2 Or. Tax 215 | Or. T.C. | 1965
Submitted on stipulation. Decision rendered for defendant October 5, 1965. *216 The above cases, presenting identical facts and issues, have been consolidated for decision. They arise out of a deficiency assessment by defendant on income from short term trusts.
The plaintiffs, David, Thomas and Robert Prentice, executed individual but identical trust agreements conveying certain stock to their respective wives in trust for their minor children. David, Thomas and Robert will be called the grantors, their wives, the trustees, and their respective minor children, the beneficiaries.
The trusts, which were for a term of ten years and one month, provided that the income was to be "accumulated" during the term for the minor children and paid to them upon termination of the trusts. The principal also was to be paid back to the grantors at the end of the trusts. The income and corpus could be used for the children under certain restrictions hereinafter mentioned. All of the income was reinvested in various stocks.
The defendant tax commission contends the income from the trusts is taxable to the grantors under the provisions of ORS
"(1) There shall be included in computing the net income of the grantor of a trust, that part of the income of the trust which:
"* * * * *
"(b) May, in the discretion of the grantor or of any person not having a substantial adverse interest in the disposition of such part of the income, be distributed to the grantor.
"* * * * *"
The above statute is substantially the same as §
In this respect the trust was similar to the trusts in this case. Here the trusts provided for the income to be used for the support, maintenance and education of the minor children in the discretion of the trustees.1 In addition, the corpus of the trusts, in the discretion of the trustees, could be used for the benefit of the beneficiaries in "any emergency" arising "by reason of sickness, accident or other unusual circumstances."
In the Stuart case the United States Supreme Court, after holding that the grantor-father owed a parental obligation to support his minor beneficiaries, stated:
"* * * We are dealing with a trust for minors where the trustees, without any interest adverse to the grantor, have authority to devote so much of the net income as 'to them shall seem advisable' to the 'education, support and maintenance' of the minor. The applicable statute says, 'Where any part of the income * * * may * * * be distributed to the grantor * * * then such part * * * shall be included in computing the net income of the grantor.' Under such provision the possibility of the use of the income to relieve the grantor, pro tanto, of his parental obligation is *218 sufficient to bring the entire income of these trusts for minors within the rule of attribution * * *."
The court held that the entire income from the trust, whether used for the benefit of the beneficiaries or not, was taxable to the grantor.
1. While the decisions of the federal court are not controlling on this court, they are persuasive. Ruth Realty Co.v. Tax Commission,
2. The applicable statutes, ORS
3. In both the instant case and the Stuart case it was discretionary with the trustees to use the trust income for the beneficiaries. While the income was not used for the beneficiaries in this case, under the Stuart decision it was sufficient if it were merely possible to do so and thus relieve the parent-grantor of the obligation of support.
4. There appears to be another reason under the Oregon statute why the income would be taxable to the grantors. The statute requires a substantial adverse interest upon the part of the trustee. It would seem to be beyond argument here that the mother-trustees of the trusts for their minor children would not be persons having a substantial adverse interest in the disposition of the trust income.2
The plaintiffs argue that the Stuart case was a *219
misinterpretation of §
5. However, the Oregon statute, ORS
In the absence of legislation comparable to §