California Trust Company v. Riddell

136 F. Supp. 7
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. California
DecidedDecember 14, 1955
Docket16183
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 136 F. Supp. 7 (California Trust Company v. Riddell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
California Trust Company v. Riddell, 136 F. Supp. 7 (S.D. Cal. 1955).

Opinion

WESTOVER, District Judge.

Katherine and Hunt Stromberg were wife and husband and, at the time of the death of Katherine Stromberg on March 15, 1951, were residents of the County of Los Angeles, State of California. During their marriage the husband, Hunt Stromberg, purchased certain life insurance and annuity policies. The policies were selected by Hunt Stromberg and purchased, by him from earnings received for personal services. He retained possession of the policies and had. the right to change the beneficiary at will.

Upon the death of Katherine Stromberg her will was admitted to probate, and the California Trust Company and Hunt Stromberg were appointed executors. The executors filed a Federal Estate Tax Return, disclosing a tax liability of $17,017.58. The executors did not list in the assets of the estate any interest of decedent in the aforementioned policies.

In April, 1953, plaintiffs received notice from defendant that additional estate taxes in the amount of $47,271.50 were due as, according to the Internal Revenue Department, the executors should have listed for estate tax purposes one-half of the cash surrender value of the insurance policies. The amount demanded was paid. A claim was duly filed for refund of the claimed overpayment, and subsequently this suit was filed.

Two problems are presented to the Court:

1. Did decedent, Katherine Stromberg, have an interest in the life insur *9 anee and annuity policies referred to above which interest should have been included in decedent’s gross estate for estate tax purposes?

2. Was the estate of Katherine Stromberg, in computing the estate tax, entitled to a marital deduction for any portion of the property passing to her surviving spouse?

According to the stipulation of facts on file in this action, Mr. and Mrs. Stromberg at all material times were residents of the State of California, and the policies in question were purchased and paid for from earnings of Mr. Stromberg received by him for personal services.

It seems hardly necessary to cite cases to the effect that in California (a community property state) the earnings of the husband during the marriage are community property — California Civil Code § 164; Thorpe v. Thorpe, 75 Cal.App.2d 605, 171 P.2d 126; Sbarbaro v. Rosa, 48 Cal.App.2d 584, 120 P.2d 151—and that property purchased from such earnings is also community. The earnings of Hunt Stromberg for personal services rendered were community funds, and as a consequence this Court must find that the insurance policies purchased with such funds were community property. Union Mutual Life Insurance Company v. Broderick, 196 Cal. 497, 238 P. 1034.

In the State of California a wife has a one-half undivided interest in community property. It is true the husband retains possession and control of community personal property, California Civil Code § 172; but the husband cannot devise the wife’s interest in eommunity^ property, either real or personal, California Probate Code §§ 201, 201.5. She has such an interest in community property that it is possible for her to will away her portion thereof and thus, at her death, cause a division of the community estate. Probate Code § 202. The fact that the policies in question were retained by the husband and that he had a right to change beneficiaries at will does not mean he could deprive the wife of her community interest therein without her consent. Inasmuch as Katherine Stromberg had a community ■interest in the policies at the time of her death, it will be the finding of this Court that the Commissioner of Internal Revenue was correct when he determined there should have been included in the gross estate of Katherine Stromberg, deceased, an undivided one-half interest in the cash surrender value of the policies in question.

The second problem presents a more serious question. Although marital deduction was a part of the Revenue Act of 1948, 26 U.S.C.A. § 812(e) (1), the Court has been able to find only one case in which a Circuit Court has had occasion to pass upon “marital deduction.” Kasper v. Kellar, 8 Cir., 217 F.2d 744.

According to the brief filed by plaintiffs in the case at bar, "the purpose of the marital deduction statute was to equalize the Estate Tax burden between community and separate property states.” Prior to 1948 there had been .considerable agitation throughout the country relative to discrimination in favor of residents of community property states who were able to divide the community income, filing separate tax returns based upon one-half of the community income to bring themselves within a lower surtax bracket. This privilege was not accorded to residents of non-community-property states and was recognized as unjust, for taxpayers should be treated indiscriminately, wherever resident; and we agree with the statement in plaintiff’s brief to the effect that the marital deduction statute was to equalize in effect the tax burden between community and separate property stated.

In community property states which allocate an undivided one-half interest in the community property there is no necessity for a marital deduction. In non-eommunity-property states in which the wife does not have an undivided one-half interest in property there was a necessity for the marital deduction; so *10 it seems to this Court from reading the very statute in question "that the marital deduction does not apply to community property. It applies only to separate property. If the rule were otherwise, in California the wife would be entitled to her one-half undivided interest in community property and then, if the executors were also entitled to a marital deduction, that deduction would be placed upon the exemptions of community property, and the injustice which existed prior to 1948 would continue to exist, even now. Certainly it was not the intent of Congress in passing the new law to continue in effect the injustice which they were trying to rectify by the Act of 1948. A reading of the statute in question certainly leads the Court to the conclusion that if Congress was trying to equalize the estate tax burdens between community and non-community-property states, it would not allow a marital deduction on community property.

Regulations 105 covering Estate and Gift Taxes, § 81.47a, provide in effect that the marital deduction is generally not available in the event decedent’s gross estate consists exclusively of property held by him and his surviving spouse as community property.

Concerning whether or not the insurance policies in question are community property, this Court holds they are.

Concerning whether or not plaintiffs are entitled to a marital deduction, this Court holds that as to the insurance policies plaintiffs are not entitled to such marital deduction.

However, if it should appear that there was separate property in the estate of Katherine Stromberg, then it is possible the estate would be entitled to a marital deduction, but that problem is not now before us.

Judgment is ordered in favor of defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
136 F. Supp. 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/california-trust-company-v-riddell-casd-1955.