At the time of her death, D owned a 23.44% interest in a family-owned personal holding company ("PHC"), whose assets consisted primarily of publicly traded stock. D's estate tax return reported the fair market value of D's interest in PHC as $3,149,767, using a capitalization-of-dividends method to value the asset. R used instead a net asset value ("NAV") method and determined a deficiency in D's estate tax as well as an accuracy-related penalty under I.R.C. sec. 6662.
Held: The fair market value of D's 23.44% interest in PHC is better determined by an NAV method and is $6,503,804.
Held, further, P is liable for a 20% accuracy-related penalty under I.R.C. sec. 6662(a), (b)(5), and (g).
FINDINGS OF FACT
Pearson Holding Company
PHC's maximizing of dividends
PHC's BICG tax liability
PHC stock transactions
Ms. Richmond's ownership and bequest of PHC stock
Financial information
The estate tax return
The notice of deficiency and the petition
The Commissioner's expert
The estate's expert
Ultimate findings
OPINION
I. Introduction
II. General principles of estate tax valuation
III. Choice of valuation method
IV. The value of the decedent's interest in PHC
A. Discount for BICG liability
1. Notice of deficiency: a zero discount
2. The estate's expert: 100% of the BICG tax
3. The Commissioner's expert: 43% of the BICG tax
4. Our conclusion: present value of the BICG tax liability
[*3] B. Discount for lack of control
C. Discount for lack of marketability
D. Conclusion
V. Accuracy-related penalty
| Year | Dividend distribution | Decedent's share |
| 2005 | $1,077,000 | $252,436 |
| 2004 | 1,047,658 | 245,559 |
| 2003 | 1,016,469 | 238,248 |
| 2002 | 947,030 | 221,973 |
| 2001 | 922,575 | 216,241 |
| 2000 | 1,185,974 | 277,979 |
| 1999 | 835,578 | 195,850 |
| Asset | Fair market value |
| Government bonds and notes | $976,939 |
| Preferred stocks | 188,449 |
| Common stocks1 | 50,690,504 |
| Cash and equivalents | 294,161 |
| Receivables | 8,868 |
| Security deposit | 509 |
| Total | 52,159,430 |
FOOTNOTE TO TABLE
1 PHC's common stocks were invested in 10 major
industries with 42.8% of the stock concentrated in four companies:
Exxon Mobil (15.7%), Merck & Co., Inc. (11%), General Electric Co.
(8.1%), and Pfizer, Inc. (8%).
END OF FOOTNOTE TO TABLE
PV = E0 (1 + g) / [k - g]
where:
E0 = Expected amount of economic income in the period
immediately past
k = Discount rate (or required rate of return)
g = Expected growth rate of earnings, annually compounded into
perpetuity
PV = $252,436 (1 + 0.05) / [0.1025 -0.05]
= $265,058 / .0525
= $5,048,72413
| Discount rate | 20 years | 30 years |
| 10.27% (as calculated by P using Ibbotson's data) | $7,570,358 | $5,565,937 |
| 10.25% (as used by P in the capitalization of dividend model) | 7,580,584 | 5,575,086 |
| 9.414% (as calculated by the Court using PHC's historic data) | 8,029,070 | 5,982,097 |
| 7% (generally accepted rate of return) | 9,594,513 | 7,492,200 |
| Assets of PHC | $52,159,430 |
| Less: Liabilities | -45,389 |
| Less: BICG discount | -7,817,106 |
| NAV of PHC | 44,296,935 |
| 23.44% Interest in NAV | 10,383,202 |
| Less: LOC discount (7.75% of $10,383,202) | -804,698 |
| 9,578,504 | |
| Less: LOM discount (32.1% of $9,578,504) | -3,074,700 |
| Value of decedent's interest in PHC | 6,503,804 |
Deduction Denied for Defective Appraisal
No Litigation Costs Allowed for $2 Million Estate