Estate of Shapiro v. Commissioner
This text of 1993 T.C. Memo. 483 (Estate of Shapiro 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.
Opinion
MEMORANDUM OPINION
HAMBLEN,
The legal issue the parties seek to have adjudicated is whether, for valuation purposes, decedent's interest in a testamentary residuary trust established by his predeceased wife's estate was an annuity for the duration of his life or a life interest in payments from a trust, the duration of which was limited to a term certain. The characterization of decedent's interest in the testamentary trust controls both the valuation of decedent's interest, and the amount petitioner is entitled to claim as a credit under *498
For purposes of deciding these cross-motions, we assume the following facts as submitted by the parties in their stipulations, pleadings, memoranda, and supporting documents.
Decedent, Benjamin Shapiro, died testate on July 2, 1986. Petitioner timely filed its Federal estate tax return on or about October 6, 1987, reporting a total estate tax due of $ 1,197,127. On the return, petitioner claimed, pursuant to
By notice of deficiency, dated September 28, 1990, respondent determined a deficiency in petitioner's Federal estate tax of $ 208,640.56. Most of the deficiency is attributable to respondent's partial disallowance of the $ 460,751 credit that petitioner claimed under
On the date the petition was filed, the legal residence of the executors, Stephen Shapiro and Saul A. Shapiro, was Croton, New York.
Decedent's spouse, Mrs. Shapiro, died on February 7, 1986, less than 5 months before decedent's own death on July 2, 1986. Decedent was 91 years old when Mrs. Shapiro died. In her will and the codicil to her will, Mrs. Shapiro directed that the residue of her estate pass in trust to Mr. Shapiro for his life, and upon*500 his death, that the remainder of the trust pass to Mrs. Shapiro's children, Saul A. Shapiro (Saul) and Estelle Pascoe.
Pertinent parts of Article 1 of the codicil direct that the residue of Mrs. Shapiro's estate be distributed to the trust and to her husband (the beneficiary) as follows: (A)(1) (2)
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MEMORANDUM OPINION
HAMBLEN,
The legal issue the parties seek to have adjudicated is whether, for valuation purposes, decedent's interest in a testamentary residuary trust established by his predeceased wife's estate was an annuity for the duration of his life or a life interest in payments from a trust, the duration of which was limited to a term certain. The characterization of decedent's interest in the testamentary trust controls both the valuation of decedent's interest, and the amount petitioner is entitled to claim as a credit under *498
For purposes of deciding these cross-motions, we assume the following facts as submitted by the parties in their stipulations, pleadings, memoranda, and supporting documents.
Decedent, Benjamin Shapiro, died testate on July 2, 1986. Petitioner timely filed its Federal estate tax return on or about October 6, 1987, reporting a total estate tax due of $ 1,197,127. On the return, petitioner claimed, pursuant to
By notice of deficiency, dated September 28, 1990, respondent determined a deficiency in petitioner's Federal estate tax of $ 208,640.56. Most of the deficiency is attributable to respondent's partial disallowance of the $ 460,751 credit that petitioner claimed under
On the date the petition was filed, the legal residence of the executors, Stephen Shapiro and Saul A. Shapiro, was Croton, New York.
Decedent's spouse, Mrs. Shapiro, died on February 7, 1986, less than 5 months before decedent's own death on July 2, 1986. Decedent was 91 years old when Mrs. Shapiro died. In her will and the codicil to her will, Mrs. Shapiro directed that the residue of her estate pass in trust to Mr. Shapiro for his life, and upon*500 his death, that the remainder of the trust pass to Mrs. Shapiro's children, Saul A. Shapiro (Saul) and Estelle Pascoe.
Pertinent parts of Article 1 of the codicil direct that the residue of Mrs. Shapiro's estate be distributed to the trust and to her husband (the beneficiary) as follows: (A)(1) (2)
The codicil to Mrs. Shapiro's will provides that the annuity payments to Mr. Shapiro "shall be made out of principal and income of such fund, and to the extent same is insufficient, out of the Balance of the Residuary Share."
The codicil further provides that no estate tax shall be allocated against the share passing to her husband, and it references an agreement between Mrs. Shapiro and Saul whereby Saul was to advance the funds needed to pay any Federal estate tax due so that Mr. Shapiro would receive his share unreduced by the estate tax. The agreement between Saul and Mrs. Shapiro provides that the advance will be repaid from the remainder of the trust after Mr. Shapiro's death. Saul advanced Mrs. Shapiro's estate $ 1,022,081.26 to pay the Federal estate tax.
On Schedule Q of petitioner's Federal estate tax return, petitioner claimed, pursuant to
The TPT credit is allowed for any beneficial interest in property.
The TPT credit is based on the value of the property in the transferor's gross estate and does not depend on the value of the property in the transferee-decedent's gross estate.
Section 20.2013-4(a), Estate Tax Regs., provides guidance as to when and how decedent's interest in the residuary trust is to be valued: If the decedent received a life estate or remainder or other limited interests in property included in the transferor's gross estate, the value of the interest is determined
The present value of an annuity * * * which is dependent on the continuation or termination of the life of one person is computed by the use of Table A in paragraph (f) of this section. * * * [However,] if the interest to be valued is dependent upon * * * a term certain concurrent with one or more lives, see paragraph (e) of this section. * * *
Petitioner and respondent agree that the fair market value of decedent's interest in the testamentary trust is equal to its present value on the date of Mrs. Shapiro's death, determined actuarially on the basis of the "recognized valuation principles" contained in
In characterizing decedent's interest, petitioner*507 relies on the fact that decedent's bequest called for the payment of an "annuity of Three Hundred Thousand (300,000) Dollars per year * * * during his life" plus a noncumulative power to withdraw up to 5 percent of the market value of the trust corpus each year. Petitioner argues that decedent's bequest is thus properly categorized as an "annuity" under
In computing the present value of decedent's interest, petitioner assumed that there would be at least $ 1,000,000 in the corpus of the residuary trust each year of decedent's remaining life, and that he would exercise his right to withdraw corpus funds in the amount of $ 50,000 each year. Thus, according to petitioner's computations, the total annuity obligation each year would equal $ 350,000 ($ 300,000 plus $ 50,000 or 5 percent of $ 1,000,000). *508 Because decedent was 91 years old on the valuation date, petitioner multiplied $ 350,000 by 2.6955 (the actuarial figure in Table A corresponding to a lifetime annuity for a 91-year-old person) to arrive at a present value figure of $ 943,425 for decedent's interest. 3
Petitioner emphasizes that the parties have stipulated that the value of the residuary trust was at least $ 1,005,126 on the date of Mrs. Shapiro's death. Because the stipulated value of the residuary trust exceeds the present value of decedent's lifetime annuity as computed under Table A, petitioner maintains that the trust was adequately funded to *509 meet the annuity obligation.
Respondent, however, argues that petitioner's valuation of decedent's interest under Table A of (1) decedent's interest is legally unenforceable as a lifetime "annuity" under state law; (2) decedent's interest in the trust must be valued as a "term certain concurrent with one" life rather than as a lifetime "annuity" since its duration was limited by a depleting corpus and was not solely "dependent on the continuation or termination of the life of one person" as required under (3) Table A is not applicable in any event because the residuary trust was "underfunded" in that the corpus was not large enough to support the annuity obligation in case decedent had lived to be age 109.
Initially, we observe that the actuarial tables, such as Table A of
Respondent does not contend that Table A is inapplicable because Mr. Shapiro's death was imminent on the date of Mrs. Shapiro's death. Rather, respondent argues that Table A cannot realistically be used to value decedent's interest because he did not receive a lifetime "annuity" or any of the other types of property interests to which Table A applies. Respondent concedes the administrative*512 necessity of using the actuarial tables to value property interests that are dependent on a person's life; however, she contends that the value of decedent's interest is also circumscribed by the limited amount of money in the residuary trust.
Based on our review of the record and the relevant authorities, we find that petitioner has properly characterized and valued decedent's interest in his wife's residuary trust for purposes of calculating the TPT credit under
It is well established that, in general, "State law creates legal interests and rights. The federal revenue acts designate what interests or rights, so created, shall be taxed."
Under New York State law, the construction of wills is to be based first and foremost on the intent of the testator as determined from the four corners of the will.
We have no doubt that Mrs. Shapiro intended to bequeath decedent a lifetime annuity. The codicil modifying her will unequivocally establishes a trust from which decedent was to receive an "annuity" of $ 300,000 per year during his life and from which decedent could make corpus withdrawals not to exceed 5 percent of the corpus' *514 market value at the end of each year. Respondent, however, argues that Mrs. Shapiro actually gave decedent a beneficial interest in an "annuity trust" which, according to respondent's reading of New York case law, is a property interest distinctly different from a "true annuity" for valuation purposes. We disagree.
An "annuity" is commonly defined as a fixed, periodic payment, either for life or a term of years. Black's Law Dictionary 90 (6th ed. 1990). An "annuity trust", under New York law, is a type of trust calling for payment of a fixed amount of income regardless of the amount of corpus.
New York courts have recognized a few distinctions between an*515 annuity and an interest payable from an annuity trust, but we do not find that any of the noted distinctions are relevant to the question of whether petitioner may value decedent's interest as an "annuity" under Table A of
Regardless of whether the residuary trust established by Mrs. Shapiro's estate fits the definition of "annuity trust" under New York law, it is clear that Mrs. Shapiro intended to give her husband a stream of fixed annual payments that was not to terminate or be reduced before his death; in other words, a lifetime annuity. Indeed, her will and codicil convince us that the annuity to her husband was chief among her testamentary objectives; she*517 gave her executors and trustee discretion to fund the trust so as to meet the annuity obligation and directed that none of the Federal estate taxes be paid out of her husband's share.
None of the New York cases cited by respondent prevents petitioner from characterizing decedent's interest in the trust as a lifetime "annuity" for purposes of determining its present value under Table A of
Accordingly, respondent employed the valuation method described in paragraph (e)
*521 Respondent's valuation method is untenable for several reasons. First, the regulation cited by respondent does not support her anomalous position that decedent's interest in the residuary trust should be characterized as a "term certain concurrent with one" life and valued as such under
Respondent confuses a
Respondent has elsewhere gone to great lengths to define what property interests are "terminable" for purposes of the marital deduction provided by section 2056. See especially sec. 20.2056(b)-1, Estate Tax Regs. The fact that respondent, in
The second reason we find respondent's valuation method under
Finally, respondent has not directed us to any cases in which an interest in a trust or other fund was deemed to be limited to a term certain concurrent with one or more lives, and hence valued under
Contrary to respondent's assertions, we find that the mere risk of corpus depletion does not restrict the duration of decedent's interest in the residuary trust to a "term certain" within the meaning of
Respondent's final argument is that petitioner's valuation of decedent's interest under Table A is erroneous because the residuary trust was "underfunded". Respondent concedes that, on the date of Mrs. Shapiro's death, the value of the residuary trust was $ 1,005,126, a figure which exceeds $ 943,425 -- the present value of decedent's annuity interest on the date of Mrs. Shapiro's death, as computed under Table A. 7*528 Nonetheless, respondent contends that petitioner's computations under Table A are invalid because the corpus of the residuary trust was not large enough to support the annuity obligation in the event decedent had lived to reach what respondent calls his "extreme life expectancy" of 109 years of age. 8 Respondent's contention is stated as follows: In the instant case, decedent was 91 years old when Gertrude died. Thus, his extreme life expectancy under Table LN was 18 more years. The corpus of the residuary trust of Gertrude's estate was only $ 1,005,126. It was, therefore, insufficient to fully satisfy the annuity payments*527 and corpus withdrawals for more than three years and would exhaust in the fourth year. The factor for a 91 year-old found in Table A is a present value * * * [assuming] 18 [more] years of payments. Therefore, in multiplying the $ 300,000 annuity by the factor in Table A, petitioner has overstated the value of Benjamin's [decedent's] interest by the equivalent of the present value of fourteen years of $ 300,000 annuity payments (extreme life expectancy of 18 years minus the four-year duration of the trust) discounted by the probability that he would live that long.
Taking respondent's argument to its theoretical conclusion,
Table A is premised on two actuarial presumptions: (1) the interest rate on the principal amount is assumed to be 10 percent, and (2) a person, at any given age, is assumed to die within a time consistent with the average mortality rate for that age.
One of the fundamental purposes *529 of the actuarial tables is to assist in the computation of the fair market value of property interests that are not ordinarily sold to the public. 10 For property items normally sold on the public markets, the fair market value is generally "the price at which the property would change hands between a willing buyer and a willing seller, neither being under any compulsion to buy or to sell and both having reasonable knowledge of relevant facts." Sec. 20.2031-1(b), Estate Tax Regs. However, with respect to property interests that are not ordinarily sold to the public -- for example, private annuities, life estates, remainders, and reversions -- their fair market value "is their
This presumption is implicit in example 1 provided in
In essence, respondent argues that unless an annuity is "guaranteed" throughout an annuitant's extreme life expectancy, just as a commercial*531 annuity is guaranteed, the computation of the annuity's present value must be made on a case-by-case basis using a special actuarial factor supplied by the Internal Revenue Service; any computation of an unguaranteed, private annuity under Table A would be deemed invalid in respondent's view. Respondent's position, if it were correct, would vitiate the use of Table A as an administrative convenience and bright-line approach to valuation. Table A could not be used to determine the present values of all sorts of unguaranteed, privately funded annuities; they would all be subject to individual analysis under a facts-and-circumstances test.
As noted, one of the principal purposes of the actuarial tables is to prevent every case from becoming a question of fact as to the most likely outcome of the case.
We have found that petitioner properly characterized decedent's interest in his wife's residuary trust as a lifetime annuity under both New York law and
Accordingly, we hold, as a matter of law, that petitioner properly computed the fair market value of decedent's interest*533 in the residuary trust under Table A of
Based on the foregoing,
Footnotes
1. Unless otherwise indicated, Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure, and section references are to the Internal Revenue Code in effect on the date of decedent's death.↩
2. The actuarial tables under
sec. 20.2031-7 , Estate Tax Regs., generally apply to estates of persons dying after Nov. 30, 1983, but before May 1, 1989, except as otherwise provided in paragraph (a)(1) of the section. Such tables assume a 10-percent interest rate and discount rate, and make no distinction between male and female life expectancies.Sec. 20.2031-10 ↩, Estate Tax Regs., generally applies to estates of persons dying after Dec. 1, 1970, but before Dec. 1, 1983, and therefore is not relevant to this case.3. Petitioner's present value computations under Table A of
sec. 20.2031-7(f) , Estate Tax Regs., can be expressed in the following formula:$ 300,000 annual annuity x 2.6955 * = $ 808,650 Plus: 5% x $ 1,000,000 x 2.6955 * = 134,775 Total present value of interest = 943,425 * 2.6955 is the actuarial figure provided by Table A corresponding to a lifetime annuity for a 91-year-old person.↩
4.
Sec. 20.2031-7(a)(1)↩ , Estate Tax Regs., provides, in pertinent part, that "The value of annuities issued by companies regularly engaged in their sale, and of insurance policies on the lives of persons other than the decedent is determined under § 20.2031-8."5.
Sec. 20.2031-7(e) , Estate Tax Regs., provides as follows:(e) Actuarial computations by the Internal Revenue Service.
If the valuation of the interest involved is dependent upon the continuation or the termination of more than one life or upona term certain concurrent with one or more lives a special factor must be used↩ . The factor is to be computed on the basis of interest at the rate of 10 percent a year, compounded annually, and life contingencies determined, as to each person involved, from the values of lx that are set forth in column 2 of Table LN of paragraph (f). Table LN contains values of lx taken from the life table for the total population appearing as Table 1 of United States Life Tables: 1969-71, published by the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, Public Health Service. A copy of the publication, containing many such special factors, may be purchased from the Superintendent of Documents, United States Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C. 20404. However, if a special factor is required in the case of an actual decedent, the Commissioner will furnish the factor to the executor upon request. The request must be accompanied by a statement of the date of birth of each person, the duration of whose life may affect the value of the interest, and by copies of the relevant instruments. Special factors are not furnished for prospective transfers. [Emphasis added.]6. Examples 8 and 11, set forth in Part 4 of IRS Publication 723E, are as follows:
4. Factors Involving One Life and a Term of Years
Example 8The columns of Table H are called "commutation columns." The use of these columns is illustrated in Examples 8 through 11. * * *
The factor for the present worth of a temporary annuity of $ 1.00 per annum payable annually for 10 years or until the prior death of a person aged 42 is $ 6.0231, determined as follows:
Initial age 42
Term of years 10
Terminal age 52
(1) N-factor, Table H, aged 42 15,313.9520 (2) N-factor, Table H, aged 52 5,117.0965 (3) Difference: Item (1) less Item (2) 10,196.8555 (4) D-factor, Table H, aged 42 1,692.9463 (5) Required factor: Item (3)/Item (4) 6.0231 * * *
Example 11
The factor for the present worth of the right of a person aged 21 to receive $ 1.00 upon attaining age 30 is $ 0.41851, determined as follows:
Initial age 21
Terminal age 30
↩ (1) D-factor, Table H, aged 30 5,461.9063 (2) D-factor, Table H, aged 21 13,050.9105 (3) Required factor: Item (1)/Item (2) $ 0.41851 7. Petitioner contends that the present value of the residuary trust was $ 2,027,207 as of the date of Mrs. Shapiro's death. It arrives at this figure by adding the present value of the residue of the estate, $ 1,005,126, plus an advancement of $ 1,022,081 from Saul Shapiro for estate taxes, pursuant to a purported contractual agreement between Saul and Mrs. Shapiro. We do not need to decide if Saul's advancement of funds is part of the residuary trust on the valuation date due to our holding in this case.↩
8. Table A of
sec. 20.2031-7(f)↩ , Estate Tax Regs., sets forth actuarial factors for purposes of determining the present value of lifetime annuities, life estates, and remainders with respect to people of the ages 1 through 109 years. Table A thus presumes that no person will live to be age 110.9. Wallace, "Taxation of Private Annuities",
40 B.U. L. Rev. 349, 371↩ (1960) .10.
Id.↩
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1993 T.C. Memo. 483, 66 T.C.M. 1067, 1993 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 497, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-shapiro-v-commissioner-tax-1993.