Estate of FRANK D. MADISON, Deceased. HARRY B. RILEY, as State Controller, etc., Appellant, v. MARSHALL P. MADISON, as Executor, etc., et al., Respondents.
S. F. No. 16970
In Bank
May 31, 1945
26 Cal. 2d 453
Edmonds, J., concurred.
Raymond G. La Noue, Inheritance Tax Attorney, Arthur
Pillsbury, Madison & Sutro for Respondents.
Each trust was to continue for the life of the trustor, during which time the income from the son‘s trust was to be accumulated, while the income from the daughters’ trusts was to be paid to them. Each trustee was authorized, if he deemed it in the best interest of the beneficiary, to deliver to him upon request portions of the corpus not to exceed an aggregate of $50,000 plus 50 per cent of any property that the trustor might add to the trust. Under this provision, one daughter received 20 per cent and the other 30 per cent of the corpus of her trust before their father‘s death.
Upon the termination of each trust upon the trustor‘s death, the corpus (together with the accumulated income in the case of the son‘s trust) was then “to go to and vest in” the respective beneficiaries. If a beneficiary did not survive the trustor, the property, both income and principal, was to go as the beneficiary might appoint by will; in default of such appointment it was to go to his or her children and their heirs.
Each trustee was given complete authority to manage and control the respective trust estates. None of the trusts could be revoked or amended, and the trustor made no reservations in his favor, although he expressed the wish that his consent be obtained before the trustee sold or otherwise disposed of the trust property. The interests of all beneficiaries were protected by spendthrift provisions and thus could not be assigned or subjected to the claims of creditors. The decedent‘s son was named trustee of his sisters’ trusts. The decedent himself became trustee of his son‘s trust. In 1938, however, a law partner of both the decedent and his son was appointed trustee of the latter trust.
At the time of the execution of the trusts, decedent wrote a letter to his son, stating that the transfers were made, not in contemplation of death, but to avoid high income taxes, to make his daughters independent of the monthly allowances that he
The controller seeks to collect an inheritance tax upon the transfers on the grounds that they were intended to take effect in possession or enjoyment at the donor‘s death and that they were made in contemplation of the donor‘s death. (
Section 2 (3) (b) of the
Respondents contend that regardless of the provisions in the gift instrument, an inter vivos gift is never taxable under
The transfer that the controller seeks to tax is that which occurred in 1935 when the trusts were created. (Hunt v. Wicht, 174 Cal. 205 [162 P. 639, L.R.A. 1917 C 961]; Estate of Potter, 188 Cal. 55 [204 P. 826].) The issue is not whether the donor retained some power or interest until his death, but rather whether he tied up the property with so many strings, which could not be loosened until his death, that the transfer may be regarded as having been intended to take effect in possession or enjoyment at his death within the meaning of the statute. It should be noted at the outset that the statute speaks, not of title, but of possession and enjoyment. Were it not for worthy authority to the contrary, a gift of income for the trustor‘s life with remainder at the trustor‘s death would appear from the plain wording of the statute to be a transfer intended to take effect in possession or enjoyment at or after death. In the early case of In re Cruger (54 App.Div. 405 [66 N.Y.S. 636], aff‘d 166 N.Y. 602 [59 N.E. 1121]), in which the facts as to part of the property transferred were similar to those of the present case, the court said: “If there were no authority, we should think that the plain reading of the statute brought this case within its terms.” (54 App.Div. 405 [66 N.Y.S. 636, 638].) More recently, in Hartford v. Martin, 122 N.J.L. 283 [4 A.2d 31, 121 A.L.R. 354], the court said: “There would seem to be no reason in principle why the settlor‘s reservation of an interest in the trust res should be the test of taxability. The question is, after all, one of statutory construction, and the statute, in language that does not reasonably admit of doubt as to the legislative intention, renders taxable all transfers ‘... intended to take effect in possession or enjoyment at or after ... death.‘” (122 N.J.L. 283, 286 [4 A.2d 31, 121 A.L.R. 354].)
Yet the courts are sharply divided on the question of the taxability of trusts such as these under statutes similar to ours. The leading case against taxability is Reinecke v. Northern Trust Co. (278 U.S. 339 [49 S.Ct. 123, 73 L.Ed. 410]), construing section 402(c) of the Revenue Act of 1921, (42 Stat. 278, now
The Reinecke case arose under an estate tax statute, whereas our statute imposes an inheritance tax. There are distinctions between the federal estate tax system and the inheritance tax system prevailing in most states-distinctions to which this court had occasion to refer in Estate of Miller (184 Cal. 674 [195 P. 413, 16 A.L.R. 694]) as follows: “The California tax is a succession tax, a tax on the beneficial interest of each beneficiary or heir. . . . The federal tax . . . on the other hand, is not a succession tax, but an estate tax, not a tax on what comes to the beneficiaries or heirs, but upon what is left by the decedent.” (184 Cal. 674, 678.)
Reinecke v. Northern Trust Co., supra, was decided in 1929. Less than two years later the United States Supreme Court held in May v. Heiner (281 U.S. 238 [50 S.Ct. 286, 74 L.Ed. 826, 67 A.L.R. 1244]), that a gift with a reservation of a life estate to the donor was not a transfer intended to take effect in possession or enjoyment at or after death. In retrospect, it does not seem surprising that a court that was about to interpret section 402(c), supra, so strikingly in terms of a shift in title rather than a shift in possession or enjoyment should have decided the Reinecke case as it did. To a state court, however, that long before the decision in May v. Heiner, supra, had upheld the taxability of gifts reserving a life estate to the donor (see Estate of Felton, 176 Cal. 663 [169 P. 392]; Estate of Murphy, 182 Cal. 740 [190 P. 46]; Estate of Potter, supra, the Reinecke case might not appear authoritative. In Helvering v. Hallock, 309 U.S. 106 [60 S.Ct. 444, 84 L.Ed. 604, 125 A.L.R. 1368]) the United States Supreme Court itself made a significant change in its approach to problems involving transfers intended to take effect at or after death. In that case the donor retained no life estate, but the property was to revert to him if he survived the life tenant. If he did not, the remainder went to his children. The donor died first and the court sustained the inclusion of the corpus in his gross estate for estate tax purposes. In May v. Heiner, supra, the lapse at the donor‘s death of his interest in the property, a life estate, was not enough to support the tax, for according to the court, no interest then passed from the dead to the living. It is difficult to believe that the court found in the lapse of the donor‘s possibility of reverter in Helvering v. Hallock, supra, an interest passing from the dead to the living sufficient to satisfy the requirements of May v. Heiner, supra. It is more likely that the court had ceased to “subordinate the plain purposes of a mod-
The extent to which the Supreme Court has departed from its early interpretation of the federal act is shown even more clearly in Fidelity-Philadelphia Trust Co. v. Rothensies (324 U.S. 108 [65 S.Ct. 508, 89 L.Ed. 783]) construing the corresponding sections of the Revenue Act of 1926 (44 Stat. 70). There the trustor retained a life estate, after which the property was to go to her two daughters for life with a remainder to their surviving issue. If no issue survived the daughters, the corpus was to go as the trustor might appoint by will; in default of such appointment named charities were the ultimate beneficiaries. Taxability was conceded, but the estate sought to avoid paying a tax on the entire value of the property at the time of the trustor‘s death. Since the trustor had retained a life estate, all that was needed to sustain a tax on the entire value was to overrule May v. Heiner, supra. The court, however, rested its decision on the ground that the trustor retained a string, which, upon certain contingencies, would have permitted her to direct by will the further disposition of the corpus. The retention of such a string, the court said, “might have resulted in altering completely the plan contemplated by the trust instrument for the transmission of decedent‘s property....” (65 S.Ct. 508, 510.) Consequently the value of the entire corpus was subject to the tax. The retention of that string, however, could have no effect on the daughters’ life estates. It gave the trustor control over the disposition of the property only after the daughters’ interests had terminated, or after the death of both daughters in the trustor‘s lifetime precluded their life estates from coming into existence. The daughters’ interests were contingent upon their surviving their mother; but that contingency was created by the mother‘s retaining a life estate, not by her retaining a reversionary interest. (See Nelson, The Stinson Case, 23 Tax Magazine 245.) A quotation from Commissioner v. Estate of Field, 324 U.S. 113 [65 S.Ct. 511, 89 L.Ed. 786], a companion case, shows even more clearly the court‘s present approach: “The estate tax is not based on the value of the reversionary interest of the decedent at the time of his death but on the value of the property to which that
Respondents rely on cases from several states in addition to Reinecke v. Northern Trust Co., supra. In re Prange‘s Will, 201 Wis. 636 [231 N.W. 271], was decided exclusively on the authority of the Reinecke case. Nor is there any compelling argument in favor of plaintiffs’ position in People v. Welch‘s Estate, 235 Mich. 555 [209 N.W. 930]. Safe Deposit Etc. Co. v. Bouse, 181 Md. 351 [29 A.2d 906], is not in point, for the transfer there in question took place before the enactment of the statute. Cases from New York are cited by the controller as well as by respondents. The law in that state appears unsettled. (Compare In re Cruger, supra; In re Patterson‘s Estate, 127 N.Y.S. 284, aff‘d 204 N.Y. 677 [98 N.E. 1109]; In re Dunlap‘s Estate, 205 App.Div. 128 [199 N.Y.S. 147]; with In re Schweinert‘s Estate, 133 Misc. 762 [234 N.Y.S. 307]; In re Kirby‘s Estate, 228 App.Div. 171 [239 N.Y.S. 390], aff‘d 254 N.Y. 624 [173 N.E. 894].) In In re Dolan‘s Estate, 279 Pa. 582 [124 A. 176, 49 A.L.R. 858], the court refused to sustain the tax even though the donor reserved a power of revocation. That case is therefore not pertinent here, although it no doubt indicates that a jurisdiction that does not allow
Respondents contend that the cases upon which the controller relies all come from jurisdictions with rules of property law opposed to the rules adopted in California. Whether that be true or not is immaterial, for the reasoning in these cases is based on realistic considerations regarding the possession and enjoyment of the property that are as relevant here as in those jurisdictions. Moreover, the case upon which respondents rely as establishing the California rule of property law does not preclude taxation in the present case. Hunt v. Wicht, supra, holds merely that the statute does not apply retroactively. Nor is respondents’ position improved by considering the trustee an agent of the beneficiary. The trustee no doubt acquired possession before the trustor‘s death, but his enjoyment was as limited as that of the beneficiary.
With the trustee‘s consent, each beneficiary could have obtained, and decedent‘s daughters did obtain, portions of the trust property. The controller does not seek to tax the portions thus advanced, but only the balance remaining in the trusts at the time of the father‘s death. It is true that, since the value of each trust might have fallen in the trustor‘s lifetime below the limit of $50,000 set upon withdrawals, the trusts might conceivably have terminated before his death. This provision shows no more than that the trustor had alternative intentions. He made dispositions intended to take effect at his death, yet indicated his willingness that they be defeated under certain contingencies. It is irrelevant that his dispositions were subject to certain contingencies now that those contingencies can no longer occur. In fact, the trusts lasted until the trustor‘s death, and the trustor certainly intended that the transfer of what remained of the corpus should take effect in possession or enjoyment at his death. No tax is imposed upon the transfer of the portions released in
Respondents finally contend that the controller‘s admitted failure in 1923 to tax similar trusts, the trusts involved in Wheeler v. Commissioner, 20 B.T.A. 695, amounted to an administrative construction of the statute, and that this construction was adopted by the Legislature in 1935 when it reenacted the statute, and now precludes taxation in this case. Mere failure to act, however, does not constitute an administrative construction. (Louisville v. Board of Education, 154 Ky. 316 [157 S.W. 379], and cases cited in 2 Sutherland, Statutory Construction (3d ed.), p. 520, n. 9.) Moreover, an erroneous administrative construction does not govern the interpretation of a statute, even though the statute is subsequently reenacted without change. (Whitcomb Hotel, Inc. v. California Emp. Com., 24 Cal.2d 753, 757-758 [151 P.2d 233], and cases therein cited.)
The purpose of the Legislature in imposing a tax on transfers intended to take effect at or after death is to prevent avoidance of the inheritance tax. “The sole reason for mentioning dispositions inter vivos . . . is to prevent the evasion of the tax . . . by such dispositions. In contemplation of that law [the inheritance tax law], the gifts inter vivos therein mentioned are all presumed to have been made with the intent to evade the tax imposed on transfers taking effect by succession at death.” (Estate of Potter, supra, 63.) Section 2(3) (b) does not impose a tax upon certain precisely defined transfers; it is rather an attempt to impose a tax in all cases, regardless of the form of transfer adopted, in which possession or enjoyment does not take effect until the donor‘s death.
Even though a trustor may have parted with all interest in the property, limitations that he has imposed will last as long as the trust lasts. Decedent‘s children were all over 21 years of age at the time the trusts were created. The daughters were married. It is unlikely, therefore, that decedent
It should be noted that the “shackles” of the trusts were stronger in the present case than in some of the cases just cited. The respondents’ interests were contingent upon their surviving the trustor. Each trust contained spendthrift provisions so that the beneficiaries could neither dispose of their interest in the corpus (Seymour v. McAvoy, 121 Cal. 438, 442 [53 P. 946, 41 L.R.A. 544]; McColgan v. Magee, Inc., 172 Cal. 182, 186 [155 P. 995, Ann.Cas. 1917 D 1050]; Estate of Edwards, 217 Cal. 25, 27 [17 P.2d 116]; Kelly v. Kelly, 11 Cal.2d 356, 362 [79 P.2d 1059, 11 A.L.R. 71], see 23 Cal. Jur. 519) nor request that the trusts be terminated before the trustor‘s death. (Fletcher v. Los Angeles Tr. & Sav. Bank, 182 Cal. 177, 179 [187 P. 425].) Moreover, irrespective of spendthrift provisions, the trusts could not be so terminated, since other persons, some perhaps not yet born, had possible interests in the trust property. (Gray v. Union Trust Co., 171 Cal. 637 [154 P. 306]; Estate of Washburn, 11 Cal.App. 735 [106 P. 415]; Woestman v. Union Trust etc. Bank, 50 Cal.App. 604 [195 P. 944]; Hunt v. Lawton, 76 Cal.App. 655 [245 P. 803]; Estate of Easterday, 45 Cal.App.2d 598 [114 P.2d 669].)
In view of our decision that the gifts here involved were intended to take effect in possession or enjoyment at death, there is no need to consider the contention that they were made in contemplation of the donor‘s death.
The judgment is reversed.
Gibson, C. J., Carter, J., and Peters, J. pro tem., concurred.
“When such person, institution or corporation becomes beneficially entitled to possession or expectancy to any property or the income therefrom by any such transfer, whether made before or after the passage of this act.
“In all transfers inter vivos the value of the property transferred shall be taken as of the date of death of the transferor and with the rates and exemptions then in effect. . . .” (Italics added.
The trial court found upon ample evidence that the transfers in question were not made in contemplation of the death of the grantor. It is also indisputable that the trusts created were and are irrevocable, but the majority opinion, after a discussion of decisions of both the United States Supreme Court and the courts of other states, reaches the conclusion that the California Legislature intended by its use of the words “Intended to take effect in possession or enjoyment at
The sole ground advanced or relied upon by such opinion to justify imposition of the tax is that the trusts were to, and did, terminate at the end of a period of time measured by the transferor‘s life; and the conclusion is asserted in face of the fact that several years before the transferor‘s death the transfers had been completed and both enjoyment and possession of the property had passed irrevocably from the transferor to the joint unit of trustee and beneficiary in each of the respective trusts.
It apparently is not contended that if the duration of the trusts had been measured by any event other than the termination of the transferor‘s life the transfers would have been subject to an inheritance tax upon the death of the transferor, and it is my opinion that the mere fact that the death of the transferor is selected as the event upon which the legal title to the corpora of the estates shall be conveyed by the trustees to the beneficiaries is not sufficient to justify us in holding that as a matter of law the transferor intended the transfer of the property “to take effect in possession or enjoyment at or after” his death within the meaning of those words as employed by the Legislature in the Inheritance Tax Act. The possession and enjoyment of the property, and its control, passed completely from the transferor when he created the trusts. Such possession, enjoyment, and control of the property, upon creation of the trusts, vested irrevocably in the trustees and beneficiaries. The effect of the majority opinion is to impose a penalty upon the beneficiaries solely because the transfers were made in trust for them instead of directly to them. I am aware of no policy of the law which justifies such a holding.
In Reinecke v. Northern Trust Co. (1929), 278 U.S. 339 [49 S.Ct. 123, 73 L.Ed. 410], the decedent, several years before his death and at a time when there was no federal gift tax, created five trusts with life estates in the incomes on terms not disclosed in the opinion. “In one the life interest was terminable five years after the death of the settlor or on the death
“The settlor died without having . . . modified any of the five trusts except one, and that in a manner not now material.” (278 U.S. at p. 344.) The federal estate statute imposed a tax “upon the transfer of the net estate of every decedent” and provided that in calculating the tax there should be included in the gross estate all property, tangible and intangible, “To the extent of any interest therein of which the decedent has at any time made a transfer, or with respect to which he has at any time created a trust, in contemplation of or intended to take effect in possession or enjoyment at or after his death.”
The Supreme Court, in holding that the transfers were not subject to the federal estate tax, stated (pp. 346-348 of 278 U.S.), “Nor did the reserved powers of management of the trusts save to decedent any control over the economic benefits or the enjoyment of the property. He would equally have reserved all these powers and others had he made himself the trustee, but the transfer would not for that reason have been incomplete. The shifting of the economic interest in the trust property which was the subject of the tax was thus complete as soon as the trust was made. [Italics added.] His power to recall the property and of control over it for his own benefit then ceased and as the trusts were not made in contemplation of death, the reserved powers do not serve to distinguish them from any other gift inter vivos not subject to the tax. . . .
“In its plan and scope the tax is one imposed on transfers at death or made in contemplation of death and is measured by the value at death of the interest which is transferred.
It is argued in the majority opinion that the Reinecke case has been weakened by subsequent decisions of the Supreme Court. Suffice it to point out that such case has not been overruled, that its sound logic remains unimpaired, and that the facts and circumstances of the litigation now before us present a manifestly stronger case for the taxpayer than did those of the Reinecke case. Here the transferor reserved no control over the property conveyed and all of it vested immediately in full possession and enjoyment in the respective units of trustees and beneficiaries. Furthermore, our statute undertakes to specifically enumerate the “cases” in which the tax shall be operative and in such enumeration lists a transfer “By a revocable trust created before or after the taking effect of this act.” (Italics added.) This statute is creative and in such a case it is a well established rule of construction that the enumeration of certain powers or items is exclusive of all others. (23 Cal.Jur. § 118, p. 740; 2 Sutherland, Statutory Construction (Horack‘s ed. 1943) § 4915, p. 414; People v. McCreery (1868), 34 Cal. 432, 442; San Joaquin etc. Irri. Co. v. Stevinson (1912), 164 Cal. 221, 234 [128 P. 924]; Pasadena University v. Los Angeles County (1923), 190 Cal. 786, 790 [214 P. 868]; Gruben v. Leebrick & Fisher, Inc. (1938), 32 Cal.App.2dSupp. 762, 765 [84 P.2d 1078]; see, also, Johnston v. Baker (1914), 167 Cal. 260, 264-265 [139 P. 86]; Moore v. Webb (1933), 219 Cal. 304, 309 [26 P.2d 22, 89 A.L.R. 925];
It is to be noted that the Supreme Court in May v. Heiner (1930), 281 U.S. 238, 244 [50 S.Ct. 286, 74 L.Ed. 826, 67 A.L.R. 1244], followed the Reinecke case and that Helvering v. Hallock (1940), 309 U.S. 106 [60 S.Ct. 444, 84 L.Ed. 604, 125 A.L.R. 1368], does not purport to overrule it. In fact the author of the opinion in the Helvering case expressly states (p. 110 of 309 U.S.) that “Whether the transfer made by the decedent in his lifetime is ‘intended to take effect in possession or enjoyment at or after his death’ by reason of that which he retained, is the crux of the problem.” (Itals added.) As previously observed, in the case now before us, the grantor retained nothing. In Fidelity-Philadelphia Trust Co. v. Rothensies (1945), 324 U.S. 108 [65 S.Ct. 508, 89 L.Ed. 783], the Supreme Court again had a tax question before it but again did not depart from the Reinecke holding. Mr. Justice Douglas, in a concurring opinion, specifically pointed out that “The District Court found that this trust was ‘intended to take effect in possession or enjoyment at or after’ the death of the decedent. The Circuit Court of Appeals agreed. Certiorari was not granted on that question but only on the question whether the entire value of the corpus of the trust at the time of decedent‘s death should be included in her gross estate.” The trust involved was one in which the grantor reserved to herself during her life the income of the trust.
Subsequent to the execution of the trust grants here involved the people of this state enacted the
The
Lastly, it must be noted that the trial court found as a fact, upon conflicting inferences, in substance that the transfers in question were intended to, and did, take effect immediately upon the execution of the trust grants and that they were not “intended to take effect in possession or enjoyment [only] at or after such [the grantor‘s] death.” The majority opinion lists a number of facts and circumstances in evidence which
Unless we are to depart from long established law, including the basic principle that the people are to be served before the state, the judgment should be affirmed.
Shenk, J., concurred.
