Filed: Mar. 01, 2000
Latest Update: Mar. 03, 2020
Summary: 114 T.C. No. 9 UNITED STATES TAX COURT ESTATE OF CHARLES E. REICHARDT, DECEASED, WILLIAM D. REICHARDT, INDEPENDENT EXECUTOR, Petitioner v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent Docket No. 1224-98. Filed March 1, 2000. Decedent (D) had two children, C and W. On June 17, 1993, D formed a revocable family trust (the trust) and a family limited partnership (the partnership). The trust was the general partner of the partnership. D, C, and W were named cotrustees, but only D performed any funct
Summary: 114 T.C. No. 9 UNITED STATES TAX COURT ESTATE OF CHARLES E. REICHARDT, DECEASED, WILLIAM D. REICHARDT, INDEPENDENT EXECUTOR, Petitioner v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent Docket No. 1224-98. Filed March 1, 2000. Decedent (D) had two children, C and W. On June 17, 1993, D formed a revocable family trust (the trust) and a family limited partnership (the partnership). The trust was the general partner of the partnership. D, C, and W were named cotrustees, but only D performed any functi..
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114 T.C. No. 9
UNITED STATES TAX COURT
ESTATE OF CHARLES E. REICHARDT, DECEASED,
WILLIAM D. REICHARDT, INDEPENDENT EXECUTOR, Petitioner v.
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
Docket No. 1224-98. Filed March 1, 2000.
Decedent (D) had two children, C and W. On June
17, 1993, D formed a revocable family trust (the trust)
and a family limited partnership (the partnership).
The trust was the general partner of the partnership.
D, C, and W were named cotrustees, but only D performed
any functions as trustee.
D transferred his residence and all of his other
property (except for his car, personal property, and
some cash) to the partnership through the trust. D’s
transfer was not a bona fide sale for full and adequate
consideration. On Oct. 22, 1993, D gave C and W each a
30.4-percent interest in the limited partnership. D
retained possession and enjoyment of and the right to
income from the property he transferred to the
partnership until he died on Aug. 21, 1994.
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Held: The fair market value at D’s date of death
of assets D transferred to the partnership is included
in D’s gross estate. See sec. 2036(a), I.R.C.
Rex B. Cruse, Jr., and S. Jeffrey Gately, for petitioner.
Deborah H. Delgado, T. Richard Sealy III, and James G.
MacDonald, for respondent.
COLVIN, Judge: Respondent determined that petitioner is
liable for a deficiency in gift tax of $161,494 for gifts made by
decedent in 1993 and a deficiency in estate tax of $358,771.
After concessions,1 the issue for decision is whether assets that
decedent transferred to the partnership are included in his
gross estate under section 2036(a). We hold that they are, and
that the fair market value of those assets was $1,634,654 when
decedent died.2
1
Respondent no longer contends that (1) the partnership is
a sham or that (2) the duty of consistency or sec. 2703(a)(2)
applies here. Petitioner's motion to shift the burden of proof
regarding those theories is moot.
2
In light of this holding, we need not decide whether, as
respondent contends, (1) the assets transferred to the
partnership are included in decedent's gross estate under sec.
2038, (2) any “applicable restriction” in the partnership
agreement is disregarded under sec. 2704(b), (3) lapsed
liquidation rights are included in decedent’s gross estate under
sec. 2704(a), or (4) decedent did not make another gift to his
children in 1994.
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Unless stated otherwise, section references are to the
Internal Revenue Code. Rule references are to the Tax Court
Rules of Practice and Procedure.
FINDINGS OF FACT
Some of the facts have been stipulated and are so found.
A. Decedent and His Family
Decedent was married to Jessie Glenn Reichardt (Mrs.
Reichardt). They had two children, Carolyn A. Reichardt Foose
(Carolyn Foose) and William D. Reichardt (William Reichardt).
Mrs. Reichardt died at age 77 on December 6, 1991. Decedent
lived at 214 Encino, Alamo Heights, San Antonio, Texas (214
Encino), when he died on August 21, 1994.
B. Mrs. Reichardt
1. Mrs. Reichardt's Inheritance
Mrs. Reichardt graduated from Rice University in Houston,
Texas. Her father died in 1971. Mrs. Reichardt handled her own
business affairs. Mrs. Reichardt inherited from her father an
undivided one-half interest in several parcels of real property
in Kleberg and Nueces Counties, Texas, and various securities.
Mrs. Reichardt's sister, Ruth Welch (Welch), inherited the other
one-half interest in the property.
Mrs. Reichardt's uncle, Jessie Dennett, died in 1973. Mrs.
Reichardt inherited from Jessie Dennett a one-half undivided
interest in real property in Kleberg County, Texas, and a one-
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third undivided interest in real property in San Patricio and
Cameron Counties, Texas. Welch inherited the other one-half
interest in the Kleberg County property. Welch and Mrs.
Reichardt's cousin, Ella Gordan, also each inherited one-third
interests in the San Patricio and Cameron Counties property. The
Cameron and San Patricio Counties property remained in the name
of the Estate of Jessie Dennett through the time of trial in this
case. Mrs. Reichardt and Welch managed Mrs. Reichardt's separate
property.
Mrs. Reichardt and her children knew that Mr. Reichardt was
involved with another woman (not identified in the record). Mrs.
Reichardt considered filing for divorce (at a time not specified
in the record) but never did so.
When she died, Mrs. Reichardt's separate property included
undivided interests in 22 parcels of real property in four Texas
counties and some securities. Her community property included
four checking accounts, a note receivable from Bruce Graham
(Graham) dated November 23, 1987 (the Graham note), stock and
bonds, two cars, the residence at 214 Encino, and three rental
properties on Routt Street (the Routt rental property) in San
Antonio.
2. Mrs. Reichardt's Will
In her will, Mrs. Reichardt left decedent all of her
community property and a life interest in her separate property.
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Mrs. Reichardt authorized decedent to sell, lease, or otherwise
dispose of any of the property subject to the life interest on
terms that he deemed advisable, without requiring him to account
for or replace any of it. Her will provided that decedent would
lose his life interest in her separate property if he remarried.
Mrs. Reichardt left the remainder interest to her children and
appointed decedent and their children as joint independent
coexecutors.
3. Probate of Mrs. Reichardt’s Estate
On May 17, 1993, decedent signed and filed an inventory in
the probate court for his wife's estate without consulting his
children. Decedent reported that Mrs. Reichardt's estate
included $744,597.50 in separate property and $612,648.50 in
community property (a total of $1,357,246). Decedent mistakenly
reported that her estate included no real estate in Nueces
County, Texas, and that some securities were both community and
separate property.
In November 1993, Thomas L. Goade (Goade), a real estate
appraiser retained by Mrs. Reichardt’s estate, concluded that, as
of September 15, 1993, her estate had $411,178.50 in community
assets and $775,986.67 in separate assets (a total of
$1,187,165.17). On November 30, 1993, decedent and his children,
as coexecutors, filed an amended inventory using the asset values
provided by Goade.
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C. Decedent’s Decision To Form a Family Limited Partnership
William Reichardt met with John R. Hannah (Hannah), a
certified public accountant, and asked about post mortem estate
planning for his mother’s estate. Hannah recommended that the
children and decedent form a family limited partnership.
Decedent, who had just been diagnosed with terminal cancer, and
William Reichardt met with Hannah on June 5, 1993, to discuss
Mrs. Reichardt's estate.
On June 17, 1993, decedent signed his will and a durable
power of attorney and formed a revocable living trust called the
Reichardt Family Trust (the trust) and a family limited
partnership called Reichardt Partners, Ltd. (the partnership).
Decedent appointed himself and his children as cotrustees and
authorized each trustee to act on behalf of the trust. The trust
instrument provided that decedent was entitled to receive the net
income of the trust, which was to be paid at least annually, and
that he was entitled to use the corpus of the trust for his
support, maintenance, health, and general welfare. The trust
instrument provided that the trust property and accumulated
income would be divided into as many equal shares as the number
of his children when decedent died.
The trust was the partnership's only general partner.
On June 21, 1993, the Texas secretary of state approved and
recorded the certificate of the partnership.
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D. Transfer of Assets to the Trust and Partnership
Decedent transferred all of his property (except for his
car, personal effects, and a small amount of cash3) to the
partnership. Decedent signed deeds individually and on behalf of
Mrs. Reichardt’s estate transferring his and the estate’s
interest in 214 Encino, the Routt rental property, and the Nueces
and Kleberg Counties property to the trust. He also signed deeds
as trustee transferring those interests in that property to the
partnership. Decedent deposited $20,540 of partnership funds in
his personal checking accounts in July and August 1993. Decedent
transferred to the trust, which then transferred to the
partnership, (1) investment accounts at Rauscher Pierce Refsnes,
Inc. (Rauscher Pierce), on June 29, 1993, and Smith Barney
Shearson, Inc. (Smith Barney), on August 16, 1993, (2) the Graham
note on August 12, 1993, and (3) $32,871.78 in cash on August 13,
1993.4 Before and after the transfers, decedent’s children let
him control the two investment accounts, the note receivable, and
the cash.
Decedent individually, and with William Reichardt and
Carolyn Foose as coexecutors of Mrs. Reichardt's estate,
transferred the Graham note which had been Mrs. Reichardt’s and
3
Decedent had $2,389 in his personal checking account when
he died.
4
Decedent transferred the cash directly to the
partnership.
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decedent’s community property from Mrs. Reichardt's estate to the
trust. On August 12, 1993, decedent, as trustee, conveyed the
Graham note from the trust to the partnership.
On August 13, 1993, decedent transferred $32,871.78 from his
two personal accounts at Frost National Bank in San Antonio to a
new partnership account at that bank. Decedent received at least
$20,540 of the $32,871.78 from rental income from property he had
transferred to the partnership.
The Estate of Jessie Dennett made no payments to Mrs.
Reichardt’s estate or to decedent from rent receipts or property
sales distributions in 1993 and 1994 from any of the real
property in Cameron County. The Estate of Jessie Dennett paid
$30,000 to Mrs. Reichardt's estate on June 19, 1995, as its share
of the proceeds from the sale of some real property. This amount
was deposited in the partnership’s bank account.
Decedent lived at 214 Encino before and after he transferred
it to the trust and to the partnership. He paid no rent to the
trust or the partnership to use that residence.
E. Decedent's Gift of Limited Partnership Interests to His
Children
On October 22, 1993, decedent gave each of his children a
30.4-percent interest in the partnership.5
5
Petitioner contends that decedent’s children received
assignee interests. We need not decide whether they received
limited partnership interests or assignee interests because,
(continued...)
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F. Management of the Partnership Assets
Decedent controlled and managed, or allowed the coowners to
control and manage, the partnership assets in the same manner
both before and after he transferred them to the partnership. He
used the same brokers and managers before and after he
transferred the property. No one except decedent signed
partnership checks and documents. Welch managed the Kleberg
County property before and after October 22, 1993, and August 21,
1994. The executors for the Estate of Jessie Dennett managed the
Cameron County property before and after October 22, 1993, and
August 21, 1994. Decedent’s relationship to the partnership
assets did not change when he conveyed them to the trust and
partnership.
Hannah’s firm made adjusting entries in the partnership’s
accounting records in an attempt to classify items of income and
expense between decedent and the partnership. The difference
between cash on hand in the partnership account and the amount in
the general journal was $8,116 in 1993 and $13,507 in 1994.
Hannah’s firm assumed that these were the amounts of decedent’s
personal expenses that the partnership paid in those years.
5
(...continued)
under sec. 2036(a), decedent’s gross estate includes the assets
that he conveyed to the trust and partnership.
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G. Tax Returns
The partnership filed income tax returns (Forms 1065, U.S.
Partnership Return of Income) for 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, and
1997. The trust filed income tax returns (Form 1041, U.S.
Fiduciary Income Tax Return) for 1994, 1995, 1996, and 1997.
In March 1994, decedent and his children, as executors,
filed a Federal estate tax return for Mrs. Reichardt's estate in
which they reported a gross estate of $1,092,290. Hannah
prepared the return.
Decedent filed a Federal gift tax return for 1993 on April
15, 1994. In it, he reported that he had given a 30.4-percent
interest in the partnership to each of his two children and that
each gift had a value of $310,000 as of October 22, 1993.
After decedent died, petitioner obtained an appraisal of
decedent’s estate and the 1993 gifts. On Schedule F of the
estate tax return, petitioner reported that, when decedent died,
his gross estate included a 36.46-percent limited partnership
interest in the partnership which had a fair market value of
$346,000, and a 1-percent general partnership interest in the
partnership which had a fair market value of $13,000.
OPINION
A. Section 2036(a)
A decedent’s gross estate includes the value of property
interests transferred by the decedent during his or her lifetime
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(other than a bona fide sale for full and adequate consideration)
if the decedent retained for life the possession or enjoyment of
the property, or the right to the income from the property. See
sec. 2036(a).6 Respondent determined and contends that assets
that decedent conveyed to the partnership are includable in his
estate under section 2036(a). Petitioner contends that section
2036(a) does not apply because decedent did not retain enjoyment
(i.e., economic benefits) of the transferred property and that
the transfer was for full and adequate consideration.
B. Whether Decedent's Gross Estate Includes Assets Held by the
Partnership When Decedent Died
We must decide whether section 2036(a) applies to the
following property: (1) Decedent’s residence at 214 Encino and
the Routt rental property; (2) a one-half interest in property in
6
Sec. 2036 provides as follows:
SEC. 2036(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,
under which he has retained for his life or for any
period not ascertainable without reference to his death
or for any period which does not in fact end before his
death--
(1) the possession or enjoyment of, or the
right to the income from, the property, or
(2) the right, either alone or in conjunction
with any person, to designate the persons who
shall possess or enjoy the property or the
income therefrom.
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Kleberg and Nueces Counties; (3) a one-third interest in the
Cameron and San Patricio property; (4) investment accounts at
Rauscher Pierce and Smith Barney Shearson; (5) the Graham note;
and (6) cash; i.e., all of the property alleged to have been in
the partnership when decedent died (the transferred property).
1. Whether Decedent Retained Possession, Enjoyment, or the
Right to the Income From the Transferred Property
During His Lifetime
For purposes of section 2036(a), a transferor retains the
enjoyment of property if there is an express or implied agreement
at the time of the transfer that the transferor will retain the
present economic benefits of the property, even if the retained
right is not legally enforceable. See Guynn v. United States,
437 F.2d 1148, 1150 (4th Cir. 1971); Estate of McNichol v.
Commissioner,
265 F.2d 667, 671 (3d Cir. 1959), affg.
29 T.C.
1179 (1958); Estate of Spruill v. Commissioner,
88 T.C. 1197,
1225 (1987); Estate of Rapelje v. Commissioner,
73 T.C. 82, 86
(1979); Estate of Honigman v. Commissioner,
66 T.C. 1080, 1082
(1976); Estate of Gilman v. Commissioner,
65 T.C. 296, 306-307
(1975), affd.
547 F.2d 32 (2d Cir. 1976); sec. 20.2036-1(a),
Estate Tax Regs. (last sentence).
In deciding whether there was an implied agreement, we
consider all of the facts and circumstances surrounding the
transfer and subsequent use of the property. See Estate of
Spruill v.
Commissioner, supra; Estate of Rapelje v.
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Commissioner, supra at 86-87. Petitioner bears the burden (which
is especially onerous for transactions involving family members)
of proving that an implied agreement or understanding between
decedent and his children did not exist when he transferred the
property at issue to the trust and to the partnership. See
Estate of Skinner v. United States,
316 F.2d 517, 520 (3d Cir.
1963); Estate of Rapelje v.
Commissioner, supra at 86; Estate of
Hendry v. Commissioner,
62 T.C. 861, 872 (1974).
Petitioner contends that decedent and his children did not
have an implied agreement that decedent could continue to use the
property after he conveyed it to the partnership. Petitioner
contends that the partnership was formed (a) to curtail
decedent’s enjoyment of the property transferred to the limited
partnership, (b) to prevent him from taking imprudent actions
with regard to the property and to settle family disharmony
regarding the assets, and (c) to give the children more control
over the assets.
a. Whether Decedent Curtailed His Enjoyment of the
Transferred Property
Decedent did not curtail his enjoyment of the transferred
property after he formed the partnership. Nothing changed except
legal title. Decedent managed the trust which managed the
partnership. Decedent was the only trustee to sign the articles
of limited partnership, the deeds, the transfer of lien, and any
document which could be executed by one trustee on behalf of the
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trust. Decedent was the only trustee to open brokerage accounts
or sign partnership checks. He did not open any accounts for the
trust.
Decedent commingled partnership and personal funds. He
deposited some partnership income in his personal account. He
used the partnership’s checking account as his personal account.
He lived at 214 Encino without paying rent before or after he
transferred it to the trust and to the partnership. Decedent’s
relationship to the assets at issue remained the same after he
transferred them. If a decedent's relationship to assets remains
the same after a transfer as it was before a transfer, the value
of the assets may be included in the decedent's gross estate.
See sec. 2036(a)(1); Guynn v. United
States, supra; Estate of
Hendry v.
Commissioner, supra at 874; Estate of Schauerhamer v.
Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1997-242. Here, nothing changed after
decedent transferred his interests in the property to the trust
and the partnership, except legal title.
Petitioner contends that decedent had no relationship to any
of the real property except for 214 Encino and the Routt rental
property because Welch and the Estate of Jessie Dennett managed
those properties. We disagree. Section 2036 applies not only if
a transferor retains possession or enjoyment of property, but
also if a transferor retains the right to income from the
property. See sec. 2036(a)(1). We believe that decedent and his
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children had an implied agreement that decedent could retain for
his lifetime the right to the income from all of the real
property that the partnership had when decedent died. Thus,
decedent did not curtail his enjoyment of the transferred
property after he transferred it to the trust and partnership.
Decedent’s estate tax return states that when decedent died
he had personal property, a car, and $2,389 cash, and he was owed
a $429 Federal income tax refund and a $733 medical refund.
Decedent apparently conveyed nearly all of his assets to the
trust and partnership.7 This suggests that decedent had an
implied agreement with his children that he could continue to use
those assets. Cf. Estate of Paxton v. Commissioner,
86 T.C. 785,
810 (1986).
b. Whether Decedent Transferred Property to the Trust
and Partnership To Prevent Decedent From Treating
the Property Imprudently, To Settle Family
Disharmony, and To Give Children Control Over
Assets
Petitioner contends that decedent formed the partnership to
prevent him from treating the transferred property imprudently.
We disagree because decedent controlled the partnership, and he
had the power to act alone on behalf of the trust which was the
7
Based on the estate tax return for decedent’s estate and
Hannah’s records, respondent alleges that decedent gave about 98
percent of his property to the partnership. Petitioner’s only
response was that respondent’s allegation is not based on the
record and is “unsupported by calculations.” Respondent’s 98-
percent estimate appears to be reasonable.
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partnership’s sole general partner. He alone (1) executed the
articles of limited partnership, the deeds, and the transfer of
lien; (2) opened the brokerage accounts; and (3) signed all of
the partnership checks.
Petitioner emphasizes that decedent’s children were
concerned that he would give Mrs. Reichardt’s property to his
lady friend. Despite that, Mrs. Reichardt’s will gave decedent
the power to consume all of her separate property in which she
gave him a life interest. Mrs. Reichardt was sophisticated and
capable. We do not think she would have given him such broad
power if she had the concern that petitioner alleges. In
addition, decedent did not do what petitioner says his children
suspected he would do. The facts suggest that this argument of
petitioner’s is, at best, overstated.
Petitioner also alleges that decedent formed the trust and
partnership to give his children control over the assets while he
was living. The facts suggest otherwise. Decedent’s children,
as cotrustees, could have taken, but did not take, actions
related to the trust or exercise control over the assets while
decedent lived.
c. Fiduciary Duties
Petitioner contends that decedent's fiduciary duties as a
general partner and trustee precluded him from retaining
enjoyment of the assets. We disagree. Decedent’s fiduciary
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duties did not deter him from continuing to possess and enjoy the
house in which he lived or the other assets he conveyed to the
partnership. Decedent's children, as cotrustees, did nothing to
preclude him from doing so. This suggests that decedent and his
children had an implied agreement to allow decedent to continue
to enjoy partnership property throughout his life.
Petitioner points out that decedent’s children could have
revoked his management powers. However, they did not. This
suggests that they and decedent had an implied agreement that he
could continue to possess, enjoy, and retain the right to income
from all of the property that he conveyed.
Decedent used at least $8,116 of partnership funds in 1993
for personal purposes and $13,507 in 1994. Petitioner contends
that, at the end of 1993 (before decedent died) and 1994 (after
decedent died), Hannah’s firm prepared yearend adjusting entries
which reclassified items of income and expense as relating to
decedent and the partnership. Petitioner contends that the
adjusting entries show there was no implied agreement for
decedent to continue to enjoy partnership property.
We disagree. The 1993 yearend and 1994 post mortem
adjusting entries made by Hannah’s firm were a belated attempt to
undo decedent’s commingling of partnership and personal accounts.
There is no evidence that the partnership or decedent transferred
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any funds to the other as a result of the adjusting entries.8
After-the-fact paperwork by decedent’s C.P.A. does not refute
that decedent and his children had agreed that decedent could
continue to use and control the property during his life.
d. Conclusion
We conclude that decedent and his children had an implied
agreement that decedent could continue to possess and enjoy the
assets and retain the right to the income from the assets that he
conveyed to the partnership during his lifetime.
2. Whether Decedent Transferred Property to the
Partnership in a Bona Fide Sale for Full and Adequate
Consideration
Section 2036(a) does not apply if the transfer of property
was part of a bona fide sale in exchange for full and adequate
consideration. A bona fide sale is an arm’s-length business
transaction between a willing buyer and a willing seller. See
Wheeler v. United States, 77 AFTR 2d 96-1405, 96-1411, 96-1 USTC
par. 60,226 (W.D. Tex. 1996) (value of homestead is included in
decedent’s gross estate under section 2036(a) in part because
there was no bona fide sale among family members).
8
Petitioner did not establish the accuracy of the records
that Hannah’s firm used to prepare the adjusting entries. The
parties stipulated that the adjusting entries summarized other
underlying records but not that the underlying records are
accurate or complete. Petitioner does not identify all of the
records on which the summary was based. One of the underlying
records that petitioner produced is another summary that is
extremely vague, e.g., $8,116 “Various C.E. Reichardt”.
Petitioner’s reliance on the adjusting entries is misplaced.
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Petitioner contends that decedent received full and adequate
consideration because he received partnership interests, family
disputes were settled, and his children became involved in family
assets. We disagree. Decedent’s children gave nothing to
decedent or the partnership when he transferred property to the
trust and the partnership, and they did not involve themselves in
the partnership.
Petitioner contends that decedent’s children gave
consideration to the partnership in the form of their remainder
interests. We disagree for reasons stated in paragraph B-4,
below.
Petitioner contends that decedent sold the transferred
property to the partnership in exchange for partnership interests
as consideration. We disagree. Petitioner did not sell the
transferred property to the partnership. See Wheeler v. United
States, supra.
3. Comparison of This Case to Schauerhamer v. Commissioner
Petitioner contends that this case is distinguishable from
Schauerhamer v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 1997-242. We held in
Schauerhamer that property transferred to three family limited
partnerships was included in the transferor’s estate under
section 2036(a). This case is similar to Schauerhamer in that,
in both cases, the decedents and their children had implied
agreements for the decedents to use property that they had
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transferred to family limited partnerships established for the
benefit of family members. In Schauerhamer, the children
testified that they intended the decedent’s relationship with the
transferred assets to remain the same after the transfer. Here,
the objective evidence (described above) shows that there was an
implied agreement that the decedent could continue to enjoy the
property, the children did not deny that there was such an
agreement, and we have so found. The decedents in both
Schauerhamer and the instant case commingled funds. Petitioner
cites no significant distinction between Schauerhamer v.
Commissioner, supra, and this case.
4. Whether Interests in the Cameron, San Patricio, Nueces,
and Kleberg Counties Property Held by the Partnership
Are Not Subject to Section 2036 Because Decedent Never
Owned Those Interests
Petitioner contends that Mrs. Reichardt’s interests in the
Cameron, San Patricio, Nueces, and Kleberg Counties property are
not subject to section 2036 because they passed directly from her
estate to the partnership and decedent never owned any interest
in them. We disagree.
The interests in the Cameron, San Patricio, Nueces, and
Kleberg Counties property were Mrs. Reichardt’s separate
property. Under her will, a life interest in that property
vested in decedent under Texas law when Mrs. Reichardt died. See
Tex. Prob. Code Ann. sec. 37 (West Supp. 1999). Decedent’s life
interest included the power to consume all of Mrs. Reichardt’s
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interest in the property. There are no deeds transferring the
Cameron and San Patricio Counties property to the trust and
partnership. Thus, the only way interests in those properties
could reach the partnership is for decedent to have used the
power to consume to convey all of Mrs. Reichardt’s interest in
those properties to the partnership.
Decedent transferred his interest in the Nueces and Kleberg
Counties property to the trust and partnership when he signed
deeds on behalf of himself as an individual. Petitioner contends
that the deeds establish that Mrs. Reichardt’s interest in the
Nueces and Kleberg Counties property passed directly from Mrs.
Reichardt’s estate to the trust and therefore is not included in
decedent’s estate under section 2036. We disagree. Mrs.
Reichardt’s interest in the Nueces and Kleberg Counties property
vested in decedent as provided under Texas law. See Tex. Prob.
Code Ann. sec. 37 (West Supp. 1999).
Petitioner contends that decedent’s children gave their
remainder interests in Mrs. Reichardt’s separate property to the
partnership, and thus decedent did not own those interests. We
disagree. Decedent’s children testified vaguely and
unconvincingly about whether they contributed their remainder
interests to the partnership. There is no documentary evidence
that they did so. We believe that they could not have done so
because decedent consumed all of Mrs. Reichardt’s separate
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property, leaving no remainder for the children. See Hudspeth v.
Hudspeth,
756 S.W.2d 29, 31 (Tex. App. 1988) (life tenant may
destroy any contingent interests held by remaindermen if testator
expressly gives life tenant power to completely dispose of
corpus); Calvert v. Thompson,
339 S.W.2d 685 (Tex. App. 1960)
(same). No document shows that decedent transferred only a life
interest in any asset to the trust or partnership.
We conclude that decedent owned and gave to the trust and
partnership during his lifetime all of the interests in the
Cameron, San Patricio, Nueces, and Kleberg Counties property that
had belonged to Mrs. Reichardt when she died.9 Thus, those
property interests are subject to section 2036.
5. Conclusion
We conclude that section 2036(a) applies to all of the
property that decedent transferred to the partnership.
C. Amount Included in Decedent’s Estate Under Section 2036(a)
To decide the amount included in decedent’s estate under
section 2036(a), we must decide the value on the date of
decedent’s death of the property that decedent transferred to the
partnership. James R. Parks (Parks), petitioner’s expert who
9
Decedent’s life interest in the Cameron and San Patricio
Counties property included the power to convey that property to
the partnership. Decedent did so even though that property
remained in the name of the Estate of Jessie Dennett. See Logan
v. Logan,
156 S.W.2d 507, 512 (Tex. 1941); King v. Evans,
791
S.W.2d 531 (Tex. App. 1990).
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adopted Goade’s estimates for real property, and Francis X. Burns
(Burns), respondent’s expert, disagree about the value of some of
the partnership assets when decedent died.
The following summarizes the parties’ positions and our
holding about the values of the partnership assets on August 21,
1994, before discounts.
Estimate by
Assets Goade & Parks Burns Conclusion
Bexar County land $378,900 $421,000 $378,900
Kleberg County land 212,017 235,575 212,017
Nueces County land 78,750 87,500 78,750
Cameron County land 42,239 0 42,239
San Patricio
County land1 -0- -- -0-
Rauscher Pierce 672,345 672,345 672,345
2
Smith Barney 119,902 119,465 119,465
Note receivable 140,594 140,594 140,594
Cash 26,072 26,072 26,072
Liabilities (35,728) (35,728) (35,728)
Totals 1,635,091 1,666,823 1,634,654
1
Goade estimated that the San Patricio County property had
no value because most of it was under water most of the year.
Burns did not include the San Patricio County property in his
report.
2
Burns listed the value of each security in the Smith
Barney portfolio. In his report, Parks stated a total for Smith
Barney, but no information on specific securities because he
found them to be unavailable. We accept Burns’ estimate.
Parks used the estimates of Goade, a professional real
estate appraiser, as the values for the real property. Goade
applied a 10-percent fractional interest discount. Burns
concluded that no fractional interest discount should be applied
to the real property values. Goade is a qualified real estate
- 24 -
appraiser; Burns admitted in his testimony that he is not. We
accept Goade’s appraisal.
We conclude that the value of the assets (less liabilities)
that decedent transferred to the partnership through the trust is
$1,634,654. This value is included in decedent’s estate under
section 2036(a).
To reflect the foregoing and concessions of the parties,
Decision will be entered
under Rule 155.