HELVERING V. CLIFFORD
309 U.S. 331 (1940)
NATURE OF THE CASE: This was a dispute over the tax status of income from a short term
trust.
FACTS: P created a trust for five years with himself as trustee. All net income of the
trust was to be held for the exclusive benefit of his wife. The trust would terminate
earlier on the death of either his wife of P. On termination of the trust the entire corpus
was to go to P while all accrued and undistributed net income any proceeds of such income
was to go to his wife. During the running of the trust, P was to pay over to his wife the
whole or such part of the net income that in his absolute discretion he might determine.
During the five-year period, P had full power to exercise all voting rights of any trustee
shares and to sell mortgage or pledge any of the securities within his absolute discretion
and to invest the proceeds in any manner he sees fit. Extraordinary cash dividends were to
be treated as principal and not income. There was an exculpatory clause for P's benefit
related to willful and deliberate breaches of duty as trustee. P paid taxes on the gift
transfer and during 1934 all the income was distributed to his wife and that was included on
her return. The IRS claimed that the income was P's and taxable to him. The Tax Board
affirmed, and the circuit court reversed and the Commissioner appealed. The Supreme Court
granted certiorari.
ISSUE:
RULE OF LAW:
HOLDING AND DECISION:
LEGAL ANALYSIS:
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