Darr v. Kervick

158 A.2d 42, 31 N.J. 476, 1960 N.J. LEXIS 247
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedFebruary 9, 1960
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 158 A.2d 42 (Darr v. Kervick) 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
Darr v. Kervick, 158 A.2d 42, 31 N.J. 476, 1960 N.J. LEXIS 247 (N.J. 1960).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Burling, J.

The appellants, executors of the estate of Katherine Kraft, prosecuted an appeal to the Superior Court, Appellate Division, from an assessment of the Acting Director of the Division of Taxation holding the corpus of a trust created by decedent inter vivos subject to the state transfer inheritance tax. While the cause was pending in the Superior Court, Appellate Division, and prior to arguments there, we certified it on our own motion. R. R. 1:10-1.

On May 26, 1924 decedent and her husband were possessed of 715 shares of stock in a corporation known as A. S.chrader & Sons, and four lots of land owned in the husband’s name located in the State of New York; of this property, 350 shares of the stock belonged to decedent absolutely and the .remainder to her husband absolutely (including the land). On that date Kraft’s Corporation was created and 100 shares of capital stock were issued by it. Eifty-one of these shares were given to the husband in exchange for his property described above. Eorty-nine of these shares were given to decedent in exchange for her property described above. On *480 tlie same day both decedent and her husband executed trust instruments with respect to the stock. By the instrument executed by her, decedent, as settlor, declared herself trustee of the 49 shares of Kraft’s Corporation stock which she had only just acquired. The net income from the cor ¡ms was to be paid to decedent’s husband for his life. Upon the husband’s death, the principal was to be divided into as many shares as there were children surviving him and children not surviving him but leaving issue living at the husband’s death. If the husband died without children or issue of children surviving him, the corpus was to revert to decedent. Otherwise, however, that portion of the principal representing shares of surviving issue of deceased children was to be distributed outright to such issue on the death of the life tenant. The shares of the children surviving the life tenant were to be held in further trust, the income of their respective shares to be paid to them for life. If these children should reach 35 years of age before dying, they were given a power of appointment, exercisable by will, with respect to their shares. Failing a valid exercise of such power, the share of the child so dying was to go to its living lawful heirs “as if such child had died intestate, a resident of the State of New York, and as if all of said property were real estate,” All other trust property not otherwise disposed of was to be distributed to the living lawful heirs of decedent’s husband as if he had died on the date of decedent’s death intestate and a resident of the State of New York and as if such property were real estate. On the same date, decedent’s husband executed a trust instrument creating a trust identical to that described above except that the life tenant was decedent. The corpus of this trust was the 51 shares of Kraft’s Corporation stock owned by the husband. The transfers of the corporation’s stock from decedent to herself as trustee and from the husband to himself as trustee were noted on the books of the corporation. It is the corpus of the first trust described above, that created by decedent, which the State seeks to tax.

*481 At the time these trusts were created, decedent’s husband was aware that he was suffering from pernicious anemia and would likely not recover. He did die within three months of the creation of the trusts described above. The transfer of the corpus of the trust created “by him was taxed by the State as a transfer made in contemplation of death and this tax was sustained in the Prerogative Court. In re Kraft’s Estate, 103 N. J. Eq. 543 (Prerog. 1928). Besides decedent, her husband was survived by three daughters. One of these died prior to her thirty-fifth birthday and without issue. Consequently the trust in her benefit created by decedent,' consisting of one-third of 49 shares of Kraft’s Corporation stock, lapsed and decedent took title to the property in accordance with the trust instrument. This property decedent transferred in her individual capacity to the trustees of the trust created by hex husband (of which she was life beueficiary) to be retained and distributed according to the provisions of the instrument executed by her husband. This portion of the original corpus of 49 shares, amounting to 16-1/3 shares, was conceded by appellants to be taxable inasmuch as decedent received the income from these shares for her life, i. e., as a transfer intended to take effect in possession or enjoyment at or after decedent’s death. R. S. 54:34-1 (c) as amended. In an effort to divest herself of any interest which might remain in her by virtue of the trust which she created, decedent transferred to the Hew York Community Trust by gift on May 25, 1951 “all her present and future rights, property, claims and demands in anywise reserved to * * *” the decedent in the trust created by her. This transfer, of course, did not affect the trust created by her husband of which she was life beneficiary.

The questions raised by this appeal are: (1) whether the corpus of the trust created by decedent on May 26, 1924 is taxable other than to the limited extent conceded by appellants; (2) if so, whether the tax ought to be reduced to account for consideration received by decedent in exchange for the creation of the trust; (3) if the entire corpus of *482 the trust is held taxable, whether such tax violates the New Jersey and Federal Constitutions; (4) whether interest was properly assessed on the tax due; and (5) whether certain payments made to the Division of Taxation were properly applied by the Division. These matters will be treated in the order in which they are listed.

The facts show, and the appellants appear to concede, that the trusts created by decedent and her husband fall within the class of trusts denominated for tax purposes as reciprocal trusts. Under this doctrine, discussed and applied by this court in Newberry v. Walsh, 20 N. J. 484, 491-494 (1956), “the person who furnishes consideration for the creation of the trust is considered the settlor, although nominally another is the settlor.” Hill’s Estate v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 229 F. 2d 237, 240 (2 Cir. 1956). The primaiy effect of this doctrine is to cause to be included within the decedent’s gross estate (to use Federal Estate Tax terms) the corpus of a trust created by another which gives decedent an interest in the corpus which would cause it to be taxed to decedent had the interest been one reserved by decedent instead of granted to him, provided the trust was created by the other person as part of a plan whereby decedent creates a similar trust in favor of the other person in exchange for the trust created by him. Lehman v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 109 F. 2d 99 (2 Cir. 1940), certiorari denied 310 U. S. 637, 60 S.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
158 A.2d 42, 31 N.J. 476, 1960 N.J. LEXIS 247, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/darr-v-kervick-nj-1960.