Farkas v. Commissioner

8 T.C. 1351, 1947 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 162
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedJune 30, 1947
DocketDocket No. 8293
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 8 T.C. 1351 (Farkas 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
Farkas v. Commissioner, 8 T.C. 1351, 1947 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 162 (tax 1947).

Opinions

OPINION.

Harron, Judge:

Respondent has determined that petitioner is taxable under section 22 (a) of the Internal Revenue Code on his full one-eighth share of the income of the testamentary trust distributable to petitioner in 1943. Petitioner was one of eight income beneficiaries under a testamentary trust set up by his father. The income was payable to each of the beneficiaries, including petitioner, for life. In 1943, while the testamentary trust was still in existence, petitioner created an inter vivos trust for the benefit of his brothers and sisters and transferred to it his interest in the income of the testamentary trust. The. inter vivos trust was to terminate within ten years, or upon the death of the trustee, one of petitioner’s brothers. After the creation of the inter vivos trust the income of the testamentary trust distributable to petitioner was paid to the inter vivos trust. The question is whether petitioner or the inter vivos trust is taxable on this income.

Petitioner contends that the inter vivos trust which he created in 1943 was to last for ten years, and that the income of the testamentary trust which he transferred to the inter vivos trust was taxable to such trust and not to him, on the authority of Blair v. Commissioner, 300 U. S. 5.

Respondent makes two contentions in support of his determination that petitioner and not the inter vivos trust was taxable on the income. His principal argument is that petitioner did not transfer to the inter vivos trust any income-producing property, but merely transferred to the trust income from property of which he remained the owner; in short, that the creation of the inter vivos trust merely worked an anticipatory assignment of income from petitioner to the trust for which petitioner is taxable under Harrison v. Schaffner, 312 U. S. 579, and Helvering v. Horst, 311 U. S. 112.

Respondent’s second contention is to the effect that the inter vimos trust which petitioner set up in 1943 was not a 10-year trust, but one for which the 10-year term was only the outside limit, and that the trust could be terminated by petitioner at any time within the 10-year period. This, says respondent, makes the trust a revocable trust, the income of which is taxable to petitioner under section 166 of the Internal Revenue Code. Corliss v. Bowers, 281 U. S. 376.

For purposes of discussing the main contention of the parties, to which we now address ourselves, and which in the last analysis is whether the instant case is controlled by the rationale of the Blair or the Schaffner case, we shall assume that the term of the inter vivos trust was for a period of ten years.

In Blair v. Commissioner, supra, Blair was the life beneficiary of a testamentary trust set up by his father. He assigned to his‘children portions of the net trust income which he was entitled to receive for life. The trustees accepted the assignments and distributed the income directly to the children. The Commissioner attempted to tax the assigned income to Blair, the assignor. The Supreme Court held that the assignments were valid and that the income was taxable to the children and not to their father, the assignor. The Court said:

The will creating the trust entitled the petitioner during his life to the net income of the property held in trust. He thus became the owner of an equitable interest in the corpus of the property. * * * The interest was present property alienable like any other, in the absence of a valid restraint upon alienation. * * * The beneficiary may thus transfer a part of his interest as well as the whole. * * * The assignment of the beneficial interest is not the assignment of a chose in action but of the “right, title, and estate in and to property.”
We conclude that the assignments were valid, that the assignees thereby became the owners of the specified beneficial interests in the income, and that as to these interests they and not the petitioner were taxable for the tax years in question. * * *

Under the authority of the Blair case, a beneficiary having a right to the net income from a trust for his life is said to have an equitable interest in the corpus of the trust, an interest in the estate. If he completely assigns that right to another, the assignee has the same equitable interest in the property or estate; and if, as in the Blair case, he assigns a specified amount of income for the rest of his life, the assignee still has a proportionate interest in the corpus, that part of the corpus which has the income-producing capacity in the specified amount assigned. The references in the Blair case present no instance where a person has transferred less than all of his future interest in all or part of the income. Huber v. Helvering, 117 Fed. (2d) 782, 784.

However, Harrison v. Schaffner, supra, does present a case where a life beneficiary under a trust has transferred less than all of his future interest in all or part of the income. In the Schaffner case the life beneficiary of a testamentary trust assigned to certain of her children specified amounts in dollars from the income of the trust for the year following the assignment. She made a like assignment to her children and a son-in-law in the following year. The Supreme Court held that the assigned income which was paid by the trustees to the several assignees was taxable to the life beneficiary, the assignor. The Court said with respect to the Blair case:

* * * It is true, as respondent argues, that where the beneficiary of a trust had assigned a share of the income to another for life without retaining any form of control over the interest assigned, this Court construed the assignment as a transfer in praesenti to the donee, of a life interest in the corpus of the trust property and held in consequence that the income thereafter paid to the donee was taxable to him and not the donor. Blair v. Commissioner, supra. But we think it quite another matter to say that the beneficiary of a trust who makes a single gift of a sum of money payable out of the income of the trust does not realize income when the gift is effectuated by payment, or that he escapes the tax by attempting to clothe the transaction in the guise of a transfer of trust property rather than the transfer of income where that is its obvious purpose and effect. We think that the gift by a beneficiary of a trust of some part of the income derived from the trust property for the period of a day, a month or a year involves no such substantial disposition of the trust property as to camouflage the reality that he is enjoying the benefit of the income from the trust of which he continues to be the beneficiary, quite as much as he enjoys the benefits of interest or wages which he gives away as in the Horst and Eubank cases. Even though the gift of income be in form accomplished by the temporary disposition of the donor’s property which produces the income, the donor retaining every other substantial interest in it, we have not allowed the form to obscure, the reality.

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Related

McGinnis v. Commissioner
1993 T.C. Memo. 45 (U.S. Tax Court, 1993)
Farkas v. Commissioner
8 T.C. 1351 (U.S. Tax Court, 1947)

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Bluebook (online)
8 T.C. 1351, 1947 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 162, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farkas-v-commissioner-tax-1947.