Arents v. Commissioner

34 T.C. 274, 1960 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 150
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedMay 23, 1960
DocketDocket No. 65650
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 34 T.C. 274 (Arents v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arents v. Commissioner, 34 T.C. 274, 1960 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 150 (tax 1960).

Opinions

OPINION.

Withe y, Judge:

Respondent determined a deficiency in estate tax in the amount of $286,672.64.

The issue presented for our decision is the correctness of the respondent’s action in determining that the value of the principal of a trust fund created by the decedent is includible in her gross estate under section 811(c) (1) (B) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1939. Additional issues presented by the pleadings have been settled by stipulation.

All of the facts have been stipulated and are found accordingly.

Lena R. Arents died on March 11, 1954. On December 29, 1954, a Federal estate tax return was filed with the director of internal revenue for the Upper Manhattan District of New York.

On April 29, 1918, George Arents, husband of the decedent, applied for and obtained an insurance policy on his own life in the amount of $200,000 from the New York Life Insurance Company. On November 6, 1918, he applied for and obtained an insurance policy on his own life in the amount of $90,000 from the New York Life Insurance Company. On May 28, 1920, he assigned each of these policies to the decedent. On October 4, 1924, he obtained a policy of insurance on his own life in the amount of $100,000 from the Travelers Insurance Company which he assigned to the decedent on October 20, 1924. On November 12, 1925, he obtained an insurance policy in the amount of $10,000 on his own life from the Penn Mutual Life Insurance Company which he assigned to the decedent on November 17, 1925. Lena was the beneficiary originally named in all of the life insurance policies except the policy issued by the Travelers Insurance Company on October 4,1924, in which the beneficiary was designated as “Executors, Administrators or Assigns of the Insured.”

On June 4, 1932, the decedent created an irrevocable inter vivos trust and transferred thereto all of the above-described life insurance policies assigned to her by George Arents, together with certain securities which at that time had a fair market value of $384,250. The decedent also executed and delivered to the United States Trust Company of New York, the trustee designated under the trust instrument, separate assignments of each of the insurance policies, together with separate stock powers covering the securities. The terms of the trust created by the decedent on June 4, 1932, in pertinent part, are as follows:1

FIRST: To hold, manage, sell, invest and reinvest all the property set forth and described in Schedule B hereto, and collect the income therefrom; and after defraying the expenses incurred in the administration of the trust, including Trustee’s commission, to devote the remainder of said income (a) to the payment of all premiums on said life insurance policies set out and described in Schedule A hereto as such mature, with the direction to and duty on Trustee to utilize in part payment of said premiums any dividends that may accrue from the insurer to the Trustee on account of said policies or any of them so long as premiums are due or to become due, and if at any time a dividend accrues to the Trustee on an insurance policy to an amount greater than the premium on that policy, then such excess shall be applied pro tanto to the payment of premiums on other policies. This utilization of part of the income from the trust to the payment of insurance premiums shall continue during the whole time that payments of premiums on said policies or any of them are payable or to become payable. If during said period as aforesaid the income from the property set forth and described in Schedule B hereto, along with dividends on policies, shall at any time be insufficient to make payment of premiums, Trustee shall give reasonable notice of such deficiency and the amount thereof to Grantor, and Grantor shall have the right to furnish Trustee funds to pay such premiums, and Trustee shall so apply such funds; if with respect to any life insurance premium Trustee shall be without funds from the income from property set forth and described in Schedule B hereto, and/or from dividends on policies, and without funds furnished by Grantor, then Trustee shall collect the cash surrender value of such policy, and utilize the funds so collected just as if the funds had arisen from the sale, as hereinafter provided, of any of the property set forth and described in Schedule B hereto, (b) The balance of the income from the property set forth and described in Schedule B hereto (if that property continued in the trust), or if such income results from any sale of property and reinvestment of the proceeds of sale as hereinafter provided, shall be paid quarterly to Grantor as long as she shall live; if collections are made by the Trustee under said life insurance policies set forth and described in Schedule A hereto other than dividends on policies as hereinbefore provided, whether such collections are made on account of the death of said George Arents, Jr., or are made for any reason before his death, then the income and profits arising from such collections of insurance and investment thereof as hereinafter provided, shall be added to the other income, and likewise paid to Grantor during her life, as is provided herein as to the income arising from the property set forth and described in Schedule B hereto; if George Arents, Jr., the husband of Grantor, survives Grantor, then the income arising from said trust, subject to the payment of insurance premiums by Trustee as above set out, and with the right after the death of Grantor in said George Arents, Jr., to supply a deficiency, shall be paid quarterly to him for and during the term of his life.
SECOND: Upon the death of the survivor of Grantor and her husband, the said George Arents, Jr., and if their son George Arents III shall then survive, the Trustee shall (having theretofore collected the insurance on the life of George Arents, Jr., hereinbefore conveyed and transferred to it) deliver and/or pay the whole corpus of the trust to said son. If the said George Arents III predeceases Grantor, Grantor may at any time thereafter, by written instrument under seal, name a new beneficiary or beneficiaries for the corpus of the trust; if said George Arents III, having survived Grantor, predeceases his father George Arents, Jr., then, in like manner, George Arents, Jr., may, by instrument under seal filed with the Trustee, name a new beneficiary or beneficiaries. If, however, said George Arents III does not survive Grantor and/or said George Arents, Jr., and there has been no designation as aforesaid of a new beneficiary or beneficiaries, then upon the death of the survivor of Grantor and George Arents, Jr., the corpus of the trust shall be paid and delivered to those who would have been the next of kin of said George Arents III, as then provided by the statutes of distribution and descent of the State of New York, if the said George Arents III had died on the day following the death of the survivor of the two, Grantor and George Arents, Jr.
With respect to the trust hereby created, and effective during the life of Grantor as well as after her death, it is understood and agreed:
A.

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Arents v. Commissioner
34 T.C. 274 (U.S. Tax Court, 1960)

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Bluebook (online)
34 T.C. 274, 1960 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arents-v-commissioner-tax-1960.