Rebecca K. Crown Income Charitable Fund, Arie S. Crown v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue

8 F.3d 571
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedDecember 9, 1993
Docket92-3957
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 8 F.3d 571 (Rebecca K. Crown Income Charitable Fund, Arie S. Crown v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rebecca K. Crown Income Charitable Fund, Arie S. Crown v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 8 F.3d 571 (7th Cir. 1993).

Opinion

POSNER, Chief Judge.

In 1983, senior members of a very wealthy Chicago family, the Crowns, created what is called a “charitable lead trust” and took a $15 million deduction for charity on their gift-tax returns. The trustees are younger members of the family. In a charitable lead trust, which comes in two varieties, grantor and nongrantor, the latter being the type involved in this case, the trust instrument requires the trust to pay a fixed sum of money per year to qualified charities for a specified number of years, and the discounted present value of that stream of promised payments is the amount allowable as a gift-tax deduction for a gift to charity. 26 U.S.C. §§ 2522(a)(2), (c)(2)(B). The present value of the stream is, if correctly discounted, a fair estimate of the value of the charitable gift. Whatever is left over after charities have received the committed amount goes to the trust’s remaindermen, who in this case are still-younger Crowns — the children and grandchildren (in some cases as yet unborn) of the trustee Crowns, who are of the generation between the trust’s creator-donors and the remaindermen. The trust'instrument directs the trustees to donate to charities $975,000 a year for 45 years, and the present value of such a gift, discounted at 6 percent (the rate the donors were required to use, Treas.Reg. §§ 25.2522(e)-3(d)(2)(iv), 25.2512-9(a)(2), 25.2512-9 (tab. B)), is slightly more than $15 million. The trust was funded with a $15 million contribution from the donors, which was used to buy securities to generate income to defray the expense of the charitable donations that the trust is required to make.

The trust instrument provides — and here we approach the heart of this case — that only if “as a matter of law” the trustees can prepay (accelerate, commute) amounts due the charities “without adversely affecting the maximum charitable deduction” are they authorized to do so. In each of the taxable years 1984 through 1986, the trustees deducted on the trust’s income tax return more than $975,000 in gifts to charities (in 1986, for example, they deducted $1.9 million). The trust’s investments had earned more *573 than $975,000 in each of those years, and any amount of income that the trust failed to give to charity would be taxable income of the trust. The charitable deduction from income tax for trusts, unlike that for individuals, has no cap. 26 U.S.C. § 642(c)(1). Nevertheless the Internal Revenue Service limited the trust’s charitable deduction to $975,000 per year, assessing income tax on the amount above that which the trust had deducted for charitable gifts. The Tax Court upheld the deficiency. 98 T.C. 327 (1992). Its decision has drawn comment, Conrad Teitell, “Questions Surround Prepayment Clauses of Charitable Trusts,” Trusts & Estates, July 1992, p. 56, but we have not been able to discover either how common prepayment clauses in charitable lead trusts are in general or how common the particular form of that clause in the Crowns’ charitable lead trust is.

The charitable gift-tax deduction is available only to the extent that the trust’s gifts to charity are “pursuant to the terms of the governing instrument.” 26 U.S.C. § 642(c)(1); John Allan Love Charitable Foundation v. United States, 710 F.2d 1316, 1319 (8th Cir.1983); Ernest & Mary Hayward Weir Foundation v. United States, 508 F.2d 894 (2d Cir.1974) (per curiam). Whether the trustees were authorized to prepay in whole or part future installments of the $975,000 committed to be paid each year to charities depends on whether prepayment would “as a matter of law” not adversely affect the $15 million gift-tax deduction taken by the donors. (We assume that this is the “charitable deduction” to which the prepayment clause refers; later we shall examine that assumption critically.) The trustees do not argue that they can take a charitable deduction from the trust’s taxable income for excess payments that are not prepayments. If they did that they would be diverting to charity money that the trust instrument reserves to the remaindermen, and thus would again be failing to honor the terms of the trust instrument.

To decide whether prepayment would have jeopardized the donors’ gift-tax deduction requires consideration of the potential for tax avoidance created by a charitable lead trust and the possible response of the Internal Revenue Service to that potential. Before 1969, when the charitable lead trust entered the Internal Revenue Code, see Eugene J. Callahan, “Charitable ‘Lead’ Trusts — the Forgotten Member of the Trilogy,” 11 U. Miami Institute on Estate Planning ¶ 500 (1977), imaginative tax lawyers played the following game: create a trust in which the income goes to charity and the remainder to the donor’s descendants; compute the charitable gift-tax deduction on assumptions favorable to the income beneficiary, that is, the charities; in the administration of the trust jigger the allocation of the trust’s receipts as between income and principal to favor principal. In effect, receipts counted as income to charity in the computation of the gift-tax deduction will go to the remaindermen, and the donor will have effected a tax-free transfer to his descendants. See Tax Reform Studies and Proposals U.S. Treasury Department, pt. 2, pp. 183, 190 (Joint Publication of H.R. Comm, on Ways and Means and S. Comm, on Finance, 91st Cong., 1st Sess., Feb. 5, 1969). Congress caught on in 1969 and provided that to qualify for the gift-tax deduction a charitable income trust would be required to take a new form, that of a charitable lead trust, defined as a trust in which the governing instrument guarantees a specified annual income to charity. 26 U.S.C. § 2522(c)(2)(B); Treas.Reg. . § 25.2522(c)-3(c)(2)(vi); H.R.Rep. No. 413, 91st Cong., 1st Sess., pt. 1, at p. 61 (1969). The charitable deduction from gift tax is limited to the present .value of that guaranteed stream of income.

Prepayment of the “guaranteed” annual payments might be a method of defeating the legislative objective. There are two arguable abuses, though only the second strikes us as real. The first depends on the fact that, the higher the discount rate used for commutation, the faster the commitment to charity can be liquidated by prepayment, accelerating the transfer of the remainder to the remaindermen. Suppose (ignoring the prepayments actually made in this ease) that in the fifth year of the Crown charitable lead trust the principal was still $15 million — the guaranteed payments to charity having been just balanced by the income from the securities constituting the principal — and the trust *574 ees decided, let us say correctly, that a fair discount rate, based on current long-term interest rates, at which to commute future to present payments was 10 percent.

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Bluebook (online)
8 F.3d 571, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rebecca-k-crown-income-charitable-fund-arie-s-crown-v-commissioner-of-ca7-1993.