1987. Bernard's and Irving's Petition for Approval of Gifts made no mention of distributions being made from the marital trust. However, in referring to the pattern of early lifetime gifts in which decedent had been engaged since 1981, the Petition created the impression that those gifts had been made by decedent from her own property, whereas in fact the bulk of them had been made from the marital trust without court authorization or approval. 1995 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 345">*358 21, 1988, the family donees executed the Seventh Consent, with terms identical to those of the Sixth Consent, except for two differences. First, the trustees agreed to "immediately distribute gratis" the assets in question. Second, the assets distributed from the marital trust were cash and the release of indebtedness owed to the marital trust by some of the family donees: $ 72,884.88 was to be distributed from the marital trust to certain family donees, and $ 15,000 in indebtedness to the marital trust owed by certain family donees was to be released. Finally, $ 15,000 was to be paid by the marital trust to decedent on behalf of Eileen and Nicholas J.D. Lane so as to reduce by that amount a debt that they owed to her. These distributions occurred during 1988. United States Gift (and Generation-Skipping Transfer) Tax Returns reporting all distributions from the marital trust and transfers of decedent's own property were timely filed for 1987 and 1988 on behalf of decedent. Gift tax of $ 28,998.69 was paid for the 1986 transfers, and this was the only year for which gift tax was actually paid. However, in all the other years, as well as in this one, the unified credit was appropriately1995 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 345">*359 reduced. The 1987 and 1988 distributions under the Sixth and Seventh Consents, like the earlier distributions under decedent's prior Consents, occurred without authorization or approval of the Orphans' Court or any other court. On May 17, 1988, decedent died testate. At the time of her death, the marital trust contained cash and securities valued at $ 447,013.86, which were included in the gross estate reported by decedent's timely filed United State Estate (and Generation- Skipping Transfer) Tax Return. Decedent's total gross estate at that time (not including the amounts in dispute in this case) was reported as amounting to $ 1,631,160.03. Under the terms of her will, decedent exercised her general power of appointment over the marital trust by appointing to her estate all the property held in the marital trust. After various specific bequests and devises, decedent's residuary estate was divided in equal shares so that each surviving grandchild would receive one share and single shares would be divided among the surviving issue of deceased grandchildren. Provision was also made for spouses and living children of surviving grandchildren out of those grandchildren's single shares. 1995 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 345">*360 As a result, the pattern of distribution under decedent's will differed somewhat from the pattern of the distributions from the marital trust, but the beneficiaries were essentially the same. Decedent's will was probated in the Orphans' Court, and Bernard and Irving qualified as executors. The parties have agreed on the date-of-death values of the distributions in issue. For this purpose, the stock of Halpern Buildings, Inc., is valued at $ 1,222 per share. Stock of CBI is valued at $ 1,417.19 per share for shares distributed in 1982, and $ 1,425.87 per share for shares distributed in 1983. Stock of Banksville, Inc., is valued at $ 2,390 per share for shares distributed in 1984, and $ 2,350 per share for shares distributed in 1985. As a result, the amounts of the distributions in issue, which respondent contends are includable in decedent's gross estate, are as set forth below: Year Amount 1982 $ 104,872.06 1983 171,104.40 1984 256,829.40 1985 325,494.00 1986 262,852.20 1987 198,575.00 1988 102,884.88 1,422,611.94
OPINION
Respondent's statutory notice of deficiency and original answer included in the gross1995 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 345">*361 estate only distributions in 1987 and 1988 from the marital trust. The grounds stated in the statutory notice for inclusion of the 1987 and 1988 distributions were that the trustees of "decedent's marital trust, alkla [sic] power-of-appointment trust, made unauthorized transfers" therefrom. With respect to the 1987 transfers, the statutory notice specified sections 2033 In her amended answer, respondent sought to include in decedent's gross estate the transfers made prior to 1987 and specified as grounds for their inclusion not only sections 2033 and 2038 but also In our order of August 16, 1993, granting respondent's motion for leave to amend answer, we assigned the burden of proof with respect to "the pre-incompetency distributions" to respondent, but said that we would not rule on the burden of proof with respect to Respondent complains generally that excluding the marital trust distributions from decedent's gross estate as valid transfers would undermine the Federal transfer tax system. Respondent argues that allowance of the section 2056 marital deduction for the amounts passing to the marital trust under Julius' will created a Federal estate tax liability in decedent's estate that her lifetime transfers -- even if they were valid under State law -- should not be permitted to avoid. Cf. The Federal estate tax does not exist in isolation. There is a unified system of Federal transfer taxes on donative transmissions of wealth that is made up of the gift tax, the estate tax, and the generation-skipping transfer tax. Decedent reported the distributions from the marital trust on her gift tax returns as her own transfers, the unified credit was reduced, and some gift taxes were paid. 1995 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 345">*365 estate would have been entitled to the marital deduction, and yet decedent's transfers clearly would not have been includable in her gross estate. 1995 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 345">*366 The question remaining is whether the distributions from the marital trust, which respondent argues contravened Julius' intent as expressed in his will, would have been upheld under Pennsylvania law if decedent or her personal representatives or any other interested party had sought legal redress. If the transfers could have been returned to the marital trust for disposition under decedent's exercise of her general power of appointment, then the transfers may be includable in decedent's gross estate. Respondent argues, with apparent plausibility, that 1995 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 345">*368 However, a literal reading of Because we will apply Respondent's strongest argument is similar to respondent's arguments in In In the case at hand, we must determine, as best we can, what the highest court of Pennsylvania would hold on the same question of State law. For the purpose of our inquiry, we distinguish between the distributions made before and after decedent's incompetency. 1995 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 345">*377 the time of her stroke. She did not sign the last two Consents, nor did her guardians Bernard and Irving sign them in their capacities as such. Bernard and Irving signed only individually and as trustees. The texts of the Sixth and Seventh Consents make clear that decedent did not join in them, either "personally or by her guardians". Petitioner has attempted to introduce evidence to the effect that Bernard and Irving consented to the last two distributions as guardians, and respondent has objected to the admission of such evidence in the face of the express statements in the Sixth and Seventh Consents, signed by Bernard and Irving individually and as trustees, that decedent was not joining the agreement, either personally or by Bernard and Irving as her guardians. Respondent cites and relies on Nor does petitioner persuade us that decedent effectively manifested her consent to the postincompetency distributions in any other way. 1995 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 345">*381 We conclude that the distributions from the marital trust prior to decedent's incompetency would not have been set aside under Pennsylvania law. We believe that a Pennsylvania court would have used at least one of the following rationales to refuse to set them aside because of a very significant characteristic of the case at hand that we also emphasized in First, under Council's will the remaindermen had only a contingent interest subject to the non-exercise of decedent's power of appointment. As the decedent had the power to appoint trust principal to anyone she chose, the trustees had no obligation to any beneficiary other than decedent. Secondly, the distributions made here ultimately inured to the benefit of the remaindermen. Under these circumstances, we believe the trustees acted with due regard to the interests of all possible beneficiaries who were specifically named in Council's will. We see no material frustration of the testator's intent. 1995 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 345">*385 A problem is presented in determining the effectiveness of the family agreements embodied by the First through Fifth Consents with respect to minor, unborn, and unascertained members and beneficiaries. The Board of Tax Appeals held valid a new supervening trust that replaced an earlier trust under a family agreement consented to by all adult members of the family because the interests of the infant members were protected by the customary legal safeguards and because a court approved the agreement. Petitioner1995 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 345">*387 cites cases where family agreements were held valid by the Pennsylvania court of first instance over then-minor family members or guardians ad litem representing them who objected at the time or later. Respondent argues that, 1995 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 345">*390 even if no one else could have complained about the distributions and sought legal redress, the executor or executors of decedent's estate had clean hands and could have done so. However, any right of the estate would have derived from decedent. 1995 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 345">*391 If adult beneficiaries consent to the termination of a trust, no consent is needed from those who take through them. Respondent argues that the Consents did not amount to releases by decedent because they contained no explicit declaration of release. While we agree that any such release by decedent was only implicit, we believe that the portion of The legislators of Pennsylvania knew how to write a requirement that a declaration of release be explicit. They did not do so in the earlier versions of Respondent also objects that if decedent had released her power, the property should have passed pursuant to Julius' will to the default takers; i.e., Julius' heirs under the laws of intestacy of Pennsylvania. Under Even if it were found appropriate to grant a remedy, under the present circumstances, where virtually all imaginable potential parties had estopped themselves from seeking further advantages and where decedent had consented to the distributions, awarding damages against the trustees would be a more practical 1995 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 345">*399 way of compensating any aggrieved plaintiff.1995 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 345">*401 Beneficiaries of Pennsylvania trusts have a choice of remedies, both legal and equitable, and can choose equitable remedies even where legal remedies are available. 1995 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 345">*403 We now turn to the revocability of the distributions pursuant to the Sixth and Seventh Consents, executed in 1987 and 1988 after decedent had a stroke and was adjudged incompetent. The legal position with respect to these later distributions (with respect to which the burden of proof remains with petitioner) is very different. We have not found sufficient evidence to conclude that those later distributions took place under one overarching family agreement to which decedent had consented (and under Pennsylvania law petitioner has the burden of proof on this issue as well). The single family agreements that the family donees attempted to embody in the Sixth and Seventh Consents expressly failed to include her as a party, even through her guardians. They therefore failed to be efficacious. Petitioner heavily relies on We believe that a Pennsylvania court would not have used the appropriate-remedy or any other1995 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 345">*405 rationale to refuse to reverse the postincompetency distributions because it would not have had the same policy rationale for doing so that we have discussed We conclude, based on all these considerations, that decedent would have prevailed in a Pennsylvania court if the reversal of the last two distributions had been sought by her or on her behalf. 1995 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 345">*407 We hold that the last two distributions ($ 198,575 for 1987 and $ 102,884.88 for 1988) must be included in decedent's gross estate under The Fifth Consent was executed on or about January 1, 1986. Pursuant to that Consent, property was distributed from the marital trust at some time during that calendar year. It is unclear whether the distribution was completed before decedent was adjudged incompetent on July 17, 1986. However, the fact that the Fifth Consent directs the trustees to "promptly distribute gratis" the assets in question persuades us that the distributions more likely than not occurred before decedent's incompetency. In any event, the burden of proof decides the issue for petitioner. Not until her amended answer did respondent raise the matter of the distributions made in years prior to 1987. We therefore ruled in our order of August 16, 1993, that respondent bears the burden of proof on the inclusion in the gross estate of the preincompetency distributions1995 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 345">*408 from the marital trust. Rule 142(a). We are now amending that order to clarify that the burden of proof is on respondent for all distributions before 1987, irrespective of whether they were made before decedent's incompetency. Inasmuch as respondent has not shown that the 1986 distributions occurred after decedent became incompetent, no assets distributed during 1986 are to be included in decedent's gross estate. There is one last possible ground for inclusion of the 1986 transfers under the Fifth Consent that we should address: that they occurred within 3 years of decedent's death in 1988. We hold that only the 1987 and 1988 distributions are included in decedent's gross estate. To reflect the foregoing and the parties' concessions,
1. Under
2. The stroke occurred between Jan. 1, 1986, when the Fifth Consent was executed, and May 30, 1986, when Bernard and Irving signed their Acceptances to appointment as guardian.↩
3. Respondent has not sought and does not seek the inclusion in the gross estate of this gift or of any of the previous gifts made from decedent's own property.↩
4. We explain
5. See also
6. The situation in the case at hand is different from
7. "So long as assets do not escape taxation entirely and no specific provision of the Code is contravened, taxpayers are generally permitted to arrange their affairs to minimize estate tax liability."
8. This is in contrast to respondent's failure to argue on brief for inclusion under sec. 2033. This failure leads us to treat the sec. 2033 issue as conceded to petitioner.↩
9. In relevant part,
(a) In General. -- The value of the gross estate shall include the value of all property -- (1) Transfers after June 22, 1936. -- To the extent of any interest therein of which the decedent has at any time made a transfer (except in case of a bona fide sale for an adequate and full consideration in money or money's worth), by trust or otherwise, where the enjoyment thereof was subject at the date of his death to any change through the exercise of a power (in whatever capacity exercisable) by the decedent alone or by the decedent in conjunction with any other person (without regard to when or from what source the decedent acquired such power), to alter, amend, revoke, or terminate, or where any such power is relinquished during the 3-year period ending on the date of the decedent's death.↩
10. The omission of a provision for general powers of appointment was quickly repaired, but in a different subsection. Revenue Act of 1918, ch. 18, sec. 402(e), 40 Stat. 1097-1098; Bittker & Clark, Federal Estate and Gift Taxation 383 (6th ed. 1990). The powers covered by the current secs. 2036-2038 remained in a separate ancestor subsection, sec. 402(c). It is interesting to note that sec. 202(b) of the Revenue Act of 1916, ch. 463, 39 Stat. 777-778, and sec. 402(c) of the Revenue Act of 1918, 40 Stat. 1097, while they did not cover general powers of appointment, did cover transfers made "in contemplation of death", the ancestor of the current
11. The issue of whether it would also apply to an unexercised power of appointment seems never to have arisen, which is to be expected, inasmuch as the tainted transfer presupposed by
12. The Commissioner has on one occasion, in
13. Although the Fourth Consent, for 1985, was signed on Feb. 1, 1985, well outside the 3-year limit, we do not know whether the distributions were completed by May 17, 1985, the date 3 years before decedent's death. Since we end up deciding that
14. In relevant part,
(a) In General. -- The value of the gross estate shall include the value of all property -- * * * (2) POWERS CREATED AFTER OCTOBER 21, 1942. -- To the extent of any property with respect to which the decedent
15. We consider
16. Respondent also argues that they were includable under
17.
18. In this section, we assume that all the distributions made under the first five Consents were made before decedent's incompetency, and that the distributions made under the Sixth and Seventh Consents were made after her incompetency. We consider
19. Bernard at trial testified that decedent could and did manifest approval of the financial arrangements that were made during her incapacitation. We are not persuaded.↩
20. On the Pennsylvania standard of clear and convincing evidence, see
21. We interpret this standard to be the equivalent of a "clear and convincing evidence" standard (as does Packel & Poulin, Pennsylvania Evidence, sec. 303.2, at 62-63 n.16 (1987)). Clear and convincing evidence is a standard used elsewhere in Pennsylvania inheritance and property law. For example, claims of an inter vivos gift must be supported by clear and convincing evidence.
The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania has characterized clear and convincing evidence as "testimony that is so clear, direct, weighty, and convincing as to enable the trier of fact to come to a clear conviction, without hesitance, of the truth of the precise facts in issue."
22. As we have seen, after her death decedent's gross estate was reported as amounting to $ 1,631,160.03. When she died at age 91, her life expectancy was 5.4 years. Sec. 1.72-9, Table I, Income Tax Regs.↩
23. The polestar metaphor, which we have first seen attested in
24. Judicial opinions continue to recite the standard statement about the primary of the settlor's intent (as well as the polestar maxim). It appears, however, in Pennsylvania as in other jurisdictions, that this intent is no longer being enforced with the fervor in favor of the settlor's intent that obtained at the turn of the last century.
25. A further problem is presented by the fact that even though departure from the terms of a trust instrument through a family agreement has been approved by the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania,
26.
27. As
28. (a) POWERS AND INTERESTS RELEASABLE. -- Any power of appointment, or power of consumption, whether general or special, other than a power in trust which is imperative, and any interest in, to, or over real or personal property held or owned outright, or in trust, or in any other manner which is reserved or given to any person by deed, will or otherwise, and irrespective of any limitation of such power or interest by virtue of any restriction in the nature of a so-called spendthrift trust provision, or similar provision, may be released or disclaimed, either with or without consideration by written instrument signed by the person possessing the power or the interest and delivered as hereinafter provided, but nothing in this section shall authorize an income beneficiary of a spendthrift trust to release or disclaim his right to such income, unless as a result of the release or disclaimer the released or disclaimed income will pass to one or more of the beneficiary's descendants. This section shall not apply to an interest that may be disclaimed under Chapter 62 (relating to disclaimers). (b) FORM OF RELEASE OR DISCLAIMER. -- A power or interest which is releasable or disclaimable may be released or disclaimed either absolutely or conditionally, and may also be released or disclaimed with respect to the whole or any part of the property subject to such power or interest, and may also be released or disclaimed in such manner as to reduce or limit the persons or objects or classes of persons or objects in whose favor such power or interest would otherwise be exercisable. No release or disclaimer of a power or of an interest shall be deemed to make imperative a power or interest which was not imperative prior to such release or disclaimer unless the instrument of release or disclaimer expressly so provides. (c) DELIVERY OF RELEASE OR DISCLAIMER. -- Such release or disclaimer may be delivered to any one of the following: (1) Any person specified for such purpose in the instrument creating the power or interest. (2) Any trustee of the property to which the power or interest relates. (3) The clerk of the court having jurisdiction of the trust for filing in said court. (4) The recorder of deeds for recording in the county in which the person possessing the power or interest resides, or in which the deed, will, or other instrument creating the power or interest is recorded or filed. (d) GRANTEE OR LIENHOLDER. -- A release or disclaimer shall be void as against a bona fide grantee of or holder of a lien on real estate in any county unless the release or disclaimer or a duplicate original or certified copy thereof is recorded in the county where the real estate lies before the recording or entering of the instrument or lien under which such grantee or lienholder claims.↩
29. There is an absence of case law in Pennsylvania on when trust powers are imperative. However, it has been held in New York that where an alternative is provided by a grantor on the failure of a donee to exercise a power of appointment and apparently also when the duty is only to himself, the power is not imperative.
30. Ch. 62 does not apply to decedent's general power of appointment, as it only applies to interests not yet in existence, and not to powers.↩
31.
32. Under sec. 25.2511-1(c)(2), Gift Tax Regs., as interpreted by
33. Moreover, the fact that some hypothetical third party might have a case should not affect petitioner's tax liabilities.
In addition, there is the problem that a suit by such a third party is so extremely improbable under the circumstances. Petitioner appropriately cites the requirement of
34. When the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania held that the defendants in
The sale that was set aside in the case that respondent cites,
A plaintiff suing in an action over alleged mismanagement of a trust fund never has the right to a particular remedy. An Orphans' Court may choose from the variety of available remedies -- including surcharge, injunction, and removal of trustees -- the remedy it considers most appropriate to effect an equitable result.
The U.S. Supreme Court, in the era preceding
35. Because we hold that decedent released her general power of appointment with respect to the property distributed pursuant to these Consents, it follows that the transfers were subject to the Federal gift tax under sec. 2514(b), and in fact they were so reported. This supports -- although it does not require -- the conclusion that the value of the transfers is not includable in the gross estate. 5 Bittker & Lokken, Federal Taxation of Income, Estates and Gifts, par. 126.3.6, at 126-27 (2d ed. 1993).↩
36. The lack of likelihood, because of decendent's incompetency, that she would have tried to reverse the trustees' actions no more prevents us from concluding that the last two distributions were revocable, and that she therefore had a general power of appointment over the subject assets under
Ward Estate , 350 Pa. 144 ( 1944 )
White's Estate , 322 Pa. 85 ( 1936 )
Rickenbach Estate , 348 Pa. 121 ( 1943 )
Free's Estate , 327 Pa. 362 ( 1937 )
Kenna Estate , 348 Pa. 214 ( 1943 )
Strawbridge's Estate , 322 Pa. 406 ( 1936 )
In Re Estate of McCrea , 475 Pa. 383 ( 1977 )
In Re Estate of Janney , 498 Pa. 398 ( 1982 )
In Re Francis Edward McGillick Foundation , 537 Pa. 194 ( 1994 )
In Re Estate of Tippins , 487 Pa. 107 ( 1979 )
In Re the Trust Under Deed of Tracy , 464 Pa. 300 ( 1975 )
Martin Estate , 349 Pa. 255 ( 1944 )
Ramsey v. Ramsey , 351 Pa. 413 ( 1945 )
Estate of Reichel , 484 Pa. 610 ( 1979 )
Estate of James E. Craft, Thomas J. Craft v. Commissioner ... , 608 F.2d 240 ( 1979 )
In Re Fiori , 438 Pa. Super. 610 ( 1995 )
In Re Francis Edward McGillick Foundation , 406 Pa. Super. 249 ( 1991 )
In Re Estate of Agostini , 311 Pa. Super. 233 ( 1983 )
In Re Adoption of Atencio , 539 Pa. 161 ( 1994 )