T.C. Memo. 2013-43
UNITED STATES TAX COURT
ESTATE OF VIRGINIA V. KITE, DONOR, DECEASED, BANK OF
OKLAHOMA, N.A., EXECUTOR/TRUSTEE, Petitioner v.
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
ESTATE OF VIRGINIA V. KITE, DECEASED, BANK OF OKLAHOMA, N.A.,
EXECUTOR/TRUSTEE, Petitioner v.
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
Docket Nos. 6772-08, 6773-08. Filed February 7, 2013.
John N. Hermes, Dee A. Replogle, Jr., and Spencer W. Haines, for petitioner.
Ann L. Darnold, for respondent.
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[*2] MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION
PARIS, Judge: In these consolidated cases, respondent issued two notices of
deficiency, taking alternative positions with respect to a private annuity transaction.
In the notice of deficiency for docket No. 6772-08, respondent determined a
$6,053,752 deficiency in the 2001 Federal gift tax of Virginia Vose Kite (Mrs.
Kite). In the notice of deficiency for docket No. 6773-08, respondent determined a
$5,100,493 deficiency in the Federal estate tax of the Estate of Virginia V. Kite
(estate).1
Mrs. Kite was the current income beneficiary of numerous trusts, only four of
which are at issue in these cases. The four trusts, which are described in more detail
below, include: two qualified terminable interest property (QTIP) trusts, one marital
deduction trust, and one revocable trust. In 2001 the QTIP trusts and the marital
deduction trust were liquidated, and the trusts’ assets, which consisted entirely of
family partnership interests, were transferred to Mrs. Kite’s lifetime revocable trust.
The family partnership interests held by the lifetime revocable trust were then
transferred to Mrs. Kite’s children in exchange for 10-year deferred private annuity
agreements.
1
The estate concedes the adjustment that the taxable estate includes $20,750
of gift tax Mrs. Kite paid within three years of her death.
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[*3] The Court must now decide: (1) whether the transfer of partnership interests
to Mrs. Kite’s children in exchange for the private annuity agreements was a
disguised gift subject to gift tax; (2) whether the transfer of the QTIP trust assets
constituted a disposition of the qualifying income interest for life such that the
disposition was a taxable gift of the remainder interest under section 2519;2 and (3)
whether Mrs. Kite made a taxable transfer under section 2514 when she effectively
released her general power of appointment over the corpus of her marital deduction
trust.
FINDINGS OF FACT
Some of the facts are stipulated and are so found. The stipulation of facts and
the attached exhibits are incorporated herein by this reference. Mrs. Kite resided in
Oklahoma when she died on April 28, 2004. Bank of Oklahoma, N.A. (BOK), the
executor of the estate, filed the petition on behalf of the estate.
I. Mrs. Kite’s Background
Mrs. Kite was born on April 8, 1926. Her father was the chairman of a
family-owned bank, Vose Bank, and its successor, First National Bank & Trust
2
Unless otherwise indicated, section references are to the applicable versions
of the Internal Revenue Code (Code), and Rule references are to the Tax Court
Rules of Practice and Procedure.
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[*4] Co. of Oklahoma City (FNB).3 As a member of a prominent banking family,
Mrs. Kite was the beneficiary of numerous trusts,4 which held, among other valuable
assets and cash, a portfolio of founder’s shares and other securities of FNB, its
affiliates, and its regional partners.
Business acumen was also passed on from generation to generation. Mrs.
Kite was a savvy businesswoman who actively participated in managing her assets.
She maintained an office where two employees assisted with her family’s finances.
In addition, she would meet with her trust administrator at least quarterly to discuss
the financial activities of her many trusts and their investments.
Mrs. Kite married James B. Kite (Mr. Kite), who, according to his death
certificate, was a geologist in the petroleum business. They were married until Mr.
Kite’s death on February 23, 1995. The couple had three children: Carolyn K.
Eason (Ms. Eason), James B. Kite, Jr. (Mr. Kite, Jr.), and Virginia K. Kite
(collectively, Kite children). After Mr. Kite’s death, Mrs. Kite remained a widow
until she died.
3
Through a merger and acquisition, FNB eventually became a part of Bank of
Oklahoma, N.A. (BOK).
4
At trial, a representative of BOK’s trust department testified that there were
70 trusts for the benefit of Mrs. Kite or her children.
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[*5] II. The Trusts
Before describing the transactions in dispute, the Court will introduce the
types of trusts involved, which, except for the two QTIP trusts, are each governed
by different provisions of the Code.
A. Kite Family QTIP Trust (QTIP trust-1)
On February 15, 1995, Mrs. Kite created the Kite Family QTIP Trust as an
irrevocable trust for the benefit of Mr. Kite, the sole income beneficiary during his
life. Upon his death, however, Mrs. Kite was to be named the sole income
beneficiary during her life, and after her death, the corpus of the trust was to be
distributed into three separate trusts of equal value: one for each of the Kite
children. Boatmen’s Trust Co., which has been succeeded by BOK, was the
original trustee.
Mrs. Kite funded the trust for the benefit of Mr. Kite with her separate
property by contributing 120,670 shares of common stock of Oklahoma Gas &
Electric Co. (OG&E), with an adjusted basis of 34 cents per share. On the date of
the gift, the shares had a value of $4,246,075.60, which Mrs. Kite reported on her
1995 Federal gift tax return5 as a gift. Mrs. Kite, however, deducted the value of
5
Before her gift to Mr. Kite in 1995, Mrs. Kite filed several other gift
tax returns for gifts made in 1976, 1986, and 1987 of $30,000, $77,000, and
(continued...)
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[*6] the gift as a marital deduction under section 2523 and therefore did not owe
any Federal gift tax on the transfer.
Under the Kite Family QTIP Trust agreement, the trustee was required to pay
to Mr. Kite,6 or otherwise use for his benefit, all income from the trust during his
life. In addition, if the trustee determined that the income from the trust was
insufficient for Mr. Kite’s maintenance, support, and education, then the trustee
could distribute the amount of principal necessary to provide for his maintenance.
The trustee was also authorized to terminate the trust at any time when, in the
judgment of the trustee, the trust corpus was too small to justify management as a
trust, or the trust otherwise should be terminated. The trustee’s powers, however,
were limited. The trustee could not prevent all or any part of the trust from
qualifying for the Federal gift tax marital deduction if elected by Mrs. Kite under
section 2523(f), or the Federal estate tax marital deduction if elected under section
2056(b) by Mr. Kite’s personal representatives.
5
(...continued)
$551,802.40, respectively. Mrs. Kite reported zero gift tax due each year. In 1987
Mrs. Kite transferred 18,820 shares of OG&E common stock, with a zero adjusted
basis, to her grandchildren. In 1976 and 1986 Mrs. Kite transferred cash to Mr.
Kite and her children.
6
Mr. Kite was the first current income beneficiary, and after he died Mrs. Kite
was named the current income beneficiary. The terms of the trust agreement
otherwise remained the same.
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[*7] Mr. Kite died on February 23, 1995, only one week after Mrs. Kite created
the Kite Family QTIP Trust. The executor of Mr. Kite’s estate made a section
2056(b)(7) election on the estate’s return for the Kite Family QTIP Trust, thereby
qualifying the trust property passing to Mrs. Kite for the marital deduction. The
Court will refer to the Kite Family QTIP Trust as QTIP trust-1.
B. Virginia V. Kite GST Exemption QTIP Trust (QTIP trust-2)
Upon Mr. Kite’s death, his estate was transferred to his lifetime revocable
trust (which became irrevocable upon his death) except for certain tangible
personal property that was transferred to Mrs. Kite directly. Pursuant to the terms
of his lifetime revocable trust, the amount of Mr. Kite’s marital estate7 equal to the
maximum generation skipping transfer (GST) exemption available to his estate
funded the Virginia V. Kite GST Exemption QTIP Trust. On Mr. Kite’s estate tax
return, the executor made a section 2056(b)(7) election for the Virginia V. Kite
GST Exemption QTIP Trust, which, like the election for QTIP trust-1, qualified
the trust property passing to Mrs. Kite for the marital deduction. The Court will
7
Mr. Kite’s lifetime revocable trust defined “marital estate” as the maximum
potential marital bequest reduced by an amount that could pass free of estate tax by
reason of Mr. Kite’s remaining unified credit and any other available credit. The
remainder of his trust estate was defined as the “residuary estate.”
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[*8] refer to the Virginia V. Kite GST Exemption QTIP Trust as QTIP trust-2, and
collectively with QTIP trust-1, as the QTIP trusts.
C. Virginia V. Kite Marital Trust (marital deduction trust)
After the funding of QTIP trust-2, the balance of Mr. Kite’s marital estate8
funded the Virginia V. Kite Marital Trust (a.k.a., the Virginia V. Kite Non Exempt
Marital Trust). The property passing to Mrs. Kite through the Virginia V. Kite
Marital Trust also qualified for the marital deduction, but was excluded from the
section 2056(b)(7) QTIP election. Instead, it qualified for the marital deduction
under section 2056(b)(5).9 The Court will refer to the Virginia V. Kite Marital Trust
as the marital deduction trust.
D. Virginia V. Kite GST Exemption Residuary Trust (residuary trust)
The remainder of Mr. Kite’s trust estate was distributed to the Virginia V.
Kite GST Exemption Residuary Trust for the benefit of Mrs. Kite during her life
and, after her death, to equal trusts for each of the Kite children. The value of the
8
See supra note 7.
9
The executor of Mr. Kite’s estate reported a gross estate of $15,480,131, a
marital deduction of $15,279,725, and zero Federal estate tax. The marital
deduction included the following trust allocations: (a) $4,291,327 to QTIP trust-1,
(b) $825,213 to QTIP trust-2, and (c) $10,143,808 to the marital deduction trust
(collectively, the marital trusts). All of the underlying trust assets, including the
OG&E stock transferred to Mr. Kite in 1995, received a step-up in basis under sec.
1014.
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[*9] residuary trust property was reported on Mr. Kite’s estate’s Federal estate tax
return as $200,406, but it was not included in the marital deduction claimed by Mr.
Kite’s estate.10 The Court will refer to Virginia V. Kite GST Exemption Residuary
Trust as the residuary trust.
E. Virginia V. Kite Revocable Trust (lifetime revocable trust)
Like her husband, Mrs. Kite created a lifetime revocable trust that, upon her
death, directed the allocation of Mrs. Kite’s trust estate among a GST Exemption
Residuary Share and a Non-Exempt Residuary Share. Each of these shares was to
be immediately divided by the trustees into three parts of equal value for the benefit
of Mrs. Kite’s children. The Court will refer to the Virginia V. Kite Revocable
Trust as Mrs. Kite’s lifetime revocable trust.
III. Kite Family Tax Planning
A. Brentwood Limited Partnership
On December 31, 1996, Mrs. Kite’s trusts, which included the QTIP trusts,
the marital deduction trust, the residuary trust, and her lifetime revocable trust,
formed Brentwood Limited Partnership, an Oklahoma limited partnership, in
exchange for limited partnership interests. Brentwood’s general partner was
10
After Mrs. Kite’s death, her estate’s Federal estate tax return reflected three
equal children’s trusts titled “GST Exempt Residuary Trust” with assets of
$345,598 per trust.
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[*10] Easterly Corp. (Easterly Oklahoma), an Oklahoma corporation organized in
December 1996 and wholly owned by Mrs. Kite and the Kite children, either
individually or through trusts.11
In January 1997 Mrs. Kite, as trustee of her trusts, transferred to her children
approximately one-third of her Brentwood limited partnership interests, with a value
of $4.5 million.12 She also transferred to her children a portion of her Easterly
Oklahoma shares with a value of $30,600.13 On a Federal gift tax return for 1997
Mrs. Kite reported the transfers as gifts and a Federal gift tax liability of
$1,485,132.
11
Mrs. Kite, through her lifetime revocable trust, owned a majority share of
Brentwood’s general partner, Easterly Oklahoma. In addition to being the general
partner, Easterly Oklahoma owned approximately 1% of Brentwood.
12
The parties stipulated that the value of the Brentwood limited partnership
interests transferred to Mrs. Kite’s children was $4.5 million. Mrs. Kite’s 1997
Federal gift tax return reported that the partnership interests had a fair market value
of $2,954,067 on the date of transfer, after applying a 34.354% lack of marketability
and minority interest discount, and a combined adjusted basis of $4,054,701, which
reflects the step-up in basis from transferring the OG&E stock through Mr. Kite’s
estate two years earlier in 1995. Mrs. Kite also transferred to her grandchildren
Brentwood limited partnership interests with an adjusted basis of $68,630 and a fair
market value of $50,000.
13
The shares of Easterly Oklahoma, which had an adjusted basis of $30,600,
had a fair market value of $20,088 after applying a 34.354% discount.
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[*11] B. Baldwin Limited Partnership
In February 1998 Brentwood and Easterly Oklahoma reorganized in Texas
seeking a more advantageous State tax jurisdiction. To reorganize in Texas
Brentwood merged into Baldwin Limited Partnership (Baldwin), a Texas limited
partnership, and Easterly Oklahoma merged into Easterly Corp. (Easterly Texas), a
Texas corporation, respectively. The ownership interests remained the same.
In May 1998 Mrs. Kite, through her trusts,14 sold her remaining interest in
Baldwin to the Kite children, either individually or to their trusts, for
$12,533,129.24 of secured, fully recourse promissory notes (Baldwin notes). Under
the terms of the Baldwin notes the Kite children, or their trusts, agreed to make
quarterly payments of principal and interest, which accrued at a rate of 5.81% per
annum, from August 1, 1998, through May 1, 2013. The principal and interest
payments totaled approximately $1,063,784 each year. Mrs. Kite, as the current
income beneficiary of her trusts, received the payments on the Baldwin notes.
14
According to the record, the residuary trust, formerly a limited partner of
Brentwood, did not participate in Mrs. Kite’s sale of her remaining interest in
Baldwin. It is unclear whether the residuary trust received an interest in Baldwin
after the merger.
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[*12] C. Kite Family Investment Company
On December 31, 2000, Mrs. Kite’s trusts contributed the Baldwin notes and
Easterly Texas contributed 1% of the value thereof to form Kite Family Investment
Co. (KIC), a Texas general partnership. As a result Mrs. Kite’s trusts collectively
held a 99% interest in KIC and Easterly Texas held a 1% interest.15 Easterly Texas,
which was controlled by Mrs. Kite as the majority shareholder, was the manager of
KIC. Mrs. Kite’s children or their trusts continued to make all required payments of
principal and interest on the Baldwin notes now held by KIC.16
IV. The Private Annuity Agreements
In 2001 Mrs. Kite, as trustee of her revocable trust, sold her interest in KIC to
her children or their trusts for three private annuity agreements, with the first
payments due 10 years later, in 2011 (annuity transaction). At a meeting held on
January 18, 2001, the annuity transaction was first presented to the Kite children
15
KIC issued general partnership interests as follows: (1) Easterly Texas, 1%;
(2) Mrs. Kite’s lifetime revocable trust, 24.62%; (3) the marital deduction trust,
49.51%; (4) QTIP trust-1, 20.84%, and (5) QTIP trust-2, 4.03%. The residuary
trust, which held a limited partnership interest in Brentwood, did not participate in
the formation of KIC.
16
The Baldwin note payments made from January 1, 2001, through Mrs.
Kite’s death on April 28, 2004, totaled $3,457,295.32, which included interest of
$2,081,505.16.
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[*13] by Gary Fuller (family attorney), the attorney for the Kite family.17 BOK’s
trust officer, Debra A. Cooper, was also at the meeting in her capacity as the
administrator of Mrs. Kite’s trusts. Mrs. Kite was not present.
At the meeting, the family attorney explained the details of the annuity
transaction, which he described as an “estate planning tool”, and its potential risks
and benefits. Under the terms of the annuity transaction, the Kite children would
begin payments to Mrs. Kite or her trust 10 years18 after the effective date of the
annuity agreements. If Mrs. Kite died within the 10-year deferral period, her
annuity interest would terminate and, as a result, her interest in KIC, and indirectly
her interest in the Baldwin notes, would be effectively removed from her gross
estate. However, if Mrs. Kite survived the 10-year deferral period, her children
would be personally liable for the annuity payments due on each annual payment
date. What is more, if Mrs. Kite survived for 13 years or longer, her children
17
The family attorney structured the annuity transaction and attended the
meeting as counsel to Mrs. Kite, individually and on behalf of her revocable trust,
and as counsel to each of the Kite children.
18
The family attorney explained that the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) had
“publicly accepted” a 10-year deferred payment annuity agreement as a valid
contract. See Rev. Rul. 72-438, 1972-2 C.B. 38. Rev. Rul. 72-438, Example (5),
1972-2 C.B. at 40, describes the valuation of a 10-year deferred payment single life
annuity purchased by a man at age 55.
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[*14] could be insolvent after the first three years of payments, in view of their then-
current personal assets.19
Mrs. Kite agreed to the terms of the annuity transaction after informally
consulting with her children, the family attorney, and Ms. Cooper. Ms. Cooper
assured Mrs. Kite that she could continue to maintain her lifestyle without the
income from KIC, which passed to Mrs. Kite through the QTIP trusts, the marital
deduction trust, and her lifetime revocable trust, and consisted primarily of the
Baldwin note payments.20 Moreover, after executing the private annuity
agreements, Mrs. Kite still had a net worth exceeding $3.5 million, which was held
primarily by Mrs. Kite’s lifetime revocable trust,21 and she was the current income
beneficiary of eight other trusts holding approximately $20.8 million of marketable
securities.
19
Needless to say, after finalization of the proposed annuity transaction, the
net value of the Kite children’s personal assets would increase substantially.
20
According to Ms. Cooper, BOK concluded that Mrs. Kite could maintain
her lifestyle using funds from other trust sources as Mrs. Kite was the income
beneficiary of multiple trusts. Ms. Cooper did not provide any economic or
business reason for BOK’s approval of the transaction, or documentation approving
the transaction.
21
Unlike the QTIP trusts and the marital deduction trust, which held assets
that consisted solely of KIC partnership interests, Mrs. Kite’s lifetime revocable
trust assets were diversified.
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[*15] In addition to consulting her family and business advisers, Mrs. Kite, who
was 74 years old at this time, contacted her physician. Her physician sent Mrs. Kite
a letter attesting to her longevity and health. The letter, dated March 6, 2001, stated
in pertinent part as follows:
I examined Mrs. Kite and interviewed her recently in her home
* * * I would anticipate that her longevity and health outlook is
good for the next several years * * * I am of the opinion that
Mrs. Kite is not terminally ill and that she does not have an
incurable illness or other deteriorating physical condition that
would cause her to die within one year and that there is at least a
50% probability that she will survive for 18 months or longer.
Mrs. Kite’s physician did not testify at trial.22
On March 28, 2001, Mrs. Kite met with Ms. Cooper, Mr. Kite, Jr., and the
family attorney to prepare for the annuity transaction. At this meeting Mrs. Kite
executed three documents that replaced the current trustees of the QTIP trusts and
the marital deduction trust with the Kite children retroactively effective as of
January 1, 2001. The Kite children, in their capacity as trustees,
contemporaneously executed subsequent documents to terminate the QTIP trusts
and the marital deduction trust effective January 1, 2001.23 The assets in the
22
Despite other testimony that reflected potentially failing health, none
suggested that Mrs. Kite was terminally ill.
23
Mr. Kite’s revocable trust and the marital trusts derived therefrom allowed
(continued...)
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[*16] QTIP trusts and the marital deduction trust, which consisted solely of KIC
general partnership interests, were transferred to Mrs. Kite’s lifetime revocable
trust. As a result, Mrs. Kite’s lifetime revocable trust held a 99% interest in KIC.24
The next day, March 29, 2001, Baldwin, which was now wholly owned by
the Kite children or their trusts, contributed $13,684,136.13 of assets to KIC, more
than doubling KIC’s previous capital and diversifying its holdings. In return,
Baldwin received a 55.8215% general partnership interest in KIC. Mrs. Kite’s
lifetime revocable trust and Easterly Texas owned KIC’s remaining interests,
43.7367% and less than 1%, respectively.25 Easterly Texas and Baldwin executed
an amended and restated general partnership agreement admitting Baldwin as a
23
(...continued)
the Kite children, as trustees, to terminate the trusts “when, in the judgment of the
trustees, the trust estate is too small to justify management as a trust, or the trust
otherwise should be terminated.”
24
Previously, the QTIP trusts, the marital deduction trust, and Mrs. Kite’s
lifetime revocable trust collectively held a 99% interest in KIC.
25
The Court notes that the general partnership percentages of KIC provided
by the parties do not equal 100%. According to KIC’s amended and restated
general partnership agreement, Easterly Texas owned 0.4417847%, Baldwin
55.8215272%, and Mrs. Kite’s trusts 43.736681%, which total 99.9999929%. For
purposes of the Court’s opinion, however, the Court accepts the percentages
stipulated by the parties. The Court further notes that after Baldwin’s contribution
to KIC, Mrs. Kite’s interest in KIC, through her trusts, was diluted from 99% to
43.7367%. See supra note 15 and accompanying text.
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[*17] general partner and reflecting their postcontribution ownership interests in
KIC. Mrs. Kite, as trustee of her lifetime revocable trust, never signed the amended
and restated general partnership agreement.
On March 30, 2001, Mrs. Kite’s lifetime revocable trust sold its entire
remaining interest in KIC to the Kite children for three unsecured annuity
agreements.26 Each of the Kite children promised to pay $1,900,679.34 to Mrs.
Kite’s lifetime revocable trust on March 30 of every year beginning in 2011 and
ending on Mrs. Kite’s death. On the same day, the Kite children, Easterly Texas,
and Baldwin entered into an amended and restated general partnership agreement to
record their ownership interests in KIC.
The Kite children did not make any annuity payments to Mrs. Kite before
she died on April 28, 2004. On her 2001 through 2003 Federal income tax
returns, Mrs. Kite reported income of $429,278, $654,962, and $302,176,
respectively, and Federal income tax of $77,371 (as amended), $118,357, and
26
The parties valued Mrs. Kite’s remaining ownership interest of 43.7367% in
KIC, held by her lifetime revocable trust, using its liquidation value of $10,605,278.
The parties did not apply a discount. They valued the annuity agreements under the
sec. 7520 regulations and actuarial tables. The parties calculated the annual annuity
payment with reference to Rev. Rul. 72-438, Example (5), supra, and the rates
prescribed by sec. 7520. The parties also used the IRS actuarial tables prescribed
by Notice 89-24, 1989-1 C.B. 660, 662, to determine that Mrs. Kite’s life
expectancy exceeded the 10-year deferral period by 2.5 years.
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[*18] $1,460, respectively. Mrs. Kite’s reported medical expense deductions for
2001 through 2003 were $131,100, $142,136, and $176,982, respectively, of which
$115,780, $114,587, and $170,845, respectively, were attributed to home health
care. In addition to Mrs. Kite’s reported income and trust assets, her lifetime
revocable trust borrowed $779,984 from six family ancestor trusts in 2003. In 2004
her final income tax return through her date of death reported income of $10,227
and zero Federal income tax due.
V. Estate Tax Return of Mrs. Kite’s Estate
Mrs. Kite died on April 28, 2004. The executor of Mrs. Kite’s estate timely
filed a Federal estate tax return on January 28, 2005, reporting a gross estate of
$3,551,120 and a taxable estate of $2,281,517. The executor did not include Mrs.
Kite’s transferred interests in the Baldwin notes or KIC in the gross estate or
adjusted taxable gifts. Respondent issued two notices of deficiency determining a
$6,053,752 deficiency in Mrs. Kite’s Federal gift tax for 2001 and a $5,100,493
deficiency in the estate’s Federal estate tax. The estate’s executor timely petitioned
the Court.
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[*19] OPINION
I. Burden of Proof
Generally, the Commissioner’s determination of a deficiency is presumed
correct, and the taxpayer bears the burden of proving it incorrect. See Rule 142(a);
Welch v. Helvering, 290 U.S. 111, 115 (1933). Under section 7491(a), the burden
of proof may shift to the Commissioner if the taxpayer produces credible evidence
with respect to any relevant factual issue and meets other requirements. The estate
has not argued or established that section 7491(a) applies, and therefore the burden
of proof remains on the estate.
II. The Private Annuity Transaction
A. Federal Gift Tax, Generally
Section 2501(a) generally imposes a tax for each calendar year on the
transfer of property by gift during the year. Although the Code does not define
what constitutes a gift for purposes of section 2501, transfers subject to the gift tax
“are not confined to those only which, being without a valuable consideration,
accord with the common law concept of gifts, but embrace as well sales,
exchanges, and other dispositions of property for a consideration to the extent that
the value of the property transferred by the donor exceeds the value in money or
money’s worth of the consideration given therefor.” Sec. 25.2512-8, Gift Tax
- 20 -
[*20] Regs. Section 2512(b) further provides that “Where property is transferred
for less than an adequate and full consideration in money or money’s worth, then the
amount by which the value of the property exceeded the value of the consideration
shall be deemed a gift.” Thus, the gift tax does not apply to a transfer for full and
adequate consideration in money or money’s worth. See sec. 25.2511-1(g)(1), Gift
Tax Regs.
B. Positions of the Parties
The parties dispute whether the transfer of the KIC partnership interests to
Mrs. Kite’s children in exchange for the annuity agreements was made for adequate
and full consideration.27 Respondent argues that the transfer was a disguised gift
subject to gift tax. Specifically, respondent argues that the annuity agreements did
not constitute adequate consideration because they were structured to ensure that no
annuity payment would be made and there was no real expectation of payment.
27
The parties also dispute whether the annuity transaction was bona fide for
purposes of sec. 2038. Sec. 2038 includes in a decedent’s gross estate an inter
vivos property transfer, other than a transfer by a bona fide sale for adequate and
full consideration, within the three-year period ending on the date of the decedent’s
death. The annuity transaction, however, was executed more than three years
before Mrs. Kite’s death thereby making sec. 2038 inapplicable.
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[*21] Relying on Estate of McLendon v. Commissioner, 135 F.3d 1017 (5th Cir.
1998), rev’g T.C. Memo. 1996-307, the estate argues that the annuity transaction
was for adequate and full consideration because the parties used IRS actuarial tables
to properly value the annuities. The estate further contends that the parties intended
to comply with the terms of the annuity agreements, which were legally enforceable
under State law, and that intent is supported by, inter alia, the Kite children’s ability
to make payments under the annuity agreements and Mrs. Kite’s profit motive.
C. Adequate and Full Consideration
When determining whether adequate and full consideration has been
exchanged, the Court generally considers whether the consideration received by
the transferor is roughly equivalent to the value of the property given up. See
Estate of Hurford v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2008-278 (“‘[U]nless a transfer
that depletes the transferor’s estate is joined with a transfer that augments the
estate by a commensurate (monetary) amount, there is no “adequate and full
consideration”’.” (quoting Kimbell v. United States, 371 F.3d 257, 262 (5th Cir.
2004))). Here the transfer at issue is the March 30 exchange of Mrs. Kite’s
remaining interests in KIC, held by her lifetime revocable trust, for the annuity
agreements. Thus, the question of whether the annuity transaction was for
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[*22] adequate and full consideration turns on the proper valuation of Mrs. Kite’s
KIC interests and the annuities. See, e.g., Estate of McLendon v. Commissioner,
135 F.3d at 1021.
Section 7520 provides that the value of any annuity shall be determined under
tables prescribed by the Secretary. Mrs. Kite and her children used IRS actuarial
tables to value the annuities, and respondent does not argue that they used the tables
improperly. Rather, respondent contends that they should not have used the
actuarial tables to value a 10-year deferred annuity because Mrs. Kite’s
deteriorating health in 2001 made her death within 10 years foreseeable. In addition
to the high probability of Mrs. Kite’s death within 10 years, respondent argues that
the lack of security for the annuity agreements, among other things, demonstrates
that the parties had no real expectation of payment, and, consequently, the annuity
transaction lacked substance. Respondent, as the party seeking to depart from the
actuarial tables, bears the burden of proving that the circumstances justify the
departure. See Estate of McLendon v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1996-307
(citing Bank of Cal. v. United States, 672 F.2d 758, 759-760 (9th Cir. 1982)).
According to IRS actuarial tables in 2001, a 75-year-old woman without a
terminal illness was expected to live 12.5 years, which was 2.5 years after the first
- 23 -
[*23] annuity payments were due. Section 1.7520-3(b)(3), Income Tax Regs.,
provides that the mortality component of the actuarial tables may not be used to
determine the present value of an annuity if the individual who is the measuring life
is terminally ill at the time of the transaction. A “terminal illness” is defined as an
“incurable illness or other deteriorating physical condition” with at least a 50%
chance of death within a year. Sec. 1.7520-3(b)(3), Income Tax Regs. In Estate of
McLendon v. Commissioner, 135 F.3d 1017, a taxpayer who had terminal cancer,
received 24-hour home health care, and, according to his physician, had a 10%
chance of surviving for more than one year was not terminally ill for purposes of
using IRS actuarial tables to value a private annuity transaction.
Before the annuity transaction, Mrs. Kite received a letter from her physician
attesting to her health and longevity. He affirmed that Mrs. Kite did not have an
incurable illness or other deteriorating physical condition that would cause her to die
within one year. The physician further opined that Mrs. Kite had at least a 50%
probability of surviving for 18 months or longer.
Respondent did not challenge the physician’s letter or present evidence
contradicting the physician. Instead, respondent relied on Mrs. Kite’s 24-hour
medical care at home, which began in 2001, and her increased medical costs from
- 24 -
[*24] 2001 through 2003 to conclude that her death within the next 10 years was
foreseeable. Mrs. Kite’s increased medical costs, however, were due primarily to
the cost of home health care. Mrs. Kite’s Federal income tax returns filed for 2001
through 2003 claimed medical expense deductions of $131,100, $142,136, and
$176,982, respectively, of which $115,780, $114,587, and $170,845, respectively,
were attributed to home health care. Although the increased medical costs28 and
home health care indicate that Mrs. Kite’s health was in decline, they alone do not
suggest, let alone prove, that Mrs. Kite had a terminal illness or an incurable
disease. Rather, Mrs. Kite’s increased medical costs merely demonstrate that Mrs.
Kite was a wealthy, 75-year-old woman who, when faced with certain health
problems, decided to employ health care aids at her home. Her decision to hire
home health care was not unusual for a woman who was accustomed to hiring
personal assistants. Moreover, as exemplified in Estate of McLendon, increased
medical costs and home health care do not prove a terminal illness or other
incurable disease for purposes of section 7520. Accordingly, Mrs. Kite was not
precluded from relying on IRS actuarial tables to value the annuity transaction.
28
Of interesting note, her prescription expense (typically not covered by
insurance) was comparatively small, being only $830, $867, and $1,243, for 2001,
2002, and 2003, respectively.
- 25 -
[*25] The annuity agreements therefore constituted adequate and full consideration
and consequently were not subject to Federal gift tax.
Respondent’s additional argument that the annuity transaction was illusory is
also rejected. Generally, the Court considers separately whether a transfer was
bona fide and whether it was supported by adequate and full consideration. Estate
of Bongard v. Commissioner, 124 T.C. 95, 122-125 (2005). In Estate of Hurford v.
Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2008-278, for example, the Court held that the transfer
of a surviving spouse’s interests in a family limited partnership (FLP) to her children
for private annuity agreements, while the surviving spouse was being treated for
stage 3 liver cancer, was not bona fide. In reaching this holding, the Court relied
upon the following: (1) the parties to the private annuity agreements intended to
ignore the agreements they signed; and (2) the children, who did not have assets of
their own to make the annuity payments, used the assets underlying the FLP
interests to transfer income back to their mother beginning with the first month after
the agreements were executed and each month thereafter. Id.
Unlike the private annuity agreements in Estate of Hurford, the annuity
agreements between Mrs. Kite and her children were enforceable, and the parties
demonstrated their intention to comply with the terms of the annuity agreements or,
in the case of Mrs. Kite, to demand compliance. See, e.g., Estate of Strangi v.
- 26 -
[*26] Commissioner, 115 T.C. 478, 484-485 (2000) (holding that the Court
generally accepts the validity of an agreement unless persuasive evidence shows that
the agreement would not be enforced by the parties), aff’d in part, rev’d in part on
other grounds, 293 F.3d 279 (5th Cir. 2002); see also Estate of Hall v.
Commissioner, 92 T.C. 312, 335 (1989). Before participating in the annuity
transaction, Baldwin, which was wholly owned by the Kite children or their trusts,
contributed approximately $13.6 million of assets to KIC. As a result, the Kite
children did not need to rely on the assets already held by KIC to make the annuity
payments. In addition, the Kite children did not transfer the assets underlying the
KIC interests back to Mrs. Kite after the annuity transaction was completed. In
fact, they did not make any distributions from KIC, but allowed the KIC assets to
accumulate in order to have income available when the annuity payments became
due.29 The Kite children therefore expected to make payments under the annuity
agreements and were prepared to do so.
Mrs. Kite also demonstrated an expectation that she would receive
payments. Mrs. Kite actively participated in her finances and over the course of
her life demonstrated an immense business acumen. Accordingly, it is unlikely
that Mrs. Kite would have entered into the annuity agreements unless they were
29
Through the date of the trial, the KIC assets had not been distributed.
- 27 -
[*27] enforceable and, more importantly, she could profit from them. In addition,
Mrs. Kite, unlike the surviving spouse in Estate of Hurford, was not diagnosed with
cancer or other terminal or incurable illness. In fact, the record, which includes a
letter from Mrs. Kite’s physician, establishes to the contrary--that Mrs. Kite was not
terminally ill and she did not have an incurable illness or other deteriorating physical
condition. Mrs. Kite and her children reasonably expected that she would live
through the life expectancy determined by IRS actuarial tables, which was 12.5
years after the annuity transaction. Indeed, if Mrs. Kite lived to her life expectancy
as determined by IRS actuarial tables, she would have received approximately
$800,000 more in annuity payments than the value of her KIC interests. At a
minimum, Mrs. Kite would have made a profit with the potential of a greater return
if she lived longer.
Mrs. Kite’s profit motive is further underscored by her access to other
financial assets, making her interests in KIC dispensable and available for a
potentially risky investment. After executing the annuity agreements, Mrs. Kite was
still the current income beneficiary of eight trusts holding approximately $20.8
million of marketable securities and her net worth exceeded $3.5 million, which was
held primarily by Mrs. Kite’s lifetime revocable trust. Her lifetime
- 28 -
[*28] revocable trust also had a line of credit of up to $800,00030 of which she
borrowed $779,984 from six family ancestor trusts in 2003. Mrs. Kite therefore did
not need her income interest that flowed from KIC interests to maintain her lifestyle
and, instead, opted to risk those interests for the potential profit from the annuity
transaction.
Accordingly, based on the unique circumstances of these cases and, in
particular, Mrs. Kite’s position of independent wealth and sophisticated business
acumen, the Court finds that the annuity transaction was a bona fide sale for
adequate and full consideration.
D. Economic Substance
Alternatively, respondent argues that the annuity transaction, and the events
leading up to it, should be disregarded and, as a result, Mrs. Kite’s $10,605,278 of
KIC interests is includible in her gross estate under section 2033. For the reasons
discussed above, the Court disagrees with respondent’s position that the annuity
transaction lacked economic substance. However, because the trustee of Mrs.
Kite’s lifetime revocable trust did not sign the KIC partnership agreement
admitting Baldwin into KIC, the Court must consider to what extent Mrs. Kite
30
Interestingly, Mrs. Kite’s line of credit equals the profit should would have
received from the annuity transaction if she had lived to her life expectancy, as
determined by IRS actuarial tables.
- 29 -
[*29] maintained an indirect ownership interest in KIC after Baldwin’s admission
and, if so, the value thereof. A retained interest in KIC would be includible in Mrs.
Kite’s estate under section 2036.
To determine the exact nature of Mrs. Kite’s interest in KIC after Baldwin’s
admission, the Court must look to State law of the entity, and in these cases, Texas
partnership law. See Adams v. United States, 218 F.3d 383, 386 (5th Cir. 2000).
Texas caselaw demonstrates that Texas courts generally rely on a partner’s intent,
whether direct or implied, as controlling when determining the legal consequences
of certain transfers of partnership property. See, e.g., Logan v. Logan, 156 S.W.2d
507, 511-512 (Tex. 1941); see also Keller v. United States, 697 F.3d 238 (5th Cir.
2012); Church v. United States, 85 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 2000-804 (W.D. Tex. 2000)
(applying Texas law to hold that the decedent’s intention to transfer property to a
family limited partnership overcame the decedent’s failure to organize the
partnership’s planned corporate general partner with the Texas secretary of state
before the decedent’s death), aff’d, 268 F.3d 1063 (5th Cir. 2001).
On March 29, 2001, Baldwin contributed $13,684,136.13 of additional assets
to KIC, which, up until that time, primarily held the Baldwin notes that Mrs. Kite
had contributed. In return, Baldwin received a 55.8215% general partnership
interest in KIC, thereby diluting Mrs. Kite’s indirect interest in KIC from 99% to
- 30 -
[*30] 43.7367%. The trustee of Mrs. Kite’s lifetime revocable trust did not sign
KIC’s amended and restated general partnership agreement admitting Baldwin as a
general partner.
On March 30, 2001, only one day after Baldwin’s admission, the trustee of
Mrs. Kite’s lifetime revocable trust executed the annuity agreements. In each of the
annuity agreements, the trustee represented that the lifetime revocable trust owned
only a 43.7367% interest in KIC. Moreover, Mrs. Kite had approximately three
years after the annuity transaction to correct the discrepancy, if any, in the amount
or value of her KIC interests transferred subject to the annuity agreement.
Therefore, despite the flawed partnership agreement purporting to document
Baldwin’s admission as a general partner of KIC, Mrs. Kite’s subsequent actions
manifest the requisite intent affirming Baldwin’s admission and, consequently, Mrs.
Kite’s diminished interest in KIC. Accordingly, Mrs. Kite did not maintain an
indirect interest in KIC that would otherwise be included in the estate under section
2036.
III. The Marital Deduction
In the alternative, respondent argues that the annuity transaction constituted a
disposition of the qualifying income interests for life, as described in section
2056(b)(7), which Mrs. Kite held in the corpuses of the QTIP trusts such that the
- 31 -
[*31] dispositions constituted taxable gifts under section 2519. Respondent also
argues that Mrs. Kite made a taxable transfer under section 2514 when she
effectively released her general power of appointment over the corpus of the marital
deduction trust.
A. The Marital Deduction
Section 2056(a) provides that an estate may deduct the value of any interest
in property passing from the decedent to his or her surviving spouse (marital
deduction) to the extent such interest is included in determining the value of the
gross estate. The policy behind the marital deduction is that property passes
untaxed from a predeceasing spouse to a surviving spouse but is then included in the
estate of the surviving spouse. Estate of Letts v. Commissioner, 109 T.C. 290, 295
(1997), aff’d without published opinion, 212 F.3d 600 (11th Cir. 2000). Thus, as a
general rule, the marital deduction does not eliminate the estate tax on marital
assets, but merely permits a deferral of tax until the death of the surviving spouse.31
31
There are exceptions to this general rule. For example, assets that pass
through the marital deduction may later be expended by the surviving spouse before
he or she dies. In this situation the estate tax on the expended marital assets would
be eliminated.
- 32 -
[*32] A marital deduction is generally not allowed if the conveyance is terminable
interest property under section 2056(b)(1). A terminable interest is an interest in
property that passes from a predeceasing spouse to a surviving spouse that will end
on the lapse of time, on the occurrence of an event or contingency, or on the failure
of an event or contingency to occur. Id. Upon termination of the surviving spouse’s
interest, the remainder interest passes to beneficiaries (other than the surviving
spouse or her estate) selected by the predeceasing spouse, id., and thereby avoids
inclusion in the surviving spouse’s estate. The general purpose of the terminable
interest rule is to not allow a marital deduction for transfers from a predeceasing
spouse to the surviving spouse that have been structured to avoid estate tax when
the surviving spouse dies. Estate of Novotny v. Commissioner, 93 T.C. 12, 16
(1989).
Section 2056(b)(7) provides an exception to the terminable interest rule and
allows a marital deduction for qualified terminable interest property, i.e., QTIP.32
Under section 2056(b)(7), the first spouse to die may pass to the surviving spouse
an income interest in property for the surviving spouse’s lifetime, and after the
32
Sec. 2056(b)(7) was added to the Code in the Economic Recovery Tax Act
of 1981, Pub. L. No. 97-34, sec. 403, 95 Stat. at 301, to expand the availability of
the marital deduction. See H.R. Rept. No. 97-201, at 158-161 (1981), 1981-2 C.B.
352, 377-378.
- 33 -
[*33] death of the surviving spouse, the property passes to beneficiaries designated
by the first spouse to die. To qualify as QTIP: (1) the terminable interest property
must pass from the first spouse to die, (2) the surviving spouse must have a
qualifying income interest for life in the property, and (3) the executor of the estate
of the first spouse to die must elect to designate the property as QTIP. Sec.
2056(b)(7)(B). The surviving spouse has a qualifying income interest for life if he
or she is entitled to all income from the property, payable annually or more
frequently, or has a usufruct interest for life in the property, and no person has the
power to appoint any part of the property to any person other than the surviving
spouse. Sec. 2056(b)(7)(B)(ii).
According to the House report explaining the expansion of the marital
deduction and the QTIP provisions, QTIP will be subject to transfer taxes at the
earlier of (1) the date on which the surviving spouse disposes (either by gift, sale,
or otherwise) of all or part of the qualifying income interest, or (2) upon the
surviving spouse’s death. See H.R. Rept. No. 97-201, at 161 (1981), 1981-2 C.B.
352, 378. Therefore, after the death of the surviving spouse, the value of his or
her gross estate includes the value of QTIP. Sec. 2044. Alternatively, if the
surviving spouse disposes of all or part of a qualifying income interest for life,
- 34 -
[*34] section 2519 treats the disposition as a transfer of all interest in QTIP other
than the qualifying income interest.33
Although section 2519 does not define a “disposition”, section 25.2519-1(f),
Gift Tax Regs., provides that the sale of QTIP, followed by the payment to the
surviving spouse of a portion of the proceeds equal to the value of the surviving
spouse’s income interest, is considered a disposition of the qualifying income
interest. As an example, section 25.2519-1(g), Gift Tax Regs., describes the tax
consequences of the sale of a surviving spouse’s life estate to a decedent’s
children. In section 25.2519-1(g), Example (2), Gift Tax Regs., which uses the
same facts as example (1),34 a personal residence valued at $250,000 passes from
33
Thus, under secs. 2044 and 2519, property subject to a sec. 2056(b)(7)
election is treated as property passing to the surviving spouse, even though only a
life interest passes to the surviving spouse, and then transferred either at the
surviving spouse’s death, sec. 2044, or during his or her life, sec. 2519. In other
words, the QTIP rules treat QTIP as passing entirely from the first spouse to die to
the surviving spouse, thereby obtaining the deferral benefit of the marital deduction
and escaping inclusion in the gross estate of the first spouse to die. In exchange for
the deferral benefit, QTIP is included in the transfer tax base of the surviving
spouse. See Estate of Morgens v. Commissioner, 133 T.C. 402, 412 (2009), aff’d,
678 F.3d 769 (9th Cir. 2012).
34
Sec. 25.2519-1(g), Example (1), Gift Tax Regs., describes the tax
consequences of the transfer of a surviving spouse’s life estate in a personal
residence to the spouse’s children. Under the will of the first spouse to die, a
personal residence valued at $250,000 passes to the surviving spouse for life, and
after the spouse’s death, to the decedent’s children. The decedent’s executor made
(continued...)
- 35 -
[*35] the decedent to the surviving spouse for life, and after the spouse’s death, to
the decedent’s children. The decedent’s executor made a valid election to treat the
property as QTIP. During 1995, when the fair market value of the property is
$300,000 and the value of the surviving spouse’s life interest is $100,000, the
surviving spouse sells her interest in the property to the decedent’s children for
$100,000. The example concludes that under section 2519 the surviving spouse has
made a gift of $200,000 (i.e., $300,000, the fair market value of the QTIP, less
$100,000, the value of the qualifying income interest in the property). The surviving
spouse does not make a gift of the income interest under section 2511 because the
consideration received for the income interest is equal to the value of the income
interest.
Not included as a disposition for purposes of section 2519 is the conversion
of QTIP into other property in which the surviving spouse has a qualifying income
34
(...continued)
a valid election to treat the property as QTIP. During 1995, when the fair market
value of the property is $300,000 and the value of the surviving spouse’s life interest
in the property is $100,000, the spouse makes a gift of the spouse’s entire interest in
the property to decedent’s children. The example concludes that under sec. 2519,
the spouse has made a gift of $200,000 (i.e., the fair market value of the QTIP of
$300,000 less the fair market value of the surviving spouse’s qualifying income
interest in the property of $100,000). In addition, under sec. 2511, the spouse
makes a gift of $100,000, which is the fair market value of the surviving spouse’s
income interest in the property.
- 36 -
[*36] interest for life. Sec. 25.2519-1(f), Gift Tax Regs. Section 25.2519-1(f), Gift
Tax Regs., provides that the sale and reinvestment of assets of a trust holding QTIP
is not a disposition of the qualifying income interest, provided that the surviving
spouse continues to have a qualifying income interest for life in the trust after the
sale and reinvestment.
B. The QTIP Trusts
When Mr. Kite died, his estate made a section 2056(b)(7) election to treat the
marital deduction property passing to the QTIP trusts as QTIP assets. Mrs. Kite, as
Mr. Kite’s surviving spouse, received a lifetime income interest in the trust assets;
and after her death the trust assets were to be distributed into three separate trusts of
equal value for each of the Kite children. Mr. Kite’s estate claimed a marital
deduction for the value of the trust assets as follows: $4,291,327 for QTIP trust-1
(which included the original $4,246,075.60 marital gift from Mrs. Kite) and
$825,213 for QTIP trust-2. Accordingly, under the QTIP regime, the QTIP trust
assets underlying the marital deduction were to be subject to either gift tax under
section 2519 if Mrs. Kite disposed of the income interest during her lifetime or
estate tax under section 2044 if Mrs. Kite retained the income interest until her
death.
- 37 -
[*37] In 1996 Mrs. Kite, through her trusts, contributed her trust assets to
Brentwood in exchange for Brentwood limited partnership interests. As a result,
instead of holding the trust assets underlying Mr. Kite’s marital deduction, the QTIP
trusts held Brentwood limited partnership interests. As the lifetime income
beneficiary of these trusts, Mrs. Kite continued to receive the income interest from
the QTIP trust assets that now passed from Brentwood to Mrs. Kite’s trusts. Thus,
under section 25.2519-1(f), Gift Tax Regs., Mrs. Kite did not dispose of her
qualifying income interest because she continued to have a qualifying income
interest for life in the QTIP trusts after reinvestment of the trust assets.
In 1997 Mrs. Kite, through her trusts, transferred limited partnership
interests in Brentwood to her children and filed a Federal gift tax return reporting
the transfers.35 Although it is not clear from Mrs. Kite’s 1997 Federal gift tax
return whether she viewed, in part, her transfers as taxable gifts under sections
2519 and 2511, her payment of gift tax preserved the integrity of the QTIP
election for the QTIP trust assets underlying the Brentwood limited partnership
35
The Court notes that Mrs. Kite was able to reduce the taxable value of the
assets underlying the Brentwood limited partnership interests by applying a
34.354% lack of marketability and minority interest discount to the limited
partnership interests themselves. According to her 1997 Federal gift tax return, the
adjusted basis of Brentwood limited partnership interests transferred to her children
and grandchildren were reduced from $4,054,701 and $68,630, respectively, to a
fair market value of $2,954,067 and $50,000, respectively.
- 38 -
[*38] interests. The QTIP trust assets, which avoided tax when transferred to the
QTIP trusts upon Mr. Kite’s death and later reinvested in Brentwood, was now
taxable when transferred by Mrs. Kite in its reinvested form, i.e., as Brentwood
limited partnership interests, to her children.
In 1998 and in 2000 Mrs. Kite, through her trusts, made three more transfers
of the QTIP trust assets; but because Mrs. Kite maintained a qualifying income
interest in the converted property, the transfers were not taxable under section 2519.
In January 1998 Brentwood reorganized as Baldwin by merging into Baldwin. The
ownership interests in Baldwin, formerly Brentwood, remained the same, and,
accordingly, Mrs. Kite continued to receive her qualifying income interest in the
QTIP trust assets indirectly through Baldwin.
Later in May 1998 Mrs. Kite, through her trusts, sold her remaining interest
in Baldwin to her children for the Baldwin notes. Again, Mrs. Kite converted the
QTIP trust assets underlying the Baldwin limited partnership interests into
reinvested property, in this case the Baldwin notes. Mrs. Kite, as the grantor and
current income beneficiary of her trusts, was the recipient of any payments made on
the Baldwin notes and therefore continued to have the right to all income from the
QTIP trust assets, payable at least annually.
- 39 -
[*39] In 2000 Mrs. Kite, through her trusts, contributed the Baldwin notes to KIC
in exchange for KIC partnership interests. Like Mrs. Kite’s initial investment of the
QTIP trust assets in Brentwood, the transfer of the Baldwin notes to KIC was not
taxable under section 2519 because Mrs. Kite, through her trusts’ interests in KIC,
continued to have a right to all payments on the Baldwin notes. Thus, from 1996
through 2000 Mrs. Kite’s transfers and reinvestments of the QTIP trust assets
satisfied the requirements of the QTIP rules because she either continued to have a
qualifying income interest in the reinvested property or, upon the transfer of the
reinvested property to her children, she reported and paid Federal gift tax.
The liquidation of the QTIP trusts and subsequent sale of Mrs. Kite’s
interests in KIC, however, disregarded the QTIP rules. In 2001 Mrs. Kite
appointed the Kite children as trustees of the marital trusts, and the Kite children,
as trustees, contemporaneously terminated the marital trusts.36 The marital trust
assets were transferred to Mrs. Kite’s lifetime revocable trust.37 Two days later
36
Respondent argues that the Kite children’s termination of the marital trusts
and subsequent transfer of trust assets to Mrs. Kite’s lifetime revocable trust was a
breach of a fiduciary duty. However, without more information regarding the Kite
children’s decision to terminate the trusts, the Court is reluctant to question the Kite
children’s discretion, as trustees, to terminate the trusts pursuant to the terms of the
trust agreements.
37
Respondent does not raise the issue of whether the Kite children’s
(continued...)
- 40 -
[*40] Mrs. Kite’s lifetime revocable trust sold its entire interest in KIC to the Kite
children for three unsecured private annuity agreements with a value of
$10,605,278. The first annuity payments were due 10 years later, in 2011, and
would continue every year until Mrs. Kite’s death.
Respondent asks the Court to view the termination of the marital trusts and
the annuity transaction as an integrated transaction. Respondent argues that “[i]n
substance * * * [Mrs. Kite] has disposed of her income interest in the Q-TIP trusts
in exchange for the deferred annuity.” Courts use substance over form and its
related judicial doctrines to determine the true meaning of a transaction disguised by
mere formalisms, which exist solely to alter tax liabilities. See United States v. B.F.
Ball Constr. Co., 355 U.S. 587 (1958); Commissioner v. Court Holding Co., 324
U.S. 331 (1945) . In such instances the substance of a transaction, rather than its
form, will be given effect.
37
(...continued)
termination of the QTIP trusts, and the subsequent liquidation of QTIP trust assets,
was a gift from the remainder beneficiaries, i.e., the Kite children, to the lifetime
income beneficiary, i.e., Mrs. Kite. Discussion of such a liquidation can be found in
Priv. Ltr. Rul. 9908033 (Feb. 26, 1999). Because the Court finds below that the
termination of the marital trusts immediately followed by the sale of the marital trust
assets is a single transaction for purposes of sec. 2519, the Court does not address
the possibility of a gift of the remaindermen interest in the QTIP trusts. See
also Rev. Rul. 98-8, 1998-1 C.B. 541 (regarding the gift tax consequences of the
disposition of a qualifying income interest).
- 41 -
[*41] According to the record, which included testimony regarding the family
attorney’s presentation of the annuity transaction to the Kite children and
subsequent negotiations of the annuity transaction with Mrs. Kite, the termination of
the QTIP trusts was part of a prearranged and simultaneous transfer of the QTIP
trust assets, i.e., Mrs. Kite’s ownership interests in KIC. Although the QTIP trust
agreements authorized the Kite children, as trustees, to terminate the QTIP trusts in
their discretion, the estate has presented no explanation of why the QTIP trusts were
terminated immediately before the transfer of the QTIP trust assets. Instead, by
creating an intermediary step in the annuity transaction, i.e., terminating the QTIP
trusts before selling the QTIP trust assets to the Kite children, Mrs. Kite’s transfer
of her ownership interests in KIC would circumvent the QTIP regime and avoid any
transfer tax imposed by section 2519. Accordingly, the Court finds that the
termination of the QTIP trusts and the following immediate transfer of the QTIP
trust assets to the Kite children are treated as a single transaction for purposes of
section 2519.
As discussed above, the sale of QTIP assets, followed by the payment to the
surviving spouse of a portion of the proceeds equal to the value of the surviving
spouse’s income interest, is considered a disposition of the qualifying income
interest. See sec. 25.2519-1(f), Gift Tax Regs. The Court held in Part II, above,
- 42 -
[*42] that Mrs. Kite received adequate and full consideration for her interest in KIC.
Accordingly, Mrs. Kite made a disposition of her qualifying income interest, which
can be traced from KIC to the QTIP trusts.38
A surviving spouse who makes a disposition of all or part of a qualifying
income interest for life in any property for which a deduction was allowed under
section 2056(b)(7) is treated as transferring all interests in property other than the
qualifying income interest. See sec. 25.2519-1(a), Gift Tax Regs. The amount
treated as a transfer under section 2519 is equal to the fair market value of the entire
property subject to the qualifying income interest, determined on the date of the
disposition, less the value of the qualifying income interest in the property on the
date of the disposition. Sec. 25.2519-1(c)(1), Gift Tax Regs. The gift tax
consequences of the disposition of the qualifying income interest are determined
separately under section 2511. Id.
As a result, the sale of Mrs. Kite’s interest in KIC that can be traced to the
QTIP trusts was subject to Federal gift tax under section 2519 to the extent of the
38
The QTIP trusts contributed the Baldwin notes to KIC in exchange for an
interest in KIC. When the QTIP trusts were terminated, their interest in KIC was
transferred to Mrs. Kite’s lifetime revocable trust. Mrs. Kite’s lifetime revocable
trust then sold its interest in KIC for the annuities.
- 43 -
[*43] fair market value39 of the entire property subject to Mrs. Kite’s qualifying
income interest, determined on the date of the annuity transaction, less the value of
her qualifying income interest. However, because Mrs. Kite received adequate and
full consideration for her income interest in KIC, she did not make a gift of her
qualifying income interest under section 2511.40
C. The Marital Deduction Trust
As discussed above, section 2056(b)(1) generally prohibits a deduction for
terminable interest property. Section 2056(b)(5)(B) provides another exception to
the terminable interest rule where the surviving spouse receives an income interest
for life and a general power of appointment. If the surviving spouse dies without
exercising the power, he or she will be subject to the estate tax under section
2041(a). Alternatively, if the surviving spouse, during his or her life, releases this
39
According to Mr. Kite’s estate tax return the fair market value of the QTIP
trusts on the date of his death in 1995 was $4,291,327 for QTIP trust-1 and
$825,213 for QTIP trust-2. See supra note 9. In 1997 Mrs. Kite, as trustee of her
trusts, transferred $4.5 million of the Brentwood limited partnership interests held
by her trusts, which included the QTIP trusts, to her children and filed a gift tax
return reporting the transfer. See supra note 12. After subsequent transfers and
reinvestments of her trust assets, including the QTIP trusts, Mrs. Kite’s lifetime
revocable trust held a 43.7367% interest in KIC, which had a liquidation value of
$10,605,278. See supra note 26.
40
Like surviving spouse described in sec. 25.2519-1(g), Example (2), Gift Tax
Regs., Mrs. Kite received consideration for her income interest in the annuity
transaction.
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[*44] power or exercises it in favor of someone else, he or she will be subject to gift
tax under section 2514.
Section 2514(b) provides that an individual who exercises or releases a
general power of appointment created after October 21, 1942, is deemed to have
transferred the related property. A general power of appointment is a power which
is exercisable in favor of the individual possessing the power, his estate, his
creditors or the creditors of his estate. See sec. 2514(c). Under section 25.2514-
1(b)(1), Gift Tax Regs., a surviving spouse who has the power to discharge and
appoint successor trustees is considered as having a power of appointment.
Accordingly, even though someone other than the surviving spouse may serve as
trustee, the power to appoint corpus will be attributed to the surviving spouse. See
First Nat’l Bank of Denver v. United States, 648 F.2d 1286, 1289 (10th Cir. 1981);
see also Estate of Wilson v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1992-479.
In 1995 Mr. Kite’s estate funded the marital deduction trust with a portion
of Mr. Kite’s marital estate and claimed a $10,143,808 marital deduction under
section 2056(b)(5) for the value of the trust property. In March 2001 Mrs. Kite,
pursuant to her authority to discharge and appoint successor trustees, replaced the
trustee of the marital deduction trust with her children. Contemporaneously, the
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[*45] Kite children, as trustees, terminated the marital deduction trust and
transferred its assets to Mrs. Kite’s lifetime revocable trust.
A “transfer of property” is defined as “any transaction in which an interest in
property is gratuitously passed or conferred upon another, regardless of the means
or the devise employed”. Sec. 25.2511-1(c), Gift Tax Regs. The transfer of the
trust assets to Mrs. Kite’s lifetime revocable trust was not a transfer of property for
gift tax purposes because Mrs. Kite did not transfer an interest in the property to
another. See, e.g., Estate of Robinson v. Commissioner, 101 T.C. 499, 508-509
(1993). Instead, Mrs. Kite maintained her interest in the property as the grantor and
the sole income beneficiary of her lifetime revocable trust. Therefore, Mrs. Kite did
not make a taxable transfer of the marital deduction trust assets under section 2514.
In conclusion, the Court holds that the portions of the annuity value originally
traceable to the ownership interest of QTIP trust-1 and QTIP trust-2 in Kite Family
Investment Co., a Texas general partnership,41 less the value of Mrs. Kite’s
qualifying income interests in QTIP trust-1 and QTIP trust-2, are subject to Federal
gift tax as of the simultaneous termination of the marital trusts and the transfer of the
marital trust assets in 2001.
41
See supra note 15.
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[*46] The Court has considered the parties’ arguments and, to the extent not
addressed herein, concludes that they are moot, irrelevant, or without merit.
To reflect the foregoing,
Decisions will be entered
under Rule 155.