Yetta C. Levin, Independent of the Estate of Sarah Caplan v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue

355 F.2d 987
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMarch 29, 1966
Docket22159
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 355 F.2d 987 (Yetta C. Levin, Independent of the Estate of Sarah Caplan v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yetta C. Levin, Independent of the Estate of Sarah Caplan v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 355 F.2d 987 (5th Cir. 1966).

Opinion

JONES, Senior Judge.

The Tax Court of the United States, in a decision dated July 23, 1964, held there was a $41,753.08 deficiency in the estate tax filed by petitioner, Yetta C. Levin, for the estate of her deceased mother, Sarah Caplan. In so doing the Tax Court upheld a determination of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue that an alleged debt owed by the estate to the testamentary trust of Dave Cap-lan, the husband of Sarah, was legally unenforceable and so nondeductible on the estate tax return. The alleged debt was valued at $125,584.90. Petitioner seeks reversal of the decision of the Tax Court.

The facts involved are discussed fully in the lower court’s opinion. 42 T.C. 446. In brief, petitioner claims that loans totaling $125,584.90 were made to her mother, Sarah Caplan, from early 1953 until Sarah’s death in 1958, from the corpus of Dave Caplan’s testamentary trust. Sarah was the income beneficiary of her husband’s trust and she received from the trustee, her nephew, 1 all the trust income including depreciation and depletion allowances. The question is whether these allowances were a part of trust corpus and so not properly distributable to Sarah as income, or income and therefore distributable. If they were the latter then there is no debt owed the trust and the Tax Court should be affirmed. 2

The question presented is somewhat complicated by the close family ties that exist between most of the parties involved in the Caplan affairs. Petitioner, the sole child of Dave and Sarah, and her children are the beneficiaries of the trusts of both Dave and Sarah. Therefore, there is no desire on the part of the beneficiaries of Dave’s trust to enforce the alleged debt. Whether the debt is enforceable or not is of interest to the parties only insofar as calculating the tax on Sarah’s estate is concerned.

Prior to Dave’s death in 1950 he was associated with Herschel Jaffe (the trustee of Dave’s testamentary trust) and one other person in the operation of oil and gas properties. The income from Dave’s interest, which was held in community with his wife, was deposited in a small corporation known as Spandsco Oil and Royalty Company (hereinafter Spand-seo). The bookkeeper for Spandsco, who was also bookkeeper for all the Caplan enterprises and for the estates and trusts involved herein, kept account of all receipts and withdrawals. After Dave’s death, Herschel Jaffe continued to manage these oil properties, which then belonged one-half to Sarah by rule of law (community property) and one-half to Dave’s testamentary trust. Herschel continued to deposit all the revenues *989 from these properties into the Spandsco bank account and, although the name of the account was changed on the books to read “Estate of Dave Caplan” and “Sarah Caplan,” there was no segregation of amounts between the two. Withdrawals were made for Sarah from this account upon her request. No accounting has been made of what Sarah’s estate might owe to Dave’s trust for alleged loans occurring while the Spandsco account was being used, and so it is of no further concern to our question.

In late 1952 Spandsco was liquidated and a special account was established shortly thereafter under Sarah Caplan’s name with the Republic National Bank. Into this account all the oil revenues were deposited. Herschel Jaffe (the trustee) was given a power of attorney by Sarah to draw upon this account. From then until Sarah’s death in 1958, all oil receipts belonging one-half to Sarah and one-half to Dave’s trust were placed in Sarah’s account and the trustee withdrew money for her use at her request. These withdrawals included tax allowances for depreciation and depletion of the oil properties. At Sarah’s death in 1958 these allowances totaled $125,-584.90. If Sarah, as the income beneficiary of Dave’s trust, was entitled to these allowances, then of course her estate does not owe any debt to Dave’s trust.

In Dave’s will the trustees were given the “full power to determine what parts of any amounts received in connection with oil, gas and mineral properties is principal and what part is income.” Further on in his will the trustees were directed to pay to his wife “during her lifetime the entire net income from the properties.” Other than these two quoted passages, there was no other reference made in the will to preservation of the corpus. Since the corpus was composed of wasting assets, i. e., oil-producing properties, it is important to know whether the testator intended to preserve the principal by retaining from distributable income enough to cover depreciation and depletion allowances. For if the testator did so intend, then the distributions of those allowances to the income beneficiary, Sarah Caplan, were improper and in that event, the trustee would have a claim against Sarah’s estate and this debt would be deductible on Sarah’s Federal estate tax return.

It is basic trust law that the trustee has a duty to preserve the principal of the trust if it is a wasting asset, unless provided otherwise in the trust instrument. 3 This duty entails the setting aside as part of corpus so much of the trust income as is necessary to replace the depreciation and depletion of the property comprising the trust corpus. However, if the testator provides otherwise in the terms of the will and directs the trustee or authorizes him in his discretion to pay the income beneficiary all the receipts, retaining nothing to replace the wasting asset, then the income beneficiary is entitled to the allowances even though it works to the disadvantage of future beneficiaries.

Dave Caplan’s will made no requirement that the trustee preserve the principal. Instead, he gave discretion to the trustees to decide if any receipts should be retained as a part of principal. 4 Our question, therefore, is whether Herschel Jaffe elected to retain depreciation and depletion allowances as a part of corpus or instead decided to treat all trust income as distributable. Petitioner contends that the former was, in fact, what actually occurred.

The contention of petitioner is based primarily on the statements of Herschel Jaffe, (trustee), Morris Jaffe (attorney for the Caplans) and the bookkeeper and *990 accountant. This testimony was that the trustee directed the accountant, in preparing the fiduciary income tax return for Dave’s estate, to take deductions for depreciation and depletion and not distribute it. Further testimony by these same people indicated that the withdrawals by Sarah from her account, to the extent they included these depreciation and depletion allowances, were considered as loans to be repaid to the trust.

The Tax Court chose to disregard this testimony and to base its opinion on the many other facts and circumstances that point the other way. First, all the income from the oil properties — including trust income and Sarah’s one-half of the community property — was deposited in one bank account. The account was in the name of Sarah Caplan (Special Account) and the trustee had a power of attorney to make withdrawals. These were made at the request of Sarah for her personal use. There was no separation of the trust funds from Sarah’s own funds.

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Estate of Holland v. Commissioner
1997 T.C. Memo. 302 (U.S. Tax Court, 1997)
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58 T.C. 543 (U.S. Tax Court, 1972)
COMMERCIAL NATIONAL BANK IN NACOGDOCHES v. Hayter
473 S.W.2d 561 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1971)
Hay v. United States
263 F. Supp. 813 (N.D. Texas, 1967)

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Bluebook (online)
355 F.2d 987, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yetta-c-levin-independent-of-the-estate-of-sarah-caplan-v-commissioner-ca5-1966.