Estate of Samuel P. Black, Jr., Samuel P. Black, III v. Commissioner

133 T.C. No. 15, 133 T.C. 340, 2009 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 35
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedDecember 14, 2009
Docket23188-05, 23191-05, 23516-06
StatusUnknown

This text of 133 T.C. No. 15 (Estate of Samuel P. Black, Jr., Samuel P. Black, III 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 Samuel P. Black, Jr., Samuel P. Black, III v. Commissioner, 133 T.C. No. 15, 133 T.C. 340, 2009 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 35 (tax 2009).

Opinion

133 T.C. No. 15

UNITED STATES TAX COURT

ESTATE OF SAMUEL P. BLACK, JR., DECEASED, SAMUEL P. BLACK, III, EXECUTOR, ET AL.,1 Petitioner v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent

Docket Nos. 23188-05, 23191-05, Filed December 14, 2009. 23516-06.

From 1927 until 1993, Mr. B was an employee, officer, or director of E (an insurance company) and was a major contributor to E’s success. In 1993, he, his son, P, and trusts for P’s two sons contributed their unencumbered E stock to BLP, a family limited partnership, in exchange for partnership interests proportionate to the fair market value of the E stock each contributed. Mr. B’s advisers had explained the estate tax advantages of placing his E stock in BLP, but the transaction was initiated to implement Mr. B’s buy-and-hold philosophy with respect to the family’s E stock. Specifically, that transaction was a solution to his concerns that (1) P’s wife and her parents (she in connection with a possible divorce from P, they because of their continual financial problems) would require P to sell or pledge some of his E stock to

1 The following cases are consolidated herewith for trial, briefing, and opinion: Estate of Irene M. Black, Deceased, Samuel P. Black, III, Executor, docket Nos. 23191-05 and 23516- 06. - 2 -

satisfy their monetary needs (P previously had pledged 125,000 E shares as collateral for a loan), and (2) his grandsons would sell all or some of the E stock that they would receive upon the termination of their trusts. In 1993, P and the two trusts owned approximately $12 million (of the B family’s approximately $80 million) worth of E stock.

Mr. B’s estate plan established a pecuniary marital trust for Mrs. B and a $20 million bequest to a university endowment. Mr. B died in December 2001, and Mrs. B, 5 months later, before there was time to fund the marital trust, which P, as executor of both estates, had intended to fund with a portion of Mr. B’s estate’s interest in BLP. On Mrs. B’s estate’s Federal estate tax return, P deemed the marital trust to be funded as of the date of her death.

Because Mrs. B’s estate lacked sufficient liquid assets to discharge its tax and other liabilities, P, BLP’s managing partner, and E agreed to have BLP sell some of its E stock in a secondary offering. That sale raised $98 million, of which E lent to Mrs. B’s estate $71 million. The interest on the loan was payable in a lump sum on the purported due date, more than 4 years from the date of the loan, and was deducted in full on Mrs. B’s estate’s tax return under sec. 20.2053- 1(b)(3), Estate Tax Regs. Mrs. B’s estate used the funds to discharge its Federal and State tax liabilities, pay the $20 million bequest to the university endowment, reimburse E’s costs, totaling $980,625, in connection with the secondary offering, and pay $1,155,000 each to P, as executor fees, and to a law firm, as legal fees.

R determined that (1) the value of the E stock apportionable to Mr. B’s partnership interest in BLP at his death is includable in his gross estate under either sec. 2035(a) or 2036(a)(1) or (2), I.R.C., (2) the marital deduction to which Mr. B’s estate is entitled under sec. 2056, I.R.C., is limited to the value of the partnership interest in BLP that actually passed to the marital trust, (3) the deemed funding date of the marital trust and, hence, the size of the BLP interest includable in Mrs. B’s estate under sec. 2044, I.R.C., is determined by reference to the value of BLP on the date of Mr. B’s death, not on the date of Mrs. B’s death when the value of BLP was higher and it would require a smaller interest in BLP to fund the trust, (4) the interest payable on the BLP loan to Mrs. B’s estate is not a deductible administration expense under sec. 2053(a)(2), I.R.C., and (5) Mrs. B’s estate is not entitled to deduct the $980,625 reimbursement of E’s secondary - 3 -

offering costs and is entitled to deduct only $500,000 of P’s executor fee and $500,000 of the legal fees.

1. Held: Because Mr. B’s transfer of E stock to BLP in exchange for a partnership interest therein constituted “a bona fide sale for an adequate and full consideration in money or money’s worth” within the meaning of sec. 2036(a), I.R.C., the value of Mr. B’s gross estate does not include the value of the transferred E stock apportionable to his date-of-death interest in BLP.

2. Held, further, holding No. 1 renders R’s second determination moot.

3. Held, further, the deemed funding date of the marital trust is the date of Mrs. B’s death.

4. Held, further, the loan from BLP to Mrs. B’s estate was not “necessarily incurred” within the meaning of sec. 20.2053-3(a), Estate Tax Regs., and, therefore, the interest thereon is not a deductible administration expense under sec. 2053(a)(2), I.R.C.

5. Held, further, Mrs. B’s estate is entitled to deduct $481,000 of its reimbursement of E’s secondary offering costs, $577,500 for P’s executor fee, and $577,500 for legal fees because only those amounts correspond to expenditures or effort on behalf of Mrs. B’s estate.

John W. Porter, J. Graham Kenney, Stephanie Loomis-Price,

and Jason S. Zarin, for petitioner.

Gerald A. Thorpe and Andrew M. Stroot, for respondent.

HALPERN, Judge: Respondent has issued four notices of

deficiency (the notices) to Samuel P. Black III (petitioner).

Two were issued to him in his capacity as executor of the estate

of Samuel P. Black, Jr. (Mr. Black’s estate and Mr. Black,

respectively), and two were issued to him in his capacity as

executor of the estate of Irene M. Black (Mrs. Black’s estate and

Mrs. Black, respectively). Two notices were with respect to - 4 -

Federal gift tax (one with respect to Mr. Black and one with

respect to Mrs. Black), each determining a deficiency in tax of

$147,623 for 2001 for gifts by Mr. Black that were treated for

Federal gift tax purposes as made one-half by each spouse. The

other two notices were with respect to Federal estate tax, one

determining a deficiency in tax of $129,166,964 for Mr. Black’s

estate, and the other determining a deficiency in tax of

$82,224,024 for Mrs. Black’s estate. Petitioner is the son of

Mr. and Mrs. Black.

After concessions (all of which relate to valuation issues

and issues resolved by the settlement of the valuation issues)

the issues for decision are (1) whether the fair market value of

stock that Mr. Black contributed to the Black Interests Limited

Partnership (Black LP) is includable in his gross estate pursuant

to section 20362 (the section 2036 issue); (2) if we decide that

the fair market value of the stock Mr. Black contributed to Black

LP, rather than the fair market value of Mr. Black’s interest in

Black LP, is includable in his gross estate under section 2036,

whether the marital deduction to which Mr. Black’s estate is

entitled under section 2056 should be computed according to the

value of the partnership interest that actually passed to Mrs.

Black or according to the value of the underlying stock

apportionable to that interest (the marital deduction issue); (3)

2 Unless otherwise stated, all section references are to the Internal Revenue Code as amended and in effect for the dates of decedents’ deaths, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure. We round all dollar amounts to the nearest dollar. - 5 -

for purposes of determining the value of the marital trust

property includable in Mrs. Black’s gross estate under section

2044, whether the marital trust that Mr. Black established for

Mrs. Black’s benefit should be deemed funded on the date of his

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133 T.C. No. 15, 133 T.C. 340, 2009 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-samuel-p-black-jr-samuel-p-black-iii-v-commissioner-tax-2009.