Pierson v. Commissioner

27 T.C. 330, 1956 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 36
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedNovember 26, 1956
DocketDocket No. 55976
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 27 T.C. 330 (Pierson 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
Pierson v. Commissioner, 27 T.C. 330, 1956 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 36 (tax 1956).

Opinion

FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION.

Tietjens, Judge:

The Commissioner determined deficiencies in the petitioner’s income tax as follows:

Year Deficiency
1944_1_$44, T99.17
1945_ 13.12

Certain adjustments made by the Commissioner are not contested by the petitioner. There are three issues for decision. The first involves the question of whether gain or loss was realized by the petitioner when she received certain assets from a trust in settlement of an inherited remainder interest in the trust; the second involves the determination of the petitioner’s basis in those assets; and third, whether the petitioner sustained a deductible loss when she canceled certain notes owed her by a corporation controlled by her former husband. The income tax returns for the years involved herein were filed with the then collector of internal revenue for the fifth district of New Jersey.

Issues 1 and %.

All of the facts bearing on these issues are stipulated and are so found. For convenience they may be summarized as follows:

During his lifetime the petitioner’s grandfather, James S. Coward, created two trusts for the benefit of his daughter, Hattie, the corpora of which consisted of bonds and mortgages. The income was payable to Hattie during her life. At her death the corpus of each was to revert to James, if living, and in the event he predeceased Hattie, the trusts were to become part of his residuary estate to be disposed of according to his will.

James died March. 11,1923, while Hattie was still living. His will continued the trusts and provided that upon Hattie’s death the trust funds were to be distributed $500,000 each to Hattie’s three children and the remainder to his son, John, the petitioner’s father.

John died December 9, 1925. By will he left one-half of his remainder interest in the trusts to his wife, Minnie, and one-half to the petitioner. At the time of "his death, John’s interest in the trusts was valued at $1,300,000.

Minnie died March 30,1940, and by will left her one-half remainder interest in the trust funds to her daughter, the petitioner. At Minnie’s death this one-half interest was valued at $50,000.

The life tenant, Hattie, died September 15,1941. On that date the trust funds were not sufficient to pay the amounts required to liquidate obligations due the life tenant and remaindermen in full (exclusive of the petitioner).

Litigation in connection with the trusts had been pending for many years based upon exceptions which had been filed to the account of the trustee. Such exceptions in part charged that the trustee had mismanaged the trust investments. This litigation was ultimately settled through the' medium of a consent decree. In substance, the decree directed a settlement of all matters in controversy and provided for the payment to the petitioner of $62,500 in cash and 9 specified pieces of real estate. The petitioner received, in addition, the sum of $28,865.77, which amount was paid by the trustee. The petitioner paid legal fees of $30,000 in connection with this litigation.

The 9 properties distributed to the petitioner had been acquired by the trusts between 1932 and 1941 as a result of foreclosure of mortgages held by the trusts. Their market value at the time of acquisition by the trusts is stipulated.

On her 1944 income tax return the petitioner reported a loss on the settlement of her remainder interests in the James S. Coward Trusts in the amount of $449,988.02, computed as follows:

Basis in trust_$700, 000. 00
Legal expenses incurred in connection with settlement of trust- 30,000.00 $730,000.00
Less:
Cash received_$ 91,365. 77
Bair market value of 9 parcels of real property— 144, 500. 00 235, 865. 77
Loss on settlement of trust_ $494,134. 23

The petitioner sold 2 of the 9 parcels of re.al estate in 1944. She sold the other 7 in 1945. On her income tax returns for those years she reported gain or loss from their sale as follows:

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The first question for decision arises because the Commissioner determined that the deduction of $494,134.23 claimed by the petitioner on her 1944 return as a loss on settlement of the trusts was not allowable, inasmuch as the claimed loss constituted merely a shrinkage in value of properties in the hands of the trustee prior to acquisition by the petitioner.

The petitioner contends that the receipt by her of the 9 parcels of real estate and cash in liquidation of her remainder interests was a taxable event upon which ordinary gain or loss was realized. The Commissioner, on the other hand, argues that such receipt was not a taxable event since there was not a “sale or other disposition” by the petitioner of her remainder interests within the meaning of section 111 (a) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1939.1

In our view, Estate of Edith M. Findlay, 46 B. T. A. 1214 (1942), disposes of this issue in favor of the Commissioner. In that case, the taxpayer’s decedent was one of the beneficiaries of an estate. The value of the decedent’s share of such estate at her death was greater than was the value when distribution was made to her executor, the taxpayer, some 4 months after the decedent’s death.- The amount of the decrease in value was claimed by the taxpayer as a deductible loss upon liquidation of the estate. We held that the loss was not deductible since there had not been a disposition.

We cannot see a disposition in this case either. So far as the record discloses here the trustee did nothing more than segregate those assets which constituted the inherited remainder interests and distribute them to the petitioner. In other words, the petitioner received under the court’s decree the equivalent of her distributive share in the remainder and this is not a taxable event, despite the fact that the value of the property thus received was, at the time of receipt, less than the amount at which, the remainder was valued at the time of John’s death and Minnie’s death. We fail to perceive anything more than a fluctuation in the meantime value of the petitioner’s share. This does not give rise to a deductible loss. Estate of Edith M. Findlay, supra.

The second issue revolves around the basis used by the Commissioner in determining gains or losses on the sale by the petitioner of the parcels of real estate which she received from the trustee. In his determination with reference to the one-half interest which the petitioner received from her mother, the Commissioner used the fair market value at the date of the mother’s death, namely $50,000, relying on section 113 (a) (5) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1939 which provides that property acquired by gift, devise, or inheritance shall have as its basis for computing gain or loss the fair market value of said property at decedent’s date of death.

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Bluebook (online)
27 T.C. 330, 1956 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pierson-v-commissioner-tax-1956.