In Re MacK

269 B.R. 392
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Minnesota
DecidedNovember 2, 2001
Docket19-30639
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 269 B.R. 392 (In Re MacK) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re MacK, 269 B.R. 392 (Minn. 2001).

Opinion

269 B.R. 392 (2001)

In re Jeffrey Charles MACK, Debtor.
Dwight R.J. Lindquist, Trustee for the Chapter 7 Bankruptcy Estate of Jeffrey Charles Mack, Plaintiff,
v.
Jeffrey Charles Mack, individually, Jeffrey C. Mack and Dave F. Senger, as Trustees of the Jeffrey C. Mack Charitable Remainder Unitrust dated January 17, 1997, Cyndi-Lee Mack, Kara Mack, Erica Mack, and The Minneapolis Foundation, Defendants.

Bankruptcy No. 01-40629. Adversary No. 01-4183.

United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Minnesota.

November 2, 2001.

*393 Patrick B. Hennessy, Esq., Minneapolis.

Cass S. Weil, Esq., Moss & Barnett, Minneapolis.

Ted Cheesebrough, Esq., Faegre & Benson LLP, Minneapolis.

Ralph V. Mitchell, Esq., Duckson, Carlson, Bassinger, Minneapolis.

FINDINGS OF FACT, CONCLUSIONS OF LAW AND ORDER FOR JUDGMENT

NANCY C. DREHER, Bankruptcy Judge.

The above-entitled matter came on for trial before the undersigned on August 13, *394 2001. Appearances were as follows: Patrick Hennessy for the Plaintiff ("Trustee"); Cass Weil for Defendant Jeffrey Charles Mack, individually ("Debtor"); Ted Cheesebrough for The Minneapolis Foundation; and Ralph Mitchell for the remaining Defendants. The court has heard the evidence and makes the following:

FINDINGS OF FACTS

A. THE PARTIES

Trustee is the Chapter 7 Trustee in the bankruptcy case of Jeffrey Charles Mack, Debtor. Debtor is settlor of the Jeffrey C. Mack Charitable Remainder Unitrust dated January 17, 1997 (the "CRUT"). Debtor and Dave F. Senger, his business lawyer, are the Trustees. Defendant Cyndi-Lee Mack is the spouse of Debtor, and Defendants Kara Mack and Erica Mack are the adult children of the Debtor. The Defendant, The Minneapolis Foundation, is a Minnesota nonprofit corporation.

All defendants are and were at all significant times residents of the State of Minnesota.

B. THE ISSUES

Debtor is named as the income beneficiary of the CRUT for his life. This case requires me to determine whether Debtor's income interest in the CRUT, which he self-settled on January 17, 1997, as well as his rights as an income beneficiary to remove and replace trustees and to amend the trust to protect its tax benefit status, are property of the bankruptcy estate. The Trustee has, by agreement of the parties, withdrawn all other claims in this case. Specifically, the Trustee does not seek an order finding the trust itself void and awarding the Trustee the assets of the trust. Further, the Trustee does not seek avoidance and preservation of the future income interests of the Debtor's spouse and two adult children. Moreover, the Trustee does not seek a determination that Debtor's power, as settlor of the trust, to revoke the income interests of the spouse and children, exercisable only in his last will and testament, is property of the bankruptcy estate. Thus, the only issues before me are 1) who gets the income the trust is required by law, and by its terms, to distribute annually to the Debtor over Debtor's life and 2) whether the Trustee can step into the Debtor's shoes as income beneficiary and control who manages the trust assets.

The answer to these questions requires an analysis of the CRUT itself, as well as the law of CRUTs, both state and federal.

C. THE CHARITABLE REMAINDER TRUST ("CRUT")

Simplistically speaking, a CRUT is a legal device pursuant to which a taxpayer can transfer assets to a trust (in this case a high value/low basis asset), take an immediate charitable tax deduction on his personal income taxes, insure himself a guaranteed stream of income generated by the trust assets (on which he must pay income taxes), defer the taxes on the transactions by and accumulations in the trust, control the manner in which trust assets are invested, and control who gets the remainder interest in the trust assets when the taxpayer and named future income beneficiaries die. The only hitch is that at some point down the line, when the settlor and all individuals whom he has named to follow him as income beneficiaries leave this earth, what's left in the trust must go to a qualified charitable organization. To make sure that this happens, in order to qualify for favorable tax treatment, a CRUT must be irrevocable and is subject to rigid rules of operation. It goes without saying that a CRUT is a tax planning tool for the rich. CRUTs are legitimate and, indeed, sound *395 in the sense that a charity gets something. They are also extremely attractive to wealthy people, like Debtor used to be, who want to defer or avoid taxes altogether while maintaining control of what happens to their money.

Debtor was the settlor of the CRUT and also was the initial Trustee. Debtor funded the CRUT by contributing 100,000 shares of common stock of Olympic Financial, Ltd. ("Olympic"). No other property has been contributed to the CRUT by Debtor or any other person. The Olympic stock was sold by the CRUT in January and February, 1997 for $1,655,188.60. Debtor's tax basis in the contributed Olympic stock was $10,000.00.

Debtor created the CRUT as part of a financial planning package recommended to him by professionals. At the time, virtually all of his net worth was tied up in Olympic stock. He had formed, successfully managed and then sold the company. He needed to diversify. The creation of the CRUT allowed him to 1) escape capital gains taxes on the CRUT's sale of Olympic stock; 2) take an immediate charitable tax deduction on his 1997 income taxes; 3) diversify his portfolio; 4) guarantee a steady stream of income for himself and his spouse and children for their life; and 5) in what must be viewed as an after-thought, give a gift to charity which would not vest for decades.[1]

The parties agree that the Debtor had significant tax reasons for creation of the CRUT. They further agree that, at the time, the creation of the CRUT was a legitimate tax deferral device, even though currently the CRUT would not qualify for favorable tax treatment because it provides so little to charity. Debtor saved several hundreds of thousands of dollars in capital gains taxes he would otherwise have paid had he sold Olympic stock in his own name. He also took a charitable deduction in 1997 of $27,209, which is the value of the charitable remainder interest calculated according to Internal Revenue Service guidelines. The value of the remainder interest awarded to charity was less than 2 percent of the value of the assets contributed to the trust.[2]

Debtor was not insolvent, as that term is defined in 11 U.S.C. § 101(32),[3] before or immediately after the transfer of the Olympic stock to the CRUT, even if the Debtor's interest in the CRUT was not included as an asset on his balance sheet. Indeed, at the time, his net worth was in the many millions of dollars.

The Trust Declaration states that it was intended to comply with section 4 of Revenue Procedure 90-30, 1990-1 C.B. 534, and section 664(d)(2) of the Internal Revenue *396 Code. I.R.C. § 664(d)(2). The Debtor retained the right to receive all distributions of a "Unitrust Amount," as defined by the Trust Declaration, during his lifetime. The Unitrust Amount, further defined in paragraph 2.2 of the Trust Declaration, is, with certain adjustments, equal to 7 percent of the net fair market value of the CRUT assets each year, based on a valuation on the first business day of the taxable year of the CRUT.

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Bluebook (online)
269 B.R. 392, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-mack-mnb-2001.