Porter, the petitioners’ testator, in 1918 and 1919, conveyed personal property to a trust company, under two deeds of trust, by which he created interests in specified beneficiaries, not necessary tо set forth. Eaeh deed reserved to him a sole power to revoke the appointments and substitute other beneficiaries, expressly excepting himself and his estate. He died in November, 1926, just before his dеath revoking the earlier deed and substituting another of the same kind. The *674 chief question is whether the funds so conveyed are to be included as a part of his taxable estate under section 302 (d) of the Revenuе Act of 1926, 26 USCA § 1094 (d). The pertinent language is as follows: “The value of the gross estate * *' * shall be determined by including the value * * * of all property * * ■ ® to the extent of any interest therein of which the decedent has at аny time made a transfer, by trust or otherwise, where the enjoyment thereof was subject at the date of his 'death to any change through the exercise of a power * * * to alter, amend, or revoke.” The еxecutors’ argument is that as their testator had irrevocably parted with any interest in the property, the fact that he might change the beneficiaries at his pleasure is irrelevant; he had finally put it beyond his сontrol; his reserved power to determine the eventual do-nees did not affect the definitiveness of his abandonment. - There was therefore nothing on which to levy an excise; nothing certainly which could bе treated as still a part of his estate..
The Commissioner answers that the power was in effect beneficial, despite its limitation. The donee might revoke the original limitation and select a facile beneficiary; might even make an agreement beforehand that the substitute should unite with him to terminate the trust, as is possible in New York, when all the beneficiaries are in being. Personal Property Law (Consol Laws N. Y. c. 41) § 23. In Meyеr v. Bank of Manhattan Trust Co.,
The language of section 302 (d) is broad enough to cover the ease at bar. United States v. Field,
However, while there was a proper subject of taxation, it does not follow that the tax actually imposed was valid. It was computed upon an amount that included the trust funds as part of the testator’s estate,
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Which by hypothesis they were not; he had parted with them. If the deeds had been made after February 26, 1926, when the act was passed, we can see no difficulty; Congress may measure an excise as it will, certainly so long as it does not upset arrangements made in reliance upon an existing immunity. Any one sotting up such trusts with the law before him would be charged with notice that they would subject his estate to taxes calculated as prescribed. None of, the reasons on which Nichols v. Coolidge,
The other question raised is of deductions claimed by the executors for payments made to fulfill the testator’s benefa ctions. He had promised to Princeton University to pay the cost of a memorial window to be built for his son, killed in tho war. To a hospital in Glen Cove, Long Island, he promised to pay for tho building of an X-ray room, as another memorial. Each institution in reliance upon the promise performed the condition, and the executors paid. The record contains no evidence as to the character of either, hut we take judicial notice that Princeton University is “organized and operated exclusively for * * '* educational purposes,” within section 303 (a) (3) of the Act of 1926, 26 USCA § 1095 (a) (3). Wo can know nothing about the hospital. There are private hospitals, “part of tho net earnings of which inures to the benefit of any private stockholder or individual.” This may not be onе, but upon the bare record we cannot assume so, and the taxpayer has the burden of proof.
Against this result the executors invoke section 303 (a) (1), 26 USCA § 1095 (a) (1), which allows a deduction of “claims against tho еstate * * * to the extent that such claims * * * were incurred or contracted bona fide and for an adequate and full consideration in money or money’s worth.” That the testator’s promise created a vаlid contract nobody denies; “promissory estoppel” is now a recognized species of consideration (Restatement of Contracts, § 90); indeed, the doctrine first gained currency in eases like thоse before us. But the section was certainly not intended to include all contracts supported by a consideration; so much is clear. We need not limit it to eases where tho consideration passes to the testator; for example, a promise to pay for goods delivered to another might fall within it, if tho testator has recourse over. But if he has not, the transaction is in substance a gift and must stand or fall with section 303 (a) (3). So here, though the testator was hound by his promise, what in fact he did was to give to tho hospital a memorial to his son: it was not a financial bargain at all, and subdivision 1 is concerned with such. Had he dеlivered to it a bond under seal in a state where tho common law still persists, the claim would hardly have been incurred for “full consideration in money or money’s worth”; though the purpose were to use the prоceeds *676 to add to its equipment. The statute cannot have meant to make critical the accident that the hospital, by acting upon the promise, fastened a debt upon the estate. So to construe the language is to confuse the purposes of the two subdivisions.
Order affirmed, except as to the contribution to Princeton University.
