428 Mass. 283 | Mass. | 1998
This is an action to reform a written trust agreement brought by BankBoston, trustee of the Elsa O. Marlow Trust (Marlow trust). BankBoston seeks a determination that each of the three subtrusts created under the Marlow trust be divided and administered as two separate trusts, with one to be subject to, and the other exempt from, Federal generation-skipping transfer (GST) taxes. This division, BankBoston contends, will accomplish Marlow’s intention of minimizing Federal transfer taxes, reduce substantially the GST tax payable
The Commissioner of Internal Revenue, although served, has not appeared in this proceeding. All named defendants have agreed to the relevant facts and have assented to the proposed reformation. Pursuant to Mass. R. Civ. P. 64, as amended, 423 Mass. 1410 (1996), a judge in the Norfolk County Probate and Family Court reported the case to the Appeals Court, and we allowed direct appellate review.
Elsa O. Marlow died in 1993, survived by three sons and eight grandchildren. By a trust instrument dated April 13, 1984, and amended June 28, 1985, before the GST was enacted, Mar-low, as grantor, and BankBoston and Marlow’s late husband, as trustees, created the Marlow trust. In order to minimize Federal and Massachusetts estate taxes, the trust provides for the creation of a marital deduction trust if Marlow’s husband were to survive her. He did not survive her, however, and in that circumstance the trust provides for the creation of three separate and equal subtrusts, one for each of Marlow’s sons and their respective wives and families.
The sub trusts established for Marlow’s sons Gordon and Peter are identical, providing that the subtrust principal and income be applied for the son’s benefit during his life. Thereafter, the trustee is to pay the principal and income to the son’s wife and children and to the issue of any deceased child until the death or remarriage of the wife. At that time, the sub-trust assets are to be distributed free of trust to each son’s issue by right of representation. The share of any such issue is to be held, however, until the beneficiary attains the age of twenty-five.
The subtrust established for the third son, Hugh, and his family is the same with two exceptions. First, the principal and income is to be applied, upon Hugh’s death, for the benefit of his wife and daughter, rather than for all his issue. Second, upon his wife’s death or remarriage, the principal and income is to be applied for his daughter’s benefit until she completes her education or attains the age of thirty, whichever occurs first. At that time, the subtrust is to be distributed free of all trusts among Hugh’s children with a one-fifth share to each of his three sons and a two-fifths share to his daughter.
The GST tax could be lessened, however, if BankBoston is authorized to allocate Marlow’s $1,000,000 exemption to or among one or more of the subtrusts. Accordingly, BankBoston seeks our declaration that each subtrust may be divided into two separate trusts, one funded with an amount equal to an allocated portion of the available GST tax exemption and the other funded with the balance of funds otherwise available to fund the sub-trust. Although certain distributions from the second subtrusts, the nonexempt ones, will be subject to the GST, BankBoston asserts that the GST tax can be avoided or minimized by making distributions from the nonexempt subtrusts to Marlow’s children or to cover certain expenses of the grandchildren that will not give rise to GST tax liability, even though they are made from a nonexempt subtrust.
The circumstances warrant authorizing BankBoston to divide each subtrust into an exempt subtrust and nonexempt subtrust and to administer each divided subtrust separately. We have allowed the reformation of trust instruments which produced tax results that were clearly inconsistent with the settlor’s tax objectives. See Putnam v. Putnam, 425 Mass. 770, 772-773 (1997); Pond v. Pond, 424 Mass. 894, 899 (1997); Simches v. Simches,
The reformation BankBoston seeks is minimal compared with the requests which we approved in two recent cases. In Pond v. Pond, supra at 899, we ordered that a revocable trust be reformed to provide a surviving spouse a “qualifying income interest for life,” I.R.C. § 2056(b)(7)(B) (1994), in order to qualify for the estate tax marital deduction, even though the reformation altered the beneficial interests of the trust’s beneficiaries. In Simches v. Simches, supra at 688-689, we reformed a qualified personal residence trust (QPR trust) by changing the beneficiaries in order to eliminate the GST tax consequences of naming grandchildren as beneficiaries of the QPR trust. The proposed reformation of the Marlow trust neither changes the identity of any beneficiary nor alters any beneficial interest. It constitutes “fine tuning of the administration of the trusts ... in order to reduce, if not eliminate, the application of the GST tax” of the sort that we approved in First Agric. Bank v. Coxe, supra at 883 n.6.
So ordered.
The GST tax does not apply to payment of certain medical and educational expenses. I.R.C. § 2611(b) (1994).