Estate of George M. Moffett, Deceased, the Hanover Bank, and James A. Moffett, 2nd v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue

269 F.2d 738, 4 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 6053, 1959 U.S. App. LEXIS 3452
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedAugust 3, 1959
Docket7879_1
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 269 F.2d 738 (Estate of George M. Moffett, Deceased, the Hanover Bank, and James A. Moffett, 2nd v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of George M. Moffett, Deceased, the Hanover Bank, and James A. Moffett, 2nd v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 269 F.2d 738, 4 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 6053, 1959 U.S. App. LEXIS 3452 (4th Cir. 1959).

Opinion

THOMSEN, District Judge.

This is a petition for review of a decision of the Tax Court, 31 T.C. 541, involving estate taxes, specifically a charitable deduction asserted by the executors under sec. 812(d) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1939, 26 U.S.C.A. § 812(d), with respect to a trust created by the will of their decedent, George M. Moffett, who died in December 1951. The question presented is whether the deduction should be restricted to the value of the charitable corporation’s right to receive the trust income during the life of decedent’s widow, as the Commissioner and the Tax Court held, or whether the deduction should also include the value of the charity’s contingent interest in the corpus.

Under the eighth paragraph of his will 1 decedent gave $1,500,000 to his executors and trustees, in trust to pay to his widow $50,000 per annum out of the principal of the trust until the entire principal is consumed or until her death prior thereto. The net income of the trust, during her life, is payable to Whitehall Foundation, Inc., a charitable corporation, to be used by its trustees for its corporate purposes. If the widow dies before the complete exhaustion of the principal of the trust fund, the remaining principal is to be paid to the Foundation.

Decedent’s wife was living and was fifty years of age on the date of his death. Based on Table 6 of the United States Life Tables and Actuarial Tables (1939-1941), her life expectancy on that date was 24.72 years; the chances of her living the full thirty year period, which would have to expire before the trust fund would be completely exhausted, were 290 in 1,000. Based on the Actuaries’ or Combined Experience Table of Mortality, she had a life expectancy of 20.18 years, and the chances of her living thirty years were 191 in 1,000.

The Commissioner determined that the present value of the Foundation’s inter *740 est in the trust as of the date of decedent’s death was $622,536, which is the present worth of the right to receive the income from the diminishing fund for a period of thirty years. The Commissioner allowed that amount as a charitable deduction, but he refused to allow any deduction for the Foundation’s conditional interest in the corpus of the trust. The executors contend that the charitable deduction should be valued by subtracting the actuarial value of the widow’s annuity from the total value of the trust property.

Sec. 812(d) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1939 was implemented by Treasury Regulations 105, secs. 81.44 and 81.46. Sec. 81.46, which applies in this case, was approved in Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Sternberger’s Estate, 348 U.S. 187, 75 S.Ct. 229, 99 L.Ed. 246, in Bowers v. South Carolina National Bank of Greenville, 4 Cir., 228 F.2d 4, and in United States v. Dean, 1 Cir., 224 F.2d 26. It provides in material part:

“Sec. 81.46. Conditional bequests.
(a) If as of the date of decedent’s death the transfer to charity is dependent upon the performance of some act or the happening of a precedent event in order that it might become effective, no deduction is allowable unless the possibility that charity will not take is so remote as to be negligible. If an estate or interest has passed to or is vested in charity at the time of decedent’s death and such right or interest would be defeated by the performance of some act or the happening of some event which appeared to have been highly improbable at the time of decedent’s death, the deduction is allowable.”

In the instant case the Tax Court, after considering all relevant factors, decided that the possibility that charity will not take the remainder interest is not so remote as to be negligible, and, therefore, that the estate is not entitled to a deduction for the value of that interest. We agree with that conclusion.

The instant case is quite similar to United States v. Dean. There, as here, the vesting of the charity’s remainder interest in the corpus did not depend upon the voluntary act of an individual, cf. Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Sternberger’s Estate; the probabilities were capable of actuarial calculation. In Dean the chance that the charity would not take was 1 in 11, about 9%. In the instant case, the chance that the charity will receive no part of the corpus is 19% or 29%, depending upon which table is used. Moreover, the amount which the charity may ultimately receive is uncertain. In Dean the First Circuit said:

“Off hand it would seem eminently fair and administratively simple to allow such a deduction in cases such as this where the chance that charity will take can be accurately computed actuarially. But the Supreme Court in the Sternberger case rejected the argument that the applicable regulations permit proportional deductions. The Court construed § 81.46 * * * as taking not a proportional but an all or nothing approach to the problem of deductions on account of contingent bequests to charity. Thus the section either denies any deduction at all for a contingent bequest to charity, or else it permits the deduction of the present value of the entire contingent bequest, allowing the latter whenever ‘the possibility that charity will not take is so remote as to be negligible.’
* * * *• * *
“The line between those chances which are so remote as to be negligible and those which are not lies somewhere between these extremes. We cannot say exactly where. We can only decide specific cases as they arise using the best judgment we have in placing them on one side or the other of the line. And there is no standard to guide us except our estimate of the extent of the encouragement tax-wise which Congress wished to give testators to make *741 gifts to charity. Our judgment being largely subjective, about all we can say is that we do not think that one chance in eleven can be considered so remote a chance as to be negligible, that is, a chance which persons generally would disregard as so highly improbable that it might be ignored with reasonable safety in undertaking a serious business transaction.” 224 F.2d at pages 28, 29.

The executors contend that the entire beneficial and economic interest in the trust fund of $1,500,000 was vested in the Foundation upon decedent’s death subject only to the fixed annuity payable to his widow, and that the interest of the Foundation in the income and its contingent interest in the corpus should be considered as having been merged. The executors contend that the allowance should have been $869,628, a figure reached by subtracting from $1,500,000 (the entire amount of the trust fund) the sum of $630,372 (the aetuarially computed value 2 of an annuity of $50,000 payable quarterly to a person aged 50 for a period of 30 years or until prior death). They say in their brief: “If the decedent had specifically provided in his will that $1,500,000 would go to Whitehall Foundation in trust, subject to the payment of $50,000 per year to Mrs.

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269 F.2d 738, 4 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 6053, 1959 U.S. App. LEXIS 3452, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-george-m-moffett-deceased-the-hanover-bank-and-james-a-ca4-1959.