Estate of Ballard v. C.I.R. 85 T.C. No. 17, Tax Ct. Rep. (CCH) 42,325 Tax Court 1985. Filed August 20, 1985. HEADNOTE:
Decedent, a
United States citizen and domiciliary, died owning real property in Canada.
Petitioner-estate paid tax to Canada pursuant to the Canadian Income Tax Act of
1971, ch. 63, Can. Stat. (1970-71-72), as amended. The tax paid to Canada was
computed on the difference between the value of the real property on the date
of death and the value of the property on January 1, 1972, the date the
relevant provisions of the Canada Income Tax Act became effective. HELD, the
tax paid to Canada is not an estate tax for which a credit is allowable under
sec. 2014(a), I.R.C. 1954. HELD FURTHER, the Canadian tax paid is not a tax of
substantially similar character to the estate tax that was imposed by Canada at
the time the United States-Canada Estate Tax Convention, Feb. 17, 1961, 13
U.S.T. 382, T.I.A.S. No. 4995, was adopted and, therefore, it is not a
creditable tax pursuant to the Convention. [*300]
COUNSEL: G.
STEPHEN WALTERS and SHIRLEY A. WEBSTER, for the petitioner. BRUCE
W. BAKER, for the respondent. OPINION
BY: DAWSON,
JUDGE: Respondent
determined a deficiency in petitioners Federal estate tax in the amount of $17,931. Two issues are
presented for decision: (1) whether the tax paid by petitioner to Canada is an
estate tax for which a credit is allowable under section 20l4(a); [FN1] and (2)
whether the tax paid [*301] by
petitioner to Canada is a tax of substantially similar character to the estate
tax imposed by Canada at the time the United States-Canada Estate Tax
Convention, Feb. 17, 1961, 13 U.S.T. 382, T.I.A.S. No. 4995, was adopted, and
therefore, is a creditable tax pursuant to the Convention. This
case was submitted fully stipulated pursuant to Rule 122, Tax Court Rules of
Practice and Procedure. The stipulation of facts and the attached exhibits are
incorporated herein by this reference. The pertinent facts are summarized
below. Claire
M. Ballard (decedent) died on February 25, 1980. He was a United States
citizen, domiciled in and a resident of Madison County, Iowa, at the time of
his death. Shirley A. Webster was appointed executor of
decedents estate. At the
time the petition was filed, Shirley A. Webster was a resident of Winterset,
Iowa. At the
time of his death, decedent owned land in Stettler County, Alberta, Canada
(Alberta property). The Alberta property had been owned by decedent for more
than twenty years. The land was rented through decedents agent primarily on a crop share basis
to approximately a dozen different tenants. Decedent did not take an active
part in the rental of the Alberta property. Pursuant
to the applicable Canadian tax statute, Revenue Canada originally assessed
decedents estate the sum
of $404,586.75 (Canadian dollars) in tax on Canadian property owned by the
decedent on the date of his death. The Canadian property included the Alberta
property as well as mineral rights owned by the decedent on the Alberta
property on the date of his death. The
$404,586.75 Canadian tax assessment was computed on the difference between the
value of decedents
Canadian property on the date of his death and the value of such
property as of January 1, 1972. For Canadian tax purposes,
decedents Alberta
property had a value of $1,455,000 (Canadian dollars) on the date of his death
and an adjusted cost base [FN2] of $313,550 (Canadian dollars). Under Canadian
law, one-half, or $570,725 (Canadian dollars), of the resulting gain of
$1,141,450 (Canadian dollars) was taxable. In addition, under Canadian law, the
mineral rights on the Alberta property had a taxable gain of $69,619 (Canadian
dollars). The total taxable [*302]
gain was subject to Canadas
graduated income tax rates for individuals, resulting in a total
Canadian tax of $404,586.75 (Canadian dollars), which petitioner paid to
Revenue Canada in November 1980. On
November 24, 1980, respondent received petitioners Federal estate tax return on which
petitioner claimed a foreign death tax credit based upon the total Canadian tax
paid to Canada. Respondent disallowed the credit and instead allowed petitioner
a deduction under section 2053 for the Canadian tax paid. Petitioner
subsequently filed a protest with Revenue Canada, contending that decedent did
not maintain a permanent establishment in Canada and that Article VIII of the
United States-Canada Income Tax Convention, Mar. 4, 1942, 56 Stat. 1399, T.S.
No. 983, as supplemented, (Income Tax Convention) exempts from Canadian income
tax gains from the sales or exchanges of capital assets where a United States
resident has no permanent establishment in Canada. Consequently, petitioner
requested a full refund of the previously paid Canadian taxes. Although Revenue
Canada agreed that decedent did not maintain a permanent establishment in
Canada, it concluded that Article VIII of the Income Tax Convention was not
applicable. Revenue Canada found that the term sale or
exchange of capital assets, as used in Article VIII, does not include
deemed dispositions of property resulting from the owners death. Instead, Revenue Canada applied
Article XI of the Income Tax Convention, which subjects individuals to a
reduced rate of fifteen percent with respect to income other than earned income
from sources within Canada. In February 1983 Revenue Canada refunded to
petitioner $302,020.50 (Canadian dollars). As a result of the refund,
respondent disallowed a portion of the previously allowed section 2053 deduction
and determined additional Federal estate tax, which petitioner paid. Petitioner
filed a claim for refund with the Internal Revenue Service in August 1983,
seeking a refund of $71,135 in estate tax. The claim was based upon
respondents disallowance
of the credit for foreign death taxes originally claimed on
petitioners estate tax
return. Respondent sent to petitioner a notice of deficiency dated September 6,
1983. The notice of deficiency disallowed the previously allowed section 2053
deduction of $101,304 for Canadian tax paid, pending the final [*303] resolution of any appeal by petitioner
of Revenue Canadas
determination, which was confirmed by the Minister of National Revenue. The
period for filing an appeal of Revenue Canadas determination expired without an appeal
being filed. As a result of the expiration of this period, respondent conceded
in his answer that petitioner is entitled to a deduction of $101,304 for
Canadian tax paid and, hence, that there is no deficiency in estate tax.
Respondent disputes, however, that petitioner is entitled to a credit for the
tax paid to Canada and, therefore, that an overpayment exists. Thus the issues
remaining for decision pertain only to petitioners claim that it is entitled to a credit
for the foreign taxes paid. ISSUE
(1) SECTION 2014(a) The
parties disagree as to whether the tax imposed by Canada is an estate tax
within the meaning of section 2014(a). [FN3] Respondents position is set forth in Rev. Rul. 82-82, 1982-1 C.B. 127. Section 2014
provides, in part, as follows: SEC.
2014. CREDIT FOR FOREIGN DEATH TAXES. (a) IN GENERAL. The tax imposed by section 2001 shall
be credited with the amount of any estate, inheritance, legacy, or succession
taxes actually paid to any foreign country in respect of any property situated
within such foreign country and included in the gross estate * * * In Biddle
v. Commissioner, 302
U.S. 573
(1938), one issue was whether certain amounts paid by the taxpayers to the
United Kingdom were foreign income taxes and therefore eligible to be used by
the taxpayers as a foreign tax credit against their Federal income taxes. The
Supreme Court held that this issue must ultimately be determined under United
States tax concepts and not by reference to foreign tax concepts. The Court
stated as follows: At
the outset it is to be observed that decision must turn on the precise meaning
of the words in the statute which grants to the citizen taxpayer a credit for
foreign income taxes paid. The power to tax and to grant
the credit resides in Congress, and it is the will of Congress which controls
the [*304] application of the
provisions for credit. The expression of its will in legislation must be taken
to conform to its own criteria unless the statute, by express language or
necessary implication, makes the meaning of the phrase paid or accrued,
and hence the operation of the statute in which it occurs, depend upon its
characterization by the foreign statutes and by decisions under them.
(Citations omitted.) Section
131 (of the Revenue Act of 1928, which allowed a foreign income tax credit)
does not say that the meaning of its words is to be determined by foreign
taxing statutes and decisions, and there is nothing in its language to suggest
that in allowing the credit for foreign tax payments, a shifting standard was
adopted by reference to foreign characterizations and classifications of tax
legislation. The phrase income taxes paid, as used in our
own revenue laws, has for most practical purposes a well understood meaning to
be derived from an examination of the statutes which provide for the laying and
collection of income taxes. It is that meaning which must be attributed to it
as used in section 131. (302 U.S. at 578-579; citations omitted.) In the
income tax area, in cases decided after Biddle, this Court and others have held
that in order for a tax paid to a foreign government to be creditable under
section 901, it must be the substantial equivalent of an
income tax as the term is understood in the United
States. See, e.g., Commissioner v. American Metal Co., 221 F.2d 134, 137 (2d Cir.
1955), affg. 19 T.C. 879 (1953), and cases cited therein. We have
previously applied these principles of statutory construction, as enunciated by
the Supreme Court in Biddle, outside of the foreign income tax credit area to
decide whether the United Kingdom rates tax is a deductible foreign real
property tax within the meaning of section 164(a)(1). Waxenberg v.
Commissioner, 62
T.C. 594, 601-602 (1974). And we think that these principles are equally
applicable here, in the estate tax area, in order to determine whether the
taxes paid to Canada are estate taxes. The credit provided
for in section 2014(a) is for estate taxes paid to a foreign country. Congress
did not express any intent in section 2014 that the foreign tax be examined
under foreign law. Consequently, we must examine it under the concepts of
United States law. Thus, in order for the tax here to qualify for the section
2014 credit, we think it must be the substantial equivalent of an estate
tax as the term is understood in the United States. The nature and
character of an estate tax is that of an excise tax upon the privilege of
transferring property of the decedent at death. Knowlton v. Moore, 178 U.S. 41, 56 (1900). See [*305] Reinecke v. Northern Trust Co., 278 U.S. 339, 349 (1929). In Knowlton v.
Moore, supra, the Supreme Court traced the history of death duties and
concluded as follows: Although
different modes of assessing such duties prevail, and although they have
different accidental names, such as probate duties, stamp duties, taxes on the
transaction, or the act of passing of an estate or a succession, legacy taxes,
estate taxes or privilege taxes, nevertheless tax laws of this nature in all
countries rest in their essence upon the principle that death is the generating
source from which the particular taxing power takes its being and that it is
the power to transmit, or the transmission from the dead to the living, on
which such taxes are more immediately rested. (178 U.S. at 56.) As
understood in the United States, (t)he
estate tax is an excise tax on the transfer of property occasioned by death.
The measure of the tax is the net estate of the decedent, which is the value of
the gross estate less certain statutory deductions. * * * (Kleberg v.
Commissioner, 31
B.T.A. 95, 100 (1934).) An
examination of the Canadian statute involved in this case reveals that the
Canadian tax is not the substantial equivalent of an estate
tax as the term is understood in the United States. Under
section 70(5)(a) of the Canadian Income Tax Act, ch. 63, Can. Stat.
(1970-71-72), as amended, (Income Tax Act) in effect at the time of
decedents death, a
decedent who died owning capital property located in Canada on the date of his
death, (s)hall
be deemed to have disposed, immediately before his death, of each property
owned by him at that time that was a capital property of the taxpayer * * * and
to have received proceeds of disposition therefore equal to the fair market
value of the property at that time * * * Capital property is defined
under section 54(b) of the Income Tax Act as follows: (b)
Capital property. — capital
property of a taxpayer means (i)
any depreciable property of the taxpayer, and (ii)
any property (other than depreciable property), any gain or loss from the
disposition of which would, if the property were disposed of, be a capital gain
or a capital loss, as the case may be, of the taxpayer * * * Sections
38, 39 and 40 of the Income Tax Act provide definitions for capital gains and
losses and general rules with [*306]
respect to the determination of the amount of a taxpayers taxable gain or loss. In general, the
amount of the capital gain or loss is the difference between the proceeds from
disposition of the property (or fair market value of the property in the case
of a deemed disposition) less the adjusted cost base of the property. Secs.
40(1) and 70(5) of the Income Tax Act. Taxable capital gain is one-half of
capital gains and allowable capital loss is one-half of capital losses, as
computed above. Sec. 38 of the Income Tax Act. The difference between taxable
capital gain and allowable capital loss is added to income or deducted (up to
$2,000), as the case may be. Sec. 3 of the Income Tax Act. Where
non-depreciable capital property is owned by a decedent-taxpayer on December
31, 1971, the adjusted cost base of the property is determined by reference to
the fair market value of the property on December 31, 1971, the date after
which the Income Tax Act generally became effective. Secs. 24 to 26, Income Tax
Application Rules, 1971. In general, the net effect is that a decedent is taxed
only on gain accruing since December 31, 1971, and only to the extent that the
gain exceeds the original cost of the property. Similarly, losses are
deductible only to the extent that they have accrued after December 31, 1971,
and only if they are losses compared with actual cost. The tax
imposed by Canada is not on the transfer of property nor on the power to
transfer property at death. This is evidenced by the measure of the tax, which
is on GAIN, IF ANY EXISTS. In this case the decedent died owning the Alberta
property valued at $1,455,000 (Canadian dollars). The accrued gain on the
property for Canadian tax purposes was $1,141,450 (Canadian dollars), after
subtracting the adjusted cost base of $313,550 (Canadian dollars). Had
decedents total adjusted
cost base equalled or exceeded the fair market value of the Alberta property,
no tax would have been imposed. Section 70(5) of the Income Tax Act includes a
provision creating a deemed disposition that may result in a taxable gain or a
deductible loss. The deemed disposition is unrelated to, and independent of,
the fact that property with value of the decedent is transmitted to a
beneficiary. The focus of the relevant provisions of the Income Tax Act is the
recognition of gain or loss, not the taxation of the transmission of property
from the dead to the living. The tax paid to Canada in the instant case is not,
therefore, the substantial equivalent [*307]
of an estate tax, as understood in the United States. We hold for respondent on
this issue. Petitioner
contends that because the Canadian statute provides that the death of a
taxpayer is the basis for assessing the tax, the tax must be an estate tax. We
disagree. As previously stated, in order to be creditable, the tax must be the
substantial equivalent of an estate tax as the term is
understood in the United States. It is not enough that death is the triggering
event for assessing the tax. In the Income Tax Act, death is merely the event
that creates the deemed disposition and is the time at which the gain or loss
is recognized for Canadian tax purposes. Petitioner
also argues that because section 2014 was enacted to prevent double taxation,
the Canadian tax paid should be creditable. While it may be true that the
enactment was intended to prevent double taxation, the possibility that denial
of the credit may result in double taxation is not a sufficient basis for
granting the credit where there is no compliance with the specific requirements
of the provision granting such benefit. Allowance of a credit for foreign taxes
is a privilege and the statute must be strictly construed. Federated Mutual
Implement & Hard. Ins. Co. v. Commissioner, 266 F.2d 66, 72 (8th Cir. 1959),
affg. 29 T.C. 262 (1957) (concerning the computation of the
taxpayers allowable
foreign income tax credit); Keasbey & Mattison Co. v. Rothensies, 133 F. 2d 894, 898 (3d Cir.
1943) (holding that the tax imposed by the Quebec Mining Act is not a
creditable foreign income tax). ISSUE
(2) ESTATE TAX
CONVENTION Petitioner contends that the Canadian
tax paid should be creditable under the provisions of the United States-Canada
Estate Tax Convention, Feb. 17, 1961, 13 U.S.T. 382, T.I.A.S. No. 4995, (Estate
Tax Convention) in effect at the time of decedents death. Specifically, Article V of the
Estate Tax Convention provides, in part, as follows: 1.
Where either contracting State imposes tax by reason of a decedent being
domiciled therein or being a citizen thereof, that contracting State shall
allow against so much of its tax (as otherwise computed) as is attributable to
property situated in the other contracting State a credit (not exceeding the
amount of the tax so attributable) equal to so much of the tax imposed by the
other contracting State as is attributable to such property. [*308]
Respondent contends that the Canadian tax in question here is not covered by
the Estate Tax Convention. We agree with respondent. Effective
April 9, 1962, the Estate Tax Convention, as stated in its preamble, was
enacted for the principal purposes of the avoidance of double
taxation and the prevention of fiscal evasion with respect to taxes on the
estates of deceased persons. Article I of the Estate Tax Convention
specifies the taxes that are covered by the Convention as follows: 1.
The taxes referred to in this Convention are: (a) for the United States of
America: the Federal estate tax; (b) for Canada: the estate tax imposed by the
Government of Canada. 2.
The present Convention shall also apply to any other taxes of a substantially
similar character imposed by either contracting State subsequent to the date of
signature of the present Convention. Section
34 of the Canadian Estate Tax Act, ch. 29, Can. Stat. (1958), as amended,
(Estate Tax Act) [FN4] in existence in Canada at the time the Estate Tax
Convention came into force, provided for the imposition of an estate tax in
respect of persons domiciled outside of Canada as follows: (1)
In the case of the death, at any time after the coming into force of this Act,
of any person domiciled outside Canada at the time of his death, an estate tax
shall be paid as hereinafter required upon the aggregate value of all taxable
property (hereinafter in this Part referred to as the property
taxable on the death ),
being property situated in Canada at the time of his death, the value of which
would, if that person had been domiciled in Canada at the time of his death, be
required by this Act to be included in computing the aggregate net value of the
property passing on his death. (2)
The tax payable under this Part upon the aggregate value of the property
taxable on the death of any person is the tax payable as fixed by assessment or
re-assessment subject to variation on objection or appeal, if any, in
accordance with the provisions of Part I. It is clear that the tax imposed
under section 34 of the Estate ct was an estate tax as that term is known and
understood in the United States. The tax was imposed on the aggregate
value of all taxable property situated in Canada and was similar to
the U.S. estate tax. In contrast, the tax [*309]
imposed under section 70(5) e Income Tax Act in issue in the present case is a
tax based on et gain (if any) resulting from the deemed disposition of property
owned by a decedent-taxpayer immediately before death. Theimposition of the tax
under section 70(5) of the Income Tax Act is triggered by the existence of
gain, not the existence of value, as is case with an estate tax such as the tax
imposed under section 34 of the Estate Tax Act. For these reasons and for the
reasons previously stated in the discussion of Issue (1), the Canadian tax in
issue herein is not an estate tax; consequently, it is not a tax of a subtantially
similar character to the repealed Canadian estate tax to be eligible
for the credit under the Estate Tax Convention. The
only similarity between the income tax imposed by the Income Tax Act in the
instant case and the tax eligible for the credit under the Estate Tax
Convention is that both taxes may arise upon the death of a taxpayer. This fact
alone does not make the tax imposed by the Income Tax Act
substantially similar to an estate tax since it is
outweighed by the lack of fundamental characteristics of an estate tax.
Accordingly, we hold for respondent on this issue. To
reflect respondents
concession and our conclusions with respect to the disputed issues, Decision
of no deficiency and no overpayment will be entered. FN1
All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as amended,
and in effect at the time of Claire M. Ballards death on February 25, 1980, unless
otherwise indicated. FN2
Adjusted cost base is analogous to the United States concept of adjusted basis.
See secs. 53 and 54(a), Canadian Income Tax Act of 1971, ch. 63, Can. Stat.
(1970-71-72), as amended. FN3
Petitioner does not contend that the Canadian tax is an inheritance,
legacy, or succession tax for which a credit is allowed under section
2014(a). Petitioner has either conceded this issue or has failed to meet its
burden of proof. Rule 142(a), Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure. FN4
The Canadian statute in question in the instant case, pursuant to which petitioner
paid tax to Canada, was not part of the Estate Tax Act. As part of major tax
reform legislation, Canada repealed its estate tax laws with respect to
decedents dying after December 31, 1971. The statute in question in the instant
case was enacted as part of this tax reform. |