304 Mass. 260 | Mass. | 1939
These are three appeals by the commissioner of corporations and taxation (hereinafter referred to as the commissioner) from a decision of the Appellate Tax Board abating certain additional income taxes. The Appellate Tax Board will be hereinafter referred to as the board, and Clarissa M. Eaton as the taxpayer.
Rosa C. Metcalf, the grandmother of the taxpayer, was a resident of the State of Rhode Island at the time of her death on February 6, 1917. She died testate and her will was duly proved and allowed in the State of Rhode Island. Pertinent provisions of the will follow: “(b) Subject to
The findings of the board are substantially as follows: The taxpayer was a resident of the State of Rhode Island
The taxpayer, citing Commissioner of Corporations & Taxation v. Simmon, 292 Mass. 507, as decisive of the point, contends that these payments constituted principal of the trust estate. The commissioner contends that the payménts were of income, and that the present cases are distinguishable in the facts from the Simmon case since “In that case there was no certainty that the income would ultimately come into the possession of the beneficiary or his heirs, while in . . . [the present cases] it was certain to ultimately come to the . . . [taxpayer] or those taking from her.”
In the Simmon case the testator, a resident of New York at the time of his death, left certain funds to trustees to be invested and kept invested for his grandnephew “until he . . . [reached] the age of twenty-one, and then to be paid to him with all the accumulations.” Power was given to the trustees to make proper allowances for his '-'comfort, maintenance, education and support.” In the event that he died leaving no surviving child or children there were gifts over. From the creation of the trust to its termination the beneficiary was a resident of Massachusetts. The court said, in substance, that it was clear that during minority the beneficiary had no right to enjoyment in possession of any part of the fund, as to either principal or accumulations; that the allowances for his support rested in the discretion of the trustees; that his interest was subject to be utterly divested if he should die before reaching his majority; that the income was not paid to him from year to year and when paid was not paid to him as income; that it was converted into capital in New York as received year by year; that what was paid to him was a legacy, a unit not due until a specified time, and payable only in the event that he was living; that he had no power of actual disposition of it until paid to him; and that when paid to him
In the present cases there was no mandate to the trustee to accumulate the income of the trust estate, but only an authorization to pay any part of the principal or of the income therefrom to the taxpayer in the absolute and uncontrolled discretion of the trustee. In this respect they are distinguishable from the Simmon case, where the trustees were under the duty to retain the estate, both principal and income (except as to provisions for support), until the time fixed for the termination of the trust. There was power to make appropriations for the support of the taxpayer during her minority in these cases as in the Simmon case. A part of the income in question was retained by the trustee in years when the taxpayer was a resident of the foreign State, whereas in the Simmon case the taxpayer was a resident of this Commonwealth during the life of the trust. In these cases the taxpayer had no right (except in circumstances hereinafter noted) to enjoyment in possession of any part of either the principal or income of the trust estate until the time fixed for the termination of the trust, unless the trustee saw fit in the exercise of an absolute discretion to make payments of either. In the Simmon case no such discretion resided in the trustees. In the present cases the taxpayer, having lived to a period fifteen years after the execution of the will, had a vested interest in the trust estate and the income therefrom, although prior to the termination of the trust she could not enter into enjoyment or possession of either unless the trustee saw fit in his discretion to make payments thereof to her. See Claflin v. Claflin, 149 Mass. 19, 21; Daly v. Gaskins, 240 Mass. 260, 261; Ball v. Hopkins, 254 Mass. 347, 350. In the Simmon case the taxpayer would be utterly divested of all interest in the trust estate and its accumulations unless he lived to the age of twenty-one years. In the Simmon case the fund as to both principal and income was a unit, the income being converted into capital from year to year when received. Other than that the dis
In the Simmon case the accumulation of income and its immediate conversion into capital took place as a matter of law. In the present cases no duty was placed upon the trustee to accumulate the income, but only the authority to pay the whole or any part thereof to the taxpayer. It is true that, except possibly as to the provisions for her support and maintenance during her minority, she could not compel the payment of principal or income to her until the termination of the trust, unless it was established that the trustee in withholding payments was acting from selfish or dishonest motives. The title to the income did not vest in her prior to the termination of the trust, until appropriated by payment to her. Wilson v. Wilson, 145 Mass. 490, 492. Rackemann v. Wood, 203 Mass. 501, 506. Am. Law Inst. Restatement: Trusts, § 128, Comments d, e. Nevertheless, in the cases at bar the trustee was under no positive prescribed duty to retain either principal or income.
We are of opinion that the present cases are distinguishable from the Simmon case, and where, as in these cases, there is no direction to accumulate income but merely an authorization to pay or withhold in the discretion of the trustee, and the income in question is paid to the beneficiary in subsequent years, it cannot be said that the payments thus made are of principal and not of income of the trust estate. Otherwise, by the simple expedient of withholding income in one year under such a discretion as was reposed in the trustee in the instant cases, and paying it to the beneficiary in the succeeding year or years, the objects and purposes of the governing statute, G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 62, § 11, could be defeated. It is true that if the contention of the taxpayer is sound its disturbing effect is no argument against its recognition, “But a contention which in its results would seriously cripple the practical operation of any comprehensive system of State income taxation has no presumption in its favor and ought not to be adopted except because
The taxpayer has argued that the major portion of payments involved was of income accumulated by the trustee while she was a resident of Rhode Island, and that “The levy by Massachusetts of an income tax on the mere act of receiving in or transferring to Massachusetts inherited funds previously accumulated in another State would be in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States.” This contention cannot be sustained. “The assessment does not touch the fund, or control it; nor does it interfere with the trustee in the exercise of his proper duties; nor call him, nor hold him, to any accountability. It affects only the income, after it has been paid by the trustee to the . . . [beneficiary].” Bates v. Boston, 5 Cush. 93, 99. Maguire v. Tax Commissioner, 230 Mass. 503, 513, affirmed 253 U. S. 12. When the payments involved were actually made to the taxpayer she was an inhabitant of this Commonwealth. First National Bank of Boston v. Commissioner of Corporations & Taxation, 279 Mass. 168, 172. Longyear v. Commissioner of Corporations 6 Taxation, 265 Mass. 585.
It follows that the board erred in its rulings to the effect that none of the payments by the trustee to the taxpayer on which the taxes, abatement of which is claimed, were assessed, constituted income taxable to her by this Commonwealth; that the payments involved were of capital; and that accumulations of income received by the trustee over a series of years and paid to the taxpayer several years after such accumulations were made did not constitute taxable income to the taxpayer under the laws of Massachusetts. Accordingly the decision of the board is reversed and the abatements sought by the taxpayer must be denied.
So ordered.