Estate of Brock v. Commissioner

71 T.C. 901, 1979 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 167
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedFebruary 27, 1979
DocketDocket No. 1570-77
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 71 T.C. 901 (Estate of Brock 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
Estate of Brock v. Commissioner, 71 T.C. 901, 1979 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 167 (tax 1979).

Opinion

OPINION

Raum, Judge:

The Commissioner determined a deficiency in petitioner’s Federal estate tax of $36,490.28. The only issue presented is whether the decedent’s estate is entitled to a charitable deduction under section 20551 for a gift to a church of a nontrust remainder interest in a salt royalty where an intervening life interest in the salt royalty was devised free of trust to his surviving spouse. The case was submitted on a stipulation of facts.

Petitioner is the Estate of Fred A. Brock, Jr., Eleanor Brock Ilfrey, executrix, who resided in Houston, Tex., when the petition herein was filed.

The decedent, Fred A. Brock, Jr., was born on May 1, 1902, and died testate on March 18, 1973. His will was executed on February 14, 1972. At the time of his death, his wife, Eleanor Chevalley Brock, was 72 years old. He had married her less than a year and a half earlier, on November 5, 1971. His only other survivors were his daughter, Eleanor Brock Ilfrey (the executrix of his will), and her two daughters, the decedent’s grandchildren. The total gross estate reported on the estate tax return was $1,320,824, the great bulk of which was bequeathed by means of a residuary clause in his will to the decedent’s daughter and his grandchildren (or for their benefit). The only testamentary disposition in favor of the widow was a life interest in a portion of a salt royalty owned by the decedent, more fully hereinafter described. The controversy herein revolves around the claimed deductibility of a gift of the remainder of that portion of the salt royalty to a church.

The decedent originally owned a fractional interest in the salt royalty. Some time prior to his death he had given one-half of his fractional interest to his daughter and grandchildren.2 He disposed of the remaining one-half of his fractional interest in the salt royalty by his will executed some 3 months after his last marriage. He thereby gave one-half of that remaining one-half to his daughter and grandchildren in a specified manner, and the other one-half of the remaining Qne-half of his fractional interest to his surviving wife for life with remainder to a church. The total value of the spouse’s life estate plus the remainder to the church was $118,125 as of the applicable valuation date. Article Fifth of the will provided as follows in respect of the life estate and charitable remainder:

Fifth: At the present time I am the owner of mineral interests in the various surveys known as Stratton Ridge located in Brazoria County, Texas, from which there are producing salt brine wells, presently operated by the Dow Chemical Company, from which I receive royalty and which I will hereinafter designate as “salt royalty”.
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I hereby give, devise and bequeath unto my wife, Eleanor Chevalley Brock, one-half (%) of the remaining salt royalty (being one-fourth (%) of the original total salt royalty that I own) for as long as my wife, Eleanor Chevalley Brock, shall live. At the time of the death of my wife, Eleanor Chevalley Brock, I give such salt royalty in fee simple absolute to the Trustees of The First Presbyterian Church of Angleton for the use and benefit of The First Presbyterian Church of Angleton as said Trustees shall in their sole discretion so decide.

The First Presbyterian Church of Angleton (hereinafter church) is a qualified beneficiary within the intendment of section 2055(a). Decedent’s surviving spouse is not such a qualified beneficiary.

The gifts to decedent’s spouse and the church consisted of a life interest and a remainder interest, respectively. The remainder interest was not in a trust which is a charitable remainder annuity trust or a charitable remainder unitrust (described in section 664) or a pooled income fund (described in section 642(c)(5)). No judicial proceeding was begun on or before December 31, 1977, to amend or conform the governing instrument (the will) so that the interest left to the church would be in a trust which is a charitable remainder annuity trust, a unitrust, or a pooled income fund.

Decedent’s interest in the salt royalty referred to in article Fifth of the will was established by a “Salt and Storage Agreement” (hereinafter agreement) dated September 1, 1960. In this agreement, decedent and several others, apparently all members of the decedent’s family, as “lessors,” granted and leased to the Dow Chemical Co., “lessee,” exclusive fights to produce and take salt3 from 1,510 acres of land in Brazoria County, Tex., owned by lessors. In exchange, Dow Chemical Co. agreed, in part, tó pay a monetary royalty which was based on the amount of salt produced from the land and which was computed in accordance with an index of chemical prices, subject to a guaranteed annual minimum royalty not based on production.4 The initial term of the agreement was 1 year, but the agreement could be extended for a potentially unlimited term as long as specified mineral operations were conducted on the land and the guaranteed annual minimum royalty were paid.5 Dow Chemical Co. was at any time entitled to terminate the agreement and to relieve itself of all obligations, including the minimum royalty, by releasing the entirety of the leased premises to the lessors.

Under the agreement, the lessors (including decedent) reserved rights to use for residential and grazing purposes parts of the land involved. As' to the residential use, the agreement provided:

LESSEE shall not conduct any of its operation within two hundred fifty (250) feet of the residence located on the leased premises so long as said residence is occupied by Mrs. Carrie S. Brock [one of the lessors][6] or any of the other LESSORS named herein.

The grazing use was reserved in the following terms:

The LESSEE [Dow Chemical Co.] shall have the right to the exclusive use and possession of so much of the surface of the land described herein as shall be reasonably necessary in the exercise of the rights and privileges granted it hereunder, but the LESSORS shall have the right to use the same for grazing purposes.[7]

The only property left to his surviving spouse by the decedent was the life interest in the salt royalty devised by article Fifth of his will; no property of the decedent passed to the surviving spouse outside of his will. As noted above, the total value of the interest left to decedent’s surviving spouse plus the interest left to the church by the provisions of article Fifth of the will was $118,125 as of the applicable valuation date.

Decedent’s estate claimed no marital deduction on its estate tax return in respect of any transfer of an interest in the salt royalty to the surviving spouse. However, it did claim a $93,566 charitable deduction in respect of the gift of the remainder interest in the salt royalty to the church. The Commissioner determined that the charitable deduction was not allowable by reason of section 2055(e)(2).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
71 T.C. 901, 1979 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-brock-v-commissioner-tax-1979.