Goodan v. Commissioner

12 T.C. 817, 1949 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 193
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedMay 23, 1949
DocketDocket Nos. 3033, 3036, 3037, 3038, 3039, 3040, 3041
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 12 T.C. 817 (Goodan 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
Goodan v. Commissioner, 12 T.C. 817, 1949 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 193 (tax 1949).

Opinions

OPINION.

ARNOLD, Judge-.

These consolidated cases involve income tax deficiencies as follows:

[[Image here]]

The parties stipulated that there is no penalty liability under section 293 (a), Revenue Act of 1938, for the taxable year 1938 in Docket No. 3037.

Numerous issues have been settled by the parties, with the result that a single issue, common to each case for each taxable year, remains for "decision, namely, whether certain taxable stock dividends received by a trust are taxable to the trust or to its grantors, seven of whom are petitioners herein.

The parties have stipulated the amount of the deficiency in each case for each taxable year if we decide the sole issue in favor of the respondent. The parties have also stipulated the amount of the deficiency or overpayment in each case for each taxable year if we decide the sole issue in favor of the petitioners. The parties have stipulated all the facts deemed pertinent hereto. Their stipulation is incorporated herein by reference and the pertinent facts are summarized hereinafter.

The income tax returns for the years involved herein were filed with the collector of internal revenue for the sixth district of California.

The trust involved herein, Chandler Trust No. 2, was created on June 26,1935, by the execution of a trust agreement. The petitioners herein and Harrison G. O. Chandler executed the agreement as trus-tors and as trustees. At no time since its execution has the trust agreement been altered, amended, or modified.

Marian Otis Chandler is the mother of Harrison G. O. Chandler and the other 6 petitioners. At June 26, 1935, she was 68 years of age, her children ranged from 42 to 28 years of age, and her 13 grandchildren from 18 years to 2 months. All of these individuals are living at the present time, except one grandchild, who died in June 1943.

At the time the trust agreement was executed Marian Otis Chandler conveyed to the present trustees and their successors 16,536 shares of stock of Chandis Securities Co., hereinafter referred to as Chandis. Each of the other 7 trustors conveyed to the present trustees and their successors a certificate representing 50 shares of stock of the Times-Mirror Co., hereinafter referred to as the Times, and two certificates representing 2,694 shares of stock of Chandis.

The certificates of stock were endorsed by the respective trustors on June 27, 1935, and delivered to the Times and Chandis for cancellation. A new certificate representing 350 shares was issued by the Times and a new certificate representing 35,394 shares was issued by Chandis in the names of and delivered to the trustees on June 27,1935. From that date to the present time the trustees have kept the certificates.

The trust indenture, after specifically naming petitioners and Harrison G. O. Chandler as “the trustors,” as “the ‘present Trustees,’ ” and as “the ‘present beneficiaries,’ ” provided in part and in summary as follows:

WITNESSETH
That, Whereas the Trustors deem it to he for their best interests, and for the best interests of The Times-Mirror Company and the Chandis Securities Company, that there should he a continuity and stability of policy and management, and to that end that the interests of each of the Trustors in said corporations, as evidenced by the stock severally held by them, be united and vested in the Trustees, as hereinafter provided; and
Whereas, the Trustors deem it also to be for their best interests that there should be held, conserved, administered and eventually distributed, according to the terms hereof, those assets which are respectively contributed by them to the Trust Estate;
*******

Article I of the trust indenture segregated the trust corpus into two parts. It provided that one part:

* * * shall consist of all of the shares of capital stock of The Times-Mirror Company delivered to the Trustees hereunder, and the other part shall consist of all of the shares of the capital stock of Chandis Securities Company delivered to the Trustees hereunder, and such division and segregation shall be continued throughout the term of this trust.

The legal title and the equitable title to the trust estate were vested in the trustees and no interest therein “is, or at any time shall be, deemed to be vested in any of the beneficiaries hereunder. The interests of the beneficiaries shall at all times consist only and solely of the right to enforce the due performance of this trust.”

Article II dealt with the gross income from the trust. It provided that gross income from each division of the trust estate (the Times stock and the Chandis stock) should be charged with the taxes, costs, charges, and expenses applicable to administering, protecting, and distributing that portion of the trust estate. General and indirect costs, charges, and expenses were to be allocated to the two parts as the trustees determined.

Article III dealt with the distribution of the net income. It provided that the “entire net income received from the trust estate and available in cash for distribution, shall be paid in monthly, quarterly, or other convenient installments” as the trustees might from time to time determine, the net income from the Times stock to be distributed in equal shares to the 7 individuals who contributed that stock and the net income from the Chandis stock to be distributed during their lives, 16,536/35,394 to Marian Otis Chandler and 2,694/35,394 to each of the other 7 trustors.

Article III also provided as follows:

There is hereby expressly reserved to each of the Trustors, during his or her lifetime, the absolute power of appointment and disposition of his or her share' of the principal and income of the Trust Estate after his or her death, the same to be exercised not by Will, but only by the last written instrument exercising such power on file with the Trustees at such Trustor’s death. Such power may be exercised, but only in the manner herein specified, from time to time, and each exercise thereof may be similarly revoked.

Failing such appointment and disposition so on file at the time of trustor’s death, the trust income to which a deceased trustor would have been entitled was to be distributed to his or her spouse for life, then to their issue, if any, then to the living heirs of such trustor, during their respective lives until termination of the trust. Similarly, the trustor’s share of principal upon termination of the trust was vested in and distributable to his or her then living issue in equal shares, per stirpes; if none survived, then to the living heirs at law, the identity and respective shares of which were to be determined by California law in force at the time of the trustor’s death.

Article IY provided that the trust “shall cease upon, and in no event shall its duration extend beyond, the death of the last survivor of the following named persons * * * ” The 21 persons named in the trust indenture were the 8 trustors and 13 grandchildren, whose ages ranged from 68 years to 2 months, as above mentioned.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Druker v. Commissioner
77 T.C. 867 (U.S. Tax Court, 1981)
United States v. Green
176 F. Supp. 359 (S.D. New York, 1959)
Solomon v. Commissioner
27 T.C. 426 (U.S. Tax Court, 1956)
Estate of Solomon v. Commissioner
27 T.C. 426 (U.S. Tax Court, 1956)
Goodan v. Commissioner
12 T.C. 817 (U.S. Tax Court, 1949)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
12 T.C. 817, 1949 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goodan-v-commissioner-tax-1949.