Estate of Kelley v. Commissioner

63 T.C. 321, 1974 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 11
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedDecember 12, 1974
DocketDocket Nos. 3236-73, 3237-73
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 63 T.C. 321 (Estate of Kelley 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 Kelley v. Commissioner, 63 T.C. 321, 1974 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 11 (tax 1974).

Opinion

OPINION

Featherston, Judge:

In these consolidated proceedings, respondent determined the following deficiencies in the gift tax of petitioners:

Docket No. Year Deficiency
3236-73_ 1954 $8,869.65
3237-73_ 1954 11,441.62

Respondent also determined that additions to the tax were applicable under section 6651(a)1 in the amount of $2,876.51 in each case. Three issues must be resolved:

1. Were transfers in 1954 of remainder interests in land by petitioners to their children and grandchildren in exchange for vendor’s lien notes completed gifts within the meaning of section 1000 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1939?

2. Was the subsequent forgiveness of the vendor’s lien notes by petitioners gifts of present or future interests within the meaning of section 1003(b)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1939?

3. Are petitioners liable for the additions to tax determined to be due under section 6651(a) for failure to file timely gift tax returns for 1954? '

All the facts are stipulated.

Petitioners N. Ray Kelley, independent executor of the Estate of J. W. Kelley, and Margaret I. Kelley were legal residents of Earth, Tex., at the time the petitions herein were filed.

On August 5, 1954, J. W. Kelley, since deceased, and his wife, Margaret I. Kelley (hereinafter referred to as petitioners), executed five warranty deeds transferring to their three children, N. Ray Kelley, M. E. Kelley, and Beulah Danforth, and to their two grandchildren, Jerry E. Devenport and Sybil Devenport Angeley, specific tracts of land in Lamb, Castro, and Palmer Counties, Tex., subject to stated reservations. In each conveyance, petitioners reserved to themselves the full possession, benefits, and use of the properties, as well as the rents, issues, and profits thereof during both of their natural lives.

Each of the deeds recites that it was given in consideration of a stated cash payment and vendor’s lien notes. Each grantee executed four non-interest-bearing vendor’s lien notes in favor of petitioners, the first of which matured January 1, 1955. The second note matured January 1, 1956; the third one on January 1,1957; and the last one on January 1,1958. The face amount of each vendor’s lien note executed by N. Ray Kelley, M. E. Kelley, and Beulah Danforth was $6,000; the face amount of each vendor’s lien note executed by Jerry E. Devenport and Sybil Devenport Angeley was $3,000. The downpayments made by the grantees in connection with the conveyances were gifts to the grantees by petitioners.

Each deed of conveyance described each of the notes given therefor and recited that a vendor’s lien was retained against the property conveyed to secure the payment of such notes. A valid lien was thereby created under Texas law against each such tract to secure the payment of the notes given therefor. The deeds were filed in the office of the county clerk of each county in which the deeded land is located.

None of the aforementioned vendor’s lien notes was actually paid by the grantees; instead the notes were forgiven by petitioners at or about the time they became due. The first note given by N. Ray Kelley, which was due on or before January 1, 1955, was forgiven by petitioners in November 1954. The first notes of Jerry E. Devenport and Sybil Devenport Angeley, which were due on or before January 1,1955, were forgiven on or about December 23, 1954. All other notes were forgiven subsequent to the calendar year 1954, and those years are not before this Court.

The vendor’s liens were released by petitioners on the dates set out below:

Grantee Date of release
N. Ray Kelley_ Oct. 25,1957
M. E. Kelley_ Oct. 25,1957
Beulah Danforth_ Nov. 5,1957
Jerry E. Devenport_ Feb. 5,1957
Sybil Devenport Angeley_ Jan. 11,1960

Gift tax returns for 1954 were filed for Margaret I. Kelley, individually, and for J. W. Kelley’s estate. In each such gift tax return, there was deducted from the reported value of the donor’s conveyance an amount equal to such donor’s community portion of the vendor’s lien notes.2

In his statutory notice of deficiency, respondent increased the taxable gifts of each petitioner for 1954 by such petitioner’s community one-half of the above-described vendor’s lien notes, being $48,000 for each petitioner. Petitioners here contend that, in August 1954, they sold remainder interests in their land to their children and grandchildren in consideration of the cash and vendor’s lien notes, reserving an estate for both of their lives, and that they did not make gifts of such interests.

We hold for petitioners. The notes received by petitioners, secured by valid vendor’s liens, constituted valuable consideration in return for the transfer of the property. Petitioners have reported as taxable gifts the value of the transferred interests in excess of the face amount of the notes. The notes were extinguished without payment as they became due, but the vendor’s liens continued in effect as long as a balance was due on the notes. At any time prior to the forgiveness of the final note relating to a particular transfer, petitioners could have demanded payment of the amounts falling due and, in case of default, could have foreclosed the vendor’s lien on the property to satisfy the obligations.3 In addition, the notes, to the extent of the unpaid balances, were subject to sale or assignment by petitioners at any time, and a purchaser or assignee could have enforced the liens.

This Court has held that when property is transferred in exchange for a valid, enforceable, and secured legal obligation, there is no gift for Federal tax purposes. In Selsor R. Haygood, 42 T.C. 936 (1964), a mother deeded properties to each of her two sons and in return took a vendor’s lien note from each son for the full value of the property, payable $3,000 per year. In accordance with her intention when she transferred the properties, the mother canceled the $3,000 payments as they became due. Holding that the mother did not make gifts of the properties at the time of the transfer and receipt of the notes, the Court said (Selsor R. Haygood, supra at 946):

If the notes of petitioner’s sons were as a matter of law unenforceable, there might be validity to respondent’s argument that there was no debt secured by the vendor’s liens and deeds of trust which would be collectible. However, under the facts in this case where the very deeds conveying the properties recited that vendor’s lien notes were being given in consideration therefor, the evidence certainly supports the fact that the notes did create enforceable indebtedness even though petitioner had no intention of collecting the debts but did intend to forgive each payment as it became due. * * *

See also Geoffrey C. Davies, 40 T.C. 525, 531 (1963); Nelson Story III, 38 T.C. 936, 941 (1962).

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Estate of Kelley v. Commissioner
63 T.C. 321 (U.S. Tax Court, 1974)

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Bluebook (online)
63 T.C. 321, 1974 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-kelley-v-commissioner-tax-1974.