This is a petition to review an order of the Board of Tax Appeals affirming a deficiency in the petitioner’s income tax for 1928. By the third clause of his will, drawn in 1895, *714 the petitioner’s husband made the following disposition: “I do hereby give bequeath and devise unto my wife * * * for and during the term of her natural life, the possession, management and control and the rents, profits, use and income of all the rest residue and remainder of all my personal and real property.” He then devised and bequeathed the remainder to trustees in trust to divide it into seven equal shares, one of which was to be held for each of his four sons and three daughters. The trustees were to use the income of each of the sons’ shares for his support as they might “deem proper” until he became twenty-one, thereafter to pay him the whole income until he was twenty-five, and at twenty-five to give him the principal; “and he is to have and to hold for and during his lifetime the possession, use, income and profits of his own share and he is to have entire control and management as he may deem best for his own interests.” The remainder was limited to the sons’ next of kin in default of appointment by will among his descendants. The shares of the daughters differed only in being held in trust until their death. The testator died in 1895, leaving only personal property; the widow qualified as an executrix but did not get possession of the residue as life tenant, and, though on occasion consulted by her fellow executors, never took an active part in the management of the estate. On April 30,1928, having adequate means of her own, she assigned to her children by deed all “the income” to which she was entitled under the third clause of the will. At that time all the children were living, except one daughter who had left three children; the deed gave one-seventh of the life interest to each stirps.
The Commissioner found, and the Board held, that the assignment of the income did not pass the whole legal interest, because the bequest included not only the income which she did assign, but the “possession, management and control” which she did not. Thus the case feE within the doctrine of such decisions as Lucas v. Earl,
Cases like Lucas v. Earl, supra, 281 U. S. Ill,
Order reversed; deficiency expunged.
