In Re Sayres'estate

60 N.W.2d 120
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedSeptember 22, 1953
Docket48272
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 60 N.W.2d 120 (In Re Sayres'estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Sayres'estate, 60 N.W.2d 120 (iowa 1953).

Opinion

60 N.W.2d 120 (1953)

In re SAYRES' ESTATE.
UTT
v.
STATE TAX COMMISSION OF IOWA.

No. 48272.

Supreme Court of Iowa.

September 22, 1953.
Rehearing Denied November 20, 1953.

Leo A. Hoegh, Atty. Gen., Henry W. Wormley, Sp. Asst. Atty. Gen., for appellant.

D. W. Harris, of Bloomfield, for appellee.

MULRONEY, Justice.

On December 31, 1943, Jennie Brunk Sayres transferred her farm to her half-brother, Frank Utt, by a warranty deed which recited "one dollar and other valuable consideration" and which further provided: "the grantor, Jennie Brunk Sayres, hereby reserves a life estate in and to the above described real estate for the remainder of her natural life."

There was oral testimony that at the time of the transfer Frank Utt agreed to support and care for Mrs. Sayres for the *121 rest of her life. There was also testimony that Mrs. Sayres, at the time of the delivery of the deed, intended to give grantee immediate possession without his paying any rent or income from the property to her under her reserved life estate, so long as he fulfilled his support contract, and evidence that grantee did perform his support contract well until Mrs. Sayres' death on March 28, 1946. The grantee had long been a renter of the property but after the deed and support contract Mrs. Sayres never asked for nor received farm rent or income during her lifetime. The trial court appraised this evidence, and we think correctly, as establishing that the life estate was retained in the deed "so that Mrs. Sayres would have some right to the income from the property in the event that Frank Utt, grantee, predeceased her and was thus prevented from fulfilling his promise to support Mrs. Sayres for life * * *"

The commission claimed a succession was due by reason of Section 450.3, Code of Iowa, I.C.A. which provides:

"The tax hereby imposed shall be collected upon the net market value * * * of any property passing: * * *

"3. By deed, grant, sale, gift or transfer made or intended to take effect in possession or enjoyment after the death of the grantor or donor. A transfer * * * in respect of which the transferor reserves to himself a life income or interest shall be deemed to have been intended to take effect in possession or enjoyment at death, provided, that if the transferor reserves to himself less than the entire income or interest, the transfer shall be deemed taxable thereunder only to the extent of a like proportion of the value of the property transferred."

The trial court decreed no tax was due and the commission appeals.

I. The obvious purpose of Section 450.3, Code 1950, I.C.A., including in the estate to be taxed, property transferred by decedent with provision for retention of life possession and enjoyment in the transferor, is to reach substitutes for testamentary disposition and thus prevent evasion of inheritance tax. Some similar provision will probably be found in the inheritance or estate tax law of all states and much the same provision is in the federal estate tax law. See U.S.C.A., Title 26, Sec. 811.

The statute is so common today and it has had such a long and challenging history in the courts that it possesses a name given to it by opinion and law review writers, to wit, the "possession or enjoyment" provision. An article in 56 Yale L.J. 176 (1946) traces the origin of the provision and some of the early history is recounted by Mr. Justice Black in Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Church's Estate, 335 U.S. 632, 637, 69 S.Ct. 322, 325, 93 L.Ed. 288, at page 294, as follows:

"The `possession or enjoyment' provision appearing in § 811(c) seems to have originated in a Pennsylvania inheritance tax law in 1826. As early as 1884 the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania held that where a legal transfer of property was made which carried with it a right of possession with a reservation by the grantor of income and profits from the property for his life, the transfer was not intended to take effect in enjoyment until the grantor's death: `One certainly cannot be considered, as in the actual enjoyment of an estate, who has no right to the profits or incomes arising or accruing therefrom.' Reish v. Com., 106 Pa. 521, 526. That court further held that the `possession or enjoyment' clause did not involve a mere technical question of title, but that the law imposed the death tax unless one had parted during his life with his possession and his title and his enjoyment. It was further held in that case that the test of `intended' was not a subjective one, that the question was not what the parties intended to do, but what the transaction actually effected as to title, possession and enjoyment.

"Most of the states have included the Pennsylvania-originated `possession or enjoyment' clause in death tax statutes, and with what appears to be complete unanimity, *122 they have * * * substantially agreed with this 1884 Pennsylvania Supreme Court interpretation."

Because there exists the natural desire on the part of property owners to avoid the imposition of a tax on the estates they may leave it was necessary to reach transfers, resorted to as a substitute for a will, making disposition of property operative at death of the transferor. As early as 1909 the New York Court of Appeals in the case of In re Keeney's Estate, 194 N.Y. 281, 87 N.E. 428, 429, said:

"It is true that an ingenious mind may devise other means of avoiding an inheritance tax, but the one commonly used is a transfer with reservation of a life estate."

Many conveyances designed to retain some economic benefits for the grantors for life in the property transferred have been before the courts. Quite early the device of transfers in trust was employed. The simple trust transfers, designed to distribute the corpus at the settlor's death with reservation of life income to the settlor, were always held taxable in all of the state courts under the possession and enjoyment provision. There was a period of time when May v. Heiner, 281 U.S. 238, 50 S.Ct. 286, 74 L.Ed. 826, 67 A.L.R. 1244, was in force, when such trust transfers were held not taxable under the federal estate tax law but May v. Heiner was not followed by any state court and it was expressly overruled by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Church's Estate, 1949, supra. The trust transfers have no effect whatever on the issue of taxability and they are mentioned because so many cases announcing basic principles involve trust transfers. We held in In re Estate of Toy, 220 Iowa 825, 263 N.W. 501, 503, that our possession and enjoyment provision was directly applicable to a trust transfer which reserved to the grantor the net annual income of the property conveyed to trustees. In that opinion we said:

"That a conveyance directly to the beneficiary with reservation to the grantor of a life estate or full use and control' during grantor's life, or a conveyance in trust for grantor during his life falls within the meaning of transfers `intended to take effect after death of the grantor or donor' and that such transfers are the very type that such inheritance tax statutes are intended to reach has been held in numerous jurisdictions." (Citing cases.)

II. The decision in the instant case involves no discussion of those cases where some indirect method was employed in order to secure tax avoidance.

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