Brody v. Commissioner

19 T.C. 126, 1952 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 58
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedNovember 4, 1952
DocketDocket Nos. 33965, 33966
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 19 T.C. 126 (Brody v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brody v. Commissioner, 19 T.C. 126, 1952 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 58 (tax 1952).

Opinion

OPINION.

Hill, Judge:

The petitioners in 1947 and again in 1948 transferred certain real property in trust for the benefit of their six children and ten grandchildren, thus creating 16 separate trusts; one for each beneficiary. Each trust provided for the payment of its net income to the beneficiary for life until February 21, 1967, when the trust was to terminate and the corpus was to be distributed to the income beneficiary unless the trust had been previously terminated pursuant to an exercise of the unlimited discretion to accelerate distribution of the corpus given to the trustees.

The gifts of corpus are gifts of future interests with respect to which exclusions are not allowable.1 Enjoyment of the corpus is deferred by the terms of the instrument until either February 21, 1967, or such time as the trustees in the exercise of their discretion determine to accelerate enjoyment. Since this is true, the gifts of corpus did not create a right in the donees to immediate enjoyment. United States v. Pelzer, 312 U. S. 399. The fact that these interests vested at their creation does not constitute them present interests. Andrew Geller, 9 T. C. 484.

The petitioners recognize the rule set forth by the statute and cases and admit that the gifts of corpus made by them would ordinarily be future interests. However, they argue that the gifts of corpus to the ten minor grandchildren constitute present interests because the minors received as of the date of such gifts as much of the use, possession, and enjoyment of every interest or estate which they could possibly have received under the laws of New Jersey. To support their contention, they rely upon the fact that a minor, under the laws of the State of New Jersey, may not be entrusted with the custody or control of property, and any use or enjoyment of the emoluments thereof must be realized through a guardian or trustee. Thus, the petitioners argue, in order to make an effective gift of realty of which the minors could have the use, possession, and enjoyment, the device of guardianship or trusteeship must be used. It appears at once that the petitioners have neglected to distinguish between the purposes which may legally be accomplished by the use of trusts or guardianship. See Scott on Trusts, vol. 1, sec. T, pp. 60-61.

In the case at bar, ownership of the property was not given to the minors with actual control in the guardian until the owners became of age; rather trusts were created to last in all but one instance far beyond the coming of age of each minor beneficiary. Thus, the interests created were future interests.

In support of their argument on this point, petitioners rely upon Kieckhefer v. Commissioner, 189 F. 2d 118, and Commissioner v. Sharp, 153 F. 2d 163. Neither of these cases sustains the petitioners’ argument here. No right was given to the minor beneficiaries herein to acquire the property free of the trusts before the termination date set forth in the instrument. The court in the Kieclchefer case pointed out that were it not for the minor beneficiary’s power to require the trustee to distribute income and corpus to him, the interests there would have been future interests. As the court in the Kieckhefer case pointed out, the minority of the beneficiary can not convert what would otherwise be a present interest into a future interest. By the same token the minority of the beneficiariés herein can not convert what are otherwise future interests into present interests.

The instant case is in no way like Commissioner v. Sharp, supra. The issue there was whether the gift of trust income to a minor beneficiary was a gift of a present interest.

The petitioners also rely on Strekalovsky v. Delaney, 78 F. Supp. 556. In that case the trusts provided that upon the demand of a legally appointed guardian of any of the beneficiaries the entire share was to be paid to the guardian. The trusts also provided that during the beneficiary’s minority the trustee should pay any part of the beneficiary’s share for the beneficiary’s benefit as if the interest of the beneficiary were held by the trustee as guardian and as if the trustee were making payment and distributions in that capacity. Concerning this the court said:

* * * the second use and purpose above quoted could not set out more clearly that it was the intent of the donor to make an absolute gift for the present use and benefit of each of her children. This is clearly brought out in the last three lines wherein she specified that the trustee was to hold as though he were a guardian. * * *

It is not necessary for us to go into the arguments made by the District Court in deciding the Strekalovsky case. It is sufficient to state that the facts of the instant case do not fall within the facts relied upon by the District Court in laying down its opinion. The petitioners’ instrument in no way indicates an intention that the trustees hold as guardian for the minor beneficiaries.

If in fact it was the intention of the petitioners to give to the minor beneficiaries herein as great an interest in the ownership, possession and enjoyment of the trust corpus as was permitted by the laws of New Jersey, and we can not find that this was in fact the case, the device chosen by them falls far short of their purpose. The petitioners are bound by the plain terms of their own instrument.

The gifts to the minor children of the corpus were gifts of future interests and by the terms of. the statute no exclusion is permissible as to them.

Two of the petitioners’ children are trustees of all the trusts. In their own trusts they are both trustee and beneficiary. As pointed out in our findings of fact, under paragraph 2 (b) of the trust agreement the trustees had the power in their sole, absolute, and unlimited discretion to accelerate the distribution of corpus to any of the beneficiaries of the trusts, including themselves. From this the petitioners argue that the gifts of corpus to the two trustee-beneficiaries constitute present gifts for the reason that their dominion and control over their respective trust corpus was for all practical purposes outright ownership. An examination of the trust provision on which the petitioners rely to support their argument on this point indicates that the trustees’ discretion to accelerate was one which must be exercised jointly. Neither could accelerate the enjoyment of the corpus of his trust without the consent of the other. Thus, the rights of each trustee fall far short of the ownership claimed by the petitioners. We, therefore, hold that the gifts of corpus to the two trustee-beneficiaries were future interests for which no exclusion is permissible.

It has long been held that a transfer of property in trust may create a present interest in the income and a future interest in the corpus. Sensenbrenner v. Commissioner, 134 F. 2d 883; Fisher v. Commissioner, 132 F. 2d 383. Were it not for paragraph 2 (b) of the instrument here in question, the petitioners would be entitled to the exclusions for which they argue with respect to the gifts of income to each of the sixteen beneficiaries.

Paragraph 2 (b) of the instrument provides as follows:

2.

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Tyler v. Commissioner
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Brody v. Commissioner
19 T.C. 126 (U.S. Tax Court, 1952)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 T.C. 126, 1952 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brody-v-commissioner-tax-1952.