*78 Decision will be entered under Rule 155.
All the assets of H and W consisted of community property in which W had a one-half vested interest under California law. H's will provided for the establishment of a testamentary trust out of the residue of his estate after a minor bequest of his interest in certain tangible personal property to W. His will also provided for the payment of all death taxes out of the residue of his estate. Upon his death, all of the community property was subject to administration as part of his probate estate prior to distribution of W's one-half interest therein. The probate estate in fact paid all the death taxes. It also received certain income during probate administration. Upon final distribution of the estate (after payment of debts and distribution of the items of tangible personal property to W), the assets were equally divided between W (as her purported interest in the community property) and the residuary trust. As a result of the equal division, W was in effect charged with one-half of the death taxes and received the benefit of only one-half of the probate income. W was the life beneficiary under the trust. Held: Under applicable*79 California law, all of the probate income belonged to W, whether paid to her directly by the estate or by the testamentary trust, and the record fails to show that she received anything more than one-half thereof. In the circumstances, the testamentary trust must be treated as overfunded to the extent of one-half of the net probate income as well as to the extent of one-half of the death taxes, and since W had a life interest in the testamentary trust, the corpus of that trust, to the extent of such overfunding, was includable in W's gross estate under
*1070 OPINION
The Commissioner determined an estate tax deficiency of $ 10,684.73 against the Estate of Gertrude Hoffman. Several issues have been resolved by agreement of the parties. The *81 remaining dispute concerns property which was subject to administration of the probate estate of Gertrude Hoffman's late husband and which, on completion of administration, was transferred to a testamentary trust established by him of which she was the trustee and the sole income beneficiary for life. The question presented is whether certain assets thus transferred to the trust belonged to Gertrude Hoffman, and, if so, whether in the circumstances of this case her failure to receive them constituted a transfer thereof by her to the trust, thus causing such assets to be included in her gross estate by reason of her life interest pursuant to
Gertrude Hoffman (hereinafter sometimes referred to as the decedent), a resident of Los Angeles, Calif., died on July 2, 1976. The executors are her two children, Arnold E. Hoffman and Sharlene Leventhal, of Anaheim, Calif., and Los Angeles, Calif., respectively. The estate tax return was filed with the Los Angeles, Calif., District Director.
Isadore Hoffman, the decedent's husband, died on September 30, 1971, and the decedent was named as executrix of *82 his will. His estate consisted solely of community property. During the period of administration, the estate received interest, net of income taxes in the amount of $ 28,695.63. The estate paid Federal estate tax of $ 24,489.22, and State inheritance tax of $ 3,778, or a total of $ 28,267.22 in death taxes.
Because Isadore's estate was solely community property, the decedent was entitled to receive one-half of the estate outright. In respect of the remainder, Isadore's will provided that all assets aside from automobiles and specified items of tangible personal property (which were bequeathed directly to his wife) 1 were to be placed in a trust of which the decedent was *1071 named as the sole trustee. The income from the trust was to be paid to the decedent during her lifetime, together with so much of the principal as was necessary to provide her with an annual income, from all sources, of $ 10,000. At her death, the remaining principal and any undistributed income were to be paid to the children.
*83 Isadore's will included a provision which sought to discourage litigation contesting the will. This "no contest" provision purported to deny the benefits of the testamentary disposition (including the trust to be created thereunder) to any party who should "contest in any court any of the provisions of this instrument." The will also included a provision directing that all estate and inheritance taxes payable by reason of Isadore's decease be paid out of the residue of the estate.
Prior to division of the estate into the share to be received by the decedent outright and the share to be received by her in trust, the Federal estate tax and State inheritance tax were both paid. The interest income received by the estate, net of income taxes paid thereon, was apparently lumped together with all other estate assets subject to the allocation between the decedent's community share and the testamentary trust.
The Government contends that the assets of Isadore's estate were improperly apportioned between Gertrude Hoffman's community share and the testamentary trust, resulting in overfunding of the trust in the amount of $ 28,481.42. More specifically, the Government's position is that the*84 addition of the probate income (here, the net interest after income taxes) to the probate estate, and subtraction of estate and inheritance taxes from the probate estate, both prior to apportionment by equal division of the estate between the surviving spouse's community share and the testamentary trust, were improper under California law. According to the Government, all probate income should have been distributed to the decedent (one-half attributable to the wife's community property rights and the other half attributable to her rights as income beneficiary of the testamentary trust), and the estate and inheritance tax burden should have been borne solely by the *1072 husband's one-half interest in the community property (and not equally by the wife and the husband's estate). Based on this premise, the decedent in effect transferred $ 28,481.42 2*85 to the testamentary trust, in which she had a lifetime interest, with the result of inclusion of this amount in the decedent's estate under
Although petitioner concedes that estate and inheritance taxes should have been allocated solely to the husband's one-half interest in the community property and thus charged ultimately against the testamentary trust, it contends that probate income was properly allocated. Petitioner further contests the Government's determination of the amount overfunded*86 as a result of the improper tax allocation, but concedes that any amount overfunded is a transfer described in
1. Income allocation. -- Under California law, one-half of community property belongs to the surviving spouse.
*88 While there is no doubt that these rights of the decedent entitled her to the probate income attributable to her one-half share of the community property (see
in the case of a testamentary trust, unless the will provides otherwise, the life tenant's right to income dates from the death of the testator rather than the date of distribution.
Thus, it is argued, the income earned by the estate's share of the community property during the period of administration was earned for the benefit of the surviving wife (the decedent herein).
We agree with the Government that probate income attributable to the estate's*89 share of the community property rightfully belonged to the wife. She apparently chose to leave it in the trust, and whatever her reason for doing so, the fact remains that by failing to assert her rights to this property she effectively transferred it to the trust in which she had a *1074 lifetime income interest. Under
Petitioner seeks to avoid this result by a formalistic argument that California law requires distribution of the estate's share of the probate income directly to the testamentary trustee, regardless of the proper disposition of the income thereafter under trust administration. 7 We find this argument unpersuasive.
*90 It may well be that, as a matter of form under California law, the income earned during administration was technically distributable to the testamentary trust upon completion of administration; nevertheless, the surviving wife was then entitled to have that income paid over to her as the income beneficiary of the testamentary trust. In substance, the probate income belonged to the wife, and it is a matter of no consequence whether it was paid to her directly by the husband's estate or whether it first passed from the estate to the testamentary trust and then was distributed by the testamentary trustee to herself as life beneficiary of that trust. In short, it was her income, regardless of the number of steps it would formally take for it to reach her.
Certainly, if the widow as testamentary trustee had distributed the probate income to herself as beneficiary, and, if she in turn had then affirmatively returned it to herself as trustee to become part of the trust corpus, there could be no serious question that
2. Transfer for value. -- On brief, petitioner's primary argument involves a novel approach to avoid inclusion of the transferred property in the decedent's estate under
As support for its position, petitioner analogizes this situation to the "widow's election" case, in which a widow who forfeits her community property rights, in exchange for a life estate in all of the community under her husband's will, is allowed a "credit" against the amount transferred equal to the *1076 value of the interest which she receives. See
In the "widow's election" situation, the widow is forced to do just that: make an election between the exercise of her rights in her share of the community property provided for under State law, and a life interest in all of the community property, which interest can be obtained only by compliance with a provision of her husband's will requiring the forfeiture of her State law rights. In contrast, the decedent here was given a life estate in her husband's share of the community property without any requirement that she relinquish any of her State law rights. In other words, there was no election to be made. Petitioner attempts to treat the present situation as the equivalent of such an election, in reliance upon the improper allocation of estate assets and the "no contest" provision in the will. We hold otherwise.
It cannot be said that the decedent "sold" or "exchanged" the transferred portion of her community share for a life estate in her husband's share, since she would have received the life estate even if there had been no such transfer due to an improper allocation. Moreover, we are unconvinced that, had the decedent challenged the improper*95 allocation, she would have suffered a forfeiture of her rights under the will. The "no contest" clause by its terms applied only to a contest of a provision of the will, and a challenge to the allocation of the estate assets would have in no way brought into question the validity of any provision of the will. In fact, the will expressly provided that estate and inheritance taxes were to be paid out of the residue of the estate, and, thus, a challenge to an allocation apportioning the taxes in a different manner would have upheld, rather than controverted, a provision of the will.
For these reasons, the transfer by the decedent to the trust was not a bona fide sale for consideration, and the amount transferred must be included in the decedent's gross estate, in full, pursuant to
3. Amount to be included under
The items which were improperly allocated, between the decedent's community property share and the testamentary trust, were probate income and death taxes. In the absence of evidence to the contrary, we must assume that the probate income was received in cash, and that cash was paid to satisfy the death taxes. We have previously held that the decedent had the beneficial interest in all of the probate income; thus, it was cash or a right thereto that she was deprived of when one-half of the income was distributed to the trust, regardless*97 of the form of that distribution (see note 8 supra). The death taxes should have been paid from the residuary of the estate after its separation from the decedent's community share; instead, by virtue of the improper allocation, cash which should have been allocated to the community share was used to pay the taxes. Because in both instances it was cash that was improperly shifted from the community share to the residuary (and then its equivalent to the testamentary trust), no issue is presented as to differing values of other assets on the date of distribution and the date of decedent's death. The Government's computation of the amount transferred ($ 28,481.42) is correct, whether considered as cash, right to cash, or cash equivalent.
Moreover, petitioner's computations involve a valuation of a certain mix of assets supposedly transferred to the trust by the widow. But even if such valuation were otherwise relevant, petitioner has failed to demonstrate, in support of its confusing computations, that those same assets were still in the trust on the date of the wife's death.
*1078 In accordance with the foregoing,
Decision will be entered under Rule 155.*98
Footnotes
1. The first and final account of the executrix indicates that the only tangible personal property of any value thus bequeathed directly to his wife consisted of an automobile valued at $ 600 and household furniture and furnishings valued at $ 200. Since she in any event owned one-half of each of these items by reason of her community property interest, the amounts bequeathed consisted of the remaining one-half owned by the husband.↩
2. This $ 28,481.42 figure represents the sum of one-half of the net income of the estate ($ 14,347.81) and one-half of the death taxes ($ 14,133.61).↩
3.
SEC. 2036 . TRANSFERS WITH RETAINED LIFE ESTATE.(a) General Rule. -- The value of the gross estate shall include the value of all property to the extent of any interest therein of which the decedent has at any time made a transfer (except in case of a bona fide sale for an adequate and full consideration in money or money's worth), by trust or otherwise, under which he has retained for his life or for any period not ascertainable without reference to his death or for any period which does not in fact end before his death --
(1) the possession or enjoyment of, or the right to the income from, the property, or
(2) the right, either alone or in conjunction with any person, to designate the persons who shall possess or enjoy the income therefrom.↩
4.
Sec. 201 . Title of surviving spouse; portion subject to testamentary disposition or successionUpon the death of either husband or wife, one-half of the community property belongs to the surviving spouse; the other half is subject to the testamentary disposition of the decedent * * *↩
5.
Sec. 202 . Death of husband, property subject to debts and administration, disposal; death of wife, husband's powers and duties relating to propertyCommunity property passing from the control of the husband, either by reason of his death or by virtue of testamentary disposition by the wife, is subject to his debts and to administration and disposal under the provisions of Division 3 of this code * * *↩
6. Petitioner, as noted above, has conceded that any overfunding of the trust "is clearly a transfer described in
sec. 2036↩ of the Code." Petitioner's Opening Brief at p. 15.7. See
In re De Laveaga's Estate, 50 Cal. 2d 480">50 Cal. 2d 480 , 326 P.2d 129">326 P.2d 129, 132↩ (1958).8. It is, of course, a matter of no consequence whether the particular cash amount, or the equivalent in other assets, found its way into the testamentary trust as a result of the equal division (between the widow and the testamentary trust) of all the remaining assets at the time of completion of administration of the husband's estate.↩
9. See note 6 supra↩.
10. See note 3 supra. See also
sec. 2043(a), I.R.C. 1954 , which provides that when a transfer is made for insufficient consideration, only the excess of the amount transferred over the consideration received is included in the gross estate undersec. 2036↩ .11. We note that such equal distribution seems to have been proposed by counsel for the estate and the widow, herself, as executrix.↩
12. See sec. 20.2031-1(b), Estate Tax Regs.↩