Hermann Trust
Hermann Trust
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
Pittsburgh National Bank, as corporate trustee of a charitable trust established by John A. Hermann, Jr., now deceased, petitioned the Orphans’ Court Division
There are involved here two separate trusts, although only one is presently before the Court in this proceeding. The first is an intervivos trust created in 1939 by a conveyance of the settlor, John A. Hermann, Jr., to five individual trustees, including himself. By this deed of trust Mr. Hermann established the John A. Hermann, Jr. Memorial Art Museum, intended to be a free “public art museum”, conveying to the trustees thereof his personal collection of paintings, ivories, bronzes and other objets d’art, together with a plot of land and a residence thereon situated in the Borough of Bellevue, Pennsylvania.
The second trust is a testamentary trust created by Mr. Hermann in his will, executed in 1940 (the testator died in 1942). Under the terms of this trust, $75,000 was transferred to Peoples-Pittsburgh Trust Co., predecessor of the present accountant, as trustee to hold, invest and reinvest, and to pay the net income to the museum trustees “for the maintenance, repair and improvement of the museum and real property connected therewith.”
The intervivos trust which created the museum was in perpetuity. The testamentary trust, however, provided that “[i]f ever the Art Museum shall cease to exist the principal and any unused income shall be held thereafter by Peoples-Pittsburgh Trust Company, as Trustee, for the same uses and purposes as are herein set forth for my residuary estate.”
In 1954 the trustees of the museum trust instituted proceedings in the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County to have the trust terminated. The residence in which the art collection was housed had become dilapidated and expensive to maintain, and income was insufficient to build a new building or to undertake a major renovation of the old one. The petition sought, in terminating the trust, to have the trustee of the testamentary trust take over all the objets d’art of the museum. The trust company opposed the petition, arguing that it was a trustee only of funds totalling $100,000 and that it was not responsible for what might become of the settlor’s art collection. The court refused to declare a termination, but by its order, entered August 16, 1955, authorized the individual trastees of the museum to sell the land and building (this was done, producing $91,300), to transfer the art to a floor of the public library building in Bellevue, Pennsylvania, and to con
Following enactment of the Federal Tax Reform Act of 1969, Pub. L. 91-172, 83 Stat. 187, the corporate fiduciary, as trustee of principal funds of $100,000,
The individual trustees of the museum sought to allay the bank’s fears that the museum was not an entity to which “qualifying distributions” might be made by requesting, on May 24, 1971, a federal tax ruling on the matter. Under §4942(g) (2) of the I.R.C. of 1954, as amended, the Secretary of the Treasury (or his designate) is empowered to authorize a “set-aside” of undistributed income (otherwise taxable under §4942) if the “set-aside” is to be expended on a specific project within 5 years, the project is one associated with the purposes of the foundation, and the project is one better accomplished through accumulation. The project proposed by the individual trustees was the acquisition of suitable land and the construction of a museum building within the next five years. Proposed expenditure for land was $50,000 and for the building was $250,000. On March 16, 1972—after the first hearing
The account of the appellee-trustee indicated the fact of withholding the accumulated income, and its petition for distribution, after reciting most of the foregoing history, sought approval of the account and the proposed “deviation” from the terms of the trust.
It was the premise of the appellee-corporate trustee in filing its account here in audit that should trust income distributed to the museum trustees be taxable under section 4942 of the Internal Revenue Code (see Note 4, supra), then it would be justified in refusing
As to the learned auditing judge’s conclusion that “the Museum [has] cea.sed to exist”, with all respect, we do not agree that failure of the testamentary trust is even raised by the petition for distribution. The penultimate paragraph of the petition, reproduced in the margin,
In sum, our review of the record is that there was no evidence that the purpose of the trust had been made impossible of fulfillment or that the trust res, the museum, had ceased to exist.
The balance for distribution should be decreed back to the appellee Pittsburgh National Bank as trustee, as the court below did by its decree here appealed from, but not for administration pursuant to the court’s opinion of June 27, 1972; rather, the accountant should be directed to hold and administer the trust funds in accordance with the terms of the testamentary trust of the decedent, viz., to invest and reinvest the same and pay over all income to the trustees of the museum trust.
Decree reversed and case remanded for entry of a decree in accordance with this opinion. Costs on appellee as trustee.
This trust in 1944 received a ruling from the Commissioner of Internal Revenue that it was exempt from federal income taxation under Section 501(c) of the Internal Revenue Code as a trust established for educational purposes.
Mr. Hermann had in his lifetime given $25,000 to the Peoples-Pittsburgh Trust Co. as trustees with direction to pay the income to the museum trustees. The further testamentary trust for the same purpose was, according to Mr. Hermann’s will, to discharge an
A tax question involving the $25,000 intervivos trust was before this Court in Hermann Estate, 349 Pa. 230, 36 A. 2d 804 (1944).
This is the combined principal amount of the intervivos trust of $25,000 (see note 2, supra) and the testamentary trust of $75,-000.
Section 4942 of the Internal Revenue Code is entitled “Taxes on Failure to Distribute Income.” It applies to a “private foundation” which is defined as an organization generally exempt from income taxation under section 501 of the I.R.C. of 1954, but within the definition of section 509 of the I.R.C. of 1954, added by Pub. L. 91.-172. Suffice it to say that there is no dispute here that the John A. Hermann, Jr. Memorial Art Museum is other than a “private foundation” within these statutory provisions. As such, it must, to avoid payment of a tax, be an “operating foundation”; that is to say, must make “qualifying distributions” of its income “directly for the active conduct of the activities constituting the purpose or function for which it is organized . . .”, §4942 (j) (3). If it is not an “operating foundation”, then under §4942(a), its nondistributed income is subject to a 15% tax, and, if the income
See The Charitable Instruments Act of 1971, June 17, 1971, P. L. 181, §4, 10 P.S. §204 (Supp. 1973-74) : “Deviation from terms of instrument. Nothing in this act shall preclude a court of competent jurisdiction from authorizing a deviation from the express terms of an instrument governing a charitable organization.” The Charitable Instruments Act was enacted in response to section 101(a) of the Tax Reform Act of 1969, Pub. L. 91-172, 26 U.S.C. §508 (1970), which requires, inter alia, that a “private foundation” have in its governing instrument a provision which requires “income for each taxable year to be distributed at such time and in such manner as not to subject the foundation to tax under section 4942”, and, in the case of pre-Tax Reform Act of 1969 trusts, requires that efforts be taken to have a court of competent jurisdiction “reform” the governing instrument to so require.
See Weiss Estate, 454 Pa. 114, 309 A. 2d 793 (1973); Benson Estate, 447 Pa. 62, 72-73, 285 A. 2d 101 (1971).
Section 10 of the Estates Act of 1947, April 24, 1947, P. E. 100, 20 P.S. §301.10, repealed and reenacted in the same language by §6110 of the Probate, Estates and Fiduciaries Code, Juno 30, 1972, P. L. 508, No. 164, 20 Pa. S. §6110 (Special Pamphlet).
“ Twenty-Third : Petitioner further represents that the Second and Partial Account before your Honorable Court was filed
Presumably, the United States Secretary of the Treasury, or his Deputy, and his Agents will pursue the same course of inquiry, examination, and inquiry, vis a vis the Bequest for Approval of Set-Asides (Exhibit “E”). He may, as the Tax Beform Act of 1969 provides, refer the matter to the Attorney General of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania who is already a party to this proceeding.”
This interpretation of paragraph Twenty-Thied is borne out by a dialogue between the court and appellee’s counsel at the first audit hearing, during which the court endeavored to ascertain
“The Court: ... I wanted to know if this is a question for me to determine here and now, regardless of when and what the Treasury Department decides, or if I should wait until the Treasury Department does resolve it. Counsel: [My suggestion is that the court] retain jurisdiction of this matter until such time as the Treasury Department of the United States or its duly authorized agent, or agencies, make determination of whether the trusts to the individual trustees of real estate and personal property, is an operating trust, or until such time as the Treasury Department of the United States shall approve a pending Set-Aside request . . . The Court: Is that all? Counsel: As far as I can see, that’s all.”
“The Court: What you are asking is that the Court suspend distribution for the present until the Treasury Department acts. Counsel: That is right. . . .” At the second audit hearing, following the favorable tax ruling, the position of the museum trustees, as stated by their counsel, was that the court had before it only a single question: “[I]s the [corporate] trustee correct in [with] holding the payment of income to the Hermann Art Memorial Museum.” Counsel for the corporate trustee did not disagree, although noting that “the subject matter of the Art Museum was dubious.”
We have doubts that the frequency of visitation by the general public is any proper part of the definition of “museum”. The Random House Dictionary of the English Language (1967) defines the word as “a building or place where works of art, scientific specimens, and other objects of permanent value are kept and displayed.” If the general public must actually visit with some measurable frequency an artistic or scientific collection, then the tastes of the current generation of society could, upon application to a court of competent jurisdiction, result in the destruction of the efforts of settlors of museum trusts to preserve the past in the hopes of enlightening the present and the future. Certainly there are valuable museum collections which, owing to their obscure location or to the obscure nature of the subject matter displayed, are only rarely visited by the general public. It is doubtful that such a fact bears on whether they are or are not “museums”.
Counsel was then asked by the lower court “why would you build a building for art objects that don’t deserve it?” Counsel answered, quite properly in our view: “For the same reason the original Trust was set up, and for the same reason this Court «gid in [1955] to keep it going. And these paintings at that timo were
The court below did not itself view the art: “We had considered the appointment of a Master to make an investigation and report on the question raised herein, but decided against this action, as it is clear from the record that the particular trust before us has failed.” Record at 124a.
We do not mean to imply that the value of an artistic work is never a justiciable question. Were the issue here the fair market value of one of the Hermann works, a court could properly hear experts testify to the price at which such a work would sell. But where the question is not one of market value, but rather of artistic merit on some absolute scale, a court is powerless to act
The conditions for termination of a charitable trust are set forth in §10 of the Estates Act of 1947. See note 7, supra. The court may order an administration or distribution of the estate “if the charitable purpose for which an interest shall be conveyed shall be or become indefinite or impossible or impractical of fulfillment. . . .” See Curry Appeal, 390 Pa. 105, 109, 134 A. 2d 497
The major portion of this undistributed income was accumulated before enactment of the Tax Reform Act of 1969 and hence is not subject to the 15% tax of that Act. See note 4, supra.
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