Estate of Spruill v. Commissioner

88 T.C. No. 68, 88 T.C. 1197, 1987 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 68
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedMay 7, 1987
DocketDocket Nos. 33697-84, 16578-85, 16579-85
StatusPublished
Cited by86 cases

This text of 88 T.C. No. 68 (Estate of Spruill 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 Spruill v. Commissioner, 88 T.C. No. 68, 88 T.C. 1197, 1987 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 68 (tax 1987).

Opinion

FEATHERSTON, Judge;

Respondent determined a deficiency in the amount of $13,570,174.98 in the estate tax for the Estate of Euil S. Spruill and an addition to tax under section 6653(b)2 in the amount of $6,785,087.49. Also, respondent determined deficiencies in the individual petitioners’ 1981 Federal income taxes as follows:

Petitioner , Deficiency
Weyman E. and Jennie Spruill.$2,600,815.56
Lewis J. Miers, Jr., and Kathleen S. Miers. 2,616,954.34

The issues for decision are:

(1) Whether the Ashford-Dunwoody Farm (exclusive of two homesites thereon) is includable in decedent’s gross estate under section 2033; the answer depends on whether a resulting trust arose in 1956 in favor of decedent’s two adult children, who had remainder interests in the property, when they executed quitclaim deeds conveying their interests to decedent.
(2) Whether the homesite where decedent’s daughter lived on the Ashford-Dunwoody Farm is includable in decedent’s gross estate under section 2033; the answer depends on whether decedent’s daughter and her husband retained their beneficial interest in the homesite when they conveyed it to decedent in 1961 in order to obtain a loan with which to pay decedent for the homesite.3
(3) Whether the homesite on which decedent’s son lived on the Ashford-Dunwoody Farm is includable in decedent’s gross estate under section 2033; the answer depends on whether decedent, within the meaning of section 2036(a)(1), retained the right to possession or enjoyment of the homesite for a period which did not, in fact, end before his death when he conveyed the homesite to his son in 1961.
(4) What was the fair market value of the Ashford-Dunwoody Farm includable in decedent’s gross estate on October 5, 1980, the date of decedent’s death.
(5) What was the fair market value of the River Farm, another piece of real estate includable in decedent’s gross estate, on October 5, 1980, the date of decedent’s death.
(6) Whether any part of the underpayment of estate tax of decedent’s estate was due to fraud within the meaning of section 6653(b).

FINDINGS OF FACT

1. Background

Euil S. Spruill (decedent) died on October 5, 1980. Under decedent’s will, his two children, Weyman E. Spruill (Wey-man) and Kathleen Spruill Miers (Kathleen), residents of Georgia, are the coexecutors of decedent’s estate. A Federal estate tax return was timely filed on July 6, 1981, with the Internal Revenue Service Center, Atlanta, Georgia.

Until his retirement, Weyman had been a farmer all his life. After graduating from high school, with the exception of military service in World War II, Weyman worked full time for his father in farming and in a grading and landscaping business that decedent had begun in the mid-1930’s to supplement the farm income.

After receiving her high school education, Kathleen began working as a bank teller. For 18 years prior to her retirement in 1978, Kathleen was employed at Citizens & Southern Bank first as a proof operator, then as a teller, and finally as a loan officer.

2. Ashford-Dunwoody Farm

Stephen T. Spruill (Stephen), decedent’s father, purchased, between 1889 and 1910, all the real property encompassed in land lots 347 and 348 of the 18th district of DeKalb County, Georgia, north of Atlanta. In 1931, Stephen conveyed various parcels of this land to six of his nine children, including a deed of approximately 102 acres of farmland in lot 347 (102 acres) to decedent, decedent’s wife, Georgia Spruill (Georgia), and decedent’s children (1931 deed).

Under the 1931 deed, decedent was to receive the income from the property for the remainder of his life, but should he predecease his wife, Georgia, the income from the land would go to Georgia until she died or remarried. Upon the termination of these life estates, the remainder of the property in fee simple was to go to decedent’s children or to the descendants of any of decedent’s children who did not survive the life estates, or, should decedent die without children or descendants, the property was to revert back to Stephen’s estate.

The Ashford-Dunwoody Farm, one of the two subject properties, consists of approximately 41 acres located in the western half of the 102 acres covered by the 1931 deed. It borders on Ashford-Dunwoody Road to the west and on Interstate Highway 285 (1-285) to the south. The recorded deeds to decedent’s brothers and sisters covering other parcels were similar in form to the 1931 deed given to decedent.

In the early 1930’s, decedent and his family moved into a former tenant house located on the 102 acres. Decedent farmed the land over the years with the help of his son, Weyman.

In 1936, Stephen conveyed to decedent, for $855 consideration, approximately 102acres of land located in land lots 347 and 346, 18th district, DeKalb County, Georgia, lying immediately north of the above-described 102 acres.4 This parcel of land was previously conveyed by Stephen to decedent’s brother, Paul, who later sold the property to DeKalb County for taxes. Stephen purchased the land from the county and sold it to decedent, giving decedent a total of approximately 205 contiguous acres of farmland.

In 1948, and again in 1956, decedent’s attorney was advised by the Atlanta Title Co. (title company) that a title insurance policy could not be obtained on either the 102 acres received by decedent under the 1931 deed or the land purchased by decedent in 1936 from his father. By letter dated July 26, 1956, the title company advised decedent’s attorney that the 1931 deed created life estates in decedent and his wife, Georgia, vested remainder interests in decedent’s children subject to being opened to include any after-born children, contingent remainder interests in decedent’s grandchildren, and a reversionary interest in Stephen or his estate. The title company suggested that most of the interests under the 1931 deed could be divested by conveyance, but the interests of decedent’s unborn children could be disposed of only pursuant to a court action brought by decedent. The purpose of such an action would be to secure court authorization to sell or borrow on the land subject to reinvestment of the proceeds, thus protecting the contingent interests of the minor grandchildren and unborn children. See Cooney v. Walton, 151 Ga. 195, 106 S.E. 167 (1921).5

In September 1956, shortly after the title company rendered its opinion, decedent obtained quitclaim deeds from all adult family members who held any interest in the 102 acres under the 1931 deed: Weyman, Kathleen, Stephen, and Georgia. The quitclaim deed executed by Stephen and Georgia provides in part:

This instrument is executed by S.T. Spruill in order to convey to said E.S.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
88 T.C. No. 68, 88 T.C. 1197, 1987 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 68, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-spruill-v-commissioner-tax-1987.