This document summarizes a Supreme Court case regarding gift taxes assessed on stock transfers in trust. Key points:
- In 1950 and 1951, Allison and Esther Gibbs transferred stock into trusts for their 5 children. The IRS assessed gift taxes on the full stock value, not just the difference between value and claimed consideration.
- The Gibbs paid the additional taxes under protest and appealed, arguing the transfers were meant to provide for their children, not gifts.
- The Court had to determine if the transfers were truly gifts subject to tax, or if the consideration stated in the trust agreements meant the children did not need to pay gift taxes. It examined the trust provisions and objectives.
This document summarizes a Supreme Court case regarding gift taxes assessed on stock transfers in trust. Key points:
- In 1950 and 1951, Allison and Esther Gibbs transferred stock into trusts for their 5 children. The IRS assessed gift taxes on the full stock value, not just the difference between value and claimed consideration.
- The Gibbs paid the additional taxes under protest and appealed, arguing the transfers were meant to provide for their children, not gifts.
- The Court had to determine if the transfers were truly gifts subject to tax, or if the consideration stated in the trust agreements meant the children did not need to pay gift taxes. It examined the trust provisions and objectives.
This document summarizes a Supreme Court case regarding gift taxes assessed on stock transfers in trust. Key points:
- In 1950 and 1951, Allison and Esther Gibbs transferred stock into trusts for their 5 children. The IRS assessed gift taxes on the full stock value, not just the difference between value and claimed consideration.
- The Gibbs paid the additional taxes under protest and appealed, arguing the transfers were meant to provide for their children, not gifts.
- The Court had to determine if the transfers were truly gifts subject to tax, or if the consideration stated in the trust agreements meant the children did not need to pay gift taxes. It examined the trust provisions and objectives.
This document summarizes a Supreme Court case regarding gift taxes assessed on stock transfers in trust. Key points:
- In 1950 and 1951, Allison and Esther Gibbs transferred stock into trusts for their 5 children. The IRS assessed gift taxes on the full stock value, not just the difference between value and claimed consideration.
- The Gibbs paid the additional taxes under protest and appealed, arguing the transfers were meant to provide for their children, not gifts.
- The Court had to determine if the transfers were truly gifts subject to tax, or if the consideration stated in the trust agreements meant the children did not need to pay gift taxes. It examined the trust provisions and objectives.
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VOL.
4, APRIL 28, 1962 1165 1166 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED
Gibbs vs. Collector of Internal Revenue Gibbs vs. Collector of Internal Revenue No. L-14166. April 28, 1962. Ozaeta, Gibbs & Ozaeta for petitioner Finley J. Gibbs, et al. FINLEY J. GIBBS, as Trustee for JOHNSON KELLEY GIBBS, ALLISON Solicitor General for respondent Collector of Internal Revenue. DEFRANCE GIBBS, CANDACE GIBBS, DOUGLAS FLETCHER GIBBS, and REGINALD KELLEY GIBBS, plaintiff-petitioner; ALLISON J. GIBBS and CONCEPCION, J.: ESTHER K. GIBBS, intervenors-petitioners, vs. COLLECTOR OF INTERNAL REVENUE and COURT OF TAX APPEALS, respondents. These are two (2) appeals, one by the plaintiff and the plaintiffs-intervenors and the other by the Government, from a decision of the Court of Tax Appeals, No. L-14320. April 28, 1962. hereafter referred to as the lower court, promulgated on February 28, 1958, the COLLECTOR OF INTERNAL REVENUE, petitioner, vs. FlNLEY J. GIBBS, as dispositive part of which reads: Trustee for JOHNSON KELLEY GlBBS, ALLISON DEFRANCE GIBBS, "IN VIEW OF THE FOREGOING, the decision appealed from is modified, and CANDACE GIBBS, DOUGLAS FLETCHER GIBBS and REGINALD the defendant Collector of Internal Revenue is hereby ordered to refund to the KELLEY GIBBS, respondent; ALLISON J. GIBBS and ESTHER K. GIBBS, plaintiff the sum of P5,381.88, as computed in Annex 'A' hereof, with interest at respondentsintervenors. the legal rate from date of payment. Without special pronouncement as to costs." Trusts; Provisions of trust agreement; Payment of consideration stipulated as amended by a resolution of said lower court, dated July 25, 1958, the in the agreement.—If the trustors earnestly concerned in providing ample funds concluding paragraph of which is as follows: to assure the support, maintenance, care, health, higher education and travel of "WHEREFORE, our decision of February 28, 1958 is modified in the sense that their children and the launching of their career after they had become of age, the delinquency interest of one-half (1/2) of one (1%) percent should be they would not have really meant to require them to pay the consideration computed on the deficiency taxes only from July 1, 1954 to July 30, 1954, and stipulated in the trust agreements. the defendant Collector of Internal Revenue is hereby ordered to refund to plaintiff the sum of P9,387.54 as computed in Annex 'A' hereof, with interest at Same; Same; Reason given for execution of agreements obviously untrue. the legal rate from date of payment. Without special pronouncement as to costs." —Considering that one of the prime objectives of the trustors in executing the trust agreements was "to transfer as much as possible of our Philippine assets to On September 25, 1950, Allison J. Gibbs and his wife Esther K. Gibbs, the United States in the form of dollars", it is understandable that they did not hereinafter referred to as trustors, executed five (5) separate documents each, wish the stock in question to be disposed of in the Philippines, for this would entitled "Deed of Sale and Declaration of Trust", whereby the respective trustors surely defeat the accomplishment of said objectives. At the same time, it is transferred, sold and assigned, in trust, 53,000 shares of stock of the Lepanto apparent that the reason given in said compromise agreements for the execution Consolidated Mining Co., in favor of each one of their five (5) children, namely, thereof is not true. Johnson Kelley Gibbs, Allison Defrance Gibbs, Candace Gibbs, Douglas Fletcher Gibbs and Reginald Kelley Gibbs in consideration of the sum of Taxation; Gift taxes; Question of who shall pay tax determined by law.— P26,227.70, to be paid "on or before December 23, 1950, by selling, mortgaging, The questions as to who shall pay any given tax and what shall be the basis hypothecating, or pledging part or all of the corpus of the trust." The market thereof are determined by law, the operation of which can not be affected by the value of said 53,000 shares on September 25, 1950 was P34,980.00. provisions of a contract to which the Government is not a party. The terms and conditions of the ten (10) deeds of Same; Same; Payment of interest on unpaid tax.—Section 119(b) (2) of 1167 the Tax Code, which provides far the payment of interest on any unpaid tax, VOL. 4, APRIL 28, 1962 1167 applies only when the taxes are not paid within the extension granted by the Gibbs vs. Collector of Internal Revenue Commissioner of Internal Revenue. trust were identical. Instituted trustee, without bond, in said ten (10) deeds, was Finley J. Gibbs, a brother of trustor Allison J. Gibbs, who, as attorney-in-fact of APPEALS from a decision of the Court of Tax Appeals. the former, accepted the trust, in his (Finley J. Gibbs') name, for and on behalf of The facts are stated in the opinion of the Court. the aforementioned beneficiaries. The trust was to terminate upon the respective 1166 beneficiary reaching the age of 35. If the beneficiary died before reaching that age, leaving legitimate issue, the trust would continue, but for the benefit of the These additional deeds of trust impelled the defendant to assess, on April 8, latter, and the full distribution and termination of the trust with respect to such 1952, a donor gift tax of P304.42 on each trustor, or a total of P608.84 for both issue would be effected not later than 20 years after the death of said beneficiary. trustors, and a donee gift tax of P36.69, on each of the beneficiaries, or a total of If the beneficiary died before reaching the age of 35 leaving no legitimate issue, P366.90. These amounts were paid on May 15, 1952, within the statutory period the trustee would turn over the trust corpus or the remainder thereof and any therefor. accumulated income, share and share alike, to the other beneficiaries or children Holding that gift taxes are available on the full market value of all the shares of the trustors. of stock thus placed in trust—instead of upon the difference between said market On October 24, 1950, the trustors gavenotice to the then Collector of Internal value and the stipulated considerations—on June 16, 1954, de fendant assessed Revenue, hereafter referred to as defendant, of the execution of the ten (10) additional donor gift taxes in the sums of P5,093.71 on each trustor, or a total of deeds of trust and requested a ruling on whether or not gift taxes were due P10,187.42, for the ten (10) trusts created on September 25, 1950, and thereon. Soon, thereafter, or on December 14, 1950, defendant assessed a donee P8,788.78, on each trustor, or a total of P17,577.56 for the trusts created on gift tax of P75.00 on each of the beneficiaries in said trust agreements, or a total December 28, 1951. Additional donee gift taxes were, likewise, assessed in the of P750.40, and a donor gift tax of P774.04 on each of the trustors, or P1,548.08 sum of P12,040.30 for the ten (10) additional trusts created on December 28, for both. These assessments were based upon the difference between said market 1951. The corresponding assessment notices demanded value of the shares of stock and the stipulated consideration for transfer thereof, 1169 On December 22, 1950, defendant revised his assessment of the donor gift tax by VOL. 4, APRIL 28, 1962 1169 increasing it from P774.04 to P342.84 for each trustor, or a total of P1,685.68. Gibbs vs. Collector of Internal Revenue The next day, the donee gift taxes were, also, increased, from the aforementioned that these three (3) sums be paid on or before June 30, 1954. Upon request of the total sum of P750.40 to P17,-856.90. taxpayers, they were given an extension up to July 31, 1954, on which date said Within the period fixed by law, or on May 15, 1951, said donor and donee sums were paid under protest. Thus, the amounts paid under protest for the two gift taxes in the sums of P1 685.68 and P17,856.90, respectively, were paid. (2) sets of trusts in question aggregate P56,911.78, itemized as follows: Subsequently, the refund of P17,106.50, representing the difference between the amount of the first assessment (P750.40) for donee gift taxes and that of the Donee gift taxes on the trusts created on Sep- second assessment thereof (P17,- tember 25, 1950 ............................................................................................................ 1168 Donor gift taxes on the trusts created on Septem- 1168 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED ber 25, 1950 .................................................................................................................. Gibbs vs. Collector of Internal Revenue Donee gift taxes on the trusts created on Decem- 856.90), was demanded, but the demand was, on August 23, 1951, turned down ber 28 1951 ................................................................................................................... by the defendant. The trustee appealed to the Secretary of Finance. Before the Donor gift taxes on the trusts created on Decem- latter could pass upon the appeal, however, the Board of Tax Appeals was ber 28, 1951 .................................................................................................................. created by Executive Order No. 401 of the President of the Philippines. The pertinent records were then forwarded to said Board. Alleging fear of expiration TOTAL .................................................................................... of the two-year period for the refund of said sum of P17,106.50, on May 12, In the meantime, or on June 16, 1954, Republic Act No. 1125, creating the Court 1953, the trustee instituted Civil Case No. 19541 of the Court of First Instance of of Tax Appeals, had been approved and become effective. Pursuant to section 22 Manila against the defendant for the recovery of such amount. of said Act, the records of Civil Case No. 19541 of the Court of First Instance of Meanwhile, or on December 28, 1951, the trustors, by five (5) separate Manila were, on August 26, 1954, forwarded to the Court of Tax Appeals. In documents each, had created ten (10) additional and separate trusts, each October, 1955, the trustors intervened in the case as plaintiffsintervenors. In their involving 22,400 shares of stock of the same mining company, in favor of each complaint in intervention they prayed for the refund of the additional donor gift of the aforementioned beneficiaries, for the stipulated consideration of P17,430, taxes paid by them in the aggregate sum of P27,764.98, with interest and to be paid by the trustees withIn 120 days after the transfer of said stock has been attorney's fees. In July, 1956, the trustee amended his complaint to include effected in the books of the mining company. In all other respects, the terms and therein the claim for refund of the aggregate sum of P50,911.78 specified above. conditions of this second set of deeds of trusts are identical to those of the first In due course, thereafter, the Court of Tax Appeals rendered its aforementioned set. Admittedly, the market value of said 22,400 shares was then P19,264.00 decision, which on motion for reconsideration was amended as adverted to above. Hence, these appeals, one by the trustee (plaintiff) and the trustors (plaintiffsintervenors), G. R. No. L-14166, and another by the defendant, G. R. Gibbs vs. Collector of Internal Revenue No. L-14320. attorney-in-fact of the trustee, his brother Finley J. Gibbs; that there was The main issue raised in the first appeal is whether the gift taxes on the absolutely no consideration for the release of the trustee from the obligation to transfer of the shares of stock aforementioned should be based on the full market pay P26,227.70 on or before December 23, 1950 , und er e ac h o f the de eds o value of said shares of stock at the time of the respective transfers thereof or only executed on September 25, 1950; that the promissory notes adverted to above upon the difference between said market value and the consideration stipulated bear no date and were not executed before any witness; and that the date of in the trust agreements. The defendant adhered to the first alternative, maturity therein set is so distant, in relation to the due dates under said deeds of 1170 trust, we find no justification for disturbing the conclusion reached by the lower 1170 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED court. In fact, said conclusion is borne out by the following circumstances: Gibbs vs. Collector of Internal Revenue 1. In answer to the following question propounded by a Judge of said court which the Court of Tax Appeals, likewise, adopted, upon the ground that the "If the trusts were created for the benefit of your childre and as you said, one of stipulated considerations were—ex cept as to the aggregate sum of P52,277.00 the consequences of which was your love and affection for your children, what allegedly paid by the trustee in June 1953—in effect, simulated. need was there for you to impose this burden of requiring them to pay for those Indeed, the stipulated consideration of P262,277.00, for the transfer of the shares?" 530,000 shares of stock involved in the first set of deeds of trust were to be paid, pursuant thereto, "on or before December 23, 1950, by selling, mortgaging, trustor Allison J. Gibbs answered: hypothecating or pledging part or all of the corpus of the trust". On December 2, 1950, the Central Bank granted plaintiffs application for license to sell, assign or "Well, there were tax considerations involved, Your Honor, h i ha ve not on ly to encumber said shares of stock. Yet nothing was done to pay the stipulated th ink of the Phi lip pine tax pro blem the United States tax problems. I very consideration on the date set therefor. What is more, the trustors did not demand carefully went into the whole matter before my wife and I decided on doing what payment of, or do anything to collect, said consideration. we did. I studied and came to the conclusion that we could not afford to make an It is true that on June 15, 1953, or about three and half years (3-1/2) after the outright gift of these shares, that the taxes that would result not only to the latter had become due, Allison J. Gibbs, as one of the trustors and as attorney-in- Philippine government but to the United States government would be too big for fact for the trustee, as well as the other trustor, his wife, Esther K. Gibbs, us to shoulder, considering the fact that we also are letting off our control of executed ten (10) documents entitled "Compromise Agreement", stating that the transfers of our right into these substantial portion of our assets. We could not parties had agreed to suspend and defer payment of the sum of P26,277.70 have afforded to do it. It calls by way of future interest under the United States stipulated in each of the first ten (10) trust agreements, and to liquidate the gift tax laws for payment of gift taxes. We are allowed an exemption both—for obligation to make said payment as follows: (a) the trustee would pay P5,227.70 both my wife—for each of my wife and myself of $30,000.00 under the United on or before June 30, 1953; and (b) the balance of P21,000.00 would be paid on States Federal gift tax law. But these gifts, had they been accepted x x x had they or before the 21st birthday of the respective beneficiaries or the date of been made 100% rather, these transf ers had they been made without any termination of the trust, whichever date came first. The trustee and the trustors consideration would have been taxable 100% at the market value on that date. have, likewise, introduced in evidence, ten (10) promissory notes of the trustee, That would have resulted on a tremendous tax both to the Philippine government for said sum of P21,000, allegedly executed in compliance with said compromise and to the United States government. We could not afford to pay those taxes, and agreements. that is fundamentally one reason for fixing the price that we did fix which was These did not merit, however, full faith and credence from the Court of Tax premised upon our cost." Appeals, which regarded such agreements, as well as said promissory notes, as a 2. The deeds of trust state that the purpose thereof is "to establish an endowment mere devise to avoid and evade payment of the corresponding gift taxes. for the support, 'maintenance, care, health, higher education and travel of the Considering that the trustee is a brother of trustor Allison J. Gibbs; that the ten 1172 (10) cash payments of P5,277.70 each, referred to in the compromise agreements aforementioned, were seemingly made to trustors Esther K. Gibbs and Allison J. 1172 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED Gibbs by the latter as Gibbs vs. Collector of Internal Revenue 1171 beneficiary and the launching of his career after he becomes of age". These VOL. 4, APRIL 28, 1962 1171 purposes would be materially impaired, if not entirely defeated, if the beneficiaries were to pay the stipulated consideration aggregating P262,277, under the first set of deeds of trust, and P174,300 under the second set, or a total If, as you said, one of the purposes of imposing a consideration on the trustee in of P436,577. If we deduct this sum from the aggregate market value of all the your favor and that of your wife, was to protect the interest of both you and your shares of stock in question—which is P542,540—the net value of the whole trust wife, why is it that when these dividends were declared by the Lepanto would be reduced to P105,863 and the net value of the aggregate trust for each Consolidated Mining Company, and were so declared, you did not collect the beneficiary would be no more than P21,172.60. And, if as the trustee and the consideration from these dividends to offset the stipulated consideration in the trustors maintain, the taxes under consideration (P56,911.78) should be deducted series of trust agreements? from the corpus of the trust, the net value of the aggregate trust for each "A—Because that would defeat the very objectives for which we created the beneficiary would be further reduced to P9,790.244. Certainly, this amount, as trusts and at least, one of the objectives was to transfer as much as possible of well as the aforementioned sum of P21,172.60 could hardly be sufficient for the our Philippine assets to the United States in the form of dollars so as to create "support, maintenance, care, health, higher education and travel" of each dollar assets in the United States on which our children could rely under the trust beneficiary and "the launching of his career after he has become of age", indentures. In fact, that was the prime basis upon which h i secur ed the even tual 3. The trustors are financially well off. When the first set of deeds of trust lice ns ing by the Bank of the transactions. In fact, h i to ld the Cen tral Ba they were executed (September 25, 1950), their assets in the Philippines and United did not license it on the basis on which h i h ad propo which I considered States were worth P1,500,000.00 and P500,000.00, respectively, at the rate of absolutely legal, then I would find some other way of accomplishing the P2.00 to a $1.00. If the trustors were earnestly concerned, as they seemingly objective. If necessary, I would leave the Philippine Islands and become a were, in providing ample funds to assure the support, maintenance, care, health, resident of the United States. And, in that instance, under their regulations, there higher education and travel of their children and the launching of their career could be no question that all of my assets in the Philippines which were earning after they had become of age, the trustors would not have really meant to require dividends would be entitled to have the dividends remitted to the United States. them to pay the consideration stipulated in the trust agreements. The subsequent They saw the logic of my reasoning and they finall y agre ed on the transac ti acts of the trustors showed that they did not intend to collect said consideration. issuing the license, XL-530 on December 2, 1950, Exhibit J-2, plaintiff. There As the lower court had correctly observed: has been no question from the very beginning of one of the prime purposes of "x x x We assume that the trustors were indeed serious about the purpose of the this transaction—it was to create a dollar estate for our children in the United trusts. With this in mind, we cannot conceive how the purpose of the trust may States, premised upon our conviction that Lepanto Consolidated Mining readily and liberally be achieved if the trust were to be burdened by such onerous Company was going to pay dividends and that the Central Bank regulations monetary consideration. Without the consideration, the purpose or purposes of would allow the remittance of dividends to non-resident stockholders." the trusts could have been more readily obtained. Consequently, we feel constrained to treat the monetary considerations of the trusts as an intended The trustors could have easily collected the stipulated super- 1174 1174 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED 1173 Gibbs vs. Collector of Internal Revenue VOL. 4, APRIL 28, 1962 1173 consideration or part of it from said dividends, yet they did not do so—they even Gibbs vs. Collector of Internal Revenue saw to it that the dividends were sent to the United States. fluity, if not a subtlety, to becloud the donative intent of trustors. In connection with the trust agreements executed on December 28, 1951, the trustee, represented by his attorney-in-fact, Allison J. Gibbs, and the latter, as 4. The corpus of the trust was never totally or partially sold, hypothecated or one of the trustors, as well as his wife, trustor Esther K. Gibbs, executed on July encumbered. Instead, after December 7, 1950, when the Central Bank authorized 15, 1953, another set of deeds, entitled "Compromise Agreement", stating that the conversion of the shares of stock covered by the first set of trust agreements the trustee thereby resold, retransferred and reassigned to the trustor the 22,400 from resident stocks to non-resident stocks, the corresponding cash dividends shares covered by each of said trust agreements, for and in consideration of the and stock dividends declared by the mining company were sent directly to the sum of P19,264 to be paid by the trustors by crediting to the trustee the sum of trustee in the United States, thus enabling the trustors to create dollar assets in P17,430, the consideration stipulated in each one of said trust agreements, the United States. The testimony of trustor Allison J. Gibbs on this point is thereby leaving a balance of P1,843 to be paid to the trustee upon the trustor's illuminating. repossession of the corresponding stock certificates. "JUDGE LUCIANO The main reason given in said compromise agreements for the provisions thereof is the alleged inability of the trustee to sell, mortgage, hypothecate, on pledge the said shares of stock or otherwise deal with third parties with a view to We find no merit in this pretense. The questions as to who shall pay any -given raising funds for the payment of the consideration stipulated in the trust tax and what shall be the basis thereof are determined by law, the operation of agreements, pending registration of the transfer of said stock, in the books of the which can not be affected by the provisions of a contract to which the mining company, in view of the conditions—not described in the compromise Government is not a party. This, of course, is without prejudice to the right, if agreements—imposed by the Central Bank for the issuance of a license any, of a party to the trust agreements to demand reimbursement from the other authorizing said transfer, which—according to the compromise agreements—are party. But such right of reimbursement is independent of, and foreign to, the rightly unacceptable to the trustee. right and duty of the defendant to collect the taxes in the manner and under the This reason is clearly artificious. The stock involved in the trust agreements conditions prescribed by law. of September 25, 1950 were so transferred. Still no payment was made thereon. 1176 Moreover, the trustee could have authorized the trustors to sell, mortgage, 1176 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED hypothecate or otherwise dispose of said stock to raise the necessary funds, if the Gibbs vs. Collector of Internal Revenue intent was really that the stipulated consideration be paid. Indeed, as attorney in- The appeal taken up by the defendant refers to the interest chargeable on the fact for the trustee, trustor Allison J. Gibbs, with the ample powers that his acts amounts representing the taxes in question, and the interest on the sum to be revealed he had, could have simply granted such authority to himself and his refunded by the Government. wife, Esther K. Gibbs, as trustors. Considering that one of the prime objectives In Its resolution of June 25, 1958, the Court of Tax Appeals held that interest of the trustors in executing the of one-half (1/2) of one (1%) percent should be charged on the deficiency taxes 1175 only from July 1, 1954 to July 30, 1954, because the defendant had demanded VOL. 4, APRIL 28, 1962 1175 payment on or before June 30, 1954, of the deficiency donor gift taxes— Gibbs vs. Collector of Internal Revenue amounting to P10,187.42 and P17,577.56—assessed on the first and the second trust agreements was "to transfer as much as possible of our Philippine assets to set of trust agreements, respectively, and the deficiency donee gift taxes of the United States in the form of dollars", it is understandable that they did not P12,040.30, assessed on the second set of trust agreements. The defendant wish the stock in question to be disposed of in the Philippines, for this would maintains that said interest should be charged from the 15th day of May surely defeat the accomplishment of said objectives. At the same time, it is following the calendar year in which the gifts in question had been made, for apparent that the reason given in said compromise agreements for the execution section 116 of the tax Code provides— thereof is not true. "The gift taxes imposed by section one hundred nine and one hundred ten of this It may not be amiss to note, also, that the compromise agreements affecting Chapter shall be due and payable on or before the fifteenth day of May following the trusts constituted on December 28, 1951, virtually revoked said trusts, the close of the calendar year and shall be paid by the donor or donee, as the case contrary to the explicit provision in the trust agreements, to the effect that the may be, 'to the Collector of Internal Revenue or the treasurer of the province, trusts therein established are "irrevocable". city or municipality of which the donor or the donee is a resident." Another factor that affects adversely the credence and weight due to all of the compromise agreements is that the same were made with knowledge of the fact Upon the other hand, section 118 (b) of the same Code, on which the lower court that the defendant was already investigating whether the stipulated consideration relied, reads: was real or fictitious and entertaining the idea of assessing the corresponding gift "In case an extension for the payment of a deficiency is granted, there shall be taxes on the basis of the full market value of the stock involved. collected, as a part of the taxes, interest on the part of the deficiency the time for The trustee and the trustors maintain that the lower court erred in not payment of which is so extended, at the rate of six per centum per annum for the deducting the amount of the donor gift taxes from the value of the property period of the extensions." (Italics supplied.) subject to the donee gift taxes, in view of the provision of the trust agreement to At this juncture, it should be noted that the taxes assessed on the basis of the the effect— difference between the market value and the consideration were paid within the "In addition to the foregoing, the TRUSTEE shall pay out of the property and/or period fixed by law or on May 15, 1951 , as rega rd s to t rusts ed in 1950, and the gross income of the trust estate al income, estate, gift, succession or on May 15, 1952, as regards the trusts constituted in 1951. Even the donor gift inheritance taxes, if any, payable by the VENDOR, TRUSTEE or taxes, under a revised assessment, and the deficiency donor gift taxes due on the BENEFICIARY by reason of this trust." first set of trusts were paid in due time (May 15, 1951). With respect to the deficiency donor gift taxes on the two sets of trust agreements and the deficiency It is urged by the defendant that the Government should not be required to donee pay interest on the amount refundable to the trustee and the trustors. The matter 1177 of payment of interest on sums collected by way of taxes, which the Government VOL. 4, APRIL 28, 1962 1117 is subsequently sentenced to refund to the taxpayer, depends upon whether or not the collection of said sums is manifestly unwarranted (Collector of Internal Gibbs vs. Collector of Internal Revenue Revenue vs. Convention of the Philippine Baptist Churches, et al., L-11807, May gifts taxes assessed on the second set of trust agreements, the defendant 19, 1961 [Resolution]; Collector of Internal Revenue vs. Sweeney, L-12178, demanded payment thereof on or before June 30, 1954. Had these assessments August 21, 1959; Collector of Internal Revenue vs. St Paul's Hospital, etc., L- been paid on that date, no interest whatsoever would have been due thereon. It is 12127, May 21, 1959). In the case at bar, it is clearly not so, in the light of the but fair and just, therefore, that interest be charged only for the period of the attendin circumstances. Hence, the amount refundable by the Government, extension secured for the payment of the trust assessments, pursuant to section pursuant to the decision appealed from, should draw no interest, and said 118(b). decision should be modified accordingly. In support of the theory that interest is due, not only o f said period of 1178 extension but, also, from the fifteenth day of May of the year following that in which the trust had been constituted, defendant cites section 119 (b) (2) of the 1178 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED Tax Code, according to which: Balbecino vs. Ortega "If the part of the deficiency the time for payment of which is extended is not Thus modified, said decision should be, as it is hereby affirmed, in all other paid in accordance with the terms of the extension, there shall be collected, as a respects, without pronouncement as to costs. It is so ordered. part of the taxes, interest on such unpaid amount at the rate of one per centum a Bengzon, C.J., Padilla, Bautista Angelo, Reyes, month from the date the same was originally due until it is paid." J.B.L., Paredes and Dizon, JJ., concur. This provision applies only when the taxes are not paid within the extension Decision modified. granted by the Collector or Commissioner of Internal Revenue. It is inapplicable to the case at bar, for the taxes involved herein were paid within said extension ____________ of time.
Joseph B. and Josephine L. Simon v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Joseph B. and Josephine L. Simon, 285 F.2d 422, 3rd Cir. (1961)
Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Walter H. Mendel and Lillian Mendel, Walter H. Mendel and Lillian Mendel v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 351 F.2d 580, 4th Cir. (1965)
Stephanie Bauer v. John E. Foley, As District Director of Internal Revenue Service, Buffalo District, and The United States, 404 F.2d 1215, 2d Cir. (1968)
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