On March 16, 1923, Horace Abbott Cate made a deed of trust of all of his property, except his residence, and the question has arisen whether upon his death which took place June 11, 1926, the property transferred by the deed should have been considered a part of his gross estate for the purpose of computing the federal estate tax under section 302 (c, d) of the revenue act of 1926, 44 Stat. 9, 26 USCA § 1094 (c) and (d). The executor of his estate filed its return for the federal estate tax, and paid under protest the sum of $15,667.40 to the collector of internal revenue, the amount being computed on a gross estate of the value of $807,247.36, and a net estate of $689,129.57, after deducting' the sum of $12,180.37 for inheritance taxes paid to the state of Maryland and other taxes of the United States. This suit was brought to recover so much of this amount as should be determined to have been erroneously exacted by the United States, and the claim was made that in determining the property to be included in the gross estate for the purpose of taxation the value of the wife’s share, amounting in value to the sum of $598,406.71, should be left out, leaving a balance of $90,722.86 on which, after all deductions were made, the net tax would be $262.89. The amount of the claim therefore was $15,404.51, and for this sum, with interest, a verdict was rendered in the plaintiff’s favor in the District Court.
Three questions arose in the course of the trial: (1) Whether the deed of trust was made in contemplation of death; (2) whether the transfer covered by the deed of trust was intended to take effect in possession or enjoyment at or after death; and (3) whether the decedent retained a power to effect a change in the enjoyment of the trust property through the exercise of a power to alter, amend, or revoke, which would render the property taxable. The applicable statutory provisions are set out in the margin. 1
In determining the first question, it is necessary to consider the terms of the deed, *853 the circumstances under which it was made, and the instructions of the District Judge u«der which the question was t submitted to the jury. Under the deed, the legal title to the property covered thereby, and the custody and possession thereof, were immediately transferred to the trustee; the net' income was to be paid to the grantor, during his life, and after his death the trustee was to convey one-half of the corpus to the widow of the grantor, if then living, and to hold the remaining half in trust for the children and descendants of the deceased children of the grantor, upon common limitations. If the grantor should die without leaving issue, it was provided that the income of the remaining half of the fund should likewise be paid to the widow, during her life, and that upon her death the principal should be paid to the living nephews and nieces of the grantor, per capita, the children of deceased nephews and nieces to take the share of their parent, per stirpes. In case the wife of the grantor should predecease him, it was provided that three-fourths of the entire trust estate should be held upon the same trusts for his issue, and on failure of issue for nephews and nieces in the shares above described; the remaining one-fourth to be held for the benefit of the stepson of the grantor and to be paid to him when he should arrive at 30 years of age, with contingent remainder to those entitled to the three-fourths share. It was provided that the grantor should have no right to revoke the deed, but should have the right to make certain additions and changes, as provided in the following paragraph: “The said Horace Abbott Cate reserves the right at all times to add to the trust property in his discretion and to change, alter and vary, by paper or papers in writing lodged with said trustee during his lifetime, the provisions of this deed relative to the dispositions of the trust property after his death, but shall have no right to exclude his wife from the benefits hereof or to change or alter the life estate herein reserved by him to himself or to have any portion of the principal paid over or delivered to him or to his estate upon his death, such right being hereby expressly denied.”
The right herein reserved to change the trust settlement was not exercised, and the grantor died without issue.
The grantor was 53 years of age at the time of the execution of the deed, and died three years thereafter. His parents were persons of financial means, and as we have seen, the value of his estate was in excess of $800,000. He had never had any business training or experience, but was interested in mechanics, and made use of his mechanical ability in the Great War, during which he served as major in the Ordinance Department of the Army. lie was discharged from the Army in April, 1919. He was a large, vigorous man, extremely fond of outdoor life in the northern woods, where he and his wife spent five or six months in each year in a camp in a remote district in Canada, accessible only by canoe and by long portages. Communication with the outside world was difficult, slow, and uncertain.
His parents, particularly his mother, attended to all of his business affairs. She died on January 26, 1921, and his father a year later, and when he was thus for the first time charged with the management of his own affairs, he was oppressed by the responsibility involved. The evidence shows that he was unquestionably influenced by these circumstances to make a transfer of his property in trust to the Safe Deposit & Trust Company of Baltimore, an institution experienced in such matters, so that his affairs might be taken care of during his long absences from civilization. The testimony indicated that his purpose in making the deed was mainly to take care of his business which he felt he was not capable of doing himself, and that he was also moved by a desire to protect his wife by definite provision free from the dangers of debts or incompetent management.
When the deed was executed, he was apparently enjoying his usual health and vigor, was actively engaged in the laborious work of dismantling his old home, and was planning an addition to his camp; and in the following summer, he went to the woods as usual and indulged in the vigorous activity which his life there entailed. During the summer of 1923, after the execution of the deed, he suffered from serious eye trouble and was advised to give up smoking, and to cut down his consumption of intoxicating liquors. His death in June, 1926, was caused by cirrhosis of the liver, a disease which ordinarily progresses slowly and may be in existence for two to four years before death. It was probably induced in this case by the regular use of alcohol in fairly large quantities during a period of forty years.
The government contends that it is reasonable to infer that although the grantor was apparently healthy in March, 1923, he was himself cognizant of a failing condition, *854 and the eye trouble during the following summer is referred to in this connection. There was, however, no substantial evidence that the making of the deed was influenced by consciousness of approaching death on the part of the grantor. Nevertheless, there were other circumstances surrounding the execution of the deed which led the District Judge to submit to the jury the question as to whether the deed was made in contemplation of death. It covered substantially all of his property, except the family residence, then under contract of sale to the city of Baltimore for the sum of $87,000. Six days after the deed of trust was executed, the decedent made a new will in which he provided that if he should die before receiving the proceeds of the sale of the residence they should be added to the trust property; otherwise it should fall into the residue which was given to his wife for life, and, if not living, then to the trust. It was suggested that this will was merely an auxiliary to the testamentary disposition, which, it was argued, the deed of trust contained.
Upon these salient facts, the District Judge instructed the jury in the words of the Chief Justice in United States v. Wells,
Under these circumstances, we are of the opinion that the jury were not led to find an erroneous verdict by the instructions of the District Judge. It is now recognized that the reference in the statute to contemplation of death “is not to the general expectation of death which all entertain. It must be a particular concern, giving rise to a definite motive. * * * The dominant purpose is to reach substitutes for testamentary dispositions and thus to prevent the evasion of the estate tax.” United States v. Wells,
The second question to be considered is whether the transfer covered by the deed of trust was intended to take effect in possession or enjoyment at or after the death of the grantor. We are concerned only with the value of one-half of the corpus and a life estate in the other half, which was the interest acquired by the wife under the deed; for it is conceded that the power, reserved by the grantor to vary the provisions of the deed relative to the disposition of the remaining interest in the property, was sufficient to make the transfer to this extent one in which the enjoyment thereof was subject to change by the grantor at the date of his death within section 302 (d) of the Revenue Act of 1926 (26 USCA § 1094 (d). See Porter v. Commissioner,
“In its plan and scope the tax is one imposed on transfers at death or made in contemplation of death and is measured by the value at death of the interest which is transferred. * * * One may freely give his property to another by absolute gift without subjecting himself or his estate to a tax, but we are asked to say that this statute means that he may not make a gift inter vivos, equally absolutely and complete, without subjecting it to a tax if the gift takes the form of a life estate in one with remainder over to another at or after the donor’s death. It would require plain and compelling language to justify so incongruous a result and we think it is wanting in the present statute. * * *
“In the light of the general purpose of the statute and the language of section 401 explicitly imposing the tax on net estates of decedents, we think it at least doubtful whether the trusts or interests in a trust intended to be reached by the phrase in section 402 (c) ‘to take effect in possession or enjoyment at or after his death,’ include any others than those passing from the possession, enjoyment or control of the donor at his death and so taxable as transfers at death under section 401. That doubt must be resolved in favor of the taxpayer. * * *»
This language was quoted and held controlling in May v. Heiner,
In contrast with these holdings it was decided in Klein v. United States,
The government now concedes that section 302 (c) of the statute does not apply to gifts inter vivos fully consummated and beyond recall, merely because the gift is one in which the donee does not come into the actual enjoyment of the property until the death of the donor; but it nevertheless contends that the statute applies in all cases in which the gift is incomplete during the life of the donor in the sense that the title to the property does not vest in any other person by virtue of the execution of the grant. And it is said with regard to the present case that the wife’s interest prior to her husband’s death was purely contingent, since not until then could it be ascertained whether she would survive, and hence his death was the generating source which brought into being new and enlarged property rights for her enjoyment. It is insisted that the case is governed by the decision in Klein v. United States, supra (see, also, Sargent v. White (C. C. A.)
It may be admitted that the remainders created for the benefit of Mrs. Cate were contingent in character, in that they were conditioned upon her survival; but that fact does not demonstrate the similarity of this case to Klein v. United States, supra. „ That decision was based not upon the contingent nature of the gift to the wife, but upon the express reservation of title to the corpus in case of her prior death by the grantor. The material question is not whether there was a vesting of title in a particular grantee, but whether there is a divesting of title by the grantor, or as the thought was expressed by Judge Rose in Curley v. Tait (D. C.)
It was expressly said in Klein v. United States, supra, that the case was not controlled by the niceties of the law of contingent and vested remainders, but by the plain fact that the death of the grantor was the indispensable event which effected the transmission of the estate from the dead to the living. See, also, Corliss v. Bowers,
The government, however, suggests there was not a complete divestment of all possibility of interest in the property by the grantor, because the deed made no provision for the disposition of the property after the grantor’s death in case he should leave surviving no issue of his own, no nephews or nieces (of whom there were thirteen when the deed was executed) or descendants of nieces and nephews, and no stepson. Such a possibility was too remote in our opinion to serve as the basis for the imposition of the tax, and certain decisions of the courts support this view. In McCormick v. Burnet,
In Com’r v. Wallace (C. C. A.)
Finally, it is contended by the government that the property should be included in the taxable estate because the grantor reserved the right to change “the provisions of this deed relative to the dispositions of the trust property after his death, but shall have no right to exclude his wife from the benefits hereof.” The District Judge held, in our opinion correctly, that the fair import of the provision for the wife is that the grantor did not reserve the power to change the interest given to her. Immediately following that provision, the grantor expressly excludes from the power any right to change the life estate reserved to himself, or to direct that any portion of the principal be paid back to him or to his estate upon his death. The contention is nevertheless made that all of the property held in trust was subject at least to a contingent power in the grantor to alter the ultimate disposition among beneficiaries, in the event that his wife should predecease him; and it is said that for this reason the transfer in trust was both intended to take effect in possession or enjoyment at the grantor’s death, under section 302 (c), and was subject at the date of his death to a power to alter or amend, under section 302 (d) of the act.
It is true that in Reinecke v. Northern Trust Company,
Section 302 (d) requires the inclusion in the taxable estate of property covered by a deed, in which a power to change, is reserved, even though the passing of title takes place at the time of the transfer and is not deferred until the grantor’s death. The subsection is applicable although the grantor disclaims power to regain the property for himself or for his estate. Porter v. Commissioner,
Affirmed.
Notes
“ 1 Sec. 1094. Gross estate; value of. 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, real or personal, tangible or intangible, wherever situated— * * *
“(c) To the extent of any interest therein of which the decedent has at any time made a transfer, by trust or otherwise, in contemplation of or intended to take effect in possession or enjoyment at or after his death, except in case of a bona fide sale for an adequate and full consideration in money or money’s worth.' * * *
“(d) To the extent of any interest therein of which the decedent has at any 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, either by the decedent alone or in conjunction with any person, to alter, amend, or revoke. * * * ”
It may be noted that shortly after these decisions, Congress amended section 302 (c) in order to make taxable transfers by a trust where the life estate is reserved by the grantor. Act of March 3, 1931, 46 Stat. 1516, Act of June 6, 1932, § 803 (a), 47 Stat. 279 (26 USOA § 1094 (c).
