The decision of the Tax Court turned on its determination that each of three trust-deeds established but a single trust. In so deciding, that court disregarded a decision of the New York Supreme Court (in a suit to which the United States was not a party) that each of those trust-deeds created multiple trusts. The reasons given by the Tax Court for disregarding the state-court decisions are these: The action in the state court was originally nonadversary and did not raise the question of the creation of multiple trusts; only after the present suits, raising that question, were begun in the Tax Court, was the complaint in the state court action amended so as to include that question; all the parties to the state-court suit were in accord with one another before the entry of the judgment therein; the appeal from the state-court judgment by one of the parties thereto was taken only after the Tax Court (in Reid’s Trust,
We think the Tax Court erred. Whatever may have been the nature of the state-court suit in its inception, the appeal
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made it adversary, within the meaning of Freuler v. Helvering,
The doctrine of the Freuler and Blair cases has been criticized. 1 There may be good sense in the criticism, but rejection of the doctrine is not within our province.
Reversed.
Notes
Cardozo, Federal Taxes and The Radiating Potencies of State Court Decisions, 51 Yale L.J. (1942) 783; Cahn, Local Law in Federal Taxation, 52 Yale L.J. (1943) 799, 818, 819; Paul, Federal Estate and Gift Taxation (1942) § 1.11 and 1946 Supplement pp. 23-27.
