Estate of Prell v. Commissioner

48 T.C. 67, 1967 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 114
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedApril 26, 1967
DocketDocket No. 2577-64
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 48 T.C. 67 (Estate of Prell 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 Prell v. Commissioner, 48 T.C. 67, 1967 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 114 (tax 1967).

Opinion

Withet, Judge:

An estate tax deficiency has been determined by respondent against petitioner in the amount of $220,932.93. The issues to be decided are (1) what is the correct valuation date for certain shares of stock which were assets of decedent’s estate, (2) what was the fair market value thereof on one valuation date, (3) whether decedent transferred $8,240 to his son and daughter prior to his death, and (4) what is the proper attorney’s fee allowance to petitioner as an administration expense. Another issue raised by the pleadings, the amount of the marital deduction, is necessarily dependent upon the disposition of issues 1 through 4 and will be given effect under Eule 50.

GENERAL FINDINGS OF FACT

The facts which have 'been agreed upon are found as stipulated.

Charles M. Prell, Sr., hereinafter referred to as the decedent, died March 31, 1960, a resident of Strongsville, Ohio. The Federal estate tax return of the Estate of Charles M. Prell, Sr., hereinafter referred to as the estate, was filed with the district director of internal revenue, Cleveland, Ohio, on June 29,1961. The return indicated a gross estate of $5,434,746.41 at the time of decedent’s death.

On April 5, 1960, the will of the decedent was admitted to probate in the Probate Court of Cuyahoga County, Ohio, and Charles M. Prell, Jr., and Helen M. Prell were appointed coexecutors of the estate.

The residuary legatees of the estate and their interests under decedent’s will are as follows:

Relationship Percentage of the
Name to decedent residue of the estate
Mary B. Prell_Wife 50
Charles M. Prell, Jr_Son 25
Helen M. Prell- Daughter 25

Issue 1

FINDINGS OF FACT

On the date of decedent’s death he owned, among other assets, 100,624 shares of stock in the Standard Pressed Steel Co., hereinafter Standard. On August 9, 1960, the executors of decedent’s estate assigned and delivered to the residuary legatees 100,000 shares of Standard stock as follows: 50,000 shares to decedent’s spouse; 25,000 shares to decedent’s son; and 25,000 shares to decedent’s daughter. On the same day the legatees signed receipts for the stock and the stock certificates were delivered to a local stock brokerage house for forwarding to Standard. On August 15,1960, Standard transferred ownership of the stock on its stock transfer books and issued new certificates to the legatees.

Decedent’s Federal estate tax return, filed on June 29,1961, indicated an election to use alternate valuation dates in valuing decedent’s gross estate. As indicated in the return, the date chosen by the executors to reflect the distribution of the 100,000 shares of Standard stock was August 9,1960.

The Standard stock assigned and delivered to the three legatees was effectively separated from the estate on August 9, 1960, and was, in fact, distributed and paid over to them on that date.

OPINION

The statute which indicates the proper date for estate tax valuation in view of petitioner’s election of an alternate date is section 2032(a) (1) ,11.E.C. 1954. The regulation which has been promulgated in pursuance thereof is section 20.2032-1 (a) (1) and (c) (2) (i), (ii), and (iii), Estate Tax Begs.2

On August 9, 1960, the executors of decedant’s estate endorsed 100,000 shares of Standard stock, obtained receipts from the residuary legatees acknowledging delivery therefor, and had the stock sent to Standard for the purpose of changing the record ownership of the shares on the corporate books from decedent’s name to those of the legatees. We think the executors, consistent with the language of the pertinent estate tax regulation, sec. 20.2032-1, effectuated a “segregation or separation of the property from the estate * * * so that it * * * [became] unqualifiedly subject to the demand or disposition of the distributee [s]” and that such action by the executors constituted an “actual paying over or delivery of the property to the distributee [s].”

While the executors do not challenge the validity of the pertinent regulation, they take the position that under Ohio probate law, Ohio Eev. Code Ann., sec. 2113.53 (Page .1953), an executor may not distribute assets of the estate until certain conditions have been met, one of which is the expiration of 6 months from the date of the executor’s appointment. Thus, they argue that the first date the Standard stock could have been legally delivered to the legatees herein was October 5, 1960, 6 months after the executors were appointed. In rejecting this contention we are satisfied that the Ohio statute relied upon is primarily intended to protect claimants of the estate. See In re Estate of Walden, 6 Ohio Misc. 214, 214 N.E. 2d 271 (Prob. Ct. 1965). The record herein not only fails to disclose the existence of any such claimants but fails to disclose 'the likelihood of any action, present or prospective, against the estate by any claimant. The word “distribution,” as used in section 2032 of the Code and as defined in the regulation quoted in the margin, relates to the shifting of the economic benefits of the property transferred, Hertsche v. United States, 244 F. Supp. 347 (D. Ore. 1965), rather than with technicalities of State law. We think the Controlling-Federal law is intended to deal with the actuality of distribution or the paying over of an asset in an estate. We have found as a fact that this occurred on August 9,1960, the valuation date designated in petitioner’s estate tax return, and therefore find the valuation date to be August 9, 1960.

Issue 2

FINDINGS OP PACT

The market price of standard stock had been declining since the end of 1959. On August 9,1960, the over-the-counter bid price of the stock was $27 and the asked price was $29% or a mean of $28.375. The total outstanding stock of Standard on that date was about 2,500,000 shares.

In the opinion of an investment banker, hereinafter the banker, whose firm was experienced in the business of acting as underwriter in the disposition of blocks of stock through secondary offerings upon the over-the-counter market, 100,000 shares of Standard stock could not have been disposed of on the market on August 9, 1960, the alternate valuation date, since the bidding for such stock was not in sufficiently large quantities. The banker felt that in order to sell such a large block of Standard stock it would be necessary to first sell the stock to an underwriting group who would, in turn, make a reoffering of the stock. The banker concluded that if a 100,000-share block of Standard stock had been disposed of in this manner, the seller would have received, after all expenses, approximately $24 a share.

At or about the end of 1959, one Joseph Fribley died. He, together with his family, held “286,000 plus” shares of Standard stock at that time. Subsequently, on December 6, 1960, the banker’s firm offered 115,760 shares of Standard stock for sale to the public. The block was composed of shares formerly held by the Prell and Fribley estates.

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Bluebook (online)
48 T.C. 67, 1967 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-prell-v-commissioner-tax-1967.