The taxpayer, Brainard, actively engaged in speculative securities and commodities trading through accounts over which he alone exercised control and discretion. Before (or at the outset of) a trading period, he executed written declarations purporting to create a trust for the benefit of his wife and minor children. The declarations stated, in substance, that any profits or gains that might thereafter be realized from his trading activities during the designated period would belong to the beneficiaries. Brainard, however, did not transfer legal title to, or control over, any existing securities, cash, or the brokerage accounts themselves. He continued to trade in his own name and at his sole discretion, using his own capital, margin, and strategies. During the relevant tax year, his trading generated substantial profits. After profits were realized and within his control, he caused amounts corresponding to those profits to be credited or delivered to the family beneficiaries or to the purported trust on their behalf. On his federal income tax return, Brainard excluded the profits, contending they were income of the beneficiaries by virtue of the prior declarations. The Commissioner determined that the profits were taxable to Brainard, asserting that the anticipatory assignments were ineffective for tax purposes. The Board of Tax Appeals sustained the Commissioner, and Brainard petitioned for review in the Fifth Circuit.
Can a taxpayer avoid federal income tax on profits from securities and commodities trading by declaring in advance that any such future profits will belong to family members (or a trust for their benefit), when the taxpayer retains full control over the trading accounts and the income-producing activity?
Under the anticipatory assignment of income doctrine (as articulated in Lucas v. Earl and applied by subsequent courts), income is taxed to the person who earns it or who owns or controls the income-producing property or activity. A present transfer of a present property interest may shift the incidence of tax on subsequent income generated by that property, but an assignment of future income—without a present, effective transfer of the underlying income-producing property or relinquishment of control—does not shift the tax burden. A declaration of trust over future, unearned profits lacks a present res and is ineffective to divert federal income tax liability from the earner.
No. The profits were taxable to Brainard. The purported declarations assigning future trading profits to his wife and children did not shift federal income tax liability because Brainard retained ownership of and control over the trading accounts and the income-producing activity. Any later transfers to the beneficiaries were gifts of income already realized by, and taxable to, Brainard.
The court emphasized substance over form: Brainard alone conducted the trading, deployed his capital, bore the market risk, and made all investment decisions. Thus, he remained the source of the income. His declarations purported to assign not an existing property interest but merely the uncertain and contingent profits that might be generated in the future from activities he alone would undertake and control. Under Lucas v. Earl, one cannot escape tax on earnings by anticipatory arrangements, however carefully framed. For federal tax purposes, the crucial question is who earned the income or controlled the asset or activity from which it derived; that person is taxed on the resulting income. The court further reasoned that, even viewing the declarations as trust instruments, they lacked a present res. A trust in "profits to be realized" from future trades has no corpus until those profits actually come into being. Only upon realization—i.e., when positions were closed and profits fixed—did any property exist to fund a trust. By that time, the income had already been earned by Brainard and come within his control. The subsequent transfers to family members were, therefore, post-realization dispositions—gifts of income after it had accrued to him—not pre-realization shifts of the tax incidence. The court also rejected the notion that state-law recognition of a trust in after-acquired property controlled the federal tax result; federal tax consequences turn on federal law principles that prevent the diversion of tax from the earner to another through anticipatory assignments. Accordingly, the Commissioner properly included the trading profits in Brainard's gross income.
Brainard is a staple in the assignment-of-income line of cases. It clarifies that to shift income tax, there must be a present and effective transfer of the income-producing property or a meaningful surrender of control before the income accrues. Merely promising to give away future profits while retaining the machinery that generates them is ineffective. For students, Brainard pairs naturally with Lucas v. Earl (contractual splitting of earnings ineffective) and Blair v. Commissioner (transfer of a present beneficial interest in a trust—i.e., the income-producing property—effective), highlighting the decisive distinction between assigning future income and transferring the underlying property. Practically, Brainard informs tax planning around gifts to family members and charities: effectuate transfers of the asset, not just the prospective yield, and do so before the income is fixed and under your control.
Brainard v. Commissioner squarely holds that a taxpayer cannot escape tax on profits produced by assets and activities he controls by declaring in advance that any such profits will belong to others. Federal tax liability tracks economic reality: the person who earns the income or controls the income-producing property bears the tax, regardless of anticipatory assignments couched as trusts or gifts.