Estate of Helen Christiansen, Christine Christiansen Hamilton, Personal Representative v. Commissioner

130 T.C. No. 1
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedJanuary 24, 2008
Docket15190-05
StatusUnknown

This text of 130 T.C. No. 1 (Estate of Helen Christiansen, Christine Christiansen Hamilton, Personal Representative 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 Helen Christiansen, Christine Christiansen Hamilton, Personal Representative v. Commissioner, 130 T.C. No. 1 (tax 2008).

Opinion

130 T.C. No. 1

UNITED STATES TAX COURT

ESTATE OF HELEN CHRISTIANSEN, DECEASED, CHRISTINE CHRISTIANSEN HAMILTON, PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE, Petitioner v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent

Docket No. 15190-05. Filed January 24, 2008.

H was the only legatee of her mother’s will. H disclaimed the portion of the gross estate that had a fair market value of more than $6,350,000. The will provided that any disclaimed portion would pass in part to a charitable foundation and in part to a charitable trust that would pay an annuity to the foundation. H did not disclaim a contingent remainder in the property passing to the charitable trust. On the estate’s tax return, it deducted as charitable contributions the disclaimed property passing to the foundation and--to the extent of the present value of the annuity interest --the disclaimed property passing to the charitable trust. The parties stipulated to a value of the estate higher than that originally reported on the return.

Held: No deduction is allowed for any of the property passing to the trust because the partial disclaimer of that property is not a qualified disclaimer under sec. 2518, I.R.C. -2-

Held, further: The entire value of the property passing to the foundation--including the increased amount passing to the foundation because of the increased valuation of C’s gross estate--is deductible because the disclaimer of that property is a qualified partial disclaimer under section 2518, and because no public policy bars increasing the amount of that deduction.

John W. Porter and J. Graham Kenney, for the estate.

Trent D. Usitalo, for respondent.

HOLMES, Judge:1 Helen Christiansen’s will left everything

to her only child, Christine Hamilton. The will anticipated that

Hamilton would disclaim a part of her inheritance, and directed

that any disclaimed property would go in part to a charitable

trust and in part to a charitable foundation that Christiansen

had established. The trust would last for 20 years, and pay an

annuity of 7 percent of the corpus’s net fair market value at the

time of Christiansen’s death to the foundation. At the end of

the 20 years, if Hamilton were still alive, the property left in

the trust would go to her.

The parties settled the issue of the estate’s value--

increasing it substantially over what was reported on the

estate’s tax return. There are two questions presented. The

first is whether the estate can claim a charitable deduction for

1 The Chief Judge reassigned this case to Judge Holmes from Judge Kroupa. -3-

the present value of that 7 percent annuity from the trust to the

foundation. This depends on whether Hamilton’s undisclaimed

contingent-remainder interest in the trust requires disallowance

of that deduction. The second question is whether the estate can

claim an increased charitable deduction for the increased value

of the disclaimed property passing directly to the foundation.

FINDINGS OF FACT2

Helen Christiansen, a lifelong South Dakotan, led a long and

remarkable life. She was one of the first women lawyers in her

state and practiced there until the late 1950s, when she married

and became a full-time farmer. She and her husband had one

child, Christine Christiansen Hamilton. Hamilton remains, as she

was when she filed the petition, a South Dakota resident. Her

mother was domiciled in the state when she died.

The Christiansens each owned and operated their own farming

and ranching businesses in central South Dakota for many years.

When her husband died in 1986, Christiansen added his operations

to her own. Christiansen’s daughter, like her mother, became

well educated, graduating from Smith College and then earning an

MBA from the University of Arizona. And like her mother, she

decided on a life back home in South Dakota. She married a

2 The parties stipulated to most of the key facts and exhibits, and insofar as they are relevant to our analysis, we have adopted the trial Judge’s findings of fact on the others. -4-

professor at South Dakota State University, and began helping to

run the family farm.

Both Christiansen and Hamilton were deeply involved in their

community, and Hamilton to this day serves on the boards of many

charitable organizations. She and her mother had also long

wanted to use some of their wealth to benefit their home state.

The family had already donated parkland to Kimball, South Dakota

in 1998, but mother and daughter wanted some way to permanently

fund projects in education and economic development. After

meeting with a local law firm in the late 1990s, they decided to

organize a charitable foundation as part of Christiansen’s estate

plan.

The Matson, Halverson, Christiansen Foundation and the Helen

Christiansen Testamentary Charitable Lead Trust were at the

center of this plan. Christiansen and Hamilton expected that

part of Christiansen’s estate would find its way to the

Foundation, and part would find its way to the Trust. The

Foundation would fund charitable causes at a rate they hoped

would be about $15,000 annually--in the Foundation’s application

to the IRS for recognition of exempt status, Hamilton stated:

The initial source of funding for the foundation will be $50,000 from the Helen Christiansen Estate providing a 5 percent income stream annually. Additionally, there will be annual funding from a 7 percent charitable lead annuity trust equaling $12,500. -5-

The Trust3 has a term of 20 years running from the date of

Christiansen’s death, and the Trust agreement provides for

payments to the Foundation of 7 percent of the Trust’s initial

corpus. Any remaining assets in the Trust at the end of 20

years will go to Hamilton; if she dies before then, they will go

to the Foundation. Hamilton and her husband, plus a family

friend, are the Foundation’s directors, and by early 2002, the

Foundation was qualified as a charitable organization under

section 501(c)(3).

Hamilton has contributed some of her own money to the

Foundation and it has already begun its work, distributing a

total of almost $22,000 through the end of 2004, including a

donation for playground equipment to a local city park, and a

grant to help buy food and supplies for the “Gathering and

Healing of Nations,” a series of bipartisan conferences sponsored

3 The Trust is a “charitable lead annuity trust.” A charitable trust is one whose beneficiaries are charities. Sec. 2522(a)(2). A charitable lead trust is a charitable trust whose income beneficiaries are charities, but whose remaindermen are not. Sec. 25.2702-1(c)(5), Gift Tax Regs. And a charitable lead annuity trust is a charitable lead trust whose charitable income beneficiary is guaranteed an annuity fixed as a percentage of the trust’s initial assets and paid for a term of years. Sec. 26.2642-3(b), GST Tax Regs.; sec. 25.2522(c)-3(c)(2)(vi), Gift Tax Regs.

Unless otherwise noted, all section references are to the Internal Revenue Code and regulations, and Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure. -6-

by former Senator Tom Daschle and South Dakota State government

that brings Indians and non-Indians together.

The problems that gave rise to this case can be traced to

some particularly complex wrinkles that Christiansen agreed to as

part of her estate planning. The first was to reorganize the

Christiansen farming and ranching businesses--which for decades

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