Estate of Rose D' Ambrosio, Vita D'Ambrosio v. Commissioner , 105 T.C. No. 18 ( 1995 )


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    105 T.C. No. 18
    UNITED STATES TAX COURT
    ESTATE OF ROSE D'AMBROSIO, DECEASED, VITA D'AMBROSIO, EXECUTRIX,
    Petitioner v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
    Docket No. 6724-94.           Filed September 25, 1995.
    D transferred her remainder interest in stock for
    consideration equal to the value of that interest, and
    retained an income interest in the stock for life.
    Following D's death, E did not include the stock in D's
    gross estate for Federal estate tax purposes. E argues
    that the stock is excludable from D's gross estate
    under the bona fide sale exception of sec. 2036(a),
    I.R.C., given the fact that D transferred the remainder
    interest for its fair market value. Held: D's gross
    estate includes the value of the stock at D's death,
    less the amount that D received for the remainder
    interest. The bona fide sale exception of sec.
    2036(a), I.R.C., is inapplicable to the facts at hand.
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    Harvey R. Poe, for petitioner.
    Frank A. Racaniello, for respondent.
    OPINION
    LARO, Judge:    The parties submitted this case to the Court
    without trial.   Rule 122.   The Estate of Rose D'Ambrosio,
    Deceased (hereinafter Decedent's estate), Vita D'Ambrosio,
    Executrix (hereinafter the executrix), petitioned the Court to
    redetermine respondent's determination of an $842,391 deficiency
    in the Federal estate tax of Decedent's estate.    We must decide
    whether Decedent's gross estate for Federal estate tax purposes
    includes the value of 470 shares of preferred stock in which
    Decedent retained an income interest for her life, after she
    transferred the remainder interest in the stock for its fair
    market value.    We hold that Decedent's gross estate includes the
    date-of-death value of the stock, reduced by the value of the
    consideration she received in return for the remainder interest.
    Unless otherwise indicated, section references are to the
    Internal Revenue Code in effect for the date of Decedent's death.
    Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and
    Procedure.
    - 3 -
    Background1
    VAPARO, Inc. (Vaparo), is a closely held corporation
    organized under the laws of the State of New York.     Vaparo was
    formed with one class of stock, one-half of which was owned by
    Decedent and one-half of which was owned by her son (Son).
    Vaparo was recapitalized on December 20, 1983, with three classes
    of stock.   Each share of the first class, class A stock, was
    assigned a par value of $1.    Each share of the second class,
    class B common stock, was valued at $0.2     The third class,
    noncumulative convertible preferred stock, was assigned Vaparo's
    remaining value, giving each of the preferred shares a value of
    $5,000.
    Immediately after Vaparo's recapitalization, its stock was
    owned as follows:
    Shares of        Shares of           Shares of
    Class A          Class B            Preferred
    Shareholder            Stock         Common Stock           Stock
    Son                     50               5,000                  500
    Decedent                50               5,000                  500
    After the recapitalization, but before September 1, 1987,
    Decedent gave away all of her Vaparo stock, less 470 shares of
    1
    The stipulations and attached exhibits are incorporated
    herein by this reference. Decedent resided (and her will was
    probated) in New Jersey. The executrix resided in Brooklyn, New
    York, when she petitioned the Court.
    2
    Under the recapitalization, all future appreciation of
    Vaparo was assigned to the class B common stock.
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    her preferred stock.   On September 1, 1987, when Decedent was
    80 years old, she and Vaparo agreed that Vaparo would buy the
    remainder interest in these 470 shares.    Under the agreement,
    Decedent sold Vaparo the remainder interest and retained the
    income interest in the shares for life.3   The remainder interest
    in the shares was worth $1,324,014 at the time of sale, and the
    total value of the shares was $2,350,000.4   Decedent received a
    private annuity worth $1,324,014, in consideration for the sale.
    Decedent died on May 25, 1990, after receiving annuity
    payments totaling $592,078.   Decedent never sold, relinquished,
    or otherwise disposed of her income interest. Respondent
    3
    Decedent reported $23,500 in dividends from Vaparo on her
    1987 Federal income tax return. For her 1988 through 1990
    taxable years, Vaparo did not declare any dividends, and Decedent
    did not report any dividend income from Vaparo.
    4
    The parties determined the value of the remainder interest
    in Decedent's preferred shares by multiplying the shares' fair
    market value by the appropriate remainder factor contained in the
    actuarial tables under sec. 20.2031, Estate Tax Regs. As
    stipulated by the parties: "The parties agree that this is a
    correct valuation of the remainder interest in the preferred
    stock." In view of this stipulation, we need not and do not
    consider the value of Decedent's preferred shares from a factual
    viewpoint, including the related question of whether Decedent's
    reserved life estate in a noncumulative preferred stock from
    which she received no dividends following the transaction at
    issue actually had value. Cf. Berzon v. Commissioner, 
    63 T.C. 601
    , 618-620 (1975), affd. 
    534 F.2d 528
     (2d Cir. 1976). The
    actuarial tables are presumptively correct, and the record that
    the parties agreed to does not require the conclusion that
    Decedent's use of the tables is "unrealistic and unreasonable" as
    in Froh v. Commissioner, 
    100 T.C. 1
    ,4 (1993), affd. without
    published opinion 
    46 F.3d 1141
     (9th Cir. 1995).
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    determined, and reflected in her notice of deficiency, that
    $1,757,922 of stock was includable in Decedent's gross estate for
    Federal estate tax purposes.    This amount equals the fair market
    value of 470 shares of Vaparo preferred stock ($2,350,000), less
    the annuity payments received by Decedent ($592,078).   Respondent
    has since conceded that the maximum amount includable in
    Decedent's gross estate with respect to the preferred stock is
    its $2,350,000 value, less the $1,324,014 value of the annuity.
    Discussion
    We are faced in this case with a Federal estate planning
    technique intended to remove the value of property from
    Decedent's gross estate.   We must decide whether the test of
    adequate and full consideration under section 2036(a) takes into
    account the value of the entire property, i.e., the fee interest,
    or merely the value of the remainder interest as determined under
    the valuation tables prescribed by respondent.   See e.g., sec.
    20.2031-7, Estate Tax Regs.    Numerous articles have been written
    on this issue, and the legal commentators debate its resolution.
    Compare, e.g., Dodge, 50-5th T.M., Transfers with Retained
    Interests and Powers A-67 (1992) with 2 Casner, Estate Planning,
    sec. 6.15.2, at 149 n.6 (5th ed. 1988 & Supp. 1993).
    Chapter 11 of the Internal Revenue Code imposes a Federal
    estate tax on the transfer of the taxable estate of a decedent
    who is a citizen or resident of the United States.   Secs. 2001
    - 6 -
    and 2002.   A decedent's gross estate is determined by reference
    to part III of chapter 11.   Under this part, the value of the
    gross estate includes the value of all property to the extent of
    the decedent's interest therein on the date of death.5     Sec.
    2033.
    A decedent's gross estate also includes property that is
    subject to section 2036(a), which applies when a decedent makes
    an inter vivos transfer of property without adequate and full
    consideration and reserves an income interest in the property for
    life.    Section 2036(a) provides:
    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 * * *
    (1) the possession or enjoyment of, or the
    right to the income from, the property * * *
    Respondent argues that section 2036(a) requires that
    Decedent's gross estate include the value of 470 shares of Vaparo
    preferred stock, less the value of Decedent's annuity.
    Respondent argues that the "bona fide sale for adequate and full
    consideration" exception of section 2036(a) is inapplicable to
    the facts at hand because Decedent received consideration only
    5
    This valuation is usually made at the time of death. The
    executor, however, may elect to value a decedent's property as of
    an alternate valuation date, e.g., 6 months after death. Sec.
    2032.
    - 7 -
    for her remainder interest in the stock.     According to the
    executrix, Decedent's gross estate does not include the value of
    any Vaparo preferred stock because, during her life, she sold the
    remainder interest in the stock for adequate and full
    consideration.   The executrix argues that Gradow v. United
    States, 
    11 Cl. Ct. 808
     (1987), affd. 
    897 F.2d 516
     (Fed. Cir.
    1990), the holding of which is contrary to her position, was
    wrongly decided by both the United States Claims Court and the
    Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit.
    According to the executrix' interpretation, section 2036(a)
    permits a taxpayer to remove the entire value of property from
    his or her gross estate by selling the remainder interest in the
    property for an amount equal to the value of the remainder
    interest.   We do not agree.   See Estate of Gregory v.
    Commissioner, 
    39 T.C. 1012
     (1963).      We do not believe that the
    bona fide sale exception of section 2036(a) allows Decedent's
    estate to avoid the Federal estate tax on the value of the
    preferred stock in which Decedent retained an income interest
    until her death.   We find the executrix' reliance on a private
    letter ruling and technical advice memoranda misplaced.     Sec.
    6110(b)(1), (j)(3) (private letter rulings and technical advice
    memoranda are not precedential); Knapp v. Commissioner, 90 T.C.
    - 8 -
    430, 438 n.5 (1988), affd. 
    867 F.2d 749
     (2d Cir. 1989).6     We also
    find that the executrix is mistaken in her reliance on the
    legislative history of section 2701, which was added to the
    Internal Revenue Code by section 11602(a) of the Omnibus Budget
    Reconciliation Act of 1990, Pub. L. 101-508, 
    104 Stat. 1388
    ,
    1388-491.    As observed by the U.S. Supreme Court:    "the views of
    one Congress as to the construction of a statute adopted many
    years before by another Congress have very little, if any,
    significance."    United States v. Southwestern Cable Co., 
    392 U.S. 157
    , 170 (1968) (quoting Rainwater v. United States, 
    356 U.S. 590
    , 593 (1958)).
    In Gradow v. United States, supra, the U.S. Claims Court
    applied section 2036(a) to a case with facts similar to those of
    the case at hand.    In the Gradow case, the surviving spouse could
    elect under her husband's will to:      (1) Receive her one-half
    share of the couple's community property outright or (2) transfer
    her one-half interest to a trust that would hold all of the
    couple's community property, pay her all of the trust income
    during her life, and distribute the trust corpus to her son upon
    her death.   She made the latter choice and, following her death,
    her executor included none of the trust assets in her gross
    estate.   According to the executor, the estate included none of
    6
    Nor are we bound by the opinions of commentators on which
    the executrix relies.
    - 9 -
    the trust's assets because the decedent's retained life interest
    was received in a transfer for adequate and full consideration
    under section 2036(a).   The Commissioner disagreed.   The
    Commissioner determined that the decedent's gross estate included
    the date-of-death value of the property which the decedent had
    contributed to the trust, less the value of the consideration
    that she received in return.   Agreeing with the Commissioner's
    position, the Claims Court held that the value of the decedent's
    transfer to the trust, namely her one-half share of the community
    property, was includable in her gross estate under section
    2036(a), less the value of the consideration received by her in
    return for the transfer.   According to the court, the
    consideration flowing from the taxpayer consisted of her half of
    the community property and did not consist only of the remainder
    interest that was left to her son under the trust.     The Court of
    Appeals for the Federal Circuit affirmed, essentially for the
    reasons stated by the Claims Court.
    In this Court, there is authority to a similar effect.    In
    Estate of Gregory v. Commissioner, supra, as in the Gradow case,
    the decedent's husband died and under his will gave her a
    "widow's election" whether to take her separate share of the
    community property outright or instead permit her share to pass
    to a testamentary trust, whereby she would acquire a life
    interest in all of their community property.   The decedent
    - 10 -
    elected the life interest, with the result that her community
    property worth approximately $65,000 went into the trust with her
    husband's share.    The actuarial value of her income interest in
    her husband's share was approximately $12,000.        The Court held
    that the decedent's election was a transfer with a retained life
    estate that was outside of the bona fide sale exception of
    section 2036(a).    The Court compared the decedent's life interest
    in her husband's share against the larger amount that she had
    placed in trust.    The Court stated:      "The statute excepts only
    those bona fide sales where the consideration received was of a
    comparable value which would be includable in the transferor's
    gross estate."     Id. at 1016.
    Subsequently, in United States v. Past, 
    347 F.2d 7
     (9th Cir.
    1965), the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit faced a
    comparable issue.    In the Past case, pursuant to a divorce
    settlement, the community property of the decedent and her
    husband was transferred to a trust, in which the decedent
    received an income interest for life.        Citing this Court's
    opinion in Estate of Gregory v. Commissioner, supra, the Court of
    Appeals rejected the argument of the decedent's estate that the
    decedent's transfer to the trust was excepted from section
    2036(a) as a bona fide sale for adequate and full consideration.
    United States v. Past, 
    supra at 12
    .        Instead the court reasoned
    that the consideration received by the decedent from the trust
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    had to be measured against the total value of the property that
    she contributed to the trust, and not only against the value of
    the remainder interest in the property.   Given that the decedent
    transferred $243,989 in property to the trust in return for a
    life estate worth approximately $143,346, the Court of Appeals
    held that the decedent did not receive adequate and full
    consideration under section 2036(a).   
    Id. at 13-14
    ; accord
    Parker v. United States, 75 AFTR 2d 2509, 95-1 USTC par. 60199
    (N.D. Ga. 1995); Pittman v. United States, 
    878 F. Supp. 833
    (E.D.N.C. 1994).
    The Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit used analogous
    reasoning in United States v. Allen, 
    293 F.2d 916
     (10th Cir.
    1961).   In the Allen case, the decedent set up an inter vivos,
    irrevocable trust in which she retained 60 percent of the income
    for life, the other 40 percent passing to her two children who
    were also the beneficiaries of the remainder interest.   Advised
    that her retention of the life estate would cause the
    attributable part of corpus (valued at approximately $900,000) to
    be included in her gross estate for Federal estate tax purposes,
    the decedent sold her life interest to her son for $140,000,
    which was slightly greater than the $135,000 actuarial value of
    the interest.   The Commissioner determined that 60 percent of the
    corpus, less the $140,000 purchase price, was includable in the
    decedent's gross estate.   The executors disagreed.   According to
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    the executors, no part of the trust corpus was includable in the
    decedent's gross estate because the sale of the income interest
    was for adequate and full consideration.   After the District
    Court agreed with the executors' position, the Court of Appeals
    for the Tenth Circuit reversed.   According to the Court of
    Appeals:
    Our narrow question is thus whether the corpus of
    a reserved life estate is removed, for federal estate
    tax purposes, from a decedent's gross estate by a
    transfer at the value of such reserved life estate. In
    other words, must the consideration be paid for the
    interest transferred, or for the interest which would
    otherwise be included in the gross estate? [Id. at
    917.]
    In holding that the consideration must be paid for the interest
    that would otherwise be includable in the gross estate, the Court
    of Appeals first acknowledged the well-settled principle that a
    taxpayer may reduce his or her tax liability through any
    permissible means.   The Court of Appeals then found, however,
    that the decedent's transaction was not a permissible means under
    this principle.   The court stated:
    It does not seem plausible, however, that Congress
    intended to allow such an easy avoidance of the taxable
    incidence befalling reserved life estates. This result
    would allow a taxpayer to reap the benefits of property
    for his lifetime and, in contemplation of death, sell
    only the interest entitling him to the income, thereby
    removing all of the property which he has enjoyed from
    his gross estate. Giving the statute a reasonable
    interpretation, we cannot believe this to be its
    intendment. It seems certain that in a situation like
    this, Congress meant the estate to include the corpus
    of the trust or, in its stead, an amount equal in
    value. [Id. at 918; citations omitted.]
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    With this longstanding judicial precedent in mind, we are
    not persuaded by Decedent's estate's position in the instant
    case.     We conclude that the congressional mandate embodied in
    section 2036(a) requires that the property in question be
    included in Decedent's gross estate.     As observed by the Supreme
    Court in construing a predecessor of section 2036(a) in the
    context of transfers in trust:
    an estate tax cannot be avoided by any trust transfer
    except by a bona fide transfer in which the settlor,
    absolutely, unequivocally, irrevocably, and without
    possible reservations, parts with all of his title and
    all of his possession and all of his enjoyment of the
    transferred property. * * * [Commissioner v. Estate of
    Church, 
    335 U.S. 632
    , 645 (1949).]
    The Court has also stated that section 2036(a):
    taxes not merely those interests which are deemed to
    pass at death according to refined technicalities of
    the law of property. It also taxes inter vivos
    transfers that are too much akin to testamentary
    dispositions not to be subjected to the same excise.
    By bringing into the gross estate at his death that
    which the settlor gave contingently upon it, this Court
    fastened on the vital factor. It refused to
    subordinate the plain purposes of a modern fiscal
    measure to the wholly unrelated origins of the
    recondite learning of ancient property law. * * *
    [Helvering v. Hallock, 
    309 U.S. 106
    , 112 (1940).]
    Accordingly, the amount of consideration which is necessary
    to remove property from a gross estate under the bona fide sale
    exception of section 2036(a) is not determined merely by
    reference to the common law definition of contractual
    consideration, Merrill v. Fahs, 
    324 U.S. 308
     (1945);
    - 14 -
    Commissioner v. Wemyss, 
    324 U.S. 303
     (1945); Estate of Gregory v.
    Commissioner, 
    39 T.C. at 1016
    , or by the rules of the law of
    conveyance, Helvering v. Hallock, 
    supra at 112
    ; see Estate of
    Hartshorne v. Commissioner, 
    402 F.2d 592
    , 595 n.4 (2d Cir. 1968),
    affg. 
    48 T.C. 882
     (1967); Estate of Frothingham v. Commissioner,
    
    60 T.C. 211
    , 215-216 (1973).   Rather, the consideration received
    is compared to the value of the property that would have been
    included in the gross estate if the transfer had not occurred.
    The bona fide sale exception applies when an interest in property
    is transferred for sufficient consideration to prevent the
    depletion of the transferor's gross estate for Federal estate tax
    purposes.   See Estate of Gregory v. Commissioner, supra.
    In the instant case, we conclude that Decedent's transfer of
    the remainder interest in her preferred stock does not fall
    within the bona fide sale exception of section 2036(a).
    Decedent's gross estate would be depleted if the value of the
    preferred stock, in which she had retained a life interest, was
    excluded therefrom.   Decedent's transfer of the remainder
    interest was of a testamentary nature, made when she was 80 years
    old to a family-owned corporation in return for an annuity worth
    more than $1 million less than the stock itself.   Given our
    conclusion that Decedent did not receive adequate and full
    consideration under section 2036(a) for her 470 shares of Vaparo
    preferred stock, we hold that her gross estate includes the date
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    of death value of that stock, less the value of the annuity.
    Sec. 2043(a); sec. 20.2043-1(a), Estate Tax Regs.    In so holding,
    we have considered all arguments made by the executrix and, to
    the extent not discussed above, have found them to be without
    merit.
    To reflect concessions by the parties,
    Decision will be entered
    under Rule 155.