Estate of Edna Korby v. Commissioner IR

471 F.3d 848, 98 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 8115, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 30087, 2006 WL 3524501
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedDecember 8, 2006
Docket06-1201, 06-1203
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 471 F.3d 848 (Estate of Edna Korby v. Commissioner IR) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of Edna Korby v. Commissioner IR, 471 F.3d 848, 98 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 8115, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 30087, 2006 WL 3524501 (8th Cir. 2006).

Opinion

BYE, Circuit Judge.

The estates of Edna and Austin Korby, along with the trustee of the Edna and Austin Korby Living Trust (collectively the Korbys), appeal the tax court’s 1 decisions finding estate tax due from both estates under 26 U.S.C. § 2036 on the grounds the *850 Korbys retained the right to income from property they transferred to a family limited partnership prior to their deaths, and the transfer was not a bona fide sale for consideration. We affirm.

I

Austin and Edna Korby married in 1948. During the course of their marriage, Austin operated a bridge-building construction company. The couple accumulated a modest estate which they desired to pass on to their four sons, Austin, Jr., Gary, Donald, and Steven. In 1993, when Edna was sixty-eight and Austin seventy-nine years old, they attended a free estate planning seminar and later met with the attorney who conducted the seminar. The attorney helped the Korbys form a revocable living trust and a family limited partnership as part of their estate planning. In June 1993, the Korbys placed in the living trust their family home, household furnishings, a vacant lot, a money market account, bank accounts, and their monthly Social Security income. In March 1994, the Korbys created the Korby Properties Limited Partnership (KPLP). A year later, the Korbys transferred to KPLP stocks valued at $1,330,442, state and municipal bonds valued at $449,378, and savings bonds valued at $71,043, for a total transfer of $1,850,863. In return, the Korbys obtained a 98% limited partnership interest from KPLP. In addition, the Korbys’ living trust transferred to KPLP a savings account worth $37,841, to bring the full funding of KPLP to $1,888,704. In return, the living trust obtained a 2% general partnership interest from KPLP.

In 1995, the Korbys gifted their 98% limited partnership interest in KPLP to four irrevocable trusts created for their sons, with each son’s trust receiving a 24.5% KPLP limited partnership interest. The Korbys filed gift tax returns in 1995 claiming a discount of 43.61% on the book value of each gift because the limited partnership interests were minority interests, their transfer was restricted, and they lacked management control. Thus, while each gift had a book value of $462,732.48, the gift tax returns reported each gift as being worth $260,935.

Between 1995 and 1998 — the year both Korbys died — KPLP made several distributions to the living trust as general partner, as well as a limited number of distributions to the four sons’ trusts as limited partners. KPLP made payments to the Korbys’ living trust totaling $120,795 ($30,-387 in 1995, $19,334 in 1996, $32,324 in 1997, and $38,750 in 1998). The Korbys used these payments to help defray Edna’s nursing home costs of over $30,000 per year 2 and pay the couple’s taxes, medical bills, and other expenses. The payments to the limited partners during the same period totaled $34,562 ($18,101 in 1996, $4,400 in 1997, and $12,061 in 1998), and were intended to pay for the limited partners’ income taxes. 3

Edna Korby died on July 3, 1998; Austin Korby died on December 2, 1998. Both estates filed tax returns on September 7, 1999. Edna’s estate return listed a *851 total gross estate value of $73,398, listing as jointly owned property the couple’s home, the vacant lot, and a checking account. The return also listed half of the general partnership interest in KPLP, or 1%. Austin’s estate return reported the couple’s home, the vacant lot, the checking account, some personal property, and the full general partnership interest in KPLP, or 2%, as owned by Austin at the time of his death. Neither return included the value of the assets transferred to KPLP in 1995.

The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) issued notices of deficiency as to both their estates on August 29, 2002, determining the full value of the KPLP assets includa-ble in the gross estates on the ground the Korbys retained for their lives “the possession or enjoyment of, or the right to the income from, the property.” 26 U.S.C. § 2036. The notices of deficiency totaled $2,175,117 ($1,104,635 for Edna’s estate, and $1,070,482 for Austin’s estate). The estates filed timely petitions for redetermi-nation of the deficiencies in the tax court.

As relevant to this appeal, the tax court decided three issues against the Korbys. First, the tax court found the Korbys retained a right to the assets transferred to KPLP, rejecting the claim that payments from KPLP to the living trust were “management fees” for work performed as the partnership’s general partner. The tax court found “an implied agreement existed between Austin, on his own behalf and on behalf of Edna, and the four Korby sons that after the assets were transferred to KPLP, income from the assets would continue to be available to Austin and Edna for as long as they needed income.” The tax court noted the lack of a written management contract between the living trust and KPLP, as well as the fact KPLP made payments to the living trust whenever Austin Korby requested them rather than by a set schedule. In addition, Austin did not keep track of the hours he worked managing the partnership’s assets, nor did the payments to the living trust reflect a certain percentage of KPLP’s income or assets, which is commonly how management fees are calculated. The tax court also noted Austin did not report the income the living trust received for his services as self-employment income on his tax returns (although the 1998 income tax return filed on behalf of Austin after his death did so).

Second, the tax court determined the transfer to KPLP did not satisfy the § 2036(a) exception for bona fide sales for adequate consideration. The Korbys claimed KPLP was created to protect the family from commercial and personal liability or from liability arising from divorce. The tax court examined the facts and circumstances surrounding the formation of KPLP, such as Austin’s involvement with the help of an estate lawyer and without the assistance of the limited partners, and found Austin “essentially stood on all sides of the partnership’s formation.” The tax court further determined the Korbys had not shown the terms of the KPLP agreement kept its assets beyond the reach of a limited partner’s creditors. The tax court concluded credit protection was not a significant reason for forming KPLP, and the real reason for forming KPLP was tax avoidance.

Finally, the tax court rejected the estates’ contention the Commissioner of Internal Revenue admitted the Korbys lacked control over the KPLP assets. Edna’s estate sought a marital deduction under 26 U.S.C. § 2056, arguing Edna’s rights to and power over the KPLP assets passed to her husband at the time of her death under the terms of the living trust. In opposing that contention, the Commissioner argued the assets used to fund *852 KPLP never passed through the living trust:

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471 F.3d 848, 98 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 8115, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 30087, 2006 WL 3524501, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-edna-korby-v-commissioner-ir-ca8-2006.