Slade v. Commissioner

15 T.C. 752, 1950 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 34
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedNovember 29, 1950
DocketDocket No. 21766
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 15 T.C. 752 (Slade 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
Slade v. Commissioner, 15 T.C. 752, 1950 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 34 (tax 1950).

Opinions

opinion.

Murdock, Judge:

The Commissioner determined a deficiency of $54,798.59 in estate tax. The error assigned is the inclusion in the gross estate under sections 811 (c) or (d) of $117.762.71, representing the alleged value of the life estate of Caroline McCormick Slade under the inter vivos trust created by the decedent on January 24, 1929. The parties filed a stipulation of facts including four exhibits and four other exhibits were received and offered in evidence without objection. The stipulation and those eight documents are adopted as findings of fact.

Francis Louis Slade, the decedent, died testate on October 4, 1944', a resident of New York. Caroline McCormick Slade, his widow, is the executor of his estate. The estate tax return was filed with the the collector of internal revenue for the third district of New York.

The decedent was born on April 11, 1870. Caroline was born on July 24,1874. They were married on October 12,1907 and remained married to the time of the decedent’s death.

The decedent created a trust on January 24, 1929. He was then 58 years of age and in good health. He transferred $500,000 face amount of bonds to the trust. A bank was named trustee of the trust. The trustee was to receive a commission.

The stated- purpose of the trust was to provide for the support and care of Caroline during her life. The income of the trust was to be paid to the grantor during his life and, after his death, to his wife during her life. Caroline was given the power to terminate the trust at any time during the life of the grantor and the trust was also to terminate if the bank should resign as trustee at any time during the life of the grantor. The trust was to terminate if the grantor and his wife should both die during the life of the trust. The corpus of the trust was to be paid over to the grantor if the trust was terminated during his lifetime, but if it terminated after his lifetime, then the corpus of the trust was to go to several named charities. The trust did not contain any other provisions relating to its amendment, alteration, termination, or revocation.

A vice-president of the bank named as trustee, who signed the trust deed, wrote a letter to the decedent dated January 24,1929, the body of which was as follows:

In connection with the Voluntary Trust which you have established with us today, I write to inform you that at any time after the death of Mrs. Slade, we will, upon written request from you, resign as Trustee so as to effect a termination of the trust.
I have given instructions that formal receipts for the wills of Mrs. Slade and yourself be sent you.
With renewed thanks for your kind consideration of us, I am * * *

Caroline never exercised her power to terminate the trust and the trustee never resigned during the life of the decedent.

No part of the value of the trust property was included in the gross estate as reported in the estate tax return. One of the adjustments made by the Commissioner in determining the deficiency was the addition to the gross estate of $117,762.71 with the explanation that it was the value of the life estate of Caroline under the trust indenture dated January 24, 1929, and was included pursuant to sections 811 (c) and 811 (d) of the Internal Revenue Code.

The petitioner called an actuary as a witness. He was told of the provisions of the trust instrument, but not of the contemporaneous letter from the trustee, and then testified that there was no actuarial basis upon which to value a reversion based upon the possibility of the principal of the trust returning to the grantor on the termination of the trust either by the act of his wife or by the resignation of the trustee.

The facts known to the Commissioner and the law were different at the time of the determination of the deficiency (November 19, 1948) from the facts in the present record and the law at this time. The Commissioner did not know of the existence of the letter from the trustee agreeing to resign. His determination must be examined in the light of that fact and subsequent changes in the law. A proper inference is that the letter, from the officer of the bank to the decedent written on the day on which the trust was created, was written at the request of the decedent and formed an integral part of the whole transaction. The grantor had no power within himself to terminate the trust during the lifetime of Caroline, but he held the agreement of the trustee that it would resign at his request if he should survive Caroline. Resignation of the trustee at the request of the grantor, had he survived his wife, would have terminated the trust and would have returned the property to the grantor under the provisions of the trust instrument.

The transfer of the life estate of the wife was a transfer which took effect in possession or enjoyment at the death of the decedent within Helvering v. Hallock, 309 U. S. 106, because his death removed the possibility that her interest might be defeated and allowed it to ripen into enjoyment. The petitioner does not argue to the contrary. Consideration need be given only to the applicability of section 811 (c) (1) (C), as amended by section 7 (a) of Public Law 378, 81st Congress, Chapter 720, First Session, approved October 25, 1949, which includes in the gross estate an interest in property of which the decedent has made a transfer by trust, or otherwise, intended to take effect in possession or enjoyment at his death. Section 811 (c) (2), as amended by Public Law 378, provides that an interest in property of which the decedent made a transfer before October 7,1949, intended to take effect in possession or enjoyment at his death shall not be included in his gross estate under paragraph 811 (c) (1) (C) unless the decedent has retained a reversionary interest in the property “arising by the express terms of the instrument of transfer and not by operation of law, and the value of such reversionary interest immediately before the death of the decedent exceeds 5 per centum of the value of such property.” It further provides that the term “rever-sionary interest” includes á possibility that the property transferred by the decedent may return to him.

Here there was a possibility that the property would return to the decedent and he had a reversionary interest within the meaning of section 811 (c) (2) which arose by express provisions of the trust rather than by operation of law. There were several possibilities under which the property might return to him. One was that Caroline might terminate, the .trust; another was that the trustee might resign and thus terminate the trust, and a third was the possibility that the decedent might survive Caroline and request the trustee to resign, in which latter case the trustee had already agreed to resign. There is evidence that an actuary could not value the reversionary interest under the first two possibilities. But there is no evidence to indicate that the reversionary interest under the third possibility could not be valued in the way contemplated in section 811. (c) (2) or that its value immediately before the death of the decedent did not exceed 5 per centum of the value of the transferred property. The petitioner had the burden of proof.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
15 T.C. 752, 1950 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/slade-v-commissioner-tax-1950.