1971 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 35">*35
Decedent purchased U.S. savings bonds (series E) with her own funds. The bonds were registered in coownership form in the name of decedent or her daughter or grandchildren. The bonds were kept in a bank safe-deposit box rented by decedent in her name and to which she had access until her death. About 6 years before she died, decedent gave the keys to the safe-deposit box to her daughter and after that time never entered the box again. Delivery of the keys was recorded in decedent's diary. The bonds remained in the safe-deposit box until the decedent's death.
57 T.C. 152">*152 In these 1971 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 35">*37 consolidated cases the respondent determined a Federal estate tax deficiency of $ 79,266.31 against the Estate of Mae Elliott, Mrs. J. E. Crabtree, a.k.a. Mary Kathryn Crabtree, executrix, in docket No. 5731-69. In respect of such determination, respondent also asserted, pursuant to
Petitioner | Docket No. | Amount |
Mrs. J. E. Crabtree, sole heir, a.k.a. Mary Kathryn | ||
Crabtree, sole heir of Mae Elliott | 5732-69 | $ 79,266.31 |
Mrs. J. E. Crabtree, a.k.a. Mary Kathryn Crabtree | 5733-69 | 79,266.31 |
Mrs. J. E. Crabtree, transferee a.k.a. Mary Kathryn | ||
Crabtree, transferee | 5734-69 | 79,266.31 |
Elliott Edley Crabtree, transferee in the Estate of | ||
Mae Elliott | 5735-69 | 14,000.00 |
Mrs. Mary Elaine Crabtree Aduddell, transferee in | ||
the Estate of Mae Elliott | 5736-69 | 14,000.00 |
1971 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 35">*38 57 T.C. 152">*153 The values of certain properties for estate tax purposes have been agreed to by the parties in their stipulation of facts. At issue is whether the value of certain U.S. savings bonds (series E), registered in coownership form to the decedent or her daughter or her grandchildren, should be included in the decedent's gross estate for Federal estate tax purposes under the provisions of
FINDINGS OF FACT
Some of the facts have been stipulated by the parties. The stipulation of facts and exhibits attached thereto are incorporated herein by this reference.
The petitioner in docket No. 5731-69 is the Estate of Mae Elliott. Mrs. J. E. Crabtree is the executrix of the estate. The Federal estate tax return for the Estate of Mae Elliott was timely filed on October 8, 1963, with the district director of internal revenue at Dallas, Tex.
Mrs. J. E. Crabtree, who is also known as Mary Kathryn1971 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 35">*39 Crabtree (hereinafter referred to as Kathryn), is the petitioner in docket Nos. 5732-69 through 5734-69 and is the sole heir of Mae Elliott and the fiduciary and transferee in law and equity of the property of the Estate of Mae Elliott. At the time she filed her petitions herein she resided in Dalhart, Tex.
Elliott Edley Crabtree (hereinafter referred to as Elliott) is the petitioner in docket No. 5735-69 and is transferee in the Estate of Mae Elliott. At the time his petition was filed herein he was a resident of Dalhart, Tex.
Mary Elaine Crabtree Aduddell (hereinafter referred to as Elaine), the petitioner in docket No. 5736-69, is also a transferee in the Estate of Mae Elliott and was a resident of Dalhart, Tex., at the time her petition was filed in this proceeding.
Mae Elliott was the mother of Mrs. J. E. Crabtree (Kathryn), and the grandmother of Elliott and Elaine.
Mae Elliott died testate on July 7, 1962, at which time she was a resident of Stratford, Tex. Her sole heir, Kathryn, survived her. Her estate has not been probated. From January 27, 1950, until her death on July 7, 1962, Mae Elliott rented a safe-deposit box in her 57 T.C. 152">*154 own name at the First State Bank1971 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 35">*40 of Stratford, Tex. The rental agreement between the bank and Mae Elliott provided, in part, that --
no person other than the renter, his duly appointed deputy, as shown by the records of the Safe Deposit Department, or the legal representative of the renter in the event of his death, incompetency, insolvency or other disability, shall have access to the box as hereinafter expressly stipulated.
There is no evidence that Mae Elliott ever appointed a deputy who had a right to enter her safe-deposit box. There is also no evidence that Mae Elliott at any time authorized the bank in writing to admit anyone to her safe-deposit box. Mae Elliott paid the rental on the safe-deposit box from January 27, 1950, until her death on July 7, 1962. There were only two keys to the safe-deposit box and, according to the contract with the bank, both of them were received by Mae Elliott when she rented the box.
From November 1949 through October 1959, Mae Elliott purchased with her own funds various U.S. savings bonds, series E, which were issued and registered in her name jointly with her daughter, Kathryn, or one of her grandchildren, Elliott and Elaine. The bonds always remained in coownership1971 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 35">*41 form. At the time of Mae Elliott's death, the bonds, having a total value of $ 95,105.60, were unredeemed and located in the safe-deposit box at the First State Bank of Stratford, Tex. The contents of the box were inventoried on July 10, 1962, and turned over to Kathryn.
Kathryn lived close to her mother, Mae Elliott, and often visited her. Kathryn was familiar with a diary which was kept by Mae Elliot for a number of years. The diary was found by Kathryn in her mother's home shortly after her death. The diary contained an entry dated August 23, 1956, which reads: "Gave Kathryn keys to safety box since bonds belong to her -- Elliott & Elaine." The keys were manually delivered to Kathryn. Both keys were in her dominion and control from August 23, 1956, until Mae Elliott's death. On several occasions Mae Elliott told Kathryn, Elliott, and Elaine the bonds in the box were theirs. After delivery of the keys to Kathryn, Mae Elliott never entered the safe-deposit box again, nor did she ever ask Kathryn for the keys. If Mae Elliott had requested the bank to open the safe-deposit box, she would have been given access thereto and would have been able to take the bonds had she so desired.
1971 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 35">*42 Kathyrn entered the safe-deposit box on several occasions both prior to and after August 23, 1956. She never gave the keys to the box to anyone after she received them from her mother.
There is no evidence that Mae Elliott ever filed a Federal gift tax return reporting any gift of the bonds to Kathryn, Elliott, and Elaine.
57 T.C. 152">*155 Upon Mae Elliott's death, Kathryn claimed as her property the bonds registered in the name of the decedent jointly with her; and Elliott and Elaine each claimed as their own property the bonds registered in their names jointly with the decedent.
The gross amount reported in the Federal estate tax return of Mae Elliott was $ 156,685.73. The U.S. savings bonds (series E) in question had a total value of $ 95,105.60 at the time of Mae Elliott's death on July 7, 1962. The value of these bonds was not included in the Federal estate tax return of Mae Elliott. In his notice of deficiency and notices of fiduciary and transferee liabilities mailed on August 15, 1969, respondent determined that the value of the bonds was includable in the decedent's gross estate under
OPINION
The basic issue confronting us in these cases is whether 1971 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 35">*43 the value of certain U.S. savings bonds (series E), registered in the names of the decedent and her daughter or grandchildren as coowners, should be included in the gross estate of Mae Elliott for Federal estate tax purposes under the provisions of
1971 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 35">*44 1.
1971 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 35">*46 To properly apply the Treasury regulations, their purpose and judicial interpretations thereof must be considered as well as the literal meaning of the words. During the hearings held in 1935 to amend the Second Liberty Bond Act, Secretary of the Treasury Morgenthau testified before the Senate Finance Committee, obviously concerned over Government liability regarding such bonds, that the purpose for making the bonds nontransferable was to prevent them from being "dealt in." See Hearings before Senate Committee on Finance on H.R. 4304, 74th Cong., 1st Sess., p. 17-18 (1935).
The Treasury regulations have been repeatedly referred to in judicial decisions as having for their purpose the prevention of suits against the Government between claimants to Government bonds, and to protect the interests of the bondholders.
57 T.C. 152">*157 Several cases have considered the applicability of the Treasury regulations to factual situations similar to the one before us. There has developed a sharp conflict among the decided cases. In the cases relied on by respondent, the courts, literally applying the language of the Treasury regulations, have held that U.S. savings bonds registered in coownership form and not redeemed or reissued prior to the decedent's death are includable in the decedent's gross estate for Federal estate tax purposes. See, e.g.,
In the instant cases respondent urges us to follow the decisions in
To support his contention that the Treasury regulations apply herein, respondent cites
Respondent also relies on two opinions of this Court, namely,
The
In neither
In the
At the death of the decedent the bonds remained in the name of the decedent or her nephew. At any time during her lifetime, decedent could have cashed the bonds. All of the bonds originally were owned by her. It is not contended that any of the bonds were purchased with money belonging to the nephew.
We therefore hold that the bonds were subject to federal estate taxes as a part of the taxable estate of decedent under
57 T.C. 152">*159 Relying upon
We reaffirm the holding of this Court in
The rationale of the
On the other side of this issue, the Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit held in
We think that the preferable view is the conclusion that as between the decedent's executor and the persons to whom the decedent made a gift, complete except for going through the process of having the bonds reissued, the right of the donees is clear. The transaction is equivalent to an express trust declared by the decedent even though trust terms were not used.
Does that relieve the estate of the decedent from an estate tax which includes the value of these bonds? The district judge points out that the regulation already cited "does not contain any intimation that the Treasury Department shall be considered as though it were one personality for borrowing money and a different one for collecting it by taxing." Of course that is true. Nevertheless, if the analysis above is correct, the decedent, prior to his death, was not equitably entitled to any of the proceeds of these bonds. Had he cashed the bonds, he and his representative after him would have been compelled to hold the1971 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 35">*55 proceeds in trust for the donees of his inter vivos gift. In essence the decedent, prior to his death, had effectively conveyed his right of survivorship to the co-owners of the bonds. The Estate Tax attaches to the economic benefit to be derived from property rather than the technical ramifications of title.[n9] The decedent had parted with his economic interest prior to his death, and in the words of the Internal Revenue Code of 1939, "the extent of the interest therein held" by the decedent was nothing. * * *
[Footnote omitted.]
The District Court in the
We cast our lot with the Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit. We agree with the reasoning and conclusion of the
In accordance with the provisions of the Treasury regulations and the Treasury Offering Circular, of which we take judicial notice, it is indisputable that at any time up until the moment prior to the decedent's death, the decedent, if she had presented the series E bonds in question 1971 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 35">*58 to the United States, would have received the redemption 57 T.C. 152">*161 value of the bonds. It is also indisputable, if the decedent's coowning daughter and grandchildren had predeceased her, that under the provisions of the Federal contract the decedent would have become the sole and absolute owner of the bonds, and no rights to or interest in the bonds would pass to the executors or administrators of the deceased daughter or grandchildren. By delivering the keys to her safe-deposit box to Kathryn and by writing in her diary that the bonds belonged to Kathryn, Elliott, and Elaine, the most the decedent did was to make an incomplete inter vivos gift under the binding Federal contract.
In view of the unambiguous and unequivocal provisions of the Treasury regulations and the Treasury Offering Circular, up until the moment of the decedent's death, the actual ownership of and interest in the series E bonds jointly vested in the names of the registered coowners because: (1) The form of the registration used must express the actual ownership of and interest in the bond (
In our judgment the rule proclaimed by the Sixth Circuit in the
1971 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 35">*60 With respect to U.S. savings bonds, series E, issued in coownership form and registered in the names of two specified coowners, we conclude that under the terms and conditions of the Federal contract -- a constituent part of which are the Treasury regulations -- one coowner cannot divest himself of all ownership of and interest in the bonds, and vest sole ownership in them in the other coowner, by making a 57 T.C. 152">*162 delivery, actual or constructive, during his lifetime of the registered bonds to the other coowner with the intent of making an inter vivos gift. The provisions of
2.
Granted that Mae Elliott had a sufficient intention to make gifts of the series E coownership bonds to Kathryn, Elaine, and Elliott on August 23, 1956, there was not an unconditional delivery to the alleged donees of possession of the bonds contained in the safe-deposit box at that time. See
3.
Tannenwald,
In my opinion, the majority has unnecessarily decided the legal issue of the broad applicability of the Treasury bond regulations. The purported transfer herein was not to a stranger but to a registered coowner of the bond. The contrast between these two types of transfer is clearly articulated by Judge Sweigert in
1. Cases of the following petitioners are consolidated herewith: Mrs. J. E. Crabtree, sole heir, a.k.a. Mary Kathryn Crabtree, sole heir of Mae Elliott, docket No. 5732-69; Mrs. J. E. Crabtree, a.k.a. Mary Kathryn Crabtree, docket No. 5733-69; Mrs. J. E. Crabtree, Transferee, a.k.a. Mary Kathryn Crabtree, Transferee, docket No. 5734-69; Elliott Edley Crabtree, Transferee in Estate of Mae Elliott, docket No. 5735-69; and Mrs. Mary Elaine Crabtree Aduddell, Transferee in Estate of Mae Elliott, docket No. 5736-69.↩
2. All statutory references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as amended, unless otherwise indicated.↩
3.
The value of the gross estate shall include the value of all property to the extent of the interest therein held as joint tenants by the decedent and any other person, or as tenants by the entirety by the decedent and spouse, or deposited, with any person carrying on the banking business, in their joint names and payable to either or the survivor, except such part thereof as may be shown to have originally belonged to such other person and never to have been received or acquired by the latter from the decedent for less than an adequate and full consideration in money or money's worth: * * *↩
4.
(a)
* * * *
(2)
Examples. John A. Jones or Mrs. Ella S. Jones. * * *
No other form of registration establishing coownership is authorized.↩
5.
(a)
6.
7.
(b) Neither the Treasury Department nor any agency for the issue, reissue, or redemption of savings bonds will accept notices of adverse claims or of pending judicial proceedings or undertake to protect the interests of litigants who do not have possession of a bond.↩
8. There are over 500 million series E bonds held by millions of persons, and about 75 percent of these are issued in coownership form and registered in the names of two coowners.↩
9. On the very issue before us the decisions of various State courts are divided, although the majority rule seems to be that U.S. savings bonds cannot be the subject of an inter vivos gift under State law because the Treasury regulations prohibit their transfer. See Annot.,
10. See
"
11. Sec. 20.2040-1(b), Estate Tax Regs., provides, in part, that "