Garrett v. Commissioner

8 T.C. 492, 1947 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 267
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedFebruary 28, 1947
DocketDocket No. 4407
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 8 T.C. 492 (Garrett 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
Garrett v. Commissioner, 8 T.C. 492, 1947 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 267 (tax 1947).

Opinions

OPINION.

Oppek, Judge:

The issue here raises the usual problem in contemplation of death cases; that of determining by a deductive process from all the facts the nature of decedent’s dominant motive for making the transfers. The issue does not arise here with equal force as to all of the interests transferred. Decedent made three separate transfers. Respondent now appears to concede that the property embraced in the so-called Trust No. 2 may be eliminated from the estate. That concession is presumably founded on the purpose to be gathered from the instrument of transfer itself: that decedent proposed to satisfy the immediate needs of his children, making them the outright beneficiaries of the income and leaving no substantial phase of the trust operation to await the event of his death. See City Bank Farmers Trust Co. v. McGowan, 323 U. S. 594.

A comparable consideration applies to a part of the remaining 1923 transfer, known as Trust No. 1. Decedent’s wife was the life beneficiary of a part of the income, and the record shows that a generous portion of the total income received by the trust was devoted, as it was presumably intended to be, to the periodic payments to her as life beneficiary. As to this, decedent’s concern for the immediate welfare of the beneficiary must be recognized.

To our mind, however, this portion of Trust Fund No. 1 must be rigorously severed from the remaining portions of the same fund, and from the property transferred in 1929. Trust Fund No. 1, as to the balance, was in essence a life insurance trust. Its evident purpose was primarily to safeguard and keep in effect the considerable value of decedent’s life insurance policies. Not only the policies themselves, but other property in the trust, consisting of income-bearing securities, partakes of that character, because by his arrangement with respect to it decedent has made it clear that his first preoccupation was with the use of that part of the income from the securities for the payment of current premiums on life insurance.

That his dominant motive was thus to preserve intact an estate which would come to fruition upon his death, is evident from the care with which these purposes were safeguarded by decedent’s arrangements. By paragraph twelfth of the trust instrument the corporate trustee is absolved from “any obligation of any nature” as to the insurance policies, “other than the safekeeping thereof * * * and the payment, so far as may be necessary to keep said policies in full force, of the premiums thereon * * * out of the net income received by the Trustees upon said Trust Fund No. 1, during the life of the Grantor {which payment shall ~be regarded as an application of the income so used to the use of the respective beneficiaries of said Trust Fund) * * (Emphasis added.)

The motivation which led decedent to take the action in question seems adequately reflected by the emphasis placed upon the use of that part of the income, not for the current needs during his life of the respective beneficiaries, but for the preservation of the insurance estate. If there could be gathered a purpose to make provision for the ultimate beneficiaries during decedent’s life — a necessity diminished by the arrangements, in that respect made otherwise but contemporaneously — it would have to be viewed as secondary and not as that primary, compelling, or dominant reason about which the present problem revolves. See United States v. Wells, 283 U. S. 102.

Several cases have arisen recently which have furnished the occasion for a consideration of a similar question. In Vanderlip v. Commissioner, 155 Fed. (2d) 152, affirming 3 T. C. 358 (certiorari denied, 329 U. S. 728), Judge Learned Hand said for the Second Circuit Court of Appeals:

* * * A gift differs from a bequest, — apart from the inevitable loss of control over the property — only in so far as it secures enjoyment to the donee during the donor’s life; and the donor’s motives are relevant to exclude property only so far as they touch upon his enjoyment in that period. * * *

See also First Trust & Deposit Co. v. Shaughnessy (C. C. A., 2d Cir.), 134 Fed. (2d) 940; certiorari denied, 320 U. S. 744.

And to quote from Thomas v. Graham (C. C. A., 5th Cir.), 158 Fed. (2d) 561:

The trHSt merely kept in force decedent’s life insurance policies during his life and economic benefits were intentionally and effectually withheld until after his death. Although the trial judge found that the transfers were not made in contemplation of death, we are of opinion that a construction of the trust instrument demands a contrary finding.

See also United States v. Tonkin & Peoples-Pittsburgh Trust Co. (C. C. A., 3d Cir.), 150 Fed. (2d) 531; certiorari denied, 326 U. S. 771; Davidson v. Commissioner (C. C. A., 10th Cir.), 158 Fed. (2d) 239.

It is true, of course, that not every transfer made to the natural objects of a decedent’s bounty, even though its effect is to avoid estate tax, is a transfer in contemplation of death. Colorado National Bank of Denver v. Commissioner, 305 U. S. 23; Allen v. Trust Co. of Georgia, 326 U. S. 630. It must be equally true, on the other hand, that not every transfer, the effect of which is to remove property from the speculative risk of retention in a decedent’s hands, is automatically eliminated as a transfer in contemplation of death. That is the result of all transfers in which decedent effectively withdraws from control. Such a motive, as the primary cause of a transfer, may well be one resulting from decedent’s preoccupation with circumstances connected with his life, and thereby effectively remove the transaction from the scope of the contemplation of death provisions. See Thomas C. Boswell et al., Executors, 37 B. T. A. 970. Under such circumstances, if decedent retains the income, the transfer might be included in his estate if made after March 3, 1931— not, hoAvever, as a contemplation of death arrangement, but because the expressed plan of the statute noAV includes it. Cf. Hassett v. Welch, 303 U. S. 303. But the motive to preserve the property as a current source of income must be discernible as decedent’s compelling concern. It is not inconsistent with a coordinate frame of mind comparable to testamentary concepts. Estate of Benjamin Franklin McGrew, 46 B. T. A. 623; affd. (C. C. A., 6th Cir.), 135 Fed. (2d) 158; see Diamond v. Commissioner (C. C. A., 2d Cir.), 159 Fed. (2d) 672. Whether the grantor takes that action with a dominant view to its effect upon the estate which will arise at his death, with testamentary motives, on the one hand, or, on the other, tó immediate or intervening considerations, is the true test.

Neither would the fact that this transfer involved so heavily the aspect of decedent’s life insurance of itself create an inference of contemplation of death. See Regulations 105, sec. 81.25.

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Garrett v. Commissioner
8 T.C. 492 (U.S. Tax Court, 1947)

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8 T.C. 492, 1947 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 267, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garrett-v-commissioner-tax-1947.