This is а suit by the executor of Forrest F. Dryden to recover estate taxes alleged to have been illegally collected by the government. It challenges the action of the commissioner in including in the gross estate of the decedent the proceeds of a fully paid up lifе insurance policy, issued to the decedent in 1920, in which his wife was irrevocably named as the beneficiary, as well as the proceeds оf paid up additional insurance purchased with divi-. dends accruing on the policy prior to the death of the decedent. The casе has been submitted on stipulated facts.
Prior to 1920, the decedent held a twenty year endowment policy in the Prudential Insurance Company оf America which contained a number of alternative modes of settlement to be exercised at maturity. The policy matured in 1920, and the dеcedent then elected one of the prescribed modes of settlement. There was accordingly issued to him in New Jersey on December 28, 1920, a participating paid up life policy in which his wife was named as the beneficiary. The policy provided for the payment of $50,000 to “Grace M. Dryden, beneficiary, wife of the insured, if the beneficiary survive the insured, otherwise to the executors, administrators or assigns of the insurеd immediately upon receipt of due proof of the death of the insured”.
Under the dividend provisions of the policy, the decedent had the option to receive any dividends in cash, or to apply such dividends to the purchase of paid 'up additions to the policy, оr to permit the dividends to accumulate with interest. It was also provided that “such paid up addition may be surrendered at any time for its full reservе at the time of such surrender.” All of the regular dividends on the policy were applied by the decedent to the purchase of paid uр additional insurance in the amount of $6,517. There was, however, a small mortuary dividend of $373.48, which was not so applied, but was paid in cash after thе decedent’s death.
The decedent died on July 19, 1932. His wife received directly from the insurance company $50,000 representing the face аmount of the policy, $6,517 representing the additional insurance purchased with the dividends, and the mortuary dividend of $373.48. The commissioner included these three amounts, totaling $56,890.48, in the decedent’s gross estate for the purpose of computing the tax. This resulted in an additional tax of $7,850.89, which the рlaintiff paid, together with interest of $728.82. The statutory exemption of $40,000 had already been claimed with respect to other policies, аnd, therefore, played no part in the assessment.
The taxes were assessed under Sections 301(a) and 302(g) of the Revenue Act of 1926, 26 U.S.C.A. §§ 410, 411. Sectiоn 301 (a) imposes a tax “upon the transfer of the net estate of every decedent”. Section 302(g) provides that in determining the value of the gross estate of a decedent there shall be included “the value at the time of his death of all property * * * (g) to the extent of the аmount receivable by the executor as insurance under policies taken out by the decedent upon his own life; and to the extent оf the excess over $40,000 of the amount receivable by all other beneficiaries as insurance under policies taken out by the deсedent upon his own life.”
The government makes no contention that any interest passed to the beneficiary of the policy as a rеsult of the death of the decedent. It rather takes the position that Section 302(g) required the inclusion of the proceeds of the pоlicy in the gross estate even though no legal incidents of ownership were retained by the decedent. It seeks to justify this construction of the section on the theory that life insurance is testamentary in character, and when taken out by the decedent upon his own life may be regаrded as a substitute for a testamentary disposition.
This position of the government has recently been upheld in the Court of Claims in Bailey et al. v. United States,
I do not think that any such construсtion of Section 302(g) as urged by'the government is at all tenable. Section 301 (a) imposes a tax upon the “interest which ceased by reason of the death”. Edwards v. Slocum,
The government insists that Section 302(g) was designed to prevent tax evasion, and that no shifting of interest is needed to sustain it on that ground. The analogy is to the tax on transfers in contemplation of death, which was upheld in Milliken v. United States,
The paid up additions to the policy should be treated in the same way as the policy itself. These additions were purchased from time to time with dividends accruing оn the policy and became a part of the policy. They were completely vested when taken out, and were “payable in accordance with the terms of the policy”. The right of surrender given by the policy could oiily be exercised by the beneficiary, and nо incident of ownership was retained by the decedent. Levy’s Estate v. Commissioner, 2 Cir.,
It is conceded that the mortuary dividend of $373.48 was properly included in the gross estate.
There may be a judgment in favor of the plaintiff for a refund of so much of the tax and interest as relates to the face amount of the policy and the paid up additional insurance.
