1969 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 77">*77
Decedent established two inter vivos trusts with a reserved life estate, two secondary life estates, and ultimate remainders to named charities. The sole corporate trustee was given discretionary power to allocate receipts and expenditures between principal and income and to invest in wasting assets without provision for a reserve or sinking fund.
52 T.C. 830">*830 OPINION
Respondent determined a deficiency in petitioner's estate tax in the amount of $ 56,308.82. The sole issue for our determination is whether the remainder interests in two trusts established by the decedent qualify for a charitable deduction pursuant to
All of the facts are stipulated and are found accordingly.
52 T.C. 830">*831 Petitioner is the executor of the Estate of Lillie MacMunn Stewart, deceased, who died on May 6, 1964. His legal residence at the time of filing the petition herein was Madison, N.J. The estate tax return was filed with the district director of internal revenue, Newark, N.J.
On May 24, 1960, the decedent created two trusts by means of separate agreements which named the Hanover Bank, a trust company and1969 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 77">*80 bank organized under the laws of New York, now known as the Manufacturers Hanover Trust Co., as sole trustee.
The trusts provided that the income be paid to the decedent for life, then to her sister, Ethel MacMunn Henderson, for life, and then to her sister's husband, W. Alan Henderson, for life. Upon the death of all the life tenants, the corpus was to be distributed to named charities, which respondent concedes meet the requirements of charitable organizations specified in
Both trust agreements are identical, except that paragraph 3 below appears only in the provisions governing trust A, and provide in pertinent part:
3. The trustee may pay or apply to or for the use of the grantor so much of the principal, even to the extent of the whole thereof, that it may in its sole discretion deem to be necessary or desirable for her support, care, comfort, and well-being.
4. The trustee shall have the following powers, authority, and discretion, which it may exercise in its sole and absolute discretion whenever and as often as it may deem advisable without application to or approval by any Court, namely:
To retain any property herewith or hereafter placed in trust, and1969 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 77">*81 to receive, invest in and retain stocks (whether common or preferred), bonds, securities, undivided interests in any real and personal property, shares or interests in investment companies or investment trusts, any Common Trust Fund maintained by the corporate trustee, and any property, real or personal, foreign or domestic, whether or not wasting assets, without any duty to diversify and without any restriction placed upon fiduciaries by any present or future applicable law, rule of court or court decision, and from time to time to hold property uninvested without liability for interest or loss of income.
* * * *
To apportion to principal or to income or in part to both any rents, dividends, interest or other income accrued or declared, but unpaid, in respect of any property at the time of the receipt of such property by the trustee, any dividend of whatever kind or nature, any property received upon any exchange, reorganization, recapitalization, consolidation, merger or dissolution, any rents, royalty or payment received in respect of any so-called "Wasting asset" or so-called "unproductive property" or any other receipt whatsoever, to determine whether or to amortize in whole 1969 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 77">*82 or in part the premium at which any property may be received or held or any depreciation on or any expense in connection with any property, real or personal, to discontinue any sinking fund or depreciation or depletion reserve and to treat the same as income in whole or in part and to pay from principal or income or in part from both any deficit from the operation of any improved or unimproved property or any charge against the trust estate, to distribute property determined to be income and to hold property determined to be principal without liability to any person then or thereafter interested in 52 T.C. 830">*832 the trust estate, upon the termination of any trust to pay any accrued rents, dividends, interest or other income, to the next estate without apportionment and in connection with the foregoing to follow or depart, in whole or in part, from any rule of law; provided that nothing herein shall authorize an illegal accumulation of income.
In all matters to administer and invest the trust estate as fully and freely as an individual owner might do, without any restrictions to which fiduciaries are ordinarily subject, except the duty to act in good faith and with reasonable care.
* * 1969 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 77">*83 * *
12. This indenture shall be construed, regulated, and administered in all respects in accordance with the laws of the State of New York, except as otherwise herein expressly provided.
At all times between the date the trusts were established and the date of death, the assets of both trusts consisted entirely of small amounts of cash and publicly traded stocks and debt obligations of well-known business corporations and governmental agencies.
Because of the life interest retained by the decedent, it is not disputed that the corpus of each trust was properly includable in the decedent's gross estate under section 2036.
The sole question herein is whether the discretionary authority given the corporate trustee by the governing instruments (i.e., to allocate receipts and expenditures between principal and income and to invest in wasting assets without provision for a reserve or sinking fund) precludes the deductibility under
Respondent's position is that the discretionary powers thus conferred upon1969 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 77">*85 the trustee were totally unrestricted and that, even if local law imposed some limitation on the free exercise of those powers, the applicable standard of conduct was not sufficiently strict and definite. He therefore asserts that they constituted a power of invasion, albeit
1969 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 77">*86 Previous cases have dealt with the impact of discretionary trustee powers of
Both parties agree that the scope of the discretionary powers herein should be determined under New York law and have cited numerous 52 T.C. 830">*834 decisions of the New York courts to support their positions. Respondent asserts that the broad powers of the trustee are at most subject to judicial interference only in the event of an arbitrary exercise thereof. Petitioner, on the other hand, claims that the trustee would be required both to act in good faith and to exercise reasonable judgment within the scope of the plan and intention of the settlor. We see no1969 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 77">*88 useful purpose to be served by a detailed exposition of the New York decisions, since each case dealing with the interpretation of a trustee's powers ultimately turns upon its own particular facts and is therefore distinguishable. We have concluded that petitioner's analysis is the correct one.
It is clear that the grant of discretion to a trustee, however broad, does not "relieve him from obedience to the great principles of equity which are the life of every trust."
It is beyond dispute that the testamentary trustees owe equal duties to the income beneficiaries and the remaindermen. One obligation to the remaindermen is to safeguard the trust corpus but no obligation is owed to incur speculative risks to increase the corpus. * * * An obligation to the income beneficiaries is to maintain the trust funds in investments that are productive of income. 5
See also
1969 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 77">*90 The thrust of New York law is further reflected in a statutory provision declaring void any provision exonerating a fiduciary "from liability for failure to exercise reasonable care, diligence, and prudence." See
52 T.C. 830">*835 The New York cases relied upon by respondent are all distinguishable on their facts. Many of them involved the right of a trustee to invade corpus in light of the demonstrated concern of the settlor for the income beneficiary, a factor not present herein. The emphasis in some of the opinions upon a standard of arbitrariness as the measure of a trustee's responsibility occurred in the context of factual situations where the trustee was held liable for having acted arbitrarily, and thus was directed toward the negative proposition of imposing an outer limit of responsibility rather than a positive standard of conduct. The decedent herein provided, in one of the trust instruments, that the trustee might, during the term of her reserved life estate, invade the whole of the corpus for her "support, 1969 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 77">*91 care, comfort and well being." No such provision appears in the other trust instrument, in which the decedent also reserved a life estate. Nor does any such provision appear for the benefit of decedent's sister and brother-in-law, who became the income beneficiaries at decedent's death. Such a clear indication of the decedent's knowledge and use of a power of direct invasion bears heavily against interpreting discretionary powers of administration in the trustee as creating a power of indirect invasion for the benefit of the income beneficiaries, especially since there is no indication whatsoever of any intent on the part of the decedent to favor such beneficiaries at the expense of the charitable remaindermen.
We think it also significant that, at all times between the establishment of the trusts and the decedent's death, the assets of the trusts consisted entirely of small amounts of cash and publicly traded stocks and debt obligations of well-known business corporations and governmental agencies. Thus, we need not concern ourselves with situations where at the date of death there was an actual or indicated pattern of investment in wasting assets or securities involving capital1969 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 77">*92 gains distributions (e.g., regulated investment companies) and we specifically abjure expressing any opinion in respect thereto. Compare
1969 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 77">*93 Finally, we note that an independent third party, i.e., a bank, was named sole trustee and that the governing instruments herein expressly imposed upon the trustee a "duty to act in good faith and with reasonable care." The presence or absence of such a provision has been a critical factor in determining whether a trust in which the decedent-settlor-trustee 52 T.C. 830">*836 has broad discretionary powers should be included in the gross estate under section 2036 or section 2038. Compare
It cannot be gainsaid that in theory the trustee herein might use its discretionary powers to allocate to income amounts that might, 1969 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 77">*94 as an a priori matter, be technically allocable to corpus, and thereby impair the charitable remainders. But such theoretical possibility is not determinative. As Mr. Justice Holmes observed in
Cases of this type inevitably involve the difficult task of line drawing -- a task which requires the1969 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 77">*95 placing of a particular case on one side of the line or the other, based upon an analysis of all the facts. See
Under all the circumstances herein, we think there was no more likelihood that the corporate trustee would or could, in light of New York law, utilize its discretionary powers as a substitute power of invasion for the benefit of the income beneficiaries than there would be in a situation where such provisions were not included in the governing instruments. Cf.
We conclude, and we so find, that the charitable remainders were "presently ascertainable" and that the possibility that they would not take effect was "so remote as to be negligible." The claimed deduction should be allowed under
To reflect the other agreements of the parties,
1. All references, unless otherwise specified, are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as amended.↩
2.
(a) In General. -- For purposes of the tax imposed by * * * * (2) to or for the use of any corporation organized and operated exclusively for religious, charitable, scientific, literary, or educational purposes * * *↩
3. We consider
4.
(a)
(b)
[Emphasis added.]↩
5. Compare
6. We note also that