Estate of George Cornelius Mills v. Commissioner

5 T.C.M. 768, 1946 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 92
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedAugust 30, 1946
DocketDocket No. 9067.
StatusUnpublished

This text of 5 T.C.M. 768 (Estate of George Cornelius Mills v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of George Cornelius Mills v. Commissioner, 5 T.C.M. 768, 1946 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 92 (tax 1946).

Opinion

Estate of George Cornelius Mills, George York Mills, as Administrator of Said Estate v. Commissioner.
Estate of George Cornelius Mills v. Commissioner
Docket No. 9067.
United States Tax Court
1946 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 92; 5 T.C.M. (CCH) 768; T.C.M. (RIA) 46216;
August 30, 1946
S. P. Cain, Esq., Cairo, Ga., for the petitioner. Edward L. Potter, Esq., for the respondent.

HARRON

Memorandum Findings of Fact and Opinion

HARRON, Judge: Respondent determined a deficiency in estate tax in the amount of $23,959.35. Certain adjustments are not contested by petitioner. Respondent has agreed that additional administration expenses, including attorney's fees, may be allowed as a deduction under the Rule 50 computation. The only question presented is whether certain transfers of land and United States Savings Bonds made by decedent in his lifetime to his four adult children were made in contemplation of death so as to be includible in the gross estate under section 811 (c). Respondent's valuation of the property transferred*93 is not in issue. Petitioner also has abandoned his original claim that decedent's inter vivos gifts of United States Savings Bonds to the widow and minor child in the respective amounts of $375 and $1,906.50 were not includible in the gross estate.

The estate tax return was filed with the collector for the district of Florida.

Findings of Fact

Petitioner is the duly qualified administrator of the estate of George C. Mills, who died intestate on October 21, 1943, a resident of Lamont, Florida.

Decedent was born on January 25, 1873. At the time of his death in 1943 he was more than 70 years old. Death resulted two hours after decedent suffered a heart attack. Decedent's second wife and a minor child born of the second marriage, survived him. He was also survived by four adult children of his first marriage, three daughters and a son, to whom the transfers here in controversy were made. The son is the petitioner herein.

Decedent was divorced from his first wife in March, 1937. Within sixty days of the divorce he remarried. The children of the first marriage were very much opposed to the second marriage. The children continued to display feelings of bitterness and hostility*94 toward the second wife up to the date of decedent's death. After the marriage, the son never spoke to his stepmother, and refused to enter decedent's home. When business reasons required the son to see decedent at home, decedent and the son would talk outside the home.

Despite the hostility of the children to the second wife, the relations between decedent and the children were friendly. He continued to give them Christmas and birthday gifts, contributed to the support of two of the daughters, and entered into business transactions with the son, all of which will be developed in more detail hereinafter.

On July 10, 1939, decedent visited a physician in Gadsden, Alabama, and underwent a three day physical examination. The examination disclosed that decedent had a very serious heart condition. His heart was enlarged, there was distinct evidence of muscular weakness of the heart, or myocardia insufficiency, and disease of the coronary artery, or coronary sclerosis. The physician informed decedent that he had extremely serious heart trouble. He emphasized to decedent that decedent had an incurable condition and that decedent would have to make the best of it. The physician further*95 advised decedent to decrease his physical exertion, to repress as much as possible all emotional activity and to lead a much more quiet existence. In accordance with his usual practice, the physician did not express any opinion to decedent as to how long decedent might expect to live. Decedent did not consult the physician thereafter.

Decedent was a very reserved man. He kept to himself. He rarely spoke of and never complained about his health. The son knew decedent did not eat certain things because of some stomach trouble. Decedent did not tell his children or his attorney, nor did they know, that he had heart trouble or that he had gone to the physician in Gadsden. It was not until late in the summer of 1943 that the son noticed any change for the worse in decedent's physical appearance. It was then for the first time that the son found out that decedent was taking pills for his heart trouble. The son did not know whether decedent's heart condition was serious.

At the time of his death and for many years prior thereto, decedent was engaged in the business of producing turpentine from timber land which he owned or leased, and of cutting timber for saw mill purposes. Although*96 decedent did no manual work, he was a very active man. From 1937 through 1940 he personally looked after the cutting of timber on the lands he owned near Lamont where he lived, and supervised the turpentine operations at Ochlocknee, some 50 miles from Lamont. The timber land near Lamont was low flat wet land. The actual cutting operations were performed by a contractor on a percentage basis, but almost every day decedent walked one to five miles on the land directing and lining up the cutting of the timber. Twice a week decedent drove by automobile to Ochlocknee to supervise the turpentine operations, a round trip of over 100 miles. Prior to his physical examination in July, 1939, and after the examination until his death, decedent did the same type of outdoor work. Although, as will be subsequently developed, the son took over the Ochlocknee turpentine operations in 1941, decedent continued to supervise the cutting of timber on the lands which he owned or gave to his daughters near Lamont. On the day before he died, decedent was directing some pulp wood cutting on the land of one of his daughters.

1. In March or April of 1939, prior to his physical examination in July, decedent*97 told a contractor who was cutting timber for him on a percentage basis that he intended to divide the land then being worked on, some 11,000 acres, between two of his daughters. Decedent showed the contractor a division line which he had had surveyed in 1938.

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5 T.C.M. 768, 1946 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 92, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-george-cornelius-mills-v-commissioner-tax-1946.