Dulany v. Commissioner
This text of 3 T.C.M. 1229 (Dulany 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.
Opinion
Memorandum Opinion
OPPER, Judge: This proceeding seeks a redetermination of deficiencies of petitioners' income tax for the years 1938, 1939, and 1940 in the sums of $167.54, $267.07, and $141.59, respectively.
Petitioners concede an adjustment of $556.50 made in 1939 income relating to gain from the sale of property. The remaining question is the taxability to petitioners of the income from properties subject to an agreement between one of the petitioners and his father.
The case is presented by a stipulation of facts and certain exhibits consisting of income tax returns for the years in question. The stipulated facts are found and these facts hereinafter appearing which are not from the stipulation are facts otherwise found from the record.
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Petitioners are husband and wife and legal residents of Savannah, Georgia, and the only issue in controversy relates to the income of F. R. Dulany, the husband, who will be hereinafter sometimes referred to as petitioner.
On September 22, 1937, petitioner and his father, W. P. Dulany, "of the City of Philadelphia, Philadelphia County, *39 Pennsylvania," executed an agreement in which petitioner was designated "trustee" and his father "grantor." Under the terms of the agreement the father "conveyed" to the trustee personal property having a value of $26,800, and reserved the right to add other property. Included in the properties listed in the schedules of properties attached to the agreement were "notes of F. R. Dulany [petitioner], due 1938 and 1939 Face $11,000 and bearing 5% interest [$11,000.]"
The agreement provided that the trustee should have full powers of management and control, including the powers of disposition, investment and reinvestment without limitation to legal investments "defined by the laws of the State of Georgia, or any other State." The trustee was given the power to enter into any agreements with reference to the trust corpus without order from any court. The trustee was relieved of giving bond or of making inventory or returns to any court but was required to make a semi-annual report to the grantor as to the investments of the trust estate or other information requested by the grantor.
The agreement further provided:
"Trustee shall pay to the Grantor, for and during his life, interest *40 at the rate of five (5) per cent per annum, payable quarterly, on the value of the Trust Estate * * * but shall not be required to pay interest on any accumulations or profits.
"Upon the death of the Grantor this trust shall terminate and the corpus of the Trust Estate, and the accumulations and profits thereof shall thereupon become the property, unconditionally and in fee simple, of FRANKLIN R. DULANY, son and only child of the Grantor, in his individual capacity and not as Trustee.
"If the said FRANKLIN R. DULANY should predecease the Grantor, then and in that event the trustees appointed under the will of the said FRANKLIN R. DULANY shall act as trustees hereunder and shall pay to the Grantor, for and during his entire life, the amounts herein stipulated to be paid, which shall be a charge upon the estate of the said FRANKLIN R. DULANY as long as the Grantor shall live. In such event the substituted Trustee shall furnish bond for the faithful performance of their duties and obligations to Grantor as set forth in this agreement. Upon Grantor's death the Trust Estate and the accumulations and profits thereof shall thereupon become a part of the estate of the said FRANKLIN R. DULANY, *41 and shall be held and administered by his executors and trustees as provided in his will."
Petitioner as trustee further agreed with his father that he would pay him promptly; that he would keep the property subject to the agreement separate and apart from his individual property and plainly identified as the property subject to the agreement; that he would maintain a separate bank account for the funds involved and, upon request, furnish his father with an itemized statement of the investments and securities. The agreement also provided that in event of default by petitioner in the prompt payment to his father or failure in other respects under the terms of the agreement, the father, upon 30 days written notice, could discharge "the Trustee and appoint * * * a substituted Trustee."
The instrument was executed by the father in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and by petitioner in Georgia. The father's tax returns for the years in question indicate his address then was St. Petersburg, Florida.
At the time of the execution of the agreement and during the taxable years in question, and at all times subsequent thereto, petitioner had a wife and two minor children and had a will leaving *42 his property in trust for his wife and children. At all times since the execution of the agreement petitioner has been a legal resident of the State of Georgia and the properties covered by the agreement and all accretions thereto have remained in that state.
For the years indicated the net income from the properties (and accretions thereto) was as follows:
| 1938 | $1,975.07 |
| 1939 | 2,407.55 |
| 1940 | 1,609.57 |
In each of these years "petitioner paid to his father the sum of $1,340.00, representing 5 per cent of $26,800.00."
Petitioner filed fiduciary income tax returns for the taxable years in question under the names of "William P. Dulany, Trust" and "W. P. Dulany, Trust," and reported therein the above-indicated amounts of income.
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3 T.C.M. 1229, 1944 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 38, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dulany-v-commissioner-tax-1944.