Kent v. United States

60 F. Supp. 203, 103 Ct. Cl. 714
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedMay 7, 1945
Docket46037
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 60 F. Supp. 203 (Kent v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kent v. United States, 60 F. Supp. 203, 103 Ct. Cl. 714 (cc 1945).

Opinions

MADDEN, Judge.

Delivered the opinion of the court:

The plaintiff claims that he was required to pay $113,938.02 more than he owed for income taxes and interest thereon for the years 1936 and 1937. The Commissioner of Internal Revenue assessed to and collected from the plaintiff taxes on the income of three trusts which the plaintiff had set up on May 20, 1932. The plaintiff was made a trustee of each of the trusts, and a trust company, a different one for each trust, was named as the other trustee. Since the trusts were similar in their provisions, except that each named a different child of the plaintiff and a different corporate trustee, a description of one of the trusts will bring out the tax question presented by each of them. We therefore describe the Elizabeth Kent Van Alen Trust.

By the trust deed the plaintiff transferred 28,762 shares of stock of the At-water Kent Manufacturing Company to be held in trust until the death of the survivor of the grantor and his wife and his daughter Elizabeth Kent Van Alen. Out of the net income the trustees were to pay the daughter during her life the yearly sums named in an .annexed schedule, which sums began at zero for 1932 and increased $5,000 each year to $75,000 for [209]*209the year 1946 at which amount they were to remain from that time on. After the death of the daughter they were to pay $10,000 a year for the maintenance and education of, during minority, and thereafter to, each of the daughter’s children for life, provided that the total of these payments to the daughter’s children in any year should not exceed one-half the net income of the trust for that year. After making the directed payments to the daughter or her children the trustees were, during the life of the grantor, to retain any remaining income of the trust for two years after its receipt, and then disburse the retained amounts on the June 30th or the December 31st which came first after the end of the two-year period of retention of any income (1) not to exceed $5,000 to the daughter or her children as needed to bring the payments to them for the preceding calendar year up to the maximum amounts stated for them for that year; (2) the balance to the plaintiff, if living.

The Commissioner of Internal Revenue, in assessing the disputed tax, and the Government, in this suit, urge that Section 167(a) (1) of the Revenue Act of 1936, 26 U.S.C.A.Int.Rev.Code, § 167(a) (1) made the retained income taxable to the plaintiff. It provides:

“Sec. 167. Income for Benefit of Grant- or

“(a) Where any part of the income of a trust—

“(1) is, or in the discretion of the grant- or or of any person not having a substantial adverse interest in the disposition of such part of the income may be, held or accumulated for future distribution to the grantor;

* * * * *

then such part of the income of the trust shall be included in computing the net income of the grantor.”

The statute seems to fit the provision in the trust deed for the retention of the income and its payment to the plaintiff. The plaintiff urges, however, that it was uncertain whether retained income was being “held or accumulated for future distribution to the grantor” since, under the trust deed, it would not be distributed to him unless he was living at the end of the two year period of retention, and some or possibly all of it might not be distributed to him even if he was alive at the, end of the period, since it might have to be used, to the extent of possibly $10,000 in any year, to make up a deficit in the share of the daughter or her children for the preceding year.

These are, without doubt, substantial uncertainties. They present the question whether Section 167(a)(1) is applicable, in the kind of situation here involved, only when the terms of the trust make it certain that the income whose taxation is in question will be paid to the grantor.

Treasury Regulation 94, promulgated under the Revenue Act of 1936, provides:

“Art. 167-1 Trusts in the income of which the grantor retains an interest.

“(b) Test of taxability to the grantor.— The test of the sufficiency of the grantor’s retained interest in the trust income, resulting in the taxation of such income to the grantor, is whether the grantor has failed to divest himself, permanently and definitively, of every right which might, by any possibility, enable him to have the income, at some time, distributed to him, actually or constructively.”

This is strong language, and would carry much farther than it is necessary to go to decide this case. But we think that at least the direction in which it points is correct, as an interpretation of the intent of Section 167(a) (1). In the taxation of incomes, the rate bracket in which they are placed for tax purposes is vital to the revenues. For one to unburden himself of much of his income tax, by ridding himself, pro tanto, of his income, is permissible. But a device by which one seeks to rid himself of much of the tax, by placing the income producing property in several separate trusts, thereby attempting to diminish almost geometrically, because of the elimination of higher surtax rates, the aggregate of income taxes payable on the same amount of income, while at the same time the income finds its way into the same pocket as before, deserves the careful scrutiny of any intelligent taxing system. As the plaintiff set up his trusts, he was, except for the possible deduction of $10,000 noted above, to get the income by surviving the two year period of retention. If, by failing to survive, he did not get it, it was,by the terms of the trust, to go to his wife, or to other natural objects of his bounty, in substantially the manner, when the several concurrently created trusts are considered, that other property which he [210]*210owned outright would normally go, upon his death. He had, then, as to the income of the property which he had owned completely- before he put it in trust, the substance of continued ownership of the income, which substance consisted of (a) the primary right and the probability that the income would actually come into his possession and (2) the arrangement whereby, upon his death, which would keep the income from coming into his possession, it would go largely if not entirely to persons who would, normally, take by inheritance or devise what he owned when he died.

We think that Section 167(a) (1) intended to tax such income to the grantor. If, as the plaintiff urges, we read into the statute words requiring that the income be held unconditionally for future distribution to the grantor, we open the way to the insertion, in trust conveyances, of conditions, of various degrees of likelihood of occurrence, which would have the intent, and frequently the effect, of leaving in a grantor the income which he had before he made the grant, while requiring his less ingenious contemporaries to make up the taxes which he escaped. We do not think that Congress intended that the statute should receive any such construction. If it had so intended, it must have known that the statute was hardly worth its space in the books.

The plaintiff cites Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Dean, 10 Cir. 102 F.2d 699

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Related

Scheft v. Commissioner
59 T.C. No. 40 (U.S. Tax Court, 1972)
Boyce v. United States
190 F. Supp. 950 (W.D. Louisiana, 1961)
Wadewitz v. Commissioner
32 T.C. 538 (U.S. Tax Court, 1959)
Kent v. United States
60 F. Supp. 203 (Court of Claims, 1945)

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60 F. Supp. 203, 103 Ct. Cl. 714, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kent-v-united-states-cc-1945.