DocketNumber: Docket Nos. 3379, 3380-68
Judges: Withey
Filed Date: 2/9/1970
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
Decedent, on June 6, 1932, made a transfer in trust, which provided,
*200 OPINION
The respondent, in docket No. 3379-68, determined an estate tax deficiency *219 in the amount of $ 239,168.95 and addressed his notice to Estate of May L. Valentine, deceased, Lester Armour and T. Stanton Armour as coexecutors. In docket No. 3380-68, respondent determined a deficiency in the same amount against the May L. Valentine, June 6, 1932 Trust, Lester Armour and Patrick A. *201 Valentine, cotrustees, as a transferee and beneficiary of the Estate of May L. Valentine, deceased, Lester Armour and T. Stanton Armour, coexecutors.
In these consolidated cases, the petitioners in docket No. 3379-68 contend that the notice of deficiency was invalidly issued and that this Court is without jurisdiction to decide the correctness of the deficiency involved. Petitioner in docket No. 3380-68 has conceded that if such deficiency or any part thereof is sustained, it is liable therefor as transferee of the estate.
The principal issues for our consideration are:
(1) Whether the proper amount to be included in the gross estate because of the reservation by the decedent of a right to periodic payments for her life out of the corpus of a trust created by her consists of (a) the entire value as of the date of her death of the trust corpus, as determined by respondent under
On June 6, 1932, decedent, as grantor, and her sons, Philip D. Armour, Lester Armour, and Patrick A. Valentine, as trustees, executed a trust agreement creating the so-called Valentine Trust. The trust agreement provided in part as follows:
2. During the period of five (5) years from the date hereof the Trustees shall accumulate the balance of the net income and hold the same in a separate fund and invest the same and the income derived therefrom. From and after the expiration of said five-year period, the Trustees shall pay the balance of net income remaining after the payments mentioned in paragraph 1 hereof monthly *202 to said PHILIP D. ARMOUR, LESTER ARMOUR, and PATRICK ANDERSON VALENTINE in equal shares.
3. The Trustees shall pay to the Grantor from the principal of the trust estate the sum of One Hundred and Fifty Thousand Dollars ($ 150,000) per annum in equal monthly installments so long as she shall live.
4. Upon *222 the death of the Grantor, the Trustees, after setting aside an amount of principal sufficient in their judgment to provide for the said annuity for MARJORIE K. LESTER, if she shall be living, shall divide the remaining principal of the trust estate together with the separate fund mentioned in paragraph 2 hereof into three (3) equal shares and shall hold and dispose of said shares as hereinafter provided. The Trustees may in their discretion use a sufficient amount of principal of the trust estate to purchase an annuity for said MARJORIE K. LESTER from some insurance or other corporation authorized to issue annuities.
5. Upon the death of the Grantor, the Trustees shall transfer and pay over one (1) of said three equal shares to said PHILIP D. ARMOUR free from any trust. If said PHILIP D. ARMOUR shall die prior to the termination of this trust, the Trustees shall pay the shares of income and principal which he would have received if living to his lawful issue in equal portions
6. The Trustees shall transfer and pay over one (1) of said three equal shares to said LESTER ARMOUR free from any trust. If said LESTER ARMOUR shall die prior to the termination of this trust, the Trustees shall pay the shares of income and principal which he would have received if living to his lawful issue in equal portions
7. (a) The Trustees shall transfer and pay over one-half (1/2) of one of said three equal shares of the trust estate to said PATRICK ANDERSON VALENTINE free from any trust, or, if he shall not be living, then to his lawful issue in equal portions
(b) The Trustees shall continue to hold the remaining one-half (1/2) of one of said three equal shares of the trust estate for the benefit of said PATRICK ANDERSON VALENTINE and shall pay the entire net income thereof to him so long as he shall live; and upon his death shall transfer and pay over said one-half to such persons as he shall by will appoint, or, in default of such appointment, then to his lawful issue in equal portions
(c) If said PATRICK ANDERSON VALENTINE shall die in the lifetime of the Grantor, the Trustees shall pay his share of the income of the trust estate until the death of the Grantor to such persons as he shall by will appoint, or, in default of such appointment, then to his lawful issue in equal portions
* * * *
14. This trust may be modified or terminated by an instrument in writing signed by the Grantor and by Philip D. Armour, Lester Armour and Patrick Anderson Valentine, or by the Grantor and by the survivors or survivor of said Philip D. Armour, Lester Armour and Patrick Anderson Valentine, provided, however, that no such instrument of modification or termination shall transfer any property or interest therein to the Grantor. In the event of such termination the Trustees shall transfer and pay over all the property in the trust, or the property with respect to which the trust may be terminated in part, in accordance with the directions contained in the instrument of termination.
Subsequently, various documents modifying the trust agreement created on June 6, 1932, and releasing rights therein were executed by the decedent and/or the trustees during 1936, 1940, 1944, and 1950 as follows:
On March 23, 1936, decedent surrendered her power reserved in paragraph 14 of the original trust instrument to modify or terminate the trust agreement in conjunction with her sons. The instrument embodying this relinquishment *226 read in part as follows:
1. Paragraph 14 of said trust agreement is hereby modified to read as follows:
"14. This trust may be modified or terminated by an instrument in writing signed by Philip D. Armour, Lester Armour and Patrick Anderson Valentine, or by the survivors of them. In the event of such termination the Trustees shall transfer and pay over the property with respect to which the trust is terminated in accordance with the directions contained in the instrument of termination."
2. Said Philip D. Armour, Lester Armour and Patrick Anderson Valentine, in consideration of the relinquishment by said May L. Valentine of her rights under the original provisions of said paragraph 14, hereby agree that in the exercise of their rights under said paragraph 14, as modified by this instrument, they will not terminate or modify, or take any action which will in any way affect, the right of said May L. Valentine under paragraph 3 of said trust agreement to receive payments from the principal of the trust estate as provided therein.
On January 31, 1940, the trustees, pursuant to a power to modify the trust agreement granted them by the trust instrument, modified paragraph 7 of the original *227 trust agreement by the addition of subparagraphs (d) and (e), to which the first three subparagraphs were expressly made subject, and which read as follows:
(d) If under the provisions of subparagraphs (a) and (b) hereof said PATRICK ANDERSON VALENTINE'S son PATRICK A. VALENTINE, JR., shall become entitled to a share of principal hereunder, then the Trustees shall hold such share in trust for him and shall use the net income thereof, or such part of the net income as they shall determine, for the support, maintenance and benefit of said PATRICK A. VALENTINE, JR., so long as he shall live, and shall accumulate any unexpended income and add it to the principal of his share. The Trustees may also expend portions of the principal for his *204 benefit and may at any time in their discretion pay income directly to him or transfer and pay over part or all of the principal of his share to him. If there shall be any property in his share at the time of his death the Trustees shall transfer and pay over the same to his children then living, in equal shares, or if there shall be no children then living, then to his heirs.
(e) If under the provisions of subparagraph (c) here of said PATRICK A. VALENTINE, *228 JR., shall become entitled to a share of income hereunder prior to the death of the Grantor, the Trustees shall, until the death of the Grantor, use such income for the support, maintenance and benefit of said PATRICK A. VALENTINE, JR.
On November 20, 1940, the trustees executed a further modification whereby the separate fund provided for in paragraph 2 of the original trust agreement was terminated and distributed in equal amounts to Philip D. Armour, Lester Armour, and Patrick Anderson Valentine.
On December 22, 1944, the trustees executed an instrument whereby they purported to release the power to modify or terminate the trust agreement conferred upon them by paragraph 14 of the original trust instrument.
By instrument dated June 13, 1950, Patrick A. Valentine purported to limit or reduce a certain power of appointment held by him pursuant to paragraph 7 of the original trust agreement.
Philip D. Armour, one of the trustees named in the instrument of June 6, 1932, and a beneficiary named therein, died on January 18, 1958. Thereafter the only trustees of the trust have been Lester Armour and Patrick A. Valentine.
At the date of decedent's death, the value of the trust corpus, excluding *229 certain policies of insurance upon the life of the decedent owned by the trust, was in the amount of $ 462,711.41. The total face value of such policies was in the amount of $ 150,000 and the total of their cash surrender values at the date of decedent's death was in the amount of $ 148,179. As a result of decedent's death, the trust received $ 150,000 representing the face value of the policies, plus $ 1,185.54 in post mortem dividends, or a total of $ 151,185.54.
As of the date of decedent's death, the actuarial value of her right to receive future annual amounts conditioned on survivorship would exceed 5 percent of the remaining balance of the trust corpus for each of the next 5 years. Table VI of Actuarial Values for Estate and Gift Taxes (IRS publication No. 11) discloses that of 6,562 persons living at age 95, the following number are expected to still be surviving at various ages to age 100:
Persons still | ||
Age | surviving | Percentage |
96 | 4,173.51 | 63.6 |
97 | 2,545.81 | 38.8 |
98 | 1,483.68 | 22.6 |
99 | 822.632 | 12.54 |
100 | 431.941 | 6.58 |
*205 From 1960 to 1964, inclusive, the total amounts paid to May L. Valentine (or the value of property distributed in kind) out of the corpus of the trust in each calendar year were *230 as follows:
Year | Amount |
1960 | $ 151,561.25 |
1961 | 149,616.14 |
1962 | 149,516.94 |
1963 | 148,602.67 |
1964 | 150,703.00 |
Total | 750,000.00 |
One monthly payment or distribution was made in 1965 in the amount of $ 12,618.72. There is no indication that income was ever paid other than to those persons and in the manner specified in the trust instrument and amendments thereto.
On March 13, 1968, an order was entered by the Circuit Court of Cook County, Ill., discharging Lester Armour and T. Stanton Armour as executors and closing decedent's estate. On April 2, 1968, a letter to this effect was received in the office of the district director of internal revenue at Chicago, Ill., which read, in pertinent part, as follows:
Re: Estate of May L. Valentine
Dear Sir:
You are hereby notified pursuant to
(S) Lester Armour
Lester Armour
(S) T. Stanton Armour
On April 8, 1968, the district *231 director of internal revenue at Chicago, Ill., mailed a letter to William P. Sutter, attorney for the May L. Valentine Estate, replying that his "letter furnishing this office the following information regarding the above-named trust" had been received, including information that he was no longer serving as trustee; and that the certified copy of the instruments attesting to such information had been received.
The statutory notice in docket No. 3379-68 was mailed on April 22, 1968, to Lester Armour and T. Stanton Armour at their respective last known addresses and was addressed as follows: Estate of May L. Valentine, Deceased Lester Armour, Co-executor Room 1274, 111 West Monroe Street Chicago, Illinois 60603 T. Stanton Armour, Co-executor Room 1912, 231 South La Salle Street Chicago, Illinois 60604
*206 On or about June 13, 1968, pursuant to section 6213(b)(3) of the 1954 Code, the petitioner in docket No. 3380-68 made payment of the amount set forth as a deficiency in estate tax in the statutory notice of deficiency therein in the amount of $ 239,168.95. No interest has been paid thereon.
At no time prior to decedent's death was any modification or other change made with respect to the trust *232 created on June 6, 1932, affecting the decedent's right to payments of trust corpus in accordance with paragraph 3 of the trust instrument of that date, and at no time did decedent waive or relinquish any of her rights under that paragraph.
Respondent in docket No. 3380-68 determined that the entire value of the corpus of the trust as of the date of decedent's death is includable in her gross estate under
For convenience of discussion we first consider *235 whether under the trust in controversy the decedent had made a transfer of property with respect to which she retained a reversionary interest, and whether the value of such interest immediately before her death exceeded 5 percent of the value of "such property" within the purview of
*208 In filing the estate tax return for decedent's estate, the executors included in the computation of the gross estate, on account of her right to annual invasions of trust principal, only the actuarial value as of the date of her death of the decedent's reversionary interest, that is, $ 282,018.92. *238 Respondent determined that the entire value of the trust corpus ($ 613,896.95), immediately before the death of the settlor, is includable in the taxable estate and accordingly determined a deficiency of $ 239,168.95. In essence, respondent urges that
Petitioner, in its petition (docket No. 3380-68), alleges that the $ 282,018.92, reported on the estate tax return, represented the actuarial value of the decedent's right immediately before her death to receive $ 12,500 per month from principal of the trust corpus, and that the $ 282,018.92 was erroneously included in her estate tax because her right to this amount terminated with her demise, at which time she possessed no rights whatever in the trust. It is the present position of petitioners on brief that under the doctrine of
In the instant case there is no question that the Valentine Trust provided *240 that the trustees were authorized to invade the trust corpus *209 in a specified amount annually for the benefit of the settlor, and that the remainder interests could be obtained only by surviving the decedent. At the date of the settlor's death, the actuarial value of her right to receive future annual amounts conditioned on survivorship exceeded 5 percent of the remaining trust corpus for each of the next 5 years. In other words, at the time of the settlor's demise, the value of her reversionary interest far exceeded 5 percent of the value at such date of the trust corpus. Moreover, the chance or expectancy as of that date that she would survive for a sufficient period of time so that the entire remaining corpus of the trust would revert to her was also substantially in excess of 5 percent.
In
While the matter of valuation was not argued and was not directly in issue in those cases, *242 the inescapable consequence of the principles enunciated there * * * is to include
And the Court further noted (pp. 111-112):
Tested by that standard,
In the companion case of
There is no basis evident for deducting the value of the corpus for the period of the life expectancies of the two measuring lives, as was done by the court below. The
We have recognized the foregoing Supreme Court decisions as controlling the question of the value to be included in numerous opinions.
In
By retaining the right to have corpus used for her benefit, the decedent postponed the complete and ultimate transfer of the property *245 until her death. This was enough to bring the property within the provisions of
*211 See also
As we have heretofore pointed out, the incidence of the estate tax is upon the entire amount of property subject to the right of invasion, and not upon the actual or probable amount of the withdrawals. * * * [citing,
It is significant that in dealing with reversionary interests under
Much has been said on this subject and we think we need not greatly increase the amount. Applying the foregoing principles to the facts of record, we believe that respondent's determination must be sustained. In the *248 instant case, paragraph 3 of the trust provides that "The Trustees shall pay to the Grantor from the principal of the trust estate the sum of One Hundred and Fifty Thousand Dollars ($ 150,000) per annum in equal monthly installments so long as she shall live." Manifestly the decedent retained a continuing right to have the trustee invade the trust corpus in a specified and substantial amount per annum for her benefit, and, hence it could not be determined until her demise whether any of the trust corpus would pass to the named remaindermen, *212 i.e., those persons, from among her two sons and their issue, who survived her.
Respondent determined that at the date of decedent's death, the total trust corpus, including the cash value of policies of insurance upon her life owned by the trust, was in the amount of $ 613,896.95. *249 probability at that time that she would survive an additional 4 years, in which event all but approximately $ 10,000 of the trust corpus would have reverted to her, was approximately 12.5 percent, or 1 chance in 8. Furthermore, the likelihood that she would survive an additional 5 years (in which case she would have survived by 11 months the entire reversion to her of that corpus), was in excess of 6.5 percent, or approximately 1 chance in 15.
It is clear from the foregoing that (1) possession or enjoyment of any of the trust corpus could be obtained only by surviving the decedent, and even then, only if and to the extent the decedent did not live long enough to recapture the entire corpus, and (2) decedent retained a reversionary interest in the property by the express terms of the instrument of transfer, the value of which, immediately before her death, exceeded (on any theory) 5 percent of the value of the "property transferred," namely, the trust corpus.
Also it is apparent that decedent's right to future annual *250 payments exceeded 5 percent of the value of each such payment to the extent of sufficient payments to more than account for the entire date-of-death value of the corpus. Moreover, since under the terms of the trust provisions, current income was currently distributable to other persons, no such prospective income could delay the date at which the entire trust corpus would fully revest in the decedent. The burden is upon the petitioner to produce evidence that the value of the reversionary interest immediately before the death of the decedent cannot be determined or that its value is not in excess of 5 percent of the value of the corpus of the trust, and in the absence of such proof, we must assume that the value did exceed the necessary 5 percent.
Although the settlor provided a fixed ceiling on the amount of the annual invasion of principal, the successive encroachments were nevertheless sufficient, we think, to postpone the complete and ultimate devolution of the trust corpus until her death and to characterize the transfer as one "intended to take effect in possession or enjoyment at or after * * * death." It is clear that the ultimate disposition or enjoyment of this trust was held in suspense until the moment of the settlor's death, and only at her demise was it certain whether the corpus would be distributed as provided in the trust agreement.
Accordingly, we hold that on June 6, 1932, decedent made a transfer in trust under the terms of which possession or enjoyment of the property could be obtained only by surviving the decedent, and under which she retained a reversionary interest by the express terms of the instrument of transfer, the value of which immediately before *252 her death exceeded 5 percent of the value of the property transferred. Also we hold that as of the date of decedent's death, the possibility that she would survive for a sufficient period of time that the entire trust corpus would revert to her exceeded 5 percent.
Petitioner relies strongly on both decisions in
In
The case is different where only a portion of the remainder * * * may be appraised with reasonable certainty under well known tables and reliable methods of calculation. Such was the situation in the case at bar. It cannot be said with any sense that a man 84 *255 years old, having an expectation of life of but 3.63 years, had an interest in the corpus of this trust that would so exhaust it that it should be included in the estate taxable on his death merely because he had a right to have payments out of principal to the extent that it might not yield sufficient income to pay him a guaranteed minimum of $ 60,000 per year. The argument in support of such a contention is particularly fantastic when the decedent died January 26, 1933, and the estate had actually yielded an average income of nearly $ 67,000 during the ten years succeeding the creation of the trust on August 15, 1923 * * *.
In
On first impression the situation in the instant case might appear to resemble that in
Finally, we reject petitioners' contention that no part of the trust corpus should have been included in decedent's gross estate under the holding in
In view of the foregoing, and the record as a whole, we must conclude that the entire value of the corpus of the trust as of the date of the decedent's death is includable in her gross estate under
1. These dockets were consolidated for purposes of trial.↩
2. Our resolution of this issue under
3. Unless otherwise mentioned, all references are to the Revenue Code of 1954, as amended.↩
4.
(a) General Rule. -- The value of the gross estate shall include the value of all property to the extent of any interest therein of which the decedent has at any time made a transfer (except in case of a bona fide sale for an adequate and full consideration in money or money's worth), by trust or otherwise, under which he has retained for his life or for any period not ascertainable without reference to his death or for any period which does not in fact end before his death -- (1) the possession or enjoyment of, or the right to the income from, the property, or * * * *
(b) Limitation on Application of General Rule. -- This section shall not apply to a transfer made before March 4, 1931; nor to a transfer made after March 3, 1931; and before June 7, 1932, unless the property transferred would have been includible in the decedent's gross estate by reason of the amendatory language of the joint resolution of March 3, 1931 (46 Stat. 1516).
(a) General Rule. -- The value of the gross estate shall include the value of all property to the extent of any interest therein of which the decedent has at any time after September 7, 1916, made a transfer (except in case of a bona fide sale for an adequate and full consideration in money or money's worth), by trust or otherwise, if -- (1) possession or enjoyment of the property can, through ownership of such interest, be obtained only by surviving the decedent, and (2) the decedent has retained a reversionary interest in the property (but in the case of a transfer made before October 8, 1949, only if such reversionary interest arose by the express terms of the instrument of transfer), and the value of such reversionary interest immediately before the death of the decedent exceeds 5 percent of the value of such property.
(b) Special Rules. -- For purposes of this section, the term "reversionary interest" includes a possibility that property transferred by the decedent -- (1) may return to him or his estate, or (2) may be subject to a power of disposition by him.↩
5.
* * * *
(c)
* * * *
(3) For purposes of this section, the value of the decedent's reversionary interest is computed as of the moment immediately before his death, without regard to whether or not the executor elects the alternate valuation method under
(4) In order to determine whether or not the decedent retained a reversionary interest in transferred property of a value in excess of 5 percent, the value of the reversionary interest is compared with the value of the transferred property, including interests therein which are not dependent upon survivorship of the decedent. * * *↩
6. The taxable estate as disclosed by the estate tax return is $ 5,235,910.26, and the taxable estate as adjusted by respondent is $ 5,592,878.84. The estate tax shown on this return in the amount of $ 2,199,950.64 was paid on May 3, 1966, by the coexecutors. Respondent increased the value of the taxable estate by $ 331,878.03 by including therein the entire value of the Valentine Trust.
7. In
8. According to Table VI of Actuarial Values for Estate and Gift Taxes (IRS publication No. 11), out of 6,562 persons living at age 95, some 6.58 percent are expected to survive to age 100.↩
9. "8.
* * * *
Section 8, which your committee has added to the House bill, further amends
10. "The Senate amendments provide that if property transferred by the decedent would be includible in his gross estate only by reason of the retention by him of a reversionary interest in the property, the amount to be included shall not exceed the value of such interest immediately before his death. While the Senate amendments apply to transfers whenever made, the conference amendments provide one rule for transfers made prior to October 8, 1949, and a different rule for subsequent transfers.
"With respect to the transfer
11. Respondent, on brief however, refers to the total trust corpus at the date of decedent's death as $ 610,890.41. There is no explanation in the record for this difference.↩