Petitioners, husband and wife, created two trusts. They purportedly conveyed their lifetime services and other personal property to one of the trusts and their residence to the other. Petitioner husband also created a third trust to which he purportedly conveyed a personal automobile. The trust documents for each trust granted petitioners, as trustees, the authority to distribute all trust income to themselves without the approval or consent of an adverse party.
MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION
STERRETT,
Addition to tax under | ||
Year | Deficiency | sec. 6653(a) |
1975 | $ 2,151 | $ 108 |
1976 | 5,218 | 261 |
The issues for our decision are: (1) whether the attempted conveyance of petitioners' lifetime services to a family trust was effective to relieve petitioners of liability for income taxes on a portion of their earnings; (2) alternatively, whether petitioners are to be treated as owners of the purported family trusts under
FINDINGS OF FACT
Some of the facts have been stipulated and are so found. The stipulation of facts together with the exhibits attached thereto are incorporated herein by this reference.
Petitioners Robert A. Broncatti, Sr. and Audrey Broncatti, husband and wife, resided in Milwaukee, Wisconsin at the time the petition 1981 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 297">*299 as filed herein. They filed joint Federal income tax returns for the calendar years 1975 and 1976 with the Internal Revenue Service Center in Kansas City, Missouri.
At all times material to this case, petitioner Robert A. Broncatti, Sr. was an employee of Hickey Cartage of Indiana, Inc., Meurer Bakeries and Local 200 of the Teamsters Union. Petitioner Audrey Broncatti was an employee of the Board of School Directors in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. During the years in issue, petitioners had two adult children, Nicholas A. and Anthony J. Broncatti, and four minor children, Robert A., Jr., Donald J., Nancy J. and Ann M. Broncatti.
On June 30, 1975 petitioners executed preprinted documents entitled "Declaration of Trust of this Constitutional Trust." These documents purportedly created three separate trusts: Brandant System (A Trust), Brandant Homestead (A Trust), and Brandant Transport (A Trust). The purpose of each trust, as set forth in the trust documents, was as follows:
[Brandant Systems (A Trust)]
[Brandant Homestead (A Trust)]
[Brandant Transport (A Trust)]
The trusts otherwise contained identical provisions, which are, in pertinent part, set forth below:
The above named Trustees, for themselves and their successors in Trust, do hereby accept the IRREVOCABLE conveyance in trust and acknowledge delivery of all the property specified, together with all the terms of the Trust herein set forth, 1981 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 297">*302 agreeing to conserve and improve the Trust, to invest and reinvest the funds of said Trust in such manner as will increase the financial rating of the Trust (estate) during the period of outstanding liabilities of the various properties and enterprises in commerce for gain, exercising their best judgment and discretion, in accordance with the Trust minutes, making distributions of portions of the proceeds and income as in their discretion, and according to the minutes, should be made, making complete periodic reports of business transactions, and upon final liquidation distributing the assets to the beneficiaries as their interests may appear; and in all other respects administering said Trust (estate) in good faith strictly in conformity hereto.
The signing and acknowledging of this Agreement by such initial Trustees or the signing and acknowledging of appropriate minutes by Trustees subsequently elected or appointed, shall constitute their acceptance of this Trust; and the Trust property, assets and emoluments thereof shall immediately vest in the new Trustee or Trustees without any further act or conveyance.
Resolutions of the Board of Trustees authorizing a special thing to be 1981 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 297">*303 done shall be evidence that such act is within its power. Any one lending or paying money to the Board of Trustees shall not be obliged to see the application thereof, all funds paid into the treasury are and become a part of the CORPUS of the Trust.
ADMINISTRATION
The Trustees shall regard this instrument as their sufficient guide, supplemented from time to time by resolutions of their Board [said resolution to be ratified ALWAYS by a MAJORITY of the Board of Trustees then in office and participating in the issuing meeting] covering contingencies as they arise and recorded in the minutes of their meetings, or by by-laws, rules or regulations, as deemed expedient and consistent with the orderly conduct of business.
OFFICERS and MANAGEMENT
The Trustees may in their discretion elect among their number a President, Secretary and Treasurer, or any other officers they may deem expedient for proper functioning. * * *
EXPENDITURES
The Trustees shall fix and pay compensation of all officers, employees or agents in their discretion, and may pay themselves such reasonable compensation for their services as may be determined by a MAJORITY of the Board of Trustees.
DOCUMENT
It is expressly 1981 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 297">*304 decalred [
CERTIFICATES of INTEREST
For convenience the equitable interests for distribution shall be divided into One Hundred (100) units * * *.
DEATH - INSOLVENCY - BANKRUPTCY
Ownership of a beneficial certificate shall not entitle the holder to any legal title in or to the Trust property, nor any undivided interest therein, nor in the management thereof, nor shall the death of a holder entitle his heirs or legal representatives to demand any partition of division of the property of the Turst [
DURATION - CLOSURE
This Trust shall continue for a period of twenty-five years from date, unless the Trustees shall unanimously determine upon an earlier date. The Trustees1981 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 297">*305 may at their discretion, because of threatened depreciation in values, or other good and sufficient reason, liquidate the assets, distribute and close the Trust at any earlier date determined by them. The Trust shall be proportionately and in a pro rata manner distributed to the beneficiaries. * * *
The initial trustees of the purported trusts were petitioners' two sons, Nicholas A. and Authony J. On June 30, 1975 petitioners filled out a preprinted form which purported to be minutes of the first meeting of the Brandant System (A Trust) Board of Trustees. Pursuant to this document, three additional persons, the petitioners and Mary Taylor (the wife of the author of the purported trusts) were elected trustees of such trust. 1 At this same meeting, the trustees agreed to accept petitioners' "lifetime services including all his [her] earned remuneration from any outside source" and certain other personal property belonging to petitioners. Such other personal property included petitioners' home furnishings, tools and related items. In exchange, petitioners received 100 units of beneficial interest, which constituted all the units of beneficial ownership of the trust. The minutes 1981 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 297">*306 continued by providing that the conveyances contemplated therein would not be "consummated by sale, gift, bargain, grant or deed.
On July 1, 1975 petitioners each executed a "Conveying Agreement" and, in concert, executed a "Bill of Sale" purporting to affect the aforementioned conveyances. In return, petitioners each received 50 units of beneficial interest of the Brandant System (A Trust).
At a trustees meeting for the Brandant System (A Trust) on July 1, 1975, petitioner Rober A. Broncatti, Sr. allegedly was elected to be so-called "Trust Manager." The duties of the "Trust Manager" were to handle the day-to-day operations of the Trust. In addition, petitioner Audrey Broncatti purportedly was elected by the trustees to be "Trust Secretary" whose duties were to maintain trust records. 2 With respect to the Brandant System (A Trust), petitioners purportedly were bound by employment contracts to perform services as manager and secretary for their natural 1981 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 297">*307 lives in exchange for remuneration in the form of management fees and payment by the trust of petitioners' personal expenses.
At a trustees meeting on July 4, 1975 petitioners had the trustees of Brandant System (A Trust) cancel the 50 units that each of the petitioners owned and convey 25 units to each of their minor children. The beneficial units were evidenced by certificates which stated, in part:
This Certificate conveys no interest of any kind in the Trust assets, management or control thereof.
Benefits hereby conveyed consist solely of the emoluments as distributed by the actions of the trustees and nothing more.
Also, the minutes of this meeting stated that--
a. Beneficial Certificates convey NO legal title or beneficial interest in and to the Trust Corpus [assets], nor any undivided interest therein, except in the event of CLOSURE.
b. Beneficial Certificates convey NO voice in the management or control of the Trust.
c. Beneficial Certificates DO CONVEY a right to receive the certificate's Pro Rata share of emoluments that 1981 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 297">*308 MAY BE distributed by the action of the MAJORITY of the Trustees.
d. Beneficial Certificates are non-taxable as personal property, non-assessable, non-negotiable, but are transferable and unimpeachable, except for fraud.
These same minutes went on to provide:
That, the prime responsibility of the Board of Trustees is to manage THIS TRUST, its business and its corpus in such a manner as to assure the maximum possible comfort and support and peace of mind for the immediate, blood members of The Robert A. Sr. & Audrey S. Broncatti Family as is possible. * * *
The Brandant Homestead (A Trust) issued all of its 100 units of beneficial interest to petitioners, 50 units each, in exchange for the transfer of petitioners' personal residence to the trust, purportedly accomplished pursuant to a Quitclaim Deed dated July 1, 1975. The Brandant Transport (A Trust) issued all of its 100 units of beneficial interest to petitioners, 50 units each, in exchange for a purported transfer of petitioners' personal automobile to the trust.
Petitioners determined that the trusts would, and in fact did, file their fiduciary returns on a calendar year basis. Accordingly, the first taxable year of each 1981 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 297">*309 trust spanned the period from July 1, 1975 to December 31, 1975.
Expenditures for all of the so-called trusts were disbursed from a checking account which was in the name of the Brandant System (A Trust). The petitioners, as officers and trustees, had discretionary authority to expend moneys from the account. Indeed, only petitioners possessed such authority because they were the only individuals authorized to transact business on the account. During the years in issue petitioners exercised this authority to pay their personal expenses.
For instance, checks were disbursed to Brandant Homestead (A Trust) and Brandant Transport (A Trust) and the amount of these were reported by the trusts as rental income. Brandant Homestead (A Trust) used these funds to maintain petitioners' personal residence. Similarly, Brandant Transport (A Trust) used these funds to maintain petitioners' automobile. On their fiduciary income tax returns for the years in issue, the trusts deducted the maintenance expenses 3 and reported depreciation deductions for the respective assets.
Beginning in July 1975 petitioners 1981 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 297">*310 transferred the salaries they received from their employers to the Brandant System (A Trust). 4 These transferred salaries, totaling $ 10,332.54 in 1975 and $ 21,383.05 in 1976, were not reported as income on petitioners' Federal income tax returns for those years. Rather, such amounts were included in the computation of income by the Brandant System (A Trust) for the years in issue. 5
Petitioners reported income from trust remunerations of only $ 1,149.73 in 1975 and $ 9,207.36 in 1976. Brandant System (A Trust) deducted such amounts from income in those years. Petitioners arrived at these income figures based upon their perceptions regarding what they considered to be their "fair share of taxes."
During the years in issue, Brandant System (A Trust) distributed checks 1981 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 297">*311 to its beneficiaries, petitioners' minor children. 6 Generally, these checks were deposited in petitioner Audrey Broncatti's personal bank account. The distributed moneys then were used to support petitioners' family (i.e., for food and clothing).
Despite the alleged transfer of petitioners' property, including their house, furnishings, tools and automobile, to the purported trusts, petitioners use of these personal items remained unchanged. Also, petitioners' relationships with their employers did not change (i.e., their duties remained the same). In point of fact, the financial affairs that petitioners allegedly were handling on behalf of the trusts were the same as petitioners' financial affairs prior to the introduction of the trusts.
In his notice of deficiency for the years 1975 and 1976 respondent determined that all income from wages and other miscellaneous income and deductions reported by the trusts 71981 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 297">*312 were reportable by the petitioners. Respondent also determined that the additions to tax under
OPINION
Respondent attacks petitioner's' purported "family trust" arrangement on several grounds including: (1) the assignment of income doctrine, (2) the grantor trust provisions (
We see no need to venture through a 1981 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 297">*313 lengthy analysis of the opposing positions as we are dealing here with some of the most elementary principles of the tax laws. Clearly, petitioners have the right under the Constitution and the law of contracts to create the trusts and purportedly to convey the exclusive use of their lifetime services thereto. However, the tax law is equally clear that compensation for services is taxable to the person who earns it.
For the same reasons expressed in those cases, petitioners' purported conveyance of the exclusive use of their lifetime services to the Brandant System (A Trust) is ineffective to shift petitioners' tax burden to the trust. Rather than acting arbitrarily and in violation of the Constitution as petitioners assert, respondent is properly carrying out his duties of administering the tax laws by making such a determination. Therefore, we concur with respondent's determination and hold that wages earned by petitioners were properly includable in their income.
Turning to the second ground, respondent claims that petitioners were the owners of the subject trusts within the meaning of
Generally,
Where it is specified in this subpart
In other words, an item of income, deduction or credit will be treated as if it had been received or paid directly by the grantor if the grantor is considered the "owner."
Petitioners contend that they have not retained any of the tainted powers over the trusts. 10 However, they have not challenged respondent's determination of the amount of income, deductions or credits reportable by petitioners should they be treated as "owners" under the aforementioned sections. Moreover, respondent appears to have property taken into account the various items of income, deductions and credits reported by the trusts in calculating the deficiency under the grantor trust provisions. Therefore, should we find that petitioners were the owners of the subject trusts within the meaning of the grantor trust provisions, then respondent's determination must be sustained with respect to this issue.
(a) General Rule.--The grantor 1981 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 297">*317 shall be treated as the owner of any portion of a trust, whether or not he is treated as such owner under section 674, whose income without the approval or consent of any adverse party is, or, in the discretion of the grantor or a nonadverse party, or both, may be--
(1) distributed to the grantor or the grantor's spouse;
The term "adverse party" is defined in section 672(a) to mean "any person having a substantial beneficial interest in the trust which would be adversely affected by the exercise on nonexercise of the power which he possesses respecting the trust." Whether the economic arrangements of a trust cause a trustee or other individual to be an adverse party is essentially a factual question dependent on the merits of each particular case.
In the instant case, petitioners were joint grantors of the Brandant System (A Trust) and the Brandant 1981 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 297">*318 Homestead (A Trust) while petitioner Robert A. Broncatti, Sr. was the grantor of the Brandant Transport (A Trust). Petitioners were members of the boards of trustees of such trusts. Under the terms of the trusts, the powers of the boards of trustees were expressed in the broadest of terms, e.g., "Resolution of the Board of Trustees authorizing a special thing to be done shall be evidence that such act is within its power." There can be no doubt that acting as a majority, the boards of trustees had the power to distribute the entire income generated by each trust's corpus to the grantor or the grantor's spouse.
Consequently, the only remaining precondition to having the petitioners treated as the owners of the trusts is whether the boards of trustees could have acted without the approval or consent of an adverse party. The answer is obvious. The trustees, other than petitioners, were Mary Taylor and petitioners' sons, Nicholas A., Anthony J. and Robert A., Jr. Clearly, Mary Taylor, Nicholas A. and Anthony J. were nonadverse parties because they had no direct beneficial interest in the subject trusts. See
The final issue for our decision is whether petitioners are liable for additions to tax under
To reflect the foregoing,
1. In 1976 Mary Taylor died and was replaced as trustee (on Nov. 9, 1976) by another of petitioners' sons, Robert A., Jr. During the period of time material to this case, the same persons were trustees of the purported trusts at issue.↩
2. Petitioners allegedly were elected to the same positions by the trustees of the Brandant Homestead (A Trust) and the Brandant Transport (A Trust).↩
3. Maintenance expenses included interest, taxes, insurance and repairs and maintenance.↩
4. The employers considered the petitioners to be their employees. The trusts had no contact with the employer. Salary checks were made payable to one of the petitioners. ↩
5. The Brandant System (A Trust) deducted Federal and state taxes withheld from petitioners' payroll checks in arriving at trust income.
In 1976 the purported trusts also reported income of $ 468 from a state tax refund and $ 34 of interest income.↩
6. There were no distributions to beneficiaries or remuneration to petitioners from the other two trusts.↩
7. Besides petitioners' wages, respondent determined that petitioners were required to report the following additional items of income:
1975 | 1976 | |
State tax refund | $ 468.00 | |
Interest | 34.00 | |
$ 502.00 |
In addition, respondent determined that petitioners were entitled to the following deductions:
Trustee and officer remuneration | $ 1,149.73 | $ 9,207.36 |
State income tax withholding | 475.13 | 1,085.39 |
Taxes | 276.21 | 673.11 |
Interest | 63.36 | 542.07 |
Deductions | $ 1,964.43 | $ 11,507.93 |
8. See also
9. Because other items of income and deductions besides petitioners' wages are at issue herein, we are compelled to discuss this second ground. See n. 7.↩
10. Petitioners also allege various constitutional violations which we find spurious and without substance. See
12. The resolution of the question whether Robert A., Jr. is an adverse party is inconsequential to our decision herein.↩