This case comes up upon petitions by the Commissioner and the taxpayer to review an order of the Board of Tax Appeals which re-assessed the taxpayer’s income tax for the years 1934 and 1935. The controversy arises over four separate deeds of trust executed by the taxpayer on July 1, 1929, by each of which she conveyed $25,-000 to her husband in trust for one of their four children. All these deeds empowered the trustee to invest and reinvest the funds at his pleasure and to use the net income “in his sole discretion” for the support of the beneficiary until he or she reached twenty-one years, whereupon he was to pay the beneficiary any accumulations and thereafter the whole annual income until the beneficiary’s death or the settlor’s, on either of which the trust should end and the trustee should personally receive the whole corpus. There were other provisions which we need not describe except a clause by which the settlor reserved to herself the power to revoke the instrument at any time after January 15, 1936. It will thus be seen that she surrendered all control of these funds and all income arising from them for a period of six years, six months and fifteen days, but that thereafter she regained complete control, which in fact she exercised within a few weeks after January 15, 1936. The first question, and the only one which we find it necessary to decide, is whether the trusts were within § 22(a) of the Act of 1934, 26 U.S.C.A. Int.Rev.Acts, page 669, as construed in Helvering v. Clifford,
Our decision in Commissioner v. Barbour, 2 Cir.,
Obviously, the consequences of an inflexible application of such a doctrine would be extremely drastic; for example, the income of an equitable life estate created by a father for his son would be taxed
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to the father so long as he lived. The court had no such revolutionary purpose and very carefully protected itself from such an interpretation of its decision. For, while it is true that the prime consideration is whether the income remains within the family, there are two other circumscribing factors: the length of the term and the powers of management reserved to the settlor. We think that these factors are complementary; the
longer the term,
the more important the reserved powers, and vice versa. Commissioner v. Buck, 2 Cir.,
120
F.2d 775. There is a good reason for such a correlation, because the shorter the term the more complete is the settlor’s real power of management and control regardless of legal reservations. A trustee who must manage a fund throughout the life of the beneficiary may well refuse to be guided by the counsels of the reversioner; the income is to be the beneficiary’s presumably for a long time, and the reversioner has a correspondingly smaller stake. But a trustee who will have to account to his beneficiary for only five or six years and then to the reversioner, is in a very different position; if he is reasonable, he will heed the reversioner, treat his interest as paramount and be guided by his judgment. Legal powers of management add very little to such a reversioner’s actual control over the fund while the trust lasts. For this reason it appears to us that it is •only when the term is longer than six ■or seven years (as for example ten years, Commissioner v. Jonas, 2 Cir.,
Order affirmed on the taxpayer’s appeal; order reversed on the Commissioner’s appeal.
