Hooker v. Commissioner

10 T.C. 388, 1948 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 253
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedFebruary 26, 1948
DocketDocket No. 13485
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 10 T.C. 388 (Hooker 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
Hooker v. Commissioner, 10 T.C. 388, 1948 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 253 (tax 1948).

Opinion

OPINION.

Murdock, Judge'.

The Commissioner determined a deficiency of $34,602.40 in gift tax for 1943. The petitioner alleges that the Commissioner erred in taxing as gifts the 1943 transfers to two trusts which he was required to make by the order of a court. The Commissioner claimed an increased deficiency on the theory that he erroneously omitted from gifts of prior, years, in computing the 1943 deficiency, a transfer of securities worth $49,375 made by the petitioner to his wife on August 10,1935. The parties filed a stipulation of facts, which is adopted as the findings of fact.

The petitioner filed his gift tax return for 1943 with the collector of internal revenue for the district of Florida. He married Winifred Holahan in 1921. They had two children, Edward, born on April 7, 1923, and Margaret, born in 1925. Margaret died on July 2, 1940.

The petitioner and Winifred separated and entered into a separation agreement dated August 26,1935. They then resided in Connecticut. The petitioner transferred to Winifred, on August 10,1935, securities valued at $49,375, of which no mention appears in the separation agreement, and on August 26,1935, $15,000 in cash, pursuant to paragraph 2 of the separation agreement which was as follows:

. Mr. Hooker has paid to Mrs. Hooker, simultaneously with the execution of thig agreement the sum of Fifteen thousand Dollars ($15,000), the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, and said sum is accepted by Mrs. Hooker in •full satisfaction of the obligation of Mr. Hooker to support and maintain her.

Paragraph 3 of the separation agreement was in part as follows:

3. In order to provide for the maintenance and support of the children of the parties Mr. Hooker has created simultaneously with the execution of this agreement two certain trusts with Central Hanover Bank and Trust Company, as Trustee, under which Mr. Hooker is grantor and the said children of the parties, to wit, Edward Gordon Hooker and Margaret Carmichael Hooker, are beneficiaries. Reference is hereby made to said trust agreements for the full terms and conditions thereof.
It is the desire and intention of Mr. Hooker that the provisions for the support and maintenance of his said children shall in the future be augmented. To carry out the foregoing intent Mr. Hooker agrees:
A. * * * [To place in trust for each child one-sixth of any amount he received from his mother during her life.]
B. If Mr. Hooker’s mother shall predecease him, upon completion of the administration of the estate of Mr. Hooker’s mother but in any' event not more than one year after the death of Mr. Hooker’s mother, to place in trust for each of the said two children of the parties amounts equal to one-sixth- (1/6) of the aggregate of the following:
(a) Such amounts as Mr. Hooker shall i ve and/or shall be entitled to receive outright from his mother’s estate after her death;
(b) Such amounts as shall be placed in trust for Mr. Hooker under his mother’s will with income payable to him for life or -for any shorter period.
♦ * * * * * *
[The petitioner also agrees at this point to leave in trust by his will . one-sixth of his estate to each trust if he predeceases his mother.]
C. Mr. Hooker’s liability under the foregoing subdivisions A and B shall be extinguished upon the happening of any of the following events:
(1) If either Mr. Hooker-or his mother at any time during life or by will shall place in trust for each of his children the sum of One Hundred thousand Dollars ($100,000) ;
(2) If both of said children shall die without surviving issue while Mr. Hooker and his mother are both living.
♦ * * ' * * ‘ * *
G. Wherever in this paragraph 3 reference is made to. the creation of a trust by either Mr. Hooker or his mother for the benefit of the said children of Mr. Hooker it shall mean a trust with the same Trustee and with terms and. provisions substantially similar to those of the trusts created simultaneously with this agreement.

Other provisions of the agreement included the following: Winifred was to have sole custody and control of the children, with the right of the petitioner to visit them not more than twice a month; each released all rights in the property of the other arising from the marriage and agreed not to encumber that property, but to aid, if necessary, in its transfer; and the agreement was to be incorporated in any decree of divorce later obtained, but could be altered by the joint action of the two parties.

The petitioner established two trusts on August 26, 1935, in which he named the Central Hanover Bank & Trust Co. of New York trustee, and his two children as principal beneficiaries. The petitioner transferred to each trust, on August 26,1935, property then worth $97,980.

The trust for Edward provided that the income until he became 25 was to be paid to Winifred for his education, maintenance, and support, or, if Winifred should die, used by the trustee for that purpose; excess income was to be accumulated and used later or paid to Edward at 25; income after Edward became 25 was to be paid to him for life; his children and widow were to receive the trust corpus at his death; Margaret was to take Edward’s place if he and his family were not living to take under the trust; Winifred was to become life beneficiary if those named were not living; if she was dead, then the petitioner or his heirs were to take the corpus; and Winifred had the right to revoke the trust during her life after the child beneficiary had reached 25, in which case the corpus was to go to her.

The trust for Margaret was identical except for the difference in names.

Winifred obtained an absolute divorce in Nevada by a decree entered October 19, 1935. The divorce decree provides that the settlement agreement of August 26,1935 “is, by this Court, ratified, adopted and approved in all respects,” it is “declared to be fair, just and equitable” to both parties and the children, and the parties are ordered to comply with it fully.

The petitioner remarried in 1936 and Winifred remarried in 1937.

The petitioner’s mother died on March 13, 1939, and the petitioner received $478,100.25 in the settlement of her estate, but he failed to add portions thereof to the two trusts. His son Edward, then beneficiary of each trust, acting through Winifred, and Winifred individually brought suit against the petitioner on July 17, 1940, in Connecticut for specific performance of the trusts and the separation agreement. The trial court entered judgment against the petitioner for specific performance. That judgment was affirmed on appeal, and thereafter, during 1943, the petitioner transferred to the trust for Edward property having a value of $159,366.75.

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Hooker v. Commissioner
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Bluebook (online)
10 T.C. 388, 1948 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 253, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hooker-v-commissioner-tax-1948.