Lynchburg Trust & S. Bank v. Commissioner of Int. Rev.

68 F.2d 356, 4 U.S. Tax Cas. (CCH) 1207, 13 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 499, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 4871
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 4, 1934
Docket3541
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 68 F.2d 356 (Lynchburg Trust & S. Bank v. Commissioner of Int. Rev.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lynchburg Trust & S. Bank v. Commissioner of Int. Rev., 68 F.2d 356, 4 U.S. Tax Cas. (CCH) 1207, 13 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 499, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 4871 (4th Cir. 1934).

Opinion

SOPER, Circuit Judge.

This is a petition to review a decision of tho Board of Tax Appeals, adjudging deficiencies in income taxes against petitioners in the amounts of $292.43, $843.19^ $265.56, and $331.54 for the respective years 1926, 1927, 1928, and 1929. The ease involves the right of petitioners to deduct in their fiduciary returns, under section 219 (b) (2) and (3) of the Revenue Act of 1926 (44 Stat. 9', 33), and under section 162 (b) and (c) of the Revenue Act of 1928 (45 Stat. 791, 838, 839-, 2:6 USCA § 2162 (b) (c), certain amounts withheld or accumulated for,beneficiaries of the trust.

An agreed statement, which was adopted by the hoard as its findings of fact, discloses that petitioners, Lynchburg Trust & Savings Bank, James R. Gilliam, Jr., and Elsie West Gilliam, are trustees under the will of T. W. Gilliam, a resident of Lynchburg, Va., who died February 3, 1924, leaving a daughter, Elsie West Gilliam, and two grandchildren, W. G. Younger and E. F. Younger, children of a deceased daughter, aged fifteen and eleven years, respectively. The will provides in detail for the payment of many legacies, and then in item V gives and bequeaths all the rest and residue of the testator’s property to the trustees upon tho following trusts. The trustees are given authority, in their discretion, to sell all but certain enumerated realty and all personalty and to invest and reinvest the proceeds in such safe and profitable property, real or personal, as they may deem most advantageous to the beneficiaries. It is then provided that the net income from this fund shall be divided into two equal parts, one of which shall be paid in quarterly installments to the testator’s daughter, Elsie West Gilliam, during her life, with certain limitations over upon her death, which are not here material. Tho provision for the two grandchildren follows:

“(e) The other half of the net income arising from the fund provided for by this Item shall, subject to the provision hereinafter contained in Item VII, he paid over to my grandchildren, the children of my daughter, Grace, and Dr. E. F. Younger, or to the survivor of them, if one die without descendants. These payments are to continue till the youngest of my grandchildren, or the survivor of them, attain the age of thirty years, when the portion of my estate on which my said grandchildren received the income is to be paid over to them in equal parts. If either of my grandchildren die leaving descendants, the share of the parent both of income and principal is to go to such descendants, and if he leave none, then his share of the principal and income is to go to Ms brother, or such brother’s descendants, if the brother he dead leaving descendants, and if none, then to my daughter, Elsie West Gilliam, if! she be living, and if she he dead leaving a descendant or descendants, then to such, descendant or descendants, and if none, then to my heirs and distributees under the laws of the State of Virginia.
“All payments of income herein provided for are to he made quarterly, and it is my object that the payment both of income and principal, whether made to the first taker or to the remainder-men, shall he at the times and in the manner herein provided for and that all distributions shall ho per stirpes, and that on the death of my daughter without descendant or descendants living, her share both of income and the principal from which it is derived shall pass to my grandchildren or their descendants, and on the death of either of my grandchildren without descendants, his income and the principal from which it is derived shall pass to the other grandchild or his *358 descendants, and on the death of both my grandchildren without descendants, their income and the principal from which it is derived shall pass to my daughter, Elsie West Gilliam, or her descendants, if she he dead leaving any, and on the death of my daughter and my two grandchildren without a descendant or descendants, then all the residuum of my estate is to pass to my heirs and distribu-tees under the laws of the State of Virginia. Whenever the word ‘descendants’ is used in this will it shall have the same meaning as though ‘descendant or descendants’ had been used.”

Item VII, referred to in paragraph (e) of item V above, after naming petitioners both executors and trustees, provides:

“I authorize my executors, or the survivors of them, or the one qualifying, to hold back and invest from the income of my two grandchildren, or either of them, such portion of said income as they may think advantageous, such investments to be made as hereinbefore provided for, or in the improvement of the property of such grandchildren.”

The trustees named qualified under the will, and have administered the trust of the residue of the estate from 1924 to the present time. Elsie West Gilliam is the guardian of both grandchildren. During the period from 1924 to the end of 1929, the total net income of the trust estate amounted to $301,424.66, of which $150,712.34 was at proper times paid to Elsie West Gilliam in her own right, and the balance, $150,712.32, was in part paid to her as guardian of the two grandchildren, and in part withheld and reinvested for their benefit under item VII of the will. A total of $7,050 was paid to the guardian during that time for E. F. Younger, $14,640' was paid to her for W. G. Younger, and the amounts withheld and reinvested for each grandchild varied accordingly, $68,306.16 being reinvested for E. F. Younger and $60',716.16 for W. G. Younger. The amounts so withheld have been kept entirely separate by the trustees, both from the corpus of the maiu trust of the residue of the estate, and from each other, separate accounts being kept as to each fund and the income earned on each fund, and-separate investments being made except aa to certain investments in securities for the joint benefit of E. E. and W. G. Younger, in which each has a one-half interest. Altogether, the securities held for their joint benefit at the close of 1929 amounted to $56,545.91, those held for the benefit of E. P. Younger alone to $37,-157.82, and those held for W. G. Younger to $27,392.58; while there was uninvested cash held for them of $9',437.75 and $11,569.22, respectively. The fund held for E. P. Younger has thus increased from $68,306.16, the total amount withheld, to $74,868.53', and that held for W. G. Younger from $69,716.16 to $67,225.75, the difference in each ease representing income earned by the particular fund during the period.

Por each of the taxable years in question the trustees filed, besides their fiduciary return as trustees of the residue, or the main trust, separate fiduciary returns as trustees for E. P. and W. G. Younger, respectively, contending that subsidiary trusts of the withheld income were created by the will and that there were thus three trust entities for the purpose of taxation. Deductions were taken in the return for the main trust not only of the amounts paid to Elsie West Gilliam in her own right and as guardian for the grandchildren, but also of the amounts of income withheld for the benefit of the grandchildren, so that as a result the entire income of the trust was offset by these deductions and no tax was payable upon the main trust. Income tax returns, covering the amounts received, were, however, made by Elsie West Gilliam, the daughter, and by the guardian for each of the grandsons, and by the trustees for each of the subsidiary trusts with respect to the retained portions of the grandsons’ income. The Commissioner denied the

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68 F.2d 356, 4 U.S. Tax Cas. (CCH) 1207, 13 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 499, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 4871, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lynchburg-trust-s-bank-v-commissioner-of-int-rev-ca4-1934.