Dolak v. Sullivan

144 A.2d 312, 145 Conn. 497, 1958 Conn. LEXIS 216
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJuly 30, 1958
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 144 A.2d 312 (Dolak v. Sullivan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dolak v. Sullivan, 144 A.2d 312, 145 Conn. 497, 1958 Conn. LEXIS 216 (Colo. 1958).

Opinion

King, J.

The fundamental question briefed and argued in this appeal is whether the Probate Court was correct in holding subject to our succession tax, as a transfer intended to take effect in possession or enjoyment at or after death, certain pension benefits which became payable to the plaintiff upon and after the death of the decedent, Michael C. Dolak, her husband, under a retirement plan of The Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Company, hereinafter referred to as the company.

The defendant tax commissioner, hereinafter called the defendant, filed an answer admitting all of the allegations of the reasons of appeal except the final paragraph, which in effect alleged that the judgment of the Probate Court was erroneous. The retirement plan was incorporated in the reasons of appeal as an exhibit. It was of the noncontributory type, since the decedent made no money payments *500 either into the plan or for any benefits provided under it. The plan was unfunded, there was no trustee, and there was no provision requiring the company to have on hand, if and when needed, any particular reserve or assets to enable it to carry out the terms of the plan. Coverage under the plan was automatic for employees of the company. The decedent, at the time of his death, was actively employed as a vice president of the company. At no time, either before or after electing the optional death benefit hereinafter referred to, had he become entitled personally to receive any retirement allowance or other money benefit under the plan. Benefit payments under the plan were not assignable. Such money benefits as a covered employee would personally receive under the plan consisted of retirement payments and came only upon his retirement while actively employed by the company. If for any cause other than death employment ceased prior to retirement, an employee was automatically withdrawn from the plan regardless of length of service, and as to him the plan would become wholly inoperative. If the decedent had, while actively employed, left the company to accept other employment or for any reason other than retirement, he would have rendered the plan inoperative as to him, and thereafter neither he nor the plaintiff would ever have received any benefits under it.

In case of death occurring prior to retirement and during active employment, which was the situation here, the plan provided for a single sum death benefit, which in this particular case would have amounted to $34,50Q. 1 Had the decedent not elected *501 otherwise, the plaintiff, upon his death while he was actively employed, would have received, subject to the company’s reserved right of discontinuance or modification hereinafter more particularly set forth, twelve monthly instalments aggregating that amount. But the plan also provided for an alternative death benefit, which the decedent on February 18, 1955, elected to take, in the form of an annuity, payable monthly, for the life of the surviving spouse. Pursuant to that arrangement, the company has made payments to the plaintiff monthly since the decedent’s death on July 6,1955. Thus the effect of the election by the decedent was to change the amount which the plaintiff would otherwise have received, upon his death while he was actively employed, from twelve monthly payments aggregating $34,500 to an annuity providing, for her life, monthly payments the commuted value of which was $37,037.18. The company reserved “the right to discontinue or modify the plan at its pleasure except that retirement allowances of employees who have already retired shall not be reduced.”

The controlling law was that in effect at the decedent’s death. Hackett v. Bankers Trust Co., 122 Conn. 107, 128, 187 A. 653. This is found in § 1137d of the 1955 Cumulative Supplement and § 2021 of the General Statutes. These sections impose a tax upon transfers of property made “by gift or grant intended to take effect in possession or enjoyment at or after the death of the transferor.” See Borchard v. Connelly, 140 Conn. 491, 493, 101 A.2d 497. Section 2021 (d) provides that such a transfer shall include one “under which the decedent retained for his life ... (1) the possession or enjoyment of, or the right to the income from, the property, or (2) the right, either alone or in conjunction with any person *502 or persons, to designate the person or persons who shall possess or enjoy the property or the income therefrom.” Id., 494. “It is the right of possession or enjoyment of property rather than the vesting in interest which is the basis of the tax levy. Cochran v. McLaughlin, 129 Conn. 176, 179, 27 A.2d 120.” Miller v. Connelly, 142 Conn. 144, 149, 112 A.2d 202. The tax is on “the shifting of the enjoyment of property—the ‘economic benefits’ thereof or ‘economic interest’ therein.” Borchard v. Connelly, supra, 494.

Belying on a statement in Borchard v. Connelly, supra, 495, that “the succession tax may be assessed only as regards property which at the time of its transfer was owned by the decedent,” the Superior Court reversed the decree of the Probate Court and held, in effect, that upon the facts the retirement plan never became an enforceable contract but remained at most a mere expectancy. Prom this the court concluded that neither at the time of the death of the decedent nor on any prior date had he owned anything, as far as the plan was concerned; that therefore the plaintiff succeeded to nothing which the decedent had owned; and, consequently, that there was nothing subject to tax. The statement relied on by the court is a correct statement of the rule normally applicable, for the reasons given at length in Connelly v. Waterbury National Bank, 136 Conn. 503, 506, 72 A.2d 645. But it does not mean that an indirect transfer of the type which took place here is not taxable. It is not necessary that the specific property received by the beneficiary shall have been previously owned by the decedent. He may, as was the case here, part with a valuable consideration owned by him in exchange for a contractual obligation of a third party running directly to the transferee.

*503 In Tilbert v. Eagle Lock Co., 116 Conn. 357, 165 A. 205, the death of one actively employed terminated the right of his employer to change or discontinue its retirement plan as to him. Here, according to the literal wording of the plan, only retirement while actively employed, which in the case of this decedent never occurred and because of his death while actively employed never can occur, had that effect. Thus a literal construction of the contract would, as claimed by the plaintiff, leave the company free at any time to discontinue or modify the monthly payments which she is receiving.

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Bluebook (online)
144 A.2d 312, 145 Conn. 497, 1958 Conn. LEXIS 216, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dolak-v-sullivan-conn-1958.