Estate of Gerson v. Commissioner

507 F.3d 435, 100 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 6593, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 26131, 2007 WL 3307024
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedNovember 9, 2007
Docket06-2582
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 507 F.3d 435 (Estate of Gerson v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of Gerson v. Commissioner, 507 F.3d 435, 100 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 6593, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 26131, 2007 WL 3307024 (6th Cir. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION

COOK, Circuit Judge.

The Estate of Eleanor R. Gerson appeals the United States Tax Court’s decision to assess a tax of $1,144,465 on the proceeds of an irrevocable trust under the generation-skipping transfer (“GST”) tax. The Estate asserts that a grandfather clause protects these assets from taxation, despite a treasury regulation that would lead to a contrary result. Because the Commissioner’s regulation reasonably construes an ambiguous statutory provision, we affirm the Tax Court’s decision.

*437 I

Benjamin Gerson created a revocable trust to benefit his wife, Eleanor Gerson, and made his last changes to the instrument in 1973. By its terms the trust became irrevocable when Benjamin died three days later. The trust gave Eleanor the right to use the income during her life and to appoint a beneficiary to receive the corpus when she died. If Eleanor failed to use her appointment power, the corpus would flow into another trust for the benefit of Benjamin’s children.

Eleanor died in 2000 with a will exercising the power of appointment and leaving the trust corpus to her grandchildren. After Eleanor’s executor filed a tax return for the Estate, the Commissioner of Internal Revenue responded with a notice of deficiency claiming that the transfer triggered the GST tax.

The Gerson Estate brought an action in the Tax Court to challenge the deficiency. The Tax Court ultimately agreed that the Estate owed $1,144,465, prompting this appeal.

II

We review de novo the Tax Court’s application of the Internal Revenue Code to undisputed facts. See Limited, Inc. v. Comm’r, 286 F.3d 324, 331 (6th Cir.2002).

The GST tax applies to transfers that skip a generation, such as a transfer from grandparent to grandchild. See I.R.C. § 2613(a) (defining a “skip person” as “a natural person assigned to a generation which is 2 or more generations below the generation assignment of the transfer- or”). The GST “tax laws were enacted to ensure taxation of generation skipping transfers in a comparable manner to outright transfers from one generation to the next, and to remove the estate planning tool of escaping taxation by skipping a generation in an estate transfer.” Comerica Bank, N.A. v. United States, 93 F.3d 225, 228 (6th Cir.1996).

The Estate concedes that the GST tax would ordinarily apply, but cites an effective date provision that grandfathers certain unmodified irrevocable trusts created before 1985. See Tax Reform Act of 1986, Pub.L. No. 99-514, § 1433(b)(2)(A), 100 Stat. 2717, 2731. This provision states that the tax does not apply to “any generation-skipping transfer under a trust which was irrevocable on September 25, 1985, but only to the extent that such transfer is not made out of corpus added to the trust after September 25, 1985.” Id. Because Eleanor never added any assets to the corpus, the Estate asserts that the provision disposes of this case.

But the Commissioner disagrees, reasoning that testators must cast the die before 1985 by including the skip transfer in the trust instrument itself or conferring no more than a limited power of appointment. 1 The IRS embodied this view in a regulation, which the Estate challenges as contrary to the plain language of the effective date provision. Treasury Regulation § 26.2601—1(b)(1)(i) provides that the grandfather exception “does not apply to a transfer of property pursuant to the exercise, release, or lapse of a general power of appointment that is treated as a taxable transfer under chapter 11 or chapter 12.”

This interpretive regulation was promulgated after notice and comment pursuant *438 to the Treasury Department’s general authority to issue regulations under I.R.C. § 7805(a), rather than under a specific statutory grant. The Tax Court highlighted three competing standards of review applicable to such interpretive regulations, Estate of Gerson v. Comm’r, 127 T.C. 139, 154, 2006 WL 3019177 (2006) (in the majority, applying National Muffler and Chevron standards in the belief the result would be the same under either approach), but this court has faithfully applied Chevron deference since abandoning the less deferential National Muffler standard in Peoples Federal Savings & Loan Ass’n of Sidney v. Commissioner, 948 F.2d 289, 304-05 (6th Cir.1991). See, e.g., Littriello v. United States, 484 F.3d 372, 376-78 (6th Cir.2007) (applying Chevron deference to interpretive tax regulations); Hosp. Corp. of Am. v. Comm’r, 348 F.3d 136, 140-41 (6th Cir.2003) (same).

Judge Vasquez’s dissenting opinion in the Tax Court favored neither National Muffler nor Chevron, but Skidmore deference — which examines various factors, including the regulation’s “power to persuade” — because the judge believed United States v. Mead Corp., 533 U.S. 218, 121 S.Ct. 2164, 150 L.Ed.2d 292 (2001), changed the law. Gerson, 127 T.C. at 174-75 (Vasquez, J., dissenting); see generally Skidmore v. Swift & Co., 323 U.S. 134, 140, 65 S.Ct. 161, 89 L.Ed. 124 (1944). In Mead, the Supreme Court explained that agency interpretations flowing from the agency’s general authority merit Chevron deference if “Congress delegated authority to the agency generally to make rules carrying the force of law” and “the agency interpretation claiming deference was promulgated in the exercise of that authority.” 533 U.S. at 226-27, 121 S.Ct. 2164. The Court ultimately applied the more searching Skid-more deference to the tariff ruling letters at issue, in large part because they were not “the fruits of notice-and-eomment rulemaking or formal adjudication.” Id. at 230-31, 121 S.Ct. 2164; see also Christensen v. Harris County, 529 U.S. 576, 587, 120 S.Ct. 1655, 146 L.Ed.2d 621 (2000) (interpretation contained in opinion letter not entitled to Chevron deference).

Although the IRS clearly has the authority to issue statements carrying the force of law, the issue is whether the agency intended to exercise that authority with Treasury Regulation § 26.2601 — 1(b)(1)(i).

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507 F.3d 435, 100 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 6593, 2007 U.S. App. LEXIS 26131, 2007 WL 3307024, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-gerson-v-commissioner-ca6-2007.