Lewis Testamentary Trust B v. Commissioner

83 T.C. No. 16, 83 T.C. 246, 1984 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 38
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedAugust 22, 1984
DocketDocket No. 20249-81
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 83 T.C. No. 16 (Lewis Testamentary Trust B 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
Lewis Testamentary Trust B v. Commissioner, 83 T.C. No. 16, 83 T.C. 246, 1984 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 38 (tax 1984).

Opinion

OPINION

Parker, Judge:

Respondent determined an income tax deficiency of $7,769 for petitioner’s taxable year ending July 31, 1979, and an addition to tax under section 6651(a)1 of $1,942. Respondent has now conceded the addition under section 6651(a). The issue for decision is whether the net capital gain deduction arising from a testamentary trust’s sale of its one-half interest in a home that was the principal residence of its income beneficiary, the decedent-settlor’s surviving spouse, is an item of tax preference under section 57(a)(9). This depends on whether the testamentary trust, petitioner herein, is entitled to the benefits of the exclusion created by section 57(a)(9)(D) for the sale or exchange of a principal residence.

This case was submitted fully stipulated; and the stipulated facts are so found. The stipulation of facts and exhibits attached thereto are incorporated herein by this reference. The pertinent facts are summarized below.

Petitioner is the Testamentary Trust B created under the Will of Frank MacBoyle Lewis (decedent). Petitioner’s appointed trustees are Frances W. Lewis (Mrs. Lewis), decedent’s surviving spouse, and Mary Ireland Ording, one of decedent’s daughters. At the time the petition in this case was filed, petitioner was situated in, and its trustees resided in, California.

Decedent died on February 26,1977. Decedent’s will directed that Mrs. Lewis’ community property interest, subject to her agreement, be given to Trust A, and that decedent’s share of the community property be given to Trust B, the petitioner in this case.2 Mrs. Lewis was the sole income beneficiary of both trusts. Mrs. Lewis had an unrestricted power to invade the Trust A corpus; her interest in the Trust B (petitioner) corpus was subject to the sole judgment and discretion of the other trustee. The other trustee could invade the Trust B corpus only after the Trust A corpus was completely exhausted and only if there was no other source of assistance reasonably available for Mrs. Lewis. Petitioner is a "simple” trust, required to distribute all its income currently. See sec. 651. Petitioner’s governing trust instrument makes no mention of the treatment of its capital gains. See sec. 643(a)(3).

Included in the community property divided between the A and B Trusts was the couple’s personal residence located at 245 Madrone Avenue, Belvedere, CA (the personal residence). At the time of decedent’s death and at all times prior to its sale, Mrs. Lewis resided alone in the personal residence. Title to the personal residence was held one-half by petitioner and one-half by Trust A.

On November 6, 1978, petitioner and Trust A each sold its respective one-half interest in the personal residence for a total gross sales price of $465,000. On its fiduciary income tax return (Form 1041) for the period beginning August 29, 1978, and ending July 31, 1979, petitioner was required to, and did report, its one-half share of capital gain. Petitioner reported the amount of $102,984 and excluded 60 percent ($61,790.40) as its long-term capital gain deduction. Petitioner included this gain as income of the fiduciary. Petitioner listed no portion of its net long-term capital gain as allocable to the beneficiary. None of petitioner’s distributions deduction of $15,771.06 on that return is attributable to petitioner’s capital gains. With this fiduciary return, petitioner did not file a Form 4626, Computation of Minimum Tax - Corporations and Fiduciaries, nor did it otherwise report a minimum tax.3 In his statutory notice, respondent determined that petitioner’s net capital gain deduction from its sale of its share of the personal residence was a tax preference item, subjecting petitioner to the minimum tax.

As in effect during the taxable year in issue, section 56(a)4 imposed a "minimum tax,” based largely upon various "items of tax preference.” Various tax preference items were listed in section 57. In pertinent part, section 57(a) provided as follows:

SEC. 57(a). In General. — For purposes of this part, the items of tax preference are—
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(9) Capital gains.—
(A) Individuals. — In the case of a taxpayer other than a corporation, an amount equal to the net capital gain deduction for the taxable year determined under section 1202.
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(D) Principal residence. — For purposes of subparagraph (A), gain from the sale or exchange of a principal residence (within the meaning of section 1034) shall not be taken into account.

Thus, a noncorporate taxpayer’s net capital gain deduction is an item of tax preference unless it is gain from "the sale or exchange of a principal residence (within the meaning of section 1034).” Sec. 57(a)(9)(D).

Tax preference items are apportioned between a trust and its beneficiaries on the basis of the trust income allocable to each. Sec. 58(c).5 The parties agree that all of petitioner’s capital gain income from its sale of its one-half share of the personal residence is allocable to petitioner, the trust.6 Petitioner correctly reported on its return the net capital gain deduction under section 1202. The parties further agree that unless petitioner’s capital gain comes within the "principal residence” exception of section 57(a)(9)(D), that net capital gain deduction is an item of tax preference, properly subjecting petitioner to the minimum tax.

Section 57(a)(9)(D) defines the "principal residence” exception by explicit cross-reference to section 1034, which permits a taxpayer to defer recognition of the gain on the sale of his "principal residence.” Section 1034(a) is expressly limited to "property * * * used by the taxpayer as his principal residence.”7 (Emphasis supplied.) While section 1034(a) has given rise to much litigation over whether or not a particular residence was the taxpayer’s principal residence, necessitating a facts and circumstances, type of inquiry, the decided cases have uniformly required actual use and occupancy by the taxpayer in the sense of living in the house on a regular day-by-day basis.8 Petitioner, a trust, did not and indeed could not actually use the house as a principal residence, and petitioner does not seriously suggest otherwise. Instead, petitioner argues that Mrs. Lewis’ use of the personal residence may be imputed to petitioner to invoke the exception of section 57(a)(9)(D). We disagree.

To whatever extent California trust law treats Mrs. Lewis, who is only an income beneficiary of Trust B, as the "equitable” owner of the corpus (the deceased-husband’s community property interest in the personal residence), such a classification is not determinative in this proceeding. State law creates property rights, but Federal law governs "what interests or rights, so created, shall be taxed.” Morgan v. Commissioner, 309 U.S. 78, 80 (1940); Lyeth v. Hoey, 305 U.S. 188, 194 (1938).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
83 T.C. No. 16, 83 T.C. 246, 1984 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 38, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-testamentary-trust-b-v-commissioner-tax-1984.