An American trust, created in the United States under
Connecticut law and administered in the United States by an
American trustee, the beneficiaries of which are British subjects
and residents and which retains capital gains income realized in
this country, is not exempt from federal income tax on such gains
by virtue of a provision of the Income Tax Convention between the
United States and the United Kingdom which exempts capital gains of
a "resident of the United Kingdom." Pp.
373 U. S.
49-56.
299 F.2d 565, affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE GOLDBERG delivered the opinion of the Court.
The question in this case is whether an American trust whose
beneficiaries are British subjects and residents and which retains
capital gains income realized in this country is exempt from
federal income tax on such gains by virtue of a provision of the
Income Tax Convention between the United States of America and the
United Kingdom, April 16, 1945, 60 Stat. 1377, 1384, which exempts
capital gains of a "resident of the United Kingdom." Certiorari was
granted, 371 U.S. 810, to resolve
Page 373 U. S. 50
a conflict between the decision of the Court of Appeals for the
Second Circuit, 299 F.2d 565, denying the exemption to the domestic
trust, the petitioner in this case, and the decision of the Court
of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit in
American Trust Co. v.
Smyth, 247 F.2d 149, granting the exemption to a domestic
trust under similar circumstances.
I
The petitioner, represented here by its successor trustee,
Maximov, a citizen and resident of the United States, is a private
trust created under Connecticut law in 1947 by an
inter
vivos deed executed by the grantor, a resident and citizen of
the United Kingdom. A lifetime interest in trust income was
retained by the grantor, his wife was named contingent successor
income beneficiary for her life, and their children were designated
as contingent remaindermen. All of the beneficiaries were citizens
and residents of the United Kingdom at the times here relevant.
The trust, which is administered in the United States, realized
capital gains income upon the sale of certain of its assets during
1954 and 1955. In accordance with controlling Connecticut law,
which the trust instrument expressly makes applicable, these gains
were treated as accretions to corpus, and were not distributed.
Pursuant to United States income tax provisions applicable to
trusts in general, the gains were reported as part of the trust's
income on federal fiduciary tax returns filed by the trustee for
the years in question, and the appropriate amount of tax paid
thereon.
Asserting exemption from United States tax under the Convention,
the trustee filed claims for refund which were disallowed by the
Internal Revenue Service. The trustee then brought this suit in the
Federal District Court seeking
Page 373 U. S. 51
recovery of the tax attributable to the capital gains. Motions
for summary judgment were filed both by the petitioner and by the
government. The District Court denied the Government's motion and
entered judgment for the petitioner in the full amount of the tax,
holding, upon the authority of the
Smyth case,
supra, that the petitioner was entitled to exemption under
the treaty. The Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit reversed
and denied the petitioner's claim of exemption under the
Convention. In so doing, the Second Circuit expressly rejected the
reasoning adopted, and result reached, by the Ninth Circuit in
Smyth.
We conclude that the interpretation of the relevant provisions
of the Convention adopted by the Second Circuit in this case is the
one more consonant with its language, purpose and intent.
Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the Court of Appeals below
denying the exemption.
II
Under United States tax laws, a trust, like the petitioner
trust, is treated as a separate taxable entity, apart from its
beneficiaries. §§ 641, 7701(a)(1), (14), Int.Rev.Code of 1954. And,
under appropriate provisions of the Internal Revenue Code, trust
income neither distributed nor otherwise taxable directly to the
beneficiaries is taxable to the trust entity.
See §§
641-668, Int.Rev.Code of 1954. Under these statutory concepts of
taxability, the gains here in question are properly includable in,
and taxable as, gross income of the petitioner. Whatever basis
there may be, therefore, for relieving the trust from tax must be
found in the words or implications of the Convention.
In asserting freedom from liability for United States income tax
on its realized and retained capital gains, the
Page 373 U. S. 52
petitioner trust relies on Article XIV of the Convention, which
provides:
"A resident of the United Kingdom not engaged in trade or
business in the United States shall be exempt from United States
tax on gains from the sale or exchange of capital assets."
The petitioner itself is a United States trust established in
this country, governed by the laws of one of our States, and
administered here by an American trustee. It is plainly not a
"resident of the United Kingdom," the class to which exemption
under Article XIV is expressly limited. It argues, however, that
the purposes and objectives of the treaty require that we disregard
its identity as a separate taxable entity and measure the
application of the exemptive provision by the economic impact of
the tax which would otherwise be imposed. The petitioner thus says
that, since the real burden of the tax falls upon its
beneficiaries, all of whom are residents of the United Kingdom and
objects of the treaty protections, the treaty should be read as
exempting the trust from the tax asserted by the United States.
Mindful that it is a treaty we are construing, and giving the
Convention all proper effect, we cannot, and do not, either read
its language or conceive its purpose as encompassing, much less
compelling, so significant a deviation from normal word use or
domestic tax concepts.
The plain language of the Convention does not afford any support
to the petitioner's argument in favor of disregarding the trust
entity. In fact, the very words of the treaty impel a contrary
reading. The exemption provided by Article XIV applies in terms
only to a "resident of the United Kingdom" and Article II(1)(g)
defines such a resident as
"any person (other than a citizen of the United States or a
United States corporation) who is resident in the United Kingdom
for the purposes of
Page 373 U. S. 53
United Kingdom tax and not resident in the United States for the
purposes of United States tax."
The word "person" is not defined in the treaty, and we are
referred by Article II(3) of the Convention, therefore, to the
domestic tax law of the country applying the treaty, in this case,
the United States, to determine its meaning. [
Footnote 1] Under United States tax law, and
apparently under British law as well, the term "person" includes a
trust. Int.Rev.Code of 1954, § 7701(a)(1);
see Harvard Law
School, World Tax Series, Taxation in the United Kingdom, 5/3.4, p.
127 (1957). Thus, it appears quite clearly that, within the meaning
of the Convention, the petitioner trust is a separate "person" and
distinct tax entity, apart from its beneficiaries. Since the
petitioner meets neither of the definitional tests of the treaty --
it is not resident in the United Kingdom for purposes of that
signatory's tax and is a resident in the United States for purposes
of this country's tax -- it plainly is not a "resident of the
United Kingdom" exempted from United States tax by the
Convention.
Apparently recognizing the impediments of the language of the
exemptive provision interpreted in accordance with its terms and
pursuant to the standards set out in the treaty itself, the
petitioner asserts that equality of tax treatment was the objective
of the treaty, and that furtherance of this objective compels
adoption of its theory that exemption must be accorded whenever the
burden of the tax would diminish such equality. Since, in general
terms, at least, the United Kingdom imposes no
Page 373 U. S. 54
tax on capital gains, says the petitioner, no similar tax should
be imposed by the United States here.
The immediate and compelling answer to this contention is that,
as already noted, the language of the Convention itself not only
fails to support the petitioner's view, but is contrary to it.
Moreover, it is particularly inappropriate for a court to sanction
a deviation from the clear import of a solemn treaty between this
Nation and a foreign sovereign when, as here, there is no
indication that application of the words of the treaty, according
to their obvious meaning, effects a result inconsistent with the
intent or expectations of its signatories. It appears from the
relevant materials instructive as to the intent of the parties to
the Convention that the general purpose of the treaty was not to
assure complete and strict equality of tax treatment -- a virtually
impossible task in light of the different tax structures of the two
nations -- but rather, as appears from the preamble to the
Convention itself, to facilitate commercial exchange through
elimination of double taxation resulting from both countries'
levying on the same transaction or profit; an additional purpose
was the prevention of fiscal evasion. [
Footnote 2] Certainly, neither of these purposes requires
the granting of relief in the situation here presented. There is
concededly no imposition of a double tax on the gains of the
petitioner, since neither it nor its beneficiaries are taxed
thereon under United Kingdom law.
See Harvard Law School,
World Tax Series, Taxation in the United Kingdom, 9/8.1, 10/7.2,
pp. 277, 307-308.
Page 373 U. S. 55
Moreover, no impairment of, or obstacle to, trade or commercial
intercourse is threatened in the context of this case, and
considerations of fiscal evasion are not here involved.
Even to the extent that one purpose of the Convention was to
secure a measure of equality of tax treatment, it is apparent from
the face of the treaty itself that no invariable or inflexible
equality was sought or intended. In fact, the treaty creates some
inequalities of treatment. For example, the very exemption provided
by Article XIV, on which the petitioner relies, is limited in its
application to United Kingdom residents who are not "engaged in
trade or business in the United States." Thus, not even all United
Kingdom residents are immune from capital gains taxation in this
country, though United States residents doing business or
conducting a trade in the United Kingdom would receive the full
benefit of the absence of a general capital gains tax there. It
appears that the treaty did not represent an attempt to equalize
all disparities in tax treatment between its signatories. To the
extent that complete equality was intended, it was specifically
provided. We cannot, in such a context, read the treaty to accord
unintended benefits inconsistent with its words and not
compellingly indicated by its implications. [
Footnote 3]
Page 373 U. S. 56
To say that we should give a broad and efficacious scope to a
treaty does not mean that we must sweep within the Convention what
are legally and traditionally recognized to be domestic taxpayers
not clearly within its protections; we would not expect the United
Kingdom to exempt similarly recognized British taxpayers not
lucidly intended to be freed of its taxes.
This, of course, does not mean that the treaty fails to provide
bilateral benefits to residents of both the United States and the
United Kingdom. A resident of the United Kingdom realizing capital
gains in this country is appropriately protected and exempt, and
the Congress has adopted provisions fully implementing the
operative dimensions of the treaty. The Internal Revenue Code
contains sections designed to give effect to exemptions of this
type and to assure consistency with tax treaty obligations in
general.
See, e.g., Int.Rev.Code of 1954, §§ 894, 7852(d).
Our interpretation affords every benefit negotiated for by the
parties to the Convention on behalf of their respective residents,
and prevents an unintended tax windfall to a private party. The
language and purposes of the treaty are amply served by adhering to
its clear import limiting exemption to "residents of the United
Kingdom" falling within the exemptive purview. The petitioner, a
resident American trust, is properly subject to United States
income tax on its retained capital gains. Accordingly, the judgment
below is
Affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
Article II(3) of the Convention provides:
"In the application of the provisions of the present Convention
by one of the Contracting Parties, any term not otherwise defined
shall, unless the context otherwise requires, have the meaning
which it has under the laws of that Contracting Party relating to
the taxes which are the subject of the present Convention."
[
Footnote 2]
The preamble recites that the parties desired "to conclude a
Convention for the avoidance of double taxation and the prevention
of fiscal evasion with respect to taxes on income."
See
also Hearings before a Subcommittee of the Committee on
Foreign Relations, on Conventions With Great Britain and Northern
Ireland Respecting Income and Estate Taxes, S. Exec. Docs. D and E,
79th Cong., 1st Sess. 1-2.
[
Footnote 3]
Treatment of the petitioner trust as a taxable entity for
purposes of construing the treaty exemption and imposition of
liability for tax on its undistributed capital gains is not only
mandated by the terms of the treaty itself, the apparent intention
of its signatories, and the context in which negotiated, but is
consistent with longstanding administrative practice and
regulations,
see T.D. 5569, 1947-2 Cum.Bull. 100, §
7.519(c), and with the administrative interpretation accorded many
other United States tax conventions limiting such exemptions to
items of income distributed or otherwise normally directly taxable
to the trust beneficiaries.
See, e.g., Australia, T.D.
6108, 1954-2 Cum.Bull. 614, § 501.10; Belgium, T.D. 6160, 1956-1
Cum.Bull. 815, § 504.119; Switzerland, T.D. 6149, 1955-2 Cum.Bull.
814, § 509.121.