Estate of Sachs v. Commissioner

856 F.2d 1158
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 15, 1988
DocketNos. 87-2489, 87-2596
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 856 F.2d 1158 (Estate of Sachs v. Commissioner) 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 Sachs v. Commissioner, 856 F.2d 1158 (8th Cir. 1988).

Opinion

ARNOLD, Circuit Judge.

This tax case involves two problems in the treatment of net gifts under the federal estate and gift tax laws. We hold, first, that a decedent’s executors may not deduct, as a claim against the estate under 26 U.S.C. § 2053(a)(3), an income-tax liability which was subsequently forgiven by Congress. Second, we hold that the decedent’s gross estate must, under 26 U.S.C. § 2035(c), include the amount of any gift tax paid by the donees of any net gift made within three years of the decedent’s death.

I.

Samuel C. Sachs, the decedent, died on June 27, 1980. Less than three years before his death, Sachs and his wife gave stock valued at $2,399,044 to three irrevocable trusts established for the benefit of their grandchildren. The donation was designed as a net gift — that is, the trust instrument required, as a condition of the gift, that the trustees satisfy all gift-tax liability arising from the Sachses’ donation of stock. Accordingly, the donee trusts paid a gift tax of $612,700, while Sachs and his wife reported the gift at a value of $1,786,340.

After Sachs’s death, the gift of stock was included in Sachs’s gross estate on the estate-tax return pursuant to § 2035(a).1 The stock’s value on the date of Sachs’s death had declined to $2,196,180, and the executors followed the then-established practice of subtracting the amount of the gift tax paid by the donee trusts from the value of the gift included in the estate, for an includable total of $1,583,480.

Sachs’s executors filed the estate-tax return on March 25, 1981. Three weeks earlier, this Court decided Diedrich v. Commissioner, 643 F.2d 499 (8th Cir.1981), which had held for the first time that a donee’s payment of the gift tax on a net gift creates taxable income for the donor. After the Supreme Court affirmed our decision in Diedrich, 457 U.S. 191, 102 S.Ct. 2414, 72 L.Ed.2d 777 (1982), the executors of Sachs’s estate agreed to recognize the gift tax paid by the donees, less the adjusted basis in the stock, as income to the estate. The executors proceeded to pay the additional income tax resulting from the donees’ 1978 payment of the gift tax, and deducted this payment as a claim against the estate under § 2053(a)(3).

The Sachs estate’s additional tax liability created by Diedrich was forgiven by Congress two years later. The Tax Reform Act of 1984, Pub.L. 98-369, § 1026(a), provides that

[i]n the case of any transfer of property subject to gift tax made before March 4, 1981 ... gross income of the donor shall not include any amount attributable to the donee’s payment of (or agreement to pay) any gift tax imposed with respect to such gift.

98 Stat. 494, 1031 (1984). As a result, the Sachs estate received a full refund of all income tax it had paid on the donees’ 1978 satisfaction of the gift-tax liability for the gift of stock.

After reviewing the return, the Commissioner took the position that the estate should include, in addition to the value of the net gift itself, the amount of the gift tax paid by the donees. In a petition to the Tax Court, the estate sought a redetermi-nation of this decision, claiming it rested on a misinterpretation of § 2035(c).2 In his amended answer, the Commissioner sought to disallow the estate’s deduction under § 2053(a)(3) for the income-tax liability [1160]*1160which had been imposed under Diedrich, but which had subsequently been forgiven by the Tax Reform Act of 1984. By an eleven-member majority with seven judges dissenting, the Tax Court held that the estate was entitled to deduct, as a claim against the estate under § 2053(a)(3), the income tax which was subsequently refunded. Estate of Sachs v. Commissioner, 88 T.C. 769, 779-83 (1987). The Commissioner appeals, and we reverse the decision of the Tax Court on this issue. By a fourteen-member majority with four judges dissenting, the Tax Court further held that the donees’ 1978 tax payment on the net gift was includable in the gross estate under § 2035(c). Id. at 772-778. The estate cross-appeals this determination, and we affirm the Tax Court on this issue.

II.

Section 2053(a)(3) allows executors to deduct claims against the estate from the gross estate in computing the value of the taxable estate. The problem at hand concerns the tax treatment of claims against the estate which cease to exist as a result of events after death. The Commissioner argues that when such claims disappear, the estate’s § 2053(a)(3) deduction disappears with them. We agree.

In reaching the opposite conclusion, the Tax Court relied on the valuation principle Mr. Justice Holmes adopted in Ithaca Trust Co. v. United States, 279 U.S. 151, 49 S.Ct. 291, 73 L.Ed. 647 (1929), that “[t]he estate so far as it may be is settled as of the date of the testator's death.” Id. at 155, 49 S.Ct. at 291. The Tax Court reasoned that, on the date of Mr. Sachs’s death, his estate was liable to pay income tax on the donees’ 1978 gift-tax payment, as the Supreme Court would later establish in Diedrich. This additional unpaid tax liability remained a valid and enforceable claim against the estate until Congress nullified it four years later. Applying the valuation formula in Ithaca Trust, the Tax Court concluded that the estate was still entitled to a deduction for the income-tax payment which Congress refunded, since the estate’s gross value was diminished by that amount at the time of Sachs’s death.

In this Circuit, however, the date-of-death principle of valuation does not apply to claims against the estate deducted under § 2053(a)(3). In Jacobs v. Commissioner, 34 F.2d 233 (8th Cir.), cert. denied, 280 U.S. 603, 50 S.Ct. 85, 74 L.Ed. 647 (1929), this Court held that an estate could not deduct, under the statutory predecessor of § 2053(a)(3), the amount of a claim against the estate arising from an antenuptial agreement which was subsequently waived by the decedent’s widow. Our Court observed:

The claims which Congress intended to be deducted were actual claims, not theoretical ones. Indeed, a claim without a claimant is a sort of legal figment.... In our opinion a claim without a claimant was not in the mind or purpose of Congress when the words “claims against the estate” were written into the revenue statutes.... It was, in our opinion, claims presented and allowed or otherwise determined as valid against the estate and actually paid or to be paid that Congress had in mind, when it provided for the deduction from the gross estate of ‘claims against the estate’ in determining the value of the net estate for taxing purposes.

34 F.2d at 235. In Jacobs, we interpreted the date-of-death rule announced in Ithaca Trust to apply only to valuations of charitable bequests, for which estates took deductions under the predecessor of 26 U.S.C.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
856 F.2d 1158, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-sachs-v-commissioner-ca8-1988.