Estate of Mary Van Riper v. Director, Division of Taxation (082000) (Tax Court & Statewide) ( 2020 )


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  •                                        SYLLABUS
    This syllabus is not part of the Court’s opinion. It has been prepared by the Office of the
    Clerk for the convenience of the reader. It has been neither reviewed nor approved by the
    Court. In the interest of brevity, portions of an opinion may not have been summarized.
    Estate of Mary Van Riper v. Director, Division of Taxation (A-51-18) (082000)
    Argued October 8, 2019 -- Decided February 5, 2020
    SOLOMON, J., writing for the Court.
    Unlike the common estate-planning strategy whereby a married couple deeds
    property into two trusts, which are taxed in two phases upon the death of each spouse,
    Walter and Mary Van Riper transferred ownership of their marital home to a single
    irrevocable trust. Walter passed away shortly after transfer of the property to the trust.
    Six years later, after Mary passed away, the trustee distributed the property to the
    couple’s niece. In this appeal, the Court considers whether the New Jersey Division of
    Taxation (Division) properly taxed the full value of the home at the time of Mary’s death.
    Walter and Mary owned their home as tenants by the entirety, which means that
    they were each considered to own 100% of their home and that neither could convey an
    interest in the home without the agreement of the other. The record reveals that Walter
    and Mary together transferred the deed to their marital residence in 2007 to a single
    irrevocable trust, the Van Riper Residence Trust (Trust). Walter and Mary each retained
    a life interest and directed that any remainder in the Trust pass to their niece, Marita,
    upon the death of the surviving spouse.
    Walter and Mary directed that, if sold, all proceeds from the sale of their residence
    would be held in trust for their benefit and would be utilized to provide housing and
    shelter during their lives. Walter died nineteen days after the creation of the Trust. Mary
    died six years later, still living in the marital residence. Mary’s inheritance tax return
    reported one-half of the date-of-death value of the marital residence as taxable.
    However, the Division conducted an audit and imposed a transfer inheritance tax
    assessment based upon the entire value of the residence at the time of Mary’s death.
    Mary’s estate paid the tax assessed but filed an administrative protest challenging
    the transfer inheritance tax assessment. The Division issued its final determination that
    the full fair market value of the marital residence held by the Trust should be included in
    Mary’s taxable estate for transfer inheritance tax purposes.
    1
    The estate filed a complaint seeking a 50% refund of the tax paid. The Tax Court
    held that the entire value of the residence was subject to transfer inheritance tax and
    granted summary judgment for the Division. 
    30 N.J. Tax 1
    , 18 (Tax 2017).
    The Appellate Division affirmed the Tax Court’s conclusion, rejecting the estate’s
    argument that transfer inheritance tax should only be assessed on Mary’s undivided one-
    half interest in the residence. 
    456 N.J. Super. 314
    , 320-21 (App. Div. 2018).
    The Court granted the estate’s petition for certification. 
    236 N.J. 565
     (2019).
    HELD: The Court agrees with both the Tax Court and the Appellate Division that the
    Division properly taxed the entirety of the residence when both life interests were
    extinguished, and the remainder was transferred to Marita. The property’s transfer, in its
    entirety, took place “at or after” Mary’s death, and was appropriately taxed at its full
    value at that time. In light of the estate-planning mechanism used here, any other holding
    would introduce an intolerable measure of speculation and uncertainty in an area of law
    in which clarity, simplicity, and ease of implementation are paramount.
    1. N.J.S.A. 54:34-1 presumptively imposes a transfer inheritance tax on all completed
    transfers of property worth $500 or more made within three years of the transferor’s
    death, where the property “is transferred by deed, grant, bargain, sale or gift made in
    contemplation of the death of the grantor, vendor or donor, or intended to take effect in
    possession or enjoyment at or after such death.” N.J.S.A. 54:34-1(c) (emphasis added).
    N.J.S.A. 54:34-1(c)’s “at or after death” provision is a common feature of inheritance tax
    statutes and is intended to prevent the owner of property from evading liability for
    transfer inheritance tax. The transfer of property to a trust for the duration of the
    transferor’s lifetime is treated as a transfer “at or after death” when the person creating
    the trust retained income or some benefit for his life with remainder over on his death.
    Accordingly, for a transfer to be taxable under the “at or after death” provision of
    N.J.S.A. 54:34-1, it is necessary that the settlor retain in himself some realistic interest,
    power or control or some other “string” during his lifetime, or his death must be the
    determinative and indispensable event in the shifting of economic benefits and burdens.
    Under N.J.S.A. 54:34-1.1, if the grantor completely and irrevocably severs ties to the
    trust more than three years before death, then no transfer inheritance tax will be assessed
    even if the grantor’s death triggers a change in the beneficiary of the trust. Here, Walter
    and Mary’s transfer falls squarely within the ambit of N.J.S.A. 54:34-1(c), and they did
    not satisfy the condition necessary for the exception to the transfer inheritance tax set
    forth in N.J.S.A. 54:34-1.1 to apply. (pp. 9-13)
    2. Turning to whether Marita inherited the entirety of the marital residence or only a one-
    half interest upon Mary’s death, the Court finds no basis for the view that the inheritance
    occurred in two stages. First, New Jersey has no law specifying that the joint conveyance
    of real property into a single trust destroys a tenancy by the entirety. Second, New Jersey
    2
    law permits both real and personal property to be held by spouses and civil union partners
    as tenants by the entirety when the spouses or partners obtain that property under
    conditions satisfied by the trust instrument here. Accordingly, even if deeding the
    property to the Trust did sever the tenancy by the entirety, a new tenancy by the entirety
    was created through the very specific terms of the Trust. The terms of the Trust,
    moreover, make it clear that no interest in the property would pass to Marita prior to the
    deaths of both spouses. The trust documents specify that the trustee’s primary obligation
    was to ensure that Walter and Mary had a residence and any custodial care required for
    their entire lives, and authorize the trustee to sell the marital residence and apply the
    proceeds of the sale toward their living or care expenses. It would be unfair to assess a
    tax based on one-half of the value of the residence at Walter’s death -- Marita’s
    remainder interest -- because, under the controlling terms of the Trust, it was not clear
    that there would be any remainder for Marita to inherit. (pp. 13-16)
    3. Not only is there no reason or legal basis to value Walter and Mary’s interests in the
    residence as though they had partitioned the property by transferring it to the Trust, but
    there are strong practical reasons not to do so. The tax law’s goals of clarity, simplicity,
    and ease of implementation would be subverted by requiring the Division to engage in
    such speculation. Here, where there is a single trust that allows for the total depletion of
    the entrusted property, that property can be taxed with certainty only after both spouses
    have died and the trust has satisfied its obligations. There is no reason to treat the single
    trust created here the same as the more common grant creating two separate trusts, and
    the Court discusses and finds inapposite the cases advanced in support of the argument
    that the property at issue here should have been valued in two steps. (pp. 16-19)
    4. The Tax Court correctly found, consistent with the relevant case law, that the retention
    of life interests by Walter and Mary “postponed [Marita’s] enjoyment of the property
    until the death of both transferors.” 30 N.J. Tax at 11. Under the terms of the Trust,
    Mary retained power or control or some other “string” during her lifetime over the
    entirety of the marital residence, not an undivided one-half interest. Mary’s death
    allowed the trustee to transfer the remainder of the property -- Mary’s 100% interest in
    the marital estate -- to Marita. Accordingly, when use and enjoyment of the residence
    was yielded to Marita, the transfer was subject to the transfer inheritance tax. The
    property’s transfer, in its entirety, took place “at or after” Mary’s death, and was
    appropriately taxed at its full value at that time. (pp. 19-20)
    AFFIRMED.
    CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER and JUSTICES LaVECCHIA, ALBIN, PATTERSON,
    FERNANDEZ-VINA, and TIMPONE join in JUSTICE SOLOMON’S opinion.
    3
    SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    A-51 September Term 2018
    082000
    Estate of Mary Van Riper,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    Director, Division of Taxation,
    Defendant-Respondent.
    On certification to the Superior Court,
    Appellate Division, whose opinion is reported at
    
    456 N.J. Super. 314
     (App. Div. 2018).
    Argued                        Decided
    October 8, 2019               February 5, 2020
    James J. Curry, Jr., argued the cause for appellant (Law
    Office of James J. Curry, Jr., attorneys; James J. Curry,
    Jr., and Timothy J. Petrin, on the brief).
    Heather Lynn Anderson, Deputy Attorney General,
    argued the cause for respondent (Gurbir S. Grewal,
    Attorney General, attorney; Melissa Dutton Schaffer,
    Assistant Attorney General, of counsel, and Heather
    Lynn Anderson, on the brief).
    Andrew J. DeMaio argued the cause for amicus curiae
    New Jersey State Bar Association (New Jersey State Bar
    Association, attorneys; Evelyn Padin, President, of
    counsel, John E. Keefe, Jr., Andrew J. DeMaio, Glenn A.
    Henkel, Jill Lebowitz, and Heather G. Suarez, on the
    brief).
    1
    Edward C. Eastman, Jr. argued the cause for amicus
    curiae New Jersey Land Title Association (Davison,
    ~
    Eastman, Munoz,   Lederman & Paone, attorneys; Peter A.
    Chacanias, on the brief).
    JUSTICE SOLOMON delivered the opinion of the Court.
    New Jersey is one of a handful of states with an inheritance tax.
    According to the New Jersey Division of Taxation (Division), a common
    estate-planning strategy adopted by married couples in light of that tax is a
    transfer of property during the lifetime of the couple into two trusts, leaving
    each spouse with sole ownership of an undivided one-half interest in the
    property for life. Upon the death of the first spouse, his or her trust takes
    ownership of that deceased spouse’s interest in the property and tax is assessed
    on that undivided one-half interest -- a “compromise tax” under N.J.S.A.
    54:36-3 -- based upon the property’s value at that time. Upon the second
    spouse’s passing, tax on that spouse’s undivided one-half interest in the
    property is assessed upon that spouse’s trust. The full value of the property is
    thus taxed in two phases upon the death of each spouse.
    The estate-planning measures used in this case were different. Here,
    Walter and Mary Van Riper transferred ownership of their marital home to a
    single irrevocable trust. Under the terms of that trust, each spouse retained a
    life interest, with ownership of the property or what might remain from the
    2
    proceeds of its sale to pass to the couple’s niece upon the death of the second
    spouse. Specific language in the trust provided that the full value of the
    property would be made available to provide shelter for the couple and to
    finance any care that might be required during their lifetimes. Walter passed
    away shortly after transfer of the property to the trust. Six years later, after
    Mary passed away, the trustee distributed the property to the couple’s niece.
    The Estate of Mary Van Riper (the Estate), as petitioner, and supportive
    amici argue that, despite the differences between the estate-planning measures
    taken by the Van Ripers and the more common two-trust method described
    above, the result should be the same. The Estate contends that transfer
    inheritance tax should now be assessed on only one-half of the value of the
    home and, because the Division failed to tax Walter’s undivided one-half
    interest at the time of his death, his interest can no longer be taxed.
    The Division counters that, under the specific terms of the single trust
    used in this case, no transfer of property occurred until Mary’s death, at which
    time Mary’s 100% interest in the home passed to her niece and became
    taxable. Thus, the Division asserts, the Estate was properly taxed for the full
    value of the home at the time of Mary’s death.
    Like the Tax Court and the Appellate Division, we agree with the
    Division’s interpretation of the language of the trust used in this case and
    3
    application of the transfer inheritance tax statute, N.J.S.A. 54:34-1. The
    Division’s view also accords with prior case law and advances the vital policy
    goals of clarity, simplicity, and ease of implementation. We therefore affirm
    the Appellate Division’s judgment.
    I.
    Walter and Mary owned their home as tenants by the entirety, which
    means that they were each considered to own 100% of their home and that
    neither could convey an interest in the home without the agreement of the
    other. See Cap. Fin. Co. of Del. Valley, Inc. v. Asterbadi, 
    389 N.J. Super. 219
    ,
    227 (Ch. Div. 2006). Only a married couple can own real property as tenants
    by the entirety and, in doing so, each spouse owns the entire property as a
    single unit. See ibid. (“A tenancy by the entirety is established when property
    is held by a husband and wife with each becoming seized and possessed of the
    entire estate; after the death of one, the survivor takes the whole.”). The
    record reveals that Walter and Mary together transferred the deed to their
    marital residence in 2007 to a single irrevocable trust, the Van Riper
    Residence Trust (Trust). Walter and Mary each retained a life interest and
    directed that any remainder in the Trust pass to their niece, Marita Kresge, the
    Trust’s sole contingent beneficiary, upon the death of the surviving spouse.
    4
    Although the trust documents allowed for the sale of the Van Riper’s
    residence, Walter and Mary directed that, if sold, all proceeds from the sale of
    their residence would be held in trust for their benefit and would be utilized to
    provide housing and shelter during their lives. The trust documents also
    provided that any funds from the sale of the property would go first to
    purchasing a residence in which Walter and/or Mary could live and receive
    care, second for their support, and lastly to the upkeep of the new residence.
    Walter died nineteen days after the creation of the Trust. Walter’s
    resident decedent inheritance tax return did not report any interest in the
    marital residence as taxable, and the Division did not assess any transfer
    inheritance tax against his estate. Mary died six years later, still living in the
    marital residence. Mary’s inheritance tax return reported one-half of the date-
    of-death value of the marital residence ($467,000) as taxable. However, the
    Division conducted an audit and imposed a transfer inheritance tax assessment
    based upon the entire value of the residence at the time of Mary’s death
    ($935,000).
    Mary’s estate paid the entire tax assessed but filed an administrative
    protest challenging the transfer inheritance tax assessment. The Division
    issued its final determination that the full fair market value of the marital
    residence held by the Trust should be included in Mary’s taxable estate for
    5
    transfer inheritance tax purposes. The Estate then filed a complaint with the
    Tax Court seeking a 50% refund of the tax paid.
    The Tax Court held that the entire value of the residence was subject to
    transfer inheritance tax and granted summary judgment for the Division.
    Estate of Riper v. Dir., Div. of Tax’n, 
    30 N.J. Tax 1
    , 18 (Tax 2017). The court
    first noted that under N.J.S.A. 54:34-1, any transfer of real property or any
    interest therein, intended to take effect at or after death, is subject to transfer
    inheritance tax. Id. at 7. The Tax Court observed that when the Trust was
    created, there were three distinct interests: (1) Walter’s life estate, (2) Mary’s
    life estate, and (3) Marita’s remainder. Id. at 17. The court then rejected the
    Estate’s argument that only Mary’s undivided one-half interest in the residence
    was taxable upon her death. Id. at 17-18.
    The court held that Walter’s life estate was extinguished upon his death
    in 2007, and that Mary’s life estate, consisting of 100% of the marital
    residence, was extinguished upon her death in 2013. Id. at 17. Under the
    express terms of the Trust, the court concluded that Marita did not receive any
    interest in the remainder of the Trust until after the deaths of both Walter and
    Mary. Id. at 17-18. Accordingly, the court affirmed the Division’s
    determination that the full value of the residence was subject to tax under
    6
    N.J.S.A. 54:34-1(c) upon the death of the surviving spouse. Id. at 18. The
    Estate appealed.
    The Appellate Division affirmed the Tax Court’s conclusion. Estate of
    Van Riper v. Dir., Div. of Tax’n, 
    456 N.J. Super. 314
     (App. Div. 2018). The
    court rejected the Estate’s argument that transfer inheritance tax should only
    be assessed on Mary’s undivided one-half interest in the residence. Id. at 320-
    21. The court explained that when the Van Ripers transferred their residence
    to the Trust, they both -- as tenants by the entirety -- held a 100% interest in
    the property, id. at 321, and together they made a transfer intended to take
    effect at or upon the death of the surviving spouse, id. at 327. The court thus
    rejected the Estate’s argument that Walter’s transfer of his interest in the
    property was taxable to his estate when he died, and concluded that the
    Division correctly determined that transfer of the entire residence to the
    contingent beneficiary upon Mary’s death was subject to transfer inheritance
    tax at the time. Id. at 322-23.
    We granted the Estate’s petition for certification. 
    236 N.J. 565
     (2019).
    The New Jersey State Bar Association (NJSBA) and the New Jersey Land Title
    Association (NJLTA), who appeared as amici before the Appellate Division,
    participated before this Court pursuant to Rule 1:13-9.
    7
    II.
    The Estate asserts that the Division missed its opportunity to assess a
    transfer inheritance tax upon Walter’s one-half interest in the residence and
    should now be precluded from taxing the full value of the Trust -- the whole
    marital residence -- after Mary’s death. To support this contention, the Estate
    relies on Gauger v. Gauger, 
    73 N.J. 538
     (1977); United States v. Heasty, 
    370 F.2d 525
     (10th Cir. 1966); and Glaser v. United States, 
    306 F.2d 57
     (7th Cir.
    1962), and submits that the moment Walter and Mary transferred their marital
    residence to the Trust as tenants by the entirety, their tenancy was severed and
    each spouse retained a one-half interest in the residence. The Estate maintains,
    therefore, that because Mary held only a one-half interest in the residence, the
    Division erroneously taxed its full value upon her death. The NJSBA and the
    NJLTA join in the Estate’s arguments.
    The Division, relying upon N.J.S.A. 54:34-1(c), argues that the entire
    unapportioned date-of-death value of the residence is includable in Mary’s
    taxable estate. The Division asserts that the ultimate transfer of the Trust’s
    remainder to the contingent beneficiary, Marita, resulted in a taxable transfer
    of the full value of the residence -- Mary’s entirety interest, not a one-half
    interest.
    8
    III.
    The question presented here is whether the Division erroneously
    imposed a transfer inheritance tax on the full value of the marital residence at
    the time of Mary’s death. We consider this question mindful that application
    of the transfer inheritance tax law must provide predictability and certainty as
    to when transferred property is subject to taxation under N.J.S.A. 54:34-1(c).
    Cf. Slater v. Dir., Div. of Tax’n, 
    26 N.J. Tax 322
    , 334 (Tax 2012) (“Statutes of
    limitations in tax statutes are strictly construed in order to provide finality and
    predictability of revenue to state and local government.” (quoting Bonanno v.
    Dir., Div. of Tax’n, 
    12 N.J. Tax 552
    , 556 (Tax 1991))).
    A.
    1.
    New Jersey’s transfer inheritance tax statute, N.J.S.A. 54:34-1, explains
    that the tax owed by a person’s estate is determined by the value of the
    property at the time of the person’s death. Schroeder v. Zink, 
    4 N.J. 1
    , 13
    (1950); Estate of Schinestuhl v. Dir., Div. of Tax’n, 
    26 N.J. Tax 289
    , 298 (Tax
    2012). The statute presumptively imposes a transfer inheritance tax on all
    completed transfers of property worth $500 or more made within three years of
    the transferor’s death,
    [w]here real or tangible personal property within this
    State of a resident of this State . . . or real or tangible
    9
    personal property within this State of a nonresident, is
    transferred by deed, grant, bargain, sale or gift made in
    contemplation of the death of the grantor, vendor or
    donor, or intended to take effect in possession or
    enjoyment at or after such death.
    [N.J.S.A. 54:34-1(c) (emphasis added).]
    N.J.S.A. 54:34-1(c)’s “‘at or after death’ provision is a common feature
    of inheritance tax statutes. It first appeared in our law in 1892.” In re Estate
    of Lingle, 
    72 N.J. 87
    , 93 (1976) (citing New Jersey’s first inheritance tax
    statute: L. 1892, c. 122). That provision is intended to prevent the owner of
    property from evading liability for transfer inheritance tax even though he or
    she has made “a lifetime transfer which is, in effect, a substitute for or a
    substantial equivalent of a . . . distribution” after death. Ibid. Thus, New
    Jersey has recognized for more than a century that “a transfer [during a
    person’s lifetime] by which the donor retains a life estate in the subject matter
    is a transfer ‘intended to take effect in possession or enjoyment at or after . . .
    death.’” Darr v. Kervick, 
    31 N.J. 476
    , 483 (1960) (quoting Carter v. Bugbee,
    
    91 N.J.L. 438
    , 442 (1918)); accord Berg v. Dir., Div. of Tax’n, 
    17 N.J. Tax 256
    , 263 (Tax 1998) (stating same and explaining that “[c]ourts consider such
    transfers to be [upon death] by their very nature, because the donors are not
    regarded as having divested themselves of the property at the time of the
    transfer, since they retain the right to the enjoyment of the income”).
    10
    The transfer of property to a trust for the duration of the transferor’s
    lifetime is likewise treated as a transfer “at or after death” when the person
    creating the trust “retained income or some benefit for his life with remainder
    over on his death.” In re Estate of Lichtenstein, 
    52 N.J. 553
    , 576 (1968).
    Accordingly, for a transfer to be taxable under the “at or after death” provision
    of N.J.S.A. 54:34-1, it is necessary “that the settlor retain in himself some
    realistic interest, power or control or some other ‘string’ during his lifetime, or
    his death must be the determinative and indispensable event in the shifting of
    economic benefits and burdens.” Id. at 578.
    Prior to 1955, if a grantor placed property in trust for the benefit of one
    person or entity during the grantor’s life with a change in beneficiaries upon
    the grantor’s death, the transfer to the second beneficiary was taxed as a
    transfer of inheritance even if the grantor created the trust more than three
    years prior to death and retained no beneficial interest in, or power over, the
    entrusted property. See In re Lambert, 
    63 N.J. 448
    , 456-57 (1973). That was
    true because the grantor’s death triggered the transfer -- it was the
    “determinative and indispensable event in the shifting of economic benefits
    and burdens.” See Lichtenstein, 52 N.J. at 576.
    In 1955, the broad scope of the transfer inheritance tax statute was
    limited by legislation relevant in the trust context. Lambert, 63 N.J. at 456-57.
    
    11 Lans. Ch. 1955
    , c. 135 brought New Jersey law into conformity with federal law and
    the law of neighboring states, which did not tax such transfers. Id. at 457.
    Codified at N.J.S.A. 54:34-1.1, the 1955 enactment provides that
    [a] transfer of property by deed, grant, bargain, sale or
    gift wherein the transferor is entitled to some income,
    right, interest or power, either expressly or by operation
    of law, shall not be deemed a transfer intended to take
    effect at or after transferor’s death if the transferor,
    more than 3 years prior to death, shall have executed an
    irrevocable and complete disposition of all reserved
    income, rights, interests and powers in and over the
    property transferred.
    [(emphases added).]
    Under that provision, if the grantor completely and irrevocably severs
    his or her ties to the trust more than three years before his or her death, then no
    transfer inheritance tax will be assessed even if the grantor’s death triggers a
    change in the beneficiary of the trust.
    2.
    Here, the effect of the transfer inheritance tax statute is clear under the
    plain language of the statute itself, as well as the case law discussed above.
    Walter and Mary transferred their marital residence to a single
    irrevocable trust and lived in that residence until death through the life
    interests they retained. It is clear from the trust documents that Walter and
    Mary intended to and did “retain[] income or some benefit for . . . life” in the
    12
    residence that could be sold to provide them with a more suitable residence,
    should their needs change, “with remainder over on his or her death.”
    Lichtenstein, 52 N.J. at 576.
    Walter and Mary’s transfer falls squarely within the ambit of section (c)
    of the transfer inheritance tax statute, N.J.S.A. 54:34-1. Furthermore, they did
    not satisfy the condition necessary for the exception to the transfer inheritance
    tax set forth in N.J.S.A. 54:34-1.1 to apply -- they never “executed an
    irrevocable and complete disposition of all reserved income, rights, interests
    and powers in and over the property transferred” three years prior to death.
    It is therefore clear that the transfer inheritance tax is properly applicable
    to the remainder conveyed through the Trust. We turn next to the question of
    whether the contingent beneficiary inherited the entirety of the marital
    residence or only a one-half interest upon Mary’s death.
    B.
    In arguing that only Mary’s one-half interest in the residence was subject
    to the transfer inheritance tax, the Estate asserts that Walter and Mary’s
    tenancy by the entirety was severed once the residence was transferred to the
    Trust in 2007. As a result, the Estate argues, Mary did not simply continue to
    own the entire interest in the Trust upon Walter’s death the way she would
    have owned the entire residence had Walter died before the Trust was created.
    13
    Instead, according to the Estate and amici, Walter’s interest passed to Marita
    upon his death, with a life estate going to Mary.
    We find no basis for such a view. First, New Jersey has no law
    specifying that the joint conveyance of real property into a single trust destroys
    a tenancy by the entirety, and the Estate points to none. Cf. N.C. Gen. Stat.
    § 39-13.7(a) (“Any real property held by a husband and wife as a tenancy by
    the entireties and conveyed (i) to a joint trust or (ii) in equal shares to two
    separate trusts shall no longer be held by the husband and wife as tenants by
    the entirety and shall be disposed of by the terms of the trust or trusts . . . .”).
    Second, New Jersey law permits both real and personal property to be held by
    spouses and civil union partners as tenants by the entirety when the spouses or
    partners obtain that property under conditions satisfied by the trust instrument
    here. See N.J.S.A. 46:3-17.2(a) (“A tenancy by entirety shall be created when:
    . . . A husband and wife together take title to an interest in real property or
    personal property under a written instrument designating both of their names
    as husband and wife . . . .”). Accordingly, even if deeding the property to the
    Trust did sever the tenancy by the entirety, a new tenancy by the entirety was
    created through the very specific terms of the Trust.
    The terms of the Trust, moreover, make it clear that no interest in the
    property would pass to Marita prior to the deaths of both spouses. If, as the
    14
    Estate and amici argue, Walter’s ownership interest passed to Marita with a
    life estate to Mary, Mary would not have been able to sell or encumber the
    property without Marita’s consent. Yet the trust documents specify that the
    trustee’s primary obligation was to ensure that Walter and Mary had a
    residence and any custodial care required for their entire lives, and authorize
    the trustee to sell the marital residence and apply the proceeds of the sale
    toward their living or care expenses. Had Mary required a new residence, the
    trustee would have sold the marital residence; had Mary’s care required the
    full value of the Trust, then the Trust would have been fully depleted to fund
    her care -- and all of this would have happened without any say in the matter
    by the contingent beneficiary.
    Indeed, it would be unfair to assess a tax based on one-half of the value
    of the residence at Walter’s death -- Marita’s remainder interest -- because,
    under the controlling terms of the Trust, it was not clear that there would be
    any remainder for Marita to inherit. In fact, given the Trust’s requirements of
    lifelong shelter and care for the Van Ripers, Walter’s supposed “half interest”
    in the Trust could not exceed half of the value of the Trust minus the resources
    that would need to be allocated to Mary’s care. The Division would thus have
    had to attempt to predict, at the point of Walter’s death, Mary’s life
    expectancy, the likely cost of her care, shifts in real estate values, as well as
    15
    other unknowable variables, to fairly assess a tax on half of what the Trust
    would ultimately prove to be worth.
    Not only is there no reason or legal basis to value Walter and Mary’s
    interests in the residence as though they had partitioned the property by
    transferring it to the Trust, but there are strong practical reasons not to do so.
    Our tax law’s goals of clarity, simplicity, and ease of implementation would be
    subverted by requiring the Division to engage in such speculation. The more
    common vehicle of creating separate trusts with life estates makes it easy to
    value property in two 50% increments. The assessment of tax on the first 50%
    of the property is not speculative -- it is made based on the property’s value at
    the time.
    Here, where there is a single trust that allows for the total depletion of
    the entrusted property, that property can be taxed with certainty only after both
    spouses have died and the trust has satisfied its obligations. Accuracy can be
    achieved only by a retrospective calculation, not a prospective estimate. The
    different estate-planning mechanisms have different consequences reflecting
    the grantors’ differing goals and intentions. In short, there is no reason to treat
    the single trust created here the same as the more common grant creating two
    separate trusts.
    16
    The Estate relies on Gauger, a case involving a divorce proceeding, to
    argue that the property at issue here should have been valued in two steps . In
    Gauger, the plaintiff wife and the defendant husband were married for twenty-
    five years. 73 N.J. at 541. Four years before the parties married, the
    defendant and his mother took title as joint tenants with a right of survivorship
    to a tract of farmland. Id. at 542. Approximately one month “before the
    parties separated and more than [ten] months before the divorce complaint was
    filed,” the defendant’s mother died and her interest in the farmland passed to
    the defendant. Ibid.
    The trial court held in Gauger that the farmland was not subject to
    equitable distribution because the defendant had not acquired the property
    during the marriage, but rather by virtue of the deed executed before his
    marriage to the plaintiff. Ibid. The court held that the property was therefore
    immune from equitable distribution. Ibid. The Appellate Division affirmed.
    Ibid.
    This Court reversed, recognizing that before the mother’s death, the
    defendant owned only an undivided one-half interest in the property, id. at 543
    (quoting Goc v. Goc, 
    134 N.J. Eq. 61
    , 63 (E. & A. 1943)), but, after his mother
    died, the defendant’s “right to possession became exclusive,” id. at 544. In
    other words, the mother’s death changed the nature of the defendant’s
    17
    ownership interest in the property. Ultimately, this Court found in Gauger that
    the property was subject to equitable distribution because the defendant
    acquired sole ownership of the property during his marriage to the plaintiff.
    Ibid. It was therefore necessary to value the property for equitable distribution
    purposes, and to accomplish this the Court “evaluate[d] that interest at one -
    half the net value of the property, as if partition by sale had occurred at the
    time of the [mother’s] death.” Ibid.
    We agree with the Appellate Division that the Estate’s reliance upon
    Gauger is misplaced. See Van Riper, 456 N.J. Super. at 322-23. Gauger dealt
    with the equitable distribution of property held as joint tenants with a right of
    survivorship, not the very different application of the transfer inheritance tax
    statute to property held as tenants by the entirety. Furthermore, unlike the
    death of the defendant’s mother in Gauger, here Walter’s death did not alter
    the nature of Mary’s interest in the property, which she and Walter held as
    tenants by the entirety.
    For support, the Estate also relies on Heasty and Glaser. In Heasty, the
    Tenth Circuit applied the Federal Tax Code to the transfer of property held
    under Kansas and Oklahoma law by a husband and wife as joint tenants with a
    right of survivorship and retained life interests. 370 F.2d at 526, 529. This
    appeal concerns application of New Jersey’s inheritance tax law to property
    18
    held as tenants by the entirety. The Appellate Division concluded correctly
    Heasty is likewise inapplicable. Van Riper, 456 N.J. Super. at 325.
    In Glaser, the Seventh Circuit interpreted and applied the Federal Tax
    Code to five separate properties in Indiana held by a husband and wife as
    tenants by the entirety and conveyed by deed to their children while retaining
    the properties for life. 306 F.2d at 58. There was no trust created; the tenancy
    was destroyed upon the properties deeding to the children. A one-half interest
    in the properties passed to the children at the time of either spouse’s death, and
    either spouse’s ties to the properties were completely and irrevocably severed
    upon the death of that spouse. Therefore, Glaser is likewise inapposite.
    C.
    In sum, we agree with both the Tax Court and the Appellate Division
    that the Division properly taxed the entirety of the residence when both life
    interests were extinguished, and the remainder was transferred to Marita.
    The Tax Court correctly found, consistent with the relevant case law,
    that the retention of life interests by Walter and Mary “postponed [Marita’s]
    enjoyment of the property until the death of both transferors.” Riper, 30 N.J.
    Tax at 11. Under the terms of the Trust, Mary retained “power or control or
    some other ‘string’ during [her] lifetime” over the entirety of the marital
    residence, see Lichtenstein, 52 N.J. at 578, not an undivided one-half interest.
    19
    Mary’s death allowed the trustee to transfer the remainder of the property --
    Mary’s 100% interest in the marital estate -- to Marita as the contingent
    beneficiary. Accordingly, when use and enjoyment of the residence was
    yielded to Marita, the transfer was subject to the transfer inheritance tax.
    Therefore, the property’s transfer, in its entirety, took place “at or after”
    Mary’s death, and was appropriately taxed at its full value at that time. In
    light of the estate-planning mechanism used here, any other holding would
    introduce an intolerable measure of speculation and uncertainty in an area of
    law in which clarity, simplicity, and ease of implementation are paramount.
    IV.
    For the reasons set forth above, the judgment of the Appellate Division
    is affirmed.
    CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER and JUSTICES LaVECCHIA, ALBIN,
    PATTERSON, FERNANDEZ-VINA, and TIMPONE join in JUSTICE
    SOLOMON’S opinion.
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