*127 Decision will be entered under Rule 155.
Decedent established a life insurance trust. The trustee applied for the policy on decedent's life and paid the initial premium with a check of decedent's in the exact amount of the premium. Decedent died 3 months later. Held, the trustee purchased the policy in his capacity as decedent's agent rather than as an independent trustee. Held, further, the policy proceeds are includable in decedent's estate under
*51 OPINION
Respondent determined a deficiency of $ 317,513.19 in petitioner's Federal estate tax. The sole issue for decision is whether petitioner's gross estate includes, pursuant to the provisions of
*129 *52 The case was submitted fully stipulated pursuant to Rule 122. The stipulation of facts and exhibits attached thereto are incorporated herein by this reference.
Petitioner is the Estate of Tetsuo Kurihara (Kurihara) represented by its administratrix, Eleanore Kurihara. At the time she filed the petition, Eleanore Kurihara resided in Bedminster, N.J.
By a trust agreement, dated July 26, 1977, Kurihara, as grantor, and Daniel and Harold Topper (the Toppers), as trustees, agreed to the creation of an irrevocable trust for the benefit of Kurihara's spouse and two children. The trust agreement recited that Kurihara, the "initiator" of life insurance policy number 10010395, issued by the Columbian Mutual Life Insurance Co. (Columbian Mutual) on his life, assigned to the trustees all right, title, and interest in such policy.
Also on July 26, 1977, Daniel Topper, as trustee, applied for $ 1 million of insurance on Kurihara's life. Kurihara signed the application as the proposed insured. The Toppers, as trustees, were named the owners and beneficiaries. The application specifically designated the policy bearing the number 10010395. The application also provided that the policy*130 "shall not take effect * * * unless and until the policy has been issued and delivered and the full first premium * * * has been paid and accepted by the Company during the lifetime and condition of health of the Proposed Insured as stated in the application." The aforesaid policy (1-year renewable and convertible term) was issued on August 20, 1977, with a "policy date" of August 1, 1977, and with an annual premium of $ 4,040.
On September 8, 1977, Kurihara drew a check to the order of "Daniel Topper, Trustee" for $ 4,040. 2 A notation on the check stated that the funds were for the "premium for Life Ins. No. 10010395 Columbian Mutual Life." Topper endorsed the check to the order of Columbian Mutual in payment of the initial premium.
Pursuant to the terms of both the insurance policy and the trust agreement, the trustees owned and were the beneficiaries of the policy. 3 Kurihara retained no interest in the trust, *53 reserving*131 only the right to add additional life insurance policies on his life to the trust.
*132 Kurihara died in an automobile accident on November 16, 1977, at the age of 43. After Kurihara's death, the trustees received the insurance policy proceeds of $ 1 million plus interest of $ 9,374.97. Petitioner did not include any part of the $ 1,009,374.97 in the gross estate.
The case law which has been developed in respect of the applicability of
We start our review our own decision and opinion in
If the decedent had purchased a life insurance policy, initially retaining the ownership in herself, and thereafter*135 assigned it to her children, there clearly would have been a "transfer" of an interest in the policy. If, on the other hand, decedent had given money to her children, and they, entirely on their own volition, had chosen to purchase an insurance policy on her life, it would be equally clear that only the money would have been "transferred."
The purpose of
Finally, we stated that we agreed with
*137 We now turn to a tracing of the fate of Coleman and its rationale. As that tracing will show, the decision in Coleman remains unchallenged, although, as often occurs, segments of the rationale have been lifted out of the context of our opinion and rejected as applied to different factual circumstances.
In
Next in sequence is
In Bel, a*139 1-year-term accidental death policy had been purchased more than 3 years prior to death but the last 1-year term had obviously commenced within the proscribed 3-year period; decedent's children were the owners of the policy from inception and decedent had paid all the premiums. The Fifth Circuit held that the proceeds of the policy were includable in decedent's gross estate on the ground that the policy, being a 1-year-term accidental death policy, was brought into existence each year and that, by paying the premiums each year, "The decedent, and the decedent alone, beamed the accidental death policy at his children, for by paying the premium he designated ownership of the policy and created in his children all of the contractual rights to the insurance benefits. These were acts of transfer." (See
It is settled law in this court that the premiums paid in contemplation of death, not the whole of the life insurance proceeds, are includable in the decedent's gross estate under
*143 Next in sequence is
In
The problem was next discussed in
*146 Finally, we come to
Bel holds that there is no practical difference between, on the one hand, purchasing a policy in one's own name and then transferring it, and on the other, purchasing the policy in someone else's name. These two acts, identical in practice, should therefore have the same tax consequences. There can be a practical difference, however, between buying insurance for someone and giving that person money, even if the money is eventually used to purchase insurance. Unlike Mr. Bel, Beverly Hope bought no policies and paid no premiums; she only gave cash, in trust, to her children. The government argues that the district court was correct in holding that the decedent and her husband provided the funds to the trustee, and that in substance it was the decedent who procured the policies and transferred them to the trust. We cannot accept this contention. Although Beverly Hope did fill out the initial application form for the insurance policies, the court could not conclude from this alone that, in the language of Bel, she "beamed the proceeds*148 at her children." Such a conclusion would require a factual determination that the trustee, Byron A. Whitmarsh, had no discretion to invest the trust assets, but was in fact controlled by the decedent, acting as the decedent's agent when he paid the premiums. Nowhere, however, was it stipulated that the grantor controlled the trustee, or that the trustee's powers were confined. On the contrary, the trust agreement is irrevocable and vests broad powers in the trustee, particularly with regard to investments. Consequently, we hold that the district court erred when it decided, as a matter of law, that a transfer occurred for purposes of
*60 We think it clear from the foregoing analysis that the ultimate questions in the instant case are: (1) Did the payment of the initial (and only) premium 11 within the proscribed 3-year period create the ownership rights in the policy on decedent's life; (2) did the decedent pay that premium? *149 We think that both questions should be answered in the affirmative.
As to the first question, we note at the outset that the fact decedent may 12 not have formally acquired and then transferred the ownership rights in the policy is immaterial.
*150 If the decedent had paid the initial premium directly to the insurance company, the answer to the second question would have been self-evident and, as a consequence, the proceeds of the policy would clearly have been includable in the decedent's gross estate under
*152 Petitioners have laid great stress on our statement in
We hold that the proceeds of the insurance policy in question are includable in decedent's gross estate.
Decision will be entered under Rule 155.
Whitaker, J., concurring: While I concur in the result reached in this case, I do not agree with the Court's method of achieving that result. This is a relatively simple case, and it should be decided on that basis. It is not a satisfactory vehicle *62 for an effort to*153 synthesize all the case law in this area (on the assumption, which is open to question, that such can be done or should be attempted). The majority's opinion will, I fear, carry us into an arena of "certitude" with which we, in the context of a different vehicle, might well find ourselves in disagreement.
The trust agreement between decedent and the trustees was entered into on July 26, 1977. It provides, in pertinent part:
1. Trust property. The Grantor, the initiator of a policy of insurance on his life issued by the Columbian Mutual Life Insurance Company, and known as policy # 10010395, desiring to establish an insurance trust during the lifetimes of his wife, Eleanore, and of his children, Hiroko and Akira, with power in the Trustees upon the death of the Grantor to purchase assets from his estate, hereby assigns to the Trustees all his right, title, and interest in and to such policy of insurance, to be held by them in trust, and to receive the proceeds of such policy of insurance as and when they become due and payable and are paid, for the purposes and on the conditions set forth in this agreement. The Grantor reserves the right to add to this trust from time to time additional*154 policies of insurance on his life which, when delivered to the Trustees, shall be held by them in every respect subject to the terms of this agreement.
On the same date, one of the trustees signed the application for the specified insurance policy as applicant and owner, while the decedent signed as the proposed insured. The trust was unfunded, and it appears to have been the parties' contemplation that it was to be funded only out of policy proceeds paid upon the decedent's death. When the policy was ready for issuance on September 8, 1977, the decedent furnished the trustee with a check in the amount of the initial premium, with language on the check specifying such use. Accordingly, the check was simply endorsed to the insurance company.
I am forced to believe that the recital in the trust agreement reflects the intentions of the parties and the facts existing on July 26, 1977. Clearly the decedent was the initiator of the insurance. Before the trust was created, he evidently had arranged with the insurance company or its agents for the policy and had obtained the policy number. Under these circumstances, I conclude that the decedent had also arranged for the insurance *155 application and for its execution by the trustee. It is necessary to infer that he had also agreed to furnish funds for payment of the initial premium. No other *63 source of payment was available. Thus, each step of the instant plan -- the trust formation, the insurance application and policy issuance, and the premium payment -- was part of an integrated transaction arranged and regulated by the decedent. 1 How else could the draftsman of the trust agreement have had access to the policy number of the policy to be issued thereafter?
*156 The facts here thus are clearly within the principles of
"the word 'transfer' * * * cannot be taken in such a restricted sense as to refer only to the passing of particular items of property directly from the decedent to the tansferee. It must, we think, at least include the transfer of property procured through expenditures by the decedent with the purpose, effected at his death, of having it pass to another. * * *" [
Bel went on to hold that a policy purchased by the decendent, who executed the insurance application and paid all of the premiums, "transferred" the policy to this children even thought they were owners of the policy ab *157 initio. It based this conclusion on the rationale that there is no practical difference between purchasing a policy in one's own name and then transferring it, and purchasing the policy in someone else's name.
The majority opinion takes great pains to discuss all of the major cases decided under
Footnotes
1. Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 as amended and in effect at the time of death, and all Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.
Sec. 2035 has been amended by the Revenue Act of 1978 (Pub. L. 95-600, 92 Stat, 2763) and the Economic Recovery Tax Act of 1981 (Pub. L. 97-34, 95 Stat. 317). See also Pearle, "Application ofSection 2035↩ to Life Insurance Owned by a Third Party -- Recent Developments," Estates, Gifts and Trusts Journal, Sept.-Oct. 1983, at 28-32.2. Petitioner concedes that this amount is includable in the estate under
sec. 2035↩ .3. The trustee's obligations concerning premium payments were as follows:
3. Payment of premiums. The trustees shall be under no obligation to pay the premiums which may become due and payable under the provisions of such policy of insurance, or to make certain that such premiums are paid by the Grantor or others, or to notify any persons of the nonpayment of such premiums, and they shall be under no responsibility or liability of any kind in case such premiums are not paid, except that they shall apply any dividends received by them on such policy to the payment of premiums thereon. Upon notice at any time during the continuance of this trust that the premiums due upon such policy are in default, or that premiums to become due will not be paid, either by the Grantor or by any other person, the Trustees, within their sole discretion, may apply any cash values attributable to such policy to the purchase of paid-up insurance or of extended insurance, or may borrow upon such policy for the payment of premiums due thereon, or may accept the cash values of such policy upon its forfeiture. * * * If Tetsuo Kurihara, the insured under such policy of insurance, becomes totally and permanently disabled, within the meaning of such policy, and because thereof the payment of premiums, or any of them, shall, during the pendency of such disability, be waived, the Trustees, upon receipt of such knowledge, shall promptly notify the insurance company which has issued such policy, and shall take any and all steps necessary to make such waiver of premium provision effective.↩
4. In concluding that Gorman and Coleman involved the same issue, we were influenced by the District Court's assumption that "the decedent transferred all the incidents of ownership to the beneficiary at least 3 years before the former's death." See
Gorman v. United States, 288 F. Supp. 225">288 F. Supp. 225 , 232. It appears, however, from the stipulation of facts in Gorman that the policy in question was taken out in May 1957 and that the decedent died within 1 year, to wit, on Mar. 25, 1958. See288 F. Supp. at 234-237 . In Coleman, we also referred to First National Bank of Midland, Texas v. United States, an unreported case (W.D. Tex. 1968, 23 AFTR 2d 69-1806, 69-1 USTC par. 12,574), in which the Government had been sustained where premiums were paid by the decedent within 3 years of death but the policy had been taken out more than 3 years prior to death. The decision of the District Court was later reversed.First National Bank of Midland, Texas v. United States, 423 F.2d 1286">423 F.2d 1286↩ (5th Cir. 1970).5. Apparently respondent made the same assumption that we and the Fifth Circuit had made regarding the factual situation in Gorman↩.
6. The court of Appeals made the following statement (
Bel v. United States, 452 F.2d 683">452 F.2d 683 , 690):"In Coleman the premium payments were made on a policy that was brought into existence more than three years prior to the decedent's death. Thus, the original contractual rights and ownership of the policy in Coleman were created outside the presumptive period↩, * * * [Emphasis added.]"
7. The Court of Appeals was also critical of
Gorman v. United States, note 4 supra. See452 F.2d at 691 , where the court also recognized (as it had not inFirst National Bank of Midland, Texas v. United States, 423 F.2d 1286">423 F.2d 1286 (5th Cir. 1970)) that the policy in Gorman had come into existence within 3 years of death. See p. 56 supra↩.8. The court made no point of the fact that the second policy represented a conversion within the proscribed 3-year period, presumably on the premise that the rights obtained therefor stemmed from the early policies and were therefore "created" by those policies. See note 6 supra. Similarly, no issue has been raised herein as to the renewal or conversion feature. In the case of a 1-year-term accidental death policy, each year stands on its own feet. See
Bel v. United States, 452 F.2d 683↩ (5th Cir. 1971) .9. The Sixth Circuit refers to the fact that the decedent in Bel v. United States also employed a trust technique with respect to the insurance policy. Neither the opinion of the Fifth Circuit nor that of the
District Court (310 F. Supp. 1189">310 F. Supp. 1189↩ ) indicates that such was the case.10. The Court of Appeals noted that
Gorman v. United States, note 4 supra , "has been thoroughly criticized."521 F. 2d at 576 n. 7↩ .11. We note that we do not have a situation involving payment of premiums in part by decedent and in part by another person.
Estate of Silverman v. Commissioner, 61 T.C. 338">61 T.C. 338 (1973), affd.521 F.2d 574">521 F.2d 574↩ (2d Cir. 1975).12. We use the word "may" because the trust agreement recites that the decedent transferred the policy to the trustees, although the policy was not yet in existence and the application specifies the trustees as owners and the parties have so stipulated.↩
13. We are aware that our decision herein is in conflict with
Estate of Chapin v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1970-7↩ .14. Several courts have suggested that it may be enough if the payment of the premium can be traced to decedent's funds. See
In re Estate of Silverman, 521 F.2d 574">521 F.2d 574 (2d Cir. 1975), affg.61 T.C. 338">61 T.C. 338 (1973); Bel v. United States, note 8 supra. ContraHope v. United States, 691 F.2d 786 (5th Cir. 1982) ; Estate of Tracy v. United States, an unreported case (W.D. N.C. 1982, 51 AFTR 2d 83↩-1301, 82-2 USTC par. 13,499).1. The majority notes that the insurance policy application provided that insurance was not to be in effect until the premium was paid. (Majority opinion at 60.) It errneously concludes, however, that "payment of the premium created the ownership rights in the trustees." That no insurance was actually in effect until payment of the premium is irrelevant to the question before us, which is whether an interest↩ in the policy was transferred by decedent within 3 years of his death. Moreover, payment of the premium on Sept. 8, 1977, was merely the fruition of the parties' plan apparently conceived before and for all practical purposes executed on July 26, 1977. The payment therefore is appropriately viewed as relating back to the transactions that occurred on and probably prior to July 26, 1977, and the policy thereby had "life" on that earlier date for purposes of the instant discussion. That is the substance of the transaction.