Freeman v. Commissioner

41 T.C. 379, 1963 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 4
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedDecember 16, 1963
DocketDocket Nos. 95204, 95205
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 41 T.C. 379 (Freeman 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
Freeman v. Commissioner, 41 T.C. 379, 1963 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 4 (tax 1963).

Opinion

OPINION

Mulroney, Judge:

The respondent determined a deficiency in docket No. 95205 in the 1957 income tax of Benjamin H. Freeman and the executor of the estate of his wife, Ethel, who had died in January of 1957, in the amount of $30,916.09. He also determined a deficiency in Benjamin’s income tax for 1958 in the amount of $862.50. The adjustments giving rise to this latter deficiency for 1958 are not contested but refund is claimed by Benjamin if respondent’s position in docket No. 95205 is upheld. The two dockets were consolidated and we need only consider the single issue presented in docket No. 95205. This issue is whether a payment of $51,102.70 to the executor of Ethel’s estate by a corporation controlled by Benjamin for redemption of the corporation’s stock was essentially equivalent to a dividened to Benjamin.

All of the facts have been stipulated and they are found accordingly. Petitioner, Benjamin H. Freeman, resides at 421 Woodbine Avenue, Narberth, Pa. Pie filed timely income tax returns with the district director of internal revenue at Philadelphia, Pa., for 1957, jointly with the executor of his wife’s estate, and for 1958 individually.

H. Freeman & Son, Inc., which will sometimes be referred to as the corporation, is a Delaware corporation of which Benjamin was a shareholder. On December 29, 1930, Benjamin executed two trust indentures wherein he was the grantor and Harry S. Mesirov was the trustee. One indenture which will be referred to as the “stock trust” conveyed 3,731.3 shares of common stock in the corporation to the trustee, to collect and dispose of the principal and income therefrom in the manner and upon the terms therein set forth. The terms were in general that the trustee pay all income to Benjamin for life and one-half of the income to Ethel if she survived him for as long as she remained his widow, and one-fourth of the income to Ethel for life in the event she remarried. The distribution of principal and income, not governed by the above specific events, was to Benjamin’s brothers and sisters and their children. Paragraph Eighteenth of this trust indenture provided, as follows:

Eighteenth. The Grantor reserves the right to revoke, alter and amend this instrument at any time, and from time to time, during his life, hy the execution and delivery to the Trustee of an instrument in writing, signed and duly acknowledged by him; provided, however, that the duties or obligations of the Trustee shall not be increased without his consent.

By the second trust indenture which will be called the “insurance trust,” Benjamin transferred to the same trustee “for safe-keeping” a $100,000 life insurance policy on his own life and naming the trustee as beneficiary. Benjamin retained all rights in the policy, including the right to dividends, the right to borrow on the policy, the right to surrender it for cash, and the right to change the beneficiary. The trustee was merely charged with the duty of safekeeping of the policy during Benjamin’s life and after his death with collection of proceeds and disposition of same to Ethel and his brothers and sisters and their children, much like the distribution ordered in the stock trust. Here, too, in paragraph Nineteenth, Benjamin reserved the right to “revoke, alter and amend” similar to paragraph Eighteenth of the stock trust with the further provision that his change of beneficiary of the policy would work a revocation of the trust.

On April 15, 1933, Benjamin executed what is called a Supplemental Indenture. In the preamble of this instrument, reference is made to the stock trust and insurance trust indentures and the paragraphs that reserved his right to alter and amend both trusts. The Supplemental Indenture then states that this instrument is to alter and amend both trust indentures. Various paragraphs of both prior trust indentures are specifically revoked and in general the substitutes in the stock trust give Ethel $5,000 a year for life and her estate $50,000 in the event she died before Benjamin. Paragraph 3 of this instrument directed the trustee to invade the corpus if necessary to make the $5,000 annual payments unless Benjamin deposited with the trustee the amount necessary to make up the deficiency if the income of the corpus was less than $5,000.

Paragraph 6 of this Supplemental Indenture provided as follows :

6. If the said Ethel R. Freeman shall die in the lifetime of the Grantor, the Grantor shall thereupon forthwith deposit with the Trustee the sum of Fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) in cash, and said sum shall immediately become subject to power of appointment of said Ethel R. Freeman by her Last Will and Testament; and the Trustee is hereby authorized and directed in such event to pay the said sum of Fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) to such person or persons and in such manner as said Ethel R. Freeman shall have directed, limited and appointed in and by her Last Will and Testament, after the same shall have been duly probated. And in the event that Grantor shall fail to deposit with the Trustee the sum of Fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) for the purpose and in the event aforesaid, the Trustee shall have authority and he is hereby directed to sell, pledge or otherwise use so much of the stock comprising the said stock trust estate, and/or to obtain a loan upon the life insurance policy or policies held by him under the Insurance Trust Agreement of December 29,1930, as may be necessary to produce and place in the Trustee’s hands for the said purpose the sum of Fifty thousand dollars ($50,000).

There were other provisions providing for application of the insurance proceeds in the event Ethel survived Benjamin, which we need not recite since that event did not occur. Paragraph 11 of this Supplemental Indenture provided, as follows:

11. The provisions of this Supplemental Trust instrument, so far as they relate to the said Ethel R. Freeman, are and shall continue to be absolutely irrevocable, except with the written consent of said Ethel R. Freeman; but the said Benjamin H. Freeman, as the Grantor in said Stock Trust Agreement of December 29, 1930, and as the Insured in said Insurance Trust Agreement of December 29, 1930, reserves the right to revoke, alter and amend the said instruments of December 29, 1930, and this instrument, at any time, and from time to time, during his life, so far as the same make provisions not affecting the said Ethel R. Freeman, in the same manner as is provided in said instruments of December 29,1930.

It is stipulated that at the time of the execution of this Supplemental Indenture the book value of the stock in the trust was between $400,000 and $403,000.

By an agreement dated December 16, 1946, executed by Benjamin, the trustee, and Ethel, Benjamin was given the right to withdraw part of the stock trust “not exceeding in the aggregate Twenty-five hundred (2500) shares.”

At the time the April 15, 1933, indenture was executed, divorce proceedings were pending between the Freemans, and a decree for absolute divorce was granted on July 10, 1933. The Freemans were remarried on August 15, 1934, and remained husband and wife until the death of Ethel E. Freeman.

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Related

Webb v. Commissioner
67 T.C. 293 (U.S. Tax Court, 1976)
Freeman v. Commissioner
41 T.C. 379 (U.S. Tax Court, 1963)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
41 T.C. 379, 1963 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/freeman-v-commissioner-tax-1963.