Beattie v. Commissioner

6 T.C. 609, 1946 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 248
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedMarch 29, 1946
DocketDocket No. 7041
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 6 T.C. 609 (Beattie 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
Beattie v. Commissioner, 6 T.C. 609, 1946 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 248 (tax 1946).

Opinion

OPINION.

Disney, Judge:

This case involves income tax for the calendar year 1941. The Commissioner .determined a deficiency of $284.06. The taxpayer contends that there is an overpayment of $175.42. The only issue presented is whether petitioner shall pay income tax upon an annuity received, based upon the total value of. property transferred in the acquisition thereof, or whether a part of such value1 shall be considered a gift.

A part of the facts have been stipulated. We find them to be as stipulated. They may be summarized and additional facts found from other evidence, stated as follows:

Petitioner is a resident of Chagrin Falls, Ohio, and filed her return for the taxable year with the collector of internal revenue for the northern district of Ohio at Cleveland, Ohio.

Petitioner was on January 1,1927, the wife of Edward Burkett Miller. On that date he was 67 years of age and the petitioner was 45 years of age. On that date they transferred property of a net value of $265,000 to Mount Union College of Alliance, Ohio, and in exchange therefor received a “Survivorship Life Annuity Bond.” The bond set forth, inter alia, that Edward Burkett Miller, called donor, “has donated and paid” to Mount Union College $265,000 to be used by it in carrying into effect the purposes of its organization as enumerated in its charter, and that during the lifetime of the donor the college would pay him $18,000 per annum as an income on the “principal sum donated,” and after the decease of the donor would pay Elizabeth Lewis Miller (now Beattie, the petitioner), called the survivor, during her lifetime, in case she survived the donor, $9,600 per annum. It further set forth that the bond was issued upon the application of the donor and was accepted by the donor with the full understanding that the income should terminate with the death of donor or survivor, and that the principal sum was an absolute gift, subject only to the payments. The bond was issued pursuant to a tentative agreement, or “Memorandum of Agreement,” in writing, executed by the petitioner and her husband and Mount Union College, on November 6, 1926, providing, in salient part, that the petitioner and her husband agreed to convey to the college as of January 1,1927, certain described properties, consisting of real estate, contracts, and mortgages; “in consideration for which conveyances and assignments,” the college agreed to execute and deliver to the petitioner and her husband “Survivorship Life Annuity Bond,” whereby the college agreed to pay Edward Burkett Miller during his lifetime $1,500 per month, beginning on February 1, 1927, and after his decease to pay the petitioner, in case she survived him, $800 per month during her life.

Mount Union College was on January 1,1927, and has since been a corporation engaged in the maintenance of a college for purposes, among others, of education, religion, morality, and the fine arts, of receiving, owning, holding and managing properties and funds, and of purchasing and owning real estate necessary to the maintenance and perpetuity of the college, and generally performing all things necessary for the conduct of the college.

The college performed the conditions of the annuity bond by paying to Miller the stipulated amounts, amounting to $121,500 on September 23, 1933. On that date the college, Miller, and the petitioner entered into a second agreement, upon the execution of which the college issued another “Survivorship Life Annuity Bond” to Miller and the petitioner. The agreement of September 23-, 1933, which was in writing, provided, inter alia, that in consideration of a transfer of property pursuant to a contract of November 6,1926, the college had delivered a “Survivorship Life Annuity Bond”; that it was the desire of the parties, upon mutual consideration, to modify such contract, and that it should be modified in that from November 1, 1933, for a period of two years, or until the death of Miller, if it should occur before November 1, 1935, the college would pay Miller $7,200 per annum as an income “on said principal sum donated,” and thereafter pay him $9,600 per year on said principal sum donated; that in case the income from the properties should justify an increase after two years, the annuity payments should be increased to $1,000 per month during the lifetime of said Miller; further, that “as a part of the consideration for this contract,” Miller and wife should transfer to the college their homestead property in Akron, Ohio, upon which property the college agreed to cancel a $14,000 mortgage dated January 9, 1930, and held by the college, Miller and wife, however, to have the right to occupy the home free of rentals and for such period of time as they might desire, they to keep the property in maintenance and repair. It was provided that the original contract of November 6, 1926, was not modified in any other respect. The “Survivorship Life Annuity Bond,” dated September 23,1933, set forth the donation of $265,000 by Miller and in substance the provisions, above set forth from the “Memorandum of Agreement,” of September 23, 1933, together with a provision that the college would pay the petitioner, after the decease of the donor, $6,000 per year during her lifetime, in monthly payments of $500. It was stated that the issuance of the bond superseded an annuity bond issued under date of January 1,1927.

On September 23, 1933, Edward Burkett Miller was 74 years of age and petitioner was 52 years of age.

Under the modified annuity the college paid Miller up to the date of bis death an additional $21,400, making a total of $142,900 paid to him. Since March 26,1936, the date of the death of Miller, the college has paid the petitioner $500 per month.

Mount Union College had a plan of issuing survivorship life annuity bonds and of receiving property donations in return for which the college paid annuities on a sliding scale, based upon the age of the person receiving it, for life. Roughly, the amount which was paid to an annuitant was an amount equal to 10 percent of the age of the annuitant on the amount donated. For instance, if a person was 50 years of age, he would get 5 percent, and if 70 years of age, 7 percent annually of the amount transferred to the college. Mount Union College was one of a number of colleges selling such annuities. They were making a study of the matter and “doing this annuity business in uniform rates.” Most educational institutions figured the annuity on a basis which would be, if the annuitant lived the ordinary expectation of life, “according to the tables,” a residual of approximately 70 percent of the original amount, which would come to the institution as a gift, and not more than 30 percent of principal would be paid out in annuities. The rate was fixed on the basis of the age and the annuity. The rule as to 70 percent of the total amount donated as a residuum for the college was a general rule for a number of the institutions. They were not compulsory rules, and each institution had its own rules.

Edward Burkett Miller died March 26,1936. On April 1,1936, the John Hancock Insurance Co. of Boston, which was in the business of issuing annuity contracts, would have charged $101,046 for a single premium “Life Annuity Without Refund,” agreeing to pay $500 per month during the life of a female 54 years of age.

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Related

Board of Trade, Inc. v. Commissioner
1969 T.C. Memo. 58 (U.S. Tax Court, 1969)
Ware v. Commissioner
5 T.C.M. 749 (U.S. Tax Court, 1946)
Beattie v. Commissioner
6 T.C. 609 (U.S. Tax Court, 1946)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 T.C. 609, 1946 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 248, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beattie-v-commissioner-tax-1946.