*153 Decision will be entered for the petitioner.
Petitioner, a resident of Nevada, was separated from his wife and, as a preliminary to his suit for divorce, his attorneys negotiated a complete settlement of her claims for support and maintenance with attorneys representing his wife. Under this agreement he was to convey to her two pieces of real estate and make a substantial cash payment. Thereupon petitioner filed in Nevada a divorce complaint alleging mental cruelty on the part of the defendant and advising the court that provision for support and maintenance of the defendant had been settled by the parties and no award in that respect would be requested. To this complaint petitioner's wife, on the same day, filed her answer through counsel, admitting the settlement and the fact she was asking no award for maintenance and support. Thereupon the court on the same day entered a final decree of absolute divorce. Following this, petitioner conveyed the property and money to his former wife as agreed. Held, that such conveyance by petitioner was made without donative intent in an arm's length business transaction settling her right to maintenance and support from petitioner*154 and is not subject to gift tax.
*1208 OPINION.
Respondent determined a deficiency in gift tax of $ 39,329.30 for the calendar year 1938. The issue is whether a payment of $ 222,643, made in property and money by petitioner in that year to his former wife in performance of his obligation to her under a contract settling property rights, entered into as an incident of their divorce proceedings, constituted a taxable gift.
We find the facts as stipulated by the parties.
The petitioner is a resident of Cook County, Illinois, and filed a gift tax return for the period here involved with the collector for the first district of Illinois.
In the year 1938 the petitioner was a resident of the State of Nevada. His wife, Louisa Dorothea Kann Jones, had separated from him and was a resident of England. On February 2, 1938, petitioner filed in the First District Court of Ormsby County, Nevada, a suit for divorce from his wife, alleging mental cruelty. On the same date his wife, through her attorneys, entered her appearance in such suit and filed her answer to the complaint.
*155 Prior to the filing of this suit for divorce, the parties thereto, through their respective attorneys, had negotiated a property settlement, to be effective upon the granting of the divorce. In that suit, the complaint filed by petitioner stated "that there are no children the issue of the marriage, and all property rights of plaintiff and defendant have been settled and adjusted, and no order of the Court is requested in reference thereto." The answer filed by petitioner's wife admitted this allegation. On the same date after a hearing the court entered its findings of fact and decree sustaining the allegations of the complaint and awarding an absolute divorce and restoring each party to the status of a single, unmarried person.
Thereafter, on May 23, 1938, petitioner and his former wife, to carry out their aforesaid prior agreement, executed an agreement bearing witness to the fact that petitioner had on that date paid over to her the sum of $ 190,000 and conveyed to her two residence properties in England in effecting a full, complete, and final settlement of all claims of each in the property of the other. The two pieces of property in question had a combined value of $ 32,643.
*156 During the years from 1928 to 1937, inclusive, the net income returned by petitioner for Federal income tax was as follows:
1928 | $ 142,240.98 |
1929 | 192,691.84 |
1930 | 163,072.25 |
1931 | 78,526.32 |
1932 | 60,351.08 |
1933 | $ 76,134.01 |
1934 | 77,498.42 |
1935 | 105,253.74 |
1936 | 131,783.43 |
1937 | 163,993.98 |
*1209 Respondent contends that the transfer of money and property by petitioner to his former wife under the foregoing circumstances was a taxable gift. He has consistently maintained the position heretofore that payments under antenuptial agreements constituting the consideration for surrender by the intended wife of the inchoate right of dower to which she would be otherwise entitled after marriage are subject to the gift tax. See
Section 804 of "Title VI -- Estate Tax*157 Amendments" in the Revenue Act of 1932 amended section 303 (d) of the estate tax provisions of the Revenue Act of 1926, by providing that, "For the purposes of this title * * *," release of dower, curtesy, or similar rights "shall not be considered to any extent a consideration 'in money or money's worth.'" The gift tax law was enacted as Title III of the same Revenue Act of 1932 and contained no comparable provision. Despite this pointed omission, respondent's theory in the Bristol case was that in construing section 503 of the gift tax law 1 we should read into it the quoted amendment to the estate tax provisions.
*158 The effect of that theory, of course, would require a holding in every case that a payment for surrender of dower or other marital rights would be subject to gift tax. We rejected that theory in the Bristol case. In that proceeding, involving a payment under an antenuptial contract, it was held that the surrender of such rights under a contract of that character could be full and adequate consideration under the gift tax law, and that the sufficiency of that consideration was a question of fact for determination in each case upon the evidence as to the value of the estate, the rights in which were released. Our view was that not only the failure of Congress to make section 804, supra, applicable to the gift tax provisions, but its specific limitation of that section to the purposes of the estate tax provisions, precluded its being treated as an amendment to the gift tax law. On review, our decision there was reversed.
The respondent relies here strongly upon the opinion of the Circuit Court in the Bristol case. He also cites other decisions involving antenuptial settlements and cases decided under the estate tax provisions of the statute. Passing the question of the correctness of our decision in the Bristol case, we do not think that the cited decisions control the present question. The Bristol case involved an antenuptial contract under which payment was made for a release of dower rights. The contested payment here occurred in satisfaction of the wife's right to support by her husband and as an incident of their divorce. There may be some ground for argument that prior to or during marriage, when no divorce is contemplated, the inchoate right of*160 dower which may never be realized is too uncertain and indefinite to be then measured in terms of money. Moreover in those cases the circumstances are frequently such that there may well be a definite donative intent in the transfer. The contract there may be to effect a mere family arrangement. The parties are manifestly not dealing at arm's length and the purpose to exact a quid pro quo may be lacking. It is a far cry, however, from such a transaction to that presented in this record, where the transfer was in settlement of a present and existing liability. Here the estranged husband and wife were taking steps to secure a divorce and a settlement was made of the wife's right to support. There was no inchoate or indefinite right, the value of which was to be ascertained. The wife possessed not only a right to support by her husband, but she was entitled to have the court determine the value of that right and set aside its amount from her husband's estate, unless the parties themselves did so by agreement. By the Nevada Compiled Laws of 1929, section 3361, curtesy and dower are abolished in that state and, by section 9463, the court, in its discretion, is given authority*161 in case of divorce to make proper provision for the support and maintenance of the wife from the husband's estate. Had the payment here been made under a specific award in the divorce decree of the court, there could scarcely have been a claim that it was a gift. See
*1211 We do not agree. In either case, whether under award by the court or by agreement between the parties, an existing legal liability on the part of the husband to the wife was settled. The mere form of the transaction under which that liability is satisfied is not controlling. The husband and wife here, acting through their respective attorneys, negotiated a settlement of the wife's right*162 to maintenance and support. The settlement was unquestionably an arm's length transaction for consideration, with no suggestion of donative intent or purpose.
We do not agree with the broad position *163 taken by respondent that a transfer under such circumstances and without donative intent may be subject to gift tax. As the Second Circuit said in
Respondent contends, nevertheless, that no value is established for the wife's right to maintenance and support, in satisfaction of which the transfer in question was made. From this premise he argues that the entire value of the transferred property and money was taxable as a gift within the literal wording of section 503, supra.
Again we do not agree. The very fact that the attorneys representing petitioner's wife in dealing at arm's length with his attorneys were able to exact a payment of $ 222,643 in settlement of his obligation is persuasive evidence to us of the value of her right. The amount which the court, in the absence of the agreement, would have been called upon to award to petitioner's wife from his estate *164 would have been based upon his income and the station in life in which he would reasonably be required to maintain his wife. The net income of petitioner for the 10 consecutive years ending with that in which the settlement occurred, averaged $ 110,000 for each year. At the time the settlement was effected, his income was increasing and the amount paid was little more than his net income for the current year. Thus, not only was the contested payment made as a result of a settlement *1212 negotiated at arm's length in which an adequate consideration will be presumed (
But aside from that frailty, we think the present transfer was not within the purview of section 503, supra. That section can scarcely mean that all arm's length business transactions, involving transfers of property, shall be subjected to scrutiny and, in every case where one party makes a bad bargain, he should have his misfortune increased by the imposition of a gift tax on his unfavorable balance from the transaction. The tax is imposed by authority of section 501. It is expressly limited to transfers "by gift." "Gift" is not defined in the statute. The respondent, however, has himself defined the term as used in the controlling statute as excluding arm's length business transactions, such as is evidenced here, in which there was no donative intent. Regulations 79, arts. 1, 2, and 8, approved October 30, 1933, and arts. 1, 2, and 8 of the same regulations, approved February 26, 1936. See
Decision will be entered for the petitioner.
Footnotes
1. SEC. 503. TRANSFER FOR LESS THAN ADEQUATE AND FULL CONSIDERATION.
Where property is transferred for less than an adequate and full consideration in money or money's worth, then the amount by which the value of the property exceeded the value of the consideration shall, for the purpose of the tax imposed by this title, be deemed a gift, and shall be included in computing the amount of gifts made during the calendar year.↩
2. The Circuit Court in the Mesta case affirmed the position of the respondent that the transaction was taxable in character, but reversed the Board's holding that no taxable gain was realized. The court in the Halliwell case agreed with the court's opinion in the Mesta↩ case.