Fort Worth National Bank v. United States

396 F. Supp. 337
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Texas
DecidedMay 30, 1975
DocketCiv. A. 4-2130
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 396 F. Supp. 337 (Fort Worth National Bank v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fort Worth National Bank v. United States, 396 F. Supp. 337 (N.D. Tex. 1975).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

MAHON, District Judge.

In this tax refund action tried to the Court, plaintiff as successor Independent Executor of the Estate of Mary Lard seeks the recovery of federal estate taxes paid in the amount of $337,780.00 pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1346.

The decedent, a Texas resident died testate on March 5, 1968. Her last will dated August 3, 1966, and two codicils to that will were duly probated. The will and codicils were admitted into evidence. The original testamentary scheme of Mary Lard as reflected in her last will included specific bequests to her sisters, a bequest in trust to two of her grandchildren and the residue of her estate in trust for her husband S. S. Lard with a remainder in trust over to Homer Lard. A residuary trust was also established for any remainder of the Homer Lard trust for the children of Homer Lard’s wife. The first codicil, executed August 4, 1966, amended the residuary clause of her last will as it pertained to her estate subsequent to the death of her husband, 5. S. Lard. Where in the original will, it was to go in trust to Homer Lard, the entire residue was now to be distributed by various specific bequests with the bulk of her estate to pass to a charity which would qualify as a charitable deduction in determining her net taxable estate for federal estate and state inheritance tax purposes. Also, a significant trust in the amount of $100,000.00 was established as part of the specific bequest of this codicil. These provisions superceded and eliminated any bequest to Homer Lard, his wife, or Homer Lard’s wife’s children. The assets of Mary Lard’s estate total some 1.6 million dollars. The original executor of the Mary Lard Estate, S. S. Lard, timely filed a Federal Estate Tax return which reflected an estate tax due of $135,348.-54. Internal Revenue Service conducted an audit of said return which resulted in an assertion of a deficiency in the amount of $372,315.03. The audit disallowed the deduction, because inter alia, the government determined that Mary Lard’s will which established her husband as the life beneficiary of her estate, permitted not just a distribution of income but also a diversion of the corpus through disbursements of royalty proceeds so as to render the charitable remainder interest unascertainable. Alternatively, the government claims that any remainder interest which would pass to charity is incapable of being accurately valued. The estate claims that the will by its provisions in no event allowed any diversion of corpus because there was an ascertainable standard for the exercise of its discretion in disbursing funds. In the alternative, the estate maintains that even if the diversion of royalty proceeds was possible under the will, the charitable remainder was ascertainable, and capable of accurate valuation. The assertion of additional tax by the treasury was protested. After failing to secure an administrative settlement of the asserted deficiency, plaintiff executor was issued the statutory ninety day letter on May 15, 1972. Said letter asserted a deficiency in estate taxes against the estate of Mary Lard in the amount of $372,314.92. Additional estate taxes in the amount of $307,204.39 plus interest in the amount of $54,281.25 were paid to the government under protest on or about May 25,1972.

Before considering the issues presented, an examination of the pertinent will provisions is necessary. Relevant portions state:

“VI.
(D) The corporate trustee, in determining net income available for distribution, shall consider as income the entire proceeds received in connection with the physical severance of natural resources, whether bonuses, royalties, overriding or limited royalties, oil payments or other similar payments and, notwithstanding the provisions of
*341 Section 33 of the Texas Trust Act, shall not allocate any portion thereof as corpus.”
******
“VII.
(B) During the lifetime of my husband, S. S. Lard the corporate trustee hereinabove named, whether it be serving as co-trustee or as the sole trustee, shall in its complete and absolute discretion distribute to and for the benefit of S. S. Lard all of the income of this trust and so much of the corpus as the corporate trustee in its sole discretion determines is appropriate for his needs.” (emphasis supplied).

Thus according to its plain terms the will says that all proceeds from mineral royalties shall be included as net income available for any distribution. The designation of all royalty proceeds as income is contrary to both generally accepted accounting principles and accepted engineering principles regarding the integrity of the corpus of a wasting asset. Generally, trust provisions that provide for distribution of income to life beneficiaries and for corpus to pass to charity present no difficulty for deduction valuations. The income is ascertainable and definite. Reference to actuarial tables is prescribed by Internal Revenue regulations and provide a basis for accurate determinations of value. A crucial distinction is presented here because of the nature of wasting assets; here oil royalties. An aliquot portion of each dollar received as royalty should properly be considered as income and another portion should be allocated as principle. The allocation process recognizes the fact that the mere act of producing and selling the asset is also an act reducing the total quantity or amount of asset available to be produced. Because there is no allocation of royalty proceeds to corpus in the will, the government maintains that either (1) the remainder over to charity is rendered unascertainable or (2) the possibility of charity taking is so remote as to be negligible.

Plaintiff contends that this question need not be reached because the will by its terms provides a measurable standard for the exercise of its discretion, i. e., the bank did not have unfettered discretion to distribute income but must be guided by the amounts of income which would be appropriate for the needs of the life beneficiary. It urges that the above quoted paragraph VII (B) be read to mean that the bank is directed to distribute in its complete and absolute discretion to and for the benefit and use of the life beneficiary only that portion of income and/or corpus as it determines is appropriate for his needs. The Court is unpersuaded that this view presents a fair and commonsense reading of the plain words of the instrument. The language of the will is clear and unambiguous. Its very words say a distribution is to be made of all of the income and so much of the corpus. To correlate a distribution of all of the income with a standard of that which is appropriate to his needs overlooks the language pertinent to corpus. How much corpus is to be distributed? Only so much of the corpus as is appropriate for the life beneficiary’s needs. How much income? All of the income. The Court specifically finds the will unambiguous ; that it gives the corporate trustee complete and absolute discretion to distribute all of the income without regard to any standard save its own discretion; that it gives the corporate trustee sole discretion to distribute so much of the corpus which it determines in its discretion is appropriate for his needs.

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Related

Estate of Proctor v. Commissioner
1994 T.C. Memo. 208 (U.S. Tax Court, 1994)
Estate of Brock v. Commissioner
71 T.C. 901 (U.S. Tax Court, 1979)

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Bluebook (online)
396 F. Supp. 337, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fort-worth-national-bank-v-united-states-txnd-1975.