De Amodio v. Commissioner

34 T.C. 894, 1960 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 88
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedAugust 22, 1960
DocketDocket Nos. 74211, 74297
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 34 T.C. 894 (De Amodio 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
De Amodio v. Commissioner, 34 T.C. 894, 1960 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 88 (tax 1960).

Opinion

Tietjens, Judge:

The respondent determined deficiencies in income tax as follows:

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The petitioners are brother and sister. Their proceedings were consolidated as both cases involve the issue whether the petitioners are taxable on the capital gains realized by a trust of which they were the grantors and beneficiaries. This is the sole issue in the case of Inez. Other issues in the case of John are whether he is taxable on a “net basis” on all dividend, interest, and rental income with respect to all income derived from sources in the United States under the terms of the United States-Swiss tax convention and whether he is taxable on capital gains from sales of capital assets other than those of the trust. By amendment to the petition, John also alleges that through tax payments made on his account by the trustee of the trust and by the Swiss Confederation under the convention and by withholding agents in the United States his taxes for the years involved have been overpaid and asks a determination of such overpayment. Certain facts are stipulated.

FINDINGS OF FACT.

Returns of John Amodio for 1951, 1952, and 1953 and a return for Inez for 1953 were filed with the collector or director of internal revenue at Pittsburgh. Inez filed a return for 1954 with the director for the Upper Manhattan District, New York. John Amodio’s return for 1954 was filed with the director of internal revenue at Baltimore, Maryland.

Inez de Amodio was a resident of the United States in 1953 and 1954. John Amodio (also known as John Julio Amodio) is a nonresident alien who resides in Switzerland. These petitioners are daughter and son of Josephine Wainwright de Amodio.

Joseph G. Wainwright, the father of Josephine, arranged for the creation of a trust, herein referred to as the Wainwright trust, on March 14, 1900. The trust corpus was real property in Texas; some in Dallas, some in El Paso. The income from the property was to be paid to Josephine during her lifetime. If upon her death her children had all reached the age of 21 years, all the property was to vest in the surviving heirs. The first trustee was Joseph G. Wainwright, who died in 1902. Other trustees were thereafter appointed by the beneficiary. The last trustee was John A. Byerly, appointed in 1934. Josephine died on April 7, 1948, at which time the petitioners, the only children and heirs of Josephine, were both over 21 years of age.

On January 11, 1947, the petitioners entered into an agreement with Byerly concerning their interests in the Wainwright trust. This agreement was referred to as the Amodio trust and provided in general for the administration by Byerly, as trustee, of the property of the Wainwright trust which would come to the petitioners upon the termination of that trust when their mother died. The petitioners were the grantors and equal beneficiaries. The agreement provided that the trustee, as soon as practicable, was to liquidate a sufficient amount of the property to pay each of the petitioners $40,000 in cash. The agreement further provided:

5. Without in any way limiting or restricting the generality of the foregoing provisions, the Trustee shall have powers as follows, with reference to any and each asset at any time constituting a part of the trust estate:
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(e) To consent to the extension, refunding or renewal of any security, obligation, lien, contract or right.
(f) To improve all or any real property; to erect buildings on all or any real property, in addition to or in substitution for the buildings at any time existing thereon, of such character and cost, and upon such terms of payment, as the Trustee shall deem advisable; to borrow money and create liens upon property and/or rents, for such purpose or for any other purpose; provided, however, that our said Trustee is authorized and empowered to reserve and set aside, at the end of each month, out of the gross current income realized in cash during said period from the property then embraced in this trust, such an amount, not exceeding 5% of said gross current income, as to him shall seem proper. The amount so reserved shall be held and accumulated by him as an improvement fund; and shall be invested by him from time to time, at such intervals and in such manner as shall seem to him to be for the best interests of the trust, in permanent improvements upon the real property embraced in the trust, or in the purchase of additional revenue-yielding property.
(g) To mortgage real and/or personal property, to such extent, and upon such terms and conditions, and for such purposes, as the Trustee shall deem advisable.
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6. We, the settlors, shall be the primary beneficiaries of this trust. We shall be considered the equitable owners of both the income and the corpus of the trust, in equal shares. One-half of the net income of the trust shall be payable to each of us for life. If the first of us to die shall die without leaving lawful issue (heirs of the body) surviving him or her, then, and in that event, all interest in the corpus and income of the trust shall go to and become the exclusive property of the surviving settlor. Upon the death of the survivor of us, this trust shall terminate, and the interest of the survivor in the trust (whether it be only a one-half interest or the full interest) shall be distributed absolutely, free of trust, as specified and directed in his or her will, or if not specifically disposed of in such will, then to the beneficiaries of the residue of his or her estate; or, if such survivor dies intestate, then to such person or persons as would take according to the laws of descent and distribution of the State of Texas, as then existing. Provided, however, that if either of us shall die before the death of the other, leaving lawful issue (heirs of the body) living at the time of his or her death, the share of such deceased settlor in the corpus and Income of the trust property shall go to and vest in such lawful issue of such decedent as may be living at the death of such decedent (taking per stirpes and without preference because of any circumstance of sex or order of birth), but such beneficiary or beneficiaries shall not receive any of the trust property corpus (only income from time to time) until the trust is terminated in the manner hereinafter specified. And provided further that this clause 6 shall not affect the right of the survivor to revote or terminate this trust at any time by his or her sole action under clause 8 hereinafter; but any right of the deceased person to join or be consulted in the termination of the trust, under clause 8 hereinafter, shall not survive to or be enjoyed by the issue of said decedent. During the continuance of the trust, our Trustee hereunder shall continue to act as the Trustee of any of said beneficiaries who may not be sui juris.
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8. This trust may be amended in any way or terminated at any time by the joint action of all the beneficiaries of the income from the trust, and such action shall become effective upon the filing in the Deed Records of Dallas County, Texas, of an instrument amending or terminating this trust.

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De Amodio v. Commissioner
34 T.C. 894 (U.S. Tax Court, 1960)

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Bluebook (online)
34 T.C. 894, 1960 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-amodio-v-commissioner-tax-1960.