29 N.W.2d 271 | Mich. | 1947
Plaintiffs are husband and wife and the parents of 11-year-old twin children, Beverly Ann and Ronald Arthur Stone, defendants herein. On October 31, 1942, each of the plaintiffs *196
owned an undivided half interest in a manufacturing business, as copartners, and on that date they transferred a quarter interest to each of the children, making them copartners with the parents, each parent and child thereafter owning a quarter interest. The transfers were made for the purpose of lawfully minimizing income tax, the parents having been advised by competent tax consultants that a separate return might be filed for the income of each of the four partners, thus avoiding the higher tax brackets theretofore encountered. Separate returns were filed for each of the four copartners for the remainder of 1942 and 1943. Thereafter the supreme court of the United States, inCommissioner of Internal Revenue v. Tower,
Defendants state the question involved as follows:
"Where a parent transfers an undivided share in a family partnership to his minor child under the mistaken belief that income accruing therefrom to the child may be separately returned on the child's Federal income tax return, and where the transfer is motivated entirely by this plan for lawful minimization of income tax and the child's guardian accepts the transfer on this assumption, and where subsequently by subsequent decision of the supreme court of the United States the parent is required to report the child's income as his own — may the parent have decree in equity revesting in him the property so transferred to the child and the proceeds, fruits and avails thereof?"
It is the position of defendants that (1) "a court of equity will not set aside transfers, conveyances, gifts or other legal transactions because of a mistake of law, pure and simple" and that (2) "a completed and absolute gift is irrevocable to the donor."
In support of the second proposition defendants cite authorities from other jurisdictions which do not squarely consider the effect of either mistake of fact or law upon the revocability of a gift. We held in Tuttle v. Doty,
In support of the first proposition defendants cite three Michigan cases, Crane v. Smith,
In Renard v. Clink,
"While it is a general rule that equity will not relieve against a mistake of law, this rule is not universal. Where parties, with knowledge of the facts, and without any inequitable incidents, have made an agreement or other instrument as they intended it should be, and the writing expresses the transaction as it was understood and designed to be made, equity will not allow a defense, or grant a reformation *199
or rescission, although one of the parties may have mistaken or misconceived its legal meaning, scope, or effect. Martin v.Hamlin,
To the same effect see Walter v. Walter,
The instant cases involve no compromise of doubtful legal rights, no question of the right to retain the benefits of a bargain, no circumstance making restitution inequitable to the donees or inexpedient because opposed to public interests. A taxpayer has the legal right to attempt, by lawful means, to minimize taxes (Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Tower,supra; Gregory v. Helvering,
Decree affirmed, without costs.
CARR, C.J., and BUTZEL, BUSHNELL, SHARPE, BOYLES, REID, and NORTH, JJ., concurred.