Huber v. Helvering

117 F.2d 782, 73 App. D.C. 196, 26 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 466, 1941 U.S. App. LEXIS 4344
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedJanuary 27, 1941
DocketNo. 7548
StatusPublished

This text of 117 F.2d 782 (Huber v. Helvering) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Huber v. Helvering, 117 F.2d 782, 73 App. D.C. 196, 26 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 466, 1941 U.S. App. LEXIS 4344 (D.C. Cir. 1941).

Opinions

VINSON, Associate Justice.

The Board of Tax Appeals agreed with the Commissioner’s determination that the petitioner has income tax deficiencies of $1,105 and $1,084.11 for the years 1933 and 1934, respectively. The Board found the facts as stipulated by the parties. Our -statement of the case is an abridgement of the stipulation.

The petitioner, a resident of Connecticut, created a trust there. He has a life interest in all of the income, payable in quarterly instalments. Whenever the income is below $10,000 for any year, the difference must be paid from the principal, if the petitioner so requests. The deductions from principal are to be made up whenever the income is more than $10,000. At his death the corpus is to be administered under four trusts for the benefit of his widow and children. The trust instrument states that the petitioner has surrendered his power to amend, modify, or revoke, but he can appoint new beneficiaries, other than himself, if all those presently named predecease him. There is a “spendthrift” provision preventing the creditors of any beneficiary from reaching the corpus or income and the beneficiaries from anticipating .or assigning their interests in the trust funds or income.

On March 18, 1933, the petitioner wrote the trustee instructing him to transfer quarterly, during the year ending March 4, 1934, the income to principal. On March 3, 1934, petitioner wrote a similar letter in respect to the year ending March 4, 1935.1

The issue in the case is whether the amounts so transferred should be included in petitioner’s gross income. The Commissioner and the Board have determined that they should. We agree with that result.

The Board believed that the letters were directions to transfer rather than irrevocable assignments, but went on to pitch its holding upon the proposition that the spendthrift clause was applicable to the donor as well as to the other beneficiaries and therefore the attempted assignments had no legal effect.2

Instead of determining whether the letters were instructions or assignments, or whether the assignments could have legal effect under the Connecticut spendthrift trust law, we prefer to answer the one basic question: were the amounts involved [784]*784indudable as gross income under Section 22 (a) of the applicable Revenue Acts.3

In holding that the income of the trust for the years 1933 and 1934, even though validly assigned, is taxable to the petitioner, we are employing the reasoning of the Blair,4 Horst,5 and Eubank6 cases. In the Blair case, the petitioner had become entitled under a testamentary trust to its whole income during his life. He assigned his entire future interest in specified amounts (measured by dollars per year) of the net income. It was held that the assignor should not be taxed upon the income. In the present case, we have a donor-beneficiary who twice made yearly assignments of income.

The Blair case is heavily relied upon by the petitioner, but we believe that the rationale of that case demands that he should bear the tax in the instant casé. “ * * * the conveyancer was not seeking to limit the assignment so as to make it anything less than a complete transfer of the specified interest of the petitioner as the life beneficiary of the trust, * * *. The will creating the trust entitled the petitioner during his life to the net income of the property held in trust. He thus became the owner of an equitable interest in the corpus of the property. * * * The interest was present property alienable like any other, in the absence of a ’valid restraint upon alienation. * * * The beneficiary may thus transfer a part of his interest as well as the whole. * * * The assignment of the beneficial interest is not the assignment of a chose in action but of the ‘right, title, and estate in and to property.’ ”7 (Italics supplied.)

A beneficiary having a right to the net income from a trust for his life is said to have an equitable interest in the corpus of the trust, an interest in the estate. If he completely assigns that right to another, the assignee has the same equitable interest in the property or estate. If, as in the Blair case, he assigns a specified amount of income for the rest of his life, the as-signee may well have a proportionate interest in the corpus, that part of the corpus which has the income producing capacity of the specified amount assigned. It is believed that is what the statement, “The beneficiary may thus transfer a part of his interest * * * ”, means. The references in the Blair case present no instance where a person has transferred less thán all of his future interest in all or part of the income. When one assigns all of his future interest in the whole income to a third party he no longer has any personal economic concern in the income producing capacity of the corpus. When one assigns all of his future interest in a specifically designated amount of the income, his concern in the corpus comes only from the undivided estate that is still his.

In the present case, the petitioner had a life interest in all of the income. That gave him an equitable estate under the Blair case. He assigned only one year’s income. What part of his estate did he assign? We believe that it should be said that he merely divested himself of one year’s income and that he has not given up any of the property or estate that earns for him.8 After the year is over the income will again flow to him. He will want 100%, not 90% nor 95% of the potential earning power of the principal when the year is ended. He certainly did not divest himself of his interest in the entire corpus, nor is it reasonable to say that he transferred a part of it because during the year the assignee is to receive all of the income —no segment of the corpus represents that. For the one year the assignee is interested in what the corpus does for him. Meanwhile the assignor is interested in the corpus for all the years that he may yet live.

In trust and corporate structures it is not always easy to say what property is whose. An estate in the corpus, the language of the Blair case, is one vehicle, but it is a nebulous concept at the outset. [785]*785Many little estates could be visualized. Nonetheless, the law isn’t for intellectual exercise alone; it must be administered. Somewhere between the facts of the Blair case and the facts here is the line of demarcation ; we are not called upon to draw that line, a line demanded, we believe, by the reasoning of the Blair case. In the Blair case the assignor had a right to all the income for life. He assigned a definite part of that life income. The assignee got all the assignor had in that part of the estate. Here the assignor has a right to all the income for life. He assigned a year’s income. The assignee received one year’s income. The assignor retained all other years’; his reversionary interest is much greater than the interest the assignee received. Thus we say the assignor keeps his estate. It being his estate, the earnings every year are his income. We determine, therefore, that this case is within the underlying principle but not within the rule of the Blair case.

That a person should be taxed upon the income which he assigns when he retains the corpus is indisputably shown by the case of Helvering v. Horst.

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Related

Blair v. Commissioner
300 U.S. 5 (Supreme Court, 1937)
Helvering v. Clifford
309 U.S. 331 (Supreme Court, 1940)
Helvering v. Horst
311 U.S. 112 (Supreme Court, 1940)
Helvering v. Eubank
311 U.S. 122 (Supreme Court, 1941)
Byrnes v. Commissioner
39 B.T.A. 594 (Board of Tax Appeals, 1939)
Byrnes v. Commissioner
110 F.2d 294 (Third Circuit, 1940)

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Bluebook (online)
117 F.2d 782, 73 App. D.C. 196, 26 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 466, 1941 U.S. App. LEXIS 4344, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/huber-v-helvering-cadc-1941.