Curt Teich Trust No. One v. Commissioner

25 T.C. 884
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedJanuary 30, 1956
DocketDocket Nos. 48118, 50768
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 25 T.C. 884 (Curt Teich Trust No. One 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
Curt Teich Trust No. One v. Commissioner, 25 T.C. 884 (tax 1956).

Opinion

OPINION.

Atkins, Judge:

Under the provisions of section 3797 (a) of the 1939 Internal Revenue Code, an “association” is included within the term “corporation.” Applying this provision of the Code to the Teich Trust, the respondent has determined that it is an association, subject to tax as a corporation. His action has resulted in the determination of deficiencies for the years 1949 and 1950.

The leading case on the issue presented here is Morrissey v. Commissioner, 296 U. S. 344, wherein, with elaborate care, the Supreme Court examined the matter of taxation of trusts in its historical setting and set forth at length its views as to a number of problems that had arisen in the many trust-association cases that had been litigated.

As we read the opinion in the Morrissey case, the first question to be resolved is whether the organization under scrutiny is, on the one hand, an association in the light of the history of the statute and regulations, or, on the other, a traditional trust. On this point the Court said:

“Association” implies associates. It implies the entering into a joint enterprise, and, as the applicable regulation imports, an enterprise for the transaction of business. This is not the characteristic of an ordinary trust — whether created by will, deed, or declaration — by which particular property is conveyed to a trustee or is to be held by the settlor, on specified trusts, for the benefit of named or described persons. Such beneficiaries do not ordinarily, and as mere cestuis que trustewt, plan a common effort or enter into a combination for the conduct of a business enterprise. Undoubtedly the terms of an association may make the taking or acquiring of shares or interests sufficient to constitute participation, and may leave the management, or even control of the enterprise, to designated persons. But the nature and purpose of the cooperative undertaking will differentiate it from an ordinary trust. In what are called “business trusts” the object is not to hold and conserve particular property, with incidental powers, as in the traditional type of trusts, but to provide a medium for the conduct of a business and sharing its gains.

The Court also stated that it is impossible in the nature of. things to translate the statutory concept of “association” into a particularity of detail that would fix the status of every sort of enterprise or organization. It has been recognized, therefore, that each case must be considered as a special, individual and separate problem. James E. Davidson v. United States, 24 A. F. T. R. 1118, affd. 115 F. 2d 799.

Under the facts before it in the Morrissey case, and in each of the other cases decided at the same time,2 the Court found that there was an association within the intent of the statute and language of the regulations. In each of those cases owners of interests in property voluntarily associated themselves, through the form of a trust, in a joint enterprise for the transaction of business.

In this case, in contrast with the facts in the Morrissey case, the beneficiaries did not associate themselves in any enterprise. Here Curt Teich, Sr., and his wife, Anna L. Teich, conveyed particular property to trustees, on specified trusts, for the benefit of their children. The testimony in the case is that it was the purpose and desire of the grantors to create an estate for the benefit of their children which could not be dissipated by spendthrift operations. To effectuate this purpose the trust instrument provides against anticipation by the beneficiaries of any interest in either principal or income. It is provided that the beneficiaries cannot assign their right to principal or income and any attempted anticipatory assignment shall be absolutely null and void. The beneficiaries had not had any previous interest in the trust property, except Anna L. Teich, who thereafter had only a life interest.

Under the circumstances of this case it is our opinion that it cannot be said that the beneficiaries planned a common effort or entered into a combination for the conduct of a business enterprise. It is our view that these beneficiaries are not associates and that the trust should not be considered an association within the meaning of the statute and the regulations and the rule of the Morrissey case. Rather, we believe the trust is properly to be classified as a traditional trust, or as the Court calls it in the Morrissey case, an “ordinary trust.”

The distinction that we see in the Morrissey case between organizations which consist of property owners who associate themselves for the operation of their properties for profit, and those in which an ancestor places his property in trust for others, has been drawn in other cases. In Blair v. Wilson Syndicate Trust, 39 F. 2d 43, it was stated:

A distinction is to be made between an agreement between individuals in the form of a trust and an Express trust created by an ancestor, although they may have some features in common. The controlling distinction is that one is a voluntary association of individuals for convenience and profit, the other a method of equitably distributing a legacy or donation. Congress has recognized this distinction, classing the former as associations, to be taxed as corporations, and at the same time providing for a separate and distinct method of taxing the income of estates and trusts created by will or deed, classing them together for that purpose.

Similarly in Living Funded Trust of Harry E. Lyman, 36 B. T. A. 161, where the grantor set up a trust for the benefit of his wife, children, and grandchildren, in holding that the trust was not an association, it was said:

In the case under consideration the beneficiaries did not establish a trust for the management of properties owned by them as tenants in common. They did not associate themselves together for the prosecution of a common enterprise; they did not create an “association” upon the methods and forms used by corporations; they had no part in establishing the trust, and were without power to modify the trust agreement or to terminate the trust.

The respondent contends that the powers vested in the trustees, described at some length in our Findings of Fact, permit them to conduct a business, as distinguished from the mere holding and conservation of property. It is our view that whether or not the trustees are empowered to conduct a business, the trust is not taxable as an association in a case such as this, where ancestors set up a traditional or ordinary trust for the benefit of the, natural objects of their bounty and there has been no voluntary association of those beneficiaries for the purpose of carrying on a business. In any event, it is our opinion that the powers given to the trustees here, while broad, do not transcend proper powers customarily reposed in trustees for the protection and conservation of trust corpus.

In support of his position the respondent cites, among other cases, Roberts-Solomon Trust Estate, 34 B. T. A. 723, affd. 89 F. 2d 569, in which it was held that the trust was an association taxable as a corporation. In that case the grantor transferred rental property in trust for the benefit of persons holding certificates of beneficial interests to be issued by the trustees.

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Bluebook (online)
25 T.C. 884, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/curt-teich-trust-no-one-v-commissioner-tax-1956.