Cruthers v. Neeld

103 A.2d 153, 14 N.J. 497, 1954 N.J. LEXIS 336
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedMarch 1, 1954
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 103 A.2d 153 (Cruthers v. Neeld) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cruthers v. Neeld, 103 A.2d 153, 14 N.J. 497, 1954 N.J. LEXIS 336 (N.J. 1954).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Wachenfeld, J.

The appeal is from an assessment made by the Division of Taxation, Department of the Treasury of the State of New Jersey, of a transfer inheritance tax in the amount of $1,679, plus interest, levied against the plaintiff. We certified the cause on our own motion.

The inquiry is directed toward three contracts issued by an insurance company, to determine whether the proceeds *500 thereof were properly included in the taxable estate of the decedent, plaintiffs husband, by reason of R. S. 54:34-1(c). That section of the statute imposes a tax where certain property is transferred “by deed, grant, bargain, sale or gift made in contemplation of the death of the grantor, vendor or donor, or intended to take effect in possession or enjoyment at or after such death.”

The record consists of a stipulation of facts, supplemented by a copy of one of the pertinent contracts, a related trust agreement, and findings of the inheritance tax examiner.

These papers reveal that Thomas Cruthers, the decedent, had been an executive of Worthington Pump and Machinery Corporation, which entered into a retirement plan and trust agreement dated May 1, 1943, with participating employees and the Fidelity Union Trust Company. In the Agreement the employer, Worthington, promised participating employees to make application to an insurance company for contracts for their benefit. The application was to be made through a retirement committee having the power to determine, “in its uncontrolled discretion, the form of the Contract * * * including who shall be the Beneficiaries and the mode of settlement,” and its decision was “conclusive, final and binding” upon all parties to the agreement and upon all persons claiming rights thereunder, including beneficiaries.

In both the application and the contract itself the trustee was designated as sole owner of the contract, subject to the terms and provisions of the trust agreement. Its function was to administer the plan.

Article Y of the trust agreement required the contract to contain an option of settlement providing for monthly payments to the participant during his lifetime after the date of his retirement, with a guarantee of 120 monthly payments to him. There was a further requirement that the contract provide for the payment of an amount equal to the unpaid guaranteed benefits to a designated beneficiary or beneficiaries in the event of the death of the participating employee prior to the expiration of ten years after his *501 retirement date. These provisions were termed the “standard option” of settlement.

In accordance with these and other directives of the trust agreement, Contract No. RA 1500257 of Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company, the insurance company selected by the retirement committee, was issued on May 1, 1943, naming Thomas Cruthers, a participating employee, as the annuitant. This contract is identical with two others under consideration, issued at later dates, with respect to the applications, endorsements and undertakings by the Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company for payment to the beneficiary if the annuitant should die prior to the date fixed for his retirement.

The policy provided Thomas Cruthers was to receive, upon the occasion of his retirement on May 1, 1953, an annuity consisting of a monthly retirement income of $402.50. Should he die before that date, which is what actually occurred here, then the insurance company was obligated to pay to the beneficiary, in one sum, “an amount equal to the cash surrender value hereunder at the date of the death of the annuitant or an amount equal to the total premiums paid for the contract * * * whichever is the greater.” Tacie I. Cruthers, wife of the annuitant, was named as beneficiary.

The retirement plan and trust agreement did not guarantee employment until retirement, nor did it obligate the employer to pay any retirement income. It granted no cause of action to the participating employees. The employer completely and irrevocably surrendered all right ever to retake or seek refund of any contributions made by it toward the purchase of the contracts; and the rights of participants became non-forfeitable from the time contributions were paid.

The premiums on the three contracts under consideration were paid by the employer, always through the medium of the trustee. There was withheld from the decedent’s salary prior to his death the amount of $7,973.70, which is said to represent his contribution toward the cost of the benefits provided by the retirement plan and trust agreement.

*502 On July 27, 1952, about nine months prior to his scheduled retirement, Thomas Cruthers died testate, a resident of West Orange, New Jersey. At the time of his death he was still in the employ of Worthington, and the trust had not been revoked.

In addition to a net estate amounting to $40,593.99, his widow became entitled to $67,039.45 as beneficiary under the three contracts issued by the Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company. Her husband’s death before his retirement date obligated the insurance company to repay the total premiums paid for the contracts, and it is these proceeds which were taxed as transfers intended to take effect in possession or enjoyment at or after death.

The argument against taxability is based on an alleged absence of “property” or “interest” in the decedent with respect to the contracts. Plaintiff urges that inasmuch as the trustee was designated the owner of the policies, nothing passed to the main beneficiary from Cruthers at or after his death.

An attack is made also upon the tax examiner’s finding that the decedent paid the entire cost of the annuity contracts, the contention being that the employer paid all the premiums to the trustee, which, in turn, paid them over to the insurance company, and thus the decedent had not even a beneficial or equitable, much less a legal, interest in tire proceeds of the contracts.

These suggestions lay considerable stress upon the peculiar legal artistry devised and employed in the making of applications for contracts, the manner of paying premiums, and the way of administering and supervising the plan by the trustee. Whatever worth this reasoning has relates solely to the form of the arrangement made and ignores the substance with which we must concern ourselves.

Fanciful rationalism must give way to a realistic and analytical interpretation of the documents under scrutiny, and such treatment discloses the policies in question to be retirement annuity contracts. In this status it becomes unimportant what interest, equitable or otherwise, the dece *503 dent had in the proceeds, for the tax is on the succession rather than on any divesting of the transferor’s ownership. In re Hollander’s Estate, 123 N. J. Eq. 52 (Prerog. 1938).

The ultimate objective of the plan — and indeed its operative effect — was to provide a stipulated return to the retired employee during his lifetime, with a disposition over upon his death of whatever might remain.

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Bluebook (online)
103 A.2d 153, 14 N.J. 497, 1954 N.J. LEXIS 336, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cruthers-v-neeld-nj-1954.