Walton v. Commissioner

Walton v. Commissioner, 115 T.C. 589 (2000),[1] a decision of the United States Tax Court in favor of taxpayer Audrey J. Walton, "ruled that a grantor's right to receive a fixed amount for a term of years, if that right is a qualified interest within the meaning of Section 2702(b),[2] is valued for gift tax purposes under Section 7520,[3] without regard to the life expectancy of the transferor."[4] More simply, a grantor's estate's contingent interest in a grantor-created annuity upon the grantor's death does not constitute a gift to anyone; but rather, is a retained interest of the grantor.[5]

Walton v. Commissioner
CourtUnited States Tax Court
Full case nameAudrey J. Walton v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue
DecidedDecember 22, 2000 (2000-12-22)
Citation(s)115 T.C. 589
Court membership
Judges sittingArthur L. Nims, III, Thomas B. Wells, Herbert Chabot, Stephen Swift, Robert Ruwe, Laurence Whalen, John O. Colvin, James Halpern, Carolyn Chiechi, David Laro, Juan F. Vasquez, Joseph H. Gale, L. Paige Marvel
Case opinions
MajorityNims, joined by a unanimous court
Laws applied
Internal Revenue Code
Keywords

Facts edit

Audrey J. Walton created two grantor retained annuity trusts (GRATs).[1] Each GRAT had a two-year duration during which Audrey retained the right to receive an annuity.[1] If Audrey died within the two-year period, the annuity payments would be received by her estate.[1] "The balance of the trust property would then be paid to the remainder beneficiaries."[1] Audrey's daughter, Ann Walton Kroenke was the beneficiary of one GRAT, and her other daughter, Nancy Walton Laurie, was the beneficiary of the other.[6]

The GRATs did not return the full annuity payments expected by Audrey (because Wal-Mart stock had underperformed expectations), so no property remained for the daughters (the remainder beneficiaries).[6] Audrey filed a gift-tax return (Form 709) valuing the GRATs as gifts of $0.[7] The IRS "issued a notice of deficiency,"[7] asserting that the taxable value of each gift was $3.8 million.[7] Audrey admitted that a mistake was made, but claimed that each gift was worth only $6k.[7]

Issues edit

  • How should the value of the gift effected upon the creation of a GRAT be calculated?
  • Did Audrey accurately value her gifts, or did she miscalculate the value of each one by close to $4 million?

Holding edit

In calculating gift tax for the creation of a GRAT, the grantor's estate's contingent interest in the annuity payments upon the grantor's death should be considered a retained interest of the grantor, not as a gift to someone. The court sided with Audrey, but declined to make specific gift-tax calculations because timing disagreements remained that could best be dealt with through Rule 155 proceedings.

Reasoning edit

First the court noted that IRC § 2702[2] provides a formula for gift valuation: "(Value of property transferred) - (value of any qualified interest retained by the grantor) = value of gift."[8] Then court reasoned that "[i]t is axiomatic that an individual cannot make a gift to himself or to his or her own estate."[8] Consequently, "by default [Audrey] retained all interests in the 2-year term annuities set forth in the trust documents,"[9] even though the annuity payments would belong to her estate in the event she died within the two-year period.

Impact edit

This case has led to the proliferation of "Walton GRATs," which tax experts Beth D. Tractenberg & Michael J. Parets describe as GRATs that last "for a term of years, with the annuity payable to the grantor's estate if the grantor dies during the annuity term."[10] This allows the grantor to retain a qualified interest that is equal to the property transferred, resulting in a gift valuation of zero to the remainder-interest party[ies].[10] The hope is that there will be an upswing in the market, allowing the remainder-interest party[ies] to take home excess returns (above the annuity returns to the grantor) without the imposition of a gift tax.[11]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Walton v. Commissioner, 115 T.C. 589 (T.C. 2000).
  2. ^ a b 26 U.S.C. § 2702
  3. ^ 26 U.S.C. § 7520
  4. ^ Carlyn S. McCaffrey, Lloyd Leva Plaine, & Pam H. Schneider, The Aftermath of Walton: The Rehabilitation of the Fixed-term, Zeroed-out GRAT, Journal of Taxation (Dec. 2001) (internal footnote omitted).
  5. ^ Walton v. Commissioner, 115 T.C. 589, 595 (T.C. 2000) ("It is axiomatic that an individual cannot make a gift to himself or to his or her own estate.").
  6. ^ a b Walton v. Commissioner, 115 T.C. 589, 591 (T.C. 2000).
  7. ^ a b c d Walton v. Commissioner, 115 T.C. 589, 592 (T.C. 2000).
  8. ^ a b Walton v. Commissioner, 115 T.C. 589, 595 (T.C. 2000).
  9. ^ Walton v. Commissioner, 115 T.C. 589, 596 (T.C. 2000).
  10. ^ a b Beth D. Tractenberg & Michael J. Parets,Grantor Retained Annuity Trusts vs. Intentionally Defective Grantor Trusts, Practising Law Institute (2006), at 763.
  11. ^ Beth D. Tractenberg & Michael J. Parets,Grantor Retained Annuity Trusts vs. Intentionally Defective Grantor Trusts, Practising Law Institute (2006), at 766.

External links edit

Text of Walton v. Commissioner, 115 T.C. 589 (2000) is available from: Google Scholar  Leagle  United States Tax Court