This appeal presents a controversy relating to the income tax liability for the calendar, year 1922 of William C. Shanley, who died on December 28, 1922. On. the merits the question is whether certain moneys received and expended by the trustee of a trust created by Shanley were properly treated as part of Shanley’s gross income for the year 1922. In addition, the defendant contends that an escrow agreement .dated February 5, 1928, is a complete defense to the plaintiffs’ action. The latter question, which apparently was the only one controverted in the District Court, may conveniently be disposed of first.
In March, 1923, the executors of the deceased taxpayer filed an income tax return, including as gross income of the decedent for 1922 the items now in dispute, and paid part of the tax liability disclosed by the return. Before any further payment was due, they filed an amended return excluding the disputed items, and filed claims for abatement and credit. The Commissioner ' disallowed their claims in the main, issued a certificate of overassessment in the sum of $145.61, and determined the tax at $26,065.61. The executors then appealed to the Board of Tax Appeals, but their petition was dismissed for lack of jurisdiction. Shanley v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue,
It is the defendant’s contention that the escrow agreement obligated the executors to pay the 1922 taxes as previously determined by the Commissioner, on condition that the appeal pending in this court should be decided in the Commissioner’s favor; that it was so decided, and consequently the payment subsequently made to the collector was a performance of the executors’ contract obligation and is not recoverable, even if the tax liability was wrongly determined. In support of his position the defendant cites United States v. John Barth Co.,
*15 [ 2, 3] Under the terms of a testamentary trust created by his father, William C. Slianley was entitled to receive one-fourth of the annual income and, upon the death or remarriage of his mother, one-third of the corpus of the trust estate. In 1910 he conveyed his interest under his father’s will to the Empire Trust Company upon trust to pay cut of the income received by it $25,000 a year to the settlor’s wife, and to pay the rest of the income and the principal, when received, to the holders of certificates of participation which were issued 10 creditors of the settlor. By an agreement dated January 5, 1914, the trust was extended to cover an additional series of certificates of participation issued to creditors. The agreements authorized the trustee to retain its reasonable fees and expenses out of moneys coming into its hands. When all certificates of participation should be paid in full, the trust was to end and the trustee was to reassign to the settlor the property held in trust. The settlor could end the trust at any time by paying all outstanding certificates of participation or depositing with the trustee sufficient money to redeem them. Out of the income collected by the trustee in 1922 it paid $25,000 to the settlor’s wife and another sum (the exact amount of which does not appear) it retained for its fees and expenses. These two sums were included in the gross income of the settlor, and the validity of the assessment resulting therefrom is the matter in controversy. The action does not involve any sums paid by the trustee to the settlor’s creditors; they are conceded to have been part of his income.
It is argued that the fact that the settlor could terminate the trust by paying off the certificates of participation made the trust income his. Under the Revenue Act of 1921, 42 Stat. 227, there is no clause such as appears in section 219 (g) of the Act of 1924, 43 Stat 277 (26 U.S.C.A. § 166 note) and later acts, declaring that the income shall be the settlor’s if he reserves a power to revoke the trust. But, if it be assumed that without express provision the same result should follow under the act of 1921, the defendant’s argument cannot prevail. Under the general law in most states, any settlor, if he is able to purchase the interests of all the beneficiaries of a trust, can bring about the termination of the trust;
but the
possibility that he may do so (if he has sufficient money) is not such a power to revest the property in himself as to make the income his. Compare Helvering v. Helmholz,
The further argument is urged that the provision for the settlor’s wife was in discharge of his marital duty to support her and so within the principle of Douglas v. Willcuts,
Finally, it is urged that the settlor’s conveyance was an assignment of income to fall due in the future and governed by such cases as Lucas v. Earl, 281 U.S. Ill,
The question as to inclusion of fees and expenses retained by the trustee might raise *16 a question of some doubt if properly before us. It may be that 'they are colored by the purposes of the trust, and, since part of those purposes were to pay the settlor’s creditors and the income so used must be deemed his, that a portion of the trustee’s fees and expenses should likewise be treated as income to him. But the question need not be now decided. It is not raised by the assignment of errors, nor was it noticed on the trial. Moreover, the parties agreed below as to the amount of the tax in dispute. In response to a question by the court as to the amount recoverable if anything was recoverable, the plaintiffs’ counsel said that the parties could agree. Thereafter, in the presence of the court, the defendant’s counsel conceded that the amount involved was $19,898.24; judgment was entered for that sum and interest from the date of payment. It is too late to disaffirm that concession now.
This disposes also of the supposed mathematical errors in the amount of recovery suggested for the first time in the appellants’ reply brief. We have no way of ascertaining the proper amount from the record; and no reason is apparent why the defendant should not be bound by a concession of the amount due.
Judgment affirmed.
