Cushman v. Commissioner

OPINION.

Tyson, Judge:

Respondent determined that the net income of the “L. A. Cushman, Jr. Trust” in 1938 in the sum of $18,714.81 is taxable to the petitioner, grantor thereof, under the provisions of sections 22 (a), 166, and 167 of the Revenue Act of 1938. His only contentions are that the net income is taxable to the petitioner under sections 22 (a) and 167. We shall now consider respondent’s contention that the net income of the trust is taxable to petitioner under section 22 (a).

Paragraph 6 of the trust instrument provides that the trust is to be irrevocable and that the grantor “hereby surrenders all interest in the property constituting the trust estate.”

The two children were minors in the taxable year. At no time has anj' trust income been used for their education, maintenance, or support, or been otherwise applied for their use or benefit. Except for payment of the expenses of trust administration and taxes, it has been accumulated, and it is the accumulation of $18,714.81 during the taxable year which is the basis of the deficiency herein. The petitioner was financially able to, and in fact did, support the children at all times since the trust was established.

Under the laws of the State of New York, the father is under a primary duty to support and educate his minor children. Lillian M. Newman, 1 T. C. 921, 926, and cases cited therein.

Paragraph 2 of the trust instrument provides that the trustees, who were petitioner and his wife, should “hold, manage, invest and reinvest” the trust estate, “shall collect the income therefrom,” and after paying all trust expenses and taxes, “shall pay to or apply the same to the use of the children of Grantor * * Similar provisions apply to the “children and issue of any deceased child” during the life of the surviving child. Under this provision of paragraph 2, we think the trustees clearly had the right in their discretion to apply the current net income, or at least so much as was necessary, to the maintenance, support, and education of the minor children, cf. David M. Heyman, 44 B. T. A. 1009, 1016, 1018, unless, as specified in paragraph ' 5, they chose to exercise the right “to accumulate [the net income] for the account of Grantor’s said children * * * during their respective minorities.”

Under paragraph 4 of the trust instrument, the following controls were reserved to petitioner in his individual capacity as “grantor”: (1) “Trustees shall from time to time, but only upon the written direction of Grantor * * * sell any or all of the property constituting the trust estate at the prices and upon the terms contained in such direction”; (2) “Trustees shall invest and reinvest any funds held in the trust estate in such stocks, bonds and securities of corporations, domestic or foreign, and/or governments, domestic or foreign, or in other property and at such prices and upon such terms as may be contained from time to time in written directions from Grantor during his lifetime and competence * * (3) subject to limitations imposed by (1) and (2) above, the “Trustees may become a party to any reorganization, consolidation, merger or other capital readjustment of any corporation, the stocks or securities of which may at any time be held in the trust, and may participate therein in all respects, as fully as though they were the individual owners of such stocks or securities.”

In Frank G. Hoover, 42 B. T. A. 786, we considered a 1situation which is very similar to the one presented here. In that case the taxpayer created a trust which, as it related to the taxable year 1935, was irrevocable until January 1, 1936, at which time the trust would terminate if the taxpayer were then living, and the corpus would revert to him. If the taxpayer were not then living the trust would continue during the life of the wife, who was named beneficiary of the net income for life, to be paid her quarterly or at such times as she might request. A bank was named as trustee and the corpus of the trust consisted of stock in a corporation in which the taxpayer was actively interested. The taxpayer reserved to himself as grantor the right to instruct the trustee as to any change in investment, both as to the principal fund and as to the income that might not be distributed. He also reserved during his lifetime the right or proxy to vote or to direct the voting of the stock covered by the trusteeship. By means of an addition to the trust instrument, apparently inserted and dated December 26,1935, the taxpayer also reserved to himself as grantor the right to substitute a trustee for the one named in the trust instrument.

We held the net income of the trust for 1935 to be taxable to the taxpayer-grantor. We stated that it might be argued that the provision that the grantor could substitute a trustee would render inapplicable the doctrine of Helvering v. Clifford. We then proceeded to say:

Omitting the power to substitute trustees, petitioner had still contrived to retain in himself, “so long as I live the right to instruct the trustee as to any change in such investment both as to principal fund as well as the income thereof that may not be distributed * * ; “to vote or direct the voting of the stock covered by this trusteeship”; “the trustor himself during his lifetime more or less directing investments”; to obtain the reversion of the corpus on January 1,1936, unless otherwise directed by him; and, in the meantime, to have the income remain in the family and be paid to petitioner’s wife, or if the wife had died to be paid over to trusts established by petitioner for the benefit of his children in his will. The “principal investment” of the trust was stock of the company in which petitioner was “actively interested.”

After comparing the aspects set out in the above excerpt from the opinion with the substance of the Supreme Court’s conclusion in Helvering v. Clifford, 309 U. S. 331, we concluded that the grantor of the trust was taxable with the net income thereof in the year 1935 on the principle of that case as applied to section 22 (a), saying with regard to the grantor:

He does control the form and manner of the investment of both principal and undistributed income. And he does remain in a position to participate in the affairs of the business in which he is actively interested, a prerogative which proceeds from the retained equivalent of ownership of his interest in that enterprise. This is an attribute of proprietorship frequently of greater significance than the right to receive income. When we combine it with the power to force the retention of that Investment and the “benefits flowing to him indirectly through the wife” we can not avoid the conclusion that “With that control in his hands he would keep direct command over all that he needed to remain in substantially the same financial situation as before.”

In the Hoover case, as here, the taxpayer created a trust in which he retained, as grantor, the absolute control of investments and rein-vestments of a trust corpus consisting of stocks in a corporation in which he was actively interested and the accumulations of income therefrom. In that case, as here, the trust was for an indeterminate term, as distinguished from a short term, since the trust there, as it related to the taxable year 1935, was to terminate on a certain date if the grantor were living, but was to continue thereafter for the life of his wife if he were not; while here the trust was to continue until the death of the survivor of certain beneficiaries of the net income unless sooner terminated by direction of the wife of the grantor under the power given her in the trust instrument. It thus clearly appears that in the Hoover case, as it related to the year 1935, the trust was of an indeterminate duration, as here, and in neither could it be said that there was a short term trust. In the Hoover case, as here, the stock comprising the corpus of the trust estate was in a corporation in which the petitioner was actively interested, as a large stockholder, director, and chairman of its executive committee.

In Verne Marshall, 1 T. C. 442, we also considered a situation very similar to the one presented here. There the grantor created an irrevocable trust, not subject to alteration or amendment by the grantor, with himself, his wife, and another individual as trustees. The trustees were to collect the income and pay the wife an annuity therefrom so long as she lived. In the event that the wife predeceased the grantor the trust was to terminate and the property be distributed to the grantor. If at any time a conflict of opinion existed among the trustees as to any decision to be made in the administration of the trusts, the opinion of the grantor was to control. The grantor reserved the right “at his option to direct the Trustees to retain any investment at any time held * * * or to direct the sale or exchange of such investment and to designate the stocks, bonds or other property * * * in which the trust fund or any reinvestment thereof shall be invested, or to direct the issuance of voting proxies under any stock * *

In deciding that the income of the trust was taxable to the grantor, notwithstanding the trust was not for a short term, we said, inter alia;

Shorn of its legal phraseology, the trust instrument leaves in the settlor practically every power which he had over his property prior to its execution * * *. The income “remains in the family” and he retains complete control over the investment, thereby having “rather complete assurance that the trust will not affect any substantial change in his economic position.” Such lingering doubt that this is true as may exist from an examination of some of the provisions of the trust, including the provision for plural trustees, is dispelled by the provision making petitioner’s opinion and discretion controlling. Therefore, the facts in the instant proceeding are, in essence, parallel to those in the Clifford case, save in one particular — the length of the term.

The fact that in the Hoover and Marshall cases the trust estate might revert to the grantor, while here it would not, is not, we think, of weighty significance, in view of the complete control of the trust funds which could be exercised here by the grantor during the continuance of the trust. Ellis H. Warren, 45 B. T. A. 379, 384; aff'd., 133 Fed. (2d) 312; Frederick B. Rentschler, 1 T. C. 814. 818. For the same reason, even though the trust here is not a short term trust, such fact is also of no weighty significance. Ellis H. Warren, supra; Morton Stein, 41 B. T. A. 994; Verne Marshall, supra. “The test is the degree of dominion and control which the grantor has over the trust property.” Frederick B. Rentschler, supra, and authorities cited; Louis Stockstrom, 3 T. C. 255, 259.

While in the Hoover and Marshall cases the grantor reserved the right to vote the stock comprising the corpus of the trust estate and here he did not do so, such a difference is also, we think, not of weighty significance, especially in view of the fact that petitioner, as a co-trustee, had such right in conjunction with his wife, the other cotrus-tee, and could have alone, as cotrustee, prevented the voting of such stock by his failure or refusal to join with his wife in doing so should she desire the stocks to be voted contrary to his wishes. This fact in itself constituted a large measure of control over the voting of the stock even though the probability of his wife, as cotrustee, concurring in grantor’s decision as to such voting be not considered. (See Ghas. F. Roeser, 2 T. C. 298.)

We can perceive no material difference between the essential facts in the Hoover and Marshall cases and the essential facts here which would justify a different conclusion here from that reached in those cases.

In view of the complete control retained by the petitioner, as grantor, in the trust estate as evidenced by the fact that the trustees could make no sales, investments, or reinvestments except through instructions of petitioner, even when such sales and reinvestments might be necessitated by reorganization, merger, or other capital readjustment of any corporation whose stock was held at any time in the trust, and in further view of the large measure of control held by him as cotrustee over the voting of the trusteed stock of the corporation in which he was actively interested, and in further view of the fact that the trust instrument provided that the trust income might be used by the two trustees, of which petitioner was one, to discharge petitioner’s legal obligation to maintain, support, and educate his children, we hold that the income of the trust here involved is taxable to petitioner under section 22 (a) of the Revenue Act of 1938.

The case of John Stuart, 2 T. C. 1103, cited by petitioner, is distinguishable on its facts, among others being the important fact that, while the grantor there reserved the right to direct the trustees at any time and from time to time to sell the corpus or any part thereof and to reinvest the proceeds as the grantor should direct, other terms of the trust instrument empowered the trustees to do likewise. So it would seem that if and until the grantor exercised his right the trustees could exercise their rights to sell and reinvest. Here, no such right was reposed in the trustees, since, under paragraph 4 of the trust instrument, the trustees could sell “any or all of the trust property” only upon direction of the grantor and mandatorily should invest and reinvest in other property at such prices and terms as were contained in written directions from the grantor.

Petitioner contends that if the 1938 income of the trust is held to be his income and the tax rates obtaining on February 8,1943, should be applied, the resulting tax would be equal to 121 percent of his personal income apart from the trust income, and that, since under New Y ork law he can not pay any part of such tax out of the trust estate, or recoup it therefrom, it would have to be paid out of his capital and consequently would be in violation of the Sixteenth Amendment. The only showing made on this point was by the following question asked and the answer made thereto by petitioner:

Q. Mr. Cushman, have you at the present tax rate calculated what would be the tax, including a tax to you, of all of the income of this trust, plus the tax upon your own income, what per cent, that would make of your income?
A. The calculations show 121 per cent.

The shortest answer to this contention of petitioner is that it is his tax for year 1938 and not 1943 which is before and concerns us and that the rates obtaining on February 8,1943, being different from and higher than those obtaining in the taxable year, are not to be applied in computing the income of petitioner for the taxable year. There is obviously no merit in this contention of petitioner.

Having decided that the income here involved is taxable to petitioner under section 22 (a), supra, it is unnecessary to consider whether it is taxable under section 167 (a) (1) and (2) of the Revenue Act of 1938.

Reviewed by the Court.

Decision will he entered under Rule 50.

Disney, J., dissents.