1967 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 130">*130 Decision will be entered under Rule 50.
Real estate was transferred by decedent to his wife, decedent retaining a life interest, pursuant to a predivorce property settlement agreement which was set forth and approved by the court in its divorce decree entered almost immediately thereafter. The wife was entitled to an equitable share in the husband's property, under the laws of the State of Kentucky, where the divorce was obtained. Held, the transfer of such real estate to the wife was for an adequate and full consideration in money or money's worth within the meaning of
47 T.C. 648">*648 This proceeding involves1967 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 130">*132 an estate tax deficiency of $ 46,048.12. The question in issue is whether there should be included in decedent's gross estate the value of certain real estate consisting of farmlands which decedent conveyed to his wife under a property settlement agreement made at the time of the wife's filing of a suit for divorce. If that question is decided affirmatively, there is a further question as to valuation of the properties.
FINDINGS OF FACT
Some of the facts have been stipulated and are found accordingly and incorporated herein by this reference.
The decedent, Morrison T. O'Nan, was born on March 26, 1891, and died November 26, 1961, a resident of Springfield, Ky. A Federal estate tax return was filed on behalf of his estate with the district director of internal revenue at Louisville, Ky., June 18, 1962. Decedent was survived by his former wife, Tillie Farrand O'Nan, hereinafter 47 T.C. 648">*649 called Tillie, who was born April 14, 1891, and their four children whose names and dates of birth as follows: Ellena O'Nan, October 12, 1915; Sara E. O'Nan, December 24, 1918; Tillie O'Nan Eddleman, June 18, 1921; Morrison A. O'Nan, August 11, 1927.
Morrison A. O'Nan was named executor of decedent's1967 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 130">*133 estate by his will which was admitted to probate on December 4, 1961.
Decedent and Tillie were married December 29, 1914, and lived together as man and wife until September 1938, when they separated because of marital differences and difficulties.
Prior to this separation decedent and Tillie lived with their children on one of decedent's farms, known as the O'Nan farm and sometimes referred to as the home place, located about 3 miles east of Springfield. This farm consisted of 3 adjacent tracts containing a total of approximately 400 acres. Two of these tracts had been purchased by decedent in 1919 and the third had been acquired by him after his mother's death in 1936 as his share of her estate and by purchase from the other heirs of their interests therein. At the time of their separation Tillie and the four children moved to a residence in Springfield which decedent had purchased in Tillie's name on March 4, 1937, for $ 5,500.
On February 19, 1938, long after the O'Nan's marital troubles had begun, decedent had conveyed the home place to Tillie reserving to himself, however, the right to operate and manage the farm and receive the income therefrom for life. He also retained1967 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 130">*134 a reversionary interest therein in the event Tillie should predecease him. The deed specified that decedent was to pay the taxes and upkeep on the farm during his lifetime. At this time decedent was 46 years and 11 months old and this property had a fair market value of approximately $ 35,000.
In 1942 decedent advised Tillie that he wanted a divorce. After considering the matter and discussing it with her eldest daughter, Ellena, Tillie decided that she and the children would require at least $ 6,000 per year for their support. Ellena conveyed this information to decedent who then made a counter offer to Tillie of $ 4,000 per year and fee simple title to his two farms subject to his reserved life estate therein. Tillie was not satisfied with this suggested settlement and took no further action at that time. In the fall of 1943 decedent then renewed his demand for a divorce. Tillie and her daughter, Ellena, then went together to consult her lawyer about the divorce and the matter of a settlement. Tillie did not want to accept decedent's proposal. Following a period of further discussion and negotiation, during which time Tillie was represented by counsel, they agreed to obtain1967 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 130">*135 a divorce and entered into an agreement dated October 15, 1943, which provided in material part as follows:
This Contract and Agreement made and entered into this day by and between Morrison T. O'Nan, of Springfield, Washington County, Kentucky, party of the 47 T.C. 648">*650 first part; and Mrs. Tillie Farrand O'Nan, of Springfield, Washington County, Kentucky, party of the second part.
Witnesseth: That whereas unfortunate differences have arisen between the parties of the first and second part, which makes it no longer possible for them to live together as man and wife; and desiring to settle their property rights have contracted among and between themselves, and do hereby agree as follows:
Mrs. Tillie Farrand O'Nan, is to institute a divorce suit in the Washington Circuit Court on the grounds of five years separation.
Mr. Morrison T. O'Nan agrees to pay her alimony in the sum of Four Thousand ($ 4,000.00) Dollars per year; and agrees to pay her between the period of November 1, 1943 and January 1, 1944, the sum of Six Hundred and Sixty-Six and 67/100 ($ 666.67) Dollars, and on the 1st day of January and July thereafter, beginning January 1, 1944, he is to pay her the sum of Two Thousand1967 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 130">*136 ($ 2,000.00) Dollars.
It is further agreed that Morrison T. O'Nan will each year kill for her three or more hogs, weighing in the aggregate at lest [sic] Six Hundred (600) pounds. He also agrees that she may come to the farm and receive vegetables, and other food products, and also butter, eggs, chickens and milk therefrom. It is also agreed that in the event Mrs. Tillie Farrand O'Nan, should die before his death, he is to provide reasonable support for any unmarried children.
Mrs. Tillie Farrand O'Nan, owns the residence in Springfield, Kentucky, which she is to keep as her own. Mr. Morrison O'Nan has conveyed to her a farm, which he purchased from Elmer Fenwick, and the O'Nan home place, and reserves to himself the right to operate, the said farms, and receive the profits from same, during his natural life.
It is agreed that the provisions of this Contract may be incorporated in, and as part of the Judgment for Divorce.
On the same date, October 15, 1943, decedent executed a deed to Tillie of the Fenwick farm which he had acquired earlier that year at public auction for $ 9,709.78, consisting of 208 acres situated about 6 miles north of Springfield. The same deed also conveyed1967 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 130">*137 to her the reversionary interest which O'Nan had retained by the 1938 deed to Tillie of the O'Nan farm. However, the October 15, 1943, deed reserved unto the grantor "a life estate in and to all of the said land, with the conwequent [sic] right to supervise, and manage same, and to receive all the profits and income from same. And to pay all of the taxes thereon, during his life time."
A lien was given by the deed on decedent's reserved life estate in the properties to secure the $ 4,000 per year alimony payments to Tillie and her rights to the meat, vegetables, and dairy products from the farms.
Also on October 15, 1943, in accordance with their agreement that Tillie would sue for divorce, she filed her petition therefor in the Washington Circuit Court (Washington County, Ky.). In the petition Tillie set forth as her grounds that decedent had left home in 1938 and that the parties had been separated for 5 years. She also alleged that the parties had settled their "property differences" per agreement attached to the petition as exhibit No. I, and that "It is agreed between them" that said contract be incorporated as part of the judgment 47 T.C. 648">*651 prayed for. Decedent was served1967 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 130">*138 with a summons in this divorce action the same date.
On October 21, 1943, by agreement of the decedent and Tillie, depositions were taken in the divorce proceeding which established Tillie's right to the divorce. Decedent did not contest the action. On this same date the deed dated October 15, 1943, was recorded. In the interim between October 15, 1943, and October 21, 1943, Tillie had not held the deed; it was not effective until October 21, 1943, at the earliest date. On October 26, 1943, the county attorney of Washington County, Ky., filed his answer in the divorce proceeding in accordance with the then Kentucky requirements and practice, in which he stated that he was unable to make defense to the pleadings and proof in the action.
The following day, October 27, 1943, the court entered its judgment and decree granting Tillie a divorce. The court's judgment provided, after quoting in full the property settlement agreement between decedent and Tillie dated October 15, 1943, as follows:
It is further adjudged by the Court, that Morrison T. O'Nan, pay the Plaintiff, Mrs. Tillie Farrand O'Nan on November 1, 1943 the sum of Six Hundred and Sixty-Six and 67/100 ($ 666.67) Dollars, 1967 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 130">*139 alimony until January 1, 1944, and thereafter he will pay her the sum of Four Thousand ($ 4,000.00) Dollars, per year; Two Thousand ($ 2,000.00) Dollars, on the 1st day of January 1944, and on each and every January 1, thereafter; and Two Thousand ($ 2,000.00) Dollars, on the 1st day of July, 1944, and on each and every July 1, thereafter.
It is therefore adjudged by the Court that Morrison T. O'Nan, will each year kill and deliver to the said Mrs. Tillie Farrand O'Nan, three or more hogs, weighing in the aggregate at lest [sic] Six Hundred (600) Pounds. She has the right to receive vegetables and food products from the farm, which he is to operate. She will also have the right to receive, butter, eggs, chickens and milk. And should the said Tillie Farrand O'Nan die before the said Morrison T. O'Nan, he is to provide reasonable support for any unmarried children.
It is further adjudged by the Court that Mrs. Tillie Farrand O'Nan, will keep as her own, the residence in Springfield, Kentucky, which was purchased from C. H. Boblitt, and that she is also the owner of the Elmer Fenwick farm, and the O'Nan home place, which defendant has conveyed to her, reserving to himself a life estate, 1967 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 130">*140 and the right to operate, control and receive the profits from same during his natural life. And that the Fee simple title of said farm belongs to the said Tillie Farrand O'Nan.
It is further adjudged by the Court, that Morrison T. O'Nan retains all of the property which he now owns, other than the property specified in Contract herein.
It is further adjudged by the Court, that the Defendant, pay the cost of this action, including a reasonable attorney's fee, for Plaintiff's attorney.
This case is now stricken from the docket.
At the time of the divorce action and decree decedent was 52 years 6 3/4 months of age, and the real properties conveyed had a fair market value of $ 46,000. At that time the only property owned by Tillie, who was 52 years 6 months of age, was the home in Springfield in which she and the four children lived and which had been purchased by decedent in her name in 1937 for $ 5,500 and possibly a few shares of title 47 T.C. 648">*652 insurance company stock of negligible value. Decedent owned substantial other property and assets, the full value and extent of which are not disclosed by the record.
One of the children of decedent and Tillie, Sara E. O'Nan, was 20 years1967 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 130">*141 old when the parents separated; she was frail and in poor health all during childhood and in later life as well. During the years of separation she developed rheumatic fever and diabetes and at the time of divorce in 1943 she was in frail health and unable to work. This condition has continued throughout her lifetime and has required constant medical attention and treatment as well as drugs and medicines. She has never been employed and has made her home with Tillie since 1938 as has her eldest sister, Ellena O'Nan. Ellena was 28 when her parents were divorced; Tillie, the daughter, was 22, and had just finished with her college education; Morrison A. O'Nan, the son, was 16 at the time and a student in high school. All four children were living at home in Springfield with their mother in 1943; young Tillie soon married (the record being unclear as to the exact time), became emancipated and moved away; Morrison lived at home there until early in the 1950's when he served in the Army during the Korean war and married; Ellena and Sara were still living with their mother, Tillie, at time of trial.
From the time of their separation in September of 1938 until the divorce in October1967 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 130">*142 of 1943, Tillie drew checks on the O'Nans' joint bank account for general household funds and to support herself and the children. The family had maintained a normal standard of living for a family in their circumstances and after the divorce Tillie continued to provide for herself and the children at home in approximately the same manner. Decedent did not provide otherwise for the children by paying support, allowances, or expenses.
Decedent died testate November 26, 1961. His will was probated in the Washington County Court December 4, 1961. Following is a verbatim copy of the will:
I am of sound mind I wish for my property to be left this way. I want Morrison A. and Sara E. O'Nan to have my big farm of 500 acres and every thing there on it. If Sara E. has no children I want her part of the farm to go back to Morrison A. I want Ellena O'Nan and Tillie Eddleman my daughters to have the tick treek farm of 208 acres and every thing there on it. I dont want a public sale I want my cash holdings to be divided equly between my four children Morrison A., Ellena, Tillie, Sara I dont want a Court settlement let Morrison take care of everything.
M. T. O'NanNov. 15, 1954
Nov. 1967 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 130">*143 15, 1954.
I want my Ex wife Tillie Ferrand to be taken care of through this Estate her life time.
M. T. O'NanIn reporting and computing the value of decedent's estate for Federal estate tax purposes, using date of death (Nov. 26, 1961) 47 T.C. 648">*653 values, the executor of decedent's estate included property and assets of a gross value of $ 104,476.49, deductions of $ 12,584.42, a net estate of $ 91,892.07, and a taxable estate after exemption of $ 31,892.07. No value was included therein for the 208-acre Fenwick farm or the 400-acre home place. Respondent made the following adjustments and explanation:
Adjustments to Net Estate | |
Taxable estate as disclosed by return | $ 31,892.07 |
Additions to value of taxable estate and decreases in deductions: | |
Transfers during decedent's life | 169,000.00 |
Taxable estate as adjusted | 200,892.07 |
Explanation of Adjustment
Transfers during Decedent's Life:
The value of the following-described property, transferred by the decedent during his lifetime, is includable in the gross estate of decedent under the provisions of
Return | Determined | |
608 acres of land, Washington County, Ky | None | $ 169,000 |
At the date of decedent's death, November 26, 1961, the 208-acre Fenwick farm had a fair market value of $ 31,200 and the 400-acre O'Nan home place had a fair market value of $ 96,000; the two farms together were then worth $ 127,200.
OPINION
The principal question in issue is whether the value of the real estate consisting of the O'Nan and Fenwick farms, which decedent transferred to Tillie during his lifetime, reserving to himself a life estate, is includable in his gross estate. A secondary issue is as to date-of-death value of these properties.
Petitioner contends that decedent's transfer of the properties in question to his wife was for an adequate and full consideration in money or money's worth, within the meaning of
Respondent's position1967 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 130">*146 is that
On brief, petitioner urges that a distinction has been made by the courts and the Commissioner's own rulings between transfers of property involving the release of marital rights incident to a divorce and those made for tax-saving purposes only by a husband and wife living together. Among the cases relied on, including several recently decided in this Court, are
This question, in its several aspects, has recently been reviewed at considerable length by this Court in
1967 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 130">*148 In the Keller case, respondent conceded that the value of the wife's life estate in the transferred property, the only interest transferred to her pursuant to a divorce decree, was excludable from the gross 47 T.C. 648">*655 estate under
However, it would seem that both a transfer with a retained life estate, and a claim based on a promise or agreement, will be deemed to be supported by an adequate and full consideration if they spring from a divorce decree, insofar as the decree effectively settles the property rights1967 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 130">*149 of the parties who are before the court, even though the wife has only marital rights to give up. But we do not think this "divorce as consideration" theory has yet been extended to provide a consideration for a transfer to third parties, not before the court in the divorce proceeding, simply because the divorce decree requires the transfer. [Emphasis supplied.]
The same view was expressed in the Glen case, where we said:
At first blush this section
In Glen where the transfer was made prior to divorce and1967 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 130">*150 the decree was silent as to said transfer, we held that the wife's relinquishment of her one-third interest to her husband's personal property upon divorce was a consideration in money or money's worth for her interest in the trusts, and to the extent of the value of such one-third interest the trust properties were excludable from the husband's gross estate. We said:
Based upon all of the above, and particularly upon the statutory history underlying
An exclusion from the gross estate was allowed in the Nelson case to the extent of the interest of the wife in a trust to which her husband transferred property under a divorce settlement agreement. The wife's relinquishment of her right1967 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 130">*151 to support, which had a value in 47 T.C. 648">*656 excess of the determined value of her interest in the trust at the time of the transfer, was held adequate and full consideration in money or money's worth.
The crucial question here is whether the transfers to the wife were effected in consideration of Tillie's right to support or by the divorce decree, rather than in satisfaction of the wife's relinquishment of her dower, curtesy, or other marital rights in decedent's estate as respondent contends.
The Kentucky statutes and the cases decided by the courts of that State establish the right of a divorced wife to a fair and reasonable share of her husband's property. Following are excerpts from pertinent provisions of the Kentucky Revised Statutes Annotated (KRS):
(1) Absolute divorce bars all claim of either husband or wife to the property, real and personal, of the other after his or her decease.
(1) If the wife does not have sufficient estate of her own she may, on a divorce obtained by her, have such allowance out of that of her husband as the1967 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 130">*152 court considers equitable; but no such allowance shall divest the husband of the fee simple title to real estate.
(2) Upon final judgment of divorce from the bonds of matrimony, each party shall be restored all the property, not disposed of at the beginning of the action, that he or she obtained from or through the other before or during the marriage and in consideration of the marriage.
Every judgment for a divorce from the bond of matrimony shall contain an order restoring any property not disposed of at the commencement of the action, which either party may have obtained, directly or indirectly, from or through the other, during marriage, in consideration or by reason thereof; and any property so obtained, without valuable consideration, shall be deemed to have been obtained by reason of marriage. The proceedings to enforce this order may be by petition of either party, specifying the property which the other has failed to restore; and the court may hear and determine the same in a summary manner, after ten days' notice to the party so failing. * * *
Equitable principles are applied in Kentucky to fix and measure 1967 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 130">*153 the award to a wife from her husband's property, and such "allowance" from the husband's estate is generally called alimony. It may be a lump sum or award of property in lieu of or in addition to periodic payments.
In
So the only fact of real significance here is that after 25 years the parties have lost their marriage and are left to divide, through the means of alimony, their accumulation of property. And the only question is what is fair.
47 T.C. 648">*657 That a wife who makes the home, raises the children, gives succor and moral support to the husband and aids him in the saving and investment of his money, but who does not directly convert any individual effort or earnings into the form of property, in the event of divorce has no interest in the property accumulated through the husband's earnings during the marriage is a travesty made tolerable only by the judicial power to correct it in the form of alimony.
We have heretofore recognized that although1967 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 130">*154 there is no rigid formula for establishing the amount, the approximate equivalent of one-third of the husband's estate is a reasonable basic measure.
[Emphasis supplied.]
In
As noted above, the Kentucky statutes specify that divorce absolutely cuts off dower, curtesy, or other marital rights in the property of the former spouse. It therefore becomes necessary to ascertain whether or not the transfers here involved were in consideration of Tillie's release of such rights or of her rights upon divorce to an equitable allowance from her husband's property. In this 1967 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 130">*156 connection it must first be kept in mind that both Tillie and O'Nan had identical and valid grounds for divorce in Kentucky in October of 1943. Either spouse is entitled to obtain a divorce from the other under
It is well established in Kentucky that this equitable award is for the wife's comfortable support and maintenance. In the first place, if she has a sufficient1967 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 130">*157 estate of her own she is not entitled to any award in the plain words of the statute and this has been interpreted to mean a sufficient separate estate to provide for her comfort and maintenance in the manner to which she has been accustomed.
In
The award is not necessarily or always the allowance of a proportionate part of the husband's estate. He may have no estate but may, nevertheless, be required to pay alimony out of current or probable earnings or income. Alimony, as the statute says, is to be determined by the equities of the case. Here the husband does have an estate, and the court in its discretion made an award of alimony in gross, or, as commonly expressed, of a lump sum, which is a proportionate division of the husband's net estate.
In the leading case of
The Kentucky law is therefore clearly and firmly established that the wife's right to an award from her husband's estate upon divorce is an award for support equitably determined on all of the facts and not an 1967 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 130">*160 award for dower, curtesy, or other rights she may have in her husband's property or estate during marriage. All Tillie could have bargained for in 1943 was her right in Kentucky to an award for support upon divorce since the decedent could have proceeded to obtain his own divorce had Tillie not done so and thus cut off her claims to or rights in his property as a spouse.
Respondent contends that Tillie's support rights were satisfied by allowing her to retain the Springfield house in her name and by decedent's agreement to pay her "alimony" of $ 4,000 per year plus the various food products from the farms. He concludes that the only right which Tillie could have relinquished to decedent in return for the two farms1967 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 130">*161 was her inchoate right to dower, and that this "does not constitute to any extent a 'consideration in money or money's worth.' Int. Rev. Code of 1954,
The annual payments of $ 4,000 plus the hogs, vegetables, dairy products, etc., were obviously intended as and in fact were support for the entire O'Nan family, Tillie and the four children then living with her in Springfield. Our findings not only disclose that all four children were living with Tillie at that time, but that three of them continued to do so for years thereafter. At the time of trial, 20 years later, two unmarried daughters still maintained their home there. One of these was a lifelong invalid. We regard the label "alimony" as insignificant and not binding upon us to fix the nature of the annual payment for these purposes in this case in the light of other terms of the agreement and decree and all of the evidence of record. Such payments were for Tillie and the children, not for Tillie alone.
We are equally unimpressed with respondent's arguments that the Kentucky divorce court had no power or authority to vary or alter the settlement agreement by its divorce decree. It has long been recognized in Kentucky that settlement agreements between the parties, if fair and made in contemplation of a permanent separation will be upheld.
The divorce court here not only had power and authority to adjudge and decree an alimony award to Tillie under
Here, instead of ignoring the arrangements worked out by the parties and applying its own equitable thumb, the court very properly accepted the negotiated agreement of the parties, incorporating it verbatim in the decree. The court then adjudged the rights and interests 47 T.C. 648">*661 of the parties, adding however two additional matters not covered by the agreement: (1) That decedent keep and retain as his all of the other property he then owned (which our findings indicate was substantial), and (2) that decedent pay costs and Tillie's attorney's fee. 3 As in
We conclude and hold that until the divorce decree was entered there was no final settlement nor were effective and binding transfers previously made. Tillie's rights and the decedent's duties were then determined and fixed.
1967 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 130">*166 As to the power of the Kentucky courts in the settlement of property rights in divorce proceedings, it is stated in
As a general rule the exercise of the power of the Court to modify a decree for alimony is not affected by the fact that it is based upon an agreement entered into by the parties, for the agreement became merged into the judgment and lost its contractual nature. 27 C.J.S., Divorce, Sec. 238 d;
* * * *
Separation agreements are upheld when untainted by fraud, undue influence or duress if the terms are fair, reasonable and equitable, considering the circumstances of the parties at the time they were made.
See also
In
The rule that, where the parties during the pendency of an action for divorce enter into an agreement settling their property rights and providing for the payment of alimony either in a lump sum or monthly payments, and a judgment is rendered carrying the agreement into effect, 1967 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 130">*168 the court is without power 47 T.C. 648">*662 after the expiration of the term to revise the alimony because of changed finances,
We conclude that the divorce court had power to decree a settlement of all property rights between the parties and to vary the terms of the prior agreement if it saw fit to do so. Therefore, petitioner's reliance on
It is also clear that if O'Nan had effected the transfers outright and the respondent had asserted a gift tax, no gift tax liability would be found. In
That judgment then became enforceable and was a debt respondent owed. Had he died before he paid it, it would not only have been collectible out of his estate but, what is even more significant for present purposes, it would, when paid, have been a deductible claim for estate tax purposes.
While it is true that even respondent has long recognized that a release of support rights constitutes a money's-worth consideration and we have concluded here that the transfers in issue were obtained in exchange for Tillie's rights to support, the only right she had in Kentucky upon divorce, we are unable on the evidence before us to fix the value of those rights. We do not mean to imply that there must be a precise1967 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 130">*172 dollar-for-dollar matching of consideration paid with the value of the transferred property in order to conclude that a full and adequate consideration was furnished. See
If we were here concerned with the income tax consequences of the transfer to decedent in the year of the settlement,
It must be assumed, we think, that the parties acted at arm's length and that they judged the marital rights to be equal in value to the property for which they were exchanged. There was no evidence to the contrary here. Absent a readily ascertainable value it is accepted practice where property is exchanged to hold, as did the Court of Claims in
We believe that this method of evaluating interests such as are here involved is particularly valid and should be applied under the facts of this case. There was long-standing marital discord, followed by 5 years of separation; the parties dealt at arm's length and negotiated over a considerable1967 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 130">*174 period of time before reaching a settlement agreement; the reserved life interests (burdened with a lien to secure Tillie's annual payments and rights to farm products) as well as Tillie's remainder interests in the two farms were such that no readily 47 T.C. 648">*664 ascertainable value of the properties exchanged can be attributed. We believe that here, too, on the record presented it should be concluded that the value of the rights surrendered by Tillie can be measured by and equated with the value of the property rights transferred to her by decedent so that full and adequate consideration in money or money's worth was provided for the transfer. There is certainly no hint or suggestion in this record that any donation or gift was intended or effected. The parties certainly judged that the rights given up by Tillie were equal in value to what she received from decedent. There was full consideration for the transfer.
We also conclude and hold that even without evidence to afford a yardstick to measure the consideration or without applying the rationale of
In the light of the foregoing, 1967 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 130">*176 the respondent's determination cannot be sustained and the principal issue is decided for petitioner. It is not therefore necessary for us to discuss the secondary valuation issue.
Decision will be entered under Rule 50.
Footnotes
1.
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 property or the income therefrom.↩
2.
SEC. 2043 . TRANSFERS FOR INSUFFICIENT CONSIDERATION.(a) In General. -- If any one of the transfers, trusts, interests, rights, or powers enumerated and described in
sections 2035 to 2038 , inclusive, andsection 2041 is made, created, exercised, or relinquished for a consideration in money or money's worth, but is not a bona fide sale for an adequate and full consideration in money or money's worth, there shall be included in the gross estate only the excess of the fair market value at the time of death of the property otherwise to be included on account of such transaction, over the value of the consideration received therefor by the decedent.(b) Marital Rights Not Treated as Consideration. -- For purposes of this chapter, a relinquishment or promised relinquishment of dower or curtesy, or of a statutory estate created in lieu of dower or curtesy, or of other marital rights in the decedent's property or estate, shall not be considered to any extent a consideration "in money or money's worth."↩
3. Respondent's argument that the court could not award fee simple title to the land to Tillie because of the restriction in
KRS 403.060 (1) is neither convincing nor persuasive. The granting of title by deed could be considered as part of the equitable award, and even if the court had, sua sponte, awarded such title, such an order divesting decedent of fee simple title would be merely voidable, not void.Dix v. Dix, 310 Ky. 818">310 Ky. 818 , 222 S.W.2d 839 (1949). A contract for conveyance of such title followed by a decree approving or ordering the same would bar the husband from subsequent recovery of title.Reese v. Greenlea, 308 Ky. 275">308 Ky. 275 , 214 S.W.2d 262↩ (1948).4. Respondent determined and conceded in
Estate of Donald M. Nelson, 47 T.C. 279">47 T.C. 279 (1966), that the value of the wife's support rights at the time of transfer was "consideration in money or money's worth received by decedent." Likewise inCommissioner v. Converse, 163 F.2d 131↩ (C.A. 2, 1947), he conceded that the portion of the transfer which satisfied the wife's right of support was supported by consideration.