320 Mass. 110 | Mass. | 1946
This is a petition for instructions by the trustees under the will of Fletcher R. Williams, who died December 31, 1942. He was survived by a son, James H. Williams, who was fifty-eight years of age and without living issue on July 21, 1945, the date of filing the petition, and who had income in addition to that from the trust hereinafter referred to. The residuary clause of the will, which sets up a trust, provides, “From the income collected from the trust property, or from the principal if they deem best, the trustees may pay any and all taxes which may be imposed upon the principal or income of the trust estate.” The son during his lifetime is the only beneficiary to receive payments from the trust. He is to receive an annuity of $8,000 until sixty years of age, of $12,000 until seventy years of age, and of $15,000 thereafter. Income in excess of what is needed to make payments to him is to be added to the principal, which, on the other hand, may be used if necessary to make the required payments to the son. Upon the death of the son the heirs of his body (represented here by a guardian ad litem), subject to an annuity to Hester Cunningham Williams, the son’s wife, are to receive income until attaining the age of twenty-one and the principal thereafter.» Failing heirs of the son’s body, there are provisions for certain annuities, and upon the death of all the annuitants (subject to an annuity of $100 to a cemetery in Ohio) ten per cent of the income is to be added to principal, and the remainder is to be paid the Shriners’ Hospital for Crippled Children. The principal of the trust was appraised as real estate $12,675 and as personal estate $317,447. The estimated net income is $8,908.32.
The questions submitted for instructions are: “1. Is it
The only issue argued is the answer to the first question. On July 25, 1939, the date of the will, and on August 23, 1939, and November 5, 1941, the dates of two codicils, the Federal income tax statute (Internal Revenue Code, § 162 [b], 52 U. S. Sts. at Large, 517) provided, contrary to the usual rule, that in cases like the present, where payments to beneficiaries could be made from both principal and income, the tax on trust net income should be assessed to and paid by the trust and not by the beneficiaries. See Burnet v. Whitehouse, 283 U. S. 148; Helvering v. Butterworth, 290 U. S. 365, 370. On October 21, 1942, the statute was amended so that if the distributable income of the trust exceeds the amount of the payments, the tax is to be paid by the beneficiaries. Revenue Act of 1942, § 111, 56 U. S. Sts. at Large, 809, U. S. C. (1940 ed.) Sup. V, Title 26, § 162 (d) (1). See Frank H. Mason Trust v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 136 Fed. (2d) 335 (C. C. A. 6).
The decree was right. The tax is imposed, upon the net income of the trust estate, but is payable by the beneficiaries.
Costs and expenses of this appeal may be allowed to the respondents or their counsel in the discretion of the Probate Court.
Decree affirmed.