Estate of Kinney v. Commissioner

39 T.C. 728, 1963 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 201
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedJanuary 31, 1963
DocketDocket No. 87718
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 39 T.C. 728 (Estate of Kinney 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 Kinney v. Commissioner, 39 T.C. 728, 1963 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 201 (tax 1963).

Opinion

TietjeNS, Judge:

The Commissioner determined a deficiency in petitioner’s estate tax of $194,993.07. The parties have settled several issues regarding the deficiency. The remaining issues for decision are: (1) Whether the value of certain stock dividends received by a trust of which petitioner’s decedent was life beneficiary is includable in decedent’s gross estate and, if so, (2) the method of determining the value of these stock dividends.

FINDINGS OF FACT.

The case was submitted upon a complete stipulation of all the facts which we find accordingly. The exhibits attached to the stipulation are incorporated by reference. All other issues raised by the pleadings, other than those issues set out above, have been stipulated by the parties.

Anna Hart Kinney, hereinafter referred to as the decedent, died on January 30, 1956, a resident of the State of New York. Irving Trust Co. is the duly qualified and presently acting executor of the estate of Anna Hart Kinney, deceased, under letters testamentary issued on June 26,1956, by the Surrogate’s Court of New York County, State of New York.

The Federal estate tax return was filed with the district director of internal revenue for the Manhattan District, N. Y.

At the time of her death, the decedent was the sole surviving trustee and life beneficiary of a certain trust created by the last will and testament of E. Burton Hart, who died a resident of New York Comity, State of New York, on November 3,1904, and whose last will and testament was duly admitted to probate by the Surrogate’s Court, New York County, on December 1, 1904. The sum of $140,000 was bequeathed to three named trustees, of whom the decedent was one, and it was provided that the net income thereof should be paid to the decedent during her life and that upon her death the principal should be paid to her then heirs-at-law in accordance with the laws of the State of New York as at that time in force. The will of E. Burton Hart contained no provision regarding the disposition as between principal and income of stock dividends which might be received by the trust.

After the death of the decedent, petitioner filed in the Surrogate’s Court, New York County, its final account of the proceedings of the decedent as sole surviving trustee of the trust and a supplemental account of petitioner as custodian of the funds of the trust after the death of the decedent and its petition for the judicial settlement of the accounts. Petitioner, on behalf of the decedent, as income beneficiary of the trust, made claim to certain stock dividends received by and held in the trust which it claimed that the decedent as life beneficiary was entitled to receive under 'the applicable New York law, as follows:

24 shares American Viscose Corp.
217 shares International Paper Co., Com.
20 shares Lily Tulip Cup Corp., Com.
120 shares Mission Corp., Com.
140/30/60 shares Mission Development Corp.
5 shares Pittsburgh Plate Glass Co., Com.
2 shares Shell Oil Co., Com.
200 shares Standard Oil Company (N.J.).

All the shares listed above were stock dividends allocable to income under New York law and received on shares held in the principal of the trust (or shares received with respect to such stock dividends by reason of stock dividends paid thereon or splits), except that of the 217 shares of International Paper Co. common, 54.48 shares had their origin in 7 shares of International Paper Co. 5 percent preferred purchased from income of the trust for the sum of $486.83, and except that in some cases where the trust received fractional shares as part of such stock dividends, fractional shares were purchased from income to make a full share.

The shares listed above, received over the period from March 15, 1935, to January 27, 1956, had a value on the various dates received in the aggregate amount of $23,886.83 and a value on January 30, 1956, the date of decedent’s death, in the aggregate amount of $65,325.04.

The shares listed above continued to be held in the trust from the date of their receipt until decedent’s death. One-tenth of a share of International Paper Co. common received by the trust was sold on February 8, 1955, for $8.73 and 9 shares of Mission Corp. received by the trust were sold in April 1955 for $343.18.

The shares were issued in the name of the trustees. Decedent received the dividends which were paid on such shares as life beneficiary of the trust. She never executed any document assigning the shares to the trust.

In the accounting proceeding, the remaindermen of the trust objected to the claim of the estate to the stock dividends upon the ground that decedent had “waived and gifted” the stock dividends in question to the principal of the trust. The surrogate of New York County sustained the right of the principal of the trust to such stock dividends upon the ground that:

decedent consciously and deliberately waived and renounced any right that she had as income beneficiary in any of these stock distributions * * *
*******
Whether we call it waiver, renunciation or gift, it is clear that [decedent] gave up and surrendered any rights * * * and that she intended to vest complete ownership of all of these dividends in the principal account.

The final decree of Surrogate’s Court was entered on June 6,1960.

The value of all of the assets of the trust as of January 30,1956, the date of the decedent’s death, was $489,652.55.

OPINION.

Petitioner argues that the stock dividends in question are not in-cludible in the decedent’s estate since the shares were received and held by the trust and she never transferred such shares to the trust as required by section 2036 of the 1954 Code.1 The Commissioner maintains that since the decedent was entitled to the stock dividends received by the trust as a matter of law, she made a transfer to the trust when she permitted the stock dividends to become part of the trust corpus.

The will of E. Burton Hart, which created the trust in 1904, made no provision with regard to the disposition of stock dividends. Under the rule of apportionment laid down in Matter of Osborne, 209 N.Y. 450 (1913), the stock dividends here, which were attributable to income, belonged to the decedent as life beneficiary of the trust.2 The court stated in a supplementary opinion (209 N.Y. at 484) :

The proposition decided 'by us in this case is that in all cases of extraordinary-dividends, either of money or stock, sufficient of the dividend must be retained in the corpus of the trust to maintain that corpus unimpaired, and the remainder must be awarded to the life beneficiary * * *

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Estate of Kinney v. Commissioner
39 T.C. 728 (U.S. Tax Court, 1963)

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Bluebook (online)
39 T.C. 728, 1963 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-kinney-v-commissioner-tax-1963.