Decedent, in her lifetime, conveyed property to herself and two
others as trustees upon a trust which was terminable by joint
action of the three trustees but which she, herself, reserved no
power to modify. She resigned as trustee, but later, upon the
resignation of her successor, was reappointed under a clause of the
trust instrument providing that such vacancies could be filled by
the other trustees with the approval of the beneficiaries.
Held:
1. That the power thus acquired to participate in terminating
the trust, not being in any sense a power reserved by her in the
trust instrument, was not a power "to alter, amend or revoke,"
within the meaning of § 302(d), Revenue Act, 1926. P.
296 U. S.
101.
2. If that section, enacted after the date of the transfer, were
deemed applicable, it would violate the Fifth Amendment.
Helvering v. Helmholz, ante p.
296 U. S. 93. P.
296 U. S. 102.
75 F.2d 35 affirmed.
Page 296 U. S. 99
Certiorari, 295 U.S. 726, to review a judgment affirming a
judgment against the Collector in a suit to recover money exacted
as part of an estate tax.
MR. JUSTICE ROBERTS delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case presents questions similar to those in
Helvering
v. Helmholz, ante, p.
296
U. S. 93.
In 1919, Adelaide J. Sargent conveyed property to three
trustees, who were herself, Arthur H. Sargent, her son, and a third
person not connected with the family. Contemporaneously the
trustees executed a declaration of trust by the terms of which they
were to pay one-half the net income to Mrs. Sargent during her life
and the other half until her death, and, after that event, the
whole, in equal shares, to such of her three children as should be
living at the time of each payment, and to the appointees of any
deceased child, and, in default of appointment, to the living issue
of a deceased child. The trust was to terminate upon the death of
the last survivor of the settlor and her three children, and
thereupon the corpus was to be divided in specified shares amongst
the issue, next of kin, or appointees of the children. Each child
was given a general power of appointment by will over one-third of
the principal. Mrs. Sargent died January 22, 1931, leaving her
three children to survive her. Her will was probated, and the
respondents are her executors. The declaration of trust contains a
power to terminate, in these words:
Page 296 U. S. 100
"This trust may be terminated at any time either as to the whole
or as to any part of the property held in trust hereunder, by the
person or persons who shall then be trustees hereunder, such
termination to be evidenced by a written declaration signed, sealed
and acknowledged by them and duly recorded in the Registry of Deeds
for the County of Suffolk, setting forth specifically the property
as to which such termination is to take effect, and in that event
the trusts declared hereunder shall as to such property be at an
end and such property shall be paid over and conveyed, free and
discharged of all trusts, to the said Adelaide J. Sargent, if she
be then living, and if she be not then living one share shall be
paid over and conveyed to each of her children who shall then be
living, and a like share shall be paid over and conveyed to the
appointees by will of each of her children who shall then have died
making such appointment, or failing such appointment, to the issue
of such deceased child then living, such issue taking by right of
representation."
No power was reserved by Mr. Sargent to modify the terms of the
trust, and the recited power was never exercised.
The agreement directed that, if any trustee should die, resign,
or be unable to act, a successor should be appointed by the
surviving trustees by a written instrument approved by the then
living children of Mrs. Sargent. In 1920, the settlor resigned as
trustee and a daughter was appointed to fill the vacancy. After
serving for one year, she resigned, and Mrs. Sargent was appointed
to fill the vacancy thus occasioned, and continued as a trustee
until her death. The decedent's son, who was a trustee, had a
vested interest in an undivided share of the income and a power to
appoint by will his share of the income and one-third of the
corpus.
The Commissioner of Internal Revenue ruled that the value of the
trust principal should be included in the gross
Page 296 U. S. 101
estate. The respondents paid the tax under protest and filed a
claim for refund, which the Commissioner rejected. They brought
suit in the District Court, which held the transfer did not come
within § 302(c) of the Revenue Act of 1926, as one made in
contemplation of death, and was not taxable under § 302(d).
[
Footnote 1] The court also
ruled that to impose an excise tax on the transfer by a statute
enacted after the transfer was complete would constitute a taking
of property without due process in violation of the Fifth
Amendment.
The petitioner appealed from a judgment in favor of the
respondents, and the Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed, holding
that the power in question was not a power to alter, amend, or
revoke within the meaning of § 302(d). [
Footnote 2]
As in
Helvering v. Helmholz, supra, the declaration of
trust in this case, technically speaking, contained no power to
revoke, amend, or alter the trust. What the instrument did was to
make it possible for the trustees, acting jointly, to terminate the
trust at any time. The petitioner insists that, as Mrs. Sargent was
one of the trustees named in the declaration the power to
terminate, which he views as the equivalent of a power to alter,
amend, or revoke, was, strictly speaking, lodged in the settlor and
two other persons. He says, therefore, that these facts make the
transaction taxable under § 302(d). The respondents reply
that, if the section be strictly construed, it applies only to a
transfer where the enjoyment thereof is subject to a power to
"alter, amend or revoke," and that the instant transfer was subject
to no such power, but to a power to terminate. The circumstances
about to be mentioned render it unnecessary to consider either
contention.
Mrs. Sargent resigned as a trustee in 1920, and was succeeded by
her daughter, one of the beneficiaries. When,
Page 296 U. S. 102
a year later, the daughter resigned, a new trustee could be
appointed only by the written nomination of the two remaining
trustees with the approval of all the beneficiaries of the trust.
By such concerted action, Mrs. Sargent was again appointed a
trustee. She then acquired any power for the future to participate
in a termination of the trust solely by virtue of the action of the
other trustees and the beneficiaries, and not in any sense by
virtue of any power reserved to herself as settlor in the original
declaration of trust. We think therefore that neither technically
nor in substance does the power to terminate as it existed from
1921 to the date of Mrs. Sargent's death fall within §
302(d).
What had been said in No. 14 requires a ruling that the section,
if held to apply to this transfer, offends the due process clause
of the Fifth Amendment.
Judgment affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE BRANDEIS, MR. JUSTICE STONE, and MR. JUSTICE CARDOZO
concur in the result.
[
Footnote 1]
8 F. Supp. 995.
[
Footnote 2]
75 F.2d 35.