This appeal is from an order of the Tax Court, assessing against executors a deficiency in their estate taxes. The cause was tried upon stipulated facts, the substance of which was as follows. Before 1918, the testator had taken out policies of life insurance, aggregating nearly a million dollars, upon which he had borrowed before June 1, 1932, all that the insurers would lend. On that day he delivered and assigned all the policies to four trustees, upon trust to hold them until they became payable, and then to collect and hold the proceeds as the principal of a trust fund. Any income derived "during the life of the set-tlor,” they were to apply to the use of his descendants, and upon his death they were to divide the principal into shares and dispose of both principal and income in ways not material here. The deed gave power to the trustees to use all dividends declared, to pay premiums and interest on the loans, and to borrow upon the policies for the same purpose. This they did, paying in all over $114,000 before the testator’s death in 1937. That was not, however, enough to keep the policies alive, and the testator himself made up the difference, over $183,000, out of his own resources. At his death the policies had a net value of $421,815.66, which the Commissioner included in the estate, as the proceeds of a gift made in contemplation of death under § 302(c) of the Internal Revenue Act of 1926, 26 U.S.C.A. Int.Rev.Acts, page 227; and the ensuing tax is the subject of this suit. It was stipulated that the gift of the policies “was motivated solely by the decedent’s desire to avoid' estate taxes thereon, and was not otherwise made in contemplation of death within the meaning of the Revenue'Acts of 1926 and 1932 as amended, 26 U.S.C.A. Int.Rev.Code § 811(c), or of the regulations thereunder.” Although the deed provided for the disposition of any income derived from the policies during the donor’s life, not only was no income ever so derived, but we assume that the parties understood that none would be, and that — as proved to be the case —the donor would himself be obliged generously to contribute, if the policies were to be kept alive. Furthermore, we assume that the policies were all payable to the donor’s executors, so that, if he had died without executing the deed, they would have been a part of his taxable estate, regardless of the time when he took them out. (The executors’ argument that they would not have been, if so payable, is so clearly without basis that we need not discuss it.) It is also clear that the executors would not have been entitled to the deduction of $40,-000, allowable when policies are made payable to a beneficiary. The policies were in effect the same as obligations for the payment of money to the donor’s executors at *154 his death, and the bare question is presented whether, when the obligee of such an obligation transfers it for the purpose of escaping estate taxes and for that purpose alone, the transfer is “in contemplation of death” within § 302(c) of the Revenue Act of 1926.
In spite of the fact that the proper interpretation of that language has been the subject of a good many decisions, United States, v. Wells,
When the property produces no income, living the donor, or when it does, and he reserves it to himself, it may be open to question whether any motive can exclude it from his estate. However, we need not go so far; and in First Trust & Deposit Company v. Shaughnessy, 2 Cir.,
Order affirmed.
