This рetition for review involves a deficiency of $2,439.11 in federal estate taxes imposed under the Revenue Acts of 1926 and
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1932, 44 Stat. 9, 47 Stat. 169, and is taken from the decision of the Board of Tax Appeals, reported
Findings of Fact.
The petitioners are the duly qualified executors of the estate of Leveret T. Sheets, who died testate June 9, 1932, a resident of Minneapolis, Minn.
In October, 1928, Pauline L. Sheets, wife of the decedent, filed a suit for divorce from her husband, alleging cruel and inhuman treatment, and inadequate support. As relief, she asked for an absolute divorce, custody of their two small children, alimony equal to one-third of his property, a reasonable monthly or quarterly allowance for the support of hеrself and her children, costs of the suit, that the alimony allowed her be paid in cash or by a division of property, that the defendant be enjoined from disposing of his property until final judgment of the court, and that a receiver be appointed of all the property of the defendant with authority to carry out the decree of the court.
The defendant was ordered to show cause on November 8, 1928, or as soon thereafter as counsel could be heard, why certain relief should not be granted the plaintiff.
After protracted negotiations, the parties agreed upon a settlement of the property rights, including alimony, involved in the suit, and the dower interest of the plaintiff in the defendant’s рroperty. The settlement agreement, entered into on November 2, 1928, contains an agreement of the parties that the estate of the defendant, consisting almost entirely of notes secured by mortgages on real property, and bonds, as disclosed by a list attached to the document, had a value of approximately $152,270.47, exclusive оf the homestead, and provides for a payment of $250 per month to the plaintiff for household expenses and clothing for herself and her children. The agreement sets.forth that the defendant had paid the plaintiff the sum of $1,000 in cash and contains his agreement to pay all outstanding bills of the family and a note of the plaintiff in the sum of $225. Other provisions of the agreement follow :
The defendant has conveyed and assigned to a third party bonds and mortgages in the sum of $50,756.82, which in turn have been assigned to the plaintiff and defendant as joint tenants and not tenants in common, to the end that upon the de^th of either of the parties the ownership of said bonds and mortgages shall be and become the property of the survivor without probate or other proceedings.
It is mutually agreed that during the lifetime of the defendant he shall have the income- from the said bonds and mortgages as his own, except as hereinafter stipulated.
It is further understood and agreed that as to said bonds and mortgages the defendant shall have no right to assign, satisfy, extend, or otherwise disposе of said bonds or mortgages without the consent of the plaintiff in writing joining thereto. * * *
In the event that defendant fails to pay to plaintiff said $250 per month, the entire income from the one-third of said estate held jointly and the increase thereon shall become the property of the plaintiff and plaintiff shall be released from paying the usual househоld expenses but not her own personal expenses. * * *
It is further understood and agreed that this stipulation disposes of the entire estate of the defendant and the plaintiff releases and forever discharges the defendant, his heirs, administrators, executors, and assigns from any and all claims or demands, either as dower or otherwise to any of the estate of the defendant contained in the list hereto attached or that may be hereafter acquired, now or after his death, except the title to one-third thereof hereinbefore provided and conveyed to her, and except one-third of the property, if any, now owned by defendant and not included in said list. * * *
It is further stipulated that the plаintiff shall return to the home of the plaintiff and defendant immediately and that the parties hereto shall again take up the relations of husband and wife as heretofore and each shall diligently try to avoid any complications that would tend to again cause unhappy differences between them, and the plaintiff agrees that the time to answer in the above proceedings shall be and hereby is extended to December 1, 1928, and it is. specifically provided that the terms of this stipulation and agreement shall be and are binding upon each of the parties hereto,, whether or not the said proceedings are dismissed or proceed to trial and judgment therein.
The securities held by the decedent and Pauline L. Sheets, as joint tenants, were itemized in the estate tax return, but the value thereof was not included in the gross estate on the ground that the property was acquired by the surviving cotenant for an *729 adequate and full consideration. The respondent determined a value for the property, and included the amount thereof, plus accrued interest in the amount of $787.34, in the gross estate.
The petitioners are not contesting the value determined by the respondent for some of the securities. The remaining securities had the following values at the time of decedent’s death (values itemized):
Opinion.
Upon the facts so found the Board decided that the full value of the property in question сonstituted a part of the gross estate and that there was deficiency in the estate tax on account thereof. The executors of the estate contend in support of their petition for review:
(1) That the property in question was not held in joint tenancy; (2) that this court should determine that Pauline L. Sheets acquired the property for an аdequate and full consideration in money’s worth, notwithstanding the amendatory provisions of section 804 of the Revenue Act of 1932, 26 U.S.C.A. § 412; and (3) that it would be violative of the Fifth Amendment to apply that section to the transaction here involved.
(1) We agree with the unanimous decision of the Board of Tax Appeals that the property was held in joint tenancy within thе meaning of section 302 (e) of the Revenue Act of 1926, 26 U.S.C.A. § 411(e).
(2) As the property here in question was held in joint tenancy at the time of the death of Leveret T. Sheets, it was taxable as part of his gross estate unless the wife in acquiring it from him had given adequate and full consideration for her interest in money or money’s worth. Revenue Act 1926, c. 27, § 302(b), 44 Stat. 9, 70, 26 U.S. C. § 411(b), 26 U.S.C.A. § 411(b). The consideratiоn which she gave for it was her agreement to relinquish her marital rights in her husband’s estate, and at the time of the transaction (November 2, 1928) Congress had not yet declared by direct legislative definition whether or not such a relinquishment would constitute the consideration referred to in the statute. Several courts had considered somewhat similar language raising the question whether a surrender of dower rights” constituted “a fair consideration in money or money’s worth” for a transfer in contemplation of death, and it had been decided in the affirmative, Ferguson v. Dickson, 3 Cir.,
The situation was therefore presented that the estate of a decedent was entitled to no deduction from tax on account of statutory rights thereto existing in the surviving spouse, but if a contract had been made by which the surviving spouse was to receive something frоm decedent’s estate in consideration of a waiver of the statutory rights of such spouse, then there was a question (which the courts had not decided) whether deduction should be made. Accordingly, and to meet this situation, 2 Congress passed the amendment restricting the definition of “consideration in ‘money or money’s worth.’ ” The amendment reads:
“For the purрoses of this [subchapter] title [Internal Revenue] a relinquishment or promised relinquishment of dqwer, curtesy, or of a statutory estate created in lieu of dower or curtesy, or of other marital rights in the decedent’s property or estate, shall not be considered to any extent a consideration ‘in money or money’s worth.’ ” Revenue Act of 1932, c. 209, 47 Stat. 280, 26 U.S.C. § 412, 26 U.S.C.A. § 412.
It сannot be seriously contended that the language of this provision failed to cover such a transaction as is here involved. Although the provision was enacted as an amendment to section 303(d) of the Revenue Act of 1926, its express terms make it applicable to the whole title of which section 302(e) is part and therefore necessarily amend section 302(e) of the act.
Read in the light of the amendment, section 302(e), 26 U.S.C.A. § 411(e), now re *730 quires that-the value of the gross estate of the decedent shall be determined by including the value at the time of his death of all property to the extent of the interest therein held as joint tenants by the deceased and any other person; and the proviso of the section is qualified so that where it is shown that the property held in joint tenancy has been at any time acquired from the decedent, no part of the value can be excepted from the gross estate where the consideration was merely the relinquishment of marital rights.
.It is contended that the amendment should not be held to apply in the computation of the gross estate of the decedent herein notwithstanding he came to his death on June 9, 1932, subsequent to the enactment of the amendment of June 6, 1932. The argument is that Congress intended it to apply only to property held in joint tenancy which was acquired from the decedent after the date of the amendment. But we think that the amendment should be regarded as a declaratory definition of terms and that section 302(e) must be read as it is written with the meaning of its terms Settled by the amendment. By its express terms the section covers property held in joint tenancy “which is shown to have been acquired from the decedent at any time”. _ Whether Mr. Sheets would have any interest in any property as a jоint tenant with another at the time of his death could not be known until he died. Thereupon the taxable estate was to be computed, as required by the law, as it was at the time of death, and as the law then read, it was applicable to property held in joint tenancy acquired from the decedent at any time.
It was held in Knox v. McElligott,
(3) To so tax the property held in joint tenancy at the time of death was not violative of the duе process clause of the Fifth Amendment. All of the property held in the joint tenancy belonged to and came from the husband, and his death was the “generating source of important definite accessions to the property rights” of the surviving spouse. All that the wife had given for the interest held in joint tenancy was her agreement to waive certain of hеr marital rights in her husband’s property. Such interests of the wife were included in the husband’s gross estate under section 302 (b) and were taxable. As dower and marital rights were taxable, it fitted in with the general scheme of taxation to keep it taxable, notwithstanding its transformation into interests in joint tenancy in the husband and wife. The amendment which defined by limiting the meaning of the term “cоnsideration ‘in -money or money’s worth,’ ” although it excluded inchoate dower rights from the definition, was not arbitrary, capricious, or a confiscation or deprivation of property without due process.
The cases of Nichols v. Coolidge,
The Supreme Court has recognized that the principles decided in Nichols v. Coolidge, supra, and related cases, are not controlling upon the question of subjecting jointly owned property to the estate tax. In Tyler v. United States,
“Although the property here involved was held under a joint tenancy with the right of survivorship created by the 1915 transfer, the rights of the possible survivor were not then irrevocably fixed, since under the state laws the joint estate might have beеn terminated through voluntary conveyance by either party, through proceedings for partition, by an involuntary alienation under an execution. Cal.Code Civ. Procedure, § 752; Green v. Skinner,
“Nichols v. Coolidge.
The same conclusion was reached in Griswold v. Helvering,
The effect of the recent affirmance by the Supreme Court,
The language used by the Supreme Court in Tyler v. U. S.,
The majority opinion of the Board of Tax Appeals is to the effect that the petitioners failed to prove that the wife received or acquired her interest in the property in question for an adequate and full consideration in money or money’s worth (or for an amount less than such consideration) regardless of the amendment of 1932, and we find no error in that conclusion. We also agree that no consideration in money’s worth was shown by the delay in the divorce case which the wife agreed to without consenting to a dismissal or termination of the case. We think the conclusion of the Board of Tax Appeals was right.
Affirmed.
