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Estate of Gilman v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 65 T.C. 296 (1975)
65 T.C. 296
United States Tax Court
ESTATE OF CHARLES GILMAN, DECEASED,
HOWARD GILMAN, CHARLES GILMAN, JR.,
AND SYLVIA P. GILMAN, EXECUTORS,
PETITIONERS
v.
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE,
RESPONDENT
Docket No. 2730-72. I Filed November io, t975•
Attorneys and Law Firms
*296 James B. Lewis and Maurice Austin, for the
petitioners.
Agatha L. Vorsanger, for the respondent.
In 1948, decedent owned 60 percent of the common stock
and a substantial block of the preferred stock of a
corporation. In that year he transferred the common stock
to a trust of which he was one of three trustees. He
continued to serve as a trustee of that trust and as a
director and chief executive officer of the corporation
until he died in 1967. Held, decedent did not retain the
enjoyment of the entrusted stock or the right to designate
the person or persons who would enjoy the stock of the
income therefrom within the meaning of sec. 2036(a)( I)
or 2036(aX2), I.R.C. 1954.
Opinion
FEATHERSTON, Judge:
The Commissioner determined a deficiency in the Federal
estate tax due from the Estate of Charles Gilman,
deceased, in the amount of $18,252,485.92. By order of
Stockholder
..414•P•
the Court dated January 10, 1973, certain secondary
issues were severed for a later trial, and the Commissioner
has since conceded one of the remaining adjustments,
leaving only the following issue for decision at this time:
Whether the value of certain shares of stock transferred
by decedent to an irrevocable trust in 1948 is required to
be included in decedent's *297 gross estate under section
2036(a).' The answer depends upon whether decedent
retained the enjoyment of the stock within the meaning of
section 2036(a)( I) or the right to designate who shall
enjoy the stock or the income therefrom within the
meaning of section 2036(a)(2).
FINDINGS OF FACT
Charles Gilman (hereinafter decedent or Charles) died
testate on June 19, 1967. His wife, Sylvia P. Gilman, and
his two sons, Howard and Charles, Jr., are, respectively,
the executrix and the executors of the will. At the time
they filed the petition herein, each of them resided in the
State of New York.
Gilman Paper Co. (hereinafter Gilman Paper, the
corporation, or the company) was incorporated in New
Hampshire in 1897 under the name of Dalton Power Co.
and was reorganized under its present name in 1921. The
company is engaged in the manufacture of paper,
paperboard, and paper products. Although its operations
were originally confined to Vermont, in 1940, the
company,
through
subsidiary
corporations,
began
expanding into southern Georgia and northern Florida.
Decedent's father, Isaac Gilman, was the company's
principal stockholder and president until the time of his
death in 1944.
In early 1940, the outstanding shares of the company's
only class of stock were held entirely by Isaac Gilman's
family as follows:
Isaac Gilman
Number of shares
15,999
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EFTA01103666
Estate of Gilman v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 65 T.C. 296 (1975)
Charles Gilman
._... 5,001
Leah Shapiro (decedent's
1,000
Sadie Collier (decedent's sister)...
.. 1,000
Celia Frank (decedent's sister)._....__.__....__.__...._...__...._...__..._... 1,000
Pauline Bailin (decedent's sister)
1,000
Total.
.. 25,000
and 4 to decedent.
At that time, Isaac Gilman was about 75 years old.
Charles, who had joined his father in the business in 1917
and was himself approximately 42 years old, was the only
close family member (apart from his father) who played
an important role in the operation of the company.
Because he had four sisters who would probably be
treated equally with him in the event of his father's *298
death, Charles was worried about his future status in the
company as a minority stockholder. He was concerned
also that his four sisters or their husbands might disrupt
the company, and his father shared that concern. As a
result, during late 1939 and early 1940, Charles was
making a serious investigation of other possible business
opportunities. Isaac Gilman was concerned about the
welfare of all of his children and was reluctant to put
Charles in a position where he could take advantage of his
four sisters by exploiting the company. The problem was
solved by an agreement entered into on June 22, 1940, by
Charles, his father, and the company. The agreement
provided for the following arrangement:
(I) The company's capital stock was reclassified and
increased to provide for the authorization of 25,000
nonvoting preferred shares, each of $100 par value, to be
exchanged share for share with the then-outstanding
stock, and 10 shares of common stock, each of $100 par
value, which would have `the exclusive voting rights and
powers,' 6 shares of which were issued to Isaac Gilman
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(2) Upon the death of Isaac Gilman, decedent would have
the option of purchasing 2 shares of the common stock for
$100 each from his father's estate.
(3) The above option was contingent upon decedent
entering into an agreement with the company that so long
as he was employed by the company his salary would not
exceed a ceiling amount computed by a specified formula.
Pursuant to the latter provision, it was expressly stated
that any compensation paid to Charles by the company
and its affiliates in excess of $30,000 a year plus 10
percent of the net profits in excess of $200,000 (as
computed for Federal income taxes) was to be received by
him as trustee for the benefit of all the stockholders of the
company, to be distributed to them immediately in
proportion to their stockholdings. Charles was aware that
the highest amount the company has ever earned up to
that time was approximately $150,000 or $160,000, and
as a consequence of the agreement the $30,000 effective
ceiling on his salary was likely to be less than the
compensation he was then receiving from the affiliated
group ($40,000 in 1940). He was nevertheless willing to
accept the terms of the contract. He wanted to control the
company because he felt he was the only one in the
family that could run it successfully.
Government Works.
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EFTA01103667
Estate of Gilman v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 65 T.C. 296 (1975)
*299 On July 26, 1940, the company increased and
reclassified its capital stock in accordance with the June
22, 1940, agreement. The common stock of the company
was voting and the preferred stock was nonvoting. The
preferred stock was entitled to a 3-percent annual
cumulative preference dividend, after payment of which
any further dividend way payable on both classes of stock
share for share. Upon liquidation, the preferred stock was
entitled to $100 per share plus arrearages in preference
dividends; the common stock was then entitled to $100
per share, and any further assets were to be distributed to
both classes of stock share for share.
Following the execution of this agreement and prior to his
death, Isaac Gilman transferred 240 preferred shares to
his son, Charles, 140 preferred shares to each of his
Stockholder
daughters, and 100 preferred shares to his nephew,
Herman Gilman.
Isaac Gilman died on August 27, 1944. At that time he
owned 15,099 shares of preferred and 6 shares of
common stock. Decedent thereupon exercised his option
pursuant to the June 22, 1940, agreement and purchased 2
shares of common stock from his father's estate. The
remaining 4 shares of common stock were distributed
equally among Isaac Gilman's four daughters as provided
by his will. The company redeemed the 15,099 shares of
preferred stock. As a result of these transactions, the
outstanding stock of the company was then held as
follows:
Shares of
common
stock
Shares of
preferred
stock
Decedent
6
5,241
Leah Shapiro (and her family)..
1
1,140
Sadie Collier (and her family)..
1
1,140
Celia Frank (and her
1
1,140
Pauline Bailin (and her family)
1
1,140
Herman Gilman
0
100
Total
10
9,901
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EFTA01103668
Estate of Gilman v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 65 T.C. 296 (1975)
On October 31, 1944, the directors elected decedent
president and treasurer of the company. At that time, the
directors of the company were decedent, Charles Bailin
(decedent's brother-in-law), and Morris Gintzler. On
February 19, 1945, the company's bylaws were amended
to provide that a director could be removed by the
shareholders with or without cause.
At a special meeting of the board of directors held on
October 5, 1945, the formula for the computation of
decedent's salary in *300 accordance with the agreement
of June 22, 1940, was abandoned, and the board approved
a salary for decedent of 10 percent of the company's net
profits in excess of $200,000, computed before the
deduction for the compensation itself and before
provision for Federal income taxes. In 1947, decedent's
older son, Howard, who was then about 23 years old,
replaced Morris Gintzler as one of the company's throe
directors.
On April 27, 1945, Gilman Foundation, Inc. (hereinafter
the foundation), a New York membership charitable
corporation, was created. At all times since its creation,
only members of decedent's immediate family and I.
Alfred Levy, decedent's and the company's counsel, have
served as directors and officers, none of whom have
received any compensation from the foundation. At all
times until his death, decedent was both president and a
director of the foundation. During the years 1946 through
1968, the company and its subsidiaries made substantial
contributions to the foundation, aggregating $4,927,653.
On June 30, 1948, decedent created a trust by an
indenture between himself as settlor and himself, Howard
Gilman, and I. Alfred Levy as trustees. On that date,
Donor
Decedent..
•••••••••••
decedent transferred to the trust his 6 shares of the
company's common stock. The trust indenture provided
that there should always be three trustees and that acts and
decisions of the trustees should be by majority vote.
Although decedent retained the right and authority during
his lifetime to appoint successor trustees, this power
remained unexercised.
The trustees were given broad management and
investment powers, including lull power and authority to
grant, bargain, sell, assign, transfer and convey all or any
part of the trust estate.' Included among these
management powers was the right to vote the stock held
in trust. The trust indenture further provided (a) that the
trust should endure until the death of the survivor of
decedent's two sons, Howard and Charles, Jr., (b) that the
trust income should be paid semiannually in equal shares
to decedent's sons with various contingent payment
provisions in the event of their deaths and the failure of
issue, and (c) that the corpus would be distributed upon
the death of the survivor of the income beneficiaries to the
issue per stirpes of Charles Gilman, Jr., and Howard
Gilman. Decedent retained no possibility of reverter.
*301 Following the creation of the trust and prior to
decedent's death, the following transfers of the
company's outstanding stock occurred:
(a) From time to time decedent gave a total of 28
preferred shares to Howard Gilman and 27 preferred
shares to Charles Gilman, Jr.
(b) From time to time the foundation received a total of
260 preferred shares as contributions as follows:
Number of preferred
shares contributed
186
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EFTA01103669
Estate of Gilman v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 65 T.C. 296 (1975)
Howard Gilman.
28
Charles Gilman, Jr.
25
Leah Shapiro.
6
Sadie Collier
12
Pauline Bailin,,,,__,_
3
Total
260
(c) On December 17, 1957, the company purchased all of
the remaining stockholdings of decedent's four sisters and
their families, consisting of 4,539 preferred and 4
common shares.
(d) On January 22, 1962, following the death of Herman
Stockholder
Gilman, the company purchased his 100 preferred shares
from his estate. As a result of the foregoing, the
outstanding stock of the company from January 22, 1962,
until decedent's death consisted of 5,262 preferred shares
and 6 common shares, which were held as follows:
Shares of
Shares of
common stock
preferred stock
Decedent..
0
5,000
Trust ..
6
0
Foundation..
0
260
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EFTA01103670
Estate of Gilman v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 65 T.C. 296 (1975)
Charles Gilman, Jr._
Total
From the creation of the trust on June 30, 1948, to the
date of his death on June 19, 1967, decedent was a trustee
of that trust, a director of the company, and the
company's chief executive officer. The bylaws of the
company provide that the directors `shall be elected at the
annual meeting of the stockholders and each director shall
be elected to serve for one year and until his successor
shall be elected and shall qualify.' The bylaws further
provide that the president and other officers of the
company 'shall be elected by the directors at their regular
annual *302 meeting.' In 1957, decedentS younger son,
Charles, Jr., replaced Charles Bailin as a company
director, with the result that decedent and his two sons
comprised the board of directors until decedent's death.
Charles, Jr., was then about 26 or 27 years old, and
Preferred stock
Year
dividend per share
0
2
6
5,262
Howard was about 6 years older.
The company was profitable in every year from 1947 to
1967, inclusive. During that period the company's annual
net earnings (after provision for Federal income taxes)
ranged from a low of about $530,000 to a high of about
$4,900,000. Its consolidated net worth grew to
approximately $44 million with earned surplus over $43
million. At the end of 1947, the company had $2,220,417
in cash on hand; as of December 31, 1967, the company's
consolidated balance sheet showed $27,250,597 in cash.
During 1944 through 1967, the company declared and
paid dividends as follows:
Common stock
dividend per share
1944-46
0
0
1947
$6
0
1948
6
0
1949
6
0
1950
11
0
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EFTA01103671
Estate of Gilman v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 65 T.C. 296 (1975)
28
12
0
0
1953
17
$6
1954
20
20
12
12
1956
12
12
0
0
In 1951, 1953, and 1954, decedent opposed payment of
additional dividends of $22 per share, $8 per share, and
$11 per share, respectively, on the preferred shares.
Charles Bain, stating that he represented the views of the
other shareholders, insisted upon an additional dividend.
The additional dividends were declared by a vote of 2 to
I. Decedent waived the 1951 and 1953 dividends on his
preferred stock.
Year
1947
1948
The only income received by the trust from the time of its
creation until decedent's death was the dividends paid by
the company in respect of its common stock, a total of
$300.
*303 During 1947 through 1967, decedent received
salaries and director's fees from the company and its
subsidiaries in the following total amounts:
Amount
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$130,820
131,225
EFTA01103672
Estate of Gilman v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 65 T.C. 296 (1975)
1949.
1950
1951.
1952.
1953.
1954
1955
1956.
1957.
1958
1960.
1961.
1962.
1963.
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101,764
141,145
280,920
103,065
192,581
102,700
78,728
108,579
66,327
36,087
110,000
110,000
110,000
109,750
109,640
EFTA01103673
Estate of Gilman v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 65 T.C. 296 (1975)
1964
....... ....... .......
....... ....... .......
1967.
On January 31, 1956, the Commissioner issued a
statutory notice to the company disallowing as excessive
$140,000 of the $250,000 deduction taken by the
company in 1951 for decedent's compensation. The
dividend which decedent waived on his preferred stock in
1951 amounted to $115,302. The company filed a petition
in this Court, the outcome of which was a decision in
favor of the Commissioner. Gilman Paper Co., T.C.
Memo. 1960.13, affd. 284 F.2d 697 (2d Cir. 1960). The
Court was of the opinion that decedent's compensation
agreement with the company was not the product of
arm's-length dealing and that his compensation in excess
of $110,000 'was, in fact, a disguised dividend.'
Decedent did not repay to the company the amount which
was determined to have been excessive for income tax
purposes. Neither the company's other shareholders nor
its other two directors (Howard and Charles Gilman, Jr.)
nor the other two trustees of the trust (Howard Gilman
and I. Alfred Levy) nor the other directors of the
foundation (Howard and Charles Gilman, Jr., and I.
Year
Date of 30-day letter
136,667
150,000
150,000
75,000
Alfred Levy) took action to compel decedent to repay the
money. The attorney general of the State of New York did
not intervene.
On October I, 1961, decedent and the company executed
a new employment agreement purporting to cancel the
employment agreement previously entered into. Under the
new agreement— stated to be in effect for a term of 5
years—decedent's annual salary was fixed at $110,000,
with payments of $50,000 a year for life upon retirement,
and if survived by his wife $50,000 a year to her during
her lifetime. In May 1964, the October 1, 1961,
employment agreement was amended to provide for a 10-
year term of employment and an annual compensation of
$150,000.
*304 For the calendar years 1965, 1966, and 1967, the
District Director of Internal Revenue issued 30-day letters
transmitting revenue agents' reports proposing liabilities
for accumulated earnings tax under section 531 against
the company as follows:
Proposed liability
1965
May
24,1968
$1,350,500.57
1966
May
24,1968
1,674,181.07
1967______
Feb.
19,1970
1,839,498.77
_
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EFTA01103674
Estate of Gilman v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 65 T.C. 296 (1975)
The company filed protests against the proposed
liabilities in which it asserted business needs for the
retention of its earnings. The proposed liabilities were
Year
Date of settlement
Jan. 26, 1970
Jan. 26, 1970
July 30, 1971
No effort was made on behalf of any of the shareholders
or by the company's directors or officers to secure
repayment of the tax from decedent's estate.
On decedent's estate tax return, petitioners did not include
in the gross estate the value of the company's common
stock which was held by the trust. In the notice of
deficiency, the Commissioner 'determined that the value
of the assets of an inter vivos trust created by the decedent
purportedly on June 30, 1948 is includible in his gross
estate, under section 2036 and 2038 of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1954.' He also determined that the
value of the 6 shares of common stock was $24,500,000.
The question of valuation, which is also in controversy,
has been severed from the instant proceeding, and the
only issue to be decided at this time is the includability of
the 6 shares in the decedent's gross estate.
settled with the Appellate Division of the Internal
Revenue Service as follows:
Accumulated earnings
tax per settlement
None
$374,000
565,000
Under section 2036(a),' property transferred by a
decedent is •305 included in his gross estate if, under the
transfer, the decedent retained for his life or a period
which did not in fact end before his death (I) the
'enjoyment' of the property or (2) the right, either alone
or in conjunction with any person, to designate the
persons who shall enjoy the property or the income
therefrom. Respondent relies upon these provisions to
include the transferred Gilman Paper stock in decedent's
gross estate.'
Section 2036(a) reflects a 'legislative policy of subjecting
to tax all property which has been the subject of an
incomplete inter vivos transfer.' United States v.
O'Malley, 383 U.S. 627, 631 (1966). The policy is to
include in a decedent's gross estate transfers which are in
substance testamentary, i.e., 'transfers which leave the
transferor a significant interest in or control over the
property transferred during his lifetime.' United States v.
Estate of Grace, 395 U.S. 316, 320 (1969).
OPINION
As stated in Commissioner v. Estate of Church, 335 U.S.
632, 645 (1949):
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EFTA01103675
Estate of Gilman v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 65 T.C. 296 (1975)
an estate tax cannot be avoided by any trust transfer
except by a bona fide transfer in which the senior,
absolutely, unequivocally, irrevocably, and without
possible reservations, parts with all of his title and all of
his possession and all of his enjoyment of the transferred
property.
At the center of the present controversy is United States v.
Byrum, 408 U.S. 125 (1972), the most recent Supreme
Court pronouncement on the breadth and reach of section
2036(a). In that case, Byrum transferred stock in three
unlisted corporations, in which he was the majority
stockholder, to an irrevocable trust for the benefit of his
children. He retained the right to vote the transferred
stock, to veto any transfer by the trustee (a bank) of any
stock, and to remove the trustee and appoint another
corporate trustee as a successor. The retained right to vote
the transferred stock, together with the vote of the stock
decedent owned at the time of his death, gave him a
majority vote in each of the corporations. The Supreme
Court held that the rights the decedent reserved in respect
of the transferred stock did not constitute retained
enjoyment thereof or the right to designate the *306
person or persons who would enjoy the income therefrom,
stating, inter alia, that (408 U.S.AT 149):
The statutory language (of sec. 2036(a)) plainly
contemplates retention of an attribute of the property
transferred— such as a right to income, use of the
property itself, or a power of appointment with respect
either to income or principal.
Even if Byrum had transferred a majority of the stock, but
had retained voting control, he would not have retained
'substantial present economic benefit,' * * * (Fn. ref.
omitted.)
In support of its conclusion, the Court repeatedly
emphasized the fiduciary duty of a majority shareholder
not to misuse his power by promoting his personal
interests at the expense of corporate interests and the
fiduciary duty of the directors of a corporation not to play
favorites among the shareholders but to promote the
interests of the corporation as a whole. These duties so
qualified the retained rights of the decedent that, the Court
held, they were insufficient to cause inclusion of the stock
in decedent's gross estate under section 2036(a).
Petitioners contend that the Byrum case is dispositive of
the instant one. Respondent seeks to distinguish the case
on its facts. There are factual differences between the two
cases, but we think that most of those differences add
strength to petitioners' case. We hold that decedent's June
30, 1948, transfer of the Gilman Paper common stock in
trust was a completed one and that the value of the stock
is not includable in his gross estate.
1. RETENTION OF ENJOYMENT
The Gilman Paper Co. stock may not be included in
decedent's gross estate under the portion of section
2036(a)(1) relied upon by respondent— that decedent
retained the 'enjoyment' of the stock— for two closely
related reasons: (I) Decedent did not retain enjoyment of
the stock 'under' the transfer; and (2) the rights that he
retained with respect to the stock did not constitute
'enjoyment' within the meaning of that term as it is used
in section 2036(a)(1).
Section 2036(a)(1) applies only where the decedent has
'retained' enjoyment 'under' the 'transfer.' This means
that the enjoyment of the transferred property must be
reserved 'in connection with or as an incident to the
transfer.' McNichol's Estate v. Commissioner, 265 F.2d
667, 670 (3d Cir. 1959), affg. 29 T.C. 1179 (1958), cert.
denied 361 U.S. 829 (1959). The *307 section applies
only where a prearrangement, embodied in an express or
implied agreement, permits the transferor to enjoy the
benefits of the property or its income. Estate of Roy D.
Barlow, 55 T.C. 666. 670 (1971); Estate of Harry H.
Beckwith, 55 T.C. 242, 247 (1970); Stephens, Maxfield,
& Lind, Federal Estate and Gift Taxation, pp. 4-81— 4.83
(3d ed. 1974); see also Fabian v. United States, 127
F.Supp. 726, 728 (D. Conn. 1954). Thus, for example, the
section does not apply where a husband transfers his
interest in a residence to his wife and they continue to
occupy it as the family home unless, by agreement he
reserves the right of occupancy as an incident to the
transfer. Union Planters National Bank v. United States,
361 F.2d 662 (6th Cir. 1966); Estate of Binkley v. United
States, 358 F.2d 639 (3d Cir. 1966); Estate of Allen D.
Gutchess, 46 T.C. 554 (1966); Estate of Robert W. Wier,
17 T.C. 409, 422 (1951); Stephenson v. United States,
238 F.Supp. 660 (W.D. Va. 1965); compare Estate of
Emil Linderme, Sr., 52 T.C. 305 (1969).
The inquiry must be focused, therefore, on the agreements
made by the parties on June 30, 1948, when the
decedent's Gilman Paper common stock was transferred
to the trust. The question is whether there was an express
or implied agreement at the time of the transfer that
decedent would continue to enjoy that stock or that the
right to enjoy the stock would later be conferred upon
him' The evidence relating to events subsequent to the
transfer is relevant only to the extent that it helps answer
that question.
In analyzing the evidence on that crucial question, it is
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EFTA01103676
Estate of Gilman v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 65 T.C. 296 (1975)
important that the term 'enjoyment' refers to the
economic benefits obtainable from the transferred
property. As stated in United States v. Byrum, 408
U.S.AT 147, the term is 'used to deal with situations in
which the owner of property divested himself of title but
retained an income interest or, in the case of real property,
the lifetime use of the property.' Enjoyment as used in
the death tax statute is not a term of art, but is
synonymous with substantial present economic benefit.'
McNichol's Estate v. Commissioner, 265 F.2d at 671; see
also *308 Commissioner v. Estate of Holmes, 326 U.S.
480, 486 (1946); Commissioner v. Estate of Church, 335
U.S.AT 645.5
A. The terms of the June 30, 1948, transfer in trust.— The
transfer under the agreement of June 30, 1948, whereby
decedent placed his Gilman Paper common stock in trust,
was not qualified in any way. Under that agreement,
decedent transferred the stock irrevocably to himself, his
son, Howard, and his attorney, I. Alfred Levy, as trustees.
The income of the trust was payable to decedent's two
sons for life, with the remainder to their issue. All acts
and decisions of the trustees were to be by a majority
vote. The trustees undertook to execute the agreement
'with all due fidelity and (to) account for all the moneys
and things received by them hereunder to the
beneficiaries.' In his individual capacity, decedent
retained certain powers— e.g., to appoint a successor
trustee in case one of the other trustees should resign, die,
or otherwise be unable to continue to serve, and, with the
approval of the other trustees, to amend the administrative
provisions of the instrument. But none of the powers
expressly retained are sufficient to constitute enjoyment
of the stock within the meaning of section 2036(a)(1), and
we do not understand respondent to contend otherwise.
B. 'Control' of the corporation.— Respondent contends
that the only reason for the existence of the transferred
stock was the right of its owner to 'control' the destiny of
Gilman Paper. Respondent argues that the agreement
creating the trust was so structured as to enable decedent
to continue to 'control' the corporation and the transfer,
therefore, was not a completed one!. In making this
argument, respondent in effect throws an *309 umbrella
over all that decedent did and might have done as trustee,
director, and chief executive officer, and maintains that all
those actions and possible actions, viewed in their totality,
show that decedent retained the enjoyment of the stock.
We do not agree.
Gilman Paper's stock structure in 1948— only 10 shares
of common and nearly 10,000 shares of preferred stock—
was highly unusual, but the practical and legal effect of
the transfer would have been the same if the voting,
dividend, and liquidation rights of the 10 common shares
had been scattered among 10,000 common shares. Since
respondent has valued the common shares at $24,500,000,
respondent cannot be heard to say they were without
independent value. Nor does it matter that Isaac Gilman's
objective in so structuring the corporation's stock, and
decedent's purpose in creating the trust, was to keep the
voting control of Gilman Paper in the Gilman family. The
applicability of section 2036(a) turns not on the senior's
motives in creating the trust, but on the nature and
operative effect of the trust transfer.'
In terms of the operation and effect of decedent's June 30,
1048, transfer, we do not think decedent had such control
over Gilman Paper as to give him a substantial present
economic benefit. Respondent at least implicitly concedes
that managerial and administrative powers vested in a
settlor-trustee, including the right to vote stock held in the
trust estate, do not trigger the applicability of section
2036(a). Old Colony Trust Co. v. United States, 423 F.2d
601, 602 (1st Cir. 1970)? Estate of Edward E. *310 Ford,
53 T.C. 114, 127-129 (1969), affd. per curiam 450 F.2d
878 (2d Cir. 1971); Estate of Willard V. King, 37 T.C.
973, 978 (1962). Insofar as the voting of stock entails the
control of a corporation, the Supreme Court in United
States v. Byrum, 408 U.S.AT 150, held that retention by a
decedent in his individual capacity of voting control of a
corporation 'was not the retention of the enjoyment of the
transferred property within the meaning of the statute.'
Surely, then, the retention by decedent of the right in his
capacity as a trustee to cast one of three votes as to how
the stock should be voted does not constitute retention of
the enjoyment of the property?
It is true, as emphasized by respondent, that the Court in
United States v. Byrum, supra at 150, pointed out that
there were 'unrelated minority interests' who could see
that Byrum and the other officers did not violate their
fiduciary duty to all of the stockholders. But the express
trust created by decedent constrained him from using his
influence on the voting of the Gilman Paper common
stock for his personal economic benefit. Moreover, the
plain fact is that when the June 30, 1948, trust agreement
was signed, decedent's four sisters owned 40 percent of
the common and 47 percent of the preferred stock)* The
sisters' interests and those of their husbands were
decidedly adverse to those of decedent or the trust.
Indeed, one of the main reasons for Isaac Gilman's 1940
agreement with decedent was to avoid conflicts between
his sons-in-law and decedent which would *311 adversely
affect the company." Also, the remaindermen of the trust,
decedent's grandchildren, represented another adverse
interest.
The adverse interests of decedent's sisters were
terminated in 1957, when the corporation purchased their
shares, but there is no evidence of an express or implied
agreement in 1948, when the trust was created, that the
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Estate of Gilman v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 65 T.C. 296 (1975)
sisters would sell their common and preferred shares. The
inference is to the contrary. The relevant corporate
minutes indicate that negotiations to that end were not
begun until a short time before January 1957; that
relationships within the family were not harmonious; and
that a controversy over the transaction persisted even after
the sale was completed. Thus, the 1948 transfer in trust
left the Gilman sisters with a substantial block of the
Gilman Paper stock and their interests were adverse to
those of both the trust and decedent.
Similar practical constraints effectively denied decedent
unimpeded control of the board of directors. The bylaws
of Gilman Paper, in accordance with State law, provided
that the board of directors shall be elected annually. A
majority vote of the trustees, who voted all the common
stock, was required for election, and from 1948 to 1957
the board always included Charles Bailin, decedent's
brother-in-law. The minutes
describe him
as
a
representative or spokesman for the 'other shareholders.'
On three occasions (in 1951, 1953, and 1954), Bailin and
Howard Gilman outvoted decedent
and declared
dividends over decedent's strong opposition. I. Alfred
Levy's testimony describes other instances in which
Bailin and Howard Gilman were able to persuade
decedent to retreat from an initially taken position and
agree with them. Thus, as a matter of fact, the record
shows that decedent did not dominate the board.
Moreover, as a matter of law, the trustees in selecting
directors and the directors in managing the corporation
were restrained by their fiduciary duties and obligations to
the corporation and all its shareholders. See United States
v. Byrum, 408 U.S.AT 138.
*312 C. Decedent's employment as chief executive.— As
to decedent's executive position with the company, no
doubt he, as well as the other two trustees, anticipated at
the time the trust was created that decedent would
continue to serve as the chief executive officer of Gilman
Paper. The company was experiencing dramatic growth,
and a corporate executive who is making money for his
employer usually keeps his job. But decedent did not
reserve the right to remain as chief executive of the
company. Indeed, the direct testimony, elicited by
respondent, is that there was no express or implied
agreement that he would continue to serve:2 and Levy
further testified that 'we could have thrown him out.' The
mere
'probability of continued
employment
and
compensation' does not constitute
the substantial
'enjoyment of • • • (the transferred) property' within the
meaning of the statute.' United States v. Byrum, supra at
150; see also Estate of William F. Hofford, 4 T.C. 790,
794(1945).
Respondent attempts to demonstrate that decedent's
continued employment enabled him to benefit himself
economically in other ways, citing the decision of this
Court that in 1951 decedent's salary was excessive.
Gilman Paper Co., T.C. Memo. 1960.13, affd. 284 F.2d
697 (2d Cir. 1960)." For that year, decedent drew a salary
of $250,000 from Gilman Paper, compared with $110,000
for the immediately preceding year and compared with
the compensation of $370,000 he could have drawn under
the October 5, 1945, resolution of the board of directors.
This Court sustained the Commissioner's determination
that all except $110,000 of the $250,000 salary exceeded
the 'reasonable compensation' allowable as a deduction
by section 23(a), I.R.C. 1939.
*313 Gilman Paper contended in that case that decedent's
salary was paid pursuant to a contingent compensation
contract embodied in the June 22, 1940, agreement with
Isaac Gilman and the 1945 resolution of Gilman Paper's
board of directors. This Court held that the June 22, 1940,
agreement was not a contingent compensation agreement
but merely fixed a limitation on the amount payable as
compensation. As to the corporate resolution, there was
no showing that it reflected arm's-length bargaining, the
'only material fact of record respecting its adoption' being
'the bare action of the board of directors.' Othenvise, the
Court's opinion is based largely upon a failure of proof,
but one crucial factor was that decedent 'waived' a
preferred stock dividend of $115,302 in that year. This
Court concluded that the 'disallowed salary payment was,
in fact, a disguised dividend."
Respondent claims that this Court's opinion shows that
decedent was able to exploit the corporation at will and
that the failure of the corporation to seek reimbursement
of the excessive portion shows that the exploitation was
consistently unopposed or unrestrained. We think
respondent tries to squeeze entirely too much from that
opinion.
The
Commissioner
challenged
the
reasonableness of decedent's salary in only 1 of the 20
years following the creation of the trust. The Court stated
that decedent's salary was fixed 'from time to time
primarily as his own needs dictated,' but that statement
was part of the Court's rejection of Gilman Paper's
contingent compensation argument, not a holding that that
decedent did or could pillage the assets of the corporation.
As far as we can tell, he never drew more as a salary than
the amount to which he was entitled under the 1945
resolution. Thus, the excessive salary in 1951, if it was
excessive *314 by business standards, was aberrational
and does not support respondent's argument.
True, after the 1960 decision of the Court of Appeals, the
corporation and the trustees did not seek to recoup the
allegedly excessive salary paid decedent in 1951. But
their failure to compel decedent to restore the amounts
determined to have been excessive does not show
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Estate of Gilman v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 65 T.C. 296 (1975)
decedent retained the right to a present economic benefit
from the transferred stock. Petitioners' reply brief
provides this effective answer to respondent's argument:
In asserting that the decedent should have been asked to
repay the $140,000 disallowed as a deduction, the
Commissioner has misunderstood the significance of the
facts. The decedent waived a 1951 dividend and received
increased
1951
compensation.
The
Treasury,
understandably, complained that, by attempting to
disguise a dividend as compensation, the corporation was
seeking an unauthorized deduction. However, that attempt
was not unfair to stockholders; to the contrary,
transmutation of a dividend into deductible compensation
can only benefit the corporation and, therefore, its
stockholders. Such an attempt, successful or otherwise, is
not unfair to stockholders. What the decedent had
accepted with one hand he had relinquished with the
other.
Gilman Paper's failure of proof in this Court would not
have aided it, with the tables turned, in proving a claim
for recoupment against decedent. Its claim would have
been faced with the 1945 resolution under which decedent
was entitled to a salary of $370,000 and with the dramatic
financial success of the corporation under his executive
leadership.
Finally, the testimony included in the record of that case"
must be read in its context in the light of the issue being
litigated. Some of that testimony, relied upon most
heavily by respondent, was evidently discounted or
disbelieved by the trial judge who heard it.'"
*315 D. The 1965, 1966, and 1967 accumulated earnings
tax.— Our Findings describe the Commissioner's
determinations,
made
after
decedent's
death, of
accumulated earnings tax liabilities for 1965, 1966, and
1967. Respondent cites the failure of anyone on behalf of
Gilman Paper or the trust to recoup the accumulated
earnings tax from decedent's estate as evidence that
nothing and no one restrained decedent's activities with
respect to the company.
For 1965, since the matter was settled without any
liability, no claim could have been asserted against
decedent. Since decedent died on June 19, 1967, he could
hardly be charged with the responsibility for the
corporation's failure to distribute a larger portion of its
earnings for that year. Indeed, the assertion of the liability
for 1967 indicates that decedent was not responsible for
Gilman Paper's conservative dividend policy since that
policy was continued after his death. Settlement of the
1966 claim for only about 22 percent thereof, nearly 4
years after decedent died, suggests that the Commissioner
regarded his claim as a weak one.
A recoupment claim for an accumulated earnings tax is a
highly unusual one." Of necessity, such a claim would
take the form of a stockholder's derivative suit and would
challenge the action of the board of directors in failing to
declare adequate dividends. The amount recoverable by
the stockholders who might have sued decedent's estate
(the trust, the foundation, and Charles Gilman, Jr.) was
too small to justify the expense of litigation. Since the
corporate minutes do not reflect that the other directors
made any effort to change the corporation's conservative
dividend policy (except in 1951, 1953, and 1954, when
they outvoted decedent), they would be liable, as a matter
*316 of law, equally with decedent. We can find no
ground, as a practical matter, for holding that decedent
retained the enjoyment of the stock in any of the facts
relating to the corporation's failure to assert against
decedent's
ESTATE A CLAIM FOR THE RESTORATION OF
THE 1966 ACCUMULATED EARNINGS TAX. 2.
RETENTION OF THE RIGHT TO DESIGNATE
THE RECIPIENT OF THE PROPERTY OR THE
INCOME THEREFROM UNDER SECTION
2036(A)(2)
Respondent's second contention is that decedent retained
the `right,' either alone or in conjunction with other
persons, to designate the persons who shall enjoy the
property or the income therefrom. In making this
argument, respondent again ignores the language of the
statute and the terms of the trust and lumps decedent's
powers as trustee with his powers as a director and as
chief executive officer. He argues: 'The decedent in
conjunction with another trustee, had the right to vote the
shares and select the corporate directors and thereby
control the dividend policy of Gilman.' In this connection,
respondent points out that the trust instrument required
the trustee to distribute its income currently and argues
that, consequently, the power to declare dividends
enabled decedent to regulate 'not only the flow of income
to the trust, but also the flow of income from the trust to
the beneficiaries.'
Section 2036(a)(2) is cast in the terms of a retained
'right.' As explained in United States v. Byrum, 408
U.S.AT 136-137, in rejecting a similar argument:
The term 'right,' certainly when used in a tax statute,
must be given its normal and customary meaning. It
connotes an ascertainable and legally enforceable power ■
* •. Here, the right ascribed to Byrum was the power to
use his majority position and influence over the corporate
directors to 'regulate the flow of dividends' to the trust.
That 'right' was neither ascertainable nor legally
enforceable and hence was not a right in any normal sense
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Estate of Gilman v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 65 T.C. 296 (1975)
of that term.
The Court added (408 U.S.AT 137): `The power to elect
the directors conferred no legal right to command them to
pay or not to pay dividends.' The Court rejected the
Government's argument that Byrum's de facto powers, as
distinguished from his legal rights, placed the entrusted
stock within the reach of section 2036(a)(2) stating (408
U.S.AT 138, 142-143):
The Government seeks to equate the de facto position of a
controlling stockholder with the legally enforceable
'right' specified by the statute. * * *
*317 Byrum was ■ • • inhibited by a fiduciary duty from
abusing his position as majority shareholder for personal
or family advantage to the detriment of the corporation or
other stockholders. * * *
We conclude that Byrum did not have an unconstrained
de facto power to regulate the flow of dividends to the
trust, much less the 'right' to designate who was to enjoy
the income from trust property. ■ ■ ■
A comparison of the facts of the two cases shows that
Byrum had greater power to affect dividend policy than
decedent in the instant case. Byrum's powers were held
individually while decedent's powers were held in trust.
By simply outvoting him in electing the board, decedent's
cotrustees could have indirectly thwarted his desires.
Similarly, by outvoting him as a member of the board (as
it did three times, in 1951, 1953, and 1954), the board
could have directly defeated decedent's wishes as to the
payment of dividends. Byrum could have removed and
replaced a trustee whereas decedent in this case had no
such power. Thus, not only were all of decedent's powers
fiduciary ones, they were less extensive than those of
Byrum.
We conclude that decedent retained neither the enjoyment
of the transferred stock within the meaning of section
2036(a)( I) nor the right, alone or in conjunction with
others, to designate the person or persons who would
enjoy the stock or the income therefrom within the
meaning of section 2036(a)(2).
Decision will be entered for the petitioners.
Reviewed by the Court.
GOFFE, J., concurring: I agree with the conclusion
reached by the majority. The case in controlled by United
States v. Byrum, 408 U.S. 125 (1972), and this is not the
Court to reconsider or rewrite that opinion.
Throughout this litigation, respondent has consistently
conceded that the trust created by decedent in 1948 was a
valid one. After the transfer to the trust, all powers
decedent held with respect to the Gilman Paper common
stock were fiduciary powers. If anything is clear from the
Byrum opinion, it is that the exercise of fiduciary powers
to vote the stock of a corporation does not constitute the
'enjoyment' of that stock within the meaning of section
2036(a) (I), and it does not matter whether those powers
are exercised by a sole trustee, one of three trustees *318
(as here), or even, as in Byrum, one who has transferred
his stock to a trust but retained the right in his individual
capacity to vote it. The personal satisfactions or the
psychic benefits derived from voting the stock do not
constitute the kind of retained economic benefits which
constitute 'enjoyment' within the meaning of section
2036(a)(1).
The dissent scorns the veracity of one of the witnesses.
However, after decedent submitted his common stock to
the restraints of a fiduciary, he became only one of three
trustees in deciding how the stock would be voted. His
powers thereafter were subject not only to fiduciary
obligations to the other shareholders, whose interests were
sharply adverse, but the fiduciary restrictions flowing
from the express trust. The corporate bylaws required
annual elections of the corporation's directors and the
president. The directors were not figureheads. They could
have elected someone else as president. Indeed, on three
occasions (in 1951, 1953, and 1954), the corporate
minutes reflect that the directors outvoted decedent 2 to I
on the payment of dividends. The testimony of Gilman's
attorney that there was no express or implied agreement
in 1948 that decedent would continue to serve as
president, the only specific testimony on the point, is thus
wholly consistent with the undisputed documentary
evidence. But it would make no difference, even if there
had been an agreement that decedent would be the most
influential one of the three trustees, because whatever
powers decedent retained were fiduciary ones, and Byrum
makes it clear that the exercise of fiduciary powers does
not constitute enjoyment under section 2036(a)(1).
IRWIN and STERRETT, JJ., agree with this concurring
opinion.
RAUM, J., dissenting: I have no doubt on the record
before us that the decedent, Charles Gilman, retained until
his death the 'enjoyment' of the 6 shares of common
stock within the meaning of section 2036(a)(1) of the
Code. An understanding of the history and significance of
these 6 shares is necessary for a proper consideration of
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Estate of Gilman v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 65 T.C. 296 (1975)
the matter.
In late 1939 and early 1940, a serious conflict had
developed between Charles Gilman and his father (Isaac
Gilman) in respect of the Gilman Paper Co. Only one
class of stock was then outstanding, consisting of 25,000
shares of voting common. Isaac *319 owned nearly
16,000 shares, Charles about 5,000 shares, and Charles'
four sisters 1,000 shares each. Isaac, who was then about
75 years old, dominated the company, and Charles, who
was then about 42 years old, was the only other member
of the family who was engaged to any significant degree
in the conduct of the company's business. To the extent
that Charles' sisters' husbands were also engaged in the
company's affairs they were 'there as a sinecure' and
added very little to the operation of the enterprise. Charles
was fearful that upon his father's death, his 16,000 shares
would be divided equally among all five children, with
the consequence that Charles, as a minority stockholder,
could be ousted from a position of control over the
company. He importuned his father for some arrangement
that would prevent any such result from occurring.
Indeed, when no such arrangement appeared on the
horizon, he not only threatened to quit his association
with the company, but undertook to implement that threat
by carrying on extensive negotiations looking towards the
establishment of other business connections for himself.
He make it clear to his father that he 'wanted first and
uppermost to be put in a position where I would run that
company, because I felt I was the only one that could run
that company— when I say 'run it,' have control of it • ■
* to control the Gilman Paper Company, should anything
happen to him!,
The solution to the problem was finally found in an
agreement dated June 22, 1940, which provided for the
reorganization of the company, whereby the entire
outstanding 25,000 shares of voting common were
exchanged for 25,000 shares of new nonvoting preferred,
and the control of the company was concentrated in 10
new shares of $100 par value voting common, of which 6
shares were issued to Isaac and 4 to Charles. The
agreement also provided that on Isaac's death, Charles
was to have the right to purchase 2 shares of the new
common from his father's estate at par, upon condition,
however, that Charles enter into a further agreement with
the company that his compensation would not exceed an
amount determined in accordance with a certain formula.
Under conditions which then prevailed, that formula
placed an effective ceiling of $30,000 a year on Charles'
salary, in contrast to the $40,000 that he was then
receiving from the company and its affiliates. Distasteful
as these latter provisions were to Charles, he was
nevertheless willing to accept these terms because—
I had one idea in mind, which was uppermost in my mind,
and that was, as I explained before, the control of the
business after my father died, that I would be assured of
the control of the business, and when I accomplished that,
or if I could accomplish that, that meant to me more than
salary or anything else.=
Upon Isaac's death in 1944, Charles exercised his right to
purchase 2 shares of the common from his father's estate,
which together with the 4 shares already owned by him
comprised the 6 shares here in controversy} It was these 6
shares that Charles in 1948 placed in trust, naming
himself, his attorney, and older son as trustees, and
providing for distributions of income to his two sons. The
trust had no other assets. Over the entire period from the
creation of the trust in 1948 up to the date of Charles'
death in 1967—and indeed up through 1970— the total
amount of dividends received by the trust in respect of the
6 shares was only $300. In contrast, the company paid
dividends in the amount of $1,129,900 with respect to the
preferred up to the date of Charles' death.
Can there be any doubt that the only purpose of the 6
shares was to provide Charles with the sought-after
control over the company? These shares were conceived
and issued solely for that purpose. It was that control that
was central to their very life! Plainly, the continued
existence of such control in Charles' hands for the
remainder of his life constituted his 'enjoyment' thereof
within the meaning of section 2036(a)( I ).
To be sure, as is indicated in United States v. Byrum, 408
U.S. 125, it is the income from property that is ordinarily
regarded as the 'enjoyment' contemplated by section
2036(a)(1). But that is not universally so, for, as
recognized in Byrum, 'enjoyment' in respect of real
property may consist of its occupancy. See also *321
Estate of Emil Linderme, Sr., 52 T.C. 305. Obviously, the
nature and character of the property must be taken into
account. In the case of a valuable oil
'enjoyment' may clearly be its availability for viewing on
the transferor's walls. As to the 6 shares involved herein,
the control which they embodied was their very raison
d'etre. It is that feature of those shares that must be
predominantly associated with their 'enjoyment,' rather
than their equity interest' in the corporation or their
income-producing potential— features which were only
of relatively minor consequence in the context of this
case. As already noted, the total income received by the
trust from these shares for a period of nearly 20 years was
only the comparatively miniscule amount of $300. Had
Charles reserved the right to that income, there could be
no question that the value of the 6 shares would have been
includable in his gross estate. How much more
meaningful to him was the control that was concentrated
in these shares. And how bizarre it is to attribute to
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Estate of Gilman v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 65 T.C. 296 (1975)
Congress an intention that would require the inclusion of
the 6 shares in the decedent's gross estate in the first
situation but would call for their exclusion in the second.
Clearly, when Congress used the word 'enjoyment,' it
manifested a purpose to treat both situations alike.
The circumstances surrounding these 6 shares were so
different from those involved in Byrum, that I cannot
believe that Byrum is of controlling authority in support
of the majority's position. Similarly, there is only a
superficial similarity between this case and that line of
cases,^ relied upon by the petitioners, in which broad
administrative and managerial powers reserved to the
grantor of a trust have been held insufficient to bring
section 2036(a)( I ) or like provisions into play. It is clear
to me that 'enjoyment' of the 6 shares here in issue means
the continued control embodied therein.
*322 I fully recognize that under the decided cases the
mere continuance of 'enjoyment' by the transferor until
his death is not sufficient, and it is essential in addition
that such enjoyment be 'retained.' However, it has also
been established that such retention need not be based
upon a legally enforceable right' and may be predicated
upon an informal arrangement or even a mere tacit or
implied understanding. Estate of McCabe v. United
States, 475 F.2d 1142, 1146 (Ct. CI.); McNichol's Estate
v. Commissioner, 265 F.2d 667, 670-671 (3d Cir.),
affirming 29 T.C. 1179, certiorari denied 361 U.S. 829;
see also Skinner's Estate v.United States, 316 F.2d 517
(3d Cir.), affirming 197 F.Supp. 726 (E.D. Pa.); Estate of
Harry H. Beckwith, 55 T.C. 242, 247; cf. Estate of Ethel
R. Kerdolff, 57 T.C. 643, 648; Estate of Emil Linderme,
Sr., 52 T.C. 305, 308.
Was there such an understanding here? In my judgment,
unless one were to be hopelessly naive, the existence of
such understanding must be inferred from this record. In
the absence of any explanation to the contrary, it is clear
beyond any reasonable doubt that Charles who had fought
so hard to obtain the control inherent in the 6 shares
would not have parted so readily with that control only a
few years after he had attained his objective. Nor can it
fairly be inferred that the establishment of the trust was
intended in any manner to provide income of any
consequence to Charles' two grown-up sons. Plainly, the
trust was merely a device through which Charles could
continue to exercise control until his death, and which
provided a mechanism for its exercise thereafter. To be
sure, there were two other trustees, his attorney and older
son, and the votes of two of the three were necessary in
order to take effective action. The majority herein relies
upon the testimony of the attorney which indicates that
there was never any agreement, express or implied,
between them in respect of the continuance of Charles'
control. I heard that testimony— indeed I was the only
member of this Court that did hear it— and it is my
unpleasant duty to say that I did not find his testimony
credible. I had ample opportunity to observe him, and I
paid most careful attention to him and his words as he
spoke. I had no confidence whatever in that testimony to
the extent that *323 it expressly denied, or merely
suggested the absence of, an implied agreement or tacit
understanding that Charles would continue to remain in
control of the company's affairs. I have no doubt in the
circumstances of this case that there was at least such a
tacit understanding. I am unwilling to indulge in the child-
like innocence that is necessary to reach the opposite
conclusion; certainly, no such credulity is required of a
trial judge.
SIMPSON and WILBUR, JJ., agree with this dissent.
TANNENWALD, l., dissenting: What bothers me most
about the majority apprach is that it appears to escalate
the rationale of United States v. Byrum, 408 U.S.I25
(1972),which was developed in light of the particular
facts of that case, into a mandated rigid doctrine of wide
application. In other words, the majority opinion may be
interpreted as concretizing Byrum, thus opening up the
possibility that future decisions will permit trust
arrangements to avoid estate tax consequences contrary to
the clear intent of Congress as expressed in section 2036.
If this is not the intended consequence of our decision
herein— and I am confident that it is not— then the
approach of the majority contains an even more difficult
and dangerous element, namely, the substitution of the
judgment of those who did not hear the evidence for that
of the trier of the facts. Judge Raum conducted the trial
and saw and heard the witnesses. He did not merely
conclude that the petitioner had failed to carry its burden
of proof. On the contrary, he reached the affirmative
ultimate
factual
conclusion
that
there
was
an
understanding between the settlor and the trustees which
resulted in the settlor retaining 'enjoyment of * * * the
property' within the meaning of section 2036(a)(1). Under
these circumstances, I do not believe that Judge Raum's
evaluation of the testimony and the record as a whole
should be disregarded, particularly where we are faced
with such a unique situation, namely, that the trusteed
shares were so structured that, given the pliability of the
other trustees and the holders of the other classes of stock,
those shares had no meaningful attributes apart from the
right to vote and thus control the destiny of the
corporation. In my opinion, this case is *324 sui generis
and situations where the trusteed shams of a closely held
corporation have a relatively significant actual or
potential value apart from the right to vote are to be
clearly distinguished, thereby avoiding, in very large
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Estate of Gilman v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 65 T.C. 296 (1975)
degree, the implications of applying the Government's
position in Byrum which so obviously troubled the
majority of the Supreme Court in that case. See 408
U.S.AT 146-150, and particularly n. 34.2
Footnotes
WILBUR, J., agrees with this dissent.
All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as in effect at the time of decedent's death, unless otherwise
noted.
2
SEC. 2036. TRANSFERS WITH RETAINED LIFE ESTATE.
(a) GENERAL RULE.— The value of the gross estate shall include the value of all property to the extent of any interest therein of
which the decedent has at any time made a transfer (except in case of a bona fide sale for an adequate and full consideration in
money or money's worth), by trust or otherwise, under which he has retained for his life or for any period not ascertainable without
reference to his death or for any period which does not in fact end before his death—
(I) the possession or enjoyment of, or the right to the income from, the property, or
(2) the right, either alone or in conjunction with any person, to designate the persons who shall possess or enjoy the property or the
income therefrom.
3
Sec. 2036(a) also applies where the decedent, under the transfer, retains 'possession' of the property or the 'right to the income'
from the property. Respondent does not rely upon those provisions. Respondent has also waived reliance on sec. 2038, which was
refernd to in the notice of deficiency.
4
Sec. 20.2036-1(aXii), Estate Tax Regs., provides:
An interest or right is treated as having been retained or reserved if at the time of the transfer there was an understanding, express
or implied, that the interest or right would later be conferred.
See Skinner's Estate v. United States, 316 F.2d 517 (3d Cir. 1963).
5
Sec. 20.2036-1(bX2), Estate Tax Regs., provides:
The 'use, possession, right to the income or other enjoyment of the transferred property' is considered as having been retained by
or reserved to the decedent to the extent that the use, possession, right to the income, or other enjoyment is to be applied toward the
discharge of a legal obligation of the decedent, or otherwise for his pecuniary benefit.
6
Respondent never actually tells us what he means by 'control.' In United States v. Byrum, 408 U.S. 125, 137 n. 10 (1972), the
Supreme Court stated its concern with the vagueness of the term 'control':
'The 'control' rationale, urged by the Government and adopted by the dissenting opinion, would create a standard— not specified
in the statute— so vague and amorphous as to be impossible of ascertainment in many instances. See n. 13, infra. Neither the
Government nor the dissent sheds light on the absence of an ascertainable standard." "'
"
The Court added (408 U.S.AT 138 n. 13):
The Government uses the terms 'control' and controlling stockholder' as if they were words of art with a fixed and ascertainable
meaning. In fact,
the concept of Control' is a nebulous one. * * * '
7
In United States v. Estate of Grace, 395 U.S. 316, 323 (1969), the Supreme Court said:
'Emphasis on the subjective intent of the parties in creating the trusts, particularly when those parties are members of the same
family unit, creates substantial obstacles to the proper application of the federal estate tax laws. As this Court said in Estate of
Spiegel v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 335 U.S. 701, 705-706, 69 S.Ct. 301, 303, 93 L.Ed. 330 (1949):
'Any requirement • " * (of) a post-death attempt to probe the settlor's thoughts in regard to the transfer, would partially impair the
effectiveness of * * * (sec. 811(c)) as an instrument to frustrate estate tax evasions.'
'We agree that 'the taxability of a trust corpus • • * does not hinge on a senior's motives, but depends on the nature and operative
effect of the trust transfer.' Id., at 705, 69 S.Ct.,at 303. See also Commissioner v. Estate of Church, supra.'
8
In Old Colony Trust Co. v. United States, 423 F.2d 601, 602 (1st Cir. 1970), the court said:
'It is common ground that a settlor will not find the corpus of the trust included in his estate merely because he named himself a
trustee. Jennings v. Smith, 2 Cir., 1947, 161 F.2d 74. He must have reserved a power to himself that is inconsistent witlt the full
termination of ownership. The government's brief defines this as 'sufficient dominion and control until Itis death.' Trustee powers
given for the administration or management of the trust must be equitably exercised, however, for the benefit of the trust as a
whole. " * " (Fn. ref. omitted.)'
9
The extent of the fiduciary duties of a trustee who directs the operations of a corporation was defined as follows in In Re Hubbell's
WestlawNext © 2013 Thomson Reuters. No claim to original U.S. Government Works.
18
EFTA01103683
Estate of Gilman v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 65 T.C. 296 (1975)
Will, 302 N.Y. 246, 254, 97 N.E.2d 888, 891 (1951):
'Where • * • the trustees own, in their individual and representative capacities, the entire outstanding stock of a corporation, • * •
(the fiduciary) duty extends not only to the trust estate as such but also to the operations of the corporation. * • • 'It is well
established that where a trustee holds a working control of the stock in an estate corporation * * • (h) is cestuis que trustent may
require him to treat the corporate transactions as though they were his own transactions as trustee * • * ' (Citations omitted.)'
IO
These percentages are considerably greater than in United States v. Byrum, supra, where the minority shareholders held 29 percent,
17 percent, and 12 percent of the stock in the three corporations there involved. Under the law of New Hampshire, where Gilman
Paper was incorporated, the approval of two-thirds of all shareholders is required for many actions, including mergers,
consolidations, major recapitalizations, and the sale, lease, or exchange of all its assets. lilt. Rev. Stat. Ann. secs. 294:40, 294:41
(1966). Thus, contrary to one of respondent's arguments, the trust did not own sufficient shares to take these actions.
It
I. Alfred Levy, the attomey who drafted the 1940 agreement, testified:
'it was Mr. Isaac Gilman's desire to have this company remain in the hands of the family as long as they could and • • * he didn't
want his in-law's sons (sic) to fight and disturb the company so he, in his wisdom, decided that he— wanted Charles Gilman who,
incidentally, knew more about the paper industry and paper business than any of the others, he wanted him to have control— not
control of the company— but to have— be in a position to run it and operate it without interference by the in-laws who were also
working with the company • • • '
12
Levy was called as a witness by respondent and testified as follows with respect to the creation of the trust:
Q. To your knowledge, sir, were there any agreements either expressed or implied, that Mr. Gilman would continue in the same
General Manager and executive of the company?
A. There never was any agreement. The question never came up. There never was any discussion about Charles Gilman's leaving
or staying or Charles Gilman's authority or anything.
13
Beginning in 1955, the year before the notice of deficiency in that case was issued, and continuing through 1964, decedent's salary
in no year exceeded 4110,000, thus confirming the Supreme Court's view in United States v. Byrum, supra at 150, that the
Commissioner's disallowance of deductions for unreasonable compensation paid to corporate executives serves as a deterrent in
cases where the settlor of a trust of stock of a corporation remains an employee.
14
The minutes of the special meeting of the board of directors of Sept. 24, 1951, state that decedent vigorously opposed payment of
the 1951 dividend, pointing to corporate needs for the funds and stating that he would not accept it. Nonetheless, the other directors
authorized the dividend by a vote of 2 to 1, thus documenting petitioner's contention that decedent lacked a controlling voice in
corporate affairs. The minutes of that meeting contain the following:
'Mr. Bailin (one of decedent's brothers-in-law) continued the discussion and suggested that if the Chairman (decedent) as
shareholder does not want the declaration and payment of dividends on his stock that that is his business, but the other shareholders
have asked him to bring the question before the Board and he as director believes that the shareholders should be given an
additional dividend at this time, despite the advice of the Chairman and regardless of how the Chairman felt.'
A motion was then made and adopted by a vote of 2 to 1, calling for a dividend of S22 per share. As noted previously, decedent's
views on the declaration of dividends also failed to prevail in 1953 and 1954.
15
The parties stipulated: 'A copy of the record on appeal (of the Tax Court reasonable compensation case) is annexed hereto as Joint
Exhibit 23-W.' Rule 91(c) of the Rules of Practice and Procedure of this Court provides that: 'A stipulation when filed need not be
offered formally to be considered in evidence.' While the stipulation does not state what probative effect is to be given to the
contents of that record, we do not interpret the stipulation to mean that the parties agree to the truthfulness of all statements in that
record. We understand that it is to be weighed, in context, along with all the other evidence.
16
As to decedent's statement at that trial that he ran the business 'from top to bottom,' repeatedly referred to by respondent, the trial
judge wrote (Gilman Paper Co., T.C. Memo. 1960-13):
'The evidence of Charles' actual services is sparse and dependent upon his own testimony. The petitioner's 1951 return labels his
services as 'part-time.' Charles disputed this characterization but there is, in fact, no evidence of how much actual time he did
devote to the business of the petitioner. Indeed, other than such statements as that he ran the business 'from top to bottom,' there is
no persuasive evidence of the services performed by Charles for petitioner. His testimony in this regard was vague and in the form
of generalities. No other officer or employee of petitioner testified as to the nature and extent of Charles' services.'
Instead of finding that decedent was the domineering personality the respondent here contends that he was, the trial judge found
that 'Charles Gilman was an agreeable but entirely unexceptional individual.' Our search of that record discloses nothing basically
inconsistent with the testimony in the present case. We find nothing in that record, read in context, which supports an inference that
decedent retained the right to any economic benefit from the transferred stock.
17
The only case cited by the parties (and we have located none other) is Mahler v. Trico Products Corp., 296 N.Y. 902, 72 N.E.2d
622 (1947), stemming from Trico Products Corp. v. Commissioner, 137 F.2d 424 (2d Cir. 1943), cert. denied 320 U.S. 799 (1943),
WestlawNex! © 2013 Thomson Reuters. No claim to original U.S. Government Works.
19
EFTA01103684
Estate of Gilman v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 65 T.C. 296 (1975)
and Trice Products Corp. v. McGowan, 169 F.2d 343 (2d Cir. 1948), cert. denied 335 U.S. 899 (1948). As far as we can tell, that
case was not litigated to a conclusion.
The quotation is from Charles' testimony in Gilman Paper Co., 19 T.C.N. 81, affirmed 284 F.2d 697 (2d Cir.), the entire record of
which was made a part of the record in the present case. I do not understand that petitioners question the truthfulness of this
testimony or of his statement appearing infra, which is also taken from that source.
2
See n. 1 supra.
3
The remaining 4 shares owned by Isaac were distributed to his daughters, and were redeemed at a later time— in 1957— prior to
Charles' death.
4
The majority opinion concerns itself at some length with possible restraints that may have existed in respect of the control
embodied in the 6 shares. Apart from the fact that as a practical matter such possible restraints were in general not very meaningful
in the circumstances of this case, the critical consideration in this connection is that Charles bargained for such control (with
whatever restraints may have been attached thereto) and it was the availability of that control (subject to such possible restraints)
that may fairly be regarded as the 'enjoyment' of which the statute speaks.
5
The majority opinion refers to the Commissioner's determination that the 6 shares had a value of $24,500,000. But that valuation
was obviously based primarily upon including the control feature as the principal component of value. Moreover, the question of
value of these shares is vigorously contested by petitioners, and was severed for separate trial in the event that it should be held that
the shares are includable in the gross estate. Without intending to prejudge their value, it does seem from the materials before the
Court that the Commissioner's figure, as well as the deficiency itself, has been grossly overstated.
6
See, e.g., Old Colony Trust Co. v. United States, 423 F.2d 601 (1st Cir.); United States v. Powell, 307 F.2d 821 (10th Cir.); Estate
of Edward E. Ford, 53 T.C. 114, affirmed per curiam 450 F.2d 878 (2d Cir.); Estate of Ralph Budd, 49 T.C. 468; Estate of Marvin
L. Pardee, 49 T.C. 140; Estate of James II. Graham, 46 T.C. 415; Estate of Willard V. King, 37 T.C. 973.
7
The 'enjoyment' clause of sec. 2036(a)(1) is thus to be sharply distinguished from 2036(aX2) which was held in Byrum to turn
upon a legally enforceable right, and which was the principal issue considered in Byrum. It is similarly to be distinguished from
that portion of 2036(a)(1) relating to a retention of a 'right' to income from the transferred property. No such limiting language is
present in respect of the 'enjoyment' clause.
I
I note that, in relative terms, the bulk of the participation of the common stock, upon liquidation of the corporation, was on a share-
for-share basis with the preferred stock. The ratio was 10/9,911 at the time the trust was established and 6/5,268 at the time of the
settlor's death.
2
Compare Estate of Hilton W. Goodwyn, T.C. Memo. 1973-153; Estate of Arthur A. Chalmers, T.C. Memo. 1972-158.
End of Document
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