1. The Tax Court held and the Commissioner contends that this case is governed by Helvering v. Leonard,
The Commissioner argues that the 1930 trust was not a continuation of the 1923 trust, on the ground that the wife received the equivalent of 66% of the income of the 1923 trust in place of the 60% which had *1008 theretofore been, allotted to her, and that that income, under the 1930 trust derives from 68% of the corpus of the 1923 trust. But those increases did not come from any property theretofore belonging to the taxpayer; they reduced the interest of the daughters, who received nothing from the taxpayer in order to induce them to agree to such reduction. It cannot be said, therefore, that the increased income of the wife stemmed from any' property of the taxpayer. It follows then that he was guaranteeing the income of property which had previously belonged to the wife plus income derived from additional property transferred for her benefit by third persons. Nor was her income or interest enlarged by the fact that, under the 1930 trust, the táxpayer relinquished the right he had previously reserved to dispose of the share of Rufus T. should he die before the taxpayer.
2. Nevertheless, we feel obliged to remand the instant case to the Tax Court because of Helvering v. Stuart,
- It is true that in that case the trust agreement originally’ reserved to the taxpayer, his wife and brother, or the survivor ’ of them, the right to change the beneficiary; that subsequently the agreement was amended so as to make the trust irrevocable; -and that the government did not claim that any trust income received after that amendment was attributable to the taxpayer. However, that portion of the opinion above quoted, relating to the possible applicability of the Clifford doctrine, does not seem to be based upon the reserved power to .change the beneficiary which existed before, the trust agreement was amended. We therefore interpret that portion of the opinion as if it dealt with a trust in which there was no such reserved power.
Were it not for the Stuart case, we would have held, in line-with our previous *1009 decisions, 1 that the 1923 trust here did not come within the Clifford doctrine and that there is no need to remand to the Tax Court to ascertain its views on what we would not have regarded as a “question of fact.” But, under that trust, as in the Stuart case, the corpus originally consisted of stock in a company of which the taxpayer was an important officer; the trust agreement also reserved in him the voting power and the right to dispose of the interest of any beneficiary who predeceased him, and named as a trustee a close associate of the taxpayer. The opinion in the Stuart case, to be sure, referred to paragraph eight of the trust which permitted recapture by the donor of the stocks from the trust by payment of their value; while there is not the precise equivalent of that provision in the 1923 trust here, yet the taxpayer here did reserve the right to direct the sale of any of the trust assets and reinvestment of the proceeds; moreover, it is not clear that in the Stuart case paragraph eight alone was the controlling factor. Consequently, in the light of the Stuart case, the decision here would appear in the first instance to be for the Tax Court rather than for ourselves, and we must remand this case to that Court so that it may determine whether tlie 1923 trust came within the doctrine of the Clifford case as illuminated by the .Stuart case. If it did, the income of that trust was, for tax purposes, the income of the taxpayer; then, as the 1930 trust is at best but a continuation of the 1923 trust, the guaranty of the income of the 1930 trust cannot be regarded as a guaranty of what had theretofore been the wife’s income, and this case, on that basis, will come within the doctrine of the .Leonard case.
It is true that the Tax Court, having held, on other grounds (which we hold unsound), that the 1930 trust was governed by the Leonard case, went on to say that it deemed unnecessary an extended consideration of the Commissioner’s argument that the income of that trust was taxable under the Clifford case, and briefly noted that it thought that the income was not thus taxable. But the Tax Court did not consider the applicability of the Clifford case to the 1923 trust, and its decision was rendered before the decision of the Stuart case.
We remand to the Tax Court for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
Notes
Commissioner v. Jonas, 2 Cir.,
