Polk v. Commissioner
This text of 5 T.C.M. 357 (Polk 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.
Opinion
*197 Gifts in trust. - Held, that the gifts of trust corpus were future interests. Held, further, there is no proof that the gifts of the trust income had any value. Accordingly, no exclusions are allowable.
Memorandum Findings of Fact and Opinion
The respondent determined a deficiency in petitioner's gift tax for the calendar year 1943, in the amount of $347.14, all of which is in controversy.
The sole issue is whether, in computing gift tax liability, respondent erred in disallowing three exclusions totalling $9,000, based on his determination that petitioner's gifts in trust for the benefit of three beneficiaries constituted gifts of*198 "future interests in property", within the meaning of
Findings of Fact
Petitioner is a resident of Memphis, Tennessee, and she filed her gift tax return for the calendar year 1943 with the collector for the district of Tennessee.
On December 31, 1943, the petitioner as "Settlor" and her daughter, Mrs. Margaret Polk Aden, as "Trustee", executed a written irrevocable declaration of trust, whereby the settlor transferred 90 shares of preferred capital stock of the C. W. Hunter Company, having a market value of $9,000, to the trustee, to hold, manage, control, invest, and reinvest such property and any additional or converted trust property, "for the education, maintenance, support and ownership" of the settlor's three grandchildren, "in equal shares". At that time the grandchildren, Adrienne, Cynthia, and Margaret Aden were approximately four, two, and one year of age, respectively.
The declaration of trust provided, in part, as follows:
The income from the trust property during the minority of each of said Adrienne Aden, Cynthia Aden and Margaret Elizabeth Aden, shall be applied by the Trustee, *199 equally, between said beneficiaries for their education, maintenance and support in such manner, and at such times as the Trustee alone may decide, and without being accountable for her acts in so doing, other than those arising from bad faith. That part of income allocable to each beneficiary and unexpended for the education, maintenance and support of said beneficiary, shall be retained by the Trustee for any other purpose deemed by said Trustee to be to the welfare of the said beneficiary.
When Adrienne Aden attains her twenty-fifth (25th) birthday, as to her, this trust shall terminate whereupon the Trustee shall apportion the corpus of the estate into three (3) equal shares, and transfer, convey and deliver to Adrienne Aden one of such equal shares, after which she shall have no further interest in the trust property; as to Cynthia and Margaret Elizabeth Aden, the trust shall continue until Cynthia Aden attains her twenty-fifth (25th) birthday, at which time as to her, this trust shall terminate, whereupon the Trustee shall apportion the corpus of the estate into two equal shares, and transfer, convey and deliver to Cynthia Aden one of such equal shares, after which she shall*200 have no further interest in the trust property; as to Margaret Elizabeth Aden, the trust shall continue and when she attains her twenty-fifth (25th) birthday, the then corpus of the trust shall be transferred, conveyed and delivered to her upon which, this trust shall terminate.
If at the time of any distribution of corpus by the Trustee, any grandchild shall have died, substitutional distribution shall be made by the Trustee of the share of the grandchild so dying as follows:
(a.) As the grandchild so dying by validly executed and duly probated last will shall appoint.
(b.) In default of appointment, or in the event no will of such grandchild be probated within six (6) months after the death of such grandchild:
If the grandchild so dying be survived by a child or children, or descendants of such child or children living at the time of distribution, then share and share alike to such child or children, or descendants thereof, per stirpes.
If the grandchild be survived by no child or children, or descendants thereof, then to my other grandchildren, share and share alike.
If all of my grandchildren shall die intestate before complete distribution of the trust estate, leaving*201 them surviving no child or children, or descendants thereof, living at the time of distribution, then to those persons who would have been my next of kin under the intestate laws of the State of Tennessee had I died intestate at the time of such distribution.
At any time during the continuation of the trust herein created Trustee is hereby given full power and authority, in her absolute discretion, to encroach upon the corpus of the trust estate for the benefit of my beneficiaries, as in the Trustee's sole discretion, she or it, may determine.
This is an irrevocable trust.
The trust instrument further provided for appointment of a successor trustee in the event of the death of the original trustee during continuance of the trust.
The petitioner created the trust because she desired to give the C. W. Hunter Company stock to her grandchildren and since they were minors she desired her daughter to vote the stock and manage and control the trust property for the benefit of the grandchildren.
From December 31, 1943 until date of trial of this proceeding in 1945, no dividends had been declared by the C. W. Hunter Company, which is in the contracting business, and no*202 trust income had been expended for the benefit of the three beneficiaries of the trust herein. From 1928 until the end of 1943 only one dividend had been paid on such stock.
Opinion
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
5 T.C.M. 357, 1946 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 197, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/polk-v-commissioner-tax-1946.