Herberts v. Commissioner

10 T.C. 1053, 1948 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 170
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedJune 7, 1948
DocketDocket Nos. 7049, 11149
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 10 T.C. 1053 (Herberts 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
Herberts v. Commissioner, 10 T.C. 1053, 1948 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 170 (tax 1948).

Opinion

OPINION.

Kern, Judge:

While the respondent contends in the income tax proceeding that the petitioner is taxable under the provisions of both sections 22 (a) and 167 of the Internal Revenue Code, he relies primarily on the general principles set forth in Helvering v. Clifford, 309 U. S. 331, and his principal contention is that petitioner is taxable under section 22 (a). The income in question is traceable, with a minor exception, to transfers of the Herberts Machinery Co. stock by the petitioner either to or for the benefit of his children.

It is necessary, therefore, to consider first the effect of those transfers.

Pre-lQfl transfers. — The petitioner made outright gifts of 1,900 shares of the Herberts Co. stock to each of his children and of 600 shares to his wife, all prior to 1941. Certificates for 1,300 shares were issued in Evelyn’s name and she was named as joint tenant with her mother in certificates for 1,200 shares (the equivalent of 600 shares each) ; certificates for 1,900 shares were issued in the name of Curtis, Jr. There was no trust, oral or written, at this time. The petitioner’s intention to make absolute gifts of the stock is shown by the evidence. The issuance of the stock certificates in the names of the children and wife is equivalent to a delivery of the stock to them, under the laws oí California,1 even though the petitioner retained the certificates for safekeeping. See Jean v. Jean, 207 Cal. 114; 277 Pac. 313; Lynch v. Lynch, 124 Cal. App. 454, 456; 12 Pac. (2d) 741. See, also, Kathryn Lammerding, 40 B. T. A. 589; affd., 121 Fed. (2d) 80. The acceptance of beneficial gifts is presumed under the laws of California. See Yano's Estate, 188 Cal. 645, 649; 206 Pac. 995; Herman v. Mortensen, 72 Cal. App. (2d) 413, 419; 164 Pac. (2d) 551. On all the evidence, we have found that the petitioner did not intend to reserve for himself, and did not reserve, any economic benefit or gain either from stock which he gave to his wife and children prior to 1941, or from the income thereon; and did not retain as to this stock any substantial rights of ownership. We hold that the pre-1941 transfers, which embrace 4,400/9,200, or 11/23, of the total stock in question, were complete and effective gifts by petitioner to his children and wife.

On January 20,1941, the petitioner caused the foregoing certificates of stock to be transferred to himself as “trustee” for his children. However, it was beyond the petitioner’s authority to dispose of stock owned by and standing in the name of his children and wife. It was equally beyond his authority to transfer this stock to trusts which he created, or purported to create, in 1941 and subsequent years. James T. Pettus, 45 B. T. A. 855; see Lawrence Miller, 2 T. C. 285. Cf. Frank E. Joseph, 5 T. C. 1049. It follows that the Commissioner erred in taxing 11/23 of the income in question to the petitioner.

In the petition there is an allegation to the effect that respondent erred in taxing to petitioner the income reported by Curtis A. Her-berts, Jr., in his individual return for the year 1942, and that this income was from stock given to Curtis, Jr., by petitioner and not from stock included in a trust for his benefit. The only evidence bearing upon this point is a schedule introduced by petitioner as an exhibit indicating that 1,000 shares of Aereo Corporation stock was a “Gift from C. A. Herberts,” and acquired by Curtis, Jr., in 1940, and was “exchanged for 55 shares Bank of America stock” in October 1942. This is not sufficient evidence to warrant a conclusion that respondent erred in liis determination that the sums oí $225 as dividends, and $367.40 as capital gains, less deductions of $64.43, were taxable to petitioner as “owner of the stock.” A similar allegation was made as to income reported for 1942 by Evelyn J. Herberts in her individual return. No income was reported in this return; the statement attached to the deficiency notice does not show that respondent taxed any such income to petitioner; and no evidence was offered as to this allegation. Therefore, as to these items our decision is against petitioner.

1941 transfers. — On January 20, 1941, the petitioner caused additional shares of the Herberts Co. stock to be transferred from his name to himself as “trustee” for his children. A certificate for 2,100 shares was issued to him as “trustee” for Evelyn, and a certificate for 2,700 shares was issued to him as “trustee” for Curtis, Jr. The petitioner contends that these transfers were absolute gifts to his children, at least in legal effect, because either (1) no trusts were created on January 20, 1941, or (2) if trusts were created, they were executed forthwith. He argues under the first point that he held the Herberts Co. stock in his name as “trustee” merely as a matter of convenience, similar to the ways in which properties were held by parents for their children in Edward H. Heller, 41 B. T. A. 1020, and Prudence Miller Trust, 7 T. C. 1245. In both of those cases we held that there was no intention to create trusts, but that there was an intention to make outright gifts. In the present case the evidence indicates, with reasonable certainty, that the petitioner intended to create a trust for each of his children and that he did not intend to make outright gifts of the stock. By 1941 Evelyn’s condition had become grave and could no longer be considered as a temporary aberration (her mental illness began in 1936, a year after the first outright gift of stock had been made to her), and the petitioner had engaged in conversations with his attorney in regard to the trust device as a protection for his family. Under these circumstances we can not ignore the significance of the petitioner’s action in transferring the stock to himself as “trustee” for his children, rather than to the children individually, as in the case of the pre-1941 transfers. We think it is clear that he did not intend to make outright gifts to his children on January 20,1941. That fact alone is sufficient to distinguish the cases relied upon by the petitioner. The petitioner contends in the alternative that if trusts were created on January 20,1941, they were executed forthwith. He argues that such trusts were dry, or passive, since he had no active duties to perform, and, therefore, that the full legal and equitable title passed at once to the children. He relies on numerous cases, of which LaFleur v. Burns Lumber Co., 188 Cal. 321; 205 Pac. 102, is a typical example. In that case a declaration in writing that a certain judgment was “in trust” for another party was held to create a valid trust under the California statute.2 It was a passive trust, because the only purpose was to acknowledge that the entire fee interest was in the beneficiary. On the other hand, in Wittfield v. Forster, 124 Cal. 418; 57 Pac. 219, there was a conveyance of real and personal property “in trust” for a named lodge. In that case the Supreme Court of California held, under the same statute, that “the language employed in the instrument is entirely too vague and uncertain to constitute a valid trust. The duration of the estate attempted to be granted to the trustee, the nature and quantity of interest which the beneficiaries are to have, and the manner in which the trust is to be performed, are all left undeclared and without any reasonable certainty; and, of course, there is no statement of any of the purposes for which, under section 857 (since repealed) , an express trust may be declared.

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10 T.C. 1053, 1948 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/herberts-v-commissioner-tax-1948.