Dexter v. State Tax Commission

215 N.E.2d 94, 350 Mass. 380, 1966 Mass. LEXIS 744
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMarch 9, 1966
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 215 N.E.2d 94 (Dexter v. State Tax Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dexter v. State Tax Commission, 215 N.E.2d 94, 350 Mass. 380, 1966 Mass. LEXIS 744 (Mass. 1966).

Opinion

Cutter, J.

By trust instrument dated December 30, 1944, Mr. John Dane, Jr. (the donor) created a trust (since amended) of which he and Mr. Franklin Dexter were the trustees. The trustees were directed to pay the net income to the donor during his life, with remainder dispositions to take effect at the donor’s death. Article 7 provided, “This . . . instrument may be altered, amended or revoked by the [d] onor in whole or in part at any time or from time to time by an instrument . . . signed by the [d]onor and delivered by him to the [t]rustees . . ..”

During 1957, the donor “individually sold various securities and recognized a loss of $84,199.72.” During the same year, the trustees ‘ ‘ sold various securities and reeog- *381 nized a gain of $44,578.57. They treated this gain as principal [for purposes of the trust] rather than income and did not distribute it.” In 1958, the trustees filed a Massachusetts 1957 fiduciary income tax return (form 2) and paid the tax shown to be due. That return showed as income for tax purposes the gain of $44,578.57 from the sale of intangible personal property. The tax with respect to that gain was $3,289.90. In 1958, the donor and his wife filed a Massachusetts 1957 joint income tax return (form 1) which, among other things, reported a loss of $84,199.72 from the sale of intangible personal property.

On May 16, 1960, the trustees filed an application for abatement of $3,289.90 of the 1957 income tax paid by them. The State Tax Commission (the commission) refused to allow the abatement. The trustees then appealed to the Appellate Tax Board (the board) under the formal procedure. The facts set forth above were stipulated. The board found that each trustee was in 1944, and at the date of the board’s decision, a resident of Massachusetts. It treated the question for decision as being whether “the income from . . . gains . . . reported by . . . [the trustees] in their [fiduciary [r] etum had been constructively received by the . . . [donor] and therefore should have been reported on his [individual [r]eturn rather than on the [fiduciary [r]eturn so that such gains would have been offset by the [donor’s] losses” shown on his individual return. A majority of the board filed an opinion in accordance with which a decision for the commission was entered. The trustees appealed.

1. The principal applicable statutes are set out in the margin. The basic Massachusetts income tax on gains from the sale of intangible personal property is found in Gr. L. c. 62, § 5 (c) (amended through St. 1957, c. 540, § 1; see also § 3). 2 Section 10 (as amended through St. 1957, *382 c. 644, § 3) 3 provides for the taxation of income received by-trustees subject as such to taxation under Gr. L. c. 62. General Laws c. 62, § 11 (as amended through St. 1955, c. 592, § 3), 4 deals with the taxation of income received by inhabitants of Massachusetts from fiduciaries, principally nonresidents, who are not subject to taxation in Massachusetts. The trustees contend in effect that under G. L. c. 62, §§ 5, 10, and 11, a Massachusetts donor of trust property, held by Massachusetts trustees subject to an unconditionally revocable trust, should be treated as the true owner of the trust income in accordance with “the economic realities of the situation.” The trustees further contend that “it is totally unrealistic to keep” (a) the donor’s individual losses upon sales of intangible personal property, and (b) the trustees’ gains upon such sales “in watertight compartments for tax purposes. ’ ’

2. Doubtless, the trustees ’ contentions have reference in part to somewhat different Federal income tax provisions which (by specific language not found in G. L. c. 62) treat the grantor of a fully revocable trust, in large measure at least, as the owner of the trust property and income. See e.g. Int. Rev. Code of 1954, § 676 (a). As we pointed out in Second Bank-State St. Trust Co. v. State Tax *383 Commn. 337 Mass. 203, 211-212, precedents under the Federal income tax act 5 must be used with caution in construing and applying the substantially different provisions of G-. L. c. 62, which has been framed subject to the restrictions of the Forty-fourth Amendment to the Constitution of the Commonwealth. The present cases, of course, must be determined in accordance with the applicable provisions of G. L. c. 62.

The recess commission which framed the Massachusetts income tax (see Bes. 1915, c. 134,1916 House Doc. No. 1700, pp. 51-52) described very fully the method which it proposed for taxing income derived from property held in trust. 6 These principles were carried into St. 1916, c. 269, and now appear in G. L. c. 62, §§ 5, 10, and 11. In the Second Bank-State St. Trust Co. case, 337 Mass. 203, 209, we reviewed the decided cases bearing upon the taxation of trust income received by Massachusetts trustees, and said, “The . . . statute taxes income from trust property in the light of the nature of the interest and attributes of the beneficiary, the real person in interest. ... If income taxable under c. 62 is received by trustees who are subject to *384 . . . [c. 62] and is distributable to or is accumulated for . . . an inhabitant of Massachusetts or for a person treated by the statute [§ 10, see fn. 3, supra] as equivalent to an inhabitant, then . . . § 10 . . . provides for the assessment of tax upon such income to the trustees, based on the interest of the beneficiary” (emphasis, supplied). As to Massachusetts trustees under trusts created by inhabitants of Massachusetts, § 10 clearly imposes the tax upon the trustee and not upon the beneficiary. Neither <S 10 nor § 5 (see fn. 2, supra), which contains in subsection (c) a tax upon the net gains from sales of intangibles realized directly by inhabitants of Massachusetts, includes any provision for offsetting (a) the gains and losses realized directly by an individual trust beneficiary residing in Massachusetts, against (b) the gains and losses realized by a Massachusetts trustee for the benefit of a Massachusetts beneficiary.

A different type of provision (see fn. 6) is made by § 11 (fn. 4, supra) with respect to the taxation of income received by inhabitants of Massachusetts from trustees, no one of whom is an inhabitant of Massachusetts. Since the Commonwealth’s power to tax cannot readily be asserted against nonresident trustees, § 11 taxes trust income received by such nonresident trustees (a) when distributed to and received by beneficiaries who are inhabitants of Massachusetts (see e.g. Maguire v. Tax Commr. 230 Mass. 503, 513, affd. sub nom. Maguire v. Trefry, 253 U. S. 12; Commissioner of Corps. & Taxn. v. Eaton, 304 Mass. 260, 266-267), or (b) when such income may properly be treated as ‘‘constructively received” (see e.g. State Tax Commn. v.

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Bluebook (online)
215 N.E.2d 94, 350 Mass. 380, 1966 Mass. LEXIS 744, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dexter-v-state-tax-commission-mass-1966.