Kingsford v. Manning

109 F. Supp. 949, 43 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 340, 1952 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2194
CourtDistrict Court, D. New Jersey
DecidedNovember 24, 1952
DocketCiv. A. 719-49
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 109 F. Supp. 949 (Kingsford v. Manning) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kingsford v. Manning, 109 F. Supp. 949, 43 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 340, 1952 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2194 (D.N.J. 1952).

Opinion

HARTSHORNE, District Judge.

Plaintiff, taxpayer, sues under the Internal Revenue Code, to recover an alleged over-payment of income taxes and interest, assessed and paid by him for the year 1944, in the amount of $9,393.02.

lie was the sole surviving Trustee of the Edith Grinnell Bowdoin Trust, under the will of George S. Bowdoin, which created a trust fund of substantial size, with testator’s daughter, Edith Grinnell Bowdoin, as life tenant, and with remainder over. Originally, plaintiff taxpayer was co-Trustee of such trust, with J. Pierpont Morgan, Jr., but he continued as sole Trustee after the latter’s death. In connection with the administration of the trust, plaintiff took income commissions from time to time and in 1944, at the termination of the trust, he was granted his principal commissions plus additional income commissions.

The principal commissions, together with the smaller amount of income commissions, all received in 1944, were not, however, 80 per centum of the entire commissions received by plaintiff taxpayer for his services to such estate, if the income commissions received by him prior to that year are included. But they were, of course, more than 80 per centum of the total compensation received by him for his personal services to such estate, if no income commissions are included.

Plaintiff taxpayer claims that income commissions paid to him for his personal services to such estate are not to be considered in making up the “total compensation for personal services” rendered by him to such estate, so that the income tax paid by plaintiff taxpayer thereon should have been calculated under the statute, Internal Revenue Code, Sec. 107(a), Title 26 U.S.C.A. Income Tax, § 107(a),1 as if such principal commissions had been paid to him “ratably” over the years during which he rendered services to the estate. The Government claims the contrary, i. e., that such income commissions should be added to the principal commissions, and that both together constituted “the total compensation for personal services” rendered such estate by the plaintiff taxpayer, so that the taxpayer was not entitled to such ratable apportionment of tax under the statute. The Government assessed the tax accordingly, and collected the deficiency, for which plaintiff taxpayer now sues.

The specific question, therefore, is whether, under such statutory provision, income-commissions of a testamentary trustee are-to be added to principal commissions allowed him, in calculating “the total compensation for personal services” taxable under such statute.

It often occurs that some project, to-which a person devotes lengthy personal services, whether it be in the form of handling an estate, long continued litigation, or even the production of an artistic work or invention, id. Sec. 107(b), is not completed' within three years or more, and that the bulk, if not all, of the compensation received by that individual for such personal services is not received till the end of that lengthy period. For that individual, who has worked on that single estate, or other subject matter, for so many tax years, to-have the bulk of the compensation for such lengthy services charged to him as income during a single tax year, and thereby raise-his income tax for that year to an unusually high bracket, would clearly cause a hardship. The purpose of the statute in question thus is to avoid this hardship, provided the conditions set forth in the statute are-met. The condition of importance here is. [951]*951that “at least 80 per centum of the total compensation for personal services” on that project, lasting 36 months or more, should have been paid in a single taxable year.

This, of course, does not mean the compensation paid him for all personal services, in all matters, perchance including his services to another estate, or as a banker, or a lawyer in the practice of his general profession. It reasonably can mean only the total compensation received by him for his personal services in the same general project, which has lasted over three years. Nor, on the other hand, can Congress have intended that this project be split up artificially. What, in fact, is the project for ■which these “services” were rendered over the years ? Such should be' the basic inquiry.

Obviously, the project for the accomplishment of which the plaintiff’s “services” were rendered, was the conduct of the trust, to which the will appointed him. Clearly, he was not appointed an income trustee only or a principal trustee only. He was directed by the will, the sole authority for his “services”, to act as trustee of both income .and principal.

As was well said by Learned Hand, J., in Smart v. Commissioner, 2 Cir., 1945, 152 F.2d 333, 335, certiorari denied, 1946, 327 U.S. 804, 66 S.Ct. 962, 90 L.Ed. 1028, ■“the services of a trustee at once protect and improve the principal, and that protection and improvement in turn protect and increase the income; and their independent effect upon each cannot be disentangled”. Apparently the only services which the trustee here rendered to the trust income ■separate from those he rendered the trust principal, were those of writing two checks a year, payable to the income beneficiary. The bulk of his services benefitted both income and principal, and such is the general rule as to trustees in both law and fact.2 It is virtually impossible to isolate any act of this trustee and say it constituted a service to income and not to principal. In carrying out the trust the services of the trustee, as they affect principal and income, instead of being separable, are co-ordinate and interdependent.

Apparently the only argument advanced by the taxpayer plaintiff to the contrary, is the fact that probate courts, in allowing commissions to the trustee for these coordinate services of benefit to both trust principal and trust income, charge part of such commissions against the principal, the other part against the income. But this practice, common to all probate courts, whether covered by statute or not, is not due to the fact that certain services of the trustee have been performed solely for the benefit of the income, while others have been performed solely for the benefit of the principal. It is due solely to the probate court’s desire to do equity, as between those jointly benefitted by these identic services of the trustee. Obviously, the splitting of the burden of the compensation for equitable reasons does not, in fact, split the trustee’s services, which were a completed transaction before the commissions were allowed.

Furthermore, due to the fact that these identic services of the trustee give rise to joint benefits to both the life tenant and remaindermen, the probate court, as the Smart case shows, cannot divide such services so as to admeasure accurately the value of each such part, but must exercise its general discretion in that regard, as guided by some statutory, or other, rule of thumb. Plaintiff claims3 that the New York statutory rule of thumb, applied by the probate court here, is based on percentages of principal. This is exactly the basis applied by the New Jersey courts, as passed on in the Smart case.4 Thus the decision of the 2nd Circuit in the Smart case, supra, upholding the collector, is on all fours with the case at bar.

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Norcross v. United States
114 F. Supp. 51 (D. New Jersey, 1953)

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Bluebook (online)
109 F. Supp. 949, 43 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 340, 1952 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2194, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kingsford-v-manning-njd-1952.