58-2 USTC P 11,818
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Petitioner,
v.
The CHASE MANHATTAN BANK, Successor of The Chase National
Bank of The City of New York, Trustee and Alleged
Transferee of Marie Elizabeth Moran, Respondent.
The CHASE MANHATTAN BANK, Sucessor of The Chase National
Bank of The City of New York, Trustee and Alleged
Transferee of Marie Elizabeth Moran, Petitioner,
v.
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent.
No. 16488.
United States Court of Appeals Fifth Circuit.
Aug. 19, 1958, Rehearing Denied Oct. 23, 1958.
L. W. Post, Ellis N. Slack, Attys., Dept. of Justice, Washington, D.C., Herman T. Reiling, Asst. Chief Counsel, Charles O. Johnson, Sp. Atty., Internal Revenue Service, Washington, D.C., Charles K. Rice, Lee A. Jackson, Asst. Attys. Gen., for petitioner.
C. W. Wellen, Whitfield H. Marshall, M. S. McCorquodale, Fulbright, Crooker, Freeman, Bates & Jaworski, Charles W. Hall, Houston, Tex., for taxpayer, The Chase Manhattan Bank.
Before CAMERON, JONES, and WISDOM, Circuit Judges.
WISDOM, Circuit Judge.
This case turns on the community property law of Texas.1 Stated broadly, the question before us is the gift tax effects of trusts and insurance in a community property state where the wife has a present, vested ownership of half the marital community in her own right.
The proceedings are brought to this Court by a petition and a cross-petition for review of a Tax Court decision concerning the transferee liability of the taxpayer, Chase Manhattan Bank, successor to Chase National Bank of New York, for gift taxes for the year 1948.
I. The Three Trusts.
Daniel James Moran and Marie Elizabeth Moran were maried before 1922 and remained husband and wife until Daniel died April 3, 1948. Their legal domicile was Texas during their entire married life. Daniel had no separate property.
November 2, 1928, in New York, Daniel created a living trust, naming as trustee, The Equitable Trust Company, a predecessor to Chase. The trust estate consisted of securities belonging to the community. Income was payable to Daniel for life, then to Marie for life, with the remainder to the settlor's descendants. Daniel reserved the right to modify or revoke the trust. He reserved no powers of control over the administration of the trust.
November 2, 1928 Daniel also created an insurance trust with the same trustee. The trust estate consisted of insurance policies on Daniel's life. Daniel paid the insurance premiums with community funds. He reserved the right to mooify or revoke the trust; and under the policies he had the right to change the beneficiaries. Upon Daniel's death the insurance proceeds were payable to the trustee. Income was payable to Marie for life, with the remainder to the settlor's descendants. The insurance trust agreement provides that the validity and effect of the trust shall be governed by the law of New York; the living trust instrument contains a similar provision.
Daniel's will provided for a testamentary trust of his residuary estate, Marie to receive the income for life, the remainder to be divided among Daniel's descendants. Chase, the trustee, was given broad discretionary power to distribute principal to any beneficiary.
II. Conflicting Contentions.
A. The Commissioner held that on Daniel's death the living trust and insurance trust became irrevocable and the testamentary trust came into being. (1) As to the testamentary trust, the Commissioner took the position that Marie was put to an election under Daniel's will and that she elected to take under the will, relinquishing her half of the community for a life estate in that half. (2) As to the living trust, the Commissioner held that it became a completed gift by husband and wife when Daniel died without having exercised his right of revocation. (3) Section 86.2(a) of Treasury Regulations 108 Specifically covers insurance payable revocably to a third person and purchased with community funds. The Commissioner held that on the husband's death there was a gift by the wife of one-half the amount of the proceeds of the insurance.
The Commissioner valued the gift to each trust as the difference between what he concluded that Marie gave up (her community one-half share of the trust estate) and what she retained (a life estate in her one-half). The resulting deficiency for the three trusts amounted to $133,378.88.4 This was assessed against Chase as trustee and transferee under Section 1025 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1939.
B. Chase, represented by the same New York lawyers who drew the trusts and the will,5 filed a petition in the Tax Court contending that Marie had made no taxable gifts; but, if she had, that the Commissioner's measure of each gift should be reduced by the value of the life estate she received in her husband's one-half of each trust. (1) Chase's petition, filed May 22, 1953, stated that the estate was still under administration and that 'no determination has yet been made as to whether or not the said Marie Elizabeth Moran has elected to take under the will.' The petition alleges however, 'upon information and belief', that Marie's motive 'in not taking against the will was to benefit hereself' and that her 'failure to take against the will * * * was an arms length transaction * * * entered into by Marie upon the advice of her attorney * * * as economically advantageous'. (2) As to the living trust and (3) insurance trust, Chase insisted that Marie had no community interest at the time of Daniel's death; her community interest was transferred when the trusts were created in 1928. As in the case of the testamentary trust, Chase claimed that Marie's transfers were 'business transactions * * * for her own benefit'.
Marie did not join in the petition. Marie did not testify. There is no testimony in the record as to Marie's alleged 'motives'. There is none as to any 'arms length' negotiations between Marie and the trustee. There is no evidence as to any affirmative act by Marie showing an intention to transfer any interest to Chase. The stipulation of facts was between Chase and the Commissioner. It has one short unenlightening paragraph referring to Marie's receipt of income from the trusts:
'Marie Elizabeth Moran has, since the date of decedent's death received income from each of the three trusts referred to above in accordance with the provisions of the said trust agreements and of the will of Daniel J. Moran.'
One witness testified, briefly. Charles A. Perlitz, Executor, stated: he informed Marie that he would collect the properties in the estate and turn them over to Chase; 'Mrs. Moran had had no experience in business matters whatever'; she knew nothing about the trusts; she had never asked if she had a right to move against the trusts or the will; he did not 'volunteer that she might have some right to bring suit against the trustees'; 'somewhere down the line when I told her that she ought to make a will or someone, I think the lawyers probating the will, told her she ought to make a will, and then there was some reference there to her community interest and whether she should take on the will or not-- under the will-- but that was long subsequent to the time when the will had been probated'.
At the trial the Commissioner and Chase agreed in assuming that Daniel's will put Marie to an election. Apparently, they agreed also that Marie's receipt of income from the trust was sufficient to show that she had elected to take under the will. They differed only as to whether the effect of the election was that she had made a taxable gift.
Chase, in its petition and at the trial, alleged that Daniel provided a trust for his wife 'of his entire residuary estate, including the property that Marie Elizabeth Moran owned with him in community'. This, we must point out now, is a contradiction in terms. Daniel Moran could put his wife to an election. But Daniel Moran's residuary estate could no more include his wife's one-half of the community property than it could include Chase Manhattan's properties on Pine Street in the city of New York.
C. A majority of the Tax Court, held that Daniel's will put Marie to an election and that Marie's 'acquiescence' in the testamentary trust constituted a taxable gift. The Court held that the living trust was testamentary, that Daniel gave away nothing while he lived, and the principal remained community property. When, however, Marie acquiesced in the trust by accepting the income, she thereby elected to surrender her community property interest in the principal. This, said the Court, was a taxable gift. The Tax Court agreed with Chase that the value of each gift was one-half of the value of the principal less the life estate in the whole. The tax deficiency was fixed at $27,426.06, plus interest amounting to $12,189.20.
As for the insurance trust, the Tax Court held that, under the law of Texas, a surviving wife has no community property interest in the proceeds of policies payable to a third party beneficiary. Marie's failure, therefore, to assert such rights could not be treated as constituting a taxable gift. The logically necessary extension of this holding would require that the entire amount of insurance proceeds be included in the gross estate of a deceased husband in Texas (and perhaps in other community property states)-- when a husband insures his life in favor of a trustee or other third person beneficiary, using community funds to pay the premiums, and reserving the right to change the beneficiary.6
D. Alarmed at this turn, mainly with respect to the insurance trust but also disagreeing on the valuation of the gifts of Marie's interests in the other trusts,7 the Commissioner filed a motion for reconsideration. The Tax Court reaffirmed its original decision. The Commissioner appealed.
Chase, trustee, cross-appealed, represented by Texas attorneys. Now, for the first time in the case, the point is made than in Taxas a deceased husband's residuary estate does not include his wife's share of the community; that Daniel's will does not purport to dispose of Marie's share and therefore she was not put to an election. If Marie transferred her share to the trust, which Chase, the trustee, in this Court now denies, the transfer is said at most to create a revocable trust not subject to a gift tax in 1948. For various reasons, some new in the proceedings, Chase contends that Marie did not make a gift of her interest in the living trust or in the insurance trust; but, if she did, it is claimed that the value of such gift is half of the principal less her life estate in the whole. Chase is willing to agree with the Tax Court that no taxes are owed on the insurance trust. Chase asserts that its transferee liability, if any, was limited to one-half of the cash-surrender value of such policies; the taxpayer relies on two recent Supreme Court cases.8
III. New Issue Raised on Appeal.
The Commissioner objects to the trustee now arguing that Marie was not put to an election. The taxpayer, the Commissioner contends, is not at liberty to urge as a ground for reversal a point not raised in the court below. Indeed, says the Commissioner, the taxpayer invited error. We think that the taxpayer did invite error. Worse, the invitation was accepted. But an appellant has no vested right in an opponent's error of law in the lower court-- especially when the protesting appellant is the Commissioner of Internal Revenue. The Commissioner owes a duty to the United States government to litigate zealously in the interest of collecting taxes. But he owes a duty to all taxpayers, including the litigating taxpayer, to see that the tax law is applied justly.
We sympathize with any litigant who has filed a brief on appeal and is then confronted with his opponent's brief raising a new issue. We sympathize also with Marie, who was not represented in the Tax Court proceedings and whose interests, to our way of thinking, were in conflict with the trustee's interests. And we sympathize with taxpayers generally who may be affected adversely if, contrary to our convictions and understanding of the law, we allow an erroneous decision to go into the books and generate additional error.
Federal procedure is moving away from what Pound calls 'the sporting theory of justice', Wigmore the 'instinct of giving the game fair play', and Arthur Vanderbilt the theory of procedure as 'a contest between two legal gladiators'.9 We are a Court 'to secure the just * * * determination of every action'. Rule 1, Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, 28 U.S.C.A.
Daniel's will is in the record and speaks for itself. 'Where, as here, the case below was tried, not upon any misapprehension of the facts, but upon a misapprehension of the effects of those facts in law, appellant may not be prevented from pressing here for the application, to the proven facts, of the correct principles of law.' Associated Indemnity Corp. v. Scott, 5 Cir., 1939,
Tax liability as to the testamentary trust depends on whether Daniel's will put Marie to an election. The question is in the case. A just determination of the appeal requires us to decide it.
IV. The Community Property System.
For many years taxpayers in common law states, with a legitimate interest in tax uniformity, and taxpayers in community property states, with a legitimate interest in tax recognition of the realities of the community property system, were at cross purposes.10 Finally, Congress enacted the equalization provisions of the Revenue Act of 1948-- to put taxpayers payers in all states on the same tax basis and at the same time recognize the logical tax effects of community property principles. It is important therefore that we weigh the issues carefully, in the interest of giving full weight to the community property law of Texas-- while we give full weight to the tax laws of the United States. This takes a little doing.
A few basic principles characterize the community property system. Their application here is determinative of the issues in this case.
The community property system comes from the custom of the women of the Visigoths and other Germanic tribes sharing the fighting and the spoils of war with their men; it owes its strength to the civilized view that marriage is a full partnership. Husband and wife are equal partners. Each has a present, vested half interest in all community property. All property accumulated during marriage is community property, unless it is received by gift, devise, or inheritance.11 In Texas even income derived from separate property belongs to the community, including interest and dividends from separately owned securities. The husband is the manager of the community. But this management is not equivalent to ownership.12 He acts as a managing agent or trustee or managing partner of a limited partnership. The husband may sell or donate community property but not in fraud of his wife's rights.13 The earnings of the husband during marriage are community, and property purchased with such earnings is also community. The wife's rights, aside from managerial control, are the same as the husband's. Thus, on death or divorce the community is divided equally. Neither spouse has testamentary disposition over the other's half of the community. The wife has complete testamentary disposition over her half and may leave it even to her paramour.14 Upon the death of either spouse, a community property state levies an inheritance tax on the decedent's half of the community.15 Since 1948 (and prior to 1942), only the decedent's half is includible in his gross estate for federal tax purposes.16
V. The Testamentary Trust.
Whether Marie made a taxable gift of her interest in the community to the trustee under Daniel's testamentary trust depends upon whether: (A) the will put her to an election and (B) she elected to take under the will.
A. If the ptovisions of a will require a legatee to surrender his property, or his statutory interest in property, to the executor or trustee as a condition to receiving the legacy, the legatee must make an election to take the legacy under the will or to renounce the will and preserve the rights which otherwise would be surrendered. One who accepts the benefits of the will must adopt the whole contents so far as the will concerns him, and renounce every right inconsistent with it. Dunn v. Vinyard, Tex.Com.App.1923,
Because of a long history of stoutly supporting a wife's vested ownership of half the community, Texas courts are loath to divest a widow of her share of the community on loose inferences. A study of the cases shows five major obstacles standing in the way of an election.
(1) A presumption exists that a testator intends to dispose of his property only. In Whaley v. Quillin, Tex.Civ.App.1941,
(2) Only where the testator's intention to dispose of property that is not his own is shown by clear and unequivocal language is a husband's will construed to devise his wife's property. Pope v. Pope, Tex.Civ.App.1943,
(3) The language of the will must be susceptible of no other construction. '* * * (The law) deprives no man of his property merely by conjecture. * * * For a will to be given the effect of an attempted disposition of property not owned by the testator, it is required that the language of the will conclusively evidence such a purpose. In such cases it is not sufficient that the will may be construed as revealing such an intention. It is necessary that it be open to no other construction.' Avery v. Johnson, 1917,
(4) Use of the first person singular pronoun shows an intention to dispose of the testator's property only. In Haley v. Gatewood,
(5) Finally, the will must give some benefit to replace the property surrendered by the election. Smith v. Butler, 1892,
It is in the light of this consistent reluctance of Texas courts to base an election on uncertain inferences that Daniel's will must be examined.
The critical language in Daniel's will creating the testamentary trust provides:
'Fifth: I give, devise and bequeath all of the rest, residue and remainder of the property, both real and personal, which I shall own or to which I may be entitled at the time of my death (hereinafter referred to as my 'residuary estate') by my Trustee of the residuary trust created hereby, in trust * * *'
'Tenth: In the administration of my estate, my executor shall have power * * *'
'Eleventh: In the administration of any trust created hereby my Trustees shall have power * * *'
'Twelfth: In the administration of my estate * * *'
Under the law of Texas, the only property Daniel owned or to which he was entitled at the time of his death was his half of the community. The care with which Daniel defined such property as his residuary estate, limiting it to the property to which he was entitled, seems to negate the construction that he intended to dispose of property he did not own. The studied absence of reference to the community or to Marie's share of the community seems to contradict the contention that Daniel disposed of the entire community, including Marie's half. Thus, (a) the unambiguous definition of the residuary estate as restricted to property which Daniel owned or was entitled to at the time of his death, (b) the use of the first person singular pronoun, and (c) the complete absence of any dispositive language relating to Marie's share indicate that Daniel did not purport to include Marie's half of the community in the testamentary trust of his residuary estate.
If no intention to dispose of Marie's property can be found in Paragraph Five, then it is difficult to read such an intention into the will, since that paragraph is the only one that is dispositive of the residuary estate. The Commissioner relies however on Paragraph Seventeen that is explanatory rather than dispositive. The paragraph reads:
'Seventeenth: The provisions herein contained for the benefit of my wife are in lieu of dower and any or all other provisions statutory or otherwise for her benefit as my widow.'
This provision is meaningless in a community property state such as Texas. There is no dower in Texas. And, a wife's ownership of half the community is not analogous to the common-law inchoate right of dower. One is a present, vested ownership. The other is a mere expectancy that may be snuffed out. In Texas a wife shares in community property not as a widow, but as a wife, ipso jure, the moment property is acquired. Community property has nothing to do with benefits for widows. Marie, under Texas law, therefore, had no rights of the character referred to in Paragraph Seventeen, as Judge Murdock pointed out in his dissent to the Tax Court holding.17
Since there is no language in the will to give aid and comfort to his view, the Commissioner is compelled to resort to speculation based on circumstances outside of the will. He contends that the husband's customary handling of all business matters and the wife's inexperience and lack of knowledge justify the conclusion that Daniel must have intended to dispose of all their property (her property included) by giving her a life estate with a competent trustee in charge for her protection. These circumstances exist in most marriages. If an election exists because a husband is experienced and a wife inexperienced in business, then a great majority of all wills put the wife to an election. Such speculation strikes us as a shaky basis for divesting a wife of her ownership of half the community.
If we must speculate, we would give considerable weight to the fact that Daniel was married and lived under Texas community property law for twenty-six years. He was a man of affairs, a man of property, head of Comtinental Oil Company. In the last six years of his Life, something like a cold war existed between the community property states and the noncommunity property states. Taxpayers of means were well aware of the tax involvements inherent in community property. It is difficult to believe that Daniel would not have stated his intentions clearly-- if he had intended to require Marie to give up her half of the community as a condition to receiving his bounty.18 We think also that it is not without significance that when Texas attorneys, familiar with community property law, entered the case (on appeal), they reacted allergically to the contention that the will purported to put Marie to an election, or that she had made an election.19
B. If it might be said that the will puts Marie to an election, the record does not show that Marie did in fact elect to take under the will. Chase, the Trustee and Ancillary Executor, in its complaint filed in the Tax Court in 1953, five years after Daniel's death, alleged that 'no determination has yet been made as to whether or not the said Marie Elizabeth Moran has elected to take under the will'. If anyone should know, Chase should know. Perlitz, the Executor, in his brief testimony, said that Marie had never asked 'whether she had any right to move against the trust' or 'against the will'; and that he had never 'volunteer(ed) that she might have any right to bring suit against the trustees'.
In the absence of any showing in the record that Marie had sufficient knowledge of her rights to make a conscious choice, it can hardly be said that she made an election. 'In the absence of statutory regulation, it may be generally said that two things are necessary in order that acts relied upon will amount to an election: First, the party must have had knowledge of his rights; that is, he must have had knowledge of the condition and extent of the estate, and of his duty to choose between the inconsistent rights; second, that he intended to elect, as shown by his words and acts, viewed in the light of all the circumstances.' Dunn v. Vinyard, Tex.Com.App.1923,
In Rippy v. Rippy, Tex.Civ.App.1932,
In this case, as in Rippy v. Rippy and in Dunn v. Vinyard, there is no showing, so far as the record goes, that Marie had knowledge of her rights, nor that she understood that it might be said she was to choose between two inconsistent rights. There is no element of estoppel here. No one was misled to his prejudice. Marie received no benefits to which she was not entitled-- on the assumption that Daniel created a trust of his half. The full income was hers: half in her own right for her share of the community, half as income beneficiary under the trust. She was entitled, therefore, to beceive the full income from the trust.
The record is barren of any evidence to show intention by Marie to create a trust by allowing Chase to have possession of her share of the community. In community property states a widow may leave her share of community with the executor, usually a bank that serves also as trustee under a testamentary trust created by the deceased husband. The reasons are twofold: (1) to continue the administration of the former community as a whole and (2) to give a widow the benefit of a bank's custodial and managerial services. There was no necessity therefore, as in Delevan v. Thom, Tex.Civ.App.1951,
Weighing the language of the will and all the circumstances, we agree with the taxpayer that the will did not put Marie to an election and she made no effort to elect. Accordingly, Marie made no taxable transfer of her share of the community. It is still in her taxable estate. If she chooses to follow her husband's example, she may do so now by gift or by will. This determination gives full effect to the community property law of Texas, in consistent with the gift tax law, and is in the interest of justice: a wife is not divested of ownership of her share of the community by a loose construction of a will.
VI. The Insurance Trust.
The Commissioner's position is that on Daniel's death Marie made a taxable gift of one-half of the value of the proceeds of the insurance policies less the value of a life estate in that half. Chase, the trustee, contends (on appeal) that, although Daniel could revoke the trust and change beneficiaries, Marie could not, and as to her the trust was complete and irrevocable in 1928 when it was created, and therefore there is no tax. The Tax Court held that there was no tax. Under Texas decisions, as the Tax Court construed them, since a surviving wife has no community property interest in the proceeds of insurance payable to a named beneficiary,21 Marie could make no taxable gift involving any part of the proceeds. We agree with the Commissioner.
If the decision of the Tax Court is upheld, consistency would require that the entire proceeds of insurance policies be included in a husband's estate, notwithstanding his ownership of only half of the marital community. The results reached by the Tax Court (A) violate principles of Texas community property law, (B) are contrary to the pre-1942 tax cases (now revitalized by the Revenue Act of 1948), and (C) frustrate the national policy of tax equalization expressed in the Revenue Act of 1948 and interpreted in the regulations carrying out that policy.
A. The holding of the Tax Court is not surprising in view of the apparent inconsistency of the Texas cases and the professed inability of some authorities to find a rational basis for reconciling the cases.22 We have no desire to rush in where Texans fear to tread. If, however, there is a rational principle running through the Texas cases, we must find it and apply it: local law determines property rights.22A We believe that a close study of the Texas cases shows that the inconsistency is only apparent, not real, and that there is a discoverable touchstone for applying orthodox community property principles to insurance. The touchstone is the distinction between policy-rights and proceeds-rights.23
Our study of the Texas cases indicates that the doubt that has arisen as to whether insurance is property subjuct to ownership by the community has been caused by courts failing to say that they distinguish between policy-rights and proceeds-rights. Texas courts consistently make this distinction in their holdings. And consistently recognize that policy-rights are a property asset of the community, and proceeds-rights are property of the named beneficiary (after maturity of the policy)-- however often one encounters the language 'insurance is not property' in cases involving contests over proceeds.
Policy-rights include the whole bundle of incidents of ownership of property in a policy-- all the rights except the right to the proceeds. This bundle includes all 'the economic benefits of the insurance, the cash surrender value, the power to change the beneficiary, the power to surrender or cancel the policy, the power to assign the policy or revoke an assignment, the power to pledge the policy for a loan, the power to obtain from the insurer a loan against the surrender value of the policy'.24 These are property rights, as any lawyer or business man knows. They are owned by the marital community when the community pays for the insurance and there is a revocable designation of beneficiary. The right to insurance proceeds is also property just as any other contractual right to money is property, but it is in the beneficiary by a contract which the husband as manager of the community can legally make. If the right to change the beneficiary is reserved, the beneficiary's proceeds-rights are inchoate until the death the insured, when these proceeds-rights vest by virtue of the terms of the contract; but in this sense only can it be said that insurance (i.e., the right to the proceeds) is not property subject to the laws of descent, heirship, or community property.
No one familiar with the workings of the community property system should be surprised that Texas courts hold that the wife has no interest in insurance proceeds received by a third party beneficiary. In the absence of fraud, the wife had no interest in any community property a third person has received by sale or donation, even though half of the property transferred was the wife's. The wife's lack of interest in the proceeds, however, is not inconsistent with the view that the community effects a gift of the proceeds to a third person beneficiary.
There is not one case in Texas that fails to recognize, in result, that insurance is property: when the policy-rights are at issue or, if proceeds-rights are at issue, when the contest is between the surviving spouse and a third party beneficiary and there is no fraud.25 There is smog only when there is a contest between the surviving spouse, or her heirs, and the insured, or his heirs, and the practical effect of applying these principles would be to allow the husband to augment his separate estate at the expense of the community. That factual situation is not present in this case.
The Tax Court recognized that up to the time of Daniel's death the insurance (at least, the cash surrender value) was community property in which the wife had a vested interest. The Tax Court and Chase, the trustee, did not recognize, however, that when Daniel took out the insurance and created the insurance trust, he acted and could act only as manager of the community. The right of revocation was not in Daniel individually, nor was the trust irrevocable only as to Marie's half of the community. Daniel held the power of revocation as agent or manager of the community. When he died without having exercised that power, the insurance became payable and the trust became irrevocable. His death operated to effect a taxable transfer from the community (husband and wife), rather than to preclude a taxable transfer from Marie, as the tax court seemed to think.
A review of the jurisprudence shows that the Texas courts invariably treat policy-rights in insurance as property that is a community asset. Just as invariably, they hold that in the absence of fraud, the wife has no community interest in the proceeds of insurance payable to a third party beneficiary.
The first case to deal with the problem is the frequently cited case of Martin v. Moran, 1895,
In the converse of the situation, where an insurance policy is payable to the wife, Texas law is clear that the proceeds are her separate property. San Jacinto Bldg., Inc., v. Brown, Tex.Civ.App.1935,
Martin v. McAllister, 1901,
This is brought out clearly in Rowlett v. Mitchell, 1908,
The next case, Jones v. Jones, Tex.Civ.App.1912,
These important early cases were on proceeds-rights. Whiteselle v. Northwestern Mutual Life Ins. Co., tex.Com.App.1920,
Womack v. Womack is a direct recognition by the Texas Supreme Court that the policy rights in an insurance policy constitute community property. This was a divorce case involving policies on the lives of both spouses. The Court stated: 'The courts of this State have held that the 'cash surrender value' of a policy is property, and may be considered and treated as community property.' Whiteselle was expressly overruled. The Court based its holding on a broad construction of property, extending to 'every species of valuable right and interest'; and on the intention of the Texas legislature, 'to give the term 'community property' a broader meaning than it was originally given (in Article 4619, Vernon's Annotated Civ.Stat.)'. The Court pointed out that 'many of the modern decisions hold that a life insurance policy is property'.
Thompson v. Calvert, Tex.Civ.App.1957,
Blackmon v. Hansen, 1943,
Blackmon v. Hansen and Thompson v. Calvert establish the Texas rule for taxation of insurance on the life of a husband when the premiums are paid with community funds and the insured retains the right to change the beneficiary. That is the basic factual situation in the instant case. Since both the state and federal laws for estate-inheritance and gift tax purposes 'tax the transfer of a present vested interest, state cases interpreting the Texas Inheritance Tax Law should be decisive for the Federal Court in applying state law'. Morrison, Life Insurance-- Tax Aspects, 5 Texas Institutes, p. 139 (1957). Applying Blackmon v. Hansen to federal estate and gift taxes applicable to insurance payable to a third person, one-half of the proceeds are includible in the husband's estate and one-half are a taxable gift to the wife.
Volunteer State Life Ins. Co. v. Hardin, 1946,
In other words, the Texas courts do treat insurance as property; and, they are 'basically sound'-- as long as they hold that the husband may give to anybody but his estate. That is the basic position of critics of the Texas courts.
Sherman v. Roe, 1953,
Warthan v. Haynes, Tex.1956,
With due deference, it seems to us that the Texas courts were less enmeshed in conflicting concepts than some of their critics. The decision recognizes that insurance is community property as to policy rights, but that the transfer or conversion of those rights into proceeds-rights by a contract entered into by the husband in the absence of fraud cuts off the wife's community interest. This may put an excessive reliance on corrective action based on fraud, but it is a perfectly rational principle of the community system as long as the husband continues as managing partner.34
Summarizing, and readily admitting that our review of the Texas cases tends to oversimplify a complex subject, it seems to us that the following conclusions may be drawn. (1) Without using the terms, Texas courts do in fact recognize that insurance is property and in their holdings, if not their opinions, break down property in insurance between policy-rights and proceeds-rights. (2) Policy-rights in an insurance policy are property, a community asset, when the insurance is purchased with community funds. (3) The wife has a present, vested interest in this asset, as she has in all other community property. (4) This interest ceases, in the absence of fraud, when the policy matures and the bundle of policy rights is converted into insurance proceeds payable to a named third-party beneficiary, just as the wife's interest in any other community asset is cut off by transfer of the assets to a third person. (5) The transfer is from the community. Under Blackmon v. Hansen, only half of the proceeds fall in the husband's taxable estate. The other half is a taxable gift from the wife. (6) The Tax Court, therefore, is mistaken in attaching importance to the fact that 'Marie did not have a community interest in the proceeds of the policy as against the named beneficiaries'. That is the orthodox situation with respect to transfers in the absence of fraud and is not inconsistent with subjecting Marie's half to a gift tax.
B. Prior to the enactment of the Revenue Act of 1942, the federal courts generally recognized the tax implications of accepting insurance as a community asset, whether the test of taxability was payment of premiums or possession of the incidents of ownership or both.35 Some of the decisive cases were decided by this Court. This is of more than academic interest; in repealing the controversial provisions of the Revenue Act of 1942 and enacting the Revenue Act of 1948 Congress revitalized the pre-1942 interpretations of community property law.
The first important federal tax case dealing with insurance purchased with community funds was Newman v. Commissioner, 5 Cir., 1935,
DeLappe v. Commissioner, 5 Cir., 1940,
The rationale of the Lang, DeLappe, and Howard cases is applicable to the existing tax situation as to estate and gift taxes. 'The net result should be, it would appear, that incidents of ownership possessed by the husband such as the reserved power to change beneficiaries, under circumstances where the proceeds are payable to a named beneficiary, rather than the insured's estate, are incidents of ownership held as agent of the marital community. Thus, the proceeds should be includible to the extent of only one-half in the estate of the insured.' Eichenbaum, Estate Taxation of Insurance Proceeds in Community Property States, 1952 Tulane Tax Institute, 251.
C. For a number of years pressure built up against community property states. Taxpayers in other states considered that they were discriminated against in tax treatment. Finally, in 1942 Congress adopted amendments to the estate and gift tax laws aimed directly at the community property states. These amendments taxed all community property to the first spouse to die, regardless of the surviving spouse's vested ownership of half of the property. The brief language of former section 811(g) of the Internal Revenue Code was replaced with an entirely new section 811(g)(4), the effect of which was to overrule by statute the Lang, DeLappe, and Howard cases. Under the 1942 law, the payment of premiums and the exercise of the incidents of ownership by the husband, was not as manager of the community but in his own behalf. This resulted in including all of the proceeds of insurance in the husband's estate.
The 1942 Act increased rather than diminished the agitation for equalization. It whetted the appetites of the common-law states for income tax equalization. It produced hardships and dissatisfaction among taxpayers in community property states.36 After long negotiations between representatives of the taxpayers in the two groups of states, and representatives of the Treasury and of Congress, with all ultimately in agreement, Congress repealed the unfortunate amendments in the 1942 Act and adopted the equalization bill as part of the Revenue Act of 1948.37 This law makes comprehensive changes in income, gift, and estate tax laws designed to equalize all these taxes between taxpayers in common law states and taxpayers in community states. The 1948 Act recognizes the realities of spousal ownership in a community property system. Equalization in income taxes is achieved by allowing the joint return. Equalization in estate and gift taxes is achieved for noncommunity property by the marital deduction and split gift provisions.38 In the case of life insurance, the repeal of Section 811(g)(4) was intended to make applicable the rules of Section 811(g) which would be applicable had paragraph (4) never been contained in Section 811(g).
The effect of repeal of the 1942 Act is to bring a return to the rule of the Lang, DeLappe, and Howard cases: incidents of ownership possessed by the husband, such as the power to change beneficiaries, are held as agent of the community; the proceeds, therefore, are includible to the extent of only one-half in the estate of the insured; the other half would be taxable as a gift by the wife, if the proceeds are payable to a third person. In order to conform the Treasury Regulations with the equalization measures, the Commissioner issued Treasury Decisions 5698 and 5699, 1949-1, 181, 226, the Cum.Bull. 181, 266 amending the gift and estate tax regulations. Treasury Decision 5698, issued May 13, 1949 added to the gift tax regulations, Section 86.2(a), the following subsection:
'(9) Where property held by a husband and wife as community property is used to purchase insurance upon the husband's life and a third person is revocably designated as beneficiary and under the State law the husband's death is considered to make absolute the transfer by the wife, there is a gift by the wife at the time of such death of one-half the amount of the proceeds of such insurance.'
After some uncertainty, the Internal Revenue Bureau has clarified its position by several rulings. Rev.Rul. 48, 1953-1 Cum.Bull. 392;39 Rev.Rul. 232, 1953-22 Cum.Bull. 21. These rulings recognize that the policy-rights in insurance payable revocably to a third person beneficiary inure to the benefit of the community; therefore, under Treasury Regulations 105, Section 81.27 the proceeds are includible in the insured's gross estate to the extent of one-half under the incidents of ownership tests; and, under Treasury Regulations 108, Section 86.2(a)(9), the wife makes a gift of the other half upon the death of the insured husband.
Cutting through all of this review of cases and statutes and regulations is the sharp knife of the intendment of Congress in imposing gift and estate taxes generally, and as set forth in the 1948 Act. Failure to give effect to the regulations will defeat the national policy of tax equalization.
Judges and lawyers hypnotize themselves with words. In Texas the words were: 'insurance is not property'. The Tax Court here could not escape the phrase, 'the wife has no interest in proceeds'. But gift and estate taxation of insurance is not based on receipt of proceeds. It is based on the transfer of property rights.40 All gift and estate taxes are based on the transfer of effective control over property rights, not the donee's or heir's receipt of property. Insurance proceeds are a measure of the value of the transfer. 'The question propounded by the Court of Claims in form suggest that the tax is one imposed by the statute upon the policies. This we have shown is not the case. It is the transfer, * * * which is the subject of the tax. The tax is not on the policies.' Chase National Bank of City of New York v. United States, 1939,
In a community property state where insurance on the husband's life is purchased with community funds, payable revocably to a third person beneficiary, the husband's right to change the beneficiary and all other control over the property are held as agent of the community. The bundle of rights in the policy is owned by the community. Something happens to this bundle when the insured dies, thereby terminating his control over the property and bringing the community to an end. What happens is, that the community's property interests in the policy-rights are transformed into the beneficiary's right to the proceeds. It is a shift in control and a shift of beneficial interest. This is the transfer that is taxed.
Up to the time of his death, Daniel, as managing agent of the community, had the right to change beneficiaries. When he died without exercising this right, the transfer to the trustee was a completed gift from the community: one-half therefore should have fallen in the taxable estate of the deceased husband. The other half is a taxable gift from the surviving spouse.
Under the terms of the trust agreement Marie was the income beneficiary for life. Accordingly, the measure of her gift was half the amount of the proceeds less a life estate in that half.
VII. Transferee Liability.
On appeal counsel for the taxpayer argue that even if Marie made a gift at the time of Daniel's death, the value of such gift could not exceed the value of her half of the cash surrender value of the policies less the value of her retained life interest.
Counsel cite Womack v. Womack and Warthan v. Haynes. The Womack case was a divorce suit. Both spouses were still alive. The only property that could be divided was the cash surrender value. In the Warthan case, although the wife died first, cash surrender values were not at issue; the Court awarded the proceeds to the named beneficiary (the husband's separate estate). More in point is Blackmon v. Hansen holding that where insurance is paid for with community funds, one-half of the proceeds should be included in the husband's estate for state inheritance tax purposes; 'one-half (is) the property of the wife, and that said part is no part of the estate of the husband.'
Counsel for the taxpayer relies on a line of cases involving transferee liability for income taxes, citing especially two recent Supreme Court decisions: Commissioner v. Stern, 1958,
As the court pointed out expressly in Rowen v. Commissioner, 2 Cir., 1954,
VIII. The Living Trust.
The Tax Court held that the living trust was 'clearly testamentary'. The principal therefore remained community property, and Daniel had no power to deprive Marie of her share of the community. When, however, Marie 'chose to abide by the terms of the trust in accepting payments of income, she elected to waive and surrender her property interest in the principal thereof and made a taxable gift'.
This reasoning disregards the fact that if the trust were testamentary, it would be invalid because of the Statute of Wills, and Daniel's half would fall into his residuary estate. Marie could not cure the invalidity by surrendering her half of the community. There would be no valid trust to which she could surrender her property.
A. Scott,42 Bogert,43 and the Restatement44 do not share the Tax Court view that such a trust is 'clearly testamentary'. On the contrary, 'It has been universally held that the creation of a trust inter vivos is not a testamentary disposition merely because the settlor reserves a power to revoke the trust or to modify it, even though in addition he reserves a beneficial life interest in the trust property.' Scott, The Effects of a Power to Revoke a Trust, 57 Harv.L.Rev. 362, 368 (1944). Virtually no cases can be found holding a contrary view. The trust comes into being at the time when the settlor delivers the property to the trustee, and all the beneficiaries acquire interests in the trust at that time, even though there is a condition subsequent allowing the settlor to deprive the beneficiaries of their interests. Unlike a will, 'the death of the settlor is not a condition precedent to the vesting of the interest in the beneficiary. The distinction between a disposition to take effect only on the death of the donor and one to take effect immediately but subject to be revoked may seem to be formal rather than substantial, but it is an important one, and one which has a determinative effect on other problems (the reach of creditors, for example).' 1 Scott on Trusts, Section 57.1, p. 445. Here, Marie acquired an interest when the trust was created. It was subject to divestment, but once acquired, it might never be divested. In fact, it was not divested.
Add the power to modify and revoke the trust, and the law is still clear that the trust is on the right side of the line. Add the element of control over the trustee's administration and the trust may cross the line or come so close to the line that cours will divide as to whether a trust is not a trust but a will, depending on the degree of control reserved. Where, however, in an 'illusory' trust the settlor 'reserves such power to control the trustee in the administration of the trust that in effect the trustee is merely his agent acting under his direction, the disposition is testamentary'. Scott, The Effects of a Power to Revoke a Trust, 57 Harv.L.Rev. 362, 371 (1944).
Here, a close examination of the Moran living trust agreement shows not a word or clause to indicate any intention by the settlor to control the trustee. Further, the trustee is given broad powers of administration, including the right to retain or purchase non-legals and 'in its discretion' to make any investments 'it may choose'.
B. In concluding that the trust was testamentary, the Tax Court relies on a line of New York cases holding certain trusts 'illusory', citing the leading case of Newman v. Dore, 1937,
In Newman v. Dore (
These cases are typical of illusory trusts. There is seldom an express trust by agreement, as in the Moran trust, or, if there is, the settlor in terms reserves virtually complete control over the trustee's administration of the trust. In either instance, the transferor reserves such a degree of control over the property that the Court is driven to the conclusion there is no real intent to transfer and that the whole transaction is a sham.45
In addition, in the illusory trust cases there is an intent to deprive the wife of her expectant interest, her distributive share, and in most of the cases there is an intent to defraud the wife by transferring property to a third person. In none of the cases does the husband give his wife any beneficial interest in the so-called trust. None of these circumstances are shown to exist here. Newman died three days after he executed his trust. Had the Newman trust been upheld, his wife would have received nothing. Had Daniel died three days after November 28, 1948, the value of Marie's life interest in the whole of the trust estate would have exceeded the value of her half interest in the community. There is nothing in the record to show that Daniel influenced the trustee in any way in its administration of the trust. There is no showing that the income from the Moran living trust was handled any differently from daniel's earnings and other income; even revenue from a husband's separate property is community, under the law of Texas.
It must be borne in mind that Daniel did not create the trust. The community created it. Any rights that were reserved in the settlor were rights held by the community. Newman exercised control over his trust property for himself; Daniel's control (in his case restricted to the right of revocation and modification) could be exercised only as agent for the community.
Much closer in point is Marine Midland Trust Co. of Binghamton v. Stanford, 1939,
In the 'illusory' trust cases the wife receives nothing. In each the transfer is a sham devised by the husband to deprive the wife of her distributive share by making a purported gift to another while still retaining control. Here there is no pretense of any fraud. There is no showing that Daniel intended to deprive Marie of any rights or that the trust had that effect. On the contrary, Daniel wanted his wife to have her share and his too, but free of the burden of capital management. The income he received was community income.
C. There are no illusory trust cases in Texas. The fact situation in such cases would be subject to the principle that, in the absence of fraud, a husband may transfer community property by gift or sale although the effect may be to divest the wife of her one-half interest in the property. To set aside a transfer as fraudulent, there would have to be an action by the wife or her heirs.
The Tax Court states, however, that under the law of Texas the living trust was not sufficient to pass a present interest, citing Armington v. Gilcrease Oil Co., Tex.Civ.App.,
This statement is not in accord with our understanding of the law of Texas. Bridewell v. Clay and Postal Mutual Indemnity Co. v. Penn did not involve trusts. Bridewell v. Clay simply held that a gift of a check is revocable until presented for payment. In Postal Mutual Indemnity Co. v. Penn, a workmen's compensation case concerning proof of dependency, the question was whether the dependent wife had received certain rent as a gift. In Armington v. Gilcrease the Armingtons purchased mineral leases but directed the seller to delay execution of the assignments until they decided to whom they wanted to make the assignments, reserving the revenue for themselves in the meantime. They had complete control and the gifts were never completed. Fleck v. Baldwin involved socalled 'tentative trusts', bank savings accounts and certificates for stock in building and loan companies, placed in the name of 'Mrs. J. C. Baldwin, in trust for-- Mrs. Fleck'. Mrs. Baldwin retained possession of the passbooks and certificates and, as the Court said (
We have not found any Texas case that passed directly on the facts as presented by the Moran trust agreement. We believe that Texas courts would uphold the trust. Schmidt v. Schmidt, Tex.Civ.App. 1953,
We hold that the Moran living trust was not ambulatory; it was a present, valid trust created in 1928. Marie is the income beneficiary under the express terms of that trust and not because she receives the income in exchange for relinquishing her half of the community as part of an assumed election to accept the benefits of the trust. We do not have before us, therefore, the question at issue in Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Siegel, 9 Cir., 1958,
D. Our holding does not mean that gift tax consequences attached at the time the trustee took title in 1928. In a transfer of property valid under state law, state law focuses on title. The federal gift and estate tax law focuses on transfer of the beneficial enjoyment of the property. One who creates a trust during his lifetime, even though he reserves a life estate, parts with legal title to the trustee and grants to the beneficiaries (including remainderman) an immediate equitable title. Transfer of the possession and enjoyment of the property may be deferred until some future time. It is this very situation that causes the application of the gift and estate tax laws. Treasury Regulation 108, Section 86.3 provide therefore: 'A gift (for tax purposes) is incomplete in every instance where a donor reserves the power to revest the beneficial title to the property in himself.' The taxable incident is the shifting of the beneficial enjoyment in the trust property, no matter when title is vested. See Brady v. Ham, 1 Cir., 1930,
Since Daniel retained the power of revocation (for the community), there was no taxable gift until the shift in beneficial enjoyment at his death. Estate of Sanford v. Commissioner, 1939,
Had Daniel been acting for himself instead of for the community, and had the right of revocation been retained by him individually the taxpayer would have been on stronger ground to urge that, as to Marie, the gift was complete in 1928. But it was as agent for the community, that Daniel held the right of revocation. For tax purposes the gift was incomplete until the right of revocation ceased on Daniel's death.
IX. Conclusion.
Summarizing, we hold as follows:
1. As to the testamentary trust, we hold in favor of the taxpayer. The will of Daniel Moran did not put his wife to an election, nor did she elect (assuming that the will put her to an election). There was, therefore, no taxable gift of Marie Moran's share of the community to the testamentary trust.
2. As to the insurance trust, we hold in favor of the Commissioner. On the death of the insured, for tax purposes half of the proceeds of the insurance belonged in Daniel Moran's gross estate and the other half was a taxable transfer from Mrs. Moran, less her retained life interest in that half.
3. As to the living trust, we hold partly in favor of the Commissioner and partly in favor of the taxpayer. We hold that on Daniel Moran's death the trust became irrevocable. His half of the community belonged in his gross estate and his wife's half was a taxable gift to the trust less her retained life interest in that half.
Accordingly, the judgment is Reversed and the case Remanded for any appropriate proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
(a) In general, see de Funiak, Principles of Community Property (1943); McKay, Community Property (1925); Speer, Law of Marital Rights in Texas (1929); Huie, The Community Property Law of Texas, 13 Vernon's Ann.Tex.Civ.Stat., VII-XLVI (1951); Haddaway, Community Property in the Administration of Estates, 33 Tex.L.Rev. 1012 (1955); Childress, Community Property in the Administration of Estates in Texas, Proc.Tex.Inst., 5th Annual Tax Conf. (1957), p. 155. Of special historical interest: Schmidt, Civil Law of Spain and Mexico (N.O. 1851)
(b) Jackson, Community Property and Federal Taxes, 12 Sw.L.J. 1 (1958); Huie, Community Property and Life Insurance, Proc.Tex.Inst., 5th Ann.Tax (1957), p. 118; Morrison, Life Insurance-- Tax Aspects, Proc.Tex.Inst., 5th Ann.Tax Conf. (1957), p. 142; Thurman, Estate Tax on Insurance, 9 Stan.L.Rev. 238 (1957); Stephens, Life Insurance and Community Property in Texas-- Revised, 10 Sw.L.J. 343 (1956); Hammond and Ray, Federal Tax Problems in Community Problems, 8 S.W.L.J. 127 (1954); Benjamin and Pigman, Federal Estate and Gift Taxation of Louisiana Life Insurance, 28 Tul.L.Rev. 75, 243 (1954); Eichenbaum, Estate Taxation of Insurance Proceeds in Community Property, 1952 Tul.Tax Inst., p. 251; Swift, House Bill 900 and Your Life Insurance Policy, 20 Tex.Bar J.No. 11, p. 691 (1957); Sterling, note on Warthan v. Haynes, 35 Tex.L.Rev. 449 (1957); Note-- 36 Tex.L.Rev. 92 (1957).
(c) See especially Huie, Community Property Law as Applied to Life Insurance, 17 Tex.L.Rev. 121 (1939); 18 Tex.L.Rev. 121 (1940); Collection of Articles in U. of Texas Institutes, Business and Family Planning, Proc.5th Ann.Tax.Conf. Conf. (1957).
(d) See also Nabors, Civil Law Influences upon the Law of Insurance in Louisiana, 6 Tulane L.Rev. 515 (1932); Young, Taxation of Community Life Insurance, 13 Tul.L.Rev. 424 (1939); Daggett, the Community Property System of Louisiana (2nd Ed., 1952); Cahn, Civil Law as applied to Life Insurance, 12 La.L.Rev. 56 (1951).
Marie filed a gift tax return for 1948 with the Collector of Internal Revenue for the First District of Texas. Venue on appeal therefore lies with this Court under Section 7482 of the 1954 Code, 26 U.S.C.A. 7482. Since no return was filed by Chase, thetransferee-taxpayer, the parties have stipulated for review by this Court in order to avoid any possible question as to venue
None of the deficiency determined against Chase as trustee and transferee was assessed against Marie. No claim was made that Marie was insolvent or that she was unable to pay the full amount of any gift tax that might be due. The determination of a deficiency against Chase was made after expiration of the time within which a gift tax deficiency could have been determined against Marie. See Section 1025, Internal Revenue Code of 1939, 26 U.S.C.A. 1025
(1) On April 3, 1948, the date of Daniel's death, the principal of the living trust amounted to $640,480.49. Marie's life interest in one-half of that principal would be worth $128,689.18; the value of her life interest in the entire trust estate would be $257,378.37. (2) The proceeds of the insurance policies paid to the trustee on Daniel's death amounted to $239,014.04. The value of Marie's life interest in one-half of the insurance trust would be $48,024.13; the value of her life interest in the entire trust estate would be $96,048.25. (3) The value of the principal of the residuary trust on April 3, 1948, was $1,010,844.25. The value of Marie's life interest in one-half of that trust would be $203,104.94; and in the entire trust estate would be $406,209.88
The will named Chase as Co-Executor with Charles A. Perlitz. Chase did not qualify but it was appointed as Ancillary Executor in New York
The proceeds of the insurance policy were included in full in the taxable estate of Daniel J. Moran and an estate tax deficiancy based upon that assumption claimed by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue was paid by the Executor of the Estate of Daniel J. Moran. The Commissioner is now asserting a deficiency in gift tax with respect to one-half of the proceeds held by the trustee, upon which he has already collected an estate tax deficiency based upon the inclusion of the entire proceeds in Moran's taxable estate
A similar question on the gift tax valuation of a wife's election to take under her husband's will was then pending in the 9th Cir. and has since been decided in the taxpayer's favor. Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Siegel, 9 Cir., 1957,
United States v. Bess, 1958,
'The sporting theory of justice, the 'instinct of giving the game fair play', as Professor Wigmore has put it (1 Wigmore on Evidence, p. 127), is so rooted in the profession in America that most of us take it for a fundamental legal tenet. But it is probably only a survival of the days when a lawsuit was a fight between two claims * * * it is peculiar to Anglo-American law * * * In America we take it as a matter of course that a judge should be a mere umpire. * * * The idea that procedure must of necessity to wholly contentious disfigures our judicial administration at every point. It leads the most conscientious judge to feel that he is merely to decide the contest, as counsel present it according to the rules of the game, not to search independently for truth and justice. * * * It creates vested rights in errors of procedure, of the benefit whereof parties are not to be deprived. The inquiry is not, What do substantive law and justice require? Instead, the inquiry is, Have the rules of the game been carried out strictly? * * * put back the offending team five or ten or fifteen yards. * * *' Pound, The Causes of Popular Dissatisfaction with the Administration of Justice, 29 ABA Rep. 395 (1906). 'The fundamental premise of the federal rules is that a trial (and its sequel, an appeal) is an orderly search for truth in the interest of justice rather than a contest between two legal gladiators with surprise and technicalities as their chief weapons * * *.' Vanderbilt, Introduction to Cases and Materials on Modern Procedure and Judicial Administration (1952), p. 42
There are eight traditional community property states: Louisiana, Texas, California, Washington, Arizona, New Mexico, Idaho, and Nevada. Texas derived its community property law from Spain by way of Mexico. Louisiana derived its community system from the Custom of Paris, then from Spanish law in 1769, and finally from the Code Napoleon. The laws of Texas and Louisiana on community property for the most part are substantially similar. The Bureau of Internal Revenue recognized their similarity as to insurance proceeds in Rev.Rul. 48, 1953-P, Cum.Bull. 392
Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann., Article 4619 provides that all property acquired by either husband or wife during marriage, except the separate property (Articles 4613, 4614) shall be deemed the common property of the husband and wife; and on dissolution of the marriage there is a presumption that all of the effects are as community
The wife has the management and control, if the husband becomes insane, or if he should disappear and his whereabouts be unknown for 12 months. Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann. Arts. 3678, 4619
Arnold v. Leonard, 1925,
Rogers v. Trevathan, 1887,
Hansen v. Blackmon, Tex.Civ.App.1942,
Lang v. Commissioner, 1938,
'Murdock, J., dissenting: * * * Her husband had no legal right to dispose of her property by his will, and it seems wrong to conclude as a matter of law that he did so under the terms of paragraph Fifth of his will. I do not understand how he could impose binding conditions in his will dependent solely upon what Marie would do with her own. Paragraph Seventeenth of the will imposed no real penalty upon Marie had she chosen to consider that her share of the community property following the death of her husband was not included in his testamentary trust. It does not appear that under the laws of Texas she had any dower rights or other rights, as the widow of her deceased husband, of the kind mentioned in paragraph Seventeenth. Certainly she did not acquire her right to one-half of the community property as widow of her deceased husband. She had that right during their marriage. Had she accepted the Fifth paragraph of his will as applying to the property owned by her husband at the time of his death but not as applying to her property at that time, she could have received the life estate in the property which he properly and legally placed in his testamentary trust and her transfer to the same trust of property which belonged to her at the death of her husband was not consideration for the life estate which her husband gave her in his property.'
Contrast the language of Daniel's will with the language of Siegel's will: 'The provisions made in this my Last Will and Testament for my beloved Wife, Mildred Irene Siegel, are in lieu of her community rights and interests, and if she elects to take her community interest, in lieu of taking under this my Last Will and Testament, then the bequests made to her in Paragraph Three hereof shall be of no force and effect and the real and personal property so bequeathed shall become a part of the rest, residue and remainder of my said estate to be distributed to my said trustees, and like wise subdivision (a) of paragraph Seven shall be of no force and effect and she shall take nothing as a beneficiary under said trust.' Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Siegel, 9 Cir., 1958,
The Commissioner cites two extreme cases, Delevan v. Thom, Tex.Civ.App.1951,
Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann. Art. 7425b-41: 'Every trust shall be revocable by the trustor during his lifetime, unless expressly made irrevocable by the terms of the instrument creating the same or by a supplement or amendment thereto.' (Acts 1943, 48th Leg., p. 232, ch. 148, 41.)
The Tax Court held: 'However, the law of Texas appears to be that where the marriage is terminated by the death of the husband, the proceeds of the policies are payable to the named beneficiary and the wife does not have any community property interest that can be asserted against such proceeds. Cf. Jones v. Jones, Tex.Civ.App.,
William O. Huie, Professor of Law of the University of Texas, a recognized authority on the community property system of Texas, reviewed the cases in 1939-1940. Community Property Law as Applied to Life Insurance, 17 Tex.L.Rev. 121 (1939), 18 Tex.L.Rev. 121 (1940). In a recent paper on the same subject he stated: 'I was unable at that time (1939-1940) to fit all of the Texas cases into any rational, consistent scheme, and that is still the situation today. The primary difficulty has been a fundamental inconsistency in the Texas cases as to the concepts to be applied, an inconsistency that began long ago and has persisted with stubborn tenacity. It can be described as a difference of opinion over whether or not a life insurance policy is property.' Texas Institutes, Business and Family Planning, p. 119; Proc.5th Annual Taxation Conference (1957). See also Stephens, Life Insurance and Community Property in Texas-- Revised, 10 S.W.L.J. 343 (1953); Notes, 35 Tex.L.J.Rev. 449 (1957), 10 S.W.L.J. 326 (1956). J. Paul Jackson, who had an active part in working out the tax equalization program in 1948 that attempts to harmonize community property concepts of insurance with the tax laws, does not go so far. 'While the cases generally have regarded the insurance policies and the avails thereof as but another species of community property to be governed by the usual community property rules, dicta in some of the cases have rather suggested that life insurance is sui juris, that policies of life insurance are not property in the community property sense, and that the life insurance laws are a gloss upon the community laws.' Jackson, Community Property and Taxation, 12 S.W.L.J. 1, 40 (1958)
Notes
22A See Paul, Selected Studies in Federal Taxation (2d ser. 1938); Cahn, Local Law in Federal Taxation, 52 Yale L.J. 799 (1943); Lang v. Commissioner, 1938,
'This difficulty stems in large part from the failure to distinguish between rights in the policy during life and rights in the proceeds following the insured's death; * * * A further source of confusion arises from the fact that although occasionally the individual may possess all of the rights in the policy as well as in its proceeds, these rights may be, and usually are, divided in various combinations.' Thurman, Federal Estate and Gift Taxation of Community Property Insurance, 9 Stan.L.Rev. 239 (1957). See also, Eichenbaum, Estate Taxation of Insurance Proceeds in Community Property States, 1952 Tulane Tax Institute 251. A thorough analysis of the nature of the community's ownership of insurance and the distinction between policy-rights and proceeds-rights may be found in Benjamin and Pigman's Federal Estate and Gift Taxation of Louisiana Life Insurance, 28 Tul.L.Rev. 75, 243 (1953, 1954). After the submission of the substance of this article in the form of a memorandum to the Treasury Department, the Bureau issued Rev.Rul. 48, 1953-1 Cum.Bull. 392 reversing its position on insurance and holding that 'it is the position of the Bureau that, under the laws of Louisiana and Texas, a gift by the wife of one-half of the policy proceeds becomes absolute, for Federal gift tax purposes, upon the death of the husband, unless he purchased the policy with intent to defraud the wife, since at that time the community is dissolved, the authority of the husband as statutory manager of the community is ended, the policy matures, and the wife's interest therein is terminated; whereas, during the existence of the marital community any revocable transfer of rights is necessarily incomplete since the husband, acting for himself and as agent of his wife, may change the beneficiary, surrender the policy for cash, or exercise other legal incidents of ownership in accordance with the terms of the policy of the laws of the State.'
Benjamin and Pigman Federal Estate and Gift Taxation of Louisiana Life Insurance, 28 Tul.L.Rev., 243, 247 (1954)
'If a third party is named beneficiary, the usual rules relating to gifts of community property obtain. In Texas, unlike the civil law in some jurisdictions, the husband as manager of the community may make limited gifts of community property. Such gifts, however, are subject to the rule that the transfer must not be in fraud of the wife's community rights. Here the rule is not an absolute one, but relative, being largely a matter of degree and substantiality. If the gift is large in relation to the size of the community, and particularly, if made to one not an intimate member of the family group, the wife may, as to one-half, succeed in having it set aside. These rules would apply to gifts of life insurance. If the policy is assigned out-right to a child or other third party and is not in fraud of the wife's rights, husband and wife each have made a gift of one-half. If a third party is named beneficiary and the right to change beneficiaries is retained, the gift is incomplete until the death of the insured, at which time the rights of the beneficiary become vested and the spouses at that time have completed their gift. But if either the assignment of the policy or the beneficiary designation is in fraud of the wife's rights, she may recover half of the policy proceeds.' Jackson, Community Property and Federal Taxes, 12 S.W.L.J. 1 (1958)
This quotation comes from an early Louisiana case, Succession of Hearing, 1874,
In Kemp v. Metropolitan Life, 5 Cir., 1953,
On the authority of Thompson v. Calvert and Womack v. Womack, the Attorney-General of Texas ruled recently that: where a wife willed the residue of her estate to three named beneficiaries, for inheritance tax purposes, decedent's half of the cash surrender value of certain insurance on the surviving husband's life passed to the beneficiaries. Opinion No. WW-446, June 6, 1958, CCH Inheritance Tax Rep. 1958, para. 18,786
Huie, Community Property and Life Insurance U. of Texas Institute, Proc.5th Ann.Tax Conf. (1957), pp. 118, 134
Stephens, Life Insurance and Community Property in Texas-- Revised, 10 S.W.L.J. 343, 355 (1956). See generally U. of Texas Institute, 5th Ann.Taxation Conference, 1957
For example: 'The rationale rests on the court's refusal to recognize the property aspects of life insurance * * * In seeking simplicity, the court seems only to have perpetuated the logical inconsistency of labelling insurance as property for some purposes but not for others.' Note, 35 Tex.L.Rev. 449 (1957)
Judge Garwood wrote a powerful dissent, contending that insurance is property. He argued strongly that the proceeds of the policies taken out during the marriage are community property and should go to the community estate. But he reaches the same conclusion that Professor Huie reaches and we reach, that insurance payable to a third person 'may in a proper case amount to no more than legitimate gifts of community property'. He is careful to say that 'this idea is not inconsistent with the idea that the community has a real interest in the policy (rights). Certainly the husband (as manager or trustee) (for the community) has a real interest'. What offends Judge Garwood, and properly, is that the husband may use his position as trustee to augment his separate estate to the detriment of the community in cases where fraud may be difficult to find or may be absent. As Judge Garwood puts it: 'The community estate furnished all of the premiums * * * the Court holds the full proceeds to be separate estate of the husband * * * These sums of money, which, by every indicium classic in this and other community property states, are community property * * * become the separate estate of the assured husband merely because the contract happens to be one of life insurance'
The Texas legislature has attempted recently to settle the alleged uncertainty by amending the statutory definition of property. Tex.Sess.Laws 1957, c. 404. This amendment recites that an emergency was created by 'the fact that the case of Warthan v. Haynes * * * casts some doubt on the status of life insurance policies as property'. Accordingly, the definition of property in Article 23 of the 1925 Texas Revised Statute, Vernon's Ann.Civ.St. art. 23, was amended to include 'life insurance policies and the effects thereof'. As to the effect of this amendment see Swift, Housing Bill 900 and Your Life Insurance Policy, 20 Tex.Bar J. 691
This result may offend our sensibilities. Unquestionably, it is inconsistent with the concept of the community as an equal partnership. But it is not an aberration in the community property system attributable to failure of Texas courts to recognize insurance as property. It is a logical, though perhaps unnecessarily rigid extension of the orthodox principle that the husband is manager of the community and may expend it 'ever so unwisely, may squander it in riotous living, or may give it away'. There is a tighter rein on the husband in some community states
If we may say so, without being presumptuous, the solution is not to pass a law saying that insurance is property. There are a number of solutions. California attacks the problem broadly. Under section 172 of the West's Ann.California Civil Code, as interpreted in the courts, any gift of community property without the wife's written consent may be set aside as voidable. During the husband's lifetime the gift may be set aside completely; after the husband's death, insurance, for example, is voidable to the extent of one-half of the policy proceeds. New York Life Insurance Co. v. Bank of Italy, 1923,
In Louisiana, as in Texas, a widow has no right to any part of insurance proceeds, if the policy is payable to a third person-- even to her husband's illegitimate children or to his mistress. Sizeler v. Sizeler, 1930,
In Hopkins v. Bacon, 1930,
The community property states made a concerted but unsuccessful frontal attack on the constitutionality of the amendments. Ferandez v. Wiener, 1945,
Revenue Act of 1948, Sections 301, 302, 303, 351, 361, 363, amending Int.Rev.Code of 1939, Sections 12, 23(aa), 51(b), 811(d), (Sec. 811(c)(2) repealed), 812, 813 and 936(b). For a statement of the adverse reaction to the 1948 Act of an informed attorney with a common-law point of view, see Surrey, Federal Taxation of the Family-- the Revenue Act of 1948, 61 Harv.L.Rev. 1097 (1948)
Int.Rev.Code of 1939, Sec. 812(e) as amended, Int.Rev.Code of 1954, Sec. 2056; Int.Rev.Code of 1939, Sections 1000, 1004 as amended, Int.Rev.Code of 1954, Sections 2513, 2523
'It is the position of the Bureau that, under the laws of Louisiana and Texas, a gift by the wife of one-half of the policy proceeds becomes absolute, for Federal gift tax purposes, upon the death of the husband, unless he purchased the policy with intent to defraud the wife, since at that time the community is dissolved, the authority of the husband as statutory manager of the community is ended, the policy matures, and the wife's interest therein is terminated * * *.' Rev.Rul. 48, 1953-1 Cum.Bull. 392
In Blackmon v. Hansen, 1943,
It has been argued that the beneficiary should be liable for the full proceeds transferred. Grayck, Transferee Liability of Insurance Beneficiary, 13 Tax Law Rev. 313 (1958)
See 1 Scott on Trusts, Section 57, p. 442 et seq
'A trust is not made testamentary by the coupling together of a life interest in the settlor and a power in him to revoke, or the joinder of these two factors.' 1 Bogert, Section 103, p. 483. The most recent ALR annotation in this subject summarizes the law: 'The later cases agree that the two elements, reservation of a life interest and a power to revoke, do not invalidate a deed of trust or render it to any extent inoperative for want of execution as a will. This holds true notwithstanding the reservations of all the income * * * for the settlor's life'. 1953,
Scott, Reporter for the Restatement of Trusts, makes the point that the nature of the trust instrument is important. 'If the creation of a trust is evidenced by a formal trust instrument, it would seem that the danger of fraud is not increased by the fact that the settlor may have reserved extensive powers.' A revision of the Restatement of Trusts, Section 57, adopted in 1947 reads: 'Where by the terms of the trust an interest passes to the beneficiary during the life of the settlor, the trust is not testamentary merely because the settlor reserves a beneficial life estate or because he reserves in addition a power to revoke the trust in whole or in part and a power to modify the trust, and a power to control the trustee as to the Administration of the trust, and the disposition will not be invalid for failure to comply with the requirements of the Statute of Wills unless the terms are so informally stated and the power of control reserved is so great that it would violate the policy of the Statute of Wills to enforce it.' The italicized language was added in the 1947 revision of the section orginally adopted in 1935. The Moran trust agreement is a typical formal trust instrument of the type used by New York banks
In the illusory trust cases, 'the settlor's control over property during his lifetime is so complete that to hold that it should not be included in the determination of the widow's distributive share would be clearly a violation of the statute which is to give the widow a share of all the property owned by him on his death'. Scott, The Effects of a Power to Revoke a Trust, 57 Harv.L.Rev. 362, 371 (1944)
Dunnett v. Shields, 1924,
