DocketNumber: Docket No. 19861
Judges: Arundell
Filed Date: 4/12/1951
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
*229
1. The decedent in her will appointed remainders after life estates to the issue of five of her children who were born after the death of the donor of the power of appointment. The donor had bequeathed to the decedent a life estate with a general testamentary power of appointment over the remainder.
2.
*743 Respondent has determined a deficiency in the amount of $ 29,134.90 in the estate tax of the estate of Edith Wilson Paul, deceased. This deficiency results from respondent's determination that there should be included in the gross estate of the decedent the value of the life estates and the remainder*231 interests in five-eighths of an estate over *744 which decedent held a power of appointment. Petitioner contests the determination that the remainder interests should be included in the gross estate.
FINDINGS OF FACT.
In 1947, petitioner filed an estate tax return on behalf of the estate of Edith Wilson Paul, deceased, with the collector of internal revenue at Los Angeles, California.
Decedent's mother (hereinafter referred to as the donor) gave by will one-half of her residuary estate and the property over which she held a power of appointment, in trust, to pay the income to the decedent for life, and upon her death to pay the principal as she shall by will appoint. In default of appointment, the property was to be put in trust for the use of decedent's children living at decedent's death, and the issue of any child who predeceased the decedent,
Decedent died in 1946, leaving a will which was duly probated and which provided that all property in her residuary estate, together with the property over which she held a power of appointment should be placed in trust and divided*232 into eight equal parts for each of her children. Each child was to receive for life the income from the part set apart for him or her. Upon the death of a beneficiary, the principal set apart for that beneficiary was to go to his or her issue absolutely. Decedent expressly designated an adopted daughter as one of her eight children.
The decedent left surviving her eight children, three of whom were born in the lifetime of the donor. The adopted daughter was one of these three. The remaining five were born in the years 1915 through 1922.
In March 1947 all of the natural children of the decedent executed an agreement providing that subject to the approval of the Orphans' Court of Philadelphia County, the one-eighth interests of the five children born after the death of the donor shall be awarded to them absolutely "as provided by the Will of Mary T. Mason Wilson in the event that her daughter failed to exercise the Power of Appointment given to her * * *." The agreement further provided that the Orphans' Court was to be requested to make this award absolutely rather than in trust, "leaving the question undetermined as to what is to happen to the remainder in the event of their *233 death."
In May of the same year in a proceeding in which the account of the trustees of the decedent was called for audit, the Orphans' Court made awards in accordance with the agreement of the children and in its decree stated that the parties to the agreement were the only parties affected. In this proceeding the court declared that the *745 appointment in remainder to the issue of these five children violated the rule against perpetuities and was void for remoteness.
The estate subject to the decedent's power of appointment consisted of personalty having a total value of $ 188,970.40. The value of the life estates granted to the five children born after the death of the donor was $ 83,466.81 and the value of the remainder interests limited thereon was $ 34,639.69. In the estate tax return the petitioner did not include the value of these life estates or remainder interests in the gross estate of the decedent.
OPINION.
At the hearing, counsel for petitioner conceded that respondent did not err in including the value of the life estate of the decedent's five children in decedent's gross estate for purposes of determining the estate tax. Thus, the only remaining error assigned*234 is the inclusion of the value of the remainder interests limited in favor of the issue of these five children. Petitioner contends that the provision in which decedent attempted to appoint remainder interests in favor of the issue of the five children born after the death of the donor was void because it violated the Pennsylvania rule against perpetuities and that, therefore, the power to appoint these remainder interests was not "exercised" within the meaning of section 403 (d) (3) of the Revenue Act of 1942.
The respondent contends that the petitioner has not established that the remainders to the issue of the five children born after the death of the donor are void under the Pennsylvania rule against perpetuities. In support of this contention, he argues that the determination of the Orphans' Court of Philadelphia County declaring the remainders void should not be given weight because the decree was rendered in a non-adversary proceeding. It would appear that the proceeding was non-adversary and, in such circumstances, it has been held that the decree rendered therein is not binding upon us.
Respondent does not deny that the issue must be resolved by applying the law of Pennsylvania. The donor was a domiciliary of Pennsylvania and the appointive estate consisted of personalty.
In Pennsylvania, like most other states, the permissible period for the rule against perpetuities is the same as that evolved at common *746 law, i. e., a life or lives in being and 21 years, allowing for the period of gestation.
Respondent argues that under the facts as stipulated and found in this case, it cannot be established that the remainders to the issue of the five children born after the death of the donor are void, because some or all of them may have had issue born prior to the death of decedent and, if so, the remainders to these issue would have vested at the time of the decedent's death which occurred within the permissible period.
It is true that issue born prior to the death of the decedent would become vested with a remainder interest immediately upon the death of the decedent and respondent correctly argues that, therefore, their remainder interest*238 would have "vested" within the permissible period. However, respondent is in error when he concludes that for this reason the rule against perpetuities would not have been violated. The remainder interest that vests in such issue at the death of decedent is not vested to a degree sufficient to satisfy the rule against perpetuities.
The remainder interest limited to any of the classes in the instant case will continue to possess this insufficient degree of vestedness until the capacity of that class to increase its membership is ended, that is, until the parent in question dies, for until that event the parent may continue to have issue who would share in the estate. In the case of the five children born after the death of the donor it is possible that this event will not occur before the termination of the permissible period of the rule against perpetuities. The decedent or any of the three children born*240 during the lifetime of the donor may be selected as the measuring life for purposes of measuring the permissible period.
*243 The requirement relating to critical dates is satisfied by the facts of the instant case. Respondent contends, however, that the exception does not apply because the power was "exercised." He argues that there should be included within the extension of the term "exercised" an appointment which, as here, fails because of a violation of the applicable rule against perpetuities. Respondent would have us hold that an appointment is a valid exercise within the meaning of section 403 (d) (3) regardless of its validity under the applicable local law.
Respondent does not cite and we have not found any authority to support this strained interpretation of the word "exercised" as that word is used in section 403 (d) (3).
In
Perhaps, as explained by the court in *246
1. A recently enacted Pennsylvania statute altered the common law rule to the extent that the permissible period is measured by actual rather than possible events. This statutory change applies only to conveyances effective on or after January 1, 1948. The Estates Act of 1947 (20 P. S. sec. 301.4 (b) and sec. 301.21).↩
2. This common law rule requiring that the capacity of the class to increase must end by the end of the permissible period is now part of the statutory law of Pennsylvania. The Estates Act of 1947 (20 P. S.,
3. Regulations 105, section 81.24 (b) (1) and (b) (3):
(1)
* * * *
(3) * * * * (iii) The release, or possession at death without exercise, of any such power of appointment if such release is effected, or the decedent dies, before July 1, 1946.↩
4. H. Rept. No. 2333, 77th Cong., 2d sess.,