Court Opinion

ID: 4597902
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-11-20 19:20:09.26352+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:51:52.571103
License: Public Domain

Lorenz Iversen, Petitioner, v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, RespondentIversen v. CommissionerDocket Nos. 98592, 100086, 103779, 108444United States Tax Court3 T.C. 756; 1944 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 128; May 9, 1944, Promulgated *128 Decisions will be entered under Rule 50.  1. Petitioner created a separate trust for each of his five children, two of whom were minors, assigning to the trustee as the corpus of each trust (a) a one-fifth interest in a royalty contract with a corporation of which he was president and a large stockholder; (b) a one-fifth interest in another agreement under which he contracted to purchase and sell a certain number of shares of stock of the corporation at fixed prices; and (c) a number of shares of stock of the corporation then held as collateral security for petitioner's loans, which the trusts assumed.  Petitioner retained the power, among others, to direct the investment of all trust funds; to control the distribution of trust income to the beneficiaries; to direct the voting of all securities held by the trustee; and to terminate the trusts at will.  Held, that the income of the trusts is taxable to petitioner under section 22 (a), Internal Revenue Code.  Helvering v. Clifford, 309 U.S. 331">309 U.S. 331.2. A trust was created in the name of petitioner's two daughters with funds furnished by petitioner for that purpose to provide income for paying the*129  premiums on policies of insurance on petitioner's life.  Held, that petitioner is the grantor of the trust and is taxable under section 167 (a) (3), Internal Revenue Code, on such part of the income of the trust as might have been applied to the payment of premiums on policies of insurance on his life.  W. A. Seifert, Esq., William Wallace Booth, Esq., and A. G. [ILLEGIBLE WORD] C. P. A., for the petitioner.Orris Bennett, Esq., for the respondent.  Smith, Judge.  Black, J., concurring in the result.  Leech, Mellott, Tyson, and Disney, JJ., agree with the concurring opinion.  SMITH *756  These proceedings, consolidated for hearing, involve income tax deficiencies for the years 1934 to 1939 as follows:Docket No.YearDeficiency985921935$ 25,112.501000861934373,583.2310377919361,153,348.6419371,116,242.021084441938914,727.971939518,302.68By an amended answer filed in Docket No. 98592 respondent asks that the deficiency for 1935 be increased to $ 902,997.26.The questions for our determination are whether the petitioner is taxable on the income of five separate trusts which he created for the benefit of his five*130  children and on the income of another trust, purportedly created by his two daughters, the income of which was to be used for the payment of premiums on policies of insurance taken out by the petitioner on his life.Several minor issues have been settled by stipulation.*757  The facts are shown by the pleadings, lengthy stipulations of the parties, and the testimony of a number of witnesses.  The stipulations of fact, together with numerous exhibits, are made a part of our findings of fact by reference.FINDINGS OF FACT.Petitioner is a resident of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.  He filed his income tax returns for all of the years involved with the collector of internal revenue at Pittsburgh.Petitioner was born in Denmark in 1876.  He came to this country in 1902 and was naturalized in 1907.  He has been employed by the Mesta Machine Co. continuously since 1902, starting as a draftsman and later serving as chief engineer, vice president and general manager, and president.  He has served as president of the company since 1930.  The Mesta Machine Co. is a corporation engaged principally in the manufacture of rolling mill machinery.  At the present time it is manufacturing ordnance*131  supplies, particularly for heavy artillery, under contracts with the United States Government.Petitioner was married in 1905 and has five children by his first wife, Gertrude Adelsberger.  His children are all married and have children as follows:Mary Helen (Helen I. Dixon) born June 27, 1906, married June 8, 1926.  John I., born December 18, 1926.Frank A., born October 18, 1928.Elonora Pauline Mayer, born September 12, 1908, married June 8, 1927.  Antoinette, born 1928.Andreas A. Iversen, born December 27, 1910, married February 3, 1933.  Lorenz, born June 27, 1936.John D. Iversen, born January 21, 1913, married October 3, 1935.  John Lorenz, born June 27, 1936.Joan, born May 23, 1939.Robert F. Iversen, born April 16, 1916, married April 2, 1938.Petitioner's first wife died in May 1934, and in October 1935, he married Fleda Faust.On April 15, 1932, petitioner as donor established five separate trusts by agreements in writing wherein the Fidelity Trust Co. of Pittsburgh was named trustee and the five children of petitioner were made the respective sole beneficiaries.The trust indenture in which Mary Helen Dixon was named as a beneficiary reads as follows: *132  Made April 15, 1932, between Lorenz Iversen, of the City of Pittsburgh, County of Allegheny and Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, hereinafter called the "Donor", and Fidelity Trust Company, as Trustee, a corporation organized under the laws of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania having its office in the City of Pittsburgh, hereinafter called the "Trustee";*758  WITNESSETHThat the Donor has assigned, transferred and set over to the Trustee, and by these presents does assign, transfer and set over to the Trustee, its successors and assigns, the following:(a) An undivided one-fifth interest in and to all his right, title and interest under that certain agreement made by Donor with Mesta Machine Company, dated June 14, 1926, a photostat copy of which is attached hereto, made part hereof and marked "Exhibit A", and hereinafter referred to as the "Mesta Agreement."(b) An undivided one-fifth interest in and to all his right, title and interest under that certain agreement made by Donor with Wildon Limited, Bartholomew Investment Corporation and William H. Donner, dated October 1, 1929, a photostat copy of which is attached hereto, made part hereof and marked "Exhibit B", and hereinafter*133  referred to as the "Donner Agreement", and subject, however, to the covenants, conditions and terms of that certain agreement made by Donor with George R. Fink et al., dated October 21, 1929, a photostat copy of which is attached hereto, made part hereof and marked "Exhibit C", and hereinafter referred to as the "Fink Agreement."(c) Eight thousand (8,000) shares of common capital stock of Mesta Machine Company presently pledged with the Commonwealth Trust Company of Pittsburgh on that certain note, made, executed and delivered by Donor on April 1, 1932, in the sum of Two Hundred Fifty Thousand ($ 250,000.00) Dollars, payable to Commonwealth Trust Company of Pittsburgh, and subject to which this transfer is made.  This transfer is also made subject to the liability of Donor on that certain note, made, executed and delivered by Donor on March 22, 1932, in the sum of One Hundred Thousand ($ 100,000.00) Dollars payable to Fidelity Trust Company.  The Trustee, as such, agrees to assume one-fifth of the liability on each of the aforesaid notes, and simultaneously with the execution of this agreement will make, execute and deliver its note in the sum of Fifty Thousand ($ 50,000.00) Dollars*134  payable to the Commonwealth Trust Company of Pittsburgh, and its note in the sum of Twenty Thousand ($ 20,000.00) Dollars payable to Fidelity Trust Company.To Have and To Hold the same, In Trust Nevertheless, for the uses and purposes and upon the terms, trusts and conditions and with the powers and authority hereinafter mentioned and expressed.ARTICLE ONEThe Trustee shall demand, collect and receive all the income, rents, issues and profits of the trust estate and pay the income therefrom, after all proper charges and expenses, including reasonable compensation to the Trustee, have been deducted, as follows:(1) So much of the income and/or principal as in the opinion of the Trustee may be advisable shall be used to pay the interest on and to reduce the principal of the two notes, hereinbefore referred to, payable to the Commonwealth Trust Company of Pittsburgh and the Fidelity Trust Company, respectively, as the same become due and payable.(2) The Trustee shall at the request of the Donor use and apply any portion of the trust estate, either principal or income, to satisfy one-fifth of the liability, if any, under the aforesaid Donner Agreement.(3) The balance of the income*135  may be paid by the Trustee to Mary Helen Dixon, daughter of the Donor, born June 27, 1906, at its discretion, but during the lifetime of the Donor only by and with the advice, consent and approval of *759  the Donor, and such part of said income as is not distributed shall be accumulated and may be distributed in any subsequent year at the discretion of the Trustee, but during the lifetime of the Donor only by and with the advice, consent and approval of the Donor.(4) Upon the death of the Donor, any undistributed income shall become part of the principal of this trust.ARTICLE TWOThis trust shall not terminate and no distribution of principal shall be made, as hereinafter provided at the several ages of the beneficiary, until after the death of the Donor unless the termination be accelerated, as hereinafter provided.After the death of the Donor, the Trustee shall pay to the beneficiary one-third of the principal if and when she shall have attained the age of thirty-three years, one-half of the balance upon her attaining the age of thirty-eight years, and the residue upon her attaining the age of forty-five years.Donor reserves the right from time to time to accelerate the*136  termination of this trust agreement as to all or any part of the trust estate and to direct the Trustee to make distribution of all or any part thereof to the beneficiary.ARTICLE THREEThe beneficiary hereunder shall have no right to pledge, assign, transfer or sell in any way whatsoever, nor to anticipate, charge or encumber any sums of money payable to her at any time by the Trustee under this trust, nor shall her interests be in any sense liable for her debts, contracts or engagements, nor to execution, attachment sequestration or other process issued against her.ARTICLE FOURThe Trustee shall have full power and authority to hold, possess, manage, control, sell, convey, pledge, exchange, invest or reinvest all or any part of the trust property in such manner as it may deem for the best interests of the beneficiary hereunder without being limited to investments authorized by the laws of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania for fiduciaries, except during the lifetime of the Donor as hereinafter specifically restricted.During the lifetime of the Donor --(a) the Trustee shall not sell, purchase or exchange any securities at any time in the trust estate, without the written consent*137  of the Donor;(b) the Trustee shall make sales, purchases or exchanges upon the written request of the Donor;(c) the Trustee shall vote the securities in the trust estate on any corporate matter as directed by the Donor.The Donor covenants that he will perform each and every obligation in the aforesaid Mesta Agreement which is purely personal to him.  The Donor reserves the right to do and perform, either in the name of the Trustee or in his own name, any act, matter or thing necessary or advisable to determine the rights of the parties or their assigns under the aforesaid Mesta, Donner and Fink Agreements.  It is agreed that in the event of any dispute under any of said agreements, Donor shall have the right either in the name of the Trustee or in his own name to conduct the necessary arbitration or other legal proceedings and to enforce the obligations of the other contracting parties or to compromise or settle the same, and the Trustee and the beneficiary shall be bound thereby.  The Trustee hereunder shall pay Donor's expenses in such events or proceedings.*760  ARTICLE FIVEThe Donor, or any other person, may at any time in the future transfer and set over to the Trustee*138  additional property, the principal and income of which shall be held, administered and distributed under and pursuant to the terms of this trust.ARTICLE SIXThe Donor, having had explained to him the difference between a revocable and irrevocable trust, hereby declares this instrument to be irrevocable.ARTICLE SEVENThe Trustee shall not be liable for loss by reason of depreciation in value of any securities now or hereafter in the trust estate, nor upon investments made by it, nor by reason of voting any of such securities.ARTICLE EIGHTThe Trustee hereby accepts the said trust and covenants that it will execute the same in all due fidelity.Witness the due execution hereof the day and year first above written.The trust agreement naming the daughter, Elonora, a beneficiary reads the same.  The agreement for the son, Andreas, reads the same except that the ages designated in article two were 35, 45, and 60, respectively.  The agreement as to the minor son, John, reads the same, except that paragraph (3) of article one reads:(3) The balance of the income shall be used by the Trustee to the extent necessary for the comfortable maintenance, education and support of John D. Iversen, *139  minor son of the Donor, born January 21, 1913, and for the protection, conservation or maintenance of his property, or of any property in which he has an interest, during his minority.  Any and all of such payments shall be made at the discretion of the Trustee, but during the lifetime of the Donor only by and with the advice, consent and approval of the Donor, and such part of said income as is not distributed shall be accumulated and may be distributed in any subsequent year at the discretion of the Trustee, but during the lifetime of the Donor only by and with the advice, consent and approval of the Donor.The agreement for the minor son, Robert, reads the same as for John.By the Mesta agreement dated June 14, 1926, the petitioner assigned to Mesta Machine Co. his entire right, title, and interest in and to an invention relating to rotary shears and method of shearing for a consideration of one-half of all profits in excess of 15 percent on all machinery supplied, furnished, or sold by contract, the receipt or obtaining of which was contingent upon the furnishing of a shear or shears embodying the assigned invention.  The agreement contained a formula for the computation of profit. *140  It provided that Mesta Machine Co. render statements to petitioner or his assignees *761  semiannually.  All improvements made by petitioner belonged to Mesta.  The agreement contained the usual provisions in the event of an infringement suit and ended as follows:13. The benefits and obligations of this agreement shall accrue and be binding upon the respective parties hereto, their successors and assigns, legal representatives, heirs, administrators or executors, except as herein provided.Notice of assignment of the Mesta agreement was given by the trustee to the Mesta Machine Co. in writing dated April 15, 1932, and the notice was accepted by the company on the same date.  The Mesta Machine Co. thereafter sent the statements required by the agreement to the Fidelity Trust Co. and paid the royalty due under the agreement directly to the trustee.The original notes of petitioner referred to in paragraph (c) of each trust instrument were canceled and marked "Paid" by both Commonwealth Trust Co. and the Fidelity Trust Co. and the trustee of each trust gave its new notes in one-fifth the amount thereof as evidence of the indebtedness.  The new notes were guaranteed by the petitioner. *141  Under the Donner agreement petitioner obligated himself to purchase 5,565 shares of Mesta Machine Co. stock from Wildon, Ltd., and 2,892 shares from Bartholomew Investment Corporation at $ 300 per share.  Donner was the principal stockholder of both of the companies and was a party to the agreement.  The purchase price of the shares was to be paid, $ 634,200 in cash and the balance in promissory notes due $ 634,200 on or before December 31, 1930, the same amount on December 31, 1931, and $ 634,500 on December 31, 1932.  The shares so purchased were all to be transferred to petitioner's name and 2,114 shares were to be delivered to him immediately.  The remaining shares were to be held by the vendors as collateral on petitioner's notes and released pro rata as payments on the purchase price were made.  As a part of the agreement petitioner assumed the obligation of Donner, under a prior contract, to sell 1,691 shares of the stock to a third party.  All dividends on the shares held as collateral, after October 1, 1929, were to belong to petitioner and the cash dividends were to be applied first to interest and then to principal on his promissory notes.  The contract was binding upon*142  the assigns of petitioner.In the Fink agreement, under which petitioner contracted to sell, and Fink and others agreed to purchase, 5,263 shares of Mesta Machine Co. stock which petitioner was to purchase under the Donner agreement at an aggregate price of $ 1,607,050, Fink and his associates agreed to make payments to petitioner as he was required to make payments under the Donner agreement and were to receive a proportionate part of the released collateral shares.*762  At the close of 1931 there was a balance due on petitioner's obligations under the Donner agreement of $ 634,500, for which 21,150 shares of Mesta Machine Co. stock were held as security.  A note covering that obligation fell due on December 31, 1932.  The note was outstanding and unpaid on April 15, 1932, at the date the five children's trusts were executed.  The market value of the Mesta Machine Co. shares on that date was $ 8.75, the stock having been split ten for one on January 10, 1930.  By reason of that split-up of the shares the petitioner was obligated under the Donner agreement to pay $ 30 per share instead of $ 300 per share.The petitioner defaulted on the payment of his note of $ 634,500 due on*143  December 31, 1932.  On January 3, 1933, petitioner called upon the trustee to make a payment thereon of $ 75,000 of principal and $ 4,139.85 of interest and thereby lift 2,500 shares of the Mesta Machine Co. stock from the escrow agent.  The trustee advised petitioner that it did not have sufficient funds with which to make the payments, whereupon petitioner made the payments himself with the understanding that the trusts would reimburse him when they could do so conveniently.  Upon this payment by petitioner 2,500 shares of Mesta Machine Co. stock were released to him by the escrow agent.In June 1933 petitioner sold 1,500 of the Mesta Machine Co. shares for $ 25,500 and credited the trusts with the proceeds.  Petitioner also credited the trusts with dividends on the shares and charged them interest on the amount due him.Petitioner made additional payments under the Donner agreement of $ 30,000 on July 20, 1934, $ 150,000 on October 3, 1934, $ 160,000 on October 22, 1934, and $ 15,050 on October 26, 1934.  A substantial part of the funds which petitioner used to make those payments was obtained from sales of the Mesta Machine Co. stock owned by him at about the time the payments*144  were made.The balance due under the Donner agreement at January 1, 1935, was $ 139,913.53.  That amount was liquidated in 1935 by the payment by Fink of $ 139,913.53, upon which payment there were released to him by the escrow agent 4,650 shares of Mesta Machine Co. stock still held by it.The trustee repaid the petitioner $ 30,000 on June 16, 1934, and charged each trust with $ 5,000 (so stipulated).  That left a balance due petitioner upon his advances in behalf of the trustee of $ 23,639.85, which, with accrued interest, the trustee paid in October 1934, charging each trust with a proportionate part of that amount.  Petitioner then turned over 1,000 Mesta Machine Co. shares to the trusts.The excess of petitioner's obligations under the Donner agreement over the market value of shares of Mesta Machine Co. stock purchased under that agreement in 1934 amounted to $ 37,850.*763  On April 30, 1932, the five trusts were without funds to pay the interest due on the notes which the trustee had issued to Commonwealth Trust Co. and Fidelity Trust Co. and petitioner advanced $ 2,500 to the trusts for that purpose.  The trustee repaid the amount to petitioner out of trust funds on January*145  3, 1933.On January 1, 1934, the Mesta Machine Co. had 600,000 shares of stock outstanding.  On January 1 of each of the years 1935 to 1939, inclusive, the number of shares outstanding was 1,000,000.  The percentage of the total shares outstanding owned by the petitioner, his wife, the five children's trusts and the Mayer Dixon trust, hereinafter described, ranged from 19.783 percent in 1934 to 17.403 percent in 1939.  The number of shares held by the petitioner, the children's trusts, and the Mayer Dixon trust for the taxable years was as follows:Children'sMayer-DixonYearPetitionertruststrust193466,70040,00012,0001935102,46670,00020,000193650,83368,55020,000193750,73368,55020,000193850,66768,55020,000193950,00068,55020,000The net income of the five children's trusts for the years 1932 to 1939, inclusive, the amounts thereof reported by the beneficiaries as distributed to them, and the amounts of income reported as undistributed and taxable to the trusts were as follows:YearNet incomeDistributedUndistributed1932$ 264,711.75$ 110,000.00$ 154,711.751933211,347.3891,544.03119,803.351934601,658.28257,577.72344,080.5619351,429,640.36748,477.43681,162.9319361,423,995.00806,392.83617,602.1719371,364,679.741,038,222.46326,457.2819381,172,472.30630,775.76541,696.541939682,420.34347,299.84335,120.50Total7,150,925.15* 4,030,290.073,120,635.08*146 The income taxes of the children paid by the trustee and included in the distributed income for the years 1933 to 1939, inclusive, were as follows:1933$ 9,094.0319346,165.77193547,834.861936293,622.561937403,355.051938$ 538,129.581939265,666.01Total      1,563,867.86*764  Most of the trust income was derived from royalties under the Mesta agreement.  The following table shows the income derived from royalties, from dividends, and from other sources:OtherYearRoyaltiesDividendssources1932$ 258,982.12(Mesta) $ 20,000.001933185,643.02"32,000.00       $ 291.391934561,217.02"50,000.00       19351,302,008.54(All) 121,340.8120,652.0419361,109,287.96"331,485.64   19371,061,123.46"323,179.12   1938942,769.15"244,350.00   1939522,637.18"161,375.00   9,244.94Total5,943,668.451,283,730.5730,188.37All distributions of trust funds and all purchases of securities by the trustee were made at petitioner's direction.  During the years 1934 to 1939, inclusive, the trustee purchased securities*147  in the aggregate amount of approximately $ 2,415,000.  Approximately $ 430,800 of such securities were distributed to the beneficiaries at cost in 1936.Each of the petitioner's children maintained two checking accounts at the Fidelity Trust Co., one of which was designated "regular" and one "special." One of the special accounts was established in 1933, two in 1934, and two in 1935.  The material cash distributions, with minor exceptions, from the five trusts were either cashed by the beneficiaries or credited to their regular or special checking accounts as follows:RegularSpecialYearCashedaccountaccount1934$ 27,000$ 106,411.95$ 96,00019357,042.57693,600193681,926.4419379,867.41625,000193882,646.18* 10,000193981,633.83Total27,000369,528.381,424,600Most of the withdrawals of funds from the special accounts were made by "debit memos" signed or approved by one of the officers of the trust company.  Some of these were for the purpose of transferring funds from the special to the regular accounts.  At different times the children all purchased homes with funds withdrawn from*148  the special accounts.During some of the years under consideration large amounts of income from the children's trusts were used for petitioner's benefit.  Some of those amounts were paid directly to the petitioner or on his obligations by the trustee, some were withdrawn for petitioner's use *765  from the children's accounts, and some were transferred by the children directly to petitioner.  In 1932 $ 50,000 of the $ 110,000 of the trust income reported distributed to the beneficiaries in that year was paid to the Fidelity Trust Co. on petitioner's indebtedness which had been assumed by the trusts, and $ 24,000 was transferred to the Mayer-Dixon trust (described below) for the payment of premiums on policies of insurance on petitioner's life.  Of the $ 154,711.75 of income reported as taxable income of the trusts in that year $ 150,000 was paid on petitioner's indebtedness to the Commonwealth Trust Co. which the trusts had assumed.In 1933 $ 32,000 of the $ 91,544.03 reported as distributed to the beneficiaries was paid over to the Mayer-Dixon trust and $ 16,000 was paid to petitioner to compensate him for the support and maintenance of his two minor children, whom he had declared*149  "emancipated" in 1932.In 1934, out of the $ 257,577.72 of income reported as distributed to the beneficiaries, $ 50,000 was paid to Fidelity Trust Co. on petitioner's indebtedness, $ 22,000 was transferred to the Mayer-Dixon trust, and $ 15,000 was paid to petitioner for support of his minor sons.  Also $ 57,881.31 was paid to petitioner out of the income reported as undistributed by the trusts to reimburse him for amounts which he had paid out under the Donner agreement, together with interest thereon.In December 1934 petitioner's children each made him a gift of $ 5,000.  In January 1935 they each made him an additional gift of $ 5,000.  The gifts were intended as Christmas presents.  They were a part of the distributed income of the trusts reported for taxation by the children in the years 1934 and 1935.  The gifts were made part in 1934 and part in 1935 upon the advice of one of the officers of the Fidelity Trust Co. so as to avoid gift tax liability.During 1937 petitioner began negotiations with certain interests in Great Britain for the organization of a new company and the construction of a plant in Great Britain.  Petitioner agreed to post a fund of $ 1,500,000 to show *150  his good faith in the negotiations.  On April 7, 1937, at petitioner's direction, the trustee of the five children's trusts deposited $ 125,000 in the special account of each child.  On April 8 petitioner caused $ 150,000 to be withdrawn from each of the accounts, which amounts were deposited to his credit in a new account opened on that date at the Union Trust Co., of Pittsburgh, together with his own check for $ 260,000 drawn on the Commonwealth Trust Co.  On April 9, 1937, petitioner purchased with those funds $ 1,000,000 face value of United States Treasury bills, which, together with $ 500,000 of petitioner's wife's funds which were likewise converted into United States Treasury bills, he transmitted to Great *766  Britain and deposited in a London bank.  Petitioner sent each of his children a receipt dated April 7, 1937, stating:Received of     the sum of One Hundred and Fifty Thousand ($ 150,000.00) Dollars deposited with me for investment purposes in conjunction with others.  To be invested at my discretion and the securities delivered and an accounting rendered in due course.[Signed] Lorenz Iversen.The negotiations for the new plant did not materialize.  In 1939*151  on petitioner's instructions 151,329-18 of the funds held by the London bank were invested in gold bullion (11 bars).  Title to the gold was taken in the names of the children.  In 1939 the gold was sold and the proceeds transmitted to this country and redeposited in the children's special accounts.  The amounts returned to the special accounts differed as to each child and were several thousand dollars less than the amounts originally withdrawn from the accounts.The funds in the children's special accounts were always handled as belonging to them individually.  However, none of the children ever drew checks on those accounts in any substantial amounts without the advice and approval of petitioner or one of the officers of the Fidelity Trust Co.  In some of the years large amounts of the funds accumulated in the accounts were invested in securities selected by officials of the Fidelity Trust Co.  Stocks costing approximately $ 450,000 were purchased in 1935 and were reflected in the balances shown in the trustee's statements sent to the children.All three of the petitioner's sons are presently employed by the Mesta Machine Co.For all of the years involved in this proceeding the*152  trustee filed income tax returns on Form 1040 for each of the trusts, and fiduciary returns on Form 1041 for each of the beneficiaries. The children each filed individual income tax returns.  The taxes shown to be due on all of those returns were paid and no refunds have ever been made to the trustee or the children.On September 3, 1931, petitioner created an unfunded insurance trust, naming the Fidelity Trust Co. trustee.  The corpus of the trust consisted of policies of insurance on petitioner's life in the aggregate face amount of $ 1,000,000.  Petitioner assigned to the trustee all of his rights in the policies except his right to disability benefits.  The trustee was not required to pay the premiums on the policies except when, and to the extent that, funds were furnished to it for that purpose.The income of the trust after petitioner's death was to be distributed to or used for the benefit of petitioner's wife and children.  The trust as created was revocable, but was made irrevocable by an amendment made by petitioner in 1932.*767  The Mayer-Dixon trust referred to above was created on November 9, 1931.  Petitioner's daughters, Mary Helen Dixon and Elonora Pauline Mayer, *153  were the nominal grantors of the trust.  The original trust corpus consisted of $ 282,000 which petitioner paid over to his daughters for that purpose by checks dated November 10, 1931.  Later petitioner gave his daughters additional checks for $ 204,000, dated November 20, 1931, which they turned over to the trustee as additional corpus of the trust.  On December 21, 1931, petitioner paid $ 30,000 additional to the trustee.The trustee was directed to apply the net income of the Mayer-Dixon trust to the payment of premiums on the policies of insurance on petitioner's life which were held under the insurance trust referred to above.  Any excess income was to be added to corpus. If necessary the trustee could use the corpus for the payment of the premiums. After petitioner's death the funds in the trust were to be consolidated with those of the insurance trust.The trust agreement also provided that the trustee should follow the instructions of petitioner's daughters in making investments and voting stocks. The daughters were to have no right to amend or revoke the trust without petitioner's consent.  If petitioner survived the daughters the trust was to terminate and its funds *154  were to be transferred to him.The net income of the Mayer-Dixon trust, the amounts of income transferred to the insurance trust, and the premiums paid by the insurance trust on policies of insurance on petitioner's life during the years 1931 to 1939, inclusive, were as follows:Transferred toPremiumsYearNet incomeinsurance trustpaid1931$ 4,900.00NoneNone193225,632.45$ 22,181.34$ 45,952.39193315,345.2113,896.2246,127.64193424,601.2525,636.5447,193.17193546,540.5039,952.8246,895.811936104,125.0043,095.6046,554.011937107,800.0046,595.0046,514.25193868,600.0046,133.0046,245.75193946,416.993,857.004,348.70In his deficiency notices for all of the years involved, except 1935, the respondent has included in petitioner's income all of the income of the five children's trusts, all of the income of the Mayer-Dixon trust, and lesser amounts of miscellaneous income which are not involved in the issues under consideration.  For 1935 the income of the Mayer-Dixon trust only was included in petitioner's income in the deficiency notice, but in an amended answer filed in the proceeding for that year, Docket No. *155  98592, respondent alleges affirmatively that petitioner is also taxable on all of the income of the five children's trusts.*768  The following tabulation shows, for each of the taxable years, the income reported by the five children's trusts, the trust income reported by the beneficiaries, the income reported by the petitioner, and petitioner's adjusted income as computed in the deficiency notices, and, as to 1935, in the respondent's amended answer:Trust incomeIncome reportedreported byIncome reportedPetitioner'sYearby 5 trustsbeneficiariesby petitioneradjusted income1934$ 344,080.56$ 257,577.72$ 95,848.15$ 731,107.861935681,122.93748,477.43184,127.271,660,616.471936617,602.17806,392.83235,451.331,770,558.631937326,457.281,038,222.46235,025.651,721,602.531938541,696.54630,775.76131,194.231,375,445.641939335,120.50347,299.84209,350.46945,200.96OPINION.Respondent's first and principal contention is that petitioner is taxable on all of the income of the five children's trusts for all of the years involved under section 22 (a), Internal Revenue Code, under the doctrine of Helvering v. Clifford, 309 U.S. 331">309 U.S. 331.*156  He makes the further, or alternative, contentions with respect to those trusts (1) that petitioner is taxable on the royalties paid to the trustee as assignee of petitioner's royalty contract with the Mesta Machine Co. under the doctrine of Helvering v. Horst, 311 U.S. 112">311 U.S. 112; Helvering v. Eubank, 311 U.S. 122">311 U.S. 122, and Harrison v. Schaffner, 312 U.S. 579">312 U.S. 579; (2) that petitioner is taxable in 1934 and 1935 under section 167 (a) (1) and (2) of the Revenue Act of 1934, under the doctrine of Helvering v. Stuart, 317 U.S. 154">317 U.S. 154, on so much of the income of the trusts as might have been used in those years in payment of his unliquidated obligations under the Donner agreement and his indebtedness to the Fidelity Trust Co.; and (3) that petitioner is likewise taxable under section 167 on all of the income of the trusts for his two minor sons, John and Robert, during their minorities (John became of age January 21, 1934, and Robert April 16, 1937).As to the Mayer-Dixon trust, respondent contends that petitioner is taxable on all the income for all of the taxable *157  years involved under sections 166 or 167, or both.We think that the respondent must be sustained in his contention that petitioner is taxable on all of the income of the five children's trusts under section 22 (a) because of his reserved interest in and powers over the principal and income of the trusts.First, petitioner had the right to direct the trustee to use either principal or income of the trusts without limitation to satisfy his liability under the Donner agreement (see article one, paragraph (2) above).  That liability amounted to $ 559,500 at January 1, 1934, and $ 139,913.53 at January 1, 1935.  It was fully paid during 1935.*769  Petitioner had absolute and exclusive control over all distributions of trust income. None of the beneficiaries could receive any distribution from the trusts during his lifetime except as he directed.  He had the right to terminate the trusts at any time and to have any or all of the principal distributed to the beneficiaries. He had the right to control all investments of trust funds.  He could not only veto any purchase or sale of the securities proposed by the trustee, but he could require the trustee to purchase, sell, or exchange*158  any securities which he himself might suggest.  He had the right to direct the trustee in voting all stock held in the trusts.  Finally, he retained the power to perform any act necessary to the determination of, or to make settlement of, any controversy involving the rights of any of the parties or their assigns under the Mesta, Donner, and Fink agreements.All of those interests, rights, and powers were expressly reserved to the petitioner under the trust agreements.  While no one of them might be deemed sufficient in itself to bring this case under section 22 (a) and the doctrine of the Clifford case, their cumulative effect is persuasive.  When we consider in addition to the rights enumerated the privileges which petitioner enjoyed in the use of the trust income through the close family relationship which existed between him and the beneficiaries, there is little left in the trust conveyances to evidence completed gifts to the children.The Supreme Court said in Helvering v. Stuart, supra, that:* * * Economic gain realized or realizable by the taxpayer is necessary to produce a taxable income under our statutory scheme. * * *That economic*159  gain for the taxable year, as distinguished from the nonmaterial satisfactions, may be obtained through a control of a trust so complete that it must be said the taxpayer is the owner of its income.  * * * [Citing Helvering v. Clifford, supra;Helvering v. Fuller, 310 U.S. 69">310 U.S. 69.]Petitioner's economic gain was definite enough as to the trust income or principal that might have been used to satisfy his financial obligations, either at his direction (as to the obligations under the Donner agreement) or in the discretion of the trustee (as to his obligations as guarantor of the notes held by the Commonwealth Trust Co. and the Fidelity Trust Co.).  (See article, one, paragraphs (1) and (2), set out above.)Against the conclusion which might be urged, from a technical construction of the trust agreements, that petitioner stood to realize no economic benefit from the trust income that was to be either distributed to the beneficiaries (pursuant to his direction) or added to principal, stand the facts that actually large amounts of such income did find their way into petitioner's hands through the channels of close family relationship. *160  First, there were the "Christmas gifts" *770  of $ 50,000 which the beneficiaries made to petitioner out of trust income in December 1934 and January 1935.  Later, in 1937, there were the withdrawals from the children's special accounts of $ 750,000 of trust income for petitioner's use in his negotiations for the construction of a new plant in Great Britain.  While the evidence is that these gifts were entirely voluntary and that the withdrawals from the special accounts were made with the consent of each of the children, the inference is that all of the available trust income may have remained "in substance at the disposal of the settlor." Helvering v. Stuart, supra.(S. Rept. 665, 72d Cong., 1st sess., pp. 34, 35.) The children had no choice but to comply with whatever request for funds petitioner might make, or else be cut off from any further income during petitioner's lifetime. Thus, petitioner's control over the income distributions gave him virtual control over the beneficiaries' use of the income as well.  Cf.  Rollins v. Helvering (C. C. A., 8th Cir.), 92 Fed. (2d) 390.The difficulty of applying the*161  doctrine of the Clifford case has been dwelt upon at length by this and other courts.  See cases discussed in Verne Marshall, 1 T. C. 442. In every case we must carefully examine the facts both in their relation to each other and to the criteria afforded us.In the recent case of Louis Stockstrom, 3 T. C. 255, we held a grantor taxable under section 22 (a) on all of the income of ten trusts which he had created primarily for the benefit of his children and grandchildren.  We found that the reservation by the grantor of broad administrative powers over trust corpus, combined with his power to control the distribution of income, brought the case under the rule of Helvering v. Clifford, supra. There, as in the instant case, the grantor had reserved broad administrative powers over the corpora of the trusts and, in addition, the power to control all distributions of trust income to the beneficiaries. In some of the trusts in the Stockstrom case he could shift the income from one beneficiary to another and in all of them he could withhold distributions entirely and cause the income*162  to accumulate.  As in the present case, he had no reversionary interest in the corpus of any of the trusts.The fact that the grantors in the Clifford and Stockstrom cases were also the trustees does not distinguish those cases from the one under consideration.  The interests and powers which the grantors there reserved to themselves as trustees were no greater in substance than those which petitioner reserved to himself as grantor. It is the scope of the control over the trust property by the grantor and not the method by which that control is to be exercised that governs.  By declaring himself trustee a grantor reserves pro forma all of the administrative and managerial powers inherent in the trusteeship.  As *771  grantor he may add to those powers as he wishes, and it matters not whether he is to exercise them as trustee or as grantor. In this respect a grantor who reserves powers as grantor is perhaps in a less favorable position tax-wise than one who reserves them as trustee.  For a trustee is charged with a fiduciary obligation to the beneficiaries which does not encumber a grantor. Cf.  Helvering v. Stuart, supra;Williamson v. Commissioner, 132 Fed. (2d) 489.*163 Petitioner had important control over the trust income in his right either to distribute it to or withhold it from any one of the beneficiaries. Thus, during the lifetime of the petitioner the beneficiaries were as completely dependent upon his bounty as if no trusts had ever been created.  Their incomes from the trusts were entirely "subject to his whims." Commissioner v. Buck, 120 Fed. (2d) 775. The retention by the grantor of the power to control the disbursements of the trust fund was considered sufficient to justify taxing the income to him under section 22 (a) in Brown v. Commissioner, 131 Fed. (2d) 640. See also Warren v. Commissioner, 133 Fed. (2d) 312; affirming 45 B. T. A. 379; Williamson v. Commissioner, supra; Commission v. Buck, supra; and Foerderer v. Commissioner (C. C. A., 3rd Cir.), 141 Fed. (2d) 53.What is perhaps a more important ground for petitioner's claiming a distinction between this and the Clifford case is that under the terms of the trust agreement*164  there the corpus was to revert to the grantor upon termination of the trust, which was to exist for a maximum term of five years, whereas in the instant case there is no provision in the trust agreements for a reversion to the petitioner of any of the corpus. It is provided in each trust agreement here that after the death of the donor the corpus is to be distributed to the beneficiary at certain stated ages (see article two above).  There is no assurance, however, that the trust shall continue in existence until petitioner's death.  It is provided in article two that:Donor reserves the right from time to time to accelerate the termination of this trust agreement as to all or any part of the trust estate and to direct the Trustee to make distribution of all or any part thereof to the beneficiary. [Italics supplied.]The plain meaning of these provisions is that the petitioner could have terminated the trusts at any time.  It is uncertain whether in case of such termination of the trust in whole or in part the trustee would have been required to pay over to the beneficiary all or any part of the corpus of the trust which was thus terminated.  It is plain, we think, that *165  a power to terminate a trust at will adds materially to the "bundle of rights" under which a grantor's liability under section 22 (a) is imposed.*772 Even if we construed the trust agreements as prohibiting the reversion of any of the corpus to petitioner during his lifetime, the situation here would be no less receptive to the doctrine of the Clifford case than was that in the Stockstrom case.  The grantor there retained no reversionary interest in the trusts.  Also in Ellis H. Warren, supra, where we held the grantor taxable under the Clifford case on the income of three family trusts, all long term trusts, over which he retained broad powers of control similar to those reserved by petitioner, there was no provision in the trust agreement for the reversion of corpus to the grantor. See also Commissioner v. Buck, supra, where the grantor had reserved no reversionary rights in either corpus or income.In their briefs both petitioner and the respondent seem to accept the trusts under consideration as long term trusts, the petitioner claiming that that fact argues against the application of the Clifford*166  case and the respondent claiming that the length of the term of the trusts is not determinative and citing Warren v. Commissioner, supra;Helvering v. Stuart, supra;Helvering v. Fuller, supra;Williamson v. Commissioner, supra;Frederick B. Rentschler, 1 T. C. 814; and Verne Marshall, supra, to which might be added Commissioner v. Buck, supra. The only significance, however, of the length of the term of the trust is that the longer the term the more important becomes the degree of control by the grantor. Helvering v. Elias, 122 Fed. (2d) 171.Arguments are made by both parties as to petitioner's motives in creating the trusts.  The respondent contends that it was tax avoidance and the petitioner contends that it was to create independent estates for his children, and particularly for his son Andreas, who had suffered a permanent physical disability in early childhood.We are not so much concerned here with petitioner's motives *167  as with the consequences of his acts.  As was said in Richardson v. Smith, 102 Fed. (2d) 697, "with few exceptions the law attaches legal consequences to what parties do, quite independently of their private purpose or intent." Regardless of petitioner's motives, the result of his acts in creating the trusts was to reduce his income taxes by spreading large amounts of income, which would otherwise have been taxable to him, among the members of his immediate family and their fiduciaries.It is appropriate to observe, too, that petitioner created the trusts not out of accumulated wealth or realized earnings, but by assigning to the trustee the source of his earnings.  The royalties accruing to petitioner under the Mesta agreement were the principal source of trust income. Petitioner was the active president and a large stockholder of Mesta Machine Co. and his royalties were to be based *773  on the earnings of that company.  In view of this integration of his royalty rights with his services to the contracting company, there would be a serious question as to whether in any event he would not be taxable on the royalties under the Horst, Eubank*168  , and Schaffner cases.  In Hogle v. Commissioner, 132 Fed. (2d) 66, the grantor assigned to his children in trust a marginal securities trading account, retaining the power to manage and operate the account.  It was held that the income from the account was taxable to the grantor because it resulted from the exercise of his personal skill and judgment and was in substance his personal earnings.It was unusual, at least, for petitioner, in the prime of life (he was only 56 years of age at the time the trusts were created) and at the peak of his business career, and facing, as he was, a crucial period in his financial affairs, to assign over to his children the very means by which he might have expected to achieve ultimate financial success.We think that all of the circumstances of the creation and operation of the trusts fully justify the respondent's determination that petitioner is taxable on the income under section 22 (a) and Helvering v. Clifford, supra.Holding as we do that petitioner is taxable on all the income of the five children's trusts under section 22 (a), it is not necessary for us to consider*169  the respondent's alternative contentions as to those trusts.The remaining issue relates to petitioner's liability for tax on the income of the Mayer-Dixon trust.  As to this issue it seems to us that the facts speak too plainly to call for much discussion.  In short, petitioner furnished his two daughters large amounts of money for the purpose of establishing a trust whose income was to be used to pay the premiums upon policies of insurance on his life.  If petitioner himself had posed as grantor of the trust he would have been taxable on the income under the explicit provisions of section 167 (a) (3) of the applicable revenue act.  1 By having his daughters assume the role of grantors he hoped to avoid that tax liability.  The evidence permits of no other explanation of his acts.  It is not shown that petitioner ever had any intention of making his daughters an outright gift of the funds which they used to establish the trust.*170 *774  Since this trust was created with funds which petitioner furnished for that purpose, we must conclude that he is the grantor of the trust.  Lehman v. Commissioner, 109 Fed. (2d) 99; certiorari denied, 310 U.S. 637">310 U.S. 637. As grantor of the trust petitioner is taxable on such part of the income as might be used to pay premiums on policies of insurance on his life.  Sec. 167 (a) (3).The net income of the Mayer-Dixon trust for some of the years 1934 to 1939, inclusive, was in excess of the premiums paid upon the policies.  The respondent argues that the petitioner is taxable upon the entire net income of the trust, since the excess income for any year not used to pay premiums could have been so used during the following year and since additional policies could have been transferred to the insurance trust.  We do not think that this is a proper construction of the statute.  Section 167 (a) (3) makes a grantor of a trust taxable upon only such part of the income as "may be, applied to the payment of premiums upon policies of insurance on the life of the grantor." We think that this means such part of the income as under *171  the terms of the trust agreement may be applied upon the current year's premiums on policies outstanding.  See Genevieve F. Moore, 39 B. T. A. 808; Frank C. Rand, 40 B. T. A. 233; affd., 116 Fed. (2d) 929; certiorari denied, 313 U.S. 594">313 U.S. 594; Commissioner v. Mott, 85 Fed. (2d) 315; Corning v. Commissioner, 104 Fed. (2d) 329. Under the terms of the trust agreement the income of the Mayer-Dixon trust was to be used only for the payment of premiums on policies of insurance on petitioner's life held in the insurance trust.  We think that the excess of the trust income over the amount of such premiums is not taxable to petitioner.  See Joseph Weil, 3 T.C. 579">3 T. C. 579.Petitioner's tax liability for the years 1934 to 1939, inclusive, will be recomputed in accordance with this opinion and the stipulations of the parties.Decisions will be entered under Rule 50.  BLACK Black, J., concurring in the result: I am in entire agreement with the majority opinion as to the taxability of the*172  income of the trust created to pay premiums on life insurance policies taken out on the life of petitioner.  I also concur in the result reached as to the five trusts created April 15, 1932, but I do not concur in some of the reasons given in the majority opinion.  For example, in speaking of the right which the settlor reserved to terminate the trusts and thus accelerate the time of enjoyment by the beneficiaries, it is said:The plain meaning of these provisions is that the petitioner could have terminated the trusts at any time.  It is uncertain whether in case of such *775  termination of the trust in whole or in part the trustee would have been required to pay over to the beneficiary all or any part of the corpus of the trust which was thus terminated. * * *If the settlor had exercised his right to terminate the trusts and thus accelerate the time of enjoyment by the beneficiaries, I do not think there is any doubt but the trustee would have had to turn over the net proceeds of the trusts to the beneficiaries after the debts and obligations of the trust estates were satisfied.  I do not agree with the majority opinion wherein it says that there was uncertainty about this. *173  Also I do not agree that the retention by the grantor of an irrevocable trust of the right to accelerate the time of enjoyment by the beneficiary of the rights granted him under the trust is the retention of any such control by the settlor as would justify the taxability of the income of the trust to him.In the recent case of Estate of Harry Holmes, 3 T.C. 571">3 T. C. 571, the grantor of the trusts had retained the right to terminate the trusts at any time and thus accelerate the time of enjoyment by the beneficiaries, but he retained no power to revest the trust corpus or any part thereof in himself or to change the portions granted to any beneficiary, such as was present in Commissioner v. Buck, 120 Fed. (2d) 775. We held that this retention by the settlor of the power to accelerate the time of enjoyment by the beneficiaries did not make the value of the trust corpus includible in decedent's gross estate under section 811 (d), I. R. C.For substantially the same reasons as expressed by us in the Holmes case that the corpus was not includible in decedent's gross estate under section 811 (d), I do not think that the retention*174  by the settlor in the instant case of the right to accelerate the time of enjoyment to the beneficiaries would afford any reason to include the income of the trust estates as petitioner's income under section 22 (a).  But while I do not agree to that part of the majority opinion, I concur in the result reached in the majority opinion because of the following provisions in article four of the trust indentures:During the lifetime of the Donor --(a) the Trustee shall not sell, purchase or exchange any securities at any time in the trust estate, without the written consent of the Donor;(b) the Trustee shall make sales, purchases or exchanges upon the written request of the Donor;(c) the Trustee shall vote the securities in the trust estate on any corporate matter as directed by the Donor.These were very broad powers of control which the settlor reserved unto himself and justify, I think, the taxation of the income of the trust estates to the settlor under section 22 (a), following such cases as Frank G. Hoover, 42 B. T. A. 786; Williamson v. Commissioner, *776  132 Fed. (2d) 489; Ellis H. Warren, 45 B. T. A. 379,*175  affd., per curiam (C. C. A., 6th Cir.), 133 Fed. (2d) 312; and Louis Stockstrom, 3 T. C. 255, following the Supreme Court's decision in Helvering v. Clifford, 309 U.S. 331">309 U.S. 331. These cases, or at least some of them, are cited and relied upon in the majority opinion and I believe they support the conclusion therein reached.  I, therefore, concur in the result.  Footnotes*. Includes children's income taxes paid by trustee in the aggregate amount of $ 1,563,867.86.↩*. For Elonora Pauline Mayer only.↩1. SEC. 167. INCOME FOR BENEFIT OF GRANTOR.(a) Where any part of the income of a trust -- * * * *(3) is, or in the discretion of the grantor or of any person not having a substantial adverse interest in the disposition of such part of the income may be, applied to the payment of premiums upon policies of insurance on the life of the grantor (except policies of insurance irrevocably payable for the purposes and in the manner specified in section 23 (o), relating to the so-called "charitable contribution" deduction);↩then such part of the income of the trust shall be included in computing the net income of the grantor.