Frederick F. Dumont, of Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, executed two wills, one dated May 31, 1938, bearing a codicil of the same date, and the other and later testament dated May 19, 1939. In both wills, after making specific bequests, the testator gave, devised and bequeathed to a trust company, in trust, the residue of his property, real and personal, provided annuities to named relatives, and directed payment to the president of Lafayette College of the balance of the income arising from the trust, to be used in his discretion for the needs of the college or its students, with a requirement that an accounting be rendered annually to the board of trustees of the educational institution. The two wills were identical with respect to the residuary devise and bequest to Lafayette College, except for an immaterial survivorship annuity provided for in the later will, which was admitted to probate eight days after the death of the testator on June 4, 1959. Inasmuch as the will probated had been executed less than thirty days before the death of the testator, the bequest therein to Lafayette College was void. Title 20, Sec. 195, Purdon’s Pennsylvania Statutes, Ann., as amended. Moore v. Gilbert,
On September 28, 1940, the president of Lafayette College contested the validity of the 1939 will by appealing from its probate *692 on the averment that the testator lacked testamentary capacity. Some five months later, an agreement was executed between the trust company as executor and trustee of the probated will of 1939 and the president and trustees of Lafayette College as trust beneficiaries-, and numerous next of kin, heirs at law and distributees of the testator, who were stated to embrace all persons entitled to or claiming an interest in the estate, except specific legatees whose interests were not - affected by the agreement. The document recited that the president of Lafayette College, on his appeal from the decision admitting the will to probate, had procured the issuance and service of citations to all parties in interest, requiring them to show cause “why his appeal should not be sustained and the decision admitting the will to probate be set aside, and why an issue should not be awarded to try certain questions.”
It was further recited that certain named next of kin had duly appeared in opposition to the position taken by the president of Lafayette College, and that the parties, being desirous of avoiding any controversy as to the competency of the testator and as to the validity of the provisions in his will “for the benefit of the College”, had reached an agreement subject to the approval of the Orphan’s Court of Lancaster County,-Pennsylvania. Court approval of the settlement was obtained in due course.
The settlement agreement provided that, in consideration of the withdrawal of the will contest by Lafayette College and the payment by the College of specific sums to them, the next of kin transferred, assigned and set over to the College all their right, title and interest in the balance of income of the residuary trust remaining after the payment of annuities therein directed to be paid and the remainder of the trust estate subject to the life estates created by the trustor. It was recited that the intention of the parties was that “the last will and testament of Frederick F. Dumont, deceased, as probated on the 12th day of June, 1939, and the intent of the testator as therein evidenced, shall be carried out to the same extent and with the same force and effect as if said will had been executed more than thirty days before the decease of said Frederick F. Dumont.”
In the estate tax return, the trust company as executor deducted as a charitable bequest to Lafayette College a sum representing the then present worth of its interest in the residue of the estate of Frederick F. Dumont. The deduction was claimed under Section 812(d) of the Internal Revenue Code, 26 U.S.C.A. Int.Rev. Code, § 812(d), 1 but was disallowed by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue, whose deficiency assessment was sustained on review by the tax court. That tribunal, however, was sharply divided on the issue, five of its judges dissenting from the opinion of the majority. The .jurisdiction of this court is now invoked by an appropriate petition for review, duly filed by the executor of the Dumont estate.
The opposing views expressed in the tax court will be found set forth in the opinions of Judge Leech, for the majority, and Judge Murdock, for the dissenters, as reported in
The majority of the tax court ruled that Lafayette College had acquired the residue of the testator’s property as
purchaser
from his heirs and next of kin and
not as legatee.
This conclusion was stated to rest upon the law of Pennsylvania. In re Hoffner’s Estate,
We think the error of the tax court inheres in its failure to consider as determinative the fact that Lafayette College occupied the position of legatee under a prior will and did not need to rely upon the probated will, under which its *693 bequest was undoubtedly void under Pennsylvania law. What Lafayette College acquired was the result of a compromise in settlement of its attack upon the later will. Its right to contest was grounded upon its status under the earlier will as residuary legatee. In that earlier will, the bequest to it was not void as a charitable bequest, for the obvious reason that the Pennsylvania thirty-day statute had no applicability.
In Lyeth v. Hoey,
The principle of Lyeth v. Hoey, supra, was applied by this court in the Sage Case, where the Commissioner of Internal Revenue conceded a testator’s bequest to have been to a charitable use and only the amount deductible in determining the net estate subject to tax was in dispute. The Board of Tax Appeals was upheld in its approval of the commissioner’s assessment upon the ground that what the widow of the testator received as a result of a compromise agreement she took because of her standing as widow and of her right in such capacity to contest the will, and, if successful, to deprive the residuary legatee of its bequest. What the widow received in settlement of the will contest was held to have been received by “inheritance” within the meaning of the Revenue Act. Robbins v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 1 Cir.,
As pointed out in the dissenting opinion of the tax court in the present controversy, that expert tribunal had applied the principle of Lyeth v. Hoey in the case of Keller v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue,
The reasoning of the minority opinion is, in our judgment, logical and sound, adheres to the true principle of Lyeth v. Hoey, and applies correctly the doctrine of that binding authority. That doctrine was approved in Helvering v. Safe Deposit & Trust Co.,
The decision of the tax court is reversed and the cause is remanded for further procedure in conformity with this opinion.
Notes
“Sec. 812. Net estate.
“For the purpose of the tax the value of the net estate shall be determined, in the case of a citizen or resident of the United States by deducting from the value of the gross estate—
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“(d) Transfers for public, charitable, and religious uses. The amount of rll bequests, legacies, devises, or transfers, to or for the use of the United States, any State, Territory, any political subdivision thereof, or the District of Columbia, for exclusively public purposes, or to or for the use of any corporation organized and operated exclusively for religious, charitable, scientific, literary, or educational purposes, * *
