Mather v. Commissioner

5 T.C. 1001, 1945 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 51
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedOctober 30, 1945
DocketDocket No. 5591
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 5 T.C. 1001 (Mather 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
Mather v. Commissioner, 5 T.C. 1001, 1945 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 51 (tax 1945).

Opinion

OPINION.

Smith, Judge:

This proceeding involves income tax deficiencies for 1940 and 1941 in the respective amounts of $36,939.12 and $28,-237.24. The question for determination is whether petitioner is taxable in 1940 and 1941 on the income of four trusts which he had previously established for the benefit of four of his infant children. Two other minor issues raised in the pleadings have been settled by stipulation. The facts pertaining to the issue in controversy have all been stipulated.

Petitioner is a resident of Perrysburg, Ohio. His income tax returns for 1940 and 1941 were filed with the collector of internal revenue for the tenth district of Ohio, at Toledo.

Prior to 1940 petitioner created four separate trusts, one each for the benefit of four of his minor children, naming the Summit Trust Co., Toledo, Ohio (predecessor to the Toledo Trust Co., Toledo, Ohio), trustee of each trust. The trust agreements were identical except as to dates of execution, property conveyed to the trustee, and beneficiaries. The designation of the trusts in the records of the trustee, the names of the beneficiaries, the dates of their birth, and the dates of the execution of the trusts were as follows:

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In each of the trusts the trustee was given broad administrative powers over the trust fund, including the power to invest and reinvest the trust funds either in legal trust investments under the laws of the State of Ohio or “in such securities as the Donor may direct in writing.”

Section 6, article I (the Eathbun F. Mather trust) provides in part:

Section 6. In the event that, in the opinion of the Trustee, it is desirable to sell any of the Trust Property for the purpose of protecting or conserving other Trust Property, the Trustee is empowered to sell any part or parts oí the Trust Property for such purpose. This clause shall not be construed as limiting the powers conferred by any other part of this Indenture relative to sales.

It was further provided in the same section that the trustee should pay its own compensation and other carrying charges out of current income and that:

After malting the payments set forth in the second paragraph of this section, or making provision therefor out of said income, the Trustee shall, — subject to the clause hereinafter inserted providing for the use of same for the maintenance and education of said beneficiary, should same become-burdensome to Donor,— reinvest the balance of said income from time to time for the benefit of the beneficiary of the Trust Property hereunder until the beneficiary reaches the age of twenty-five (25) years, after which time the Trustee shall pay to said beneficiary the net income from the Trust Property, said payments to be made quarterly or oftener. When said beneficiary reaches the age of thirty (30) years, one-fourth (%) of the Trust Property, including accretions, shall be paid and transferred to said beneficiary, and when said beneficiary reaches the age of thirty-five (35) years another one-fourth (%) of said Trust Property and accretions shall be paid over and delivered to said beneficiary, and the balance of said Trust Property shall be paid to said beneficiary when sa;d beneficiary reaches the age of forty (40) years, but the last distribution is not to be made if, in the reasonable judgment of the Trust. Company, the interest of the beneficiary will be best conserved by a retention of the Trust Property.

After making provisions for final disposition of the trust property in the event of the beneficiary’s death before termination of the trust, section 6, article I, further provides that:

The Donor retains the right to elect at any time to have all or any part of the net income used for the maintenance and education of his said sou, Rathbun Fuller Mather, or said son’s lineal heirs.

It was further provided in section 4, article V, that:

Section 4. All loans, sales and purchases in connection with the Trust Property heretofore made by the Trustee in accordance with the written directions of the Donor, are hereby ratified and approved in all respects.
The Trustee is authorizsd and directed to make all loans, sales and purchases which Donor may hereafter direct in writing.

The trustee was directed to keep adequate books of account and to hold them open for the inspection of the donor or the beneficiaries.

The stipulation of facts filed by the parties, in so far as not covered by the above findings of fact, reads as follows:

5. The trustee has from time to time purchased additional securities from Income produced by the said trust properties, which have been added to the said trust properties, sometimes acting under the unlimited powers of purchase and sale contained in the said trust instruments, and sometimes acting under written directions of the Donor-Settlor, pursuant to the provisions of Section 1 of Article I of said trust instruments.
0. No loans have ever been made by the trustee as provided for in Article V, Section 4 of said trust instruments, and none of the trust properties have ever been reconveyed to the Donor-Settlor.
7. The petitioner is amply able to support his minor children and has always done so. No occasion has arisen when the maintenance and education of any of the aforesaid beneficiaries has become financially burdensome to the Donor-Settlor.
8. During the years 1940 and 1941 the entire -maintenance and education of the petitioner’s children, Rathbun F. Mather, (became 21 years of age on January 15, 1041), George Mather, Adele Mather, and Catherine Mather, in a manner consistent with the petitioner’s station in life, were provided by petitioner from petitioner’s own separate funds. The amounts required and expended by the petitioner for such purposes during the years 19-10 and 1941 were $10,147.21 and $7,070.20, respectively, as recorded in petitioner’s personal books of account.
9. None of the income of any of the said trusts was reflected in the income tax return originally filed by the petitioner for the year 1940; but the income of said trusts for the year 1941 was included in the gross income shown in petitioner’s income tax return filed for that year to the extent of $7,070.20. Following examination of the income tax return filed by the petitioner for the year 1940, petitioner consented to the inclusion in his gross income for that year of the income of said trusts to the extent of $10,147.21 and paid the deficiency with respect thereto on or about December 10, 1941.
10. In determining the taxable net income of the petitioner for the years 1940 and 1941, the respondent included in the petitioner’s gross income the net income of the four said trusts, as follows:
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11.

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Related

Estate of Hamiel v. Commissioner
1956 T.C. Memo. 235 (U.S. Tax Court, 1956)
Richards v. Commissioner
19 T.C. 366 (U.S. Tax Court, 1952)
Preston v. Commissioner
14 T.C. 1391 (U.S. Tax Court, 1950)
Parker v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue
166 F.2d 364 (Ninth Circuit, 1948)
Mather v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue
157 F.2d 680 (Sixth Circuit, 1946)
Alexander v. Commissioner
6 T.C. 804 (U.S. Tax Court, 1946)
Jones v. Commissioner
6 T.C. 412 (U.S. Tax Court, 1946)
Mather v. Commissioner
5 T.C. 1001 (U.S. Tax Court, 1945)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 T.C. 1001, 1945 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mather-v-commissioner-tax-1945.