DocketNumber: Docket No. 50113
Citation Numbers: 25 T.C. 143, 1955 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 65
Judges: Raum
Filed Date: 10/27/1955
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
Taxpayer is income beneficiary of two separate testamentary trusts established by her father, the same trustees being named for such trusts. One of the trusts sustained a net loss.
*144 OPINION.
The Commissioner determined a deficiency in income tax against petitioners, husband and wife, in the amount of $ 27,071.87 for the year 1948. All of the facts have been stipulated; they are rather complicated, but a simplified summary will be sufficient to bring into focus the only question for decision.
A. L. Hobson, the father of Grace Hobson Smith, died in 1929. By his will he created certain trusts, naming petitioners as co-trustees in each of them. The sole income beneficiary of one of them, the Aliso-Ross-Hill Ranches Trust (referred to hereinafter as the *66 Aliso trust), was his daughter, Grace Hobson Smith, one of the petitioners in this proceeding. A fiduciary income tax return for this trust for 1948 was filed by petitioners as trustees on Form 1041 in March 1949, reporting a net loss from the operation of business in the amount of $ 34,524.73 as "distributable" to the beneficiary.
Another trust established by the will was created out of the residue of the estate and is referred to as the A. L. Hobson Residue Estate, or the residue trust. It provided for distribution of income in a specified manner: (a) 10 per cent to petitioners, as trustees, for certain eleemosynary purposes; (b) 45 per cent to decedent's widow, with provisions for other disposition in the event of her death; and (c) the remaining 45 per cent to pay annuities for life to 5 persons, and the remainder to Grace Hobson Smith. During 1948 the residue trust realized a total of $ 252,859.77 ordinary net income and $ 21,660.24 long-term capital gain. The widow had died some years prior thereto, and her 45 per cent share was distributable in its entirety to Grace Hobson Smith. Also, 4 of the 5 annuitants had died prior to 1948, and, as a result, only $ 1,200 out of the *67 remaining 45 per cent was payable to someone other than Grace Hobson Smith. In March 1948, petitioners filed certain partnership and fiduciary returns, in connection with the foregoing, which are described in the margin. *68
In petitioners' joint individual income tax returns for 1948, also filed in March 1949, there was reported, in addition to certain long-term *145 capital gains, "Income from Partnerships and Trusts" as follows:
Aliso-Ross-Hill Ranches Trust | A. L. Hobson Estate Trust | 112,586.89 |
A. L. Hobson Residue Estate | 113,786.90 | |
Grace Hobson Smith -- separate | $ 191,761.56 |
The deficiency notice for 1948 was mailed to petitioners on June 10, 1953. The deficiency resulted from the respondent's determination that the net operating loss of the Aliso trust could not be used to offset the income distributable to Grace Hobson Smith which had its source in the residue trust.
After receiving the deficiency notice, but prior to filing their petition herein, the petitioners, as co-trustees of trusts created by A. L. Hobson undertook to file an "Amended" return on Form 1041 for 1948, in which the operations of the Aliso trust were *69 consolidated with those of the residue estate, with the result that the net income ultimately shown on the return reflected the net loss of the Aliso trust.
The Government contends that the income payable to Grace Hobson Smith from the trust or trusts created out of the residue are taxable to her under
Under our tax law, a trust is a separate juristic entity, and its income and deductions are not consolidated with those of other trusts or *146 entities. Cf.
Petitioner seeks to overcome the effect of the foregoing by reliance upon section 29.142-3 of Regulations 111, which provides:
Returns in Case of Two Trusts. -- In the case of two or more trusts the income of which is taxable to the beneficiaries, which were created by the same person and for which the same trustee acts, the trustee shall make a single return on Form 1041 for all such trusts, notwithstanding that they may arise from different instruments. If, however, one person acts as trustee for trusts created by different persons for the benefit of the same beneficiary, he shall make a return on Form 1041 for each trust separately.
We cannot agree that this regulation effectively neutralizes the general rule required by the Code and *71 applied in the
*147 Petitioners rely upon the fact that the regulation has been in effect over a number of years and that the applicable statute has been reenacted a number of times during that period. We would ordinarily be very slow to put aside such a regulation, where there has been an administrative history showing that the regulation had been applied consistently over the years to cases comparable to the one before the Court. However, *73 we have no way of knowing whether such is the situation here. By its terms, the regulation does not specifically call for the result upon which petitioners insist, and the respondent explains its purpose so as not to require that result. Respondent argues that the regulation was intended to cover only those situations in which
1. They filed, first, a partnership return on Form 1065 as co-trustees of the A. L. Hobson Residue Trust, reporting ordinary net income of $ 252,859.77 and net long-term capital gain of $ 21,660.24, shown to be distributable as follows:
Ordinary | Long-term | ||
Distributee | Per cent | net income | capital gain |
A. L. Hobson Trust Fund | 10 | $ 25,285.98 | $ 2,166.02 |
Grace Hobson Smith | 45 | 113,786.90 | 9,747.11 |
A. L. Hobson Estate Trust | 45 | 113,786.89 | 9,747.11 |
Totals | $ 252,859.77 | $ 21,660.24 |
The first 45 per cent listed above represents the interest originally allocable to the decedent's widow, and the second 45 per cent represents the interest out of which the five annuities with remainders to Grace Hobson Smith were to be paid.
Petitioners also filed at that time two other returns for 1948, as trustees, each on Form 1041: one for the "A. L. Hobson Trust Fund," and the other for the "A. L. Hobson Estate Trust." On the return for the latter, $ 112,586.89 out of a total of $ 113,786.89 ordinary income was reported as distributable to Grace Hobson Smith and the remaining $ 1,200 to the last surviving annuitant.
1. The loss as reported in the return of the Aliso-Ross-Hill Ranches Trust was $ 34,524.73 ($ 34,612.23 less a net taxable capital gain of $ 87.50 from sale of a horse and scrap iron).↩
2.
3. See art. 423, Regs. 45; art. 423, Regs. 62; art. 423, Regs. 65; art. 423, Regs. 69; art. 743, Regs. 74; art. 743, Regs. 77; art. 142-3, Regs. 86; art. 142-3, Regs. 94; art. 142-3, Regs. 101; sec. 19.142-3, Regs. 103; sec. 29.142-3, Regs. 111; sec. 39.142-3, Regs. 118. See also
4. See 1955 P-H vol. 2, par. 17,636.↩