DocketNumber: Docket No. 8302-80, 8303-80.
Filed Date: 8/3/1982
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/20/2020
MEMORANDUM OPINION
SCOTT,
The last will and testatment of Aimee Magnus Flanigan was executed on January 14, 1975. The will provided for specific bequests of Mrs. Flanigan's tangible personal property and real property and for cash gifts in specified amounts to each of two granddaughters and to certain specifically named charities. The residue of the estate was to be used to establish (1) a marital deduction trust for the benefit of Mr. Flanigan and (2) trusts for the benefit of each of Mrs. Flanigan's four children and her grandchildren. The will specifically provided that all estate, inheritance, and death taxes were to be charged against that portion of the residue which was to be used to establish the trusts for the benefit of the children and grandchildren. The will provided, in pertinent part, with respect to the marital deduction trust, as follows:
A. If my spouse shall*305 survive me * * *, I give, devise and bequeath to the fiduciary of the trust created hereunder * * * (a) such fractional share of the property comprising my residuary estate as will result in the maximum allowable marital deduction, as finally determined for federal estate tax purposes in my estate, less (b) all property and interests therein which pass or have passed to my spouse under other provisions of this will or otherwise than under this will, but only to the extent that such property and interests are included in my gross estate and allowed as a marital deduction for federal estate tax purposes. * * *
I direct the fiduciary of the Marital Deduction Trust to hold such fractional share of the property comprising my residuary estate, IN TRUST, to manage, invest and reinvest the same, to collect the income thereof and, after paying therefrom the necessary expenses of administration which are properly chargeable against and payable out of such income, to pay the net income to my spouse, in annual or more frequent installments, during my spouse's life.
In addition to the net income of this trust, I authorize and empower the fiduciary, at any time and from time to time, to transfer*306 and pay over to or apply for my spouse's benefit so much of the principal of the Marital Deduction Trust, including the whole thereof, as the fiduciary, in the exercise of absolute discretion, may consider appropriate, suitable or desirable for my spouse's comfort and welfare, without regard to my spouse's income or other resources.
Upon my spouse's death, the fiduciary shall transfer and pay over the then remaining principal, if any, of the Marital Deduction Trust as it is then constituted, together with any accrued and undistributed income, to and among or for the benefit of such persons or corporations, including my spouse, my spouse's estate, my spouse's creditors or the creditors of my spouse's estate, in such amounts or proportions, and in such lawful interests or estates, whether outright or in trust, as my spouse may appoint by Last Will and Testament containing a specific reference to this power. In default of such appointment, or to the extent that such appointment shall for any reason be ineffective, the fiduciary shall transfer and pay over, unless my spouse's will provides otherwise, to my spouse's legal representatives from such principal and income (herein "the unappointed*307 property"), at such time or times as my spouse's legal representatives shall request in writing, an amount equal to the difference between (i) the amount of all estate, inheritance, succession, transfer and other death taxes payable with respect to all property includible in my spouse's gross estate for federal estate tax purposes, and (ii) the amount of all such taxes which would have been payable if the Marital Deduction Trust property were not includible in my spouse's gross estate for federal estate tax purposes. In making such transfer to my spouse's legal representatives, the fiduciary shall be entitled to rely upon and treat as correct, without investigation, any such written request from my spouse's legal representatives. The balance of such unappointed property shall then be added to and form a part of my residuary estate disposed of in Paragraphs "1" and "3" of Subdivision "B" of this Article and be dealt with and disposed of accordingly, as if I had died immediately following the death of my spouse.
Paragraphs 1 and 3 referred to in the preceding sentence provide for the establishment of the trusts for the benefit of Mrs. Flanigan's children and grandchildren.
On*308 November 15, 1976, within six months of Mrs. Flanigan's death, Mr. Flanigan executed an affidavit in which he stated the following:
Under * * * my wife's said will, I am entitled for life to the net income from a Trust thereby created and I have a general testamentary power of appointment thereunder.
I make this affidavit, pursuant to the provisions of
The names of the alternate charities and the number of shares that each was to receive were specifically set forth. No part of the corpus of the marital deduction trust was distributed to any beneficiary during Mr. Flanigan's life.
The last will of Mr. Flanigan which was executed on November 15, 1976, provided as follows with respect to the exercise of the power of appointment given to him by Mrs. Flanigan's will:
In the exercise of such power of appointment, I hereby direct the fiduciary of the Marital Deduction Trust upon my death to transfer and pay over * * * [to the Aimee M. and Horace C. Flanigan Foundation, if such organization is a qualified charity, or alternatively to certain other enumerated qualified charitable organizations] such proportion including the whole thereof, of the principal of the Marital Deduction Trust, as then constituted, which shall be equal to the lesser of (1) such proportion of the principal of the Marital Deduction Trust allowable as a deduction for federal estate tax purposes in my estate under
On the Federal estate tax return filed by the estate of Mrs. Flanigan, a marital deduction in the amount of $7,248,732.79 was claimed. The return stated that $6,580,975.29 of this amount was attributable to the interest of Mr. Flanigan in the marital deduction trust Mrs. Flanigan in her will directed be established. The estate on the return also claimed a charitable deduction in the amount of $5,570,290.07. It was stated on the return that $5,267,741.67 of this amount was attributable to the value of the remainder interest in the marital deduction trust which Mr. Flanigan by affidavit stated he intended to appoint to charity.
On the Federal estate tax return filed by Mr. Flanigan's estate, a charitable deduction in the amount of $6,818,218.29 was claimed. All of such amount was based on his exercise of the general power of appointment over the marital deduction trust in favor of a qualified charity.
Respondent in his*311 statutory notice determined that no charitable deduction was allowable to Mrs. Flanigan's estate for the remainder interest of the marital deduction trust giving the following explanation:
(c) It is determined that the remainder interest of the Marital Deduction Trust created under the sixth article of the will, dated January 14, 1975, of Aimee M. Flanigan, as appointed by Horace C. Flanigan (in the second article of his will), does not meet the requirements of
Accordingly, the taxable estate is increased $5,267,741.67.
Respondent in his statutory notice of deficiency to the estate of Mr. Flanigan asserted that no charitable deduction was allowable to the estate with the following explanation:
(g) It is determined that the second article of the will, dated November 15, 1976, of Horace C. Flanigan, deceased, exercises his power of appointment over the remaining principal and accrued and undistributed income*312 of the Marital Deduction Trust created by the will, dated January 14, 1975, of his predeceased spouse, Aimee M. Flanigan. The second article of Horace C. Flanigan's will also instructs the trustee of said Marital Deduction Trust to transfer to certain named charities the lesser of the charitable deductions allowable under
In the statutory notice issued to the Estate of Aimee M. Flanigan, it has been determined "that the remainder interest of the Marital Deduction Trust created under the sixth article of the will, dated January 14, 1975, of Aimee M. Flanigan, as appointed by Horace C. Flanigan, does not meet the requirements of
Since the will of Horace C. Flanigan reflects his intention that the charities named therein are to receive nothing if his spouse's estate is denied a charitable deduction for the remainder*313 interest of the Marital Deduction Trust and since the statutory notice to the spouse's estate has disallowed any such deduction, it is hereby determined that nothing will pass to charity under the will of Horace C. Flanigan, and, therefore, his gross estate should not have been reduced by the amount reported on Schedule N of the estate tax return filed for his estate.
Accordingly, the taxable estate is increased $6,818,218.29.
*314
*315 The conditions are that (1) no part of the corpus of the trust is distributed to any beneficiary during the life of the surviving spouse; (2) the surviving spouse is 80 years old at the date of decedent's death; (3) the surviving spouse executes an affidavit within six months after decedent's death specifying the charities in favor of which he plans to exercise the power; and (4) the power of appointment is exercised in favor of the charities specified in the affidavit. Counsel for petitioners concedes that Mr. Flanigan's estate is allowed a charitable deduction only if a charitable deduction is allowable to Mrs. Flanigan's estate. We will therefore first consider whether her estate is entitled*316 to a charitable deduction with respect to any portion fo the corpus of the trust created in her will for Mr. Flanigan's benefit. The record is clear that the four specific conditions set forth in The two principal arguments made by petitioners in support of the contention that the In support of their first position, petitioners contend that no actual transfer was made by Mrs. Flanigan and therefore by its terms In our view, there is no merit to petitioners' contention that Mrs. Flanigan made no transfer to charity within the meaning of For purposes of this section * * * 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 * * * [certain*319 prescribed conditions are met]. The affidavit referred to * * * [above] shall be attached to the estate tax return of the decedent and shall constitute a sufficient basis for the allowance of the deduction * * *. Thus, the literal language of Although not so stated, and in fact denied by petitioners, the substance of their argument is that The structure of The only allowance language contained in We conclude that, for the purposes of *323 Petitioners, secondly, argue that in In In the absence of some affirmative showing of an intention to repeal, the only permissible justification for a repeal by implication is when the earlier and the later statutes are irreconcilable. Petitioners, while acknowledging the above to be the main purpose of Congress in enacting We are unwilling to presume that an octogenarian will always have a short lifespan, much less to assume that since in general as a group octogenarians will have a shorter projected lifespan than other persons in younger age groups, the possibility of abuse is so slight that a further, unstated exception, in effect, can be made to We therefore conclude that the circumstance surrounding transfers covered by Petitioners contend that if we conclude that because of Where an interest in property (other than a remainder interest in a personal residence or farm or an undivided portion of the decedent's entire interest in property) passes or has passed from the decedent to a * * * [charity or for a charitable use] and an interest * * * in the same property passes or has passed * * * from the decedent to a person * * * [or organization other than a charity or for other than a charitable use], *328 no deduction shall be allowed under this section for the interest which passed or has passed to the * * * [charity] unless-- (A) in the case of a remainder interest, such interest is in a trust which is a charitable remainder annuity trust or a charitable remainder unitrust * * * or a pooled income fund * * *. *329 Based on the express lnguage of the statute, we stated in the In But, while the rule is a well-established and useful one, it is, like other canons of statutory construction, only an aid to the ascertainment of the true meaning of the statute. It is neither final nor exclusive. To ascertain the meaning of the words of a statute, they may be submitted to the test of all appropriate canons of statutory construction, of which the rule of ejusdem generis is only one. If, upon a consideration of the context and the objects sought to be attained and of the act as a whole, it adequately appears that*330 the general words were not used in the restricted sense suggested by the rule, we must give effect to the conclusion afforded by the wider view in order that the will of the Legislature shall not fail. In that case, the Court was faced with interpreting a statute which provided as follows: Sec. 217. (a) In the case of a nonresident alien individual, * * * the following items of gross income shall be treated as income from sosurces within the United States: (1) Interest on bonds, notes, or other interest-bearing obligations of residents, corporate or otherwise, not including (A) interest on deposits with persons carrying on the banking business paid to persons not engaged in business within the United States and not having an office or place of business therein, * * * The Revenue Act of 1926, 44 Stat. 9, provided that in the case of a foreign corporation gross income would only include gross income from sources within the United States, determined in the manner provided in the statute quoted above. The taxpayer contended that the interest paid to it on a tax refund was not from a source within the United States under the statute in issue because such income was not interest*331 upon an interest-bearing obligation in the nature of a bond or note. After giving general reasons why it believed that Congress intended such income to be taxable, the Court stated the following (at 90): The foregoing views are put beyond all fair doubt, if otherwise any would remain, by the consideration of a qualification contained in the section itself. After declaring that interest on bonds, notes, or other interest-bearing obligations shall be treated as income from sources within the United States, the section immediately proceeds to exclude from that language "interest on deposits with persons carrying on the banking business paid to persons not engaged in business within the United States. * * *" It is apparent from this exception that Congress understood that, unless the exception were made, the interest on such deposits would fall within the term "interest-bearing obligations," and, to prevent that result, it was necessary to specifically create the exception. The conclusion fairly results that the clause was intended to include all interest-bearing obligations not specifically excepted. Likewise, Although, as indicated above, the committee is in general agreement with the House regarding the need for a closer correlation between the charitable contributions deduction allowed for a gift of a remainder interest to charity and the benefit ultimately received by the charity, the committee believes that the House provision is unduly restrictive. The requirement that a deduction is to be allowed only if the remainder interest given to charity is in the form of an annuity*333 trust or unitrust could have a significant adverse effect on established forms of charitable giving, such as pooled income fund arrangements, and outright gifts of real property, such as a residence, where the donor reserves a life estate in the property. Since these types of charitable giving cannot be framed in the form of an annuity trust or unitrust, the House provision would deny a deduction for the charitable gift. The committee believes that it is possible to continue to allow a charitable deduction in these types of cases with appropriate limitations, however, to prevent the overstating of the charitable contribution deduction. In addition, under the committee amendment a deduction is to be allowed for a gift of a charitable remainder interest in trust which takes the form of a transfer of property to a pooled income fund. (The definition of a pooled income fund is discussed in No. 6 above.) In order to prevent manipulation to overstate the appropriate charitable contribution deduction in the case of this type of gift, it is further provided that the amount of the charitable contribution deduction allowed the donor upon the transfer*334 of property to the pooled income fund is to be determined by valuing the income interest on the basis of the highest rate of return earned by the particular pooled income fund in any of the three taxable years preceding the taxable year of the fund in which the transfer occurs. Where a fund has not been in existence for this period of time, the rate of return is to be assumed to be 6 percent, unless a different rate is prescribed by the Secretary of the Treasury or his delegate. Another additional situation in which the committee amendments allow a charitable contribution deduction for the gift of a remainder interest to charity is in the case of a nontrust gift of a remainder interest in real property to charity. Thus, for example, a charitable contribution deduction is to be allowed where an individual makes a gift of his residence to charity and retains the right to live in the residence for his life. The committee does not believe that this type of situation generally presents the kind of abuse which both the House and the committee believe it appropriate to curtail. Nevertheless, a limited valuation problem is presented even in this type of situation, and for this reason*335 it is further provided that in determining the value of a remainder interest in real property which is given to charity, straight-line depreciation and cost depletion are to be taken into account. Thus, there will be an appropriate reflection in the value of the charitable gift of the decrease in value of the property which may occur as a result of the depreciation or depletion of the property. In addition, the committee contemplates that the Secretary of the Treasury or his delegate will provide that the rate of return to be used in valuing this type of charitable gift is one which is reasonable in view of the interest rates and investment returns prevailing at the time of the gift. At the present time, a 6 percent rate of return would appear appropriate to the committee. As indicated above, the committee has retained with minor modifications the annuity trust and unitrust rules of the House bill. Under the House provision, an annuity trust is one which specifies in dollar terms the amount of the annuity which is to be paid to the income beneficiary. The trust also must require the income payments to be made at least annually. A unitrust is a trust which specifies that the*336 income beneficiary is to receive annual payments based on a fixed percentage of the net fair market value of the trust's assets, as determined each year. The income interest in either case may either be for a term of years or for the life of the income beneficiary. [S. Rept. No. 91-552 (1969), *337 Since Mr. Flanigan in his will clearly stated that he intended to exercise the power of appointment only to the extent that Mrs. Flanigan's estate also received a charitable deduction, he did not utilize such power of appointment so as to result in his making a transfer to charity under
Since there is nothing in the*325 legislative history of
The conference committee followed the Senate's amendments, but limited their scope by permitting deductions for remainder interests in real property to personal residences or farms. Conf. Rept. No. 91-782 (1969),
1. Unless otherwise indicated, all statutory references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as amended and in effect during the year in issue.↩
2.
(b) Powers of Appointment.--
(1) General rule.--Property includible in the decedent's gross estate under
3.
(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).
The affidavit referred to in subparagraph (C) shall be attached to the estate tax return of the decedent and shall constitute a sufficient basis for the allowance of the deduction under this paragraph in the first instance subject to a later disallowance of the deduction if the conditions herein specified are not complied with.
4. Petitioner cites the decisions in
Furthermore, it is important to keep in mind that in such prior group of cases issues were raised as to three deductions: (1) the entitlement of the first decedent's estate to a marital deduction for the property in the marital trust under sec. 2056(b)(5), (2) the allowance to the first decedent's estate of a charitable deduction for the remainder interest in such trust deemed to pass from such decedent to charity under
5. The Tax Reform Act of 1976, Pub. L. 94-455, 90 Stat. 1520, sec. 2124(e), amended the statute by striking the language of the parenthetical exception "(other than an interest in a personal residence or farm or an undivided interest in property)" and replacing it with the language "(other than an interest described in section 170(f)(3)(B))". This change thereby made an additional exception for a "qualified conservation contribution." See sec. 170(f)(3)(B)(iii). Thus, under such amendment a deduction was to be allowed for the--
contribution to a charitable organization exclusively for "conservation purposes" of 1) a lease on, option to purchase, or easement with respect to real property of not less than 30 years' duration or 2) a remainder interest in real property. The term "conservation purposes" is defined to mean the preservation of land areas for public recreation, education, or scenic enjoyment, the preservation of historically important land areas or structures, or the preservation of natural environmental systems.
Conf. Rept. No. 94-1515, 94th Cong., 2d Sess. (1976) 505-506. Deductions under such amendment were to be allowed for charitable contributions and transfers made after June 13, 1976, and before June 14, 1977. However, sec. 309(b)(2), Pub. L. 95-30, 91 Stat. 154, changed such latter date to June 14, 1981.↩
6. In view of the express language of
Neither have we found any merit to petitioners' other contention that by later action Congress implicitly indicated that the
(1) if the decedent had died before October 9, 1972, without having republished the will after October 9, 1969, by codicil or otherwise,
(2) if the decedent at no time after October 9, 1969, had the right to change the portions of the will pertaining to the passing of the property to charity, or
(3) 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 publish the will by codicil or otherwise.
Analogous provisions were also made in the case of property transferred in trust on or before October 9, 1969. Sec. 201(g)(4)(A) through -(C), Tax Reform Act of 1969, Pub. L. 91-172, 83 Stat. 487. See also S. Rept. 91-552 (1969),
7. Because of our holding with respect to respondent's principal contention, we do not reach the issue of whether his alternative contention in his brief that in any event a charitable deduction must be disallowed to the estate of Mrs. Flanigan because the power of the trustees to invade the corpus of the trust was not limited by an ascertainable standard is properly before us and, if it is, the merits of respondent's position.↩