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Robert H. Jackson, Atty. Gen., and Warner W. Gardner, of Washington, D.C., for petitioner.
Messrs. George M. Wolfson, of New York City, and Dean G. Acheson, of Washington, D.C., for respondent.
Mr. Justice DOUGLAS delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case, like Helvering v. Clifford,
Petitioner maintains that the trust income is taxable to respondent either under 166 or 22(a) of the Revenue Act of 1934, 48 Stat. 680, 686, 729, 26 U.S.C.A. Int.Rev.Code, 166, and 26 U.S.C.A.Int.Rev.Acts, page 669 or both.
By 166 the income from a trust is taxable to the grantor where 'at any time the power to revest in the grantor title to any part of the corpus of the trust is vested' in him or in any person 'not having a substantial adverse interest in the disposition of such part of the corpus or the income therefrom.' 4 Petitioner has not undertaken to establish that under New York law, which governs this trust, respondent had the power to revoke it prior to the end of the term. But in his contention that the trust here involved is covered by 166, petitioner points out that there is no practical difference between a revocable trust and one certain to be terminated soon. And he argues that it would not be sensible [309 U.S. 344, 347] to impute to Congress a purpose to impose the tax when the grantor has an executory power to revest title in himself but to withhold the tax when the grantor, by provisions in the trust deed, has already exercised that power.
Our difficulty lies not in an inability to see the similarity of those situations but in being able to say that Congress treated them the same under 166. A power to revest or revoke may in economic fact be the equivalent of a reversion. But at least in the law of estates they are by no means synonymous. For, generally speaking, the power to revest or to revoke an existing estate is discretionary with the donor; a reversion is the residue left in the grantor on determination of a particular estate. See Tiffany, Real Property (2nd ed.) 129 et seq., 316 et seq. Congress seems to have drawn 166 with that distinction in mind, for mere reversions are not specifically mentioned. Whether as a matter of policy such nice distinctions should be perpetuated in a tax law by selecting one type of trust but not the other for special treatment is not for us. We have only the responsibility of carrying out the Congressional mandate. And where Congress has drawn a distinction, however nice, it is not proper for us to obliterate it. That seems to us to be the case here. Whether wisely or not, Congress confined 166 to trusts where there was a 'power to revest'. The problem of interpretation under 166 is therefore quite different from that under 22(a). The former is narrowly confined to a special class; the latter by broad, sweeping language is all inclusive. Helvering v. Clifford, supra. Accordingly, the wide range for definition and specification under the latter is lacking under 166. And so far as 166 is concerned no apparent or lurking ambiguity requires or permits us to divine a broader purpose than that expressed. The legis- [309 U.S. 344, 348] lative history corroborates this conclusion. When the 1934 Act was before the House Committee, the Treasury recommended that income from short term trusts and from revocable trusts should be taxable to the creator. 5 The Congress adopted the latter6 by an appropriate amendment to 166; but it did not select the former for special treatment. When such clear choice of ideas has been made in the drafting of a specific provision of the law, its language must be taken at its face value. Sec. 166 is therefore not applicable to this trust since respondent is given no power to recall the corpus. He or his estate gets it at the end of the term, on the death of his wife, or on his own death-whichever is the earliest.
For a wholly different reason, petitioner's argument based on 22(a) must fail. The Board of Tax Appeals purported to place its decision solely on 166 and 167 of the Act, 26 U.S.C.A.Int.Rev.Code, 166, 167. Petitioner in his assignments of error specifically mentioned only 166 and 167, not 22(a). In his brief before the Circuit Court of Appeals petitioner expressly waived reliance upon any section other than
[309
U.S. 344, 349]
s 166. Though petitioner in his petition for certiorari relied on 22(a), respondent in opposition thereto took the position that that point was not available to petitioner here as it was not raised below. In view of these facts, especially the express waiver below, we do not think that petitioner should be allowed to add here for the first time another string to his bow. As we have indicated, the issues under 166 and 22(a) are not coterminous. Though both deal with concepts of ownership, the range of inquiry under the latter is broad, under the former confined. To open here for the first time and in face of the express disclaimer an inquiry into the broader field is not only to deprive this Court of the assistance of a decision below but to permit a shift to ground which the taxpayer had every reason to think was abandoned in the earlier stages of this litigation.
7
See Burnet v. Commonwealth Improvement Co.,
AFFIRMED.
Mr. Justice ROBERTS concurs in the result.
[ Footnote 1 ] In 1932 the term was extended to five years from April, 1931.
[ Footnote 2 ] His right to sell was subject to a collateral agreement, not material here, with one Scherman, granting Scherman a preemptive right in case respondent decided to sell.
[ Footnote 3 ] No substitute trustee was, however, appointed, respondent continuing to act as trustee until termination of the trust in 1936.
[ Footnote 4 ] Sec. 166 reads in full:
then the income of such part of the trust shall be included in computing the net income of the grantor.'
[ Footnote 5 ] Revenue Revision, 1934, Hearings before the Committee on Ways & Means, H.R. 73rd Cong., 2nd Sess., p. 151. The recommendation read: 'The income from short-term trusts and trusts which are revocable by the creator at the expiration of a short period after notice by him should be made taxable to the creator of the trust.'
[ Footnote 6 ] Conference Rep. No. 1385, H.R. 73rd Cong., 2nd Sess., p. 24: 'Under existing law, the income from a revocable trust is taxable to the grantor only where such grantor (or a person not having a substantial adverse interest in the trust) has the power within the taxable year to revest in the grantor title to any part of the corpus of the trust. Under the terms of some trusts, the power to revoke cannot be exercised within the taxable year, except upon advance notice delivered to the trustee during the preceding taxable year. If this notice is not given within the preceding taxable year, the courts have held that the grantor is not required under existing law to include the trust income for the taxable year in his return. The Senate amendments require the income from trusts of this type to be reported by the grantor. The House recedes.'
[ Footnote 7 ] Art. 166-1 of Treasury Regulations 86, originally promulgated under 166, was not promulgated under 22(a) until 1936 (T.D. 4629), two years after the tax liability here in issue occurred. Hence we do not have a case of reliance by the government on a regulation which during the taxable year in question rested on two legs, one of which was 22(a).
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Citation: 309 U.S. 344
No. 384
Argued: February 05, 1940
Decided: February 26, 1940
Court: United States Supreme Court
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