Cecil B. Furstenberg, Petitioner v. Commissioner
of Internal Revenue, Respondent
Docket No. 19977-80
UNITED STATES TAX COURT
83 T.C. 755; 1984 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 12; 83 T.C.
No. 43
November 26, 1984.
November 26, 1984, Filed
DISPOSITION: [**1] Decision
will be entered under Rule 155.
CASE SUMMARY:
PROCEDURAL POSTURE: Petitioner taxpayer sought review of the determination of
respondent, Commissioner of Internal Revenue, of deficiencies in the taxpayer's
federal income tax return for capital gains on the sale of stock, U.S.-source
dividends and interest, and distributions from two trusts, for the tax year in
which the taxpayer lost her U.S. citizenship and became a nonresident alien for
tax purposes.
OVERVIEW: The
taxpayer was a U.S. citizen who resided in Europe for many years. The taxpayer
became an Austrian citizen, lost her U.S. citizenship, and became a nonresident
alien for U.S. tax purposes. The Internal Revenue Service (IRS)
determined deficiencies in the taxpayer's federal income taxes for capital
gains on the sale of stock, U.S.-source dividends and interest, and
distributions from two trusts. The court held: 1) that the taxpayer met her
burden under I.R.C. § 877(e) of showing that tax avoidance was not a principal
purpose in expatriating; 2) that the taxpayer was not taxable under § 877 for
capital gains and U.S.-source dividends and interest after the date of
expatriation, but was taxable under I.R.C. § 871 and the French tax treaty
rate; 4) that the testamentary trust distributions were available for the
taxpayer's use and benefit before expatriation, were includable in income
during the period the taxpayer was a U.S. citizen, and were taxable at
graduated rates; and 5) that the taxpayer was not in constructive receipt of an
inter vivos trust distribution before her expatriation and properly reported
the distribution as received while she was a nonresident alien.
OUTCOME: The
tax court entered a decision in favor of the taxpayer with regard to capital
gains and U.S.-source dividends and interest made after the taxpayer's
expatriation, but entered a decision in favor of the IRS for trust
distributions made prior to the taxpayer's expatriation.
CORE TERMS: taxable year,
expatriation, citizenship, beneficiary, testamentary trust, treaty,
accumulation, distributed, dividend, principal purposes, stock, nonresident
alien, timing, marriage, tax avoidance, net income, capital gains,
distributable, graduated, marry, tax returns, alien, tax rates, gross income,
tax-avoidance, nonresident, preceding, resident, income taxes, constructive
LexisNexis(R)
Headnotes
Tax Law > Federal
Income Tax Computation > Sales & Exchanges > Capital Gains &
Losses (IRC secs. 1201-1202, 1211-1212, 1221-1223, 1231-1260, 1271-1278,
1281-1288, 1291-1298) > Treatment of Gains
Tax Law >
International Taxes > Americans Operating Abroad > Tax Treaties (IRC
secs. 894, 6114)
Tax Law > State &
Local Taxes > Income Tax > General Overview
[HN1] Under the
provisions of the Convention with the French Republic with Respect to Income
and Property, Jan. 1, 1967, U.S.-Fr., art. 12, 23 U.S.T. 20, capital gains are
not taxed.
Tax Law >
International Taxes > Americans Operating Abroad > Effectively Connected
Income (IRC sec. 1446)
Tax Law >
International Taxes > Americans Operating Abroad > Tax Treaties (IRC
secs. 894, 6114)
Tax Law >
International Taxes > Foreign Persons' Activities in the United States >
Nonresident & Resident Aliens (IRC secs. 864, 871-880) > Nonresident
Aliens
[HN2] Treas. Reg. § 1.871-13(a) requires that when
an individual changes his status from U.S. citizen to nonresident alien during
the taxable year, the individual is taxable as though his taxable year were
composed of two separate periods. During the first period of U.S. citizen
status, the individual is taxable under the rules generally applicable to U.S.
citizens. He is taxable on his worldwide income at the customary graduated tax
rates. Treas.
Reg. § 1.1-1(b). During the second period of nonresident alien status,
commencing on the date U.S. citizenship is renounced,
the individual is taxable under the special rules applicable to nonresident
aliens. He is taxed either, under I.R.C. § 871, at a flat 30 percent rate only
on gross income derived from sources within the United States or gross income
which is effectively connected with the conduct of a trade or business within
the United States, or, under I.R.C. § 894, at lower treaty rates, where
applicable.
Tax Law >
International Taxes > Foreign Persons' Activities in the United States >
Nonresident & Resident Aliens (IRC secs. 864, 871-880) > General
Overview
[HN3] Treas. Reg. § 1.6012-1(b)(2)(ii)(b)
provides that only one tax return is filed for a dual status year with allocations
reflected on a special schedule attached to the return. The proper form is
determined by the status of the taxpayer at taxable year end.
Tax Law > Federal Tax
Administration & Procedure > Burdens of Proof > General Overview
Tax Law >
International Taxes > Foreign Persons' Activities in the United States >
Nonresident & Resident Aliens (IRC secs. 864, 871-880) > Nonresident
Aliens
Tax Law > State &
Local Taxes > Administration & Proceedings > Tax Avoidance &
Evasion
[HN4] I.R.C. § 877 provides that a nonresident
alien individual who loses his U.S. citizenship shall be subject to tax on his
U.S.-source income, for the 10-year period following such loss, at the
graduated tax rates applicable to U.S. citizens rather than more favorable
rates applicable to nonresident aliens, unless the loss of citizenship did not
have for one of its principal purposes the avoidance of U.S. taxes. I.R.C. § 877(e) specifically assigns the
burden of proving the lack of a tax-avoidance motive on the expatriate if the
Commissioner of the Internal Revenue establishes that it is reasonable to
believe that the individual's loss of U.S. citizenship would result in a
substantial reduction in taxes.
Tax Law >
International Taxes > Foreign Persons' Activities in the United States >
Nonresident & Resident Aliens (IRC secs. 864, 871-880) > General
Overview
[HN5] See 26 U.S.C.S. §
877.
Evidence > Procedural
Considerations > Burdens of Proof > General Overview
Tax Law > Federal Tax
Administration & Procedure > Burdens of Proof > Fraud Cases (IRC sec.
7454)
Tax Law > State &
Local Taxes > Administration & Proceedings > Tax Avoidance &
Evasion
[HN6] In the context of
a fraud determination under I.R.C. § 6653(b), seldom will an individual be
forthcoming with direct evidence of his fraudulent intent, and the Commissioner
of the Internal Revenue, in order to carry his burden of proof, is often forced
to present indirect evidence of the individual's conduct on which inferences as
to fraudulent intent may be drawn.
Evidence > Privileges
> General Overview
Legal Ethics > Client
Relations > Confidentiality of Information
[HN7] If a client party
claims the attorney-client privilege, the prevailing view is that no inference
should be drawn against him as to the unfavorable nature of the information
sought.
Estate, Gift & Trust
Law > Trusts > General Overview
Tax Law > Federal
Taxpayer Groups > Income Taxation of Estates, Trusts & Beneficiaries
> Taxation of Beneficiaries (IRC secs. 661-668, 691-692)
Tax Law > State &
Local Taxes > Estate & Gift Tax > Estate Tax > General Overview
[HN8] I.R.C. § 668(a) provides that
accumulation distributions from complex trusts shall be included in the income
of a beneficiary of the trust when paid.
Treas. Reg. § 1.668(a)-1A(a) provides that the total of an accumulation
distribution is to be included in the income of the beneficiary in the taxable
year of the beneficiary in which such amounts are in fact paid unless the
taxable year of the beneficiary differs from the taxable year of the
trust. I.R.C. § 662(c) provides
that when a beneficiary has a taxable year different from that of the trust, an
accumulation distribution is to be included in income in the tax year of the beneficiary which coincides with, or encompasses, the end of
the tax year of the trust.
Tax Law > Federal
Taxpayer Groups > Income Taxation of Estates, Trusts & Beneficiaries
> Taxation of Beneficiaries (IRC secs. 661-668, 691-692)
[HN9] See 26 U.S.C.S. §
668(a).
Tax Law > Federal
Taxpayer Groups > Income Taxation of Estates, Trusts & Beneficiaries
> Taxation of Beneficiaries (IRC secs. 661-668, 691-692)
[HN10] See 26 U.S.C.S. §
662(a).
Tax Law > Federal
Income Tax Computation > Tax Accounting > Taxable Year (IRC secs.
441-444) > Definitions
Tax Law >
International Taxes > Foreign Persons' Activities in the United States >
Nonresident & Resident Aliens (IRC secs. 864, 871-880) > Nonresident
Aliens
[HN11] Treas. Reg. § 1.871-13(a)(1) provides
that when a taxpayer changes status from U.S. citizen to nonresident alien
during the taxable year, he is taxable for such year as though his taxable year
were comprised of two separate periods, the first covering income received as a
U.S. citizen and the second covering income received as a nonresident alien.
Tax Law >
International Taxes > Foreign Persons' Activities in the United States >
Nonresident & Resident Aliens (IRC secs. 864, 871-880) > Nonresident
Aliens
[HN12] Treas. Reg. § 1.871-13(a)(1) directs a
status-changing taxpayer to treat his taxable year as though it were comprised
of two separate periods. Section 1.871-13(a)(1) provides that a status-changing
taxpayer will have only one taxable year, albeit one which is divided into two
portions, each taxable at different rates. Consistent with the notion that only
a single taxable year is involved in a change-in-status situation, Treas. Reg.
§ 1.6012-1(b)(2)(ii) provides that only one tax return should be filed for a
dual status year, the proper form of which is determined by the status of the
taxpayer at the taxable year end, with allocations between the two periods
reflected on a separate schedule attached to the return.
Tax Law >
International Taxes > Foreign Persons' Activities in the United States >
Nonresident & Resident Aliens (IRC secs. 864, 871-880) > Nonresident
Aliens
[HN13] Treas. Reg. § 1.871-13(a)(1) provides
that an individual who is a citizen or resident of the United States at the
beginning of the taxable year but a nonresident alien at the end of the taxable
year, or a nonresident alien at the beginning of the taxable year but a citizen
or resident of the United States at the end of the taxable year, is taxable for
such year as though his taxable year were comprised of two separate periods,
one consisting of the time during which he is a citizen or resident of the
United States and the other consisting of the time during which he is not a
citizen or resident of the United States.
Tax Law > Federal
Taxpayer Groups > Income Taxation of Estates, Trusts & Beneficiaries
> Taxation of Beneficiaries (IRC secs. 661-668, 691-692)
Tax Law > Federal
Taxpayer Groups > S Corporations > Distributions (IRC secs. 1361, 1368)
Tax Law > State &
Local Taxes > Estate & Gift Tax > General Overview
[HN14] I.R.C. § 668(a) directs inclusion of an
accumulation distribution in the income of a beneficiary "when paid,"
and I.R.C. § 666(a) directs that the amount of the accumulation distribution
shall be deemed to be an amount distributed on the last day of each of the
preceding taxable years for which the undistributed income was accumulated.
Tax Law > Federal
Taxpayer Groups > Income Taxation of Estates, Trusts & Beneficiaries
> Taxation of Beneficiaries (IRC secs. 661-668, 691-692)
[HN15] See 26 U.S.C.S. §
666(a).
Contracts Law >
Negotiable Instruments > Discharge & Payment > Payment > Methods
& Places
Tax Law > Federal
Income Tax Computation > Tax Accounting > Cash Basis Method (IRC secs.
446, 448, 451, 461) > General Overview
[HN16] A cash method
taxpayer is in receipt of income as of the date a check is received, whether or
not such check is presented to a bank for payment.
Tax Law > Federal
Income Tax Computation > Tax Accounting > Cash Basis Method (IRC secs.
446, 448, 451, 461) > General Overview
Tax Law > State &
Local Taxes > Income Tax > General Overview
[HN17] The doctrine of
constructive receipt is based on the principle that income is
received by cash method taxpayers when it is made subject to the will
and control of the taxpayer and can be, except for his own action or inaction,
reduced to actual possession.
Tax Law > Federal
Income Tax Computation > Tax Accounting > Cash Basis Method (IRC secs.
446, 448, 451, 461) > Taxable Year of Inclusion
[HN18] Treas. Reg. § 1.451-2(a) provides that
income, although not actually reduced to a taxpayer's possession, is constructively
received by him in the taxable year during which it is credited to his account,
set apart for him, or otherwise made available so that he may draw upon it at
any time, or so that he could have drawn upon it during the taxable year if
notice of intention to withdraw had been given. Income is not constructively
received if the taxpayer's control of its receipt is subject to substantial
limitations or restrictions.
SYLLABUS
From Jan. 1,
1975, to Dec. 22, 1975, petitioner was a U.S. citizen. On Dec. 23, 1975, petitioner adopted
Austrian citizenship, thereby losing her U.S. citizenship. During 1975,
petitioner received distributions from two complex trusts of which she was a beneficiary.
Held, petitioner
did not have tax avoidance as one of her principal purposes in expatriating;
thus her income is not taxable under sec. 877, I.R.C. 1954.
Held, further, petitioner
is taxable at the graduated rates applicable to U.S. citizens on an
accumulation distribution from a complex testamentary trust received by her
before the date of her expatriation.
Held, further, petitioner
is taxable at the flat French Tax Treaty rate on a distribution of
distributable net income from a complex inter vivos trust because she neither
actually nor constructively received the distribution before the date of her
expatriation.
COUNSEL: Charles W.
Hall, William S. Lee, and Stephen M. Feldhaus, for the
petitioners.
David W.
Johnson
and Sheri A. Wilcox, for the respondent.
JUDGES: Featherston, Judge.
OPINION BY: FEATHERSTON
OPINION
[*755] Respondent determined deficiencies in
petitioner's Federal income taxes as set forth below:
Year |
Deficiency |
1975 |
$ 595,017 |
1976 |
1,476,718 |
1977 |
3,207,600 |
After
concessions, the issues for decision are as follows:
(1) Whether
petitioner's loss of her U.S. citizenship on December 23, 1975, had as one of
its principal purposes the [*756] avoidance of U.S.
taxes within the meaning of [**8] section 877(a); 1
(2) Whether,
even if we find that petitioner had tax avoidance as one of her principal
purposes in expatriating, the French Tax Treaty, rather than section
877, governs the taxation of petitioner's capital gains and U.S.-source
dividends and interest after the date of her expatriation; and
(3) In the
alternative, for the year 1975, whether petitioner is taxable on distributions
from two trusts at the graduated tax rates applicable to U.S. citizens, or at
the lower flat French Tax Treaty rate of 15 percent. Resolution of this issue turns on: (a)
Whether an accumulation distribution in the amount of $ 830,753.13 from the
Testamentary Trust of petitioner's mother, Sarah Campbell Blaffer, a complex
trust, although actually distributed before petitioner's expatriation, is
includable in petitioner's income for the period after she became a nonresident
alien; 2 and (b) whether petitioner was in constructive receipt
before December 23, 1975, the date of her expatriation, of a distribution of
distributable net income in the amount of $ 128,792.71 from the Cecil A.
Blaffer Trust No. 1, a complex inter vivos trust.
1 All section
references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 as amended, unless
otherwise noted.
[**9]
2 The parties
have stipulated an actual distribution to petitioner on Nov. 20, 1975, before
petitioner's expatriation, from the testamentary trust in the amount of $
995,724.76. Such distribution
consisted of $ 164,971.63 in distributable net income and $ 830,753.13 in
accumulated income. Petitioner
concedes that the portion of the distribution consisting of distributable net
income actually received before her expatriation is taxable at the normal
graduated rates applicable to U.S. citizens; at issue here is only the portion
consisting of the accumulation distribution.
FINDINGS OF
FACT
At the time
she filed her petition in this case, petitioner resided at 34 Boulevard
d'Italie, Monte Carlo, Monaco.
During the years at issue, petitioner kept her books and records and
filed her Federal income tax returns on a calendar year basis using the cash
receipts and disbursements method of accounting under section 446(c)(1).
Petitioner's Early
Background
Petitioner
was born on December 17, 1919, in Houston, TX. She is the daughter of Sarah Campbell
Blaffer and Robert Lee [*757] Blaffer; her father [**10] was one of the founders of Humble Oil
& Refining Co., the predecessor of Exxon Corp.
Petitioner's
formal education began at Kincaid, a day school in Houston. She then went to the Ethel Walker School
in Connecticut. During World War
II, petitioner attended a French school for girls in New York where instruction
was exclusively in French. She
later studied languages and art at the University of Mexico.
Because of
the financial success of her father, petitioner's family was able to travel a
great deal. As a child, petitioner
traveled extensively with her family, visiting Europe, and in particular, France.
Petitioner
had a close relationship as a child with her governess, a Frenchwoman named
"Suzanne Glemet," described by petitioner as a "second
mother." She spent several summers in France at the family home of her
governess in Charent, in the southwest part of France near Bordeaux.
Petitioner
learned to speak French as her "first language," i.e., before she
learned to speak English. She is so
fluent in French, in fact, that she is taken for a French person when she
speaks. In addition to English and
French, petitioner also speaks Spanish and German.
Petitioner's
Marriages to [**11] E.J. Hudson
and Richard J. Sheridan
On August 7,
1945, petitioner married E.J. Hudson (Hudson), a petroleum engineer. Petitioner and Hudson had two sons,
Edward Joseph Hudson, Jr. (Joe Hudson), born June 8, 1948, and Robert Lee
Blaffer Hudson (Lee Hudson), born April 4, 1951.
The Hudsons
resided in Houston during their marriage. They did, however, take many trips to
Europe and spent extended periods of time there, particularly in France, with
their children. On one occasion,
the Hudsons rented a home near Paris, and on two other occasions, they rented a
home in the south of France.
Petitioner's
sons were educated for the most part in the United States. Both children, however, attended school
in Paris for 1 year and in the south of France for 1 year. Both of petitioner's sons learned French
as children, and both became fluent in that language.
[*758] During her marriage to Hudson,
petitioner continued to travel as extensively as she had as a child. Her travel was "not always to his
[Hudson's] liking." Petitioner was divorced from Hudson on March 14,
1963. After her divorce from
Hudson, petitioner continued to travel frequently to Europe, including France
and some of the [**12] other countries.
On January
25, 1968, petitioner married Richard M. Sheridan (Sheridan), an international
executive of Mobil Oil Corp., in Tokyo, Japan. Petitioner resided with Sheridan in
Tokyo from January 1968 to June 1968; they moved to London in September
1968. When she moved to London,
petitioner moved her china, silver, and heirlooms there from Houston.
As of the
time of their move to London, Sheridan would have been eligible for retirement
from Mobil in approximately 8 or 9 years.
Petitioner owned some real estate in the south of France; 3
she discussed with Sheridan the possibility of their settling there permanently
after his retirement. Initially,
Sheridan agreed to such a plan, but during the course of their marriage, he
changed his mind. Petitioner
separated from Sheridan in the summer of 1970, and was divorced from him on
November 29, 1971.
3 Petitioner
owned a substantial portion of the stock of Societe Immobiliere Commerciale et Agricole (S.I.C.A.), a French corporation. S.I.C.A. was in the business of selling
lots which it owned at St. Paul de Vence in the south of France. Petitioner planned for S.I.C.A. to sell
all of its lots but one on which she and Sheridan would build a home and live.
[**13] Petitioner's Move to Paris
In August
1969, petitioner obtained an option for the purchase of an apartment in a
building to be constructed at 33 Avenue Foch in Paris; she purchased the
apartment in January 1970. When
construction of the apartment was completed, petitioner moved in, taking her
personal belongings from London. It
is stipulated that petitioner was a resident of France from 1970 through 1977,
the last year here in controversy.
Petitioner's
apartment in Paris was staffed by domestic help who kept the apartment open
regardless of whether petitioner was staying there or traveling. Petitioner kept an automobile in Paris
and maintained a bank account there; she subscribed to a French newspaper. She attended the Anglican Church [*759] located
on Avenue George V. Petitioner was a resident member, during the years at
issue, of the Polo Club in Paris and was also a Paris resident member of Le
Cercle du 33 Avenue Foch, another social club.
By this time
in her life, petitioner had a great many friends in France and other European
countries; indeed, the majority of her close friends were in Europe. While living in Paris, petitioner
pursued her interest in the art world,
[**14] visiting many museums
and attending art exhibits, openings, and auctions, both in Paris and elsewhere
in Europe. 4 She
attended music festivals in Bayreuth and Munich in West Germany; in Salzburg
and Vienna in Austria; and in the south of France and Italy.
4 As a child,
petitioner was encouraged by her mother to study the fine arts; petitioner's
mother made lifetime gifts to her of paintings by such artists as Matisse,
Braque, and Picasso. Further,
petitioner's corporation, Beekman Gallery Corp., which was operated by
petitioner with an associate, had been engaged in the business of buying and
selling art objects all over the world for approximately 20 years. The fact that petitioner lived in Europe
was advantageous in her work for the corporation, because there were more art
markets in Europe than in the United States.
Petitioner's Marriage to
Prince Tassilo von Furstenberg
Petitioner
first met Prince Tassilo von Furstenberg (Furstenberg) in Trieste, Italy, in
1961. When they met, petitioner was
in the process [**15] of obtaining her
divorce from Mr. Hudson.
Furstenberg, who was living in Italy at the time, was married to Clara
Agnelli (Agnelli), an Italian woman from whom he had been separated for
years. At that time, however,
divorces were prohibited under Italian law.
Petitioner
spent time with Furstenberg in Trieste, where he escorted her to parties and
introduced her to relatives and friends.
They met again a few weeks later in Austria, during the music festival
in Salzburg; petitioner accompanied Furstenberg to his nearby hunting lodge to
meet relatives and friends. As
early as their meetings in 1961, petitioner and Furstenberg found that they
were compatible and congenial. They
discussed the subject of marriage; however, neither of them was free to marry
at that time.
During the
period from 1961 to 1966, petitioner saw Furstenberg when she went to Europe
and they corresponded frequently.
After her divorce from Sheridan in 1971, petitioner saw Furstenberg in
Paris, Salzburg, and Vienna in 1972, and
[*760] they spent a great
deal of time together. By the early
1970's, Italian law had been changed to permit divorces and Furstenberg was
divorced from Agnelli.
Sometime
during the first [**16] 3 months of 1975,
petitioner and Furstenberg decided to marry. At that time, petitioner was 55
years of age, and Furstenberg was 71 years of age; petitioner's two sons and
Furstenberg's three children were living independently of their parents. Although the prior marriages of
petitioner and Furstenberg had been unsuccessful, they felt that they were
compatible and that they "could make a success" of their marriage.
At the time
of their decision to marry in 1975, petitioner was living in Paris, and
Furstenberg was living most of the time in Italy. They discussed where they would make
their home after the marriage and agreed to live for the time being in
petitioner's apartment in Paris.
With respect to where they might live later, they were both very partial
to the south of France.
They also
discussed the possibility of living in Austria. Furstenberg, an Austrian citizen, owned
a hunting lodge surrounded by some 70 acres of land in the Austrian town of
Strobl on St. Wolfgang Lake. The
land and lodge were purchased by Furstenberg's father and were the last of the
family properties owned by Furstenberg.
Petitioner was not adverse to the idea of living in Austria; however,
although [**17] Furstenberg was
emotionally attached to the property in Strobl, it was not equipped for winter
living and he did not like living in such cold weather. 5 Further, Furstenberg had
been living outside of Austria for several years, and he decided that he
preferred to live with petitioner in Paris for the time being.
5 Petitioner
and Furstenberg did, however, visit the lodge and spend time there during the
summer months. During July, August,
and September 1975, they spent 4 to 6 weeks in Austria to visit Furstenberg's
family and friends and spend time at the lodge.
Petitioner
and Furstenberg were married in Paris on October 17, 1975, in a civil ceremony
attended only by their children and a few close friends. A buffet luncheon reception was given
after the wedding at the apartment of Baron and Baroness Hubert von Pantz,
Austrian friends of the Furstenbergs, and was attended by approximately 150 persons,
including Baron Otto Eiselberg, the Austrian Ambassador to France. The Ambassador, assuming that petitioner
would [**18] adopt the [*761] Austrian citizenship of her new husband,
assured petitioner that he could simplify naturalization procedures for her.
The
Furstenbergs honeymooned in the United States from October 20, 1975, to
December 19, 1975. While on their
honeymoon, they visited New York, Houston, San Antonio, Dallas, and Victoria. They visited Furstenberg's son and
grandchildren, and petitioner introduced her new husband to family and friends
whom he had not previously met.
As of the
time of trial, petitioner had been married to Furstenberg for more than 8
years. Petitioner and Furstenberg
plan at their deaths to be buried at the Furstenberg family burial plot in
Strobl, Austria.
Petitioner's Adoption of
Austrian Citizenship
Members of
Furstenberg's family first became princes of the Holy Roman Empire in
1664. He was and is a citizen of
Austria; his Austrian heritage and ties are very important to him. At the time they decided to marry in
early 1975, Furstenberg explained to petitioner the importance of his Austrian
heritage and expressed to her his desire that she adopt Austrian nationality.
Cognizant of
the fact that "it was more or less expected of that type of European
aristocracy," [**19] petitioner confirmed
her decision with her commitment to Furstenberg that she would be "very
proud to marry him, bear his name, his title, and his nationality."
Although she had been living outside of the United States for some years, at no
time did petitioner ever consider the possibility of adopting European
citizenship until her engagement to Furstenberg.
Petitioner
felt that part of bearing Furstenberg's name and title "was to be Austrian
the way he wished it." Further, by 1975, petitioner had been living in
Europe continuously for 7 years; she preferred living in Europe more than anywhere else. Finally, petitioner felt that by
adopting Austrian citizenship, she "was going back to [her own] * * *
European heritage and roots." 6 At the time petitioner agreed
to adopt [*762]
Furstenberg's Austrian nationality, in early 1975,
when they decided to marry, she did not know that by so doing, she would lose
her U.S. citizenship. Further, she did not know what the tax consequences of
such an action would be.
6 None of
petitioner's great-grandparents was born in the United States. On her father's side of the family,
petitioner had two German great-grandparents, a French Huguenot-Alsatian
grandfather, and an Austrian great-grandmother. Petitioner's maternal great-grandparents
were all born in Scotland.
[**20] During their honeymoon, Furstenberg
reminded petitioner of her agreement to become an Austrian citizen. Petitioner told her husband that she
would attend to the matter as soon as she could.
The
Furstenbergs returned to Paris from their honeymoon in the United States on
December 19, 1975. They had planned
to go to Vicenza in northern Italy to spend Christmas Eve with one of
petitioner's sons and his wife and one of Furstenberg's sons. Knowing that her husband wished her to
adopt Austrian citizenship as soon as possible, petitioner went to the Austrian
consulate in Paris to make her application for Austrian citizenship on December
23, 1975. In her words, she chose
that date because --
It just
happened to be an afternoon that I could get off, and I knew that my husband
wanted me to do it before the end of the year. He had mentioned to do it as soon as
possible, and we were leaving that night for Italy. And I happened * * * to have that time *
* * to go down and make the application.
As he had
promised at petitioner's wedding reception, the naturalization process was
simplified for petitioner at the request of Baron Eiselberg, Austrian Ambassador
to France. Petitioner obtained [**21] Austrian citizenship
by naturalization on her own application on December 23, 1975; she thereby lost
her U.S. citizenship on the same day under the provisions of section 349(a)(1)
of the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952, 66 Stat. 267.
Petitioner's Discussions
With Her Accountant
During the
1970's, petitioner's U.S. tax returns were prepared by Arthur
Young & Co., an accounting firm. The individual at Arthur Young with whom
petitioner discussed her tax returns was Gordon S. Moore (Moore), who is now deceased. Petitioner's practice was to meet with
Moore once a year to discuss her current year's tax return, although some years
she may have met with Moore twice.
[*763] In late April or early May 1975, after
her decision to marry Furstenberg and adopt his citizenship, petitioner met
with Moore when she came to Houston to attend to her mother who was terminally
ill. At their meeting, petitioner
informed Moore that she intended to marry Furstenberg, adopt Austrian
citizenship, and live with her husband in Paris. She asked Moore to advise her concerning
the income tax consequences of her plans.
Moore
informed petitioner at this meeting that her plan to marry and adopt Austrian [**22] nationality would
"complicate" her taxes.
He warned petitioner about French taxes, telling her that the French
taxes could be very high, and that they were rising. Moore told petitioner that he would look
into it for her. Petitioner and Moore
did not discuss the two trust distributions which petitioner later received in
1975; nor did they discuss the possibility of any sale of securities. 7 Petitioner had no further
discussions with Moore during 1975 after this meeting.
7 As
described more fully, infra, petitioner sold securities in 1976 and
1977, realizing significant capital gains. Most of the securities sold by
petitioner were distributed to her upon the death of petitioner's mother. At the time of petitioner's meeting with
Moore, petitioner's mother had not yet died.
Petitioner's
next meeting with Moore did not occur until March 1976, after her expatriation,
when petitioner was in Houston for a trustees meeting of the Sarah Campbell
Blaffer Foundation. 8
Moore advised petitioner that by adopting Austrian [**23]
citizenship, she had put herself "in a position
to be challenged by the tax authorities in the United States." In
addition, she had exposed herself to "double taxation with the French and
the Americans." Petitioner did not understand the full implications of
what double taxation could mean to her, but she found it "alarming."
Moore further advised petitioner of the existence of a tax treaty
between France and the United States and suggested that she seek legal advice.
8 Petitioner's
mother established the Sarah Campbell Blaffer Foundation to which she
contributed many works of art and also funds so the foundation could add to its
collection. The foundation
operates a teaching art collection which is
shown in schools throughout Texas.
Petitioner is a trustee of the foundation.
[*764] 1975 Distribution From the
Testamentary Trust of Sarah Campbell Blaffer
Petitioner
was one of four beneficiaries of the remainder of a complex testamentary trust
(or trusts consisting of shares thereof) established under the will [**24] of her father, Robert
L. Blaffer, designated as the Testamentary Trust of Sarah Campbell Blaffer (the
testamentary trust). Petitioner's
mother, Sarah Campbell Blaffer, who was the sole beneficiary of the
testamentary trust during her lifetime, died on May 11, 1975. The will provided that upon Sarah
Campbell Blaffer's death and certain stated conditions, the trust for each
beneficiary was to terminate and such beneficiary was to receive her one-fourth
share, outright, free, and clear of the trust. Petitioner met the conditions stated in
her father's will and, upon her mother's death, became entitled to her share of
the trust assets.
Texas
Commerce Bank was the executor of Sarah Campbell Blaffer's estate, a very large
estate. Included in the estate were
many assets which required "quite a bit" of
activity by the bank in connection with its administration. The sole surviving trustee of the
testamentary trust was Mrs. Jane Owen, petitioner's sister. Mrs. Owen employed Texas Commerce Bank
in an agency capacity to assist her in her duties as trustee of the
testamentary trust to accomplish the transfer of some 39 different stocks to
the beneficiaries of the testamentary trust.
James [**25] M. Barr (Barr), a
Texas Commerce Bank trust officer, wrote to the various transfer agents for
each of the 39 securities requesting the reissuance of the shares held by the
testamentary trust in the names of the four beneficiaries of the trust. Most of the letters to the transfer
agents are dated December 22, 1975; a few are dated later. The task of writing to
the transfer agents was handled as a routine matter by the bank personnel
involved.
Texas
Commerce Bank was not requested to assist with the transfer of Exxon stock to
the beneficiaries of the testamentary trust. Mrs. Ora V. Howton (Mrs. Howton),
manager of Mrs. Blaffer's office, handled that particular transfer herself
because she was proud of her connection with Exxon; she felt she was part of
the Humble Oil family; and she knew the
[*765] personnel at the First
National City Bank who did the transfer work with respect to the Exxon stock.
By letter
dated November 18, 1975, Mrs. Owen sent 122,167 shares of Exxon Corp. stock, an
asset of the testamentary trust, to Mr. George Grosz, a trust officer with the
First National City Bank, the transfer agent for Exxon Corp. Mrs. Owen's letter
includes instructions concerning the [**26]
reissuance of the Exxon stock, requesting that 30,541
shares, i.e., one-fourth of the total shares, be reissued in petitioner's
name. Pursuant to Mrs. Owen's
request, the 30,541 shares of Exxon stock, having a total value of $ 2,653,249,
were reissued in the name of petitioner on the books of Exxon's transfer agent
on November 20, 1975.
Petitioner
knew that after the death of her mother, she would be receiving distributions
from the testamentary trust. During 1975 and 1976, petitioner had a close
relationship with her sister, Mrs. Owen, the trustee of the testamentary trust,
and would not have hesitated to ask her sister to assist her in any reasonable
manner. Petitioner felt that her
sister would have accommodated any reasonable request for her. Petitioner, however, did not give
anyone, in particular her sister, Mrs. Owen, or the personnel at the Texas
Commerce Bank, any instructions or make any requests with respect to the timing
of any distributions from the testamentary trust.
Knowing that
she was to receive distributions from the testamentary trust, indeed that
"they had begun distributing it," and knowing that she would be out
of the United States for an extended period [**27] when
such distributions would be made, petitioner executed, on December 17, 1975,
before she left for Europe after her honeymoon in the United States, a limited
power of attorney (power of attorney) appointing her son, Joe Hudson, as her
attorney-in-fact for the purpose of receiving petitioner's portion of the
assets to be distributed from the testamentary trust. Petitioner also executed
a partial receipt and release dated December 17, 1975 (partial receipt), in
connection with the distribution to her of various assets, including 30,541
shares of Exxon stock, from the testamentary trust.
It has been
stipulated that petitioner received distributions from the testamentary trust
in 1975, before the date of her expatriation, in the amount of $ 995,724.76
consisting of an [*766] accumulation
distribution of $ 830,753.13 and $ 164,971.63 in distributable net income.
1975
Distribution From the Cecil A. Blaffer Trust No. 1
On December
28, 1934, petitioner's parents established an inter vivos trust, the Cecil A.
Blaffer Trust No. 1 (Trust No. 1), of which petitioner was the sole
beneficiary. Trust No. 1 was a complex trust with a taxable year ending
December 31. In 1975, Texas
Commerce [**28] Bank was the trustee
of Trust No. 1; Leslie C. Lewis (Lewis), a senior vice president and trust
officer at Texas Commerce Bank, who had worked on the Blaffer family trust
accounts since he returned to Texas Commerce Bank from World War II, was the
trust officer in charge of the administration of Trust No. 1 in 1975.
With respect
to distributions, section II of the Cecil Amelia Blaffer Trust Agreement, the
governing instrument of Trust No. 1, provides as follows:
Section II.
The principal and the income of the Trust Fund shall be held in trust for the
benefit of my said daughter, Cecil Amelia Blaffer, until she attains sixty-five
(65) years of age: Provided, that when our said daughter becomes thirty (30)
years of age, the Trustee shall pay over to her during each year thereafter,
that fraction of the undistributed portion of the principal of the Trust Fund
represented by the figure one over the number of years remaining until our said
daughter attains the age of sixty-five (65) years. That is to say, when our said daughter
becomes thirty (30) years of age, during the first year thereafter there
shall be distributed to her one-thirty-fifth (1/35) of the undistributed
portion [**29] of the principal of
the Trust Fund; during the second year, one-thirty-fourth (1/34); etc., until
the thirty-fifth year after our said daughter attains thirty (30) years of age
is reached, when the remaining undistributed portion of the principal of the
Trust Fund shall be distributed to our said daughter. The income of the Trust
Fund shall be accumulated and added to the principal of the Trust Fund and
distributed as a part thereof in accordance with the foregoing provisions:
Provided, That our said daughter during any calendar year after she attains
legal age shall have the right to elect in writing to require the Trustee to
distribute to her during the succeeding calendar year the income, in whole or in
part, of the Trust Fund accruing during each succeeding calendar year; and the
election of our said daughter as to the amount of such income to be distributed
to her shall be binding in all respects upon the Trustee. Said payments of principal and income
of the Trust Fund shall be made quarterly to our said daughter on
January 1st, April 1st, July 1st and October 1st, of the year in which they
respectively become due.
[Emphasis added.]
[*767] Although section II, [**30] as
recited above, provided for quarterly distributions to petitioner of the
applicable fractional portion of principal in the year succeeding each birthday
on which the fraction was calculated, Texas Commerce Bank's administrative
practice, which was consistent with that which had been followed by the prior
trustee of Trust No. 1, was to make a single annual distribution at some time
following petitioner's birthday. Texas Commerce Bank's normal administrative
practice was to calculate the book value of the assets of Trust No. 1 as of petitioner's
birthday each year, and to apply the applicable fraction as provided in section
II of the trust agreement in determining the amount to be distributed to the
petitioner.
Distributions
following petitioner's birthday for the years 1970 through 1976 were recorded
on the bank's books as follows:
|
Date
distribution recorded |
Date
distribution calculated |
in Texas Commerce Bank
records |
Dec. 17,
1970 |
Dec. 30,
1970 |
Dec. 17,
1971 |
Dec. 23,
1971 |
Dec. 17,
1972 |
Dec. 22,
1972 |
Dec. 17,
1973 |
Jan. 25,
1974 |
Dec. 17,
1974 |
Dec. 17,
1974 |
Dec. 17,
1975 |
Dec. 23,
1975 |
Dec. 17,
1976 |
Mar.7, 1977 |
Each of the
foregoing dates on which the [**31] respective
distributions were recorded was probably the date on which the check for the
distribution was written; the check, however, could have been recorded the day
after it was written.
The
distribution from Trust No. 1 with respect to petitioner's birthday on December
17, 1975, was made by Texas Commerce Bank in the amount of $ 128,792.71 by its
check dated December 22, 1975.
Lewis transmitted the check to petitioner with his letter dated December
22, 1975, addressed to petitioner in care of Mrs. Howton, manager of petitioner's
mother's office. Lewis could not
recall whether he hand-delivered this letter or put it in the mail. The check was deposited in petitioner's
account on December 23, 1975.
Petitioner,
herself, never communicated with Lewis concerning distributions from Trust No.
1; only Mrs. Howton communicated with Lewis with respect to such
distributions. [*768] Mrs. Howton, however, never communicated
with Lewis concerning the timing of any distributions to petitioner from Trust
No. 1.
Petitioner
did no planning with respect to the 1975 distribution to her from Trust No. 1;
nor did she do anything with respect to the timing of such distribution. She did not communicate [**32] to Texas Commerce Bank
at any time prior to December 23, 1975, any information concerning her
intention to adopt Austrian citizenship. During 1975, petitioner did not even
know when the 1975 distribution from Trust No. 1 had been received for her
account.
Lewis did not
do, nor did he cause anyone else at Texas Commerce Bank to do, any planning
with respect to the 1975 distribution to petitioner from Trust No. 1, other
than to take the routine administrative steps which had been followed for a
number of previous years. Indeed,
Lewis was not aware of any action being taken with respect to the 1975 distribution which differed from the routine which had been
followed in previous years. He knew
of no particular reason for selecting December 22, 1975, as the date on which
the distribution check was transmitted to petitioner.
Because Lewis
had been the Texas Commerce Bank trust officer in charge of the Blaffer family
accounts for many years prior to 1975, it would have been usual procedure for
him to be informed of any matters affecting any of the Blaffer family accounts
with the bank. On December 23,
1975, Lewis had no knowledge with respect to petitioner's intention to adopt
Austrian [**33] citizenship.
Sales of Securities by
Petitioner in 1976 and 1977
As of
December 23, 1975, the date of her expatriation, petitioner had no intention of
selling any securities. After her
meeting with her accountant, Mr. Moore, in March 1976, petitioner understood
that as a result of the distribution of securities and other assets to her from
the testamentary trust which "considerably increased" her dividend
income, she faced "dangerous exposure" to potential tax problems,
particularly to the possibility of double taxation of her dividends by the
United States and France. At some
time after her March 1976 meeting with Mr. Moore, however, during 1976 and
1977, petitioner sold more stock than she had ever sold before.
[*769] In 1976, petitioner realized a net
capital gain in the amount of $ 2,601,680.06 from the sale of securities. Many of the securities sold were those which had been distributed to petitioner from the
testamentary trust. In 1977, petitioner again realized a net capital gain of $
7,219,440.35 from the sale of various securities. The great bulk of this gain, $
7,080,908.82, resulted from her sale of 148,742 shares of Exxon stock.
Petitioner
delayed her sale of [**34] the Exxon stock until
at least the summer of 1977 because she was "hesitant to part with
it." She considered Exxon to be part of her "father's endeavor"
and it was obviously sentimental to her.
Petitioner's mother, during her lifetime, had always cautioned her
children not to sell their Exxon stock.
Petitioner's Tax
Returns: 1974 -- 1977
Petitioner
filed income tax returns and reported income and tax liability for 1974 through
1977 as described below:
1974. -- As a
U.S. citizen for the entire year, petitioner filed a Form 1040 for 1974. She reported total income of $
766,297.08, consisting principally of dividend income from various sources in
the amount of $ 688,766.55. Her
total U.S. tax liability for the year, computed under the graduated rates
applicable to U.S. citizens, was $ 155,990.54.
1975. -- For
1975, petitioner filed a Form 1040NR, U.S. Nonresident Alien Income Tax Return,
attaching to it a Form 1040.
Schedule 1 of the Form 1040NR is entitled "General
Information" and states in relevant part:
Taxpayer was
a resident of France during the entire year of 1975. She was a U.S. Citizen until December
23, 1975 on which date she acquired the nationality of Austria [**35] by naturalization.
* * * *
Taxpayer's
income tax liability for the period from January 1, 1975 to December 22, 1975
is computed on Form 1040 and supporting schedules attached.
Taxpayer's
income during the period from December 23, 1975 to December 31, 1975 is
reported on page 4 of Form 1040NR.
The tax on dividends is computed at 15 percent in accordance with French
Income Tax Treaty, Article 9, copy of which is attached.
Taxpayer
received distributions in 1975 from the Testamentary Trust for Sarah C.
Blaffer. Copies of Schedules K-1
and J are attached.
[*770] On the Form 1040 attached to the Form
1040NR, petitioner reported the following as income received prior to December
23, 1975, the date of her expatriation:
Dividends (less $ 100
exclusion) |
$
644,659.19 |
Interest |
2,570.99 |
Capital gains (after
sec. 1202 deduction) |
488.55 |
Rental or royalty
income (net) |
56,603.32 |
Director fees |
1,200.00 |
Prize |
1,000.00 |
|
|
Total |
706,522.05 |
The tax on
the income reported on the Form 1040 as received prior to December 23, 1975,
was computed under the graduated tax rates applicable to U.S. citizens.
On the Form
1040NR, petitioner reported the following as income received during the period [**36] December 23, 1975,
through December 31, 1975, after her expatriation:
Dividends |
|
|
|
Blue Creek Ranch |
$ 812.50 |
Murray Corp. |
499.80 |
Wallace-Murray Pfd. |
30.60 |
Cecil A. Blaffer Trust
No. 1 |
128,793.00 |
Testamentary Trust for
Sarah Campbell Blaffer |
995,724.76 |
|
|
|
1,125,860.66 |
|
|
Oil and gas royalties |
|
|
|
Exxon Corp |
5,932.37 |
Amoco Production |
600.22 |
Scurlock Oil & Gas |
59.63 |
Miscellaneous |
2,785.05 |
|
|
|
9,377.27 |
|
|
Rent income |
|
|
|
Beekman Gallery, Inc. |
28,000.00 |
The tax on
the dividend income, including the income received by petitioner from the
distributions from Trust No. 1 and the testamentary trust listed on the Form
1040NR was computed using the 15-percent rate applicable under article 9 of the
Convention with the French Republic with Respect to Income and Property, July
28, 1967, 23 U.S.T. 20, T.I.A.S. 7270, effective January 1, 1967 (the French
Tax Treaty), the income tax treaty between the United States and
France. The tax on the remainder of
petitioner's reported income was [*771] computed at the flat
30-percent rate provided in section 871.
Petitioner's total U.S. tax liability for 1975, as reported, was $
341,998.
Petitioner
did not file French income tax returns while she [**37] was
a citizen of the United States. In
reliance on the advice of her French accountants, she, likewise, did not file a
French income tax return for the short period after her expatriation from
December 23, 1975, through December 31, 1975. Petitioner did not pay any French income
taxes on the 1975 trust distributions.
1976
and 1977. -- Petitioner filed Forms 1040NR for
1976 and 1977, reporting income as follows:
|
1976 |
1977 |
Dividends |
$ 842,898 |
$ 591,388 |
Royalties |
96,191 |
124,357 |
Director fees |
200 |
200 |
Petitioner
computed the U.S. tax with respect to this income under the applicable
percentages set forth in the French Tax Treaty and section 871. During 1976, petitioner realized capital
gains from the sale of various securities in the amount of $ 2,601,680. [HN1] Under the provisions of
article 12 of the French Tax Treaty, capital gains are not taxed. Accordingly, attached to the 1976 Form
1040NR is Schedule 4 entitled "Gross Income Exclusion" which states
the following:
For the year
ended December 31, 1976, taxpayer has excluded: * * * capital gains in the
amount of $ 2,601,680 received from the sale of personal property not used in a
trade or business, pursuant to [**38] Internal Revenue Code
Section 871 and Article 12 of the U.S. - French Tax Treaty * * *
During 1977,
petitioner realized capital gains, principally from the sale of her Exxon
stock, in the amount of $ 7,225,295.
As she did in her 1976 return, petitioner excluded the capital gains
from income under article 12 of the French Tax Treaty. She attached to her 1977 Form 1040NR
Schedule 4 entitled "Gross Income Exclusion" which states the
following:
For the year
ended December 31, 1977, taxpayer has excluded: * * * capital gains in the
amount of $ 7,225,295 received from the sale of personal property not used in a
trade or business, pursuant to Internal Revenue Code Section 871 and Article 12
of the U.S. - French Tax Treaty.
[*772] In 1976, petitioner's reported U.S. tax
liability was $ 155,352; her French tax liability was $ 364,292. In 1977, petitioner's reported U.S. tax
liability was $ 126,075; petitioner's French tax liability for the year was
1,628,897F. 9
Petitioner's 1975, 1976, and 1977 income tax returns were prepared by Arthur
Young & Co., and she signed them as presented to her without
question or change.
9 The only
evidence in the record concerning petitioner's French tax liability for 1977 is
her 1977 French tax return on which her tax liability was reported in French
francs.
[**39] In the notice of deficiency, respondent
determined that the principal purpose of petitioner's expatriation was the
avoidance of U.S. income taxes, and relying upon section 877, determined the
deficiencies set forth above by applying the graduated tax rates normally
applicable to U.S. citizens with respect to petitioner's capital gains and
U.S.-source income received after the date of her expatriation.
OPINION
1. The
Tax-Avoidance Issue
Petitioner, a
U.S. citizen by birth, adopted Austrian citizenship on December 23, 1975,
thereby losing her U.S. citizenship. The controversy at hand centers on the
income tax consequences flowing from petitioner's expatriation.
Until
December 23, 1975, the date of her expatriation, petitioner reported her income
and paid U.S. income taxes based on the graduated tax rates applicable to all
U.S. citizens. Thereafter, as an
Austrian citizen residing in Paris, petitioner became a nonresident alien for
U.S. tax purposes. She reported her
U.S.-source income as a nonresident alien for the last week of 1975 (December
23 to 31) and for 1976 and 1977. 10
In her [*773]
nonresident alien returns (Forms 1040NR) for the
periods at issue, petitioner reported [**40] that, as a nonresident alien residing in
France, she was taxable under section 871 and the French Tax Treaty as
follows:
(1) She was
subject to tax on her U.S.-source dividends and interest at the respective
rates of 15 percent and 10 percent under articles 9 and 10 of the French Tax Treaty. Petitioner received substantial trust
distributions in late 1975 which she reported on her
1975 nonresident alien return as dividends taxable at the 15-percent rate under
the French Tax Treaty;
(2) She was
subject to tax on her other items of U.S.-source income not covered by the treaty
(royalties, rent, director fees) at the flat rate of 30 percent under section
871; and
(3) She was
not subject to U.S. tax on her capital gains under article 12 of the French Tax
Treaty.
10 [HN2] Sec. 1.871-13(a), Income Tax
Regs., requires that when an individual changes his status from U.S. citizen to
nonresident alien during the taxable year, the individual is taxable as though
his taxable year were composed of two separate periods.
During the
first period of U.S. citizen status, the individual is taxable under the rules
generally applicable to U.S. citizens, i.e., he is taxable on his worldwide
income at the customary graduated tax rates. Cook v. Tait, 265 U.S. 47 (1924);
Filler v. Commissioner, 74 T.C. 406, 410 (1980); sec. 1.1-1(b), Income
Tax Regs.
During the
second period of nonresident alien status, commencing on the date U.S.
citizenship is renounced, the individual is taxable under the special rules
applicable to nonresident aliens, i.e., in general, he is taxed either, under
sec. 871, at a flat 30-percent rate only on gross income derived from sources
within the United States or gross income which is effectively connected with
the conduct of a trade or business within the United States, or, under sec.
894, at lower treaty rates, where applicable.
[HN3] Sec. 1.6012-1(b)(2)(ii)(b),
Income Tax Regs., provides that only one tax return
should be filed for a dual status year with allocations reflected on a special
schedule attached to the return; the proper form is determined by the status of
the taxpayer at taxable yearend.
Thus, for 1975, the year of her change in status, petitioner filed a
Form 1040NR, a nonresident alien return.
See
discussion, infra, in part 2, A, concerning the issue of whether a
change in status creates 2 taxable years.
[**41] Respondent contends that the loss of
petitioner's citizenship had for one of its principal purposes the avoidance of
U.S. taxes so as to subject petitioner's U.S. source income and capital gains
to taxation under the graduated tax rates made applicable by section 877 to
former U.S. citizens who expatriate for tax-avoidance purposes. Petitioner, in the first instance, urges
us to resolve this factual issue in her favor by finding that tax avoidance was
not one of her principal purposes in expatriating, thus finding her to be
taxable as a nonresident alien under the more favorable rates prescribed by
section 871 and the French Tax Treaty. 11
11 Assuming
that the principal purpose of her expatriation was not tax avoidance, the
parties have stipulated to all of the conditions necessary for the application
of arts. 9, 10, and 12 of the French Tax Treaty to petitioner's capital
gains and U.S-source dividends and interest.
Petitioner,
however, raises an alternative legal issue as well. She contends that even were we to [**42] conclude that tax
avoidance was one of her principal purposes in expatriating, she is,
nevertheless, entitled, as a nonresident alien resident in France beginning
December 23, 1975, to be taxed on her capital gains and U.S.-source dividends
and interest under the [*774] French Tax Treaty. 12 Petitioner contends that
because the French Tax Treaty and section 877 are inconsistent with
respect to the rates of U.S. tax applicable to her, it is the French Tax Treaty,
adopted subsequent to section 877, which takes precedence. 13 Respondent, however, takes
the position that under article 22(4)(a), the "savings clause" of the
French Tax Treaty, the benefits of the treaty are not available
to former U.S. citizens who have lost their U.S. citizenship for tax-avoidance
purposes. 14 Because we
resolve the factual issue in favor of petitioner, we find it unnecessary to
decide the legal issue.
12 Petitioner
concedes on this issue that should we find tax avoidance a principal purpose in
her expatriation, the remainder of her U.S.-source income is taxable under sec.
877.
13 Sec. 877
was added to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 as amended, by H.R. 13103, 90th
Cong., 1st Sess. (1966), the Foreign Investors Tax Act of 1966, Pub. L. 89-809, 80 Stat. 1541, signed into law by the
President on Nov. 13, 1966.
The French
Tax Treaty, 19 U.S.T. 5280, T.I.A.S. 6518, effective during the years at
issue was signed July 28, 1967; the U.S. Senate gave its advice and consent to
ratification of the treaty on June 6, 1968; it was brought into force by
an exchange of instruments of ratification on July 11, 1968.
[**43]
14 During the
years at issue, art. 22(4)(a) of the French Tax Treaty, known as the
"savings clause," provided as follows:
"The
United States may tax its citizens and residents as if the present Convention
had not come into effect."
By a Protocol
to the French Tax Treaty, 1979-2 C.B. 411, 413, T.I.A.S. 9500, signed
Nov. 24, 1978, in force Oct. 27, 1979, by exchange of instruments of
ratification and effective for tax years beginning on or after Jan. 1, 1979,
the savings clause of the French Tax Treaty was changed to read as
follows:
"The United
States may tax its citizens and residents as if the present Convention had not
come into effect. For this purpose
the term "citizen" shall include a former citizen whose loss of
citizenship had as one of its principal purposes the avoidance of income tax,
but only for a period of 10 years following such loss."
Respondent
contends, as detailed more fully in Rev. Rul. 79-152, 79-1 C.B. 237, that this
change was a "clarifying change" only and that, even though the
French Tax Treaty did not, during the years at issue, specifically
reserve the right of the United States to tax under sec. 877, petitioner is
nonetheless subject to tax under that section.
[**44] In general, [HN4] section 877 provides that a
nonresident alien individual who loses his U.S. citizenship shall be subject to
tax on his U.S.-source income, for the 10-year period following such loss, at
the graduated tax rates applicable to U.S. citizens rather than more favorable
rates applicable to nonresident aliens, unless the loss of citizenship did not
have for one of its principal purposes the avoidance of U.S. taxes. 15 See H.
Rept. [*775] 1450, 89th Cong., 2d Sess. (1966),
1966-2 C.B. 967, 982; S. Rept. 1707, 89th Cong., 2d Sess. (1966), 1966-2 C.B.
1059, 1078. Section 877(e) specifically assigns the burden of proving the lack
of a tax-avoidance motive on the expatriate if respondent establishes that it
is reasonable to believe that the individual's loss of U.S. citizenship would
result in a substantial reduction in taxes. The parties have stipulated that
respondent has met his initial burden of proof under section 877(e). Thus, the burden is on petitioner to
demonstrate that tax avoidance was not one of her principal purposes in
expatriating. The issue is purely factual.
15 [HN5] SEC. 877. EXPATRIATION TO AVOID TAX.
(a) In
General. -- Every nonresident alien
individual who at any time after March 8, 1965, and within the 10-year period
immediately preceding the close of the taxable year lost United States
citizenship, unless such loss did not have for one of its principal purposes
the avoidance of taxes under this subtitle or subtitle B, shall be taxable for
such taxable year in the manner provided in subsection (b) if the tax imposed
pursuant to such subsection exceeds the tax which, without regard to this
section, is imposed pursuant to section 871.
(b)
Alternative Tax. -- A nonresident
alien individual described in subsection (a) shall be taxable for the taxable
year as provided in section 1, 55, or 402(e)(1), except that --
(1) the gross income shall include only the gross income
described in section 872(a) (as modified by subsection (c) of this section),
and
(2) the deductions shall be allowed if and to the extent that
they are connected with the gross income included under this section, except
that the capital loss carryover provided by section 1212(b) shall not be
allowed; and the proper allocation and apportionment of the deductions for this
purpose shall be determined as provided under regulations prescribed by the
Secretary.
For purposes
of paragraph (2), the deductions allowed by section 873(b) shall be allowed;
and the deduction (for losses not connected with the trade or business if
incurred in transactions entered into for profit) allowed by section 165(c)(2)
shall be allowed, but only if the profit, if such transaction had resulted in a
profit, would be included in gross income under this section.
(c) Special Rules
of Source. -- For purposes of
subsection (b), the following items of gross income shall be treated as income
from sources within the United States:
(1) Sale of
property. -- Gains on the sale or
exchange of property (other than stock or debt obligations) located in the
United States.
(2) Stock or
debt obligations. -- Gains on the
sale or exchange of stock issued by a domestic corporation or debt obligations
of United States persons of the United States, a State or political subdivision
thereof, or the District of Columbia.
(d) Exception
for Loss of Citizenship for Certain Causes. -- Subsection (a) shall not apply to a
nonresident alien individual whose loss of United States citizenship resulted
from the application of section 301(b), 350, or 355 of the Immigration and
Nationality Act, as amended (8 U.S.C. 1401(b), 1482, or 1487).
(e) Burden of
Proof. -- If the Secretary
establishes that it is reasonable to believe that an individual's loss of
United States citizenship would, but for this section, result in a substantial
reduction for the taxable year in the taxes on his probable income for such
year, the burden of proving for such taxable year that such loss of citizenship
did not have for one of its principal purposes the avoidance of taxes under
this subtitle or subtitle B shall be on such individual.
[**45] Although we have never specifically
interpreted the phrase "one of its principal purposes" in the context
of section 877, we find instructive the following definition set forth in Dittler
Bros., Inc. v. Commissioner, 72 T.C. 896, 915 (1979), affd. without published opinion 642 F.2d 1211 (5th Cir. 1981), in
which the Court was called upon to determine, under section 367, whether or not
a certain transaction was in "pursuance of [*776] a plan having as one of its principal
purposes the avoidance of Federal income taxes:"
we believe that
the term "principal purposes" should be construed in accordance with
its ordinary meaning. Such a rule of statutory construction has been endorsed by the Supreme
Court. Malat
v. Riddell, 383 U.S. 569, 571 (1966). Webster's New Collegiate
Dictionary defines "principal" as "first in rank, authority,
importance, or degree." Thus, the proper inquiry hereunder is whether the
exchange of manufacturing know-how was in pursuance of a plan having as one of
its "first-in-importance" purposes the avoidance of Federal income
taxes.
After careful
consideration of all [**46] the evidence, we
conclude that petitioner has carried her burden under section 877(e); we are convinced
that petitioner did not have tax avoidance as one of her principal or
"first in importance" purposes in expatriating.
With respect
to her intent in expatriating, petitioner testified that: She and Furstenberg
decided to marry in early 1975. At
that time, Furstenberg, a titled Austrian aristrocrat, requested that
petitioner adopt his Austrian citizenship. Although she had been living abroad
for more than 7 years, petitioner had never before considered expatriation.
Desiring, however, to do what she could to make her third marriage a success
and cognizant of the fact that it was general European custom for a wife to
adopt the nationality of her husband, petitioner committed herself at the time
of her decision to marry Furstenberg in early 1975 to "bear his name, his
title, and his nationality."
Petitioner's
decision to expatriate at the time of her marriage was further motivated, as
she testified, by her ever-increasing, lifelong ties to Europe; her preference
for living in Europe rather than anywhere else; her personal and professional
interest in the arts; the fact that, as of [**47] 1975,
her social life was centered in Europe, where she had been living for more than
7 years; and the fact that both of her parents were dead and her children were
grown. In sum, her expatriation was
the result of both her commitment to marry Furstenberg and the ultimate
culmination of her lifelong ties to Europe. Petitioner specifically declared that
tax avoidance was neither a principal purpose, nor any purpose whatsoever, in
her decision to adopt Austrian citizenship. We found petitioner to [*777] be
a straightforward and credible witness; we have no reason to disbelieve or
doubt her testimony.
Respondent,
citing cases dealing with determinations of fraud under section 6653(b),
contends that intent, or the lack thereof, can seldom be established by direct
proof and, therefore, urges us to examine petitioner's entire course of conduct
to determine her intent in expatriating. It is true that [HN6] in the context of a fraud
determination, seldom will an individual be forthcoming with direct evidence of
his fraudulent intent, and respondent, in order to carry his burden of proof,
is often forced to present indirect evidence of the individual's conduct on
which inferences as to fraudulent [**48] intent
may be drawn. In this case,
however, petitioner has the burden of proof, and she has squarely addressed the
issue of her intent through her uncontroverted testimony. Moreover, an examination of petitioner's
conduct with respect to her expatriation, in our view, only serves to
corroborate her testimony concerning her lack of tax-avoidance motives.
Petitioner
met with her accountant, Gordon Moore, in late April or early May 1975, only
after her decision to marry Furstenberg and her commitment to adopt Austrian
citizenship had been made. She
asked him to advise her concerning the income tax consequences of her planned
marriage and expatriation. At that time, he warned petitioner that her plan to
marry and expatriate would "complicate" her taxes; that French taxes
could be very bad and were getting worse.
Petitioner had no further discussions with Moore until March 1976, after
her expatriation, when he advised her of the risk of double taxation on her
dividends by France and the United States.
Only after
this second meeting with Moore, which occurred after her expatriation, did
petitioner decide to sell the bulk of the securities that she received in the
1975 distribution [**49] from the testamentary
trust. Sales of those securities resulted in substantial capital gains in 1976
and 1977. Indeed, she did not sell
her Exxon stock, a valuable family asset, until 1977. That she sold her Exxon stock at all,
against her mother's express advice, is striking evidence that petitioner's
sales of securities stemmed from her concern with respect to double taxation
on [*778] her
dividends after her expatriation rather than any preconceived plan of tax
avoidance. 16
16 According
to the testimony of a French tax law expert, if petitioner's dividend income
were to be taxed by the United States under sec. 877, the aggregate marginal
rate of tax on her dividends would be 115 percent, 70 percent to the United
States and 45 percent to France. Because
most of petitioner's income was derived from U.S. sources, her sec. 901 foreign
tax credit would be minimal.
The foregoing
chronology of events makes clear that at the time of her expatriation,
petitioner was aware not of any possible tax advantages, but [**50] only
of possible negative tax consequences which could follow from giving up her
U.S. citizenship. Petitioner's decision to sell her securities was made after
her expatriation. Avoidance of taxes, therefore, could not have been a
consideration either as of the date of her decision to expatriate or the date
of expatriation, itself.
Further,
rather than concluding that the timing of petitioner's expatriation points to
her tax-avoidance motives, as urged by respondent, we think the timing of her
expatriation is compelling evidence, itself, that petitioner's expatriation was
inextricably linked only to her commitment to marry Furstenberg, rather than to
any plan of tax avoidance. Petitioner expatriated on December 23, 1975, only 4
days following her return from her honeymoon and the day of her scheduled
departure for a Christmas holiday in Italy. Had her expatriation not been tied to
her marriage to Furstenberg, petitioner, who had been living in Europe for more
than 7 years and in France for at least 5 years, could have expatriated years
earlier. She could have, thereby,
claimed the benefits of the French Tax Treaty years earlier.
In addition,
knowing that she was eventually to receive [**51] sizable
trust distributions, petitioner, were she as sophisticated a taxpayer as
respondent would have us believe, could surely have coordinated the timing of
her expatriation, viz-a-viz the trust distributions, more favorably. She could have expatriated before both
trust distributions. Surely petitioner
would not have given her son the power of attorney and receipt and release
authorizing him to receive her trust distribution at any particular time. By the terms of Trust No. 1, she was
legally entitled to quarterly distributions, beginning on January 1, 1976,
after her December 17, 1975, birthday; yet she did nothing to cause the trustee
to vary its administrative [*779] practice of
distributing shortly after her December birthday the full amount to which she
was entitled for the succeeding year.
The timing of the November 1975 distribution from the testamentary trust
was within the control of her sister as trustee; yet petitioner did nothing to
delay the distribution so that it would be received in the taxable year after
her expatriation was complete.
The timing of
these trust distributions, which appear to have been made in the routine course
of business, corroborates petitioner's [**52]
testimony that she did no planning with respect to,
and was not even aware of, the timing of the distributions. That she did no planning with respect to
the trust distributions is evidence of her lack of tax-avoidance motives in
giving up her U.S. citizenship. In our view, none of petitioner's actions, or
her omissions to act, were done with tax avoidance as
a first-in-importance purpose.
Petitioner's
actions here are clearly distinguishable from those of Max Kronenberg, the
taxpayer in Kronenberg v. Commissioner, 64 T.C. 428 (1975), the only
other case in which the Court has decided the issue of tax avoidance as a
principal purpose in expatriation under sec. 877. Kronenberg was a naturalized U.S.
citizen who had retained his Swiss citizenship. From 1955 through 1966,
Kronenberg owned 95.30 percent of the outstanding stock and was the president
and co-director, with his wife, of PIC, Inc., a mica importing business. In 1966, Kronenberg decided to sell the
business and considered moving back to Switzerland. On Feb. 26, 1966, PIC's shareholders voted
to effect a complete liquidation under sec. 337 to be completed by Feb. 25,
1967. In December 1966, [**53]
Kronenberg learned from his accountant that if he lost
his U.S. citizenship prior to receiving the liquidating distribution from PIC,
Inc., it would not be subject to tax by the United States. The Court described Kronenberg's subsequent
activities as follows (64 T.C. at 434-435):
After learning of such
tax advantage, he engaged in a flurry of activity: he engaged attorneys to
prepare the papers and complete the liquidation of PIC; he sold the family
house; he made all the necessary arrangements for the transportation of his
family and possessions to Switzerland; on February 20, 1967, the shareholders
and directors of PIC met and took the necessary actions to complete the
liquidation of the corporation; he instructed his attorneys to distribute to
him all the assets of PIC at the latest possible time; he and his family
actually left the United States on February 21, 1967, and [*780] arrived in Zurich on the following day;
on February 23, 1967, he and his wife renounced their U.S. citizenship; and in
accordance with his instructions, the transfer of funds from PIC to his
personal account was carried out by his attorneys on February 24, 1967.
Finding [**54]
Kronenberg's activities of January and February 1967
"too perfect to be unplanned" (64 T.C. at 435), the Court concluded
that the evidence failed to show that Kronenberg gave any consideration to
renouncing his U.S. citizenship before he learned of the tax advantages of
doing so. The Court was
"compelled" to find that Kronenberg had expatriated for tax-avoidance
purposes.
In contrast,
petitioner's activities were too imperfect from a tax standpoint to have been
planned. As we have discussed,
petitioner engaged in no "flurry of activity" in connection with her
expatriation. She decided to expatriate before she knew anything about the tax
consequences thereof; she had lived in Europe for more than 7 years; at the
time of her expatriation she knew of only possible negative tax effects; and
her activity, or lack of it, viz-a-viz the trust distributions indicates that
she did no planning whatsoever to delay them until after her expatriation.
Respondent
has offered no evidence to refute or impeach petitioner's testimony concerning
her motives for expatriating. He urges us, however, to infer a tax-avoidance
motive because petitioner never resided in Austria [**55] after
adopting Austrian citizenship; because of the "fortunate" timing of
her expatriation concommitant with the testamentary trust distribution of
various securities, in 1976 and 1977, resulting in the realization of
substantial capital gains which, but for her expatriation, enabled petitioner
to reap significant tax benefits; and because petitioner is a wealthy,
intelligent woman who in the past had relied on tax counsel. 17 This we decline to do.
17 We will
not draw any negative inference against petitioner, as urged by respondent, as
a result of petitioner's assertion of the attorney-client privilege in these
proceedings. See 8 J. Wigmore,
Evidence, sec. 2322, at 630 (1961):
[HN7] "If a client party claims the [attorney-client] privilege,
the prevailing view * * * is that no inference should be drawn against him as
to the unfavorable nature of the information sought."
First, we do
not find as troubling, as does respondent, the fact that petitioner never
resided in Austria after adopting Austrian citizenship. It merely [**56] corroborates
petitioner's testimony [*781] that she adopted the Austrian citizenship
of her husband as part of her marriage commitment, and reflects her belief that
she was conforming to the custom of the European aristocracy which she was
joining by her marriage. Petitioner testified that she was not adverse to living in Austria; indeed, she spent more than a
month there in the summer of 1975, staying at Furstenberg's hunting lodge in
Strobl. We think it quite
reasonable, nonetheless, for petitioner and Furstenberg to have settled in
Paris after their marriage. Furstenberg, who was 71 years old at the time of
the marriage, had himself been living outside of Austria for many years, and he
did not like living in Austria's harsh climate. Petitioner had lived in her Paris
apartment for 5 years and was obviously settled into the social life
there. That they chose to live in
Paris rather than Austria, therefore, raises no suspicion of tax-avoidance
motives.
Further, we
draw no negative inference from the timing of the testamentary trust
distribution in light of petitioner's uncontroverted testimony that at the time
of her expatriation she had no intention of selling any of the [**57]
securities distributed. The record is clear that only
after her meeting with her accountant in March 1976, after her expatriation,
did she decide to sell the securities out of her concern with respect to the
possibility of double taxation of her dividends. Moreover, as we have
discussed, had tax considerations played an important role in her decisions,
she could have caused the trust distributions to have been
more favorably timed.
Finally,
although it is true that petitioner is a wealthy and intelligent woman, she has
no more than a layman's knowledge of the tax law; indeed, she admitted that she
did not read or understand her tax returns for the years at issue, she merely
signed what was presented to her by her accountants. Thus, we cannot infer a tax-avoidance
motive merely by virtue of her wealth and intelligence.
Petitioner,
in this case, has had the burden of proving a negative, i.e., a lack of
intent. Admittedly, this is usually
a difficult thing to do. She
testified that tax avoidance was not a purpose in her expatriation; her actions
and the surrounding circumstances support her testimony. There is no evidence other than the
magnitude of the deficiencies here in dispute [**58] to
suggest otherwise. Although those
deficiencies are sufficient to [*782] place the burden of
proof on petitioner under section 877(e), they are not enough to refute the
direct credible testimony presented by petitioner and the corroborating facts
and circumstances. We think
petitioner has adequately met her burden of proving a lack of tax-avoidance
motives. Thus, we conclude that because tax avoidance was not one of
petitioner's principal purposes in expatriating, she is not taxable under
section 877.
2. Taxability
of the 1975 Trust Distributions
Having
decided above that, after her expatriation, petitioner is not taxable under
section 877, but rather, under section 871 and the French Tax Treaty, we
turn to the alternative issues raised by respondent with respect to the proper
tax rates applicable to the two trust distributions received by petitioner in
1975.
On November
20, 1975, petitioner received a distribution of $ 995,724.76 from the
testamentary trust, a complex trust with a taxable year ending December 31,
consisting of distributable net income in the amount of $ 164,971.63 and an
accumulation distribution in the amount of $ 830,753.13. In December 1975, petitioner [**59] received a
distribution consisting entirely of distributable net income in the amount of $
128,792.71 from Trust No. 1, also a complex trust, with a taxable year ending
December 31. Petitioner reported
both trust distributions on her 1975 Form 1040NR as dividend income received
after December 23, 1975, the date of her expatriation, and taxable at the flat
rate of 15 percent under article 9 of the French Tax Treaty.
Respondent
contends that petitioner was in actual receipt of the accumulation distribution
from the testamentary trust and in constructive receipt of the distribution
from Trust No. 1 before the date of her expatriation, and, therefore, both
distributions are taxable at the graduated tax rates applicable to petitioner
for the period of 1975 during which she was still a U.S. citizen. 18 We shall discuss the
taxability of each of the trust distributions in turn.
18 Petitioner
was a U.S. citizen on Dec. 22, 1975, but became an alien for the entire day of
Dec. 23, 1975, the date of her expatriation. Sec.
1.871-13(a)(2), Income Tax Regs; Estate of Petschek v. Commissioner, 81
T.C. 260, 264 (1983), affd. 738 F.2d 67 (2d Cir. 1984).
[**60] [*783] A. The Testamentary Trust
The parties
have stipulated that on November 20, 1975, before her expatriation, petitioner
received a distribution from the testamentary trust, a portion of which was
distributable net income and the balance was an accumulation distribution. Although she actually received the
distribution before her expatriation, petitioner reported it on her 1975 Form
1040NR as taxable during the short period after she had become a nonresident
alien. On brief, petitioner concedes that the portion of the distribution consisting
of distributable net income ($ 164,971.63) is taxable at the graduated rates applicable
to her while she was still a U.S. citizen.
Petitioner maintains, however, that, regardless of the timing of the
actual receipt, the accumulation distribution ($ 830,753.13) should, under
sections 668(a) and 662(c), in the form in which they were then in effect, be
includable in income during the period after which she lost her U.S.
citizenship.
For the
reasons stated below, we conclude that sections 668(a) and 662(c) do not
require the result urged by petitioner; we sustain respondent's determination
that the entire amount of the testamentary trust [**61]
distribution is includable in income during the period
before petitioner lost her U.S. citizenship and is thus taxable at the usual
graduated rates.
[HN8] Section 668(a), as in effect in
1975, provides that accumulation distributions from complex
trusts "shall be included in the income of a beneficiary of the
trust when paid." 19 Amplification [*784] of
this statutory directive is found in section 1.668(a)-1A(a), Income Tax Regs.,
which provides that the total of an accumulation distribution is to be included
in the income of the beneficiary in the taxable year of the beneficiary in
which such amounts are in fact paid unless the taxable year of the beneficiary
differs from the taxable year of the trust. In such a case, the regulation directs
us to the rules under section 662(c), which provides that when a beneficiary has
a taxable year different from that of the trust, an accumulation distribution
is to be included in income in the tax year of the beneficiary which coincides
with, or encompasses, the end of the tax year of the trust. 20 Petitioner contends that
by virtue of her loss of U.S. citizenship, "a distinctive situation arose
which required the operation of section 662(c)" [**62] with
respect to the timing of inclusion of the accumulation distribution.
19 [HN9] SEC. 668. TREATMENT OF
AMOUNTS DEEMED DISTRIBUTED IN PRECEDING YEARS.
(a) General
Rule. -- The total of the amounts
which are treated under sections 666 and 669 as having been distributed by the
trust in a preceding taxable year shall be included in the income of a
beneficiary of the trust when paid, credited, or required to be distributed to the
extent that such total would have been included in the income of such
beneficiary under section 662(a)(2) and (b) if such total had been paid to such
beneficiary on the last day of such preceding taxable year. * * *
[HN10] Sec. 662(a), here referred to, is
in pertinent part as follows:
SEC. 662. INCLUSION OF AMOUNTS IN GROSS INCOME OF BENEFICIARIES OF ESTATES
AND TRUSTS ACCUMULATING INCOME OR DISTRIBUTING CORPUS.
(a)
Inclusion. -- Subject to subsection
(b), there shall be included in the gross income of a beneficiary to whom an
amount specified in section 661(a) is paid, credited, or required to be
distributed (by an estate or trust described in section 661), the sum of the
following amounts:
(1) Amounts
required to be distributed currently.
-- The amount of income for the taxable year required to be distributed
currently to such beneficiary, whether distributed or not. * * *
(2) Other
amounts distributed. -- All other amounts properly paid, credited, or required
to be distributed to such beneficiary for the taxable year. If the sum of --
(A) the amount of income for the taxable year required to be
distributed currently to all beneficiaries, and
(B) all other amounts properly paid, credited, or required to be
distributed to all beneficiaries exceeds the distributable net income of the estate
or trust, then, in lieu of the amount provided in the preceding sentence, there
shall be included in the gross income of the beneficiary an amount which bears
the same ratio to distributable net income (reduced by the amounts specified in
(A)) as the other amounts properly paid, credited or required to be distributed
to the beneficiary bear to the other amounts properly paid, credited, or
required to be distributed to all beneficiaries.
[**63]
20
SEC. 662. INCLUSION OF AMOUNTS IN GROSS INCOME OF
BENEFICIARIES OF ESTATES AND TRUSTS ACCUMULATING INCOME OR DISTRIBUTING CORPUS.
(c) Different
Taxable Years. -- If the taxable year of a beneficiary is different from that
of the estate or trust, the amount to be included in the gross income of the
beneficiary shall be based on the distributable net income of the estate or
trust and the amounts properly paid, credited, or required to be distributed to
the beneficiary during any taxable year or years of the estate or trust ending
within or with his taxable year.
The
implementing regulation provides in part:
Sec.
1.662(c)-1. Different taxable years.
If a
beneficiary has a different taxable year (as defined in section 441 or 442)
from the taxable year of an estate or trust, the amount he is required to
include in gross income in accordance with section 662(a) and (b) is based upon
the distributable net income of the estate or trust and the amounts properly
paid, credited, or required to be distributed to the beneficiary for any
taxable year or years of the estate or trust ending with or within his taxable
year. * * *
[**64] Petitioner argues that, because of her
change in status from U.S. citizen to nonresident alien, she had 2 taxable
years during 1975, the first covering her period of U.S. citizenship through
December 22, and the second commencing December 23, the date of her
expatriation, and ending December 31, covering the period during which she had
become a nonresident alien. Petitioner's argument is based on the interaction
of (1) [HN11] section 1.871-13(a)(1), Income
Tax Regs., which provides that when a taxpayer changes status from U.S. citizen
to [*785] nonresident alien during the taxable
year, he is taxable for such year "as though his taxable year were
comprised of two separate periods," the first covering income received as
a U.S. citizen and the second covering income received as a nonresident alien;
(2) section 1.662(c)-1, Income Tax Regs., which provides that section 662(c)
"applies as to so-called short taxable years as well as taxable years of
normal duration"; and (3) section 441(b)(3) which defines the term
"taxable year" as "the period for which the return is made, if a
return is made for a period of less than 12 months." She maintains that,
because section 441(b)(3) defines "taxable [**65] year"
in terms of "periods," sec. 1.871-13(a)(1), Income Tax Regs., which
divides the taxable year into "periods," sanctions the existence of 2
taxable years in a change-of-status calendar year.
Petitioner
thus argues, because she had 2 taxable years in 1975 which were different from
those of the testamentary trust, section 662(c) requires the inclusion of the
accumulation distribution in her taxable income during her short, nonresident-alien-status
taxable year, the end of which coincides with the end of the trust's taxable
year. In effect, petitioner seeks to have us equate the notion of a
"taxable period" with that of a short "taxable year."
We agree with
respondent that petitioner's position calls for a misapplication of section
1.871-13(a)(1), Income Tax Regs., and section
441(b)(3). Petitioner's argument
fails because, although her change-of-status year is bifurcated with respect to
the tax rates applicable to income received during the period of citizenship
versus nonresident alien status, her taxable year remains a single calendar
year taxable year; her change of status does not create a short taxable year
within the definition of section 443(b)(3). Because petitioner and [**66] the testamentary trust
both have the same taxable year, section 662(c) is, by its terms, inapplicable
to petitioner.
[HN12] Section 1.871-13(a)(1), Income Tax
Regs., directs a status-changing taxpayer to treat his
taxable year "as though" it were "comprised of two separate
periods." 21 By its express [*786] terms,
the regulation provides that a status-changing taxpayer will have only 1
taxable year, albeit one which is divided into two portions, each taxable at different
rates. Consistent with the notion
that only a single taxable year is involved in a change-in-status situation,
sec. 1.6012-1(b)(2)(ii), Income Tax Regs., provides
that only one tax return should be filed for a dual status year, the proper
form of which is determined by the status of the taxpayer at the taxable
yearend, with allocations between the two periods reflected on a separate
schedule attached to the return. 22
In compliance with this regulation, petitioner, herself, filed only one tax
return for 1975, a Form 1040NR, attaching the required schedule of income
allocations between the two periods.
21 [HN13] Sec. 1.871-13. Taxation of
individuals for taxable year of change of U.S. citizenship or residence.
(a) In
general. (1) An individual who
is a citizen or resident of the United States at the beginning of the taxable
year but a nonresident alien at the end of the taxable year, or a nonresident
alien at the beginning of the taxable year but a citizen or resident of the
United States at the end of the taxable year, is taxable for such year as
though his taxable year were comprised of two separate periods, one consisting
of the time during which he is a citizen or resident of the United States and
the other consisting of the time during which he is not a citizen or resident
of the United States. * * *
[**67]
22 This
regulation embodies respondent's longstanding policy of requiring only one
return for a dual status taxpayer dating back to G.C.M. 10759, XI-2 C.B. 99
(1932).
We do not
think that the definition of the term "taxable year" in section
441(b)(3) in any way transforms the two periods described in section
1.871-13(a)(1), Income Tax Regs., into two separate
taxable years. Under section
441(b)(3), a period of less than 12 months is defined as a taxable year only if
a return is made for a period of less than 12 months. 23 Sec. 1.441-1(b)(iii),
Income Tax Regs., further directs that a return for a
period of less than 12 months must be made under the provisions of section
443. As it then stood, section
443(a) authorized such "short period" returns under only three
specific circumstances: (1) When a taxpayer changes his annual accounting
period; (2) when a taxpayer is not in existence for an entire taxable year; and
(3) when the Secretary terminates a taxpayer's taxable year for jeopardy. Petitioner has not argued, nor could
she, that her circumstances conform to those [**68]
specified in section 443; in fact, as stated above,
she filed a single return for a 12-month calendar year. Section 441(b)(3) is,
thus, inapplicable to her 1975 return.
23
SEC. 441. PERIOD FOR COMPUTATION OF TAXABLE INCOME.
(b) Taxable
Year. -- For purposes of this subtitle, the term "taxable year" means
--
* * * *
(3) the period for which the return is made, if a return is made
for a period of less than 12 months; * * *
[*787] Our conclusion that a status-changing
taxpayer has only a single taxable year in the year of change finds support in
the reasoning of Estate of Petschek v. Commissioner, 81 T.C. 260 (1983),
affd. 738 F.2d 67
(2d Cir. 1984). Petschek, a calendar year taxpayer, was the income
beneficiary of a simple trust, which also reported its income on a calendar
year basis. During 1975, the year
at issue, Petschek was a U.S. citizen until November 23, 1975, when he became a
citizen of France. The issue was
whether distributions from the [**69] trust
should be taxed at the rates applicable to U.S. citizens or to nonresident
aliens.
This Court
observed in Estate of Petschek v. Commissioner, 81 T.C. at 264 n. 6,
that the two periods prescribed in the case of status-changing taxpayers by
sec. 1.871-13(a)(1), Income Tax Regs., "are not
separate taxable years." Further, in addressing Petschek's argument under
section 652(c), which, as does section 662(c) in the case of complex trusts, prescribes
the timing of inclusion in income of distributions from simple trusts when the
beneficiary and the trust have different taxable years, the Court noted:
"The case before us does not involve such different taxable years." 81 T.C. at 270. 24 In affirming this Court's
opinion on this point, the Court of Appeals (738 F.2d at 72) explained that
"the operation of section 652(c) presupposes the continuation of the
beneficiary's and the trust's respective taxpayer statuses from year to
year," and stated that "Petschek's tax year did not end with his
abandonment of his citizenship." With respect to the issue of whether a
change in status creates 2 taxable years [**70] for
a dual-status taxpayer, we see nothing to distinguish the facts of the instant
situation from those of Estate of Petschek, even though we are here
dealing with a complex trust. Thus,
as section 652(c) was inapplicable to Estate of Petschek, so, too, is
section 662(c) inapplicable to petitioner.
24 See also Nico
v. Commissioner, 565 F.2d 1234, 1236 (2d Cir. 1977), affg. in part and revg. in part 67 T.C.
647 (1977); More v. Commissioner, 66 T.C. 27 (1976), affd. without published opinion 562 F.2d 38 (2d Cir. 1977); Simenon
v. Commissioner, 44 T.C. 820, 832-833 (1965); Klaas v. Commissioner,
36 T.C. 239 (1961). These cases all hold, in the context of various Code
sections, that a change in status does not provide a dual-status taxpayer with
a short taxable year.
Having so
decided, however, the issue remains as to the proper period [**71] for inclusion of the
accumulation distribution under sec. 1.871-13(a)(1), Income Tax Regs., given
the practical [*788] reality that, in the usual case, the
amount of an accumulation distribution is calculated as of the end of the trust
year. In Estate of Petschek,
we rejected the taxpayer's argument that because distributable net income from
a simple trust is calculated at the end of the trust's taxable year, such
amount may only be included in the income of the beneficiary on the last day of
the taxable year. There, we held that a beneficiary of a simple trust, i.e.,
one which is required to distribute all income currently, earns income
simultaneously with the trust's realization of income, and, therefore, he must
include in his own income for the period while he was still a U.S. citizen all
of the income earned by the trust during the period, regardless of whether it
had yet been distributed to him. In
Estate of Petschek, however, we declined to decide how distributions
from a complex trust, which could include income accumulated over a period of
years, would be taxed. The
statutory scheme governing complex trust distributions makes no special
provision for the unique [**72] considerations
involving change-in-status taxpayers; thus, the statute does not provide us
with specific guidance on this issue.
Petitioner is
correct in her assertion that the conduit rationale underlying our Estate of
Petschek decision, based as it is on legal
principles governing only simple trusts, may be inapplicable to an accumulation
distribution from a complex trust.
Such a distribution represents amounts that were earned by the trust in
prior years and taxed at trust rates usually lower than rates applicable to the
beneficiary's income. Such amounts, therefore, are not earned by the beneficiary simultaneously
with the trust. We do not
agree, however, that the reasoning of Estate of Petschek is wholly
irrelevant to the issue before us. Estate
of Petschek, as well as other cases cited by respondent, supports our
conclusion that the taxpayer of change-of-status taxpayers is not always to be
governed by the automatic application of the "usual" rules. 25
25
Illustrative of this principle are Marsman v. Commissioner, 205 F.2d 335
(4th Cir. 1953), affg. in part and revg. and remanding in part 18 T.C. 1 (1952), and Gutierrez v.
Commissioner, 53 T.C. 394 (1969), affd. per curiam
without published opinion (D.C. Cir. 1971). In those cases it was held, in spite of
the unambiguous statutory directive under sec. 551(b) and its predecessor sec.
337(b), I.R.C. 1939, that the full amount of a deemed dividend from a foreign
personal holding company is to be included in the shareholder's income as of
the last day of the year, that only a pro rata portion of the dividend should
be taxed to the taxpayers therein reflecting the fact that they had only been
resident aliens for the last portion of the year, and subject to U.S. tax for
only such portion.
[**73] [*789] On the facts of this case, because
the accumulation distribution was actually received by petitioner and available
for her use and benefit before her expatriation, we think it is includable in
her income for the period in 1975 during which she was a U.S. citizen and thus
taxable at graduated U.S. tax rates.
This conclusion is consistent with both the literal terms of [HN14] section 668(a) which directs
inclusion of an accumulation distribution in the income of a beneficiary
"when paid," and the directive of section 666(a) 26 that
the amount of the accumulation distribution shall be deemed to be an amount
"distributed on the last day of each of the preceding taxable years"
for which the undistributed income was accumulated. These provisions indicate that
consideration of the beneficiary's status both at the time of distribution and
during the years of income accumulation is relevant in determining the tax
consequences of an accumulation distribution to a status-changing
taxpayer. 27
26 [HN15] SEC. 666. ACCUMULATION
DISTRIBUTION ALLOCATED TO PRECEDING YEARS.
(a) Amount
Allocated. -- In the case of a
trust which is subject to subpart C, the amount of the accumulation distribution
of such trust for a taxable year shall be deemed to be an amount within the
meaning of paragraph (2) of section 661(a) distributed on the last day of each
of the preceding taxable years, commencing with the earliest of such years, to
the extent that such amount exceeds the total of any undistributed net income
for all earlier preceding taxable years.
The amount deemed to be distributed in any such preceding taxable year
under the preceding sentence shall not exceed the
undistributed net income for such preceding taxable year. * * *
[**74]
27 We need
not here decide what the result would have been had petitioner received the
accumulation distribution after her expatriation.
Under the
circumstances of this case, because petitioner was a U.S. citizen both during
the years of accumulation and at the time of distribution, we think section 668
calls for the tax to be applied to such distribution at rates applicable to
U.S. citizens. Certainly, to do so
is consistent with the general policy underlying the taxation of accumulation
distributions under the "throwback rules" of section 666, i.e., to
eliminate tax avoidance by ensuring that a trust beneficiary pays tax at the
rates applicable to him on the trust distributions he receives, rather than
allowing him, by income accumulation, to shift the tax burden to the trust
which is subject, generally, to lower tax rates. See H. Rept. 1337, 83d Cong., 2d Sess.
60-64 (1954); S. Rept. 1622, 83d Cong., 2d Sess. 84-85 (1954).
Admittedly,
our conclusion is made easier by the fact that the amounts of distributable net
income and accumulated income stipulated by the parties as having been received
[**75] by [*790] petitioner before her expatriation
constitute the entire year's trust income as revealed by the 1975 Form 1041
fiduciary return for the testamentary trust. There is, therefore, no problem in
allocating current earnings during 1975 between petitioner's citizen and
nonresident alien periods. Such
accounting problems need not be addressed here. We emphasize that we are not announcing
a hard and fast rule with respect to the timing of income inclusion of an
accumulation distribution by a change-of-status taxpayer. On the facts of this case, however, we
think the accumulation distribution is includable in petitioner's income for
the period during which she was a U.S. citizen.
B. Trust
No. 1
On December
17, 1975, petitioner attained the age of 56 years, and under the terms of
section II of the instrument governing Trust No. 1,
she became entitled to receive a distribution of one-ninth of the principal of
the trust. Although the trust
instrument provided that payment of the distribution calculated as of December
17, 1975, was to be made in quarterly installments beginning on January 1,
1976, the year following petitioner's 1975 birthday, the trustee, Texas Commerce
[**76] Bank, had for years
followed the administrative practice of calculating the amount of each year's
distribution as of December 17, the petitioner's birthday, and paying the
entire amount of that year's distribution in a single annual payment on some
date following petitioner's birthday, often, but not always in the same year on
which the calculated amount was based.
With respect
to the 1975 distribution at issue, the facts, undisputed by the parties, are as
follows: The amount of the distribution was calculated based on the value of
the trust assets as of December 17, 1975, petitioner's birthday. Petitioner
returned to Europe on December 19, 1975.
The trustee's check for the distribution was written on December 22,
1975, and recorded on the trustee's books on December 23, 1975. The check was deposited into
petitioner's account on December 23, 1975.
The trust officer in charge of Trust No. 1 could not remember whether he
personally delivered the check to petitioner's family office on December 22, or
whether he placed it in the mail.
[*791] There is no evidence that petitioner or
her agent actually received the check before December 23, 1975, the date it was
deposited in petitioner's [**77] account. 28 Thus, the issue is whether
she constructively received the income before that date. 29 This
issue was raised by respondent for the first time in his Answer and
Answer to Amended Petition; the issue is, therefore, a new matter with respect
to which respondent has the burden of proof. Rule 142(a); Achiro
v. Commissioner, 77 T.C. 881, 890 (1981); Estate of Falese v.
Commissioner, 58 T.C. 895, 898-899 (1972). Our study of the evidence
on this issue leads us to conclude that respondent has failed to meet his
burden; on the evidence before us, we are unable to find that petitioner was in
constructive receipt of the distribution from Trust No. 1 before December 23,
1975.
28 It is well
settled that [HN16] a cash method
taxpayer is in receipt of income as of the date a check is received, whether or
not such check is presented to a bank for payment. Kahler v.
Commissioner, 18 T.C. 31, 34-35 (1952). Thus, had petitioner or her
agent received the distribution check on Dec. 22, 1975, the distribution would
have been taxable at the graduated rates.
The evidence, however, does not prove when petitioner or her agent
actually received the check.
[**78]
29 The Trust
No. 1 instrument was executed on Dec. 28, 1934. The application to it of subsequent
changes in the tax laws raises difficult potential issues. From the outset, the parties have
limited their arguments with respect to this issue to whether or not the 1975
distribution was constructively received by petitioner prior to her
expatriation. We do not know what evidence or arguments would have been
presented had respondent taken a broader position. Accordingly, we decide only the issue
presented by the parties.
[HN17] The doctrine of constructive
receipt is based on the principle that income is received by
cash method taxpayers "when it is made subject to the will and
control of the taxpayer and can be, except for his own action or inaction, reduced
to actual possession." Loose v. United States, 74 F.2d 147, 150
(8th Cir. 1934). The general rule with respect to the inclusion of income under
the doctrine of constructive receipt is set forth in section 1.451-2(a), Income
Tax Regs., as follows:
[HN18] Sec. 1.451-2. Constructive
receipt of income.
(a) General
rule. [**79] Income although not actually reduced to
a taxpayer's possession is constructively received by him in the taxable year
during which it is credited to his account, set apart for him, or otherwise
made available so that he may draw upon it at any time, or so that he could
have drawn upon it during the taxable year if notice of intention to withdraw
had been given. However, income is
not constructively received if the taxpayer's control of its receipt is subject
to substantial limitations or restrictions. * * *
Respondent
bases his contention that petitioner was in constructive receipt of the
distribution before her expatriation
[*792] on the following
evidence: The amount of the distribution was calculated by the trustee "as
of" December 17, 1975; the check was written on December 22, 1975;
according to Lewis, the trust officer responsible for the administration of
Trust No. 1, petitioner or her agent could have picked up the check the day it
was written; further, according to Lewis, had petitioner so requested, he could
have made the distribution as early as December 19, 1975. These facts, argues respondent,
demonstrate that the distribution was made available to petitioner so that [**80] she could have drawn
upon it before her expatriation, if notice of her intention to withdraw had
been given.
We do not
think that the evidence on which respondent relies is sufficient to demonstrate
constructive receipt in this case.
Implicit in the notion of availability to the taxpayer is notice to him
that the funds are subject to his will and control. 30 Respondent has failed to
show that either petitioner or her agent was informed or knew that the
distribution check could have been picked up on December 22, 1975, or that they
could have requested an earlier distribution.
30
Davis v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1978-12.
Our findings
reveal that the yearly distributions from 1970 through 1976 were not made on
any specific date; in only 2 of the 7 years, 1972 and 1974, was the
distribution recorded before December 23; in 2 years, 1971 and 1975, it was recorded
on that date. Thus, petitioner
could have had no expectation that she would receive the check before her
expatriation. Petitioner, [**81] in fact, never communicated
with the trustee with respect to any of the yearly trust distributions. It is true that petitioner's agent, Mrs.
Howton, did, from time to time, communicate with the trustee concerning
distributions from Trust No. 1; however, there is no evidence that Mrs. Howton
ever communicated with the trustee with respect to the timing of such
distributions, or that she had any knowledge that she could influence the
timing.
This is
clearly not a case in which petitioner "turned her back" on the
income by taking any affirmative steps to delay receipt of the check until
after her expatriation. Compare Romine v. Commissioner, 25 T.C. 859,
873-875 (1956). As discussed in part 1, above, petitioner did no planning
whatsoever with respect to the Trust No. 1 distribution. Mindful of [*793] the
oft-stated principle that constructive receipt should be sparingly applied ( Kaw
Dehydrating Co. v. Commissioner, 74 T.C. 370, 375 (1980); Gullett v.
Commissioner, 31 B.T.A. 1067, 1069 (1935)), we do not think petitioner can
be charged with constructive receipt of the trust distribution [**82] based on speculation concerning whether
the trustee would have agreed to an earlier payment if so requested. 31 See Amend v.
Commissioner, 13 T.C. 178, 184-185 (1949).
31 See Rev.
Rul. 60-31, 1961-1 C.B. 174, 178, which states, among other things, that
"the statute cannot be administered by speculating whether the payor would
have been willing to agree to an earlier payment."
Thus, we
conclude that petitioner was not in constructive receipt before her
expatriation of the distribution from Trust No. 1 and that she properly
reported the distribution as received during the period of 1975 in which she
was a nonresident alien. The distribution from Trust No. 1 is taxable as
reported by petitioner.
Based on the
foregoing,
Decision will
be entered under Rule 155.