Carpenter v. United States

4 Cl. Ct. 705, 53 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 1624, 1984 U.S. Claims LEXIS 1463
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedMarch 14, 1984
DocketNo. 691-81T
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 4 Cl. Ct. 705 (Carpenter v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carpenter v. United States, 4 Cl. Ct. 705, 53 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 1624, 1984 U.S. Claims LEXIS 1463 (cc 1984).

Opinion

OPINION

LYDON, Judge:

In 1970, plaintiff1 executed a trust document wherein he transferred to a trust his remainder interest in his mother’s 1927 trust. The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) assessed a gift tax on this transfer on the ground that plaintiff’s execution of the [708]*708trust document constituted a gift to the 1970 trust of his remainder interest under I.R.C. § 2501(a)(1) (Supp. V 1969). Plaintiff paid the tax assessment and sues here for a refund of $142,979.25, plus interest.

Plaintiff maintains that his execution of the trust instrument did not constitute a gift of his remainder interest for three reasons. These reasons, which have been translated into issues, are as follows: First, plaintiff claims that the 1970 trust was not effective until the death of his mother in 1976 because the trust instrument was not delivered to the trustee until that date. Second, plaintiff argues that the 1970 trust was invalid since it was executed by him only because of duress, coercion, and undue influence by his mother and her attorney. Third, plaintiff contends that the 1970 trust was invalid because plaintiff did not read or understand the terms of the trust at the time of execution, and he, therefore, lacked the necessary intent to create a trust at that time.

Both parties have moved for summary judgment on the first issue. Plaintiff maintains that since the trust instrument was not delivered to the trustee until his mother’s death in 1976, as a matter of law, there could be no conveyance in 1970, of plaintiff’s remainder interest in his mother’s 1927 trust. Defendant contends, however, that since the trust instrument was delivered in 1970 to a third party with instructions to deliver it to the trustee on his mother’s death, this constituted constructive delivery to the trustee in 1970 as a matter of law. Therefore, defendant argues that the trust was validly created in 1970 and that the transfer to the trust by plaintiff of his remainder interest constituted a gift to the trust at the time the trust instrument was executed in 1970.

Defendant has also moved for summary judgment on the second and third issues. Defendant argues that, as a matter of law, there was no duress, coercion or undue influence by plaintiff’s mother or her attorney since the basis for this contention is merely plaintiff’s fear of disinheritance or discontinuance of financial support if he did not execute the trust instrument. Defendant further argues that given the circumstances surrounding the execution of the 1970 trust, and plaintiff’s maturity, experience and education, his failure to read and/or understand the trust document did not invalidate the 1970 trust as a matter of law. Plaintiff opposes defendant’s motion on these two issues claiming that genuine issues of material fact remain to be resolved relative thereto.2

Upon consideration of the briefs of the parties, and after oral argument, it is concluded that plaintiff’s delivery of the trust instrument constituted constructive delivery to the trustee as a matter of law. It is also concluded, as a matter of law, that the factors relied on by plaintiff do not constitute coercion, duress or undue influence sufficient to invalidate the trust, nor does plaintiff’s alleged failure to read and/or understand the terms of the trust, under circumstances which existed at the time, suffice to invalidate the trust.

I.

Plaintiff was one of three adopted children of a wealthy family. Plaintiff’s mother, Louisa d’A. Carpenter, had established a 1927 trust wherein her three adopted children, or their surviving issue, were to receive equal shares of the trust corpus on the death of the mother. As of April 10, 1970, the IRS estimated the value of this 1927 trust to be approximately $5,154,286.

As of April 10, 1970, plaintiff was 35 years of age. He had received a degree from a business college. He and his wife Jeanne had two children. While he worked for short periods of time at various jobs, e.g., stock salesman for a brokerage firm, real estate salesman, Tastee Freeze ice cream business, retail seafood business, [709]*709bowling lane business, he and his family were, in essence, supported by his mother. His mother provided him with income, occasionally paid off his debts, and even bought a bowling business for him to operate. His mother also provided like financial support to her other two adopted children.

During the years 1967 to 1969, plaintiffs mother decided that some method had to be devised to ensure continued financial support for plaintiff’s wife and children after the mother’s death. She was equally concerned about the financial future of her other two adopted children. The mother was worried about plaintiff’s inability to manage finances and wanted to make sure that, after her death, he did not unnecessarily deplete his financial sources. Among the considerable assets of plaintiff’s mother was a lifetime income interest in the 1927 trust discussed earlier. To prevent the depletion of her children’s financial resources after her death, plaintiff’s mother, in consultation with her lawyer, decided that her children should put their contingent remainder interests in the 1927 trust (/.&, contingent on the children or their issue surviving the mother’s death) into the newly created trusts.

During the period 1967 to 1969, Richard Carvell (Carvell), the mother’s attorney, proceeded to draft trust agreements for execution by plaintiff and the other two children which would place in trust their remainder interests in the 1927 trust. Plaintiff maintains, in his deposition, that he was not consulted by Carvell regarding this matter during the period when Carvell was drafting the trusts. Carvell, in his deposition, claims he explained the terms of the trust to plaintiff and to the other children. Plaintiff’s mother was concerned about federal gift tax liability when the three children conveyed their remainder interests to the new trusts. She advised that she would not pay any gift tax due on such transfers. The children, on their own, would not, in Carvell’s view, have been able to pay any such gift tax at that time. Carvell, after seeking the advice of a tax attorney, decided to set the trust up in such a way that, in the view of both attorneys, any federal gift tax liability would be deferred until after the mother’s death.

Specifically, Carvell planned to have the trust instruments delivered, after execution by the three children, to a third party instead of to the trustee with instructions to the third party to hold the instrument until the death of the mother and at her death the trust instruments were to be delivered to the trustee by the third party. Carvell drafted the same substantive language for all three trusts for execution by each of the children. In this way, Carvell hoped to take advantage of one of the basic requirements of trust law for the creation of a valid trust, namely, delivery of the trust property or trust instrument to the trustee. Accordingly, Carvell was of the opinion that these trusts would not be valid until delivery of the trust instruments to the trustee after the mother’s death and that any gift tax liability accordingly would be deferred until the date of the mother’s death. At this latter time, money would be available to the children for payment of any gift tax liability.

In the process of drafting the trust instruments, Carvell sent a copy of the proposed trust agreement to Wilmington Trust Company (Wilmington Trust), which was to serve as trustee of the trusts, for comment.

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Bluebook (online)
4 Cl. Ct. 705, 53 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 1624, 1984 U.S. Claims LEXIS 1463, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carpenter-v-united-states-cc-1984.