Flick's Estate v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue

166 F.2d 733
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedApril 16, 1948
Docket12160
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 166 F.2d 733 (Flick's Estate v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Flick's Estate v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 166 F.2d 733 (5th Cir. 1948).

Opinions

WALLER, Circuit Judge.

On December 9, 1935, R. Jay Flick created an insurance trust with Bankers Trust Company, a New York corporation, and Robert I. Ingalls, Jr., a resident of Alabama, as trustees, to which trust the decedent on that date made complete, absolute, and irrevocable assignments of six paid-up life insurance policies. Data in reference to these policies may be synopsized as follows:

When Face Amount
Issue Date Company Paid Up Amount Collected
Mar. 3, 1897 Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Co., No. 365032 1917 $ 20,000 $ 36,300.00
Aug. 29, 1911 Same company, No. 891599 1931 15,000 15,251.00
Nov. 1, 1935 Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Co., No. 1702718 Single 80,000 80,435.99 premium
Nov. 1, 1935 Same company, No. 1702719 Single 20,000 20,109.00 premium
Nov. 22, 1935 Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Co., No. 887364 Single 32,500 32,638.74 premium
Nov. 26, 1935 Prudential Insurance Co., No. 9086294 Single 50,000 50,429.74 premium
Total.......... ..$217,000 $235,164.47

These six policies had a cash value at the date of the making of the trust of $174,004.12. As noted above, four were single premium policies taken out within six weeks of the date of the creation of the trust.

The trust instrument provided that the trustees should:

“ * * * pay the net income, in as nearly as practicable equal monthly instal-ments, to the Insured’s wife, Henrietta Ridgely Flick, during her life, and from and after her death, if the Insured’s daughter Eleanor Flick Ingalls, shall then be living, to said Eleanor Flick Ingalls during her life, and upon the death of the survivor of said Henrietta Ridgely Flick and said Eleanor Flick Ingalls,
“(A) if the Insured shall already have died, the Trustees shall divide and set apart the then principal of the trust estate into separate funds for the issue then living of the Insured, in equal shares per stirpes, * * * ”1

Four years after creating the trust, the decedent, on December 4, 1939, made a will purportedly revoking all former wills and providing also for the creation of a [735]*735trust, out of the residue of the estate, not including the insurance policies, however, but distributable to the same beneficiaries as in the insurance trust.

In the year of making the trust [1935] decedent made a return and paid the gift tax on the value of the insurance policies assigned to the trust estate. At the time of the creation of the trust decedent was sixty-four years of age and in good health. His sixty-three-year old wife was an invalid, and had been for a number of years; nevertheless, she and the other contingent beneficiaries survived him.

Decedent, while a resident of Palm Beach, Florida, died on August 24, 1940, nearly five years after the creation of the trust.

The Commissioner, in the determination of the gross estate of the decedent, added the sum of $235,164.47, representing the net proceeds received by the trustees from the six insurance policies.2

It was stipulated that at the time the trust was established the decedent was in good health and that the trust was not created in contemplation of death insofar as it concerned the health of the settlor. Between the date of the making of the trust agreement and the decedent’s death there was no change in the securities', but the trustees, meanwhile, collected $7,993.89 as dividends on the policies.

It was shown in evidence without dispute that: the estate of decedent consisted largely of stocks against which there were debit balances of $140,000; that the decedent did not discuss inheritance taxes-with the attorney who prepared the trust agreement or with his family; that he did,, however, display concern over rising income taxes; that he advised his attorney that his primary interest in the creation-of the trust was a desire to provide security for his invalid wife.

The Tax Court found that the dominant purpose of the deceased in creating the trust was not advancing age or insecure health, but that the very nature of the decedent’s dispositions showed that a desire to make provision upon the event of his death predominated, and that the transfers of the insurance policies to the trust estate “were substitutes for testamentary dispositions.” In reaching this conclusion The Tax Court stated that it was influenced by the following considerations: (a) that the subject matter of the transfer, to-wit, policies of insurance, would acquire their greatest value upon maturity at the death of the insured; (b) the circumstances of the acquisition of the policies; (c) the fact that the trust favored the [736]*736same beneficiaries and made the same distributary provisions as to the residuum of decedent’s estate as were made in his will; (d) that the trustees in the insurance trust were the same as the executors of the will; 3 (e) that the provision in the trust agreement authorizing his trustees to purchase from his executors or administrators under his will any securities or other property, real or personal, belonging to his estate denoted an intimate connection in the decedent’s mind between the estate that would occur on his death and the trust; (f) that the creation and design of the trust were such as heavily emphasized considerations connected with the death of the decedent. The Tax Court in summary made the following statement: “All of these evidences look in the direction of a provision for the integration of the proceeds of the insurance and the property devolving at death, creating persuasive inferences of a corresponding motivation in the mind of the individual whose conduct they reflect, and consistent only with testamentary motivation.”

The Tax Court thought that “Such other motives as a desire to free his property from the hazards of stock market fluctuations and to avoid the incidence of the income tax could have been accomplished in so many other ways that even were there more convincing evidence of their existence, they would yet weigh negligibly in a determination of decedent’s impelling purpose.”

This case must be tried by the law as it existed prior to August 24, 1940, the date of the death of the settlor. The 1942 amendment to Sec. 811, Title 26 U.S.C.A. Internal Revenue Code, expressly provided that it should be applicable only to those who died subsequent to October 21, 1942. Sec. 811(c), prior to the 1942 amendment, provided that in determining the gross estate of the decedent there should be included the value at the time of his death of all property of the decedent; Sec. 811(a) required inclusion of the interest in any property of decedent; Sec.

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Flick's Estate v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue
166 F.2d 733 (Fifth Circuit, 1948)

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Bluebook (online)
166 F.2d 733, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flicks-estate-v-commissioner-of-internal-revenue-ca5-1948.