Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Davis

132 F.2d 644, 30 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 647, 1943 U.S. App. LEXIS 3946, 1 U.S. Tax Cas. (CCH) 9239
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedJanuary 7, 1943
Docket3784, 3785
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 132 F.2d 644 (Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Davis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Davis, 132 F.2d 644, 30 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 647, 1943 U.S. App. LEXIS 3946, 1 U.S. Tax Cas. (CCH) 9239 (1st Cir. 1943).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

Respondent taxpayers are the executors under the will of George S. Fiske of Boston, Massachusetts, who died on January 18, 1936. The Board of Tax Appeals rendered two decisions, one determining a deficiency in income taxes of the estate for the period January 19-December 31, 1936, and the other determining a deficiency in estate taxes. In each case the Board fixed the deficiency at an amount less than that claimed by the Commissioner. The two cases are brought here by the Commissioner on petitions for review.

From the Commissioner’s brief and statements of counsel at the oral argument, it appears that there remains no real controversy as to the correctness of the Board’s decision in the income tax case (No. 3785). That decision is affirmed on the Board’s opinion, reported in 45 B.T.A. 135.

We proceed to a consideration of the estate tax case (No. 3784). 45 B.T.A. 52. Here, also, we think the Board’s decision was correct. Relevant portions of the applicable revenue act and of the Treasury Regulations are copied in the footnote. 1

*646 George S. Fiske created a trust in 1903. The income of the trust was payable to Fiske for life, and upon his death “said trustees shall hold said property upon the trusts and dispose of the same in such manner as said George S. Fiske may by his last will appoint”, with other provision in default of appointment. Fiske reserved the power, in conjunction with the trustees, to alter the trust in any particular. In his last will Fiske made a number of specific bequests and placed in trust all the residue of his estate, including property over which he had any power of appointment.

The trustees of the 1903 inter vivos trust did not distribute the trust funds immediately upon the death of Fiske on January 18, 1936, but continued to administer the same during the remainder of that year. Meanwhile the said trustees, who were also the executors and testamentary trustees under the decedent’s will, filed a petition in the Probate Court for Suffolk County, Massachusetts, asking instructions as to the disposition of the corpus of the 1903 trust. The Probate Court, on December 1, 1936, ordered the trustees to wind up the affairs of the trust and transfer its assets to themselves as executors, to use them, as if they had been owned outright by Fiske, along with his other assets to pay debts, expenses, taxes and legacies, and to place the remainder in the testamentary trust.

Clearly the 1903 trust did not terminate immediately upon the death of Fiske. It necessarily had to continue for a reasonable time, for the winding up of its affairs and the transfer of its property to the proper persons. See Rothwell v. Rothwell, 1933, 283 Mass. 563, 570, 186 N.E. 662. The Commissioner and respondents agree on this point. The Board explicitly so held in the income tax case (No. 3785), and we do not gather, from a reading of the Board’s opinion, that it intended to hold otherwise in the estate tax case (No. 3784).

The value of the fund distributable under the 1903 trust was not less than $1,992,-146.92. Early in 1937 the trustees received $19,921.47 as a termination charge with respect to such trust. This charge, which was based on 1% of the aforesaid value, is conceded to be a reasonable and customary termination charge, which by long established custom in Massachusetts is payable to trustees when they finally surrender and distribute the property in their hands. In addition, trustees’ commissions of $2,773.72, based upon a percentage of gross income for the year 1936, were paid to the said trustees in 1936.

As executors under the will of George S. Fiske, respondents filed an estate tax return in which they included as part of the gross estate the full value of the trust property under the 1903 trust. In Schedule J-2 of the estate tax return they deducted the sum of $19,921.47, representing the termination charge to which the trustees under the 1903 trust were entitled. The Commissioner disallowed this deduction, and the portion of the deficiency now in *647 dispute is based upon such disallowance. The Board held, overruling the Commissioner, that the termination charge was “a proper charge against the estate, allowed by the laws of Massachusetts, and deductible under section 303(a)(1) of the Revenue Act of 1926 as amended.”

In Massachusetts, trustees’ commissions are not prescribed by statute but are determined by the court on the basis of what is just and reasonable. Mass.G.L.(Ter.Ed.) c. 206, § 16; Parker v. Hill, 1904, 185 Mass. 14, 69 N.E. 336; North Adams National Bank v. Curtiss, 1932, 278 Mass. 471, 476, 485, 180 N.E. 217, 83 A.L.R. 607. However, it has become the practice for trustees to receive a percentage of the income during each year and a percentage of the total trust estate at the termination of the trust. The trust property is subject to a lien for the amount of the termination charge and the trustees need not pay over the principal upon termination of the trust without deducting the amount of such charge. See Am.L.Inst. Restatement of Trusts, § 242, comment e; Bradbury v. Birchmore, 1875, 117 Mass. 569. The Commissioner is in error in supposing that the termination charge was unearned at the date of Fiske’s death and was paid for services rendered after his death. As above stated the trustees received separate commissions of $2,773.72 based upon a percentage of the gross income for 1936. If, in addition to that, the termination charge of $19,921.47 was also paid for the services of the trustees during the remaining months of 1936 after the death of Fiske, such payments would have been grossly excessive. The termination charge, based upon a percentage of the principal, was compensation for services of the trustees in the conservation of the trust fund for the entire period of its existence up to the time of its transfer to the executors under the will. So far as appears, the trustees would have received this same termination charge of 1% even though they had paid over the trust fund to the executors under the will immediately after Fiske’s death.

The termination charge was not a personal liability of Fiske’s and hence would not be deductible as a claim against his estate under § 303(a)(1)(C) of the’ Revenue Act of 1926 as amended. See Art. 36, Treas.Reg. 80 (1937 ed.).

Nor could it under any view be deductible as an administration expense under § 303(a)(1)(B), for that relates to expenses properly incurred by the executors in the ordinary administration of the decedent’s estate, whereas the termination charge was an expense incurred in the administration of the 1903 trust prior to the transfer of the trust funds by the trustees to the executors under the will. Therefore Article 33 of Treasury Regulations 80, 1937 Ed., which forbids the deduction as an ordinary “administration expense” of commissions paid to the executors as trustees or to other trustees under the will of the decedent, clearly has no application to the present case. The Commissioner’s reliance upon this article of the regulations seems to us to be wholly misplaced.

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Bluebook (online)
132 F.2d 644, 30 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 647, 1943 U.S. App. LEXIS 3946, 1 U.S. Tax Cas. (CCH) 9239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commissioner-of-internal-revenue-v-davis-ca1-1943.