280 F. 742 | W.D.N.Y. | 1921
This is an action by the executors of the will of William Austin Wadsworth, deceased, to recover from Vincent H. Riordan, collector of internal revenue, federal estate taxes amounting to $38,310, with interest, illegally collected under the acts of March 3 and October 3, 1917. The principal question is whether a gift of bonds of the admitted value of $273,649.17, made by the deceased to his wife nine days before his death, is properly included as part of his gross estate under section 202 (b) of the act of 1916 (39 Stat. 777) as a gift “made in contemplation of death.” The parts of the statute involved herein provide for imposing a tax on the transfer of the net estate of every person dying after the passage of the act, and, after specifying the manner of determining the gross estate, reads:
“(b) Any transfer of a material part of bis property in the nature of a final disposition or distribution thereof, made by the decedent within two years prior to his death without such a consideration, shall, unless shown to the contrary, be deemed to have been made in contemplation of death within the meaning of this title.”
The salient facts as proven at the trial are as follows: Maj. Wads-worth died on May 2, 1918, at the age of 71 years, and the value of his estate approximated $2,500,000, not including the bonds which are the subject of this controversy; and thereafter, on November 25, 1918, his executors filed an estate tax return with the commissioner and paid a tax of $249,475.51. The bonds transferred to his wife were not included in the tax return, but, had they been, the estate tax would have been larger by the amount of $38,310.89. There was an overpayment of $9,294.12 on the tax paid by the executors, arising from a deduction or allowance of a testamentary gift to the Wadsworth I Jbrary amounting to $100,000. The commissioner retained the overpayment, applying it on the tax which he claimed the estate owed for the gift of the bonds to Mrs. Wadsworth. The executors protested, and the additional balance required by the commissioner was paid, and this action brought for a refund of the amount assessed on the bonds.
The plaintiffs, in my opinion, are entitled to judgment against the .United States internal revenue collector for a return of the tax illegally assessed' on the bonds in question and paid by the plaintiffs under protest.
A decree may be entered, with costs.