1972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 196">*196
Decedent was required under a decree of divorce to pay $ 1,000 monthly to his former wife until she died or until the expiration of 10 years and 10 months. He made regular payments to her during his life but died with 111 unmatured installments remaining. The provisions of the decree admittedly bound the estate. The estate claimed a deduction of $ 111,000 on the estate tax return. The executor continued the payments for 10 months and then settled the entire claim, with the approval of the court which granted the divorce, by substituting a commercial annuity policy. The settlement effectuated the terms of the original divorce decree but also brought in a son and a grandson of decedent and his former spouse as beneficiaries under the annuity.
57 T.C. 503">*503 OPINION
All of the facts are stipulated and this case was submitted under
Donald E. Lester, the decedent, died on February 2, 1963, domiciled in Natchitoches, La., and leaving a holographic1972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 196">*199 will. The executor of the estate is Robert S. Coors, an individual who was a legal resident of Milwaukee, Wis., at the time the petition was filed. He received letters testamentary from the Tenth Judicial District Court for the Parish of Natchitoches.
The decedent divorced his wife Ruth Lester on July 27, 1961, in the Circuit Court of Milwaukee County, Wis. The decree obligated the decedent to make monthly payments to his ex-wife in the following provision:
As and for a further full, final and complete division of estate of the parties, the defendant herein shall be entitled to receive a total sum of One hundred thirty thousand dollars ($ 130,000.00) to be paid by the plaintiff in the following manner: One thousand dollars ($ 1,000.00) per month, on the first day of the calendar month, following the date of entry of judgment of divorce, and the further sum of One thousand dollars ($ 1,000.00) per month on the first day of each calendar month thereafter, for a total period of ten (10) years and ten (10) months, until the full sum of One hundred thirty thousand dollars ($ 130,000.00) shall have been paid by said plaintiff for the benefit of the defendant. In the event the plaintiff1972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 196">*200 shall predecease the defendant prior to the expiration of the ten (10) year and ten (10) month period hereinabove set forth, the Estate of the plaintiff shall pay the defendant the sum of One thousand dollars ($ 1,000.00) monthly, following his death, until the death of the defendant, or until the expiration of the original ten (10) year and ten (10) month period, whichever shall first occur.
During his life the decedent made the 19 payments which fell due before February 2, 1963, the date of death. On that date 9 years and 3 months of the term established by the decree remained, and assuming that the ex-wife's death would not have occurred during that interval, 57 T.C. 503">*505 the estate would have been obligated to pay 111 installments of $ 1,000 monthly to her commencing March 1, 1963. In fact the petitioner did make such payments, and after 14 months' worth totaling $ 14,000 were disbursed the Federal estate tax return (Form 706) was filed on April 28, 1964.
Ten more installments were completed through February 1, 1965, but on February 22 the Wisconsin court which granted the divorce entered an order styled "Order to Show Cause" upon the stipulation of Ruth Lester, the ex-wife, and1972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 196">*201 Robert Coors, the executor. The court directed Coors to purchase "a Single Premium Immediate Annuity Certain, Non-participating" from a designated insurance company naming Ruth Lester the annuitant and the son and the grandson of the decedent and Ruth Lester as primary and secondary beneficiaries respectively. The order further provided:
4.) That defendant, RUTH A. LESTER, shall have no power of assignment of said policy of insurance, and said defendant further shall have no right to change the beneficiary or beneficiaries on said policy of insurance.
5.) Said policy of insurance shall pay the sum of One thousand dollars ($ 1,000.00) monthly to the defendant, RUTH A. LESTER, first payment commencing March 1, 1965, and the further sum of One thousand dollars ($ 1,000.00) on the first day of each calendar month thereafter until the balance of Eighty-seven thousand dollars ($ 87,000.00) shall have been paid to her in full. In the event the defendant, RUTH A. LESTER, shall die before the balance of Eighty-seven thousand dollars ($ 87,000.00) shall have been paid to her under said policy of insurance, then and in that event the balance of payments under said policy of insurance shall1972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 196">*202 be made payable to the primary beneficiary or secondary beneficiary, as specified herein and in the policy of insurance.
These terms were intended to and did discharge the estate from future installments and served to liquidate the balance remaining under the original decree of divorce.
Robert Coors purchased the annuity policy at a total cost of $ 78,700 about March 1, 1965. In the Federal estate tax return filed approximately 10 months earlier the estate claimed a deduction for the ex-wife's claim against the estate in the amount of $ 111,000 or the face amount of the maximum number of installments due as of the decedent's death under the decree of divorce.
Ruth Lester was born May 18, 1916.
The Commissioner determined an estate tax deficiency of $ 6,490.35 and explained as follows in the deficiency notice and accompanying statement:
Debts of decedent and mortgages and liens:
Items:
Return | Determined | |
2 | $ 111,000.00 | $ 92,456.16 |
* * * *
57 T.C. 503">*506 Item 2: It has been determined that in the computation of the taxable estate the estate is entitled to a deduction for a debt of decedent due to Ruth Myers Lester his divorced wife in the amount of $ 92,456.16 rather than1972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 196">*203 $ 111,000.00 as claimed in Schedule K of the return, Form 706. This debt is a settlement payment due decedent's divorced wife under a court decree. The payments still due at date of death of decedent were in the amount of $ 1,000.00 per month for 9 years and 3 months. The computation of the allowable deduction under the provisions of Federal Estate Tax Regulations
For 9 years from Actuarial Tables for Estate and Gift Tax, Internal Revenue Service Publication No. 11: N[47] - N[56] / D[47] equals 2668428 - 1435810 / 168474 equals 1232618 / 168474 equals 7.3164.
7.3164 x ($ 1,000.00 x 12) x 1.0189 equals | $ 89,456.16 |
Add 3 months at $ 1,000.00 per month | 3,000.00 |
Total commuted value of this non-interest-bearing debt | 92,456.16 |
The Commissioner contends that the amount of the estate's obligation to the decedent's ex-wife is the commuted value at the date of death of the installments which had not yet become due. He cites
Petitioner makes three contentions in the alternative: First, that the estate is entitled to deduct the face amount of the installments outstanding at the date of death, or $ 1,000 multiplied by 111 payments; second, that the allowable deduction is the amount of the installments which accrued and were paid during the administration plus the cost to the estate of the annuity policy substituted for 1972 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 196">*205 the yet unmatured installments; and last, $ 96,021.49, which evidently is a figure petitioner arrived at after consulting Table II under
57 T.C. 503">*507 We think these contentions of petitioner have no merit.
The
We think there is no reason in this case to go beyond the principle of
There is no need to go into the effect of events subsequent to the husband's death, i.e., how the estate finally freed itself of a continuing and admitted liability.
Here the validity of the claim is undisputed. The estate acknowledged it in the estate tax return and subsequently made payments thereon. The only question is how the claim should be valued for the purpose of determining the amount of the estate tax deduction. Under
Accordingly, the Commissioner's determination is approved.
1. All statutory references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 unless otherwise stated.
(a) General Rule. -- For purposes of the tax imposed by * * * * (3) for claims against the estate * * * *↩