115 T.C. No. 41
UNITED STATES TAX COURT
AUDREY J. WALTON, Petitioner v.
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
Docket No. 3824-99. Filed December 22, 2000.
P established and funded with corporate stock two
substantially identical grantor retained annuity trusts
(GRAT’s). Each GRAT had a 2-year term during which P
retained the right to receive an annuity. In the event
that P died prior to expiration of the 2-year term, the
remaining scheduled annuity payments were to be made to
her estate. The balance of the trust property would
then be paid to the remainder beneficiaries.
Held: For purposes of determining the value under
sec. 2702, I.R.C., of the gift effected upon creation
of each GRAT, P’s retained qualified interest is to be
valued as an annuity for a specified term of years,
rather than as an annuity for the shorter of a term
certain or the period ending upon P’s death.
Held, further, Sec. 25.2702-3(e), Example (5),
Gift Tax Regs., is an invalid interpretation of sec.
2702, I.R.C.
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Richard B. Covey and Jerome J. Caulfield, for petitioner.
Carmen M. Baerga and Marie E. Small, for respondent.
OPINION
NIMS, Judge: Respondent determined a deficiency in Federal
gift tax against petitioner for 1993 in the amount of
$4,532,776.82. The sole issue for decision is the valuation
under section 2702 of gifts resulting from petitioner’s creation
of two grantor retained annuity trusts (GRAT’s).
Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to
sections of the Internal Revenue Code in effect for the year in
issue, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of
Practice and Procedure.
Background
This case was submitted fully stipulated pursuant to Rule
122, and the facts are so found. The stipulations of the
parties, with accompanying exhibits, are incorporated herein by
this reference. At the time the petition was filed in this case,
petitioner resided in Versailles, Missouri.
Prior to April 7, 1993, petitioner was the sole owner of,
and held in her name, 7,223,478 shares of common stock of Wal-
Mart Stores, Inc., a publicly traded entity. Then, on April 7,
1993, petitioner established two substantially identical GRAT’s,
each of which had a term of 2 years and was funded by a transfer
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of 3,611,739 shares of the above Wal-Mart stock. The fair market
value of the Wal-Mart stock on that date was $27.6875 per share,
and the consequent initial fair market value of each trust was
$100,000,023.56.
According to the provisions of each GRAT, petitioner was to
receive an annuity amount equal to 49.35 percent of the initial
trust value for the first 12-month period of the trust term and
59.22 percent of such initial value for the second 12-month
period of the trust term. In the event that petitioner’s death
intervened, the annuity amounts were to be paid to her estate.
The sums were payable on December 31 of each taxable year but
could be paid up through the date by which the Federal income tax
return for the trust was required to be filed. The payments were
to be made from income and, to the extent income was not
sufficient, from principal. Any excess income was to be added to
principal.
Upon completion of the 2-year trust term, the remaining
balance was to be distributed to the designated remainder
beneficiary. Petitioner’s daughter Ann Walton Kroenke was the
beneficiary so named under one trust instrument; petitioner’s
daughter Nancy Walton Laurie was named in the other.
Each trust was irrevocable, prohibited additional
contributions, specified that the grantor’s interest was not
subject to commutation, and mandated that no payment be made
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during the trust term to any person other than the grantor or the
grantor’s estate. The two trustees for each respective trust
were petitioner and the daughter for whose benefit the trust was
created.
The following payments were made to petitioner from each of
the GRAT’s:
Date of Form of Number of Value per Amount of
Payment Payment Shares Share Payment
7/9/93 Cash $ 117,381.52
10/4/93 Cash 117,381.52
7/15/94 Stock 1,434,518 $25.1900 36,135,508.42
1/5/94 Cash 117,381.52
4/14/94 Cash 153,498.91
7/3/94 Cash 153,498.91
10/3/94 Cash 92,531.89
6/26/95 Stock 2,142,517 26.1875 56,107,163.94
1/5/95 Cash 92,531.89
4/14/95 Cash 108,861.05
6/26/95 Stock 34,704 26.1875 908,811.00
3,611,739 94,104,550.57
The assets of each GRAT were exhausted upon the final
payment of stock in June of 1995, as all income and principal had
been distributed to petitioner pursuant to the scheduled annuity
payments. Since the aggregate amount of annuity payments called
for by each trust instrument was $108,570,025.58 (49.35 percent x
$100,000,023.56 + 59.22 percent x $100,000,023.56), each GRAT
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resulted in a $14,465,475.01 shortfall in annuity payments to the
grantor and left no property to be delivered to the remainder
beneficiary.
Petitioner timely filed a United States Gift (and
Generation-Skipping Transfer) Tax Return, Form 709, for the
taxable year 1993. Therein, petitioner valued at zero the gifts
to her daughters of remainder interests in the GRAT’s.
Petitioner represented that the value of her retained interests
in the GRAT’s equaled 100 percent of the value of the Wal-Mart
stock on the date of the transfer, thus eliminating any taxable
gift to the remaindermen. Respondent subsequently issued a
notice of deficiency determining that petitioner had understated
the value of the gifts resulting from her establishment of the
two GRAT’s. Petitioner now concedes on brief that the gift
occasioned by each GRAT should be valued at $6,195.10, while
respondent asserts that the taxable value of each gift by
petitioner is $3,821,522.12.
Discussion
I. General Rules
Section 2501 imposes a tax for each calendar year on the
transfer of property by gift by any taxpayer. Pursuant to
section 2512, the value of the transferred property as of the
date of the gift “shall be considered the amount of the gift”.
Generally, where property is transferred in trust but the donor
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retains an interest in such property, the value of the gift is
the value of the property transferred, less the value of the
donor’s retained interest. See sec. 25.2512-5A(e), Gift Tax
Regs.; sec. 25.2512-5T(d)(2), Temporary Gift Tax Regs., 64 Fed.
Reg. 23224 (Apr. 30, 1999). However, if the gift in trust is to
a family member (as defined in section 2704(c)(2)), the value of
the gift is determined subject to the limitations of section
2702. See id.
As pertinent herein, section 2702 provides:
SEC. 2702. SPECIAL VALUATION RULES IN CASE OF
TRANSFERS OF INTERESTS IN TRUSTS.
(a) Valuation Rules.--
(1) In general.--Solely for purposes of
determining whether a transfer of an interest in
trust to (or for the benefit of) a member of the
transferor’s family is a gift (and the value of
such transfer), the value of any interest in such
trust retained by the transferor or any applicable
family member * * * shall be determined as
provided in paragraph (2).
(2) Valuation of retained interests.--
(A) In general.--The value of any
retained interest which is not a qualified
interest shall be treated as being zero.
(B) Valuation of qualified interest.--
The value of any retained interest which is a
qualified interest shall be determined under
section 7520 [providing for use of valuation
tables prescribed by the Secretary for
annuities, life interests, etc.].
* * * * * * *
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(b) Qualified Interest.--For purposes of this
section, the term “qualified interest” means--
(1) any interest which consists of the right
to receive fixed amounts payable not less
frequently than annually,
(2) any interest which consists of the right
to receive amounts which are payable not less
frequently than annually and are a fixed
percentage of the fair market value of the
property in the trust (determined annually), and
(3) any noncontingent remainder interest if
all of the other interests in the trust consist of
interests described in paragraph (1) or (2).
Regulations promulgated under section 2702 define, and
expand upon, certain of the terms employed in section 2702.
“Retained” denotes “held by the same individual both before and
after the transfer in trust.” Sec. 25.2702-2(a)(3), Gift Tax
Regs. The statutory definition of “qualified interest” is
likewise elucidated in the following manner: “Qualified interest
means a qualified annuity interest, a qualified unitrust
interest, or a qualified remainder interest.” Sec. 25.2702-
2(a)(5), Gift Tax Regs. A “qualified annuity interest”, in turn,
is “an interest that meets all the requirements of § 25.2702-3(b)
and (d).” Sec. 25.2702-2(a)(6), Gift Tax Regs.
The above-referenced paragraph (b) of section 25.2702-3,
Gift Tax Regs., requires that a “qualified annuity interest”
consist of “an irrevocable right to receive a fixed amount”,
“payable to (or for the benefit of) the holder of the annuity
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interest for each taxable year of the term.” Sec. 25.2702-
3(b)(1)(i), Gift Tax Regs. In this context, a “fixed amount” is
either a stated dollar amount or a fixed fraction or percentage
(not to exceed 120 percent of the fixed fraction or percentage
payable in the preceding year) of the initial fair market value
of the property transferred to the trust as finally determined
for Federal tax purposes. Sec. 25.2702-3(b)(1)(ii), Gift Tax
Regs. In either case, the fixed amount must be payable
periodically but not less frequently than annually. See id.
Paragraph (d) of section 25.2702-3, Gift Tax Regs., then
adds the following requirement dealing with the term of the
annuity interest: “The governing instrument must fix the term of
the annuity or unitrust interest. The term must be for the life
of the term holder, for a specified term of years, or for the
shorter (but not the longer) of those periods.” Sec. 25.2702-
3(d)(3), Gift Tax Regs. Furthermore, the trust instrument must
also prohibit distributions from the trust to or for the benefit
of any person other than the holder of the qualified annuity
interest during the term of the qualified interest. See sec.
25.2702-3(d)(2), Gift Tax Regs.
II. Contentions of the Parties
Respondent contends that in establishing each GRAT,
petitioner created three separate and distinct interests: (1)
The annuity payable to her during her lifetime, (2) the
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“contingent” interest of her estate to receive the annuity
payments in the event of her death prior to expiration of the 2-
year trust term, and (3) the remainder interest granted to her
daughter. Of these three, it is respondent’s position that only
the first interest, but not the second, constitutes a qualified
retained interest within the meaning of section 2702 and the
regulations promulgated thereunder. Respondent particularly
relies upon section 25.2702-3(e), Example (5), Gift Tax Regs.
(hereinafter Example 5), as a valid interpretation of the statute
and as governing the issues involved in this case.
Hence, according to respondent, only the value of an annuity
payable for the shorter of 2 years or the period ending upon
petitioner’s death may be subtracted from the fair market value
of the stock in calculating the value of the taxable gift made by
reason of petitioner’s establishment of the GRAT’s. Respondent
concludes that the present value of the retained qualified
interest in each GRAT was $96,178,501.88 and the taxable gift
$3,821,522.12 (consisting of the estate’s contingent interest of
$2,938,000.00 and the remainder interest of $883,522.12).
Conversely, petitioner maintains that for valuation purposes
under section 2702, each GRAT is properly characterized as
creating only two separate interests: (1) A retained annuity
payable for a fixed term of 2 years, and (2) a remainder interest
in favor of her daughter. Petitioner further asserts that the
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former, in its entirety, is a qualified interest within the
meaning of the statute. Accordingly, it is petitioner’s position
that the retained interest to be subtracted in computing the
amount of the taxable gift occasioned by each GRAT is to be
valued as a simple 2-year term annuity, without regard to any
mortality factor. Using this method, petitioner calculates the
retained annuity as having a value of $99,993,828.90, such that
each GRAT effected a gift of $6,195.10.
To the extent that Example 5 would appear to suggest
otherwise, petitioner avers that the example is an invalid and
unreasonable interpretation of section 2702. Petitioner argues
that the example is unsupported by statutory language or
legislative history and is inconsistent with other regulations
and examples, especially section 25.2702-3(d)(3), Gift Tax Regs.
In the alternative, petitioner claims that even if Example 5 is a
permissible interpretation of the statute on substantive grounds,
it is procedurally invalid as issued in violation of the notice
and comment provisions of the Administrative Procedures Act, 5
U.S.C. sec. 553 (1994).
III. Application
As pertinent here, section 2702 provides a facially simple
formula for valuation: (Value of property transferred in trust)
- (value of any qualified interest retained by the grantor) =
value of gift. Applying this formula, however, requires
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resolution of potentially complex subsidiary issues. For
instance, in order to determine the amount that may be
subtracted, the following are among the questions that must be
addressed: The nature of the interest “retained” by the grantor,
the extent to which that interest is “qualified”, and the
actuarial value of the qualified interest.
A. The Nature of the Interest Retained
Commencing with the threshold inquiry of what interest or
interests petitioner “retained”, we conclude that, even if we
were to view the GRAT indentures as creating separate interests
in favor of petitioner and petitioner’s estate, both such
interests must be construed as retained by petitioner. It is
axiomatic that an individual cannot make a gift to himself or to
his or her own estate. An attempt to do so has long been treated
at common law as a retention by the individual of the interest
purportedly transferred. For example, 1 Restatement, Trusts 2d,
section 127 comment b (1959), states:
Where the owner of property, whether real or
personal, transfers it in trust to pay the income to
himself for a period of years and at the expiration of
the period to pay the principal to him, he is the sole
beneficiary of the trust. He is likewise the sole
beneficiary where he transfers property in trust to pay
the income to himself for life and on his death to pay
the principal to his estate, or to his personal
representatives. * * *
Hence, because petitioner could not as a matter of law give an
interest in property to her estate, she by default retained all
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interests in the 2-year term annuities set forth in the trust
documents. Such interests thus were, as required by the
regulations, “held by the same individual both before and after
the transfer in trust.” Sec. 25.2702-2(a)(3), Gift Tax Regs.
B. The Extent of the Qualified Interest
Having therefore decided that petitioner, either
individually or through her estate, retained the 2-year annuities
in their entirety, we next consider the extent to which these
interests are “qualified”. In this connection, section 2702
itself provides only that “qualified interest” means “any
interest which consists of the right to receive fixed amounts
payable not less frequently than annually”. Sec. 2702(b)(1).
Since a simple 2-year annuity would appear to fall within this
definition, we turn to whether relevant regulations set forth
additional restrictions.
The regulatory provision which enumerates the permissible
terms for a qualified annuity mandates that the term be “for the
life of the term holder, for a specified term of years, or for
the shorter (but not the longer) of those periods.” Sec.
25.2702-3(d)(3), Gift Tax Regs. Petitioner thus contends that
her 2-year annuities are sanctioned by the second of these three
options and may be valued as such. Respondent, however, asserts
that petitioner’s annuities are in fact of the third listed type
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and cites Example 5 and section 25.2702-3(e), Example (1), Gift
Tax Regs., among others, in support of this position. Example 5
states as follows:
A transfers property to an irrevocable trust, retaining
the right to receive 5 percent of the net fair market
value of the trust property, valued annually, for 10
years. If A dies within the 10-year term, the unitrust
amount is to be paid to A’s estate for the balance of
the term. A’s interest is a qualified unitrust
interest to the extent of the right to receive the
unitrust payment for 10 years or until A’s prior death.
Section 25.2702-3(e), Example (1), Gift Tax Regs., provides:
A transfers property to an irrevocable trust, retaining
the right to receive the greater of $10,000 or the
trust income in each year for a term of 10 years. Upon
expiration of the 10-year term, the trust is to
terminate and the entire trust corpus is to be paid to
A’s child, provided that if A dies within the 10-year
term the trust corpus is to be paid to A’s estate. A’s
annual payment right is a qualified annuity interest to
the extent of the right to receive $10,000 per year for
10 years or until A’s prior death, and is valued under
section 7520 without regard to the right to receive any
income in excess of $10,000 per year. The contingent
reversion is valued at zero. The amount of A’s gift is
the fair market value of the property transferred to
the trust less the value of the qualified annuity
interest.
We agree with respondent that Example 5, if valid, would
preclude the valuation methodology for which petitioner argues.
To say that Example 5 is not on point because it involves a
unitrust rather than an annuity interest would be to rely on a
distinction without a substantive difference. Consequently, we
are faced squarely with the question of this regulation’s
validity.
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The regulations at issue here are interpretative regulations
promulgated under the general authority vested in the Secretary
by section 7805(a). Hence, while entitled to considerable
weight, they are accorded less deference than would be
legislative regulations issued under a specific grant of
authority to address a matter raised by the pertinent statute.
See Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council,
Inc., 467 U.S. 837, 843-844 (1984) (Chevron); United States v.
Vogel Fertilizer Co., 455 U.S. 16, 24 (1982). A legislative
regulation is to be upheld unless “arbitrary, capricious, or
manifestly contrary to the statute.” Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v.
Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc., supra at 843-844.
With respect to interpretative regulations, the appropriate
standard is whether the provision “‘implement[s] the
congressional mandate in some reasonable manner.’” United States
v. Vogel Fertilizer Co., supra at 24 (quoting United States v.
Correll, 389 U.S. 299, 307 (1967)). In applying this test, we
look to the following two-part analysis enunciated by the Supreme
Court:
When a court reviews an agency’s construction of
the statute which it administers, it is confronted with
two questions. First, always, is the question whether
Congress has directly spoken to the precise question at
issue. If the intent of Congress is clear, that is the
end of the matter; for the court, as well as the
agency, must give effect to the unambiguously expressed
intent of Congress. If, however, the court determines
Congress has not directly addressed the precise
question at issue, the court does not simply impose its
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own construction on the statute, as would be necessary
in the absence of an administrative interpretation.
Rather, if the statute is silent or ambiguous with
respect to the specific issue, the question for the
court is whether the agency’s answer is based on a
permissible construction of the statute. [Chevron
U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council,
Inc., supra at 842-843; fn. refs. omitted.]
A challenged regulation is not considered such a permissible
construction or reasonable interpretation unless it harmonizes
both with the statutory language and with the statute’s origin
and purpose. See United States v. Vogel Fertilizer Co., supra at
25-26; National Muffler Dealers Association v. United States, 440
U.S. 472, 477 (1979) (National Muffler).
We pause to note that before the Chevron standard of review
was enunciated by the Supreme Court, the traditional standard was
simply “whether the regulation harmonizes with the plain language
of the statute, its origin, and its purpose”, as prescribed by
the Supreme Court in National Muffler Dealers Association v.
United States, supra at 477. As we have observed in a previous
case, the opinion of the Supreme Court in Chevron failed to cite
National Muffler and may have established a different formulation
of the standard of review. See Central Pa. Sav. Association v.
Commissioner, 104 T.C. 384, 390-391 (1995). In the case before
us, we conclude that it is unnecessary to parse the semantics of
the two tests to discern any substantive difference between them,
because the result here would be the same under either.
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Because section 2702 does not speak to the issue of the
permissible term for a qualified annuity, Example 5 does not
expressly contradict any statutory language. Accordingly, we
focus on the statute’s origin and purpose for further guidance.
Section 2702 was enacted as part of the Omnibus Budget
Reconciliation Act of 1990, Pub. L. 101-508, sec. 11602, 104
Stat. 1388-491. Legislative history1 describes the aims which
prompted the measure:
the committee is concerned about the undervaluation of
gifts valued pursuant to Treasury tables. Based on
average rates of return and life expectancy, those
tables are seldom accurate in a particular case, and
therefore, may be the subject of adverse selection.
Because the taxpayer decides what property to give,
when to give it, and often controls the return on the
property, use of Treasury tables undervalues the
transferred interests in the aggregate, more often than
not.
Therefore, the committee determines that the
valuation problems inherent in trusts and term
interests in property are best addressed by valuing
1
Sec. 2702 originated in the Senate version of the Omnibus
Budget Reconciliation Act of 1990, Pub. L. 101-508, 104 Stat.
1388-400. See H. Conf. Rept. 101-964 (1990), 1991-2 C.B. 560,
1131-1133. The Senate bill was prepared under very limited time
constraints. See 136 Cong. Rec. 30485 (1990). In order to avoid
delay, the bill was brought to the floor without printing a
formal report of the Senate Budget Committee. See id. In lieu
thereof, the report language that had been submitted to the
Budget Committee, for inclusion in its report, by the Senate
Finance Committee relating to the bill’s provisions within the
Finance Committee’s jurisdiction, including sec. 2702, was
printed in the Congressional Record. See id. The text of the
Senate version of sec. 2702, the subject of the report language
printed in the Congressional Record, was identical in all
material respects to the statute ultimately enacted. See id. at
30818.
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retained interests at zero unless they take an easily
valued form--as an annuity or unitrust interest. By
doing so, the bill draws upon present law rules valuing
split interests in property for purposes of the
charitable deduction. [136 Cong. Rec. 30538-30539
(1990).]
The legislative record then goes on to explain the statute’s
intended operation:
The bill requires that the value of a remainder
interest be determined by subtracting the value of the
income interest from the value of the entire property.
The bill provides that the value of an interest
retained by the transferor or an applicable family
member is zero unless such interest is a “qualified
interest”. A qualified interest is (1) a right to
receive fixed amounts payable at least annually, (2) a
right to receive amounts payable at least annually
which are a fixed percentage of the trust’s assets
(determined annually), or (3) a non-contingent
remainder interest if all the other interests in the
trust are qualified payments.30 A qualified interest
generally would be valued under present law, e.g., by
reference to section 7520.
Thus, a person who makes a completed transfer of
nonresidential property in trust and retains (1) the
right to the income of the trust for a term of years
and (2) a reversionary right (or a testamentary general
power of appointment) with respect to trust corpus is
treated as making a transfer equal to the value of the
whole property. * * * In contrast, the creation of a
trust the only interests in which are an annuity for a
term of years and a noncontingent remainder interest is
valued under present law.
_______________
30
These interests are similar to those permitted in
charitable split-interest trusts under Section 664.
Id. at 30540 & n.30.
Based on these statements, it is clear that the principal
objective of section 2702 was to prevent undervaluation of gifted
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interests. Moreover, the foregoing language reflects that the
statute was designed primarily to restrict a donor’s ability to
calculate the amount of a gift by subtracting certain elements of
actuarial value that would or might in fact pass to the donee. A
fixed-term annuity, payable to the grantor or the grantor’s
estate, would therefore appear to fall within the statute’s
permissible parameters, as elucidated by the legislative history.
Such an interest would further seem to fall within the class of
easily valued rights which the final sentence in the passage
above indicates Congress envisioned would not be afforded a
lesser value under the new rules.
Respondent, however, characterizes the annuities at issue
here as equivalent to the reversionary rights referenced by
Congress as nonqualified, rather than to the fixed-term interests
approved by the lawmakers. In respondent’s view, the
congressional concern underlying section 2702 reaches
petitioner’s annuities.
Respondent alleges that Congress sought to curb the then-
current practice of dividing trusts into numerous interests and
selectively retaining interests based on mortality, such as
reversions. Respondent points out the common estate planning
device of creating a trust, with a term short enough that the
grantor’s risk of dying during the term would be minimal, in
which the grantor retained both an income interest and a
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contingent reversion in the trust corpus to take effect in the
event of his or her death during the term. The value of the gift
to the remaindermen would then be calculated by subtracting
actuarial amounts for each of these interests, despite the
negligible chance that the reversion would become operative.
Respondent then goes on to frame the annuities payable to
petitioner’s estate as no different in substance from such
reversions. Respondent’s position is that both represent
separate rights to receive property contingent upon the grantor’s
death during the trust term. Because contingent rights, not
fixed or ascertainable at the creation of the trust, do not fall
within any of the three forms defined as qualified in section
2702(b), respondent maintains that both are properly valued at
zero. On this basis, respondent argues that Example 5 is
consistent not only with the purpose of section 2702 but also
with other regulations which deal with post-death interests,
particularly section 25.2702-3(e), Example (1), Gift Tax Regs.
Respondent further contends that Congress’ reference to a
trust consisting only of a fixed-term annuity and a noncontingent
remainder was describing a situation different from that of
petitioner here. Respondent avers that the scenario contemplated
by the lawmakers was one in which the donor transferred the lead
annuity to an entity with perpetual life and retained a
noncontingent remainder. According to respondent, only in that
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context is it possible for a donor to create strictly an annuity
for a term of years and a noncontingent remainder. Hence, it is
only that kind of situation which respondent claims is sanctioned
by the mention of an annuity “for a specified term of years” in
section 25.2702-3(d)(3), Gift Tax Regs., with the result that
there exists no inconsistency between Example 5 and such
regulatory section.
In response to this latter argument, we would simply point
out that the statute does not contemplate a transfer of the lead
annuity to a perpetual-life entity. See secs. 2702(e),
2704(c)(2) (defining “member of the family” for purposes of
bringing a transaction within the section 2702 rules). We
therefore turn to respondent’s broader contentions regarding
Example 5’s consistency with the underlying purpose of section
2702. On this issue, we conclude that the annuities here are
more akin to the fixed-term interests cited with approval in the
legislative history than to the reversionary interests identified
as leading to undervaluation. We base our conclusions on the
statutory text, on the above-quoted policy concerns, and on the
comparable situation in the section 664 context (dealing with
valuation of split-interest gifts to charity), to which the
legislative history alludes.
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With respect to the text itself, the short answer is that an
annuity for a specified term of years is consistent with the
section 2702(b) definition of a qualified interest; a contingent
reversion is not.
As regards policy, permitting reduction to gift value for
reversionary interests was resulting in arbitrary and abusive
elimination of value which was intended to, and typically did,
pass to the donee. Donors were subtracting the full actuarial
value of a reversionary interest in the trust corpus and were not
merely treating their retained interests as an annuity for a
fixed term of years. Although we acknowledge that, in the case
of a reversion, at least the equivalent of the term annuity’s
value would be payable to the grantor or the grantor’s estate in
all events, Congress was entitled to require that interests be
cast in one of three specified forms to receive the favorable
treatment afforded qualified interests. Accordingly, the
Commissioner is equally justified in assigning a zero value to
reversionary interests outside the scope of the statutory
definition and refusing to consider whether such interests can
have the practical effect of a different form of interest not
chosen by the grantor. See sec. 25.2702-3(e), Example (1), Gift
Tax Regs.
In contrast, there exists no rationale for refusing to take
into account for valuation purposes a retained interest of which
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both the form and the effect are consistent with the statute. We
further observe that respondent’s attempts to equate the estate’s
rights here with other contingent, post-death interests are
premised on the bifurcation of the estate’s interest from that of
petitioner. Yet, given the historical unity between an
individual and his or her estate, we believe such separation is
unwarranted where the trust is drafted in the form of a specified
interest retained by the grantor, with the estate designated only
as the alternate payee of that precise interest. This is the
result that would obtain if the governing instrument were simply
silent as to the disposition of the annuity in the event of the
grantor’s death during the trust term. Additionally, any other
construction would effectively eliminate the qualified term-of-
years annuity, a result not contemplated by Congress.
Moreover, we note in this connection that the Commissioner
has defined noncontingent for purposes of determining a qualified
remainder interest as follows: “an interest is non-contingent
only if it is payable to the beneficiary or the beneficiary’s
estate in all events.” Sec. 25.2702-3(f)(1)(iii), Gift Tax Regs.
We are satisfied that this principle is equally applicable in the
circumstances at bar. For similar reasons, we decline
respondent’s invitation to treat term annuities payable to a
grantor or the grantor’s estate as having two separate “holders”
for purposes of the regulatory requirement of section 25.2702-
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3(b)(1)(i), Gift Tax Regs., that the annuity amount “be payable
to (or for the benefit of) the holder of the annuity interest for
each taxable year of the term.”
Lastly, we observe that the legislative history indicates
section 2702 was to draw upon the rules for valuing split-
interest gifts to charity under section 664. Section 664 deals
with charitable remainder annuity trusts and unitrusts for which
a tax deduction is available. Yet under this statute, respondent
apparently acknowledges that an annuity payable for a term of
years to an individual or the individual’s estate is valued as a
fixed-term interest. Section 1.664-2(c), Income Tax Regs.,
provides that the present value of an annuity is to be computed
in accordance with regulations promulgated under section 2031.
Such regulations, in turn, contain the following example:
Example 4. Annuity payable for a term of years. The
decedent, or the decedent’s estate, was entitled to
receive an annuity of $10,000 a year payable in equal
quarterly installments at the end of each quarter
throughout a term certain. At the time of the
decedent’s death, the section 7520 rate was 9.8
percent. A quarterly payment had just been made prior
to the decedent’s death and payments were to continue
for 5 more years. Under Table B in § 20.2031-7(d)(6)
for the interest rate of 9.8 percent, the factor for
the present value of a remainder interest due after a
term of 5 years is .626597. Converting the factor to
an annuity factor, as described in paragraph
(d)(2)(iv)(A) of this section, the factor for the
present value of an annuity for a term of 5 years is
3.8102. The adjustment factor from Table K in §
20.2031-7(d)(6) at an interest rate of 9.8 percent for
quarterly annuity payments made at the end of the
period is 1.0360. The present value of the annuity is,
therefore, $39,473.67 ($10,000 x 3.8102 x 1.0360).
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[Sec. 20.2031-7T(d)(5), Example (4), Temporary Estate
Tax Regs., 64 Fed. Reg. 23214 (April 30, 1999); see
also pre-1999 sec. 20.2031-7(d)(5), Example (4), Estate
Tax Regs.]
It strikes us as incongruous that respondent is willing to
recognize the full value of a term annuity, whether payable to a
taxpayer or to the taxpayer’s estate, when to do so will reduce
the amount of a charitable deduction, but refutes this approach
when it will decrease the amount of a taxable gift.
Thus, given the above authorities, we construe each of the
subject GRAT’s as creating a single, noncontingent annuity
interest payable for a specified term of years to the
undifferentiated unit of petitioner or her estate. We further
conclude that Congress meant to allow individuals to retain
qualified annuity interests for a specified term of years, and
that the proper method for doing so is to make the balance of any
payments due after the grantor’s death payable to the grantor’s
estate. We hold that Example 5 is an unreasonable interpretation
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and an invalid extension of section 27022, and we need not reach
the issue of whether it was adopted in violation of the
Administrative Procedures Act. Accordingly, the qualified
interest retained by petitioner in each GRAT here is an annuity
payable for a specified term of 2 years.
C. The Actuarial Value of the Qualified Interests
Having decided the nature and extent of the qualified
interests retained by petitioner, we say a few words regarding
the calculation of their actuarial value. In compliance with
section 2702(a)(2)(B), these interests are to be valued under
section 7520. There appears, however, to be some disagreement
between the parties as to the mechanics of this computation.
They seem to differ with respect to how properly to account for
the timing of the payments and the partial years involved where a
GRAT is established other than on January 1. Because we believe
2
We note that sec. 25.2702-3(e), Example (5), Gift Tax
Regs. (hereinafter Example 5), was cited and its alleged
underlying rationale was alluded to in support of our holding in
Cook v. Commissioner, 115 T.C. 15 (2000). In that case, neither
party challenged the validity of any regulations promulgated
under sec. 2702, and it is not the typical practice of this Court
to raise such issues sua sponte. Suffice it to say at this point
that we would have reached the same result absent any reliance on
Example 5. The spousal interests at issue there were in fact
contingent in a sense violative of the policy behind sec. 2702.
They would never take effect if the spouse were to predecease the
grantor, and any value attributable thereto would pass to the
donee. The statute does not sanction treatment of such interests
as qualified.
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that such issues are more appropriately dealt with when fully
articulated pursuant to Rule 155 proceedings, we defer from
expressing any opinion on this matter at the present time.
To reflect the foregoing,
Decision will be entered
under Rule 155.
Reviewed by the Court.
WELLS, CHABOT, SWIFT, RUWE, WHALEN, COLVIN, HALPERN,
CHIECHI, LARO, VASQUEZ, GALE, and MARVEL, JJ., agree with this
opinion.
BEGHE, FOLEY, and THORNTON, JJ., did not participate in the
consideration of this opinion.