In Re Hartford

194 A. 800, 122 N.J. Eq. 489, 1937 N.J. Prerog. Ct. LEXIS 2
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedNovember 5, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 194 A. 800 (In Re Hartford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Hartford, 194 A. 800, 122 N.J. Eq. 489, 1937 N.J. Prerog. Ct. LEXIS 2 (N.J. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

The petitioners, as trustees under a deed of trust made by George H. Hartford, now deceased, appeal from the transfer inheritance tax levied in respect of that deed of trust underP.L. 1909, ch. 228, as amended by P.L. 1914, ch. 151. *Page 490

Decedent was the owner of 6985 shares, (out of a total of 7000), of the common stock of Great Atlantic Pacific Tea Co. On April 7th, 1915, he executed his last will and testament, and at the same time executed and delivered a deed of trust whereby he conveyed to trustees all of the stock aforesaid, in trust to pay the income to himself for life and after his death equally to and among his five children or their issue or testamentary appointees, — the corpus to be similarly distributed among such issue (or testamentary appointees) of his children, when both he and his last surviving child should be dead.

Two years later, on June 1st, 1917, the decedent assigned to his five children, equally, the income thereafter to accrue to him under the provisions of the trust; and three months later, on August 29th, 1917, he died, leaving an estate (not including the trust fund) of approximately 3 1/4 million dollars, which passed under his will. The levy of transfer inheritance tax with respect to this testamentary estate is not in dispute.

The commissioner, however, also assessed tax in respect of the aforesaid transfers inter vivos. Appellants contend that this was erroneous because (they claim) (1) these transfers were not made in contemplation of death; (2) they are not taxable as transfers intended to take effect in possession or enjoyment at or after the death of the transferor, — because of the effect of the subsequent assignment; (3) the subsequent assignment of income did not come within either of these two categories; and (4) if any of the transfers be taxable, the tax appraisal should have been made as of the date of the transfer, April 7th, 1915, instead of as of the date of death, August 29th, 1917.

1. Taxability as in contemplation of death.

That the gifts made by the deed of trust to decedent's children and their issue, or testamentary appointees, were made in contemplation of death, is clear under the circumstances of that transfer and the law as presently established in this state. At the date thereof decedent, although in good health, was over 81 years old, and he died within 2 1/2 years *Page 491 thereafter. The deed of trust reserved to himself the income for life, and made a final disposition and distribution of the remainder to and among the members of his family and the natural objects of his bounty, substantially similar to the testamentary disposition of the balance of his property provided for by the terms of his will which he executed at the same time. The value of the property transferred, at the time of the transfer, was approximately $2,500,000, and constituted nearly half of his assets. Obviously it was a transfer made in lieu of a testamentary disposition, and is taxable as a transfer made in contemplation of death, under the meaning and intent of the statute. In re Schweinler, 117 N.J. Eq. 67, 175 Atl. Rep. 71;affirmed, 13 N.J. Mis. 722, 180 Atl. Rep. 774.

Appellants contend (and there is testimony in support thereof) that the impelling motive for this transfer was the decedent's desire, based on sound financial and economic principles and then present circumstances, and also on the advice of counsel, to perpetuate control of the stock of the company in his two sons (the trustees) in order that outside capital could be attracted to invest in the company. Taking this to be true, it is nevertheless equally true that it was not requisite for decedent to make this "testamentary disposition" in order to accomplish the trusteeship and the consummation of his desire aforesaid. Furthermore, even if the desire aforesaid was an impelling motive for the transfer, and one without which the transfer would not have been made, it is nevertheless clear that it was not the only impelling motive for so much of the transfer as constitutes the "testamentary disposition;" and that, for that part of the transfer, the desire and intent to accomplish an ultimate disposition and distribution of his estate in lieu of a testamentary disposition in that behalf, was an impelling motive without which such ultimate disposition would not have been thereby effected. It is not a requisite of taxability that the contemplation of death should have been the sole motive for the transfer. In re Schweinler, supra; In re Grabfelder,107 N.J. Law 520, 153 Atl. Rep. 532. *Page 492

2. Taxability as intended to take effect after death.

In the second place, it is also clear that these transfers to the children by the deed of trust, besides being made in contemplation of death, were transfers intended to take effect in possession or enjoyment at or after the transferor's death. The deed created an equitable life estate in the transferor for his own life, followed by secondary life estates (for the lives of the five children) and by complete equitable remainders. Neither the secondary life estates or the remainders were to take effect in possession or enjoyment until at and after the transferor's death. The taxability of such transfers is not open to question, unless the subsequent assignment of his equitable life estate by decedent in 1917 operated to deprive them of taxability under this category. Appellants contend that that assignment did so operate.

Their argument is to this effect: If a donor reserves to himself a life estate and transfers the remainder, the transfer of that remainder is taxable. If however the donor does not reserve a life estate but transfers the complete estate, that transfer is not taxable, (unless made "in contemplation of death"). If, after a transfer of the estate in remainder subject to a life estate in himself, the donor transfers his life estate to the same transferee, he has thereby effectuated a transfer of the complete estate; the life estate and remainder merge into a complete estate; the transferee's possession and enjoyment is no longer postponed until the transferor's death; and hence there is no taxable transfer any more than there would have been if the complete estate had been transferred at the one time as a whole. The situation in the case sub judice is essentially similar to the case just stated; by the deed of trust a life estate was created or reserved in the donor himself and interests subsequent to donor's life were transferred to donor's children and their issue; by the assignment in 1917 of the donor's life estate to the donor's children, the donor's life estate was merged in the subsequent life estates to the children so that thereafter the children were in full possession and enjoyment of estates for their own lives and there remained no interests which were dependent on or postponed *Page 493 to the donor's death, hence the taxability of those interests was thereby terminated or extinguished.

This argument is unsound for several reasons.

In the first place, — it is doubtless true (and at any rate may be admitted for the sake of argument) that where one transfers a remainder, reserving a life estate to himself, and thereafter transfers his life estate to the remainderman, a merger occurs between the life estate and the remainder and the donee is vested with ownership and possession of the entire estate.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
194 A. 800, 122 N.J. Eq. 489, 1937 N.J. Prerog. Ct. LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-hartford-njsuperctappdiv-1937.