Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Holmes Estate

Citation326 U.S. 480,90 L.Ed. 228,66 S.Ct. 257
Decision Date02 January 1946
Docket NumberNo. 203,203
PartiesCOMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE v. HOLMES' ESTATE
CourtUnited States Supreme Court

See 327 U.S. 813, 66 S.Ct. 519.

Miss Helen R. Carloss, of Washington, D.C., for petitioner.

Mr. J. V. Wheat, of Houston, Tex., for respondent.

Mr. Justice RUTLEDGE delivered the opinion of the Court.

In White v. Poor, 296 U.S. 98, 56 S.Ct. 66, 80 L.Ed. 80, the question arose whether the power 'to alter, amend, or revoke' included the power of a decedent to terminate a trust so as to bring the trust estate within his gross estate for purposes of the transfer tax imposed by § 302(d) of the Revenue Act of 1926, c. 27, 44 Stat. 9, 71, 26 U.S.C.A. Int.Rev.Acts, page 228. The Court, finding it unnecessary to determine that question, disposed of the case upon another ground, The question is here again, this time inescapably, but with a further legislative history and a somewhat different setting of fact.

In 1936, immediately following the White decision, Congress revised § 302(d) by rewriting it into two separate paragraphs relating to 'revocable transfers,' one applying to transfers after June 22, 1936, the other to transfers on or prior to that date. These are now §§ 811(d)(1) and (2) of the Internal Revenue Code, 26 U.S.C.A. Int.Rev.Code, § 811(d)(1, 2), which are set forth in the margin.1 For present purposes the difference claimed to be important consisted in changing the phrase 'to alter, amend, or revoke' applying to transfers on or prior to June 22, 1936, so that in § 811(d)(1) it reads 'to alter, amend, revoke, or terminate,' as to transfers after that date.

However § 811(d)(2) governs the transfer in this case, since it was made in January, 1935, prior to the dividing date. And the question most mooted has been whether the change was one of substance or was only a clarifying amendment. Put differently, the principal issue is whether power to 'alter, amend or revoke' included power merely to terminate the interests created by the trust or required some further change.

The Tax Court and the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, one judge dissenting, have ruled that the change was substantial, not merely declaratory. 3 T.C. 571; 148 F.2d 740. Accordingly they have held that no deficiency resulted from the taxpayer's failure to include the value of the trust estate created by the decedent Holmes in his gross estate for estate tax purposes. The Commissioner maintains the contrary view. Because of alleged conflict with decisions from other circuits,2 certiorari was granted. 326 U.S. 702, 66 S.Ct. 40.

We think the Tax Court and the Court of Appeals were in error in their view of the statute's effect.

The facts were stipulated. In so far as necessary to state, they are as follows. On January 20, 1935, by a single trust indenture Holmes created three several irrevocable trusts, one for each of three sons then aged 22, 19 and 14 years respectively. Each was given the beneficial interest in one-third of a common fund consisting of corporate stock later converted into other assets. 3 The three trusts were identical in terms. Holmes was named and acted as trustee until his death October 5, 1940.

Each trust was to continue for a period of fifteen years, unless earlier terminated under power reserved to the grantor, or for a longer term on specified conditions summarized below. But the grantor reserved to himself during his lifetime the power to terminate any or all of the trusts and distribute the principal, with accumulated income, to the beneficiaries then entitled to receive it.4 He retained no power to revest in himself or his estate any portion of the corpus or income.

Various provisions for disposition over were made to cover contingencies created by the death of beneficiaries during continuance of the trust. Generally stated, the scheme was that the surviving issue of each son should take his share of the corpus, receiving it share and share alike, unconditionally if over 21; as beneficiaries until at- taining that age, if under it. If a son should die without issue, his 'share or trust' was to go 'pro rata' to the other two sons, or their surviving issue per stirpes; if either other son should be dead without issue, the survivor or his issue was to take the whole; and if all the sons should be deceased without issue, whatever might remain in the trust estate was given to the grantor's wife, if living; if not, to her heirs at law. The trust was to terminate in any event upon the death of the last survivor of the three sons and the expiration of twenty-one years thereafter.

The trustee was given broad discretionary power to apply each beneficiary's share of the corpus for his maintenance, welfare, comfort or happiness, with a precatory suggestion of liberality.

The income was subject to spendthrift provisions and discretionary power of accumulation. If not accumulated, it was to be distributed to the beneficiary, preferably in monthly instalments.

The principal contention is that the sum of the various provisions was to create or reserve to the decedent only a power to accelerate in time the enjoyment of the beneficial interests brought into being by the trusts; that these were vested interests; that no power was reserved to revest them or any of them in the donor or his estate or to change or alter them, or the terms of the gifts, in any manner other than by mere acceleration of enjoyment; and that the powers thus reserved are not sufficient to bring the trust estate, or any part of it, within the coverage of § 811(d)(2).5

This view presupposes two things. One is that termination of contingencies upon which enjoyment is dependent does not 'change, alter, or revoke' enjoyment; the other, that the power 'to alter, amend, or revoke' specified in § 811(d)(2) does not include a power to terminate contingencies which accelerate enjoyment, with the effect of making certain that the beneficiary taking will have it rather than others to whom it would or might inure if termination were longer deferred.

One difficulty with respondent's position is in its conception of 'enjoyment.' More than once recently we have emphasized that 'enjoyment' or 'emjoy,' as used in these and similar statutes, are not terms of art, but connote substantial present economic benefit rather than technical vesting of title or estates. Cf. United States v. Pelzer, 312 U.S. 399, 403, 61 S.Ct. 659, 85 L.Ed. 913; Fondren v. Commissioner, 324 U.S. 18, 20, 65 S.Ct. 499, 501; Commissioner v. Disston, 325 U.S. 442, 65 S.Ct. 1328, 158 A.L.R. 166.6 In this sense it is clear that none of the sons here had a present right to immediate enjoyment of either income or principal, see Commissioner v. Disston, supra, although each may have been invested with what respondent regards as a 'fee simple' in an equi able interest, subject to divestment by the contingency of the beneficiary's death during continuance of the trust. So long as it continued—and it might continue for the life of the survivor of the three sons and 21 years—it could not be said with assurance that any of the sons, or his issue, would come into present enjoyment of his share, or any part of it; for in connection with the possible occurrence of many contingencies, in- cluding the grantor's death and his earlier exercise of the power of termination, it is to be recalled that the grantor reserved to himself, while acting as trustee, the power to accumulate the income.

It seems obvious that one who has the power to terminate contingencies upon which the right of enjoyment is staked, so as to make certain that a beneficiary will have it who may never come into it if the power is not exercised, has power which affects not only the time of enjoyment but also the person or persons who may enjoy the donation. More therefore is involved than mere acceleration of the time of enjoyment. The very right of enjoyment is affected, the difference dependent upon the grantor's power being between present substantial benefit and the mere prospect or possibility, even the probability, that one may have it at some uncertain future time or perhaps not at all. A donor who keeps so strong a hold over the actual and immediate enjoyment of what he puts beyond his own power to retake has not diversted himself of that degree of control which § 811(d)(2) requires in order to avoid the tax.

But the respondent relies heavily upon the legislative history and the continued use of 'alter, amend, or revoke' in the 1936 revision, which at the same time introduced 'or terminate' to govern future transactions, as expressive of intention to differentiate the two classes of transfers. This view puts emphasis on the meaning of 'revoke' rather than of 'enjoyment,' and excludes from that term's scope a power not amounting to more than one of termination.

We think the history gives the opposite story. The 1936 revision resulted from the White decision, which raised doubt whether Congress had included the power to terminate in the words 'alter, amend, or revoke.' To clarify the matter Congress removed all doubt for the future by enacting § 811(d)(1). At the same time it adopted § 811(d)(2), which retained the earlier phrasing. This was from concern that retroactive application of § 811(d)(1) should not impose taxes on prior transfers not comprehended by the prior law, as the concluding sentence of § 811(d)(2) shows.7 Notwithstanding this and the doubt created by White v. Poor, supra, the report of the Committee on Ways and Means of the House of Representatives expressly states that the addition of 'or terminate' in § 811(d)(1) was 'declaratory of existing law.'8 Administrative interpretation, including Treasury Regulations, support this view,9 which also is either followed or indicated in decisions of the Circuit Courts of Appeals, except the one now in review.10 As we have pointed out, that view is more consonant with the structure and...

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