1971 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 118">*118
1. Decedent's grandson did not owe interest on a land purchase contract at the time of decedent's death; consequently, no claim for such interest is includable in her taxable estate under
2. Decedent did not make completed gifts to her children of certificates of deposit or of funds deposited in certain savings accounts, all of which were maintained in the joint names of decedent and one of the children; therefore, such certificates and funds are includable in her taxable estate under
3. Decedent's deposit of funds in a joint savings account with her daughter and the subsequent withdrawal of such funds by her daughter prior to decedent's death was a gift not in contemplation of death within the meaning of
56 T.C. 579">*579 Respondent determined that each petitioner is liable as transferee for a deficiency of $ 9,949.74 in the Federal estate tax of the Estate of Stella M. Wilson. The questions presented for decision are:
(1) Whether on the date of Stella M. Wilson's death she was the owner of a contract right entitling her to collect $ 234.25 in accrued interest from her1971 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 118">*119 grandson;
(2) Whether Stella M. Wilson made completed gifts to her two adult children of certificates of deposit and of funds deposited in certain savings accounts, all of which were maintained in the joint names of her and one of the children, with the result that such certificates and funds are not includable in her gross estate under
(3) Whether Stella M. Wilson's gift of the funds in a savings account was made in contemplation of death within the meaning of
FINDINGS OF FACT
Petitioner Harley A. Wilson (hereinafter referred to as Harley) resided in Nyssa, Oreg., at the time he filed his petition herein. Petitioner Beulah L. Zurcher (hereinafter referred to as Beulah) resided in Parma, Idaho, at the time her petition in this proceeding was filed.
56 T.C. 579">*580 Stella M. Wilson (hereinafter referred to as decedent or Stella) died intestate on February 12, 1965, at Harley's home in 1971 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 118">*120 Nyssa, Oreg. She resided in Parma at the time of her death, and her estate was probated in the Probate Court of Canyon County, Idaho, with Lester W. Zurcher, Beulah's husband, serving as administrator. On January 25, 1966, an estate tax return was timely filed with the district director of internal revenue for the district of Idaho.
All of the decedent's property was distributed in equal shares to the petitioners herein. The total value of the property so distributed was $ 58,773.60 in money and $ 55,870 in real estate.
On January 3, 1962, the decedent and her husband, Charles L. Wilson (hereinafter referred to as Charles), executed a contract to sell real property to Darrell L. Wilson (hereinafter Darrell), their grandson. The contract provided for the payment of the purchase price in the following manner:
Charles died on August 17, 1964, and this contract thereupon became the property of Stella. Between January 3, 1962, and February 12, 1965, Darrell made payments under this contract, and on the latter date there remained a principal balance of $ 9,370. No interest payments were ever made by Darrell in connection with the contract. When Darrell attempted to pay the decedent the interest due under the contract, she refused to accept it, telling Darrell that she did not care to have interest paid. On Stella's death, the contract became the property of Harley, and he collected no interest thereon.
In the notices of deficiency, respondent determined that the decedent's estate had a right to collect accrued interest of $ 234.25 from Darrell for the period between Charles' death and the decedent's death.
On July 19, 1963, the decedent and her daughter Beulah went to Caldwell, Idaho, 1971 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 118">*122 where they visited three banks. At The Idaho First National Bank, the decedent opened savings account No. X0860 in the names of "Stella M. Wilson or Bulah [sic] L. Zurcher" and deposited $ 5,000 of her own funds therein. At the First Federal Savings and Loan 56 T.C. 579">*581 Association of Boise, decedent opened savings account No. XXXX in the names of "Wilson, Stella M. or Beulah L. Zurcher" and deposited $ 9,000 which was transferred from an account previously carried in the names of Charles and Stella. At the Bank of Idaho, decedent changed the title of savings account No. X4928 from her own name to "Stella M. Wilson or Beulah L. Zurcher" and added $ 5,937.84 to an already existing balance of $ 4,062.16, making a total balance of $ 10,000. After they returned to their car, decedent handed Beulah the passbooks and told her that she could use the money and enjoy it. Beulah kept the passbooks in a deposit box in her home.
On January 7, 1964, the decedent and Beulah again went to Caldwell where the decedent deposited an additional $ 800 of her own funds in account No. X4928. The passbook remained in Beulah's possession.
Beulah never deposited any funds in the three accounts; nor did 1971 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 118">*123 she report as income any of the interest earned on these deposits.
On February 2, 1965, Beulah withdrew all of the funds in account No. X0860, that sum being $ 5,221.81. On February 12, 1965, the day her mother died, Beulah closed out the two remaining accounts -- No. X4928 and No. XXXX -- and deposited these funds in accounts bearing the title of "Beulah L. Zurcher or Lester Zurcher." When they were closed, account No. XXXX contained $ 9,609.50 and account No. X4928 contained $ 11,344.51.
On January 8, 1964, the decedent opened, at the Bank of Idaho, savings account No. X7535 in the names of "Stella M. Wilson or Harley A. Wilson" and deposited $ 10,400 of her own funds therein. At The Idaho First National Bank, she opened savings account No. X1052 in the names of "Stella M. Wilson, or Harley A. Wilson" and deposited $ 9,114.04 of her own funds therein. When Harley visited his mother later that day, he signed the appropriate signature cards for the aforementioned accounts; and decedent then gave him the two passbooks. She told him he could use the money; that she had given Beulah some money also; and that he ought to buy a new car.
Harley never deposited any funds in the accounts; 1971 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 118">*124 and in his tax returns he reported no interest income from this source.
On February 12, 1965, the date decedent died, Harley withdrew the money then on deposit in the two accounts and placed them in accounts bearing the name of "Harley A. or Betty Jo Wilson." At that time account No. X7535 contained $ 10,767.18 and account No. X1052 contained $ 9,435.81.
On January 7, 1965, the decedent purchased in the names of "Stella M. Wilson or Harley A. Wilson," two $ 10,000 time certificates of deposit numbered 10747 and 10748. The certificates contained the following provision: "Payable to said owner, or, if more than one, to either 56 T.C. 579">*582 or any of said owners or the survivor or survivors * * *." She gave these certificates to Harley and told him he could use these funds.
On January 13, 1966, the certificates were redeemed and included in Stella's gross estate under Schedule C of her estate tax return.
The decedent never filed gift tax returns reporting the transfers of any of the savings accounts or the funds for which the certificates of deposit were issued. On July 14, 1970, Harley and Beulah filed gift tax returns for 1963, 1964, and 1965 and paid a gift tax of $ 2,492.71.
In the1971 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 118">*125 notices of deficiency, respondent determined that the joint account Nos. X7535, X1052, and X4928 were held in joint tenancy by decedent at the date of her death and that decedent had furnished all the funds in these accounts; thus, the total amount contained in these three accounts was includable in decedent's taxable estate under
From 1946, when Stella and her husband, Charles, moved to Parma, Idaho, until her death, decedent performed all of the daily chores of a farmer's wife including milking their cow, maintaining the yard, cooking, washing, ironing, and caring for her husband while he was ill.
Sometime prior to 1963, Stella's husband suffered a stroke which left him ambulatory but with a severe hostility toward Stella. In July 1963, the hostility1971 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 118">*126 caused her to move to the nearby community of Homedale for several months. In September 1963, she took a 4-month trip to California, Arizona, and Oklahoma in order to visit relatives. While she was away, her husband suffered another stroke and, upon her return to Parma in December of that year, she resumed caring for him.
In August 1964, shortly after her husband's death, decedent complained of shortness of breath, inability to lie flat on her stomach, general weakness, and swelling of her abdomen and legs. Dr. John Paul Finck, who had treated decedent for a number of years, concluded that she was in heart failure at that time, and an electrocardiogram disclosed a pocket of healed scar tissue on the wall of her heart. Dr. Finck was of the opinion that, apparently unbeknownst to decedent, she had suffered a heart attack sometime in 1963.
From August 1964 through February 8, 1965, decedent saw Dr. Finck approximately 8 times. During that period, she responded fairly well to several cardiac medicines. On February 8, 1965, decedent complained of a loss of appetite and vomiting. Dr. Finck thought she was 56 T.C. 579">*583 having a recurrence of gallbladder complications, a problem for which1971 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 118">*127 she had received treatment on a number of occasions between 1947 and 1960. He ordered her to stop taking all cardiac medicine for a few days. Decedent died 4 days later due to acute congestive heart failure. She was 65 years old at the time.
In the notices of deficiency, respondent determined that the withdrawal of the funds in account No. X0860 by Beulah on February 2, 1965, constituted a transfer in contemplation of death and was includable in decedent's estate under
ULTIMATE FINDINGS OF FACT
1. At the time of decedent's death, Darrell L. Wilson did not owe decedent interest under the contract to sell real property, executed on January 3, 1962.
2. Decedent did not make completed gifts to Beulah L. Zurcher of the funds in savings account Nos. XXXX and X4928. Nor did she make completed gifts to Harley A. Wilson of the funds in savings account Nos. X7535 and X1052 or of the time certificates of deposit numbered 10747 and 10748.
3. Decedent did not transfer the proceeds of savings account No. X0860 to Beulah L. Zurcher in contemplation of death.
OPINION
The first issue for decision is whether the decedent, at the time of her1971 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 118">*128 death, had a right to collect $ 234.25 as accrued interest under a written contract executed January 3, 1962, for the sale of real property to Darrell, her grandson. If so, the value of such right is includable in decedent's estate under
After Charles' death in August 1964, Darrell offered to pay interest on the balance due under the contract, but decedent refused to accept the payment, stating that she did not want any interest on the debt. Darrell acquiesced in decedent's agreement to relieve him of interest on the contract, and he paid no interest thereafter. In view of these facts, respondent erred in including this item in decedent's taxable estate. Darrell did not owe the interest at her death.
The parties have briefed extensively the applicability of the parol evidence rule. However, since respondent did not object to the oral testimony on this point when it was presented, we do not think the rule is any barrier to our consideration of all the testimony. Moreover, whether that testimony is viewed as evidence of an oral amendment of a written contract or a clarification of the terms of the agreement, we 56 T.C. 579">*584 do not think1971 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 118">*129 we are precluded from its consideration. See
The next issue is whether decedent made completed gifts to her two adult children of the funds deposited in four of the five savings accounts and the funds represented by the two time certificates of deposit. Respondent has conceded that the withdrawal by Beulah from savings account No. X0860 on February 2, 1965, completed a gift of the funds in that account. We do not think petitioners have shown a completed gift of any of the other accounts or the time certificates of deposit.
The testimony is that, in July 1963, decedent had her daughter Beulah's name added to the signature cards and passbooks for account Nos. XXXX and X4928, then containing about $ 19,000, and handed her the passbooks, stating that Beulah could use the money in the accounts. Similarly, in January 1964, she added her son Harley's name to account Nos. X1052 and X7535, containing about $ 19,500, and 1 year later1971 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 118">*130 purchased two time certificates of deposit in her and Harley's names, evidencing deposits of $ 20,000. According to the testimony, she told him that he could use these funds. Both of her children were responsible adults in their early forties. Yet there is no explanation why, if decedent intended absolutely and irrevocably to divest herself of title, dominion, and control of the accounts and deposit certificates, she kept her name on them.
Beulah's name was added to the two accounts (Nos. XXXX and X4928) on July 19, 1963. The testimony shows that on or1971 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 118">*131 about that date -- some time during July 1963 -- the decedent separated from her husband because of the severe hostilities he had developed toward her following a series of strokes. These accounts represented a susbstantial portion of the cash resources available to her, and it seems unlikely that she would have divested herself of a large part of her cash on the occasion of her assuming responsibility for her own support. Nor had her situation changed materially when she added Harley's name 56 T.C. 579">*585 to the other accounts and the deposit certificates. Although she had returned to live with her husband and had resumed taking care of him in December 1963, she no doubt knew that his death was imminent and that she would soon be dependent upon her own resources. We think she retained her name on the savings accounts and certificates of deposit so that she would have the funds available for her use in the event she needed them.
As further evidence that decedent did not intend the addition of her children's names to these accounts to constitute immediate gifts, we note that she did not file gift tax returns reporting the transactions; such returns were not filed until after she died. 1971 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 118">*132 Nor did either Beulah or Harley make any additional deposits in the accounts or report in their income tax returns as taxable income the interest as it accumulated on the accounts. While they retained possession of the passbooks, they made no withdrawals from the accounts and exercised no other rights of ownership over them.
As we view the evidence, the most that decedent did in connection with these accounts and certificates was to transfer to Beulah and Harley a present right and power to withdraw all or part of the funds, authorizing them to use the funds for their own purposes without accounting to her. At the same time she retained a similar right. Gifts of the funds to Beulah and Harley would not be completed unless and until they exercised the right conferred upon them to withdraw the funds.
In view of these facts, these accounts and time certificates of deposit fall squarely within
We find nothing in Idaho law which so limits "the extent of the interest" of decedent in the accounts as to permit a contrary conclusion. Under
Every interest created1971 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 118">*135 in favor of several persons in their own right is an interest in common, * * * unless declared in its creation to be a joint interest * * *
Under this section, the intention of the parties, ascertained in the light of all the circumstances, is controlling in determining their respective rights. Thus in
56 T.C. 579">*587 Applying the principles of these cases, for the reasons we have stated we do not think decedent intended to make an inter vivos gift of the accounts or the certificates of deposit. Nor is there any evidence whatever that decedent intended to create tenancies in common in the accounts by making completed gifts of only fractional interests therein. The accounts are includable in decedent's estate.
Respondent concedes that a gift to Beulah of the proceeds of account No. X0860 was completed when she withdrew them on February 2, 1965. He contends, however, that the funds so withdrawn are includable in decedent's estate as a transfer in contemplation of death within the meaning of
1971 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 118">*137
does not have reference to that general expectation of death such as all persons entertain. * * * A transfer "in contemplation of death" is a disposition of property prompted by the thought of death (although it need not be solely so prompted). A transfer is prompted by the thought of death if (1) made with the purpose of avoiding death taxes, (2) made as a substitute for a testamentary disposition of the property, or (3) made for any other motive associated with death. * * *
The guidelines prescribed by this regulation pose a question of fact which requires an examination of all the evidence with a view to ascertaining the decedent's motive,
Respondent emphasizes decedent's deteriorating physical condition as of February 2, 1965, when Beulah withdrew funds from the account, and argues that decedent was then apprehensive of death. Although the gift was not completed until February 2, 1965, we think decedent's motives and intent must be viewed1971 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 118">*138 as of July 19, 1963, when she added Beulah's name to this account. At that time she authorized Beulah to withdraw the funds for her own use, albeit decedent retained a similar right. There is no evidence whatever to support an inference that decedent suggested, or was even aware of the February 2, 1964, withdrawal. While she had made it possible for Beulah to withdraw the funds, she had done that more than 18 months previously.
Viewing the creation of this joint bank account as of July 19, 1963, we do not think it involved a transfer in contemplation of death. Prior 56 T.C. 579">*588 to that date decedent had lived on a farm with her husband, taking care of him and performing numerous chores. After leaving him, she moved to the nearby community of Homedale, where she lived alone, and later took an extended trip, visiting relatives in Arizona, California, and Oklahoma. She made no efforts to equalize between the two children the joint accounts created at this time, but set up joint accounts with only Beulah. At that time she orally authorized Beulah to use the funds deposited in the accounts. Significantly, also, she retained a similar right to herself. In December 1963, she returned1971 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 118">*139 to her husband and continued to care for him until shortly before he died in August 1964. Not until after her husband's death did she learn that she was seriously ill. We do not think she was contemplating death in July 1963.
1. All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as amended, unless otherwise noted.↩
2. Account No. XXXX, as well as the two time certificates of deposit, were included in decedent's estate under Schedule C of her estate tax return; petitioners, however, now contend that these inclusions were erroneous.Account No. XXXX, as well as the two time certificates of deposit, were included in decedent's estate under Schedule C of her estate tax return; petitioners, however, now contend that these inclusions were erroneous.↩
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. The accounts are also includable in decedent's taxable estate under
The value of the gross estate shall include the value of all property to the extent of the interest therein of the decedent at the time of his death.↩
5.
(a) 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, in contemplation of his death.↩