1946 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 68">*68
Petitioner was the sole trustee of trusts set up by her husband. Petitioner was given the absolute power to pay, in her own discretion and not subject to the control of her husband or of any other person, all or part of the trust income to herself or to her husband, in accordance with their respective needs, of which she was the sole judge, and to accumulate any undistributed balance.
7 T.C. 890">*890 Respondent has determined deficiencies in the income tax liability of Eleanor M. Funk for the years 1938 to and including 1941 in the respective amounts of $ 1,346.91, $ 18,109.65, $ 25,154.24, and $ 32,583.62. The notice of deficiencies for the years 1938 and 1939 was mailed more than three years after the returns for those years were filed. It is not disputed, however, that if the income from four trusts set up by petitioner's husband was properly includible in petitioner's gross income, her returns for the years 1938 and 1939 understated her proper gross income by more than 25 per cent and the notice of deficiencies was timely under
Petitioner filed her returns with the collector at Newark, New Jersey.
FINDINGS OF FACT.
We find the facts as stipulated1946 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 68">*71 by the parties. For present purposes they may be summarized as follows:
Petitioner is the wife of Wilfred J. Funk. Petitioner and her husband are the parents of three children, Wilfred J. Funk, Jr., Peter Van Keuran Funk, and Joan Eleanor Funk.
On March 1, 1929, petitioner's husband organized Erwin Park, Inc., a Delaware corporation, as his personal holding company. He transferred to it a substantial part of his property, including 17,925 shares of Funk & Wagnalls Co. stock, and became entitled to all of the capital stock of Erwin Park. The property received from Funk was set up on Erwin Park's books at a value of $ 6,603,439.32.
7 T.C. 890">*891 At the beginning of 1938, the first taxable year here in question, the authorized capital stock of Erwin Park consisted of 500 shares of class A, 1,000 shares of class B, and 500 shares of class C, stock. Petitioner's husband and John D. Murphy, a member of a firm of accountants and tax consultants were, and continued to be, the company's board of directors. Dividends were to be declared and paid at such time, and in such amounts as the directors in their absolute discretion should determine, except that of all dividends paid during any calendar1946 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 68">*72 year, 5 per cent had to be paid on class A stock, 15 per cent on class B stock, and 80 per cent on class C stock. Voting power was vested exclusively in the holders of class B stock. Petitioner's husband owned all of the class B stock. Four hundred and ninety-nine and four-fifths out of the 500 shares of class A stock constituted the corpus of three trusts which petitioner's husband had set up for each of their children, with himself as trustee, and the 500 shares of class C stock represented the corpus of trusts A, B, C, and D, the income of which gives rise to the present controversy.
On December 29, 1936, petitioner's husband set up four identical irrevocable trusts, designated as trusts A, B, C, D. The corpus of each trust consisted of 125 shares of Erwin Park's class C stock. Petitioner was made the trustee of each trust. The trusts are to exist during the lifetime of the husband. Upon the death of the husband, the trusts will terminate and the principal and undistributed income will be paid to such persons whom the husband may appoint by will, or, in default of appointment, to the children of petitioner and her husband, or to the issue or heirs of such children.
Each 1946 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 68">*73 trust deed provided that the trustee should have the power:
FIRST
During my lifetime to hold, manage, sell, invest, and reinvest the same, to receive the income thereof and to pay therefrom all taxes, assessments, and other charges and expenses accruing thereon from year to year and properly chargeable thereto, and all expenses incident to the trust hereby created, and in her discretion to pay all or a part of the net income annually to me, or to herself, in accordance with our respective needs, of which she shall be the sole judge, and to accumulate and add to principal the balance of such income, if any. Any income so accumulated and added to principal by the Trustee shall become a part of the corpus of the trust and may not thereafter be distributed by the Trustee.
* * * *
THIRD
Upon the death or resignation of the Trustee she shall have the right by will or other instrument in writing to appoint a successor Trustee who shall have the same powers as the Trustee appointed hereby.
The trustee was also given the usual broad powers of management over the trust corpus, including the power of changing investments 7 T.C. 890">*892 and registering the securities in her own name. All stock dividends1946 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 68">*74 must be added to principal, and all cash dividends, except liquidating dividends, are to be treated as income.
Petitioner accepted the trusts, received the stock certificates constituting the corpus of each trust, and placed them in a safe deposit box to which she alone had access.
On December 29, 1936, petitioner and her husband exchanged the following letters relating to trusts A, B, C, and D:
December 29, 1936.
Eleanor M. Funk,
Dear Eleanor: As you know, I have to-day made you the Trustee of four trusts designated as Trusts A, B, C, and D, the property transferred to each trust consisting of 125 shares of the capital stock of Erwin Park, Inc. Under the terms of these trusts you are to have discretion annually to divide the income between us or to accumulate and add it to the principal of the trust.
My objective in setting up the trusts in this way is to provide substantial amounts of income which you may dispose of according to the circumstances which you find to exist at the end of each year. No one can foretell with certainty what those circumstances will be, and it is my desire to put you in a position to exercise your own1946 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 68">*75 judgment as to how such circumstances shall be met, to the extent of the income arising from these trust funds.
It is your legal right and duty to exercise this discretion each year as may seem best to you, and in the exercise of this discretion you are not subject to my control or to the control of any other person.
Very truly yours,
[Signed] Wilfred J. Funk.
December 29, 1936
Wilfred J. Funk,
Dear Wilfred: I have read your letter of to-day with reference to the four new trusts which you are setting up, of which you have made me Trustee.
I understand that at the end of each year I am to decide whether I will pay the income which I have received as Trustee to you or to myself or divide it between us or accumulate and add it to principal. I am to do any or all of these things in such amounts and in such proportions as I see fit.
I understand that the effect of these trusts is to place upon me the duty of deciding how the money shall be disposed of and that in making this decision I am not subject to your control or that of any other person.
Yours very truly,
[Signed] Eleanor M. Funk
During the taxable years in question the corpus1946 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 68">*76 of each trust consisted solely of 125 shares of Erwin Park's class C stock and accumulated income therefrom. In each of the taxable years Erwin Park issued dividend checks in favor of petitioner, as trustee, on the class C stock held by each trust. The checks were deposited to her account as trustee. As trustee, petitioner filed fiduciary income tax returns and 7 T.C. 890">*893 paid the tax due on the dividend income received by each of the trusts in the respective amounts of $ 3,400, $ 12,000, $ 12,400, and $ 13,400 for the years 1938, 1939, 1940, and 1941. In the year following the year of receipt of the dividends petitioner disposed of the net dividend income from each trust as follows:
Available for | ||||
Year | disposition | To W. Funk | To petitioner | Accumulated |
1939 | $ 3,268.00 | $ 3,200.00 | $ 68.00 | |
1940 | 11,091.00 | $ 11,000.00 | 91.00 | |
1941 | 11,203.20 | 9,000.00 | 2,000.00 | 203.20 |
1942 | 10,671.00 | 5,000.00 | 5,500.00 | 171.00 |
Petitioner did not discuss the question of the distribution of the trust income with anyone. She exercised her own discretion and was the sole judge of how the net income was distributed or accumulated.
Petitioner reported in her Federal income tax 1946 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 68">*77 return for 1938, which was filed on March 15, 1939, gross income of $ 6,647.55. She did not report $ 13,600 gross income of the four trusts. Petitioner filed her Federal income tax return for 1939 on March 14, 1940, reporting gross income of $ 33,154.46. She did not include in her return $ 48,000 gross income of the four trusts.
OPINION.
The issue in this case is whether petitioner is taxable under section 22 (a) of the Revenue Act of 1938 and the Internal Revenue Code on the income of trusts A, B, C, and D. Petitioner was not the grantor of the trusts. Her husband was. Moreover, he retained the power to dispose of the corpus by will when the trusts terminated upon his death. But during the life of the trusts petitioner was the sole trustee, with the power to pay the income to herself or her husband, or to divide it between them, or to accumulate and add it to principal. This power of distribution or apportionment was to be exercised in accordance with petitioner's own and her husband's respective needs, of which, however, she was the sole judge, not subject to the control of her husband or any other person. During the taxable years she distributed some of the income to herself1946 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 68">*78 and some to her husband. The rest she accumulated.
Under the revenue acts the touchstone of taxability of trust income is, for the most part, quite different for the grantor than for the trustee or beneficiary of a trust. Before the creation of a trust the grantor is the owner of the property and as the owner has to pay the tax, under section 22 (a), on the income derived therefrom. If he gives away only the income he still has to pay the tax.
Moreover, even though a grantor does not retain such control over the administration and management of the trust corpus and disposition of the trust income as to justify taxing him on the trust income under section 22 (a), he still may have to bear the tax under the provisions of sections 166 or 167. For if a grantor transfers property in trust and gives the trustee discretion to pay the income or corpus back to him, the trustee
However, taxation of the trustee and beneficiary presents a different problem. Neither the trustee nor the beneficiary had any relation to the property forming the corpus of the trust before the trust was set up. They were not taxable on the income of the property before the trust was created. Hence, if a trustee, other than a grantor, is given powers over trust property which, if held by a grantor, would make the grantor taxable, the trustee does not necessarily come within the purview of section 22 (a) and become liable for tax. A trustee who is not the grantor may have broad powers of control over the management and administration of the trust corpus and may have discretion to dispose of the income among a wide class of beneficiaries, but in the absence of his being able to receive any of the income or corpus personally or in discharge of his obligations, it would be difficult to assert that he is taxable under section 22 (a). See
However, although
Applying these principles to the facts of the instant case, we see that respondent has rightfully assessed the income of the four trusts against petitioner. Petitioner was the sole trustee, with the unrestricted power during the taxable years, as we shall presently demonstrate, to distribute the income to herself personally. It should be noted that the question of whether a beneficiary is taxable on trust income under
As the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit said in
In
The Circuit Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit made this same observation itself in
And in
It is claimed, however, that, whatever rights petitioner1946 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 68">*89 had, she had those rights as trustee, subject to the control of a court of equity. Also, that she did not have the unrestricted power to take all of the income, since it was to be either distributed in accordance with the respective needs of petitioner and her husband, or accumulated, which, when once done, removed the income from her control. We do not believe, however, that these contentions can remove the instant case from the authority of the
Petitioner's husband was a man of great wealth. It is inconceivable that the husband, having voluntarily placed such broad discretionary powers in his wife, and having no need for the trust income during the taxable years, could successfully have complained in a court of equity in New Jersey that the trustee elected to pay all of the income to herself. In any event, as the court in
There is no suggestion in the record in 1946 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 68">*91 this case that conditions existed during the taxable years relative to the respective needs of petitioner and her husband which, had petitioner taken all of the income, would have made her guilty of such gross and callous disregard of her husband's needs, as compared to her own, that a court could be summoned to compel her to give her husband some measure of relief. That the husband did receive some of the trust income is unimportant. On the record, this distribution to him was a matter of petitioner's grace and beyond his control. Petitioner has not shown the minimum which a court would have compelled her to give away or accumulate. Everything above such amount petitioner could have kept as her own by reason of the absolute discretionary power conferred upon her in the trust instrument. The intent of the grantor of the trusts is demonstrated also in the subsequent letters between the parties, set forth in the findings of fact. Without a showing of a minimum amount distributable to her husband, petitioner must be considered as having had absolute command over all of the income.
During the taxable years here in question, therefore, we hold that petitioner has failed to demonstrate1946 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 68">*92 that her power and command over the income was sufficiently hedged in by the language of the trust instruments so as to relieve her from tax on all of the income 7 T.C. 890">*899 under section 22 (a). We take the view that she was the owner of all of the income of the trusts, and that the income which she paid to her husband and income accumulated were gifts to him.
It is true that under the trust instruments stock dividends were beyond the control of petitioner, since they could not be distributed but had to be added to principal. But there is no suggestion that any of the income which respondent seeks to tax to petitioner consisted of stock dividends. To the extent that stock dividend income would not be subject to petitioner's control because it had to be added to principal, she could not be taxed on it. But this does not relieve her from liability for tax on income which she could have distributed to herself during the taxable years in question.
This likewise disposes of the contention that, since petitioner's powers were given to her
Finally, it is asserted that the instant case comes within the text of
1946 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 68">*96 We hold that petitioner is taxable under section 22 (a) on the income of trusts A, B, C, and D for the taxable years here in question. The assessment of the deficiencies for the years 1938 and 1939 as determined by respondent is not barred by the statute of limitations, for the reason that petitioner's returns for those years understated her proper gross income by more than 25 per cent and the notice of deficiencies was mailed to petitioner within five years after her returns for those years were filed.
Disney,
Regulations 103, section 19.162-1, applicable to the taxable years here in question, provides:
There is taxable to the estate or to the trust, 1946 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 68">*98 unless it be taxable to the
The regulation, of course, merely follows the above statute, since it provides for payment of the tax by the fiduciary
The income here involved was returned as such and income tax paid thereon by the petitioner as fiduciary, in accordance with
That the above regulation should be given weight is indicated clearly in
* * * Unless in the meantime the difficulty be resolved by statute or treasury regulation, we leave it to future judicial decisions to determine precisely where the line shall be drawn between gifts of income-producing property and gifts of income from property of which the donor remains the owner, for all substantial and practical purposes. * * *
Despite the statute, and despite the position taken by the Treasury Department in the regulation above, that tax shall be upon the fiduciary, "
Reliance is placed, among other cases less applicable, upon
Sound application of authority requires closer relation between facts and legal conclusion in the case cited, and much more similarity to the factual and statutory situation involved in the case to which the citation is applied, than exists between
The
Likewise, reliance is placed on its
That mere power,
Referring now generally to the cases above analyzed, and others cited, it seems to me that the essential idea governing decision in cases applying section 22 (a) to1946 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 68">*110 trusts is that of approximation in the taxpayer of an owner's rights and powers, 2 and that the
Is the petitioner's status as trustee to be disregarded, because she is sole trustee? Had she been both sole beneficiary and sole trustee as to the same identical interest, the general law of trusts1946 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 68">*112 is that the trust would fail by merger.
It is no objection to the validity of a trust that the trustee named is one of the beneficiaries,
Though the trust instrument here made petitioner "sole judge" of the "respective needs" according to the circumstances of the two beneficiaries, her husband and herself, the fact remains that there were two beneficiaries, and their respective needs and circumstances were in the mind of the settlor. We have not only distinguished between the capacity of one person as fiduciary and individual, on this question of taxability,
* * * It is true that the creator of this trust had reserved to himself the broadest rights of management. His discretion was to be "absolute1946 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 68">*114 and uncontrolled." 7 T.C. 890">*907 That does not mean, however, that it might be recklessly or willfully abused. He had made himself a trustee; and in so doing he had subjected himself to those obligations of fidelity and diligence that attach to the office of trustee. He had power to "invest" the moneys committed to his care. He had no power, under cover of an investment, to loan them to himself. His discretion, however broad, did not relieve him from obedience to the great principles of equity which are the life of every trust. * * *
Thus we approve the holding that even an expression that discretion was to be "absolute and uncontrolled" does not abolish fiduciary duty, and that a court of equity will protect beneficiaries. To the same effect is
The majority opinion suggests that under the
The trust instrument involved in this case recites that it is to be governed by, and administered under, the laws of New Jersey, and the returns were filed in New Jersey. In
New Jersey will not support an unfair use by a fiduciary of discretionary powers.
The
In
Recently we followed
In this case I can have no doubt that, had petitioner's husband suffered financial reverses and needed some of the trust income, no court of equity would have denied him relief from arbitrary misuse of discretion in adjudging the "respective needs" and "according to the circumstances," 1946 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 68">*120 as expressed in the trust instrument and the letters. Yet, if this be true, we have a negation of the idea upon which taxation of petitioner is based -- disregard of her fiduciary position.
Under all of the language used in the trust instrument, and the letters 3 between petitioner and her husband, and under the facts, in my opinion, there was such right in the husband as cobeneficiary as to require recognition of the position of the petitioner as trustee, and it may not soundly be said that her discretion so enabled her to take all of the trust income that all should be taxed to her, regardless of whether she actually received it. Petitioner's discretion was as to annual payment of income "in accordance with our respective needs, of which she shall be sole judge" in the words of the trust instrument. On the same day she and her husband exchanged letters to clarify the matters. Therein we find the grantor stating that his objective was to provide income "which you may dispose of according to the circumstances which you find to exist
In
Finally, the majority opinion points out that the petitioner had power, upon her death or resignation, to designate by will or other writing, a successor-trustee with the same power as she had, and that there was no restriction on the identity of such successor. But this surely removes any doubt whatever as to whether petitioner's powers were as trustee. (The majority opinion expresses such doubt, stating that it is difficult to state categorically that she held the powers as trustee or as beneficiary. How can there be such doubt when she is 7 T.C. 890">*911 not grantor and the trust instrument and letters, her only source of power, specifically provide that she is to hold "in trust," and constantly refer to her as "trustee" and never as an individual?) The successor is to be
In none of the cases relied on by the majority opinion do I find a situation analogous to the one here presented, where the petitioner is not only a trustee-beneficiary, but had a duty of considering, annually according to circumstances, at a set time, the "respective needs" of her husband as well as her own. Thus in
* * * The test is impalpable enough at best; but if it is to be continually refined by successive distinctions, each trifling in itself, we shall end in a morass from which there will be no escape; and the spate of decisions already poured upon us will be the earnest of eventual utter confusion.
I respectfully dissent.
1.
2. For example,
3.
(a) Application of Tax. -- The taxes imposed by this chapter upon individuals shall apply to the income of estates or of any kind of property held in trust, including --
* * * *
(4) Income which, in the discretion of the fiduciary, may be either distributed to the beneficiaries or accumulated.
* * * *↩
1.
(a) Application of Tax. -- The taxes imposed by this title upon individuals shall apply to the income of estates or of any kind of property held in trust, including --
* * * *
(4) Income which, in the discretion of the fiduciary may be either distributed to the beneficiaries or accumulated.
(b) Computation and Payment. -- The tax shall be computed upon the net income of the estate or trust, and shall be paid by the fiduciary, except as provided in section 166 (relating to revocable trusts) and
2. "The evident policy of the Revenue Act is to tax the income to the grantor of a trust when he retains the substantial mastery over the
3. The trust instrument and letters, executed all on the same day and referring to the same subject, constitute one contract.