Rosalyn Deutsch, Petitioner
T.C.
T.C.
T.C. Memo. 1997-470 UNITED STATES TAX COURT ROSALYN DEUTSCH, Petitioner v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent Docket No. 21845-93. Filed October 15, 1997.
Decedent (D), who died in 1988, bequeathed his spouse (P) minimal assets from a net estate of $3,361,683. In 1989, P elected against D's will to take the Florida elective share of 30 percent of the net estate, or $1,008,504. The estate reported 1989 distributable net income (DNI) of $707,095, including $176,432 of capital gains that D's personal representative treated as estate income, and $377,753 of distributions to the estate from D's individual retirement accounts. Pursuant to order of the Florida Probate Court, D's personal representative paid P the elective share in 1989, but made no distributions to the residuary beneficiaries until 1990. The personal representative claimed a distribution deduction of $707,095 for 1989 under sec. 661(a), I.R.C., on the ground that all the estate's DNI had been included in the payments to P in satisfaction of her elective share. P did not include in her gross income any part of the elective share.
Held: Payments to P in satisfaction of her Florida elective share are not distributions of income or amounts properly paid or credited or required to be distributed to beneficiaries within the meaning of secs. 661(a), 662(a), I.R.C., and sec. 1.661(a)-2(e), Income Tax Regs. P’s Florida elective share is excluded from her gross income.
Kenneth M. Hart and Stephen G. Vogelsang, for petitioner.
Sergio Garcia-Pages and Kenneth A. Hochman, for respondent.
BEGHE, Judge: Respondent determined a deficiency of $201,825 in petitioner's 1989 income tax.1 The issue for decision is whether distributable net income (DNI) of the estate of petitioner's deceased husband is included in her gross income by reason of the payment to her during 1989 of her elective share of the estate under Florida law. We hold that petitioner is not required to include any part of the payment of her elective share in gross income.
Some of the facts have been stipulated and are so found.
The stipulation of facts and the attached exhibits are incorporated herein by reference. Petitioner resided in Lake Worth, Florida, when she filed the petition. Petitioner and Seymour Deutsch (decedent) had been married for approximately 9 years when he died on September 22, 1988, at age 67. Decedent was survived by three children from his first marriage, Jay R.
Deutsch (Mr. Deutsch) and his two sisters. Decedent’s sister and her children, among them Richard L. Braunstein (Mr. Braunstein), also survived decedent.
Decedent died testate, leaving a net estate of $3,361,683.
Decedent left petitioner substantially less than the statutory 30-percent elective share of $1,008,504 that she was entitled to under Fla. Stat. Ann. sec. 732.201 (West 1995). Under the will, petitioner would have taken no more than decedent's interests in two country clubs (the Woodcrest and Fountain bonds), and furnishings and other tangible personal property located at his residence, a Lake Worth, Florida, condominium. The will also purported to devise2 to petitioner the condominium, which
actually passed to her outside the probate estate as surviving tenant by the entirety. The will devised the residuary estate in equal shares to Mr. Deutsch and his sisters.
Decedent's will designated Mr. Deutsch, a certified public accountant, and Mr. Braunstein, an attorney, as executors, or personal representatives, of his estate.3 In January 1989, Mr.
Braunstein informed petitioner that he believed decedent had intended to increase the amounts left to her under his will. Mr.
Braunstein also informed petitioner that, regardless of the provisions of the will, she was entitled to elect to take the Florida elective share. He further told her that he would apprise decedent's children of his understanding of decedent's intention to change his will. Shortly thereafter, Mr. Braunstein disclaimed his bequest under the will.
On February 14, 1989, petitioner filed an “Election to Take Elective Share” with the probate division of the Circuit Court for the 15th Judicial Circuit for Palm Beach County, Florida (Probate Court). Petitioner's election resulted in more than 2 2(...continued) “devise” to describe the transfer at death of personal property as well as real property. Fla. Stat. Ann. sec. 731.201(8) (West 1995).
years of acrimonious litigation between her and Mr. Deutsch in 2 divisions of the Palm Beach County Circuit Court over the amount of petitioner's elective share, the timing of its payments, and, ultimately, whether such payment would cause petitioner to suffer the entire Federal income tax impact of the estate's 1989 DNI.
On May 26, 1989, the personal representatives filed a “Petition for Determination of Elective Share” with the Probate Court. The personal representatives asked the Probate Court to defer payment of petitioner's elective share, pursuant to Fla.
Stat. Ann. sec. 732.214 (West 1995), until after they had filed the estate tax return, which was due upon the expiration of an extension on December 22, 1989. Petitioner's answer of June 16, 1989, requested the Probate Court to compel immediate payment.
Several concerns, some based on incomplete and erroneous information, impelled petitioner and her attorneys to request prompt payment of her elective share. Petitioner's attorneys correctly advised her that the elective share was not entitled to participate in income of the estate and that, until the Probate Court ordered payment of the elective share, she would not be entitled to receive interest on the fund. But petitioner's attorneys mistakenly believed that the estate was already liquid at the time of petitioner's election, and thus could easily pay the elective share without delay.
Until September 15, 1989, consistent with their mistaken belief in the estate's liquidity, petitioner and her attorneys also mistakenly believed that the estate's 1989 DNI would not exceed $100,000. Notwithstanding that the Florida elective share is not entitled to participate in estate income, petitioner's attorneys believed that petitioner's elective share would attract the estate’s DNI in the year of payment. As early as summer 1989, petitioner's attorneys were trying to minimize the impact of the estate’s DNI on petitioner's income tax liability, well before they learned in late September how much DNI there would be. In a July 6, 1989, letter to Mr. Deutsch's attorneys, petitioner's attorneys asked the estate to make an immediate distribution to the residuary beneficiaries, which would have required them to include their proportionate shares of DNI in their taxable income. In subsequent telephone conversations with Mr. Deutsch's attorneys at the end of August, petitioner's attorneys again asked the estate to make concurrent distributions to the residuary beneficiaries. When Mr. Deutsch refused to do so, petitioner's attorneys asked him to postpone payment of the elective share until a later year.
On September 6, 1989, petitioner filed with the Probate Court a Motion for Appointment of Administrator Ad Litem, alleging that Mr. Deutsch's dual role as estate fiduciary and beneficiary created a conflict of interest. On September 15, 1989, petitioner and her attorneys were informed by one of Mr.
Deutsch's attorneys that the estate income for 1989 would exceed $250,000. At a hearing on the motion before the Probate Court on September 25, 1989, the parties discussed amounts and components of estimated estate income. Based upon Mr. Deutsch's work papers, which were presented to the Probate Court in support of the estate's plan to satisfy petitioner's elective share, the parties stipulated that estate income was projected to be $650,000 in 1989 and $50,000 in 1990. Petitioner asked the Probate Court to synchronize payment of the elective share with distributions to the residuary beneficiaries.
The parties entered into a settlement, stipulating the projected 1989 income, the size of the net estate, $3,361,683, and the elective share, $1,008,504, and the assets to be used to satisfy the elective share. The Probate Court ratified this settlement in an Agreed Order, dated September 25, 1989, the day of the hearing. The Order also provided for the transfer to petitioner, as part of the elective share, of the specific assets that would have passed to her under the will, with the balance to be paid in cash.
The Probate Court's order directed the personal representatives to pay petitioner the elective share in its entirety in 1989, and not to make any distributions to the residuary beneficiaries until 1990 or thereafter. In the same Order, the Probate Court denied petitioner's motion for appointment of an administrator ad litem. On October 30, 1989, in response to petitioner's motion for rehearing, the Probate Court amended its order to permit but not require the personal representatives to make distributions to the residuary beneficiaries during 1989. Petitioner promptly appealed the modified order. In January 1990, the Florida Fourth District Court of Appeals dismissed the appeal. On November 3, 1989, during pendency of the appeal, Mr. Deutsch tendered, and petitioner accepted payment of the elective share, less amounts left in escrow to pay various State tax liabilities. The estate paid petitioner the amount that had been fixed by the Agreed Order of September 25, 1989. It did not include interest from the date of the Agreed Order to the date of payment.
In the 1989 calendar year fiduciary income tax return for decedent's estate, filed August 15, 1990, pursuant to extensions, Mr. Deutsch reported DNI of $707,095, net of tax-exempt interest, and claimed a distribution deduction for that amount pursuant to section 661(a) for the payment to petitioner in satisfaction of her elective share. Mr. Braunstein did not sign the estate’s fiduciary income tax return.
The $707,095 of 1989 DNI reported by the estate was divided into three major categories: Dividend and interest income of $152,910, some of which the estate received after petitioner received her elective share on November 3, 1989; $377,753 of income from 2 individual retirement accounts (IRA's), including post mortem interest and other income paid to the estate in 1989; and capital gains of $176,432 that, pursuant to advice from the attorney who drafted decedent’s will, Mr. Deutsch treated as estate income in their entirety. The capital gains consisted entirely of post mortem asset appreciation that the estate realized when Mr. Deutsch liquidated estate assets in anticipation of paying the elective share to petitioner.
On September 13, 1990, petitioner filed her 1989 income tax return, pursuant to extensions. Petitioner's return did not include the DNI shown by the estate’s fiduciary income tax return as having been distributed to her. Petitioner's return included a Form 8275 (Disclosure Statement under Section 6661) with a rider that disclosed receipt of the elective share and its noninclusion in her gross income and also disagreed with inclusion of the capital gains in estate DNI.
Following dismissal, in March 1990, of her appeal of the Probate Court Order, petitioner sued Mr. Deutsch in the Civil Division of the Circuit Court for the 15th Judicial Circuit for Palm Beach County, Florida. Petitioner alleged that Mr. Deutsch had violated his fiduciary duty to her by “intentionally plac[ing] 100% of the income tax burden on [petitioner] and diverted from himself and his relatives their share of the income tax burden”. The complaint did not name Mr. Braunstein.
On January 31, 1991, petitioner proposed settling her suit against Mr. Deutsch. She asked the estate to place $124,000 in escrow until expiration of the 3-year period of limitations on petitioner's 1989 Federal income tax return, to be paid only if respondent determined an income tax deficiency against petitioner by reason of her receipt of the elective share. In the same letter, petitioner asserted that “no case law, statutory law or IRS ruling * * * holds that the Florida elective share carries out distributable net income”. Mr. Deutsch responded that he did not wish to play “audit roulette”, and counter-offered to pay petitioner $50,000 to settle all her claims and serve as a “war- chest” for any controversy with respondent. In April 1991, petitioner accepted that offer and settled her suit against Mr.
Deutsch for a payment of $50,000.
On August 13, 1993, prior to the August 15, 1993, expiration of the period of limitations on assessment of a 1989 income tax deficiency against the estate, respondent determined that petitioner had received a distribution of income of $707,095 from the estate during 1989 and sent her a notice of a deficiency of $201,825 in her income tax for that year. Petitioner filed a timely petition with this Court.
The personal representatives had made distributions from the estate to the residuary beneficiaries in 1990 and 1991. As of the time of trial, the personal representatives had not made final distributions from the estate.
The question for decision is whether payments in satisfaction of a surviving spouse’s elective share under Florida law (the Florida elective share) are distributions of income or other amounts properly paid or credited or required to be distributed, secs. 661(a), 662(a); sec. 1.661(a)-2(e), Income Tax Regs., that carry out the estate’s DNI to the recipient.4 We begin our inquiry by summarizing the issues that bear on the question, as framed and argued by petitioner and respondent.
Petitioner argues, citing and quoting Ferguson, Freeland, & Ascher, Federal Income Taxation of Estates, Trusts, and Beneficiaries, sec. 1.3 at 1:17 (2d ed. 1993 & Supp. 1997) (Ferguson et al.), that the Florida elective share is not “subchapter J property”; in petitioner’s view, the Florida
elective share passes from a decedent to a surviving spouse outside “the subchapter J estate,” so that “the distribution rules of subchapter J simply do not apply”.5 See also Zaritsky & Lane, Federal Income Taxation of Estates and Trusts, sec. 1.06 at 1-12 (2d ed. 1993 & Supp. 1996). Petitioner also relies on Rev.
Rul. 64-101, 1964-1 C.B. (Part 1) 77, modified by Rev. Rul. 71- 167, 1971-1 C.B. 163, in which the Commissioner ruled that payment of the statutory predecessor of the elective share, Florida statutory dower, did not carry out the estate’s DNI to the surviving spouse.6 Respondent argues that petitioner is an estate beneficiary whose elective share interest is qualitatively indistinguishable from the interests of the estate’s residuary beneficiaries. In response to petitioner’s argument that any differences between the Florida elective share and statutory dower amount to “a
distinction without a difference”, respondent argues that any comparison between them is “inapposite”.
Inasmuch as State law is the source of legal rights and interests in property and income, we first ascertain the legal and economic characteristics of the Florida elective share under the Florida Probate Code as compared with Florida statutory dower. In so doing, we are bound and guided by the relevant rulings of the Florida Supreme Court, Commissioner v. Estate of Bosch, 387 U.S. 456, 465 (1967), and give “proper regard” to rulings of the lower Florida courts, id. We then determine the effect of those legal rights and interests for Federal income tax purposes in accordance with Federal income tax principles and rules. Morgan v. Commissioner, 309 U.S. 78, 81 (1940); Lyeth v.
Hoey, 305 U.S. 188, 193-194 (1938); Jones v. Whittington, 194 F.2d 812, 815 (10th Cir. 1952).
We agree with petitioner and conclude that the distribution rules of subchapter J do not apply to her Florida elective share.
The legal and economic differences between petitioner's interest in the Florida elective share and the interests of the residuary beneficiaries are so significant that their respective interests must be treated differently for Federal income tax purposes. The Florida elective share, which replaced statutory dower in 1975, should be accorded the same Federal income tax treatment as statutory dower because they have common legal and economic characteristics that justify their exclusion from the subchapter J estate. The exclusion of the Florida elective share from the subchapter J distribution rules is confirmed by its lack of any legal or economic participation in estate income, which, under Florida law, accrues in this case for the ultimate benefit of the estate’s residuary beneficiaries.
1. Comparison of Elective Share with Statutory Dower Florida statutory dower,7 from 1933 until its replacement in 1975 by the Florida elective share, was a widow's (changed to “surviving spouse” in 1973) one-third interest in “fee simple of the real property which was owned by her husband at the time of his death” and an absolute one-third interest in all “personal property owned by her husband at the time of his death”. Fla.
Stat. Ann. sec. 731.34 (West 1964) (repealed 1974). The widow was also entitled to “mesne profits” on statutory dower, or income earned by the dower interest from the date of the election to take dower until the date of actual payment. Fla. Stat. Ann.
sec. 733.12 (West 1964) (repealed 1974). Statutory dower was originally “free from all liability for the debts of the decedent and all costs, charges and expenses of administration”. 1933 Fla. Laws ch. 16103, sec. 35. However, it was modified in 1939
to render the widow's dower interest in personal property liable for secured debts, liens, mortgages, and other encumbrances.
1939 Fla. Laws ch. 18999, sec 1.
In 1975, the Florida legislature enacted the Florida Probate Code, which abolished statutory dower and replaced it with the Florida elective share, Fla. Stat. Ann. sec. 732.201 (West 1995), in its present form: 30 percent, Fla. Stat. Ann. sec. 732.207 (West 1995), of “all property of the decedent wherever located that is subject to administration except real property not located in Florida”, Fla. Stat. Ann. sec. 732.206 (West 1995), valued “on the date of death”, Fla. Stat. Ann. sec. 732.207 (West 1995).
The new elective share differed from statutory dower in 2 major respects. Unlike dower, as to which only personal property was liable for secured debts, the elective share is calculated net of all liens, mortgages, and unsecured claims, Fla. Stat.
Ann. sec. 732.207 (West 1995), including funeral expenses, Fla.
Stat. Ann. sec. 731.201(4) (West 1995); Paredes v. McLucas, 561 So. 2d 439, 441 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 1990). Second, the elective share does not accrue mesne profits; it does not participate in post mortem economic gains and losses and estate income, Price v.
Florida Natl. Bank, 419 So. 2d 389, 390-391 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App.
1982), although the electing spouse is entitled to interest on the share from the date of the order directing the personal representative to pay, id.
The elective share retains many fundamental attributes of statutory dower. See Hanley, Elective Share, in Basic Practice Under Florida Probate Code, sec. 7.1, at 275 (3d ed. 1987); Redfearn, Wills and Administration in Florida, sec. 19.3 (6th ed.
1986 & Supp. 1996). The Florida statutes governing the current elective share and statutory dower provide a virtually absolute right to the surviving spouse to elect to take the respective shares, Fla. Stat. Ann. sec. 732.201 (West 1995); Fla. Stat.
Ann. sec. 731.34 (West 1964) (repealed 1974); Catlett v. Chesnut, 131 So. 120, 122 (Fla. 1930), both of which vest at death, In re Estate of Donner, 364 So. 2d 742, 751 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 1978) (dower vests at death); Fla. Stat. Ann. sec. 732.201 (West 1995) (“The surviving spouse of a person who dies domiciled in Florida shall have the right” to take her elective share). Like statutory dower, the elective share becomes a fixed claim against the estate as of the date of decedent’s death, Wax v. Wilson, 101 So. 2d 54, 57 (Fla. Ct. App. 1958) (citing Catlett v. Chesnut, supra), of the amount determined by the Probate Court, Fla. Stat.
Ann. sec. 732.214 (West 1995).
Under Florida law, payment of the elective share takes precedence over distributions to all other beneficiaries, including those receiving specific bequests, Fla. Stat. Ann. sec.
733.805(1) (West 1995), just as statutory dower took such precedence. In re Malone’s Estate, 54 So. 2d 248, 249 (Fla.
1951); Murphy v. Murphy, 170 So. 856, 874 (Fla. 1936); Catlett v.
Chesnut, supra at 121. Under Fla. Stat. Ann. sec. 733.805(1) (West 1995), “payment of debts, estate and inheritance taxes, family allowances, exempt property, elective share charges, expenses of administration, and devises” are to be paid, in the absence of specific provision in decedent’s will, or designation of funds or property to be used, first from property not disposed of by the will and then, in turn, by residuary devises, “Property not specifically or demonstratively devised”, and last by specific or demonstrative devises.8 Consistent with Fla. Stat. Ann. sec. 733.805(1) (West 1995), and the substantively identical legal characteristics of the Florida elective share and its predecessor, statutory dower, the Florida Supreme Court has interpreted the Florida elective share as effectively entitling the surviving spouse to the same longstanding legislative favor and senior status relative to
beneficiaries under the decedent’s will that statutory dower enjoyed prior to 1974. Via v. Putnam, 656 So. 2d 460, 466 (Fla.
1995) (elective share); In re Estate of Donner, supra at 751-752 (dower); see also Pawley v. Pawley, 46 So. 2d 464, 472-473 n.2 (Fla. 1950). In Via v. Putnam, supra, the Florida Supreme Court recently concluded that the elective share and pretermitted spouse statutes give priority to the surviving spouse of a subsequent marriage over the contractual rights of the children of the decedent’s prior marriage who are beneficiaries of their parents’ mutual wills. The Court justified its holding as protecting the “`institution of marriage [that] has been a cornerstone of western civilization * * * and * * * the most important type of contract ever formed’”. Via v. Putnam, supra at 465 (quoting In re Estate of Yohn, 238 So. 2d 290, 296 (Fla.
1970) (Boyd, J., concurring)).9
2. Subchapter J Income Attribution Rules The income attribution rules of subchapter J give effect to the distinction made by section 102 between gifts and inheritances of property, which are excluded from a recipient's gross income, sec. 102(a), and the income derived therefrom, sec.
102(b)(1), and gifts of income from property, sec. 102(b)(2); Irwin v. Gavit, 268 U.S. 161 (1925), which are included in a recipient’s gross income. Subchapter J retains the conduit principle of the 1939 Code to pass income from an estate or trust to its beneficiaries, see H. Rept. 1337, 83d Cong., 2d Sess. 61 (1954); Kitch v. Commissioner, 104 T.C. 1, 11 (1995), affd. on other grounds 103 F.3d 104 (10th Cir. 1996), while introducing the mechanism of DNI to determine the amount and character of that income “to avoid both the necessity of ‘tracing’ and an inquiry into the subjective intention of executors”. Harkness v.
United States, 199 Ct. Cl. 721, 727, 469 F.2d 310, 316 (1973); see also H. Rept. 1337, supra; Kitch v. Commissioner, supra. A distribution included in the gross income of a beneficiary under subchapter J is “treated * * * as a gift, bequest, devise, or inheritance of income from property.” Sec. 102(b).
9(...continued) recipient of Florida statutory dower and estate beneficiaries that those beneficiaries would reimburse her for Federal income tax paid by her on receipt of an advance payment of statutory dower).
a. Application of Subchapter J Distribution Rules to Estates Estates, which are not required to distribute currently all income received, are taxed only on income not actually distributed or required to be distributed to beneficiaries, secs.
641(a), 661, with a deduction for distributions included in beneficiaries' gross income under section 662, sec. 661(a).
Beneficiaries must include section 662 distributions in their gross income in 2 tiers: First, “income * * * required to be distributed currently”, sec. 662(a)(1); and, second, all “other amounts properly paid, credited, or required to be distributed”, sec. 662(a)(2)(B). DNI is ratably allocated among all first tier distributions, sec. 662(a)(1), and the balance is then ratably allocated among all second tier distributions, sec.
662(a)(2)(B). Amounts distributed in excess of DNI are deemed to be distributions of corpus, passing to the beneficiary tax-free.
Id. In most cases, distributions by estates during administration are in the second tier.10 Section 663(a)(1) excludes payments of specific sums of money or specific property from the subchapter J estate, thus giving effect to the distinction made by State law between
specific bequests of property and bequests from the residuary estate, see, e.g., Park Lake Presbyterian Church v. Estate of Henry, 106 So. 2d 215, 217 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 1958). Although the Code does not expressly state that section 663(a)(1) gifts or bequests are excluded from a recipient's gross income under section 102(a), the regulations, section 1.102-1(d), Income Tax Regs., “acknowledge that they enjoy this status”. 3 Bittker & Lokken, Federal Taxation of Income, Estates and Gifts, sec.
81.4.7 at 81-46 (2d ed. 1991 & Supp. No. 4 1996).11 b. Section 662(a)(2)(B) Not All-Inclusive The distribution rules of sections 661 and 662, and the exclusion for specific bequests provided by section 663(a)(1) do not exclusively govern the section 102 differentiation between nontaxable gifts and inheritances of property and taxable income from property. Because sections 661-663, found in subpart C of
subchapter J, do not expressly claim the attribute of exclusiveness, they are not regarded as having that attribute.12 Under various judicial, regulatory, and administrative exceptions, certain assets in which a decedent had an interest are excluded from the subchapter J estate. As a result, the subchapter J distribution rules do not apply to their transfer or receipt.13 In Petersen v. Commissioner, 35 T.C. 962 (1961), we held that subchapter J distributions do not include income generated by property held in joint and survivorship tenancies because the decedent’s interest ceases to exist at death, supplanted by the surviving joint tenant’s interest, leaving nothing for the estate to administer. Id. at 967-968; see also Lang v. Commissioner, 289 U.S. 109, 110 (1933) (tenancy by the entirety); Edmonds v.
Commissioner, 90 F.2d 14, 16 (9th Cir. 1937), affg. 31 B.T.A. 962 (1934) (joint and survivorship tenancy).14 Similarly, funds deposited in joint and survivorship bank accounts, title to which passes to the survivor under State law, while included in a decedent’s gross estate for Federal transfer tax purposes, sec. 2040; sec. 20.2040-1(b), Estate Tax Regs., pass outside the subchapter J estate because the funds are not subject to estate administration. Petersen v. Commissioner, supra. Proceeds of life insurance policies, sec. 101(a); sec.
1.101-1(a), Income Tax Regs., Totten trusts, or savings bank account trusts, property held in revocable trusts that terminate at death whose corpus is transferred to named beneficiaries, and property held in irrevocable trusts over which decedent retained a life interest are other instances of property includable in a decedent’s gross estate for estate tax purposes, see secs. 2036 (transfers with retained life estates); 2037 (transfers taking effect at death); 2038 (revocable transfers); 2042 (proceeds of life insurance), none of the payments or distributions of which are included in section 661 and 662 distributions. See Zaritsky
& Lane, supra sec. 1.06 at 1-12 to 1-13.15 In each of these preceding instances, Federal income tax treatment takes into account the legal and economic characteristics of the property interest under State law by excluding the transfer of such property from the subchapter J distribution rules.
Section 1.661(a)-2(e), Income Tax Regs., limits the scope of section 662(a)(2)(B) by excluding from second tier distributions all transfers of a decedent’s fee simple interest in real property to heirs, legatees, or devisees when title passes directly under State law upon decedent’s death. Specific devises by a decedent of real property the title to which passes directly at his death, which might otherwise be excluded from subchapter J property under an expansive reading of section 663(a)(1), are instead excluded from second tier distributions because they do “not constitute an amount paid, credited, or required to be distributed under section 661”. Sec. 1.663(a)-1(c)(1)(ii), Income Tax Regs.
The Commissioner has also ruled that a transfer of real property, which would otherwise be part of the residuary estate,
is also excluded from the subchapter J estate when title to such property passes directly to an heir or devisee. “[E]ven though the real property is in the possession of the executor or administrator during the period of administration”, such transfers are subject only “to the general provisions of section 102 of the Code.” Rev. Rul. 68-49, 1968-1 C.B. 304, 305; cf.
Rev. Rul. 62-116, 1962-2 C.B. 207.
In Rev. Rul. 64-101, 1964-1 C.B. (Part 1) 77, relied upon by petitioner, the Commissioner advanced the broad exclusion of real property as the primary ground for similarly excluding payment of Florida statutory dower from section 662(a)(2)(B) distributions.
The Commissioner primarily justified the exclusion of dower by its similarities in “legal characteristics to the real property exception provided in” section 1.661(a)-2(e), Income Tax Regs.
Rev. Rul. 64-101, 1964-1 C.B. (Part 1) at 79. The Commissioner went on to declare that the statutory “dower interest might be even more absolute than real property * * * since real property * * * might be liable for debts of the estate.”16 Id.
Rev. Rul. 64-101, 1964-1 C.B. (Part 1) at 78, also cited similarities in “purpose and effect” between statutory dower and temporary family support allowances payable from corpus, which were excluded from the subchapter J estate under section 1.661(a)-2(e), Income Tax Regs., at the time Rev. Rul. 64-101, 1964-1 C.B. (Part 1) 77, was published. However, Estate of McCoy v. Commissioner, 50 T.C. 562 (1968), held invalid that portion of section 1.661(a)-2(e), Income Tax Regs., and the regulation was accordingly modified.17 Nevertheless, in modifying the portion of the regulation dealing with family support allowances, the Commissioner did not retract support for the exclusion of statutory dower from the subchapter J estate on the ground of its legal similarity to real property whose title directly vests in a 16(...continued) obviously does not rely upon that reading inasmuch as it relies upon the similarity of statutory dower to real property, passage of title to which is subject to debts secured by mortgages and other liens.
devisee.18 Thus, Rev. Rul. 64-101, 1964-1 C.B. (Part 1) 77, continued to have vitality insofar as it relied upon the real property exception of section 1.661(a)-2(e), Income Tax Regs., to justify the exclusion of Florida statutory dower from subchapter J distributions.
3. Exclusion of Statutory Dower From Surviving Spouse’s Gross Income Requires Exclusion of Elective Share Several legal and economic characteristics of statutory dower virtually replicate the characteristics of transfers of decedents’ real property. Both are rights to property, Fla.
Stat. Ann. sec. 731.34 (West 1964) (repealed 1974), that vest in the recipient at decedent’s death, Emmerson v. Merritt, 94 N.E.
955, 956 (Ill. 1911) (real property vests at death); Jones v.
Federal Farm Mortgage Corp., 182 So. 226, 227 (Fla. 1938) (same); In re Estate of Donner, 364 So. 2d at 751 (dower vests at death).
While both rights of succession share antecedents rooted in the common law, they have both evolved into transfers at death whose rights and limitations now are a matter of legislative discretion. Irving Trust Co. v. Day, 314 U.S. 556, 562 (1942); Coral Gables First Natl. Bank v. Hart, 20 So. 2d 647, 649 (Fla.
1945) (devolution is a matter of legislative discretion). The most significant limitation on both interests is liability for
decedent’s debts. See, e.g., Fla. Stat. Ann. sec. 733.613 (West 1995) (power of sale over real property to pay debts); Fla. Stat.
Ann. sec. 731.34 (West 1964) (repealed 1974) (personalty liable for decedent’s secured debts after 1939).
The Commissioner’s ruling in Rev. Rul. 64-101, 1964-1 C.B.
(Part 1) 77, confirmed that the longstanding practice of excluding dower from a widow’s gross income under the 1939 Code and earlier revenue acts would be continued under the 1954 Code.
6 Merten's Law of Federal Income Taxation, sec. 36.81 at 390 (1949) (“Amounts received as dower by a widow are not taxable” under the 1939 Code). There is no evidence in the legislative history of the 1954 Code that Congress intended to reverse the exclusion when it enacted subchapter J.19 That exclusion ensures that the surviving spouse will incur no income tax liability by
reason of the transfer to her of property in satisfaction of statutory dower in excess of any tax liability incurred by reason of her receipt of mesne profits. The exclusion is also consistent with the longstanding solicitude of the Florida legislature towards the economic interests of the surviving spouse that has been repeatedly implemented by the Florida Supreme Court. See, e.g., Via v. Putnam, 656 So. 2d 460 (Fla.
1995); In re Malone’s Estate, 54 So. 2d at 249; Pawley v. Pawley,
Moreover, the Florida elective share, unlike statutory dower, does not share in income of the estate, or mesne profits, nor is it entitled to interest from the estate prior to the date distribution is ordered by the Probate Court, Price v. Florida Natl. Bank, 419 So. 2d at 390-391. This is because Fla. Stat.
Ann. sec. 732.207 (West 1995), fixes the amount as of the date of decedent's death without any other express statutory provision for income to accrue. A transfer of statutory dower to a surviving spouse included both property and mesne profits and the surviving spouse incurred an income tax liability under section 102(b) to the extent of the mesne profits.21 The fact that the surviving spouse who elects the Florida elective share incurs no similar income tax liability because she is not entitled to enjoy
any portion of estate income only confirms that the payment of the Florida elective share is not a subchapter J distribution.
The dissociation of the Florida elective share from estate income is illustrated in the case at hand by the following catalog of the respective interests of the surviving spouse and the residuary beneficiaries of the Deutsch estate in various categories of 1989 estate income.
In 1989, the estate received $152,910 in interest and dividends. Petitioner had no right to receive, participate in, or enjoy any of these items because the estate received them after decedent's death; the Probate Court fixed the value and amount of the elective share as of the date of decedent’s death.
Fla. Stat. Ann. secs. 732.207, 732.214 (West 1995). Furthermore, the estate received some of those items of income after it had paid petitioner on November 3, 1989, bearing in mind that the estate's taxable year was the entire calendar year 1989.
The estate also realized $176,432 in net capital gains that, because decedent's assets received a step-up in basis at his death to fair market value, sec. 1014(a), measured appreciation in estate assets only from the date of death until sale.
Petitioner enjoyed no benefits from that post mortem appreciation because her share was valued as of the date of decedent’s death.
Fla. Stat. Ann. sec. 732.207 (West 1995). Although the assets whose sale generated the gains were realized in order to enable the estate to pay petitioner’s elective share, the economic benefit of those gains inured solely to the estate and its residuary beneficiaries, Mr. Deutsch and his sisters. Mr.
Deutsch’s purported allocation of capital gains to income, whatever its effect for estate accounting purposes, had no practical consequence whatsoever with respect to the relative entitlements of petitioner and the residuary beneficiaries.
The largest components of the estate's 1989 DNI, totaling $377,753, were the distributions to the estate from decedent's IRA's. The bulk of the income from the IRA's represented the proceeds of decedent's lifetime accumulations of deferred compensation and were included in estate principal under Florida law. Fla. Stat. Ann. sec. 738.04(c) (West 1995). Although petitioner had an economic interest equal to 30 percent of the value of the IRA’s reflected in the amount of the elective share, the remaining 70 percent redounded to the benefit of the residuary beneficiaries. Neither subchapter J, nor the income tax law generally, provides for allocating income between petitioner on the one hand, and the estate and its beneficiaries on the other, on the basis of their proportionate economic interests therein. Because the quantitative interest of the estate and its residuary beneficiaries in the income from the IRA’s is more than twice as large as petitioner’s interest therein, the entire amount of that income should remain with the estate.22 Section 662(a)(2)(B) does not exclusively govern all transfers by a decedent’s estate that are not otherwise governed by section 662(a)(1) and section 662(a)(2)(A) as income required to be distributed currently. Second tier distributions do not include interests in joint tenancies, income derived therefrom, transfers at decedent’s death of title to real property, or payments in satisfaction of statutory dower, all of which share a number of legal and economic characteristics. In Rev. Rul. 64- 101, 1964-1 C.B.(Part 1) 77, the Commissioner has conceded that statutory dower is properly excluded from second tier distributions under the 1954 Code, just as payments for statutory forced shares were excluded from distributions of estate income under the 1939 Code and earlier revenue acts.23 The same must hold true of petitioner’s Florida elective share.
We conclude that payment to the surviving spouse in satisfaction of the Florida elective share is not a distribution within the meaning of sections 661(a) and 662(a)(2)(B).
Petitioner is not required to include any part of the payment of her Florida elective share in gross income.
for petitioner.
Decision will be entered
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