                       T.C. Memo. 2005-126



                     UNITED STATES TAX COURT



           ESTATE OF CHARLES PORTER SCHUTT, DECEASED,
  CHARLES P. SCHUTT, JR., AND HENRY I. BROWN III, CO-EXECUTORS,
                          Petitioner v.
          COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent



     Docket No. 19208-02.            Filed May 26, 2005.

          S1 and S2, Delaware business trusts, were formed
     in 1998 and were capitalized by the contribution
     thereto of stock by D through a revocable trust and by
     WTC as trustee of various trusts created for the
     benefit of D’s children and grandchildren. At his
     death in 1999, D held through the revocable trust a
     45.236-percent interest in S1 and a 47.336-percent
     interest in S2.

          Held: D’s transfers of stock to S1 and S2 were
     bona fide sales for adequate and full consideration
     within the meaning of secs. 2036(a) and 2038, I.R.C.,
     such that the value of the transferred assets is not
     included in his gross estate under these statutes.


     John W. Porter, W. Donald Sparks II, and Michael R. Stein,

for petitioner.

     Gerald A. Thorpe, for respondent.
                                  -2-


                MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION


     WHERRY, Judge:     By a statutory notice dated October 11,

2002, respondent determined a Federal estate tax deficiency in

the amount of $6,113,583.03 with respect to the estate of Charles

Porter Schutt (the estate).    By answer, respondent asserted an

increase in the deficiency of $1,409,884.65.      Thereafter, by

amendment to answer, respondent asserted a further increase in

the deficiency of $3,595,513.32 (for a total deficiency of

$11,118,981).    After concessions, the principal issue for

decision is whether the fair market value of stock contributed by

Charles Porter Schutt (decedent) through a revocable trust to

Schutt, I, Business Trust (Schutt I) and Schutt, II, Business

Trust (Schutt II) is includable in his gross estate pursuant to

section 2036(a) or 2038.1

                           FINDINGS OF FACT

     Some of the facts have been stipulated and are so found.

The stipulations of the parties, with accompanying exhibits, are

incorporated herein by this reference.    Decedent was a resident

of the State of Delaware when he died testate on April 21, 1999,

and his will was probated in that State.      The co-executors of



     1
       Unless otherwise indicated, section references are to the
Internal Revenue Code (Code) in effect as of the date of
decedent’s death, and Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules
of Practice and Procedure.
                                  -3-

decedent’s estate both resided in the Commonwealth of

Pennsylvania at the time the petition in this case was filed.

General Background

     Decedent was born on February 11, 1911.      Decedent later

married Phyllis duPont (Mrs. Schutt), the daughter of Eugene E.

duPont (Mr. duPont).   Decedent and Mrs. Schutt had four children,

each of whom subsequently married:      Sarah Schutt Harrison,

Caroline Schutt Brown, Katherine D. Schutt Streitweiser, and

Charles P. Schutt, Jr.   Decedent’s son Charles P. Schutt, Jr.,

and his son-in-law Henry I. Brown III are the co-executors of his

estate.   Each of decedent’s four children had children of his or

her own, such that decedent and Mrs. Schutt were survived by 14

grandchildren.

     Historically, a significant portion of the Schutt family

wealth has been invested in, and a concomitant significant and

steady portion of the family income has been generated by, an

interest in E. I. du Pont de Nemours and Company (DuPont) stock

and Phillips Petroleum Company stock initially obtained from

Mr. duPont.   Throughout the decades, Mr. duPont, decedent, and

Mrs. Schutt have, in the administration of these and other

holdings, established a number of trusts for the benefit of

themselves and/or their issue.2    In the mid-1980s, the Schutt


     2
       Various trusts directly pertinent to the instant
litigation are described in detail infra in text. Decedent
                                                   (continued...)
                                  -4-

family’s holdings in Phillips Petroleum stock were sold, due to

dissatisfaction with the management of Phillips Petroleum, and

were replaced with stock in Exxon Corporation.

Trust 3044

     During 1940, Mr. duPont as trustor and Wilmington Trust

Company (WTC) as trustee entered into a trust agreement dated

December 30, 1940 (Trust 3044).    In accordance with this

agreement, shares of DuPont and Christiana Securities Company3

stock were placed in trust for the benefit of Mrs. Schutt and her

issue.   As pertinent here,4 Trust 3044 provided that, until Mrs.

Schutt’s death, income was to be distributed quarterly to her

issue per stirpes, or if none to Mrs. Schutt.

     Upon Mrs. Schutt’s death, the trust corpus was to be divided

into shares, per stirpes, for the benefit of her issue.      If such

share was set aside for a living child of Mrs. Schutt, the corpus

so allocated was to be held in trust for the child and income


     2
      (...continued)
and/or Mrs. Schutt also established at least three additional
trusts during the 1970s for the benefit of their grandchildren
and the issue of their grandchildren.
     3
       Christiana Securities Company was a holding company
established by certain branches of the duPont family to hold
DuPont stock. The company was later merged into DuPont, and at
times relevant to this proceeding, the corpus of Trust 3044 (or
subtrusts thereunder) included DuPont and Exxon stock.
     4
       The following explanations in text of the various trusts
pertinent to this litigation are intended to serve as summaries
of the most salient provisions. The recitations do not attempt
to set forth every feature and/or contingency.
                                -5-

therefrom was to continue to be distributed in quarterly

installments to the child.   Upon the child’s death, the trustee

was to distribute the corpus free of trust to the child’s

descendants, per stirpes, subject to specified age restrictions.

     As regards administration, Trust 3044 granted to the

trustee, subject to specified limitations, “in general, the power

to do and perform any and all acts and things in relation to the

trust fund in the same manner and to the same extent as an

individual might or could do with respect to his own property.”

Concerning limitations, the trust agreement provided for the

appointment of an “adviser of the trust” (also referred to herein

as a “consent adviser”) by Mrs. Schutt and stated that enumerated

powers granted to the trustee shall be exercised

     only with the written consent of the adviser of the
     trust; provided, however, that if at any time during
     the continuance of this trust there shall be no adviser
     of the trust, or if the adviser of the trust shall fail
     to communicate in writing to Trustee his or her consent
     or disapproval as to the exercise of any of the
     aforesaid powers for which exercise the consent of such
     adviser shall be necessary, within twenty days after
     Trustee shall have sent to the adviser of the trust, by
     registered mail, at his or her last known address, a
     written request for such consent, then Trustee is
     hereby authorized and empowered to take such action in
     the premises as it, in its sole discretion, shall deem
     to be for the best interest of any beneficiary of this
     trust.

     The specified powers subject to the above consent provision

were the trustee’s authority:   (1) To sell or otherwise dispose

of trust property; (2) to hold cash uninvested or to invest in
                                -6-

income-producing property; (3) to vote shares of stock held by

the trust; and (4) to participate in any plan or proceeding with

respect to rights or obligations arising from ownership of any

security held by the trust.

     The trust agreement recited that any trust established

thereunder would terminate no later than 21 years after the death

of the last survivor of Mr. duPont, his then-living issue, and

his sons-in-law.   At that juncture, any remaining principal was

to be distributed free of trust to the income beneficiaries

thereof at the time of the termination.

     By a letter to WTC dated March 11, 1941, Mrs. Schutt

appointed Mr. duPont and decedent as advisers of Trust 3044.    The

letter further stated that upon the death of either appointee,

the survivor would act as sole adviser until such time as

Mrs. Schutt appointed another adviser.    Mr. duPont died on

December 17, 1966, and decedent remained as sole adviser with

respect to Trust 3044 and trusts created thereunder, a position

he continued to hold at the time of his own death on April 21,

1999.

     Mrs. Schutt died on August 5, 1989.    Upon her death, Trust

3044 was divided into separate trusts for the benefit of her four

children.   These trusts are referred to as Trusts 3044-1, 3044-2,

3044-3, 3044-4, 3044-5, 3044-6, 3044-7, and 3044-8.
                                 -7-

     Decedent’s and Mrs. Schutt’s daughter Katherine D. Schutt

Streitweiser died of leukemia on March 27, 1993.    At that time,

she was the current beneficiary of Trusts 3044-3 and 3044-7.      In

accordance with the provisions of those trusts, the assets held

therein were distributed outright to her children.

Trust 2064

     Mrs. Schutt’s death was also significant with respect to the

structure of two additional trusts directly pertinent to this

litigation.    By means of a trust agreement dated October 6, 1934,

between Mr. duPont and WTC, Mr. duPont conferred upon Mrs. Schutt

a limited power of appointment over what is referred to as Trust

2064.    Under her will dated December 1, 1988, as amended by a

first codicil dated January 25, 1989, Mrs. Schutt exercised this

power of appointment.    These documents provided that the property

subject to the power was to be held in trust by WTC.    At

Mrs. Schutt’s death and after the distribution of $1,000 to each

of her surviving children, the balance of the trust was to be

divided into shares, with one share set aside for each surviving

grandchild and one share set aside for the then-living issue (as

a group) of any grandchild who predeceased her but left surviving

issue.

     Any share set aside for a predeceased grandchild was to be

distributed free of trust to that grandchild’s issue, per

stirpes, subject to the minor’s trust provision set forth in the
                                -8-

will.   The shares set aside for grandchildren who survived Mrs.

Schutt were to be held as a single trust, from which net income

was to be distributed quarterly in equal shares to each

grandchild until the youngest such grandchild achieved the age of

40.   Trust 2064 was to terminate on the earlier of (1) the date

the youngest grandchild living at Mrs. Schutt’s death reached 40,

(2) the death of all grandchildren living at Mrs. Schutt’s death,

or (3) the date 21 years after the death of the last survivor of

the issue of Mrs. Schutt’s grandfather, Alexis Irenee duPont,

living on October 6, 1934.   Trust property remaining at

termination was to be distributed, if any such persons survived,

in equal shares to the income beneficiaries thereof.

      As pertains to the administration of Trust 2064,

Mrs. Schutt’s will provided a representative listing of powers

granted to the trustee, subject to specified limitations.      More

specifically, the will provided for an adviser of the trust (also

referred to herein as a “direction adviser”), and appointed

decedent as the initial direction adviser, a position he

continued to hold until his death.    A committee made up of

Mrs. Schutt’s daughter-in-law Katherine Draper Schutt and son-in-

law Henry I. Brown III was designated to succeed decedent in this

role.   Regarding the direction adviser, the will stated, in

relevant part:

           I direct the trustee of each trust created in this
      Will to exercise the powers granted to it * * *,
                               -9-

     relating to buying, selling, leasing, exchanging,
     mortgaging, or pledging property held in such trust,
     and participation in incorporations, reorganizations,
     consolidations, liquidations, or mergers, only upon the
     written direction of the advisor of such trust or of
     the Committee, as the case may be.

                *   *    *    *      *   *   *

          Notwithstanding the previous provisions of this
     Article, if at any time during the administration of
     any trust hereunder, the advisor or Committee fail to
     communicate in writing to Trustee any direction or
     disapproval with respect to Trustee’s exercise of any
     power requiring the direction of the advisor or
     Committee within fifteen (15) days after trustee has
     sent a written request for such direction to the
     advisor’s or Committee members’ last known address by
     registered or certified mail (but Trustee shall not be
     required to take the initiative to seek any such
     direction), then Trustee is authorized to take such
     action in the matter as it, in its sole discretion,
     deems appropriate.

The will further directed that the direction adviser and

Committee members exercise their functions in a fiduciary

capacity.

Trust 11258-3

     As previously indicated, Mrs. Schutt’s death was also

significant with respect to the structure of a second trust

directly relevant to the factual background of this proceeding.

On January 16, 1976, Mrs. Schutt had established a revocable

trust, which was subsequently amended by supplemental trust

agreements dated April 9, 1976, June 6, 1979, December 30, 1982,
                               -10-

and December 1, 1988.5   At Mrs. Schutt’s death, following payment

of certain cash bequests, the corpus of the revocable trust was

divided into three trusts:   (1) A marital trust; (2) a

generation-skipping transfer tax exemption trust (GST trust); and

(3) a residuary trust.   WTC became trustee of these trusts, the

GST portion of which is also referred to as Trust 11258-3.

     The marital trust was to be funded with the “marital

deduction amount”, an amount which, taking into account

applicable provisions of the Code, resulted in a taxable estate

of $2.5 million, less the amount of any adjusted taxable gifts.

During decedent’s life, he was to receive net income therefrom

and so much of principal as he requested.   At his death,

remaining corpus was to be distributed according to the exercise

of a power of appointment granted to decedent.   In absence of an

exercise of this power, and after taking into account specified

provisions relating to payment of taxes and expenses, remaining

marital trust assets were to be added to the residuary trust.

     The GST trust was to be funded with property equal in value

to the maximum amount then available to Mrs. Schutt under the

generation-skipping transfer tax exemption set forth in the Code.

The trustee was authorized, in its sole discretion, to distribute


     5
       One of the parties’ stipulations contains a mistaken
reference to the date of the final supplemental trust agreement
as Sept. 1, 1998. Elsewhere in the same stipulation, as well as
in the accompanying exhibit, the correct date of Dec. 1, 1988, is
reflected.
                               -11-

net income and principal to Mrs. Schutt’s issue more remote than

children for their support, maintenance, education, care, and

welfare.   The GST trust was to terminate 110 years after becoming

irrevocable, at which time the property was to be distributed

free of trust to Mrs. Schutt’s then-living issue, per stirpes.

     The remaining assets of the revocable trust were to be

placed into the residuary trust.   A share of the residuary trust

was set aside for each of Mrs. Schutt’s four children.    Subject

to certain differences not material here, each child was given a

lifetime income interest in, and a limited testamentary power of

appointment over, his or her share.   In default of any such

appointment by the child, the trustee was directed upon the

child’s death to distribute the assets free of trust to the

child’s then-living issue, per stirpes.   Mrs. Schutt’s son,

Charles P. Schutt, Jr., was also authorized to withdraw up to

one-third of the value of his share upon request.

     With respect to administration, the trust indenture provided

for powers to the trustee and a direction adviser or committee in

terms substantially identical to those contained in Trust 2064.

Mrs. Schutt was named as the initial direction adviser.   She was

succeeded at her death in that role by decedent, a position he

held until his own death.   Katherine Draper Schutt and Henry I.

Brown III were again named as the members of the committee to

succeed decedent.
                               -12-

Revocable Trust

     Like Mrs. Schutt, decedent on January 16, 1976, had

established a revocable trust, subsequently amended by

supplemental trust agreements dated April 9, 1976, June 6, 1979,

December 30, 1982, December 1, 1988, January 24, 1989, July 18,

1989, April 6, 1990, May 4, 1994, May 20, 1994, December 10,

1996, and May 21, 1997 (Revocable Trust).   The Revocable Trust

was initially funded with life insurance policies on decedent’s

life and with various holdings in common stock.   Decedent, Henry

I. Brown III, and Charles P. Schutt, Jr., were named as co-

trustees, positions they held until decedent’s death, at which

time Henry I. Brown III and Charles P. Schutt, Jr., continued as

successor co-trustees.

     As amended, the trust agreement made the following

provisions with respect to distributions.   During decedent’s

life, he was to receive all net income of the trust and so much

of the principal as he requested in writing at any time.   At

decedent’s death, specified cash bequests were to be made to

named beneficiaries.   Remaining corpus was to be divided into

three trusts:   (1) A charitable lead trust; (2) a so-called

special trust; and (3) a residuary trust.

     The charitable lead trust provided for a charitable lead

unitrust term beginning on the date of decedent’s death and

terminating 25 years thereafter, and for a unitrust amount to
                               -13-

charity annually of 5 percent of the value of the trust assets.

The total value of the trust fund was to be an amount which would

produce a charitable deduction for the charitable lead trust

sufficiently large to leave a taxable estate equal to decedent’s

unused generation-skipping transfer tax exemption.   At the

termination of the charitable interest, specified amounts were to

be distributed to grandchildren born after Mrs. Schutt’s death

and to then-living issue of any predeceased grandchild.

     Assets not distributed under the just-described provisions

were to be held in trust and to be paid at the sole discretion of

the trustee for the support, maintenance, education, care, and

welfare of then-living grandchildren of decedent and then-living

issue of any grandchild dying prior to the termination of the

charitable lead.   This trust was to terminate upon the earlier of

the death of decedent’s last-surviving grandchild or 110 years

after decedent’s death.   At that time, the corpus was to be

distributed outright, per stirpes, to decedent’s then-living

great-grandchildren and to issue of any predeceased great-

grandchild.

     The special trust was to be created by setting aside $2

million.   Until the death of the last to die of decedent’s

children, income could be paid to any then-living child in the

discretion of the trustee, so long as the trustee was not a child

of decedent.   Following the death of the last to die of
                               -14-

decedent’s children, the trustee was to pay annually to the

University of Virginia an annuity equal to 4 percent of the value

of the special trust on the date of the last child’s death.

Throughout the trust’s term, principal could be used for the

full-time undergraduate college tuition of the issue of any of

decedent’s children.   Unless earlier exhausted, the special trust

was to terminate 90 years after the death of the last grandchild

living at decedent’s death, at which time the corpus was to be

distributed free of trust to the University of Virginia.

     The remaining assets of the revocable trust were to be

placed into the residuary trust.    A share of the residuary trust

was to be set aside for each of decedent’s three living children

and the issue per stirpes of his predeceased daughter.   Each

primary beneficiary was given a lifetime income interest in, and

a limited testamentary power of appointment over, his or her

share.   In default of any such appointment, the trustee was

directed upon the beneficiary’s death to distribute the assets

free of trust to the beneficiary’s then-living issue, per

stirpes.   Decedent’s son was also authorized to withdraw

principal not in excess of one-third of the value of his share

upon request.

Schutt Family Limited Partnership

     In addition to the foregoing trusts, decedent and two of his

children, Charles P. Schutt, Jr., and Caroline Schutt Brown, on
                                    -15-

December 23, 1994, created the Schutt Family Limited Partnership.

On behalf of himself and the two children, decedent contributed

to the partnership Alabama timberlands,6 securities, and cash.

In return for these contributions (or deemed contributions), the

partners received units in the entity representing the following

interests:

     Charles Porter Schutt:    5-percent general partnership interest

                               82.112-percent limited partnership interest

     Charles P. Schutt, Jr.:   1-percent general partnership interest

                               5.444-percent limited partnership interest

     Caroline Schutt Brown:    1-percent general partnership interest

                               5.444-percent limited partnership interest

Thereafter, decedent began making annual gifts of limited

partnership interests, apparently intended to qualify for the

exclusion under section 2503(b), to certain of his children,

their spouses, and their children.

Decedent’s Lifestyle and Health

     At some time after his first wife’s death and prior to May

of 1994, decedent remarried, and he remained married to Greta

Brown Layton-Schutt at the time of his death.           During the 1995

through 1998 period, decedent led an active lifestyle.             This

     6
       Decedent had acquired interests in Alabama timberlands
with two of his brothers-in-law during the 1960s. Portions of
decedent’s interests in the timberlands and related operations
were placed in trust in 1971, see supra note 2, portions were
used in funding the Schutt Family Limited Partnership, and still
other portions continued to be owned outright by decedent at his
death.
                               -16-

lifestyle included extensive traveling, boating, hunting, and

socializing, and decedent remained at his residence in

Wilmington, Delaware, only about 50 percent of the time.    For

instance, during the 1995 through 1998 period, decedent made

regular visits to Vredenburgh, Alabama, to oversee both a working

farm he owned there and Schutt family timberlands in the

vicinity.   He also traveled to, inter alia, England, Turkey,

China, Russia, and Africa, and he spent a substantial amount of

time cruising the Chesapeake Bay area on his yacht.

     When at his home in Wilmington, decedent typically spent

mornings during the work week at the Carpenter/Schutt family

office7 reviewing investment literature, followed by lunch at the

Wilmington Club (a social club), followed by a return to the

family office for additional investment research.   Decedent

subscribed to a buy and hold investment philosophy, as had his

father-in-law, Mr. duPont.

     This philosophy emphasized the acquisition of stock in

quality companies that would provide both income and value

appreciation, which would then be held for the long term.    In

particular, decedent, like Mr. duPont before him, stressed

maintaining the family’s large holdings in DuPont and, depending



     7
       Mrs. Carpenter and Mrs. Schutt were both daughters of
Mr. duPont. Since at least the early 1970s, the two families had
maintained a joint family office with staff overseeing and
assisting in business and personal matters for family members.
                                -17-

on the time frame and absent drastic circumstances, Phillips or

Exxon.   Over the years, decedent also on numerous occasions

expressed concern about family members selling DuPont or Exxon

shares, and he was displeased with such sales made by

grandchildren during the 1990s.

     During the 1996 through 1998 period, decedent was under the

regular care of his family physician and a cardiologist in

Wilmington, Delaware, and of another family physician in Camden,

Alabama.    Decedent’s health history during the period included

coronary artery disease, congestive heart failure,

hyperlipidemia, hypertension, renal insufficiency, and gout.     On

November 29, 1996, decedent was admitted to the hospital

complaining of shortness of breath.    He was released on December

5, 1996, after receipt of fluids, monitoring, and adjustment of

his medication.   He was also admitted briefly to a hospital in

Camden, Alabama, on January 6, 1998, because of similar medical

problems.

Schutt I and II

     During late 1996 or early 1997, decedent and two of his

principal advisers, Stephen J. Dinneen and Thomas P. Sweeney,

began discussions concerning the transfer of assets out of the

Revocable Trust to another investment vehicle.   Mr. Dinneen was a

certified public accountant who was in charge of accounting and

tax work and served as the office manager for the
                                 -18-

Carpenter/Schutt family office.    Among other things, he advised

Schutt family members on investment and business matters and had

been employed by the family since 1973.   Mr. Sweeney, a member of

the law firm Richards, Layton & Finger, P.A., during this period

served as decedent’s attorney on tax and estate planning matters.

Decedent had been a client of Mr. Sweeney since 1967.

     Among the considerations providing an impetus for this

potential restructuring of decedent’s assets, Mr. Sweeney and/or

Mr. Dinneen recall discussing:    (1) Decedent’s concerns regarding

sales by family members of core stockholdings and his desire to

extend and perpetuate his buy and hold investment philosophy over

family assets; (2) the need to develop another vehicle through

which decedent could continue to make annual exclusion gifts due

to exhaustion of available units in the family limited

partnership for this purpose; and (3) the possibility of

valuation discounts.   Following the initial discussions with

decedent, Mr. Sweeney and Mr. Dinneen undertook to investigate

possible alternative entity structures for decedent’s assets.

Over the course of the next 15 months, a process of meetings,

discussions, and research, extensively documented in letters,

memoranda, and notes, took place and culminated in the formation

of Schutt I and II on March 17, 1998.

     On January 27, 1997, Mr. Sweeney sent to Mr. Dinneen a

letter enclosing a memorandum entitled “CONSIDERATIONS RELEVANT
                                -19-

IN CHOOSING BETWEEN A FAMILY LIMITED PARTNERSHIP, A LIMITED

LIABILITY COMPANY, AND A DELAWARE BUSINESS TRUST”.8   The

memorandum first summarized characteristics, benefits, and

problems associated with each entity, including potential

transfer tax savings and the problem of being classified as an

“investment company” within the meaning of section 721(b).     The

second half of the memorandum was then devoted to a more extended

discussion of valuation discounts for estate planning purposes.

In the cover letter, Mr. Sweeney recommended use of “a Delaware

business trust because this would avoid the implications of an

investment company since what is to be transferred is a

diversified portfolio of marketable securities being transferred

by one person.”   He also expressed general observations regarding

the types of discounts that could be available “If Porter died

owning a substantial portion of the interest” in the entity and

noted the need for a qualified appraiser to determine the precise

amount of the discount.

     On February 3, 1997, Mr. Sweeney met with decedent and

Mr. Dinneen to further discuss entity formation issues raised in

the January 27 letter.    Upon reviewing the memorandum, Mr.



     8
       During the 1997 to early 1998 period, a Delaware business
trust was formed pursuant to the Delaware Business Trust Act,
Del. Code Ann. tit. 12, secs. 3801-3822 (Supp. 2004). Effective
September 1, 2002, the Delaware Business Trust Act was replaced
by the Delaware Statutory Trust Act, Del. Code Ann. tit. 12,
secs. 3801-3826 (Supp. 2004).
                               -20-

Dinneen had come up with the idea of creating a Delaware business

trust in which decedent held a minority interest and served as

trustee, while the remaining interests would be held for the

benefit of his children and grandchildren by WTC trusts of which

decedent was the direction or consent adviser.   The participants

agreed to pursue this idea, and decedent authorized Mr. Sweeney

to contact representatives of WTC to discuss the joint creation

of a business trust.   They also reviewed at the meeting a

computation prepared by Mr. Dinneen reflecting the estimated

difference in Federal estate tax and net inherited amount under

decedent’s current estate plan and under a plan where a portion

of his assets would be placed into an entity subject to minority

and marketability discounts.

     In early February 1997, on decedent’s behalf, Mr. Sweeney

met with representatives of WTC to determine whether the company

would consider being involved with decedent in forming a Delaware

business trust and, if so, under what conditions.    Specifically,

on February 5, 1997, Mr. Sweeney met with George W. Helme IV,

senior vice president and head of the trust department of WTC.

Mr. Helme indicated that, in concept, the company was willing to

participate, and he directed Mr. Sweeney to speak with the legal

staff of the trust department regarding details.    Mr. Sweeney

reported these developments to decedent in a letter dated

February 6, 1997.
                                -21-

     On February 10, 1997, Mr. Sweeney sent a memorandum to

Kathleen E. Lee, another attorney at his firm, asking her to

research certain issues with respect to the potential business

trust transaction.   He also summarized therein as follows:

          The present concept that is being considered is
     that Porter would put up $40 million of his portfolio,
     and between trusts 2064 and 3044-5, 3044-6 and 3044-8,
     the Wilmington Trust Company would put up approximately
     $42 million. The net effect would be that Porter’s
     funded revocable trust would then have a minority
     interest in the business trust, and possibly at
     Porter’s death, we could obtain both lack of
     marketability and minority interest discounts with
     respect to Porter’s interest in the Delaware business
     trust.

He further noted:    “it is anticipated that Porter Schutt will at

some time in the not too distant future after the transaction is

implemented commence to give away to his children in the form of

taxable gifts interests in the Delaware business trust.”

     Ms. Lee responded to the following four questions by

memorandum dated March 5, 1997:

          1.   If our client and the Wilmington Trust
     Company contribute investment portfolios consisting of
     marketable securities into a Delaware Business Trust,
     would such contributions give rise to investment
     company status under § 721(b) of the Internal Revenue
     Code of 1986, as amended (the “Code”) such that a
     realization of gain must be recognized upon the
     creation of the Delaware Business Trust?

          2.   Can the Delaware Business Trust make an
     election under § 754 of the Code to increase basis in
     the underlying assets of the Delaware Business Trust?

          3.   How should the Delaware Business Trust be
     structured so that the entity will continue after the
     death of our client?
                                -22-

          4.   What valuation discounts should be given for
     a minority interest and a lack of marketability in a
     Delaware Business Trust which consists solely of a
     portfolio of marketable securities?

     During the period March through August 1997, Mr. Sweeney

continued discussions with WTC concerning the formation of a

Delaware business trust to hold certain of the assets of the WTC

trusts and the Revocable Trust.   These discussions began with a

meeting that took place on March 4, 1997, between Cynthia L.

Corliss, Mary B. Hickok, and Neal J. Howard, who attended the

meeting on behalf of the trust department legal staff of WTC, and

Mr. Sweeney.   Subsequent to this meeting, Mr. Sweeney received a

memorandum from Ms. Corliss, Ms. Hickok, and Mr. Howard, dated

March 6, 1997, stating initial concerns of WTC regarding use of a

business trust.    Specifically, the memorandum expressed desire on

the part of WTC:   (1) To ensure that none of the WTC trusts would

be subjected to tax on built-in capital gains attributable to

sales of assets contributed by the Revocable Trust or any other

WTC trust; (2) to structure the business trust so that WTC and

decedent remained in the same relative positions as then enjoyed

with respect to control over investment decisions; (3) to obtain

consents from existing beneficiaries of the WTC trusts agreeing

to formation of the business trust; and (4) to have all assets of

the business trust held in a WTC custody account.

     Thereafter, Mr. Sweeney and attorneys at his firm undertook

to research and address the concerns raised by WTC.   For
                                -23-

instance, at Mr. Sweeney’s direction, Cynthia D. Kaiser analyzed

potential securities law issues attendant to the proposed

transaction and Julian H. Baumann, Jr., researched partnership

income tax matters broached in WTC’s March 6, 1997, memorandum.

In addition, discussions and negotiations between Mr. Sweeney and

WTC representatives, in which Mr. Howard took the lead role on

behalf of WTC, continued in the form of letters, telephone

conversations, and other meetings.     Mr. Sweeney and Mr. Dinneen

also communicated regularly about issues that arose, as phrased

in one letter, “in connection with our pursuing the Delaware

business trust for Porter and his family in order to make certain

that those entities with respect to which Porter has investment

responsibility are being managed in a consistent manner.”

Decedent was likewise kept informed regarding the status of the

discussions and negotiations.   For example, a letter to decedent

from Mr. Sweeney, dated July 14, 1997, explained as follows:

          I apologize for the delay in getting to you this
     letter which outlines the structure for a Delaware
     business trust. There are still a number of issues
     which need to be addressed and worked through with the
     Wilmington Trust Company, and we will proceed to have
     further discussions with them in this regard.

          The purpose of the Delaware business trust would
     be to have under one document all of the trust assets
     of which you are either the direction or consent
     investment advisor, including a substantial portion of
     your own portfolio presently held in your funded
     revocable trust. In this manner, there could be a
     consistent investment policy with respect to the assets
     in which the Schutt family has an equitable interest
                         -24-

and thus provide a vehicle through which a more
coordinated investment policy can be administered.

     The first major issue which needs to be addressed
and with respect to which hopefully Steve Dinneen can
provide the detailed information from the Wilmington
Trust Company reports from the various trusts is to
make certain that going into a Delaware business trust
does not create a taxable transaction. The critical
thing is to make certain that the creation of the
business trust does not constitute “an investment
company” in the context of the pertinent provisions of
the Internal Revenue Code. * * *

               *    *    *      *   *   *    *

     Structurally, it would be proposed that you be
named as the initial trustee of the Delaware business
trust with perhaps the Wilmington Trust Company being
the successor trustee, and that the business trust have
perpetual existence which would not be terminated or
revoked by a beneficial owner or other person except in
accordance with the terms of its governing instrument.
In addition, it should provide that death, incapacity,
dissolution, termination or bankruptcy of a beneficial
owner will not result in the termination or dissolution
of the business trust except to the extent as otherwise
provided in the governing instrument of the business
trust.

     We would propose that investment decisions would
be those recommended by you, subject to review by the
Wilmington Trust Company, and that your view would
control based on the terms of the various trusts which
would become participants.

     In the event of termination of one of the trusts
investing in the Delaware business trust occurs, then
the assets which would be distributed to the persons
entitled to the beneficial [sic] would be interests in
the Delaware business trust which would continue in
existence as noted above.

     The issue raised in the March 6 Wilmington Trust
Company memo pertaining to separate sections of the
Delaware business trust so that certain trusts are not
subject to a share of the capital gains generated by
other sales is of concern because it appears that that
                              -25-

     would be inconsistent with the normal treatment of
     investment partnerships for tax purposes. * * *

          In addition to the foregoing, we have examined
     certain federal and Delaware security law aspects of
     creating such a business trust. There may be both
     state and federal filing requirements to consider.
     However, these requirements will be somewhat limited if
     it can be illustrated that each investor is a “credited
     investor,” * * *

               *    *    *    *      *     *      *

          Once we are certain that you are in agreement with
     structuring the business trust as generally indicated
     above, then we will go back to the Wilmington Trust
     Company and try to work out with them in more detail
     the issues they have raised and the proposed solutions
     in connection therewith.

     On August 27, 1997, Mr. Sweeney met with Mr. Dinneen and

decedent to review whether, given the preliminary work completed

to date, decedent was willing to proceed with the transaction.

Decedent indicated a willingness to do so, but during the

meeting, several points were emphasized:       (1) The trust should be

structured so as to avoid the “investment company problem”; (2)

decedent wished to be the trustee, with his son, son-in-law, and

perhaps even their wives as successor trustees; (3) decedent

wanted to ensure that fees to be received by WTC for serving as

both trustee of the WTC trusts and custodian of the business

trust assets would not result in “double dipping” and thereby

exceed fees currently being charged; (4) the trust arrangement

should be such that only precontribution gain, and not

postcontribution gain, was allocated solely to the contributing
                               -26-

trust; and (5) decedent desired to retain final say on investment

decisions, although WTC could be permitted some involvement.

     Shortly thereafter, on September 4, 1997, Mr. Sweeney met

with Mr. Howard and Ms. Hickok of WTC.   The following issues were

among those addressed at this conference.   (1) With respect to

the burden of capital gains tax on future asset sales, Mr. Howard

and Ms. Hickok clarified that the concern previously raised

focused on precontribution gain, and they agreed that operative

partnership tax rules under section 704 resolved their concerns.

(2) In connection with fulfilling fiduciary duties, Mr. Howard

and Ms. Hickok indicated a desire to obtain consents from

beneficiaries of various WTC trusts participating in the business

trust transaction.   (3) As to the investment company issue, the

participants discussed the stock concentrations within the

relevant portfolios and broached as a topic for further research

whether contributing only DuPont stock to the business trust

could avoid the problem.   (4) Regarding the length of the trust’s

existence, the WTC representatives expressed interest in a 30- to

40-year term, while Mr. Sweeney suggested at least a 40- to 50-

year term.   (5) On the matter of investment decisions, Mr.

Sweeney stressed that decedent wanted the trust structured so

that he would have the final vote and control, to which Mr.

Howard and Ms. Hickok ultimately agreed so long as WTC had some

input.   (6) Lastly, as to WTC’s fees, Mr. Howard and Ms. Hickok
                                -27-

agreed that with respect to assets contributed by the WTC trusts,

the combined custodian and trustee fees would not exceed current

charges.   However, they indicated that “new” fees would be

charged for custody of stock contributed by decedent’s Revocable

Trust.    Mr. Sweeney indicated that this issue would have to be

analyzed further and negotiated.

     Mr. Sweeney reported the foregoing to decedent in a letter

dated September 5, 1997, and also on that date requested that

Ms. Lee research certain of the issues raised.     On September 22,

1997, Mr. Sweeney sent a further letter to decedent indicating

that contribution of only DuPont stock to the business trust

appeared, based on the research performed, to avoid the

investment company problem.   Mr. Sweeney asked decedent to

consider whether proceeding on that basis would accomplish his

objectives.

     During late 1997, discussions continued between Mr. Sweeney

and WTC representatives, with Mr. Sweeney making several

proposals to address WTC concerns.     In particular, following

analysis by Mr. Dinneen of holdings of the various trusts,

Mr. Sweeney proposed that, in order to avoid characterization as

an investment company for income tax purposes under section

721(b), two separate business trusts be created.     One would hold

exclusively DuPont stock, and the other would hold only Exxon

shares.
                               -28-

     WTC, in a November 26, 1997, letter to Mr. Sweeney,

ultimately agreed to structure the transactions as Mr. Sweeney

proposed, subject to enumerated conditions:   (1) WTC would have

the opportunity to review the business trusts to ensure they were

in a form satisfactory for WTC to proceed; (2) all adult

beneficiaries of the WTC trusts would execute a consent form, to

which a copy of the business trusts would be attached, “whereby

they acknowledge and consent to the trusts’ investing in the

business trusts and that they recognize that the business trusts

may last beyond the termination date of the trusts of which they

are a beneficiary”; and (3) business trust assets would be placed

in custody with WTC, with fees charged as set forth in an

attached November 25, 1997, proposal.

     Mr. Sweeney communicated these conditions to decedent, and

negotiations continued with respect to the fee arrangement.    For

instance, decedent requested that the proposed fee agreement be

amended:   (1) To provide clearly that WTC’s commissions as

custodian of the business trust assets would not exceed the fees

lost on trustee fees from the participating trusts, and (2) to

address the ability of the trustee of the business trusts to

change the custodian if WTC were to be acquired by another bank.

WTC agreed to make changes addressing these concerns.

     Also during December of 1997, drafts of the business trusts

were prepared and circulated for comment amongst decedent, his
                                 -29-

advisers, and WTC.   Mr. Sweeney had initially asked Ms. Lee to

begin drafting the documents in a November 14, 1997, memorandum

that set forth details regarding certain provisions to be

included.   Regarding purpose, the memorandum stated:

          You will recall that the purpose of the two
     Delaware business trusts is to preserve and coordinate
     Porter Schutt’s investment philosophy with respect to
     those trusts over which he has either direction or
     consent investment advice of which the Wilmington Trust
     Company is trustee, as well as his own funded revocable
     trust. Over the years, Porter Schutt has developed a
     buy and hold philosophy which has been quite
     successful, and he is anxious to have that philosophy
     preserved for his family for the future.

     In a January 6, 1998, telephone conversation, Mr. Howard

pointed out, along with several minor drafting errors, what he

considered to be a significant substantive problem with the

provision then included in the trust documents regarding

distributions.   The initial drafts of the trust stated that net

cashflow would be distributed at such times and in such amounts

as determined by the trustee in his discretion.    WTC wanted the

trusts to provide for distribution of net cashflow at least

annually.   Mr. Sweeney thought that quarterly distributions could

accord with decedent’s original intent, and the documents were

revised to so provide, for further review by the participants.

     By a letter dated January 9, 1998, WTC confirmed its

agreement with the form and content of the Schutt I and Schutt II

indentures, and work proceeded to prepare and finalize the

beneficiary consent documents.    Like the trusts, the consents
                              -30-

were circulated for comment and revision.   Mr. Sweeney sent a

draft consent to decedent on January 23, 1998, under a cover

letter summarizing the rationale for certain provisions, e.g.,

     we have included a recital to the effect that you will
     be contributing DuPont and Exxon stock out of your
     trust to the respective Business Trusts which clarifies
     that this is really a family matter and a method of
     preserving the investment philosophy you have developed
     which has been so successful for the family.

Mr. Howard subsequently suggested on behalf of WTC that the

consents indicate the percentage of the participating trust’s

assets being contributed to the business trusts so that the

beneficiaries would have a clearer understanding of the impact of

the investments on their beneficial interests.   Decedent agreed

to this modification.

     The finalized consent forms, accompanied by copies of the

business trust agreements, were circulated to the beneficiaries

for signature on February 12, 1998.   The forms provided that the

beneficiaries consented to the contribution of certain securities

to the business trusts and released WTC and decedent “from any

and all action, suits, claims, accounts, and demands * * * for or

on account of any matter or thing made, done, or permitted by the

Advisor or the Trustees in connection with the contribution of

securities to the Business Trusts.”   All living beneficiaries of

Trusts 2064, 3044-1, 3044-2, 3044-5, 3044-6, 3044-8, and 11253-3

executed the consent and release forms in February and early

March of 1998.
                               -31-

     The trust agreements for Schutt I and Schutt II were signed

on March 11, 1998, by WTC as trustee for Trusts 2064, 3044-1,

3044-2, 3044-5, 3044-6, 3044-8, and 11258-3 and were signed on

March 17, 1998, by decedent, Charles P. Schutt, Jr., and Henry I.

Brown III as trustees of the Revocable Trust.   On or about March

30, 1998, a Form SS-4, Application for Employer Identification

Number, was signed and thereafter filed with the Internal Revenue

Service for each business trust.   Similarly, on April 1, 1998, a

Certificate of Business Trust Registration for each Schutt I and

Schutt II was filed with the Office of the Secretary of State for

the State of Delaware.

     Funding of the business trusts began in March of 1998 and

establishment of a WTC account for each business trust, with the

account for Schutt I holding the DuPont securities and the

account for Schutt II holding the Exxon securities, was completed

at least by mid-April.   The custody agreements for the business

trusts were executed by decedent and a representative of WTC on

April 1, 1998.   As a result of the funding, the following capital

contributions were made, and proportionate percentage interests

received, in Schutt I and Schutt II:
                              -32-

                            SCHUTT I

           Unit          DuPont          Monetary     Percentage
          Holder         Shares           Value        Interest

     Revocable Trust     472,200     $30,752,025.00     45.236
     Trust 2064          108,000       7,033,500.00     10.346
     Trust 3044-1         19,098       1,243,757.25      1.830
     Trust 3044-2         23,670       1,541,508.75      2.268
     Trust 3044-5        132,962       8,659,150.25     12.738
     Trust 3044-6        132,962       8,659,150.25     12.738
     Trust 3044-8        132,960       8,659,020.00     12.737
     Trust 11258-3        22,000       1,432,750.00      2.108

          Totals       1,043,852      67,980,861.50       100
                                                       (rounded)

                            SCHUTT II

           Unit          Exxon           Monetary     Percentage
          Holder         Shares           Value        Interest

     Revocable Trust     178,200     $11,237,737.50     47.336
     Trust 2064          156,000       9,837,750.00     41.439
     Trust 3044-5         11,418         720,047.63      3.033
     Trust 3044-6         11,418         720,047.63      3.033
     Trust 3044-8         11,418         720,047.63      3.033
     Trust 11258-3         8,000         504,500.00      2.125

          Totals         376,454      23,740,130.39       100
                                                       (rounded)

The values of the shares and resultant percentage interests were

calculated based on the average of the high and low prices for

the stock on March 17, 1998, the effective date of the business

trust agreements.

     At the time Schutt I and Schutt II were formed, decedent

owned assets not contributed to the business trusts with a fair

market value of approximately $30,000,000.   These assets

included, without limitation, marketable securities, Alabama
                                 -33-

timberland, cattle, investments in partnerships, a one-third

undivided interest in South Carolina real estate, residential

real estate located in Delaware and Alabama, and tangible

personal property.

     The trust agreements for Schutt I and Schutt II entered into

as of March 17, 1998, were substantially identical and set forth

the governing provisions for the entities.   The agreements

recited an intent to create a Delaware business trust, to be

classified as a partnership for Federal income tax purposes.       The

stated purpose of the trusts was

     to engage in any lawful act or activity for which
     business trusts may be formed under the Act [Delaware
     Business Trust Act, Del. Code Ann. tit. 12, secs. 3801-
     3822], including the ownership and operation of every
     type of property and business, and the Trust may
     perform all acts necessary or incidental to the
     furtherance of such purpose.

The trust agreements were to be governed by and interpreted in

accordance with the laws of the State of Delaware.

     Decedent was named as the initial trustee, with his term to

continue until his death, resignation, or adjudged incompetence.

Charles P. Schutt, Jr., Henry I. Brown III, and Caroline S.

Brown, in that order, were designated successor trustees.     If

none of the named successor trustees was able or willing to

serve, an individual resident in the State of Delaware was to be

selected by the vote of unit holders holding at least 66 percent

of the interests in the trust.
                               -34-

     As regards powers of the trustee, the agreements provided

generally:

     Subject to the express limitations herein, the business
     and affairs of the Trust shall be managed by or under
     the direction of the Trustee, who shall have full,
     exclusive and absolute power, control and authority
     over the Property and over the business of the Trust.
     The Trustee may take any actions as in his or her sole
     judgment and discretion are necessary or desirable to
     conduct the business of the Trust. This Agreement
     shall be construed with a presumption in favor of the
     grant of power and authority to the Trustee. * * *

The agreements then enumerated specific powers, such as the

ability to invest, transfer, dispose of, lend, and exercise

voting and other ownership rights of trust property.     The trustee

was also expressly authorized to establish or change policies to

govern the investment of trust assets.

     Concerning capital contributions and accounts, the

agreements stated that a capital account was to be maintained for

each unit holder by crediting thereto the unit holder’s capital

contributions, distributive share of profits, and amount of any

trust liabilities assumed, and by debiting the value of cash or

other property distributed to the unit holder, the unit holder’s

distributive share of losses, and the amount of unit holder

liabilities assumed by the trust.     Profits and losses were

generally to be allocated in proportion to the unit holders’

interests in the entity, and allocations for tax purposes with

respect to contributed property were to be made in accordance

with section 704(c).   Any return of a capital contribution, in
                               -35-

whole or in part, could be made only upon the consent of a

majority in interest of the unit holders.

     With respect to distributions, the trust agreements

specified that “Net Cash Flow shall be distributed by the Trustee

on or before the last day of each calendar quarter”.    “Net Cash

Flow” was defined as gross cash receipts, less amounts paid by or

for the account of the trust, less “any amounts determined by the

Trustee, in his discretion, to be necessary to provide a

reasonable reserve for working-capital needs or to provide funds

for any other contingencies of the Trust.”    The distributions

were to be made in accordance with the proportionate interests of

the unit holders in the entity.

     The agreements prohibited the sale, transfer, assignment,

pledge, encumbrance, mortgage, or other hypothecation of any unit

holder’s interest, as well as withdrawal by a unit holder from

the trust, without the consent of all unit holders.    The stated

term of the trusts was to extend until December 31, 2048, but the

agreements provided that the term could be extended beyond that

date with the written approval before December 31, 2048, of both

the trustee and a majority in interest of the unit holders, or

the trusts could be dissolved prior to that date upon the written

consent of all unit holders.   Upon dissolution and termination,

the trusts were to be liquidated.     Proceeds of the liquidation

were to be disposed of first in payment to creditors of the
                               -36-

trusts, then for the establishment of any additional reserves

deemed by the trustee to be reasonably necessary for any

contingent liabilities, and then to unit holders in accordance

with their capital account balances.

     Regarding amendments, the trust agreements provided as a

general rule that any amendment must be in writing and approved

by holders of at least an aggregate 66-percent interest in the

entity.   Two modifications of this rule were likewise set forth.

First, the trustee was authorized to amend the agreements without

any unit holder’s consent to (1) correct any patent error,

omission, or ambiguity, and (2) add or delete any provision as

necessary to attain and maintain qualification as a partnership

for Federal income tax purposes or to comply with any Federal or

State securities law, regulation, or other requirement.    The

second modification required the written consent of all unit

holders to convert the trust to a general partnership or to

change the liability of or reduce the interests in capital,

profits, or losses of the unit holders.   On a related point, the

trust agreements specifically mandated 66 percent approval for

transfer of any part of the trust corpus to another business

trust, partnership, or corporation in exchange for an ownership

interest in the entity and for merger or consolidation of the

trust with another business entity.
                                -37-

     Since the formation and funding of Schutt I and II, the net

cashflow of each trust has been distributed pro rata on a

quarterly basis, as required by the trust documents.    The trusts

have also filed annual Federal income tax returns reporting,

inter alia, the pro rata distributive shares of income, credits,

deductions, etc., allocated to each unit holder.    Through at

least the time of decedent’s death, the trusts had never sold any

of the DuPont or Exxon shares used to fund the entities, nor had

they acquired any other assets.9   Decedent’s personal assets were

not commingled with those of Schutt I or Schutt II.

Estate Tax Proceedings

     As previously stated, decedent died on April 21, 1999,

approximately 1 year after Schutt I and II were formed.      A Form

706, United States Estate (and Generation-Skipping Transfer) Tax

Return, was filed on behalf of decedent on or about January 21,

2000.    An election was made therein to use the alternate

valuation date of October 21, 1999.    The value reported for the

gross estate on the Form 706 was $61,590,355.08, which included

$15,837,295.45 and $7,237,104.56 for the Revocable Trust’s

interests in Schutt I and Schutt II, respectively.    As of October



     9
       At trial, on direct examination, Mr. Dineen was asked:
“And have either Schutt I or Schutt II sold DuPont stock?” He
responded: “No.” Although not free from ambiguity given that
Schutt II held only Exxon stock, a reasonable inference from this
testimony would appear to be that neither business trust had sold
assets through the time of trial.
                                 -38-

21, 1999, the underlying asset value of Schutt I was $65,273,495,

of which the Revocable Trust’s proportionate share was

$29,527,314.   The underlying asset value of Schutt II was

$28,504,626, of which the Revocable Trust’s proportionate share

was $13,493,064.

     In the notice of deficiency issued on October 11, 2002,

respondent determined that the discounts applied in valuing the

interests in Schutt I and Schutt II were excessive.   The estate

timely filed the instant proceeding challenging the statutory

notice.   By amendment to answer filed in this case, respondent

then asserted an increased deficiency on the grounds that the

full fair market value of the underlying assets contributed by

the Revocable Trust to Schutt I and Schutt II should be included

in decedent’s gross estate under sections 2036(a) and 2038.     The

parties have since stipulated that if the Court rejects

respondent’s position under sections 2036 and 2038, they agree

that the Schutt I and II units held by the Revocable Trust should

be included in decedent’s gross estate at the respective values

of $19,930,937 and $9,107,818.

                              OPINION

I.   Inclusion in the Gross Estate--Sections 2036 and 2038

     A.   General Rules

     As a general rule, the Code imposes a Federal excise tax “on

the transfer of the taxable estate of every decedent who is a
                               -39-

citizen or resident of the United States.”   Sec. 2001(a).   The

taxable estate, in turn, is defined as “the value of the gross

estate”, less applicable deductions.   Sec. 2051.   Section 2031(a)

specifies that the gross estate comprises “all property, real or

personal, tangible or intangible, wherever situated”, to the

extent provided in sections 2033 through 2045 (i.e., subtitle B,

chapter 11, subchapter A, part III of the Code).

     Section 2033 states broadly that “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.”

Sections 2034 through 2045 then explicitly mandate inclusion of

several more narrowly defined classes of assets.    Among these

specific sections is section 2036, which reads in pertinent part

as follows:

     SEC. 2036.   TRANSFERS WITH RETAINED LIFE ESTATE.

          (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.
                               -40-

Regulations further explain that “An interest or right is treated

as having been retained or reserved if at the time of the

transfer there was an understanding, express or implied, that the

interest or right would later be conferred.”   Sec. 20.2036-1(a),

Estate Tax Regs.

     Given the language used in the above-quoted provisions, it

has long been recognized that “The general purpose of this

section is ‘to include in a decedent’s gross estate transfers

that are essentially testamentary’ in nature.”    Ray v. United

States, 762 F.2d 1361, 1362 (9th Cir. 1985) (quoting United

States v. Estate of Grace, 395 U.S. 316, 320 (1969)).   The

Supreme Court has defined as “essentially testamentary” those

“transfers which leave the transferor a significant interest in

or control over the property transferred during his lifetime.”

United States v. Estate of Grace, supra at 320.   Accordingly,

courts have emphasized that the statute “describes a broad scheme

of inclusion in the gross estate, not limited by the form of the

transaction, but concerned with all inter vivos transfers where

outright disposition of the property is delayed until the

transferor’s death.”   Guynn v. United States, 437 F.2d 1148, 1150

(4th Cir. 1971).

     As used in section 2036(a)(1), the term “enjoyment” has been

described as “synonymous with substantial present economic

benefit.”   Estate of McNichol v. Commissioner, 265 F.2d 667, 671
                               -41-

(3d Cir. 1959), affg. 29 T.C. 1179 (1958); see also Estate of

Reichardt v. Commissioner, 114 T.C. 144, 151 (2000).      Regulations

additionally provide that use, possession, right to income, or

other enjoyment of transferred property is considered as having

been retained or reserved “to the extent that the use,

possession, right to the income, or other enjoyment is to be

applied toward the discharge of a legal obligation of the

decedent, or otherwise for his pecuniary benefit.”   Sec. 20.2036-

1(b)(2), Estate Tax Regs.   Moreover, possession or enjoyment of

transferred property is retained for purposes of section

2036(a)(1) where there is an express or implied understanding to

that effect among the parties at the time of the transfer, even

if the retained interest is not legally enforceable.      Estate of

Maxwell v. Commissioner, 3 F.3d 591, 593 (2d Cir. 1993), affg. 98

T.C. 594 (1992); Guynn v. United States, supra at 1150; Estate of

Reichardt v. Commissioner, supra at 151; Estate of Rapelje v.

Commissioner, 73 T.C. 82, 86 (1979).   The existence or

nonexistence of such an understanding is determined from all of

the facts and circumstances surrounding both the transfer itself

and the subsequent use of the property.   Estate of Reichardt v.

Commissioner, supra at 151; Estate of Rapelje v. Commissioner,

supra at 86.

     As used in section 2036(a)(2), the term “right” has been

construed to “connote[] an ascertainable and legally enforceable
                               -42-

power”.   United States v. Byrum, 408 U.S. 125, 136 (1972).

Nonetheless, regulations clarify:

     With respect to such a power, it is immaterial
     (i) whether the power was exercisable alone or only in
     conjunction with another person or persons, whether or
     not having an adverse interest; (ii) in what capacity
     the power was exercisable by the decedent or by another
     person or persons in conjunction with the decedent; and
     (iii) whether the exercise of the power was subject to
     a contingency beyond the decedent’s control which did
     not occur before his death (e.g., the death of another
     person during the decedent’s lifetime). The phrase,
     however, does not include a power over the transferred
     property itself which does not affect the enjoyment of
     the income received or earned during the decedent’s
     life. * * * Nor does the phrase apply to a power held
     solely by a person other than the decedent. But, for
     example, if the decedent reserved the unrestricted
     power to remove or discharge a trustee at any time and
     appoint himself as trustee, the decedent is considered
     as having the powers of the trustee. [Sec. 20.2036-
     1(b)(3), Estate Tax Regs.]

Additionally, retention of a right to exercise managerial power

over transferred assets or investments does not in and of itself

result in inclusion under section 2036(a)(2).   United States v.

Byrum, supra at 132-134.

     An exception to the treatment mandated by section 2036(a)

exists where the facts establish “a bona fide sale for an

adequate and full consideration in money or money’s worth”.

     Like section 2036, section 2038 provides for inclusion in

the gross estate of the value of transferred property.

Specifically, as pertinent here, section 2038(a)(1) addresses

revocable transfers and requires inclusion of the value of

property:
                              -43-

     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, where the enjoyment thereof was subject at
     the date of his death to any change through the
     exercise of a power (in whatever capacity exercisable)
     by the decedent alone or by the decedent in conjunction
     with any other person (without regard to when or from
     what source the decedent acquired such power), to
     alter, amend, revoke, or terminate, or where any such
     power is relinquished during the 3-year period ending
     on the date of the decedent’s death.

Regulations promulgated under the statute clarify that section

2038 does not apply:

          (1) To the extent that the transfer was for an
     adequate and full consideration in money or money’s
     worth (see § 20.2043-1);

          (2) If the decedent’s power could be exercised
     only with the consent of all parties having an interest
     (vested or contingent) in the transferred property, and
     if the power adds nothing to the rights of the parties
     under local law; or

          (3) To a power held solely by a person other than
     the decedent. * * * [Sec. 20-2038-1(a), Estate Tax
     Regs.]

     B.   Burden of Proof

     Typically, the burden of disproving the existence of an

agreement regarding a retained interest has rested on the estate,

and this burden has often been characterized as particularly

onerous in intrafamily situations.   Estate of Maxwell v.

Commissioner, supra at 594; Estate of Reichardt v. Commissioner,

supra at 151-152; Estate of Rapelje v. Commissioner, supra at 86.

In this case, however, the section 2036 and 2038 issues were not
                                -44-

raised in the statutory notice of deficiency and are therefore

new matters within the meaning of Rule 142(a).      Thus, as

respondent has conceded, the burden of proof is on respondent.

     C.   The Parenthetical Exception

     Sections 2036 and 2038 each contain an identical

parenthetical exception for “a bona fide sale for an adequate and

full consideration in money or money’s worth”.      Regulations

promulgated under both sections reference the definition for this

phrase contained in section 20.2043-1, Estate Tax Regs.        Secs.

20.2036-1(a), 20.2038-1(a)(1), Estate Tax Regs.      Section 20.2043-

1(a), Estate Tax Regs., provides:      “To constitute a bona fide

sale for an adequate and full consideration in money or money’s

worth, the transfer must have been made in good faith, and the

price must have been an adequate and full equivalent reducible to

a money value.”

     Availability of the exception thus rests on two

requirements:    (1) A bona fide sale and (2) adequate and full

consideration.    This Court has recently summarized when these

requirements will be satisfied, as follows:

          In the context of family limited partnerships, the
     bona fide sale for adequate and full consideration
     exception is met where the record establishes the
     existence of a legitimate and significant nontax reason
     for creating the family limited partnership, and the
     transferors received partnership interests
     proportionate to the value of the property transferred.
     * * * The objective evidence must indicate that the
     nontax reason was a significant factor that motivated
                                    -45-

     the partnership’s creation. * * * [Estate of Bongard v.
     Commissioner, 124 T.C. __, __ (2005) (slip op. at 39).]

     Bona Fide Sale

     The Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit, to which appeal

in this case would normally lie, has emphasized that the bona

fide sale prong will only be met where the transfer was made in

good faith.      Estate of Thompson v. Commissioner, 382 F.3d 367,

383 (3d Cir. 2004) (citing sec. 20.2043-1(a), Estate Tax Regs.),

affg. T.C. Memo. 2002-246.        In the context of family entities,

the Court of Appeals set forth the following test:        “A ‘good

faith’ transfer to a family limited partnership must provide the

transferor some potential for benefit other than the potential

estate tax advantages that might result from holding assets in

the partnership form.”      Id.    Stated otherwise, “if there is no

discernable purpose or benefit for the transfer other than estate

tax savings, the sale is not ‘bona fide’ within the meaning of

§ 2036.”   Id.    The Court of Appeals further indicated that while

this test does not necessarily demand a transaction between a

transferor and an unrelated third party, intrafamily transfers

should be subjected to heightened scrutiny.        Id. at 382.

     The approach of the Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit

correlates with this Court’s requirement of a legitimate and

significant nontax purpose for the entity.        This Court has

expressed this requirement using the alternate phraseology of an

arm’s-length transaction, in the sense of “the standard for
                                -46-

testing whether the resulting terms and conditions of a

transaction were the same as if unrelated parties had engaged in

the same transaction.”    Estate of Bongard v. Commissioner, supra

at __ (slip op. at 46).   Intrafamily or related-party

transactions are not barred under this standard, but they are

subjected to a higher level of scrutiny.    Id. at __ (slip op. at

46-47).

     In probing the presence or absence of a bona fide sale and

corollary legitimate and significant nontax purpose, courts have

identified various factual circumstances weighing in this

analysis.   These factors include whether the entity engaged in

legitimate business operations, whether property was actually

transferred to the entity, whether personal and entity assets

were commingled, whether the taxpayer was financially dependent

on distributions from the entity, and whether the transferor

stood on both sides of the transaction.    See, e.g., Estate of

Thompson v. Commissioner, supra; Kimbell v. United States, 371

F.3d 257 (5th Cir. 2004); Estate of Bongard v. Commissioner,

supra; Estate of Hillgren v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2004-46;

Estate of Stone v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2003-309; Estate of

Strangi v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2003-145; Estate of Harper v.

Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2002-121.

     Hence, in evaluating whether decedent’s transfers to Schutt

I and II are properly characterized as bona fide sales, the
                                 -47-

essential task is to “separate the true nontax reasons for the

[entities’] formation from those that merely clothe transfer tax

savings motives.”   Estate of Bongard v. Commissioner, supra at __

(slip op. at 44).   It must be recognized, however, that

“Legitimate nontax purposes are often inextricably interwoven

with testamentary objectives.”    Id.   Furthermore, with respect to

the particular case at bar, the Court must be cognizant of any

potential divergence between decedent’s actual motives and the

concerns of his advisers.

     The estate’s position is that Schutt I and II were “formed

primarily to put into place an entity to perpetuate Mr. Schutt’s

buy and hold investment philosophy with respect to the DuPont and

Exxon stock belonging both to Mr. Schutt and to the Wilmington

Trust Company Trusts.”   In service of this objective, Schutt I

and II were aimed at “the furtherance and protection of * * *

[decedent’s] family’s wealth by providing for the centralized

management of his family’s holdings in duPont [sic] stock and

Exxon stock during his lifetime and to prevent the improvident

disposition of this stock during his lifetime and to the extent

possible after his death.”   The estate contends that the desired

preservation of decedent’s investment policy “could not be

accomplished without the creation of Schutt I and Schutt II, as

the WTC Trusts were scheduled to terminate at various intervals
                              -48-

and the assets of those trusts would be distributed, free of

trust, to their respective beneficiaries.”

     Respondent’s argument to the contrary is summarized as

follows:

     (1) it was not necessary to transfer stock from
     Mr. Schutt’s revocable trust to the business trusts to
     perpetuate his investment philosophy; (2) the record
     establishes that obtaining valuation discounts for gift
     and estate tax purposes was the dominant, if not the
     sole, reason for forming the business trusts; and (3)
     in any event, Mr. Schutt’s desire to perpetuate his
     investment philosophy was itself a testamentary motive.
     * * *

     The totality of the record in this case, when viewed as a

whole, supports the estate’s position that a significant motive

for decedent’s creation of Schutt I and II was to perpetuate his

buy and hold investment philosophy.   That decedent was in fact a

committed adherent to the buy and hold approach is undisputed.

His longstanding concern with disposition of core stockholdings

by his descendants is also well attested.    Mr. Sweeney testified

that decedent “would raise, at least annually and, quite often,

more than annually, his concern about the ability of children or

grandchildren or whoever it might be to sell principal rather

than using the income from the principal”.   Mr. Dinneen likewise

testified that decedent expressed concern about Schutt family

members’ selling of stock from “Back in the early seventies and

on a regular basis from there on out.”
                                -49-

     The documentary record also furnishes at least a measure of

objective support for the decedent’s willingness to act based on

these worries.    In 1994, decedent declined to make annual

exclusion gifts of limited partnership interests in the Schutt

Family Limited Partnership to his daughter Sarah S. Harrison and

her children.    The estate attributes this decision to concern

about the investment philosophy of these individuals, and the

limited evidence does reflect 13 occasions on which DuPont or

Exxon stock was sold by Harrison grandchildren from 1989 through

1997.

     Further corroborating the bona fides of the professed intent

underlying creation of Schutt I and II is the fact that formation

of the business trusts did serve to advance this goal.

Respondent’s contention that the business trusts were unnecessary

to perpetuate decedent’s investment philosophy unduly emphasizes

management of the assets held by the Revocable Trust and

minimizes any focus on the considerable assets held in the WTC

trusts.   Respondent points out that, under the Revocable Trust

indenture, decedent could control investment decisions pertaining

to the assets until his death, at which time various successor

trusts to be administered by his son and son-in-law would be

funded.   Respondent argues that the situation under the business

trusts was functionally equivalent, with decedent as trustee
                               -50-

setting investment philosophy during his lifetime, followed by

his son and son-in-law as successor trustees.

     However, by only considering the Revocable Trust assets in

isolation, this analysis disregards more than half of the

property involved in the business trusts.    Decedent in effect

used the assets of the Revocable Trust10 to enhance his ability

to perpetuate a philosophy vis-a-vis the stock of the WTC trusts,

such that none of the contributions should be disregarded in

evaluating the practical implications of Schutt I and II.

Mr. Howard testified that he did not believe he would have

considered a proposal involving contribution only of the WTC

trusts’ assets to entities structured as were Schutt I and II,

without decedent’s willingness to place his own property

alongside.   As Mr. Howard explained:   “it made real to me,

certainly, when someone is willing to contribute that sum of

money and tie it up the same way we were tying it up with respect

to distributions, if not with respect to management, that this

was something that he and the family, if they were willing to

agree to it, felt strongly about.”    This importance of decedent’s

contributions to those negotiating on behalf of WTC, at least on

a psychological level, reflects a critical interconnectedness

between decedent’s contributions and those of the WTC trusts.


     10
        To employ an oft-used metaphor, the assets of the
Revocable Trust served essentially as leverage in the form of a
carrot.
                                -51-

     The effect of Schutt I and II on the assets of the WTC

trusts shows that the business trusts advanced decedent’s

objectives in a meaningful way.    Respondent’s argument, however,

to the extent that it takes into account the WTC assets, seeks to

counter this conclusion by once again placing unwarranted

emphasis on certain features or results of the structure to the

exclusion of others.    In discussing the alleged motive for

involving the WTC trusts in the transaction, respondent states

that “even if the decedent formed the business trusts to prevent

his heirs from dissipating the family’s wealth, this is itself a

testamentary motive.”    More specifically, respondent dismisses

the estate’s contentions as follows:

          The decedent’s testamentary motives are
     particularly evident in this case as it is clear that
     he was concerned about the dissipation of the family’s
     wealth after his death as opposed to during his
     lifetime. While he was alive, he controlled the sale
     of stock held by his revocable trust. Similarly, as
     the direction or consent advisor to the bank trusts,
     none of the stock held by those entities could be sold
     without his consent. The only risk that assets held by
     the bank trusts could be sold without his consent was
     if one of his children predeceased him, thereby causing
     a distribution of a portion of the trust assets to that
     child’s issue. Since his surviving children were all
     in good health when the business trusts were formed and
     the decedent was not, there is little doubt that the
     decedent was concerned about what would happen to the
     family’s wealth after his death.

     The Court disagrees that decedent’s motives may properly be

dismissed, in the unique circumstances of this case, as merely

testamentary.   The record on the whole supports that decedent’s
                                 -52-

greatest worry with respect to wealth dissipation centered on

outright distribution of assets to the beneficiaries of the

various WTC trusts.    It is clear from the structures of the WTC

trusts involved that outright distribution created the single

largest risk to the perpetuation of a buy and hold philosophy,

and testimony confirmed decedent’s concern over a termination

situation.    Because none of the events that would trigger such a

distribution turned on decedent’s own death, to call the

underlying motive testamentary is inappropriate.

     Trust 2064, which contributed 10.346 percent of the DuPont

stock to Schutt I and 41.439 percent of the Exxon stock to Schutt

II, was to terminate, and the corpus was to be distributed free

of trust to decedent’s grandchildren, no later than when the

youngest grandchild turned 40.    Notably, the health of both

decedent and his issue was irrelevant to this precipitating

event.    According to the parties’ stipulations, decedent’s

youngest grandchild, Katherine D. Schutt, was 24 years of age at

the time of decedent’s 1999 death.      The provisions of Trust 2064

would therefore dictate termination no later than the spring of

2015.    Schutt I and II were structured to continue to 2048,

absent agreement to the contrary in accordance with limited

procedures set forth in the business trust indentures.

     The Trust 3044 subtrusts, which in the aggregate contributed

42.310 percent of the DuPont stock to Schutt I and 9.099 percent
                               -53-

of the Exxon stock to Schutt II, specified that at the death of a

primary beneficiary, one of decedent’s children, the assets were

to be distributed free of trust to the corresponding

grandchildren.   Respondent apparently seeks to belittle any

concern decedent may have felt over these provisions by citing

the good health of decedent’s three surviving children, who were

61, 60, and 56 at the time of decedent’s death.   Yet respondent

has offered no evidence contradicting the bona fides of

decedent’s fears in this regard.   Nor is the Court prepared to

say that decedent, who had already lost one child to cancer and

observed firsthand the operation of the outright distribution

mechanism, would be unjustified in taking steps to guard against

this risk.

     Still another aspect of the evidence in this case that

corroborates decedent’s desire to perpetuate his investment

philosophy through establishment of Schutt I and II stems from

WTC’s concerns with and reactions to the proposed arrangement.

The record indicates that WTC perceived the business trust

transactions as having a meaningful economic impact on the rights

of the beneficiaries of the WTC trusts.   From early in the

planning process, representatives of WTC consistently voiced

concerns regarding the effect of the business trusts on

liquidity.
                               -54-

     Mr. Howard testified regarding the tone of the conversation

when Mr. Helme first asked him to look into the possibility of

participating in a business trust transaction:   “It was a matter

where we were going to take substantial portions of a series of

trusts and put them into a business trust where we would not have

the immediacy of control and liquidity that we had at the moment

to meet the needs of the beneficiary.   That’s not an

insignificant matter to review”.   Similarly, the initial March 6,

1997, memorandum from WTC to Mr. Sweeney memorializing issues of

concern to WTC explained the impetus for obtaining consents from

involved beneficiaries as follows:

     Each trust’s interest in the DBT will be non-marketable
     for a period of time, perhaps beyond the termination of
     a trust. WTC would not normally invest marketable
     assets so as to cause them to become illiquid. The
     beneficiaries of the trust who are “sui juris” should,
     therefore, consent to this investment. To the extent
     these illiquidity concerns can be minimized by
     structuring the DBT so as to allow pro rata
     distributions on the occurrence of certain events,
     e.g., the death of one of Mr. Schutt’s children, this
     should be done.[11]

Notes made by Mr. Sweeney of a September 4, 1997, meeting with

decedent, Mr. Howard, and Ms. Hickok likewise reflect continued

emphasis by WTC representatives on the need for beneficiary

consent in conjunction with issues related to the duration of the

business trusts.   As a final example, in Mr. Howard’s November


     11
       The Court notes that this suggestion pertaining to
distributions would manifestly have conflicted with decedent’s
objectives and was not incorporated.
                                 -55-

26, 1997, letter agreeing to investment in Schutt I and II

subject to three conditions, the condition pertaining to consent

read:

          All of the beneficiaries of the various trusts who
     are of age will execute a form of consent whereby they
     acknowledge and consent to the trusts’ investing in the
     business trusts and that they recognize that the
     business trusts may last beyond the termination date of
     the trusts of which they are a beneficiary. The form
     of the Delaware business trusts will be attached to the
     consents.

Mr. Howard testified that the latter requirement of the just-

quoted condition was suggested and insisted upon by him to ensure

that the consent given by the beneficiaries was meaningful.

     Despite the evidence discussed above, it is nonetheless

respondent’s position that tax savings through valuation

discounts constituted the dominant reason for formation of Schutt

I and II.   Respondent characterizes the issue of valuation

discounts as having “dominated” the early discussions concerning

the formation of a new entity.    Respondent also notes that

decedent and his advisers initially contemplated only

transferring stock from the Revocable Trust to a business trust

and emphasizes that the subsequent decision to involve the WTC

trusts served a tax purpose of making available minority as well

as marketability discounts.   However, while it is clear that

estate tax implications were recognized and considered in the

initial stages of the planning process, the record fails to

reflect that such issues predominated in decedent’s thinking and
                                -56-

desires.   What may have originally been approached as a

relatively routine estate planning transaction rapidly developed

into an opportunity and vehicle for addressing more fundamental

concerns of decedent.

     As Mr. Sweeney and Mr. Dinneen acknowledged at trial, both

had a background in tax and so would naturally have taken tax and

valuation matters into account in any recommendations they made

for decedent.   Yet the documentary evidence and testimony fall

short of enabling the Court to infer that decedent himself was

principally focused on tax savings.    To the contrary, the record

compiled over the course of the ensuing year suggests otherwise.

     The valuation questions evaluated by decedent’s advisers in

February and early March of 1997 were left virtually untouched

throughout the remaining approximately 12 months of the planning

and formation process.   Furthermore, to the extent that the notes

taken by Mr. Sweeney of meetings involving decedent enable us to

identify the particular concerns or comments emphasized by

decedent himself, these concerns never touch on valuation

discounts.   Rather, there is a notable focus on matters such as

decedent’s desire for investment control.   Additionally, in the

letters sent by Mr. Sweeney to decedent for purposes of updating

him on the progress of negotiations and presumably focusing on

issues about which decedent would be most interested, transfer

tax issues are nearly absent.   Thus, the proffered evidence is
                                -57-

insufficient to establish that estate tax savings were decedent’s

predominant reason for forming Schutt I and II and to contradict

the estate’s contention that a true and significant motive for

decedent’s creation of the entities was to perpetuate his buy and

hold investment philosophy.

       Given this conclusion regarding decedent’s motive, the

question then becomes whether perpetuation of a buy and hold

investment strategy qualifies as a “legitimate and significant

nontax reason” within the meaning of Estate of Bongard v.

Commissioner, 124 T.C. at __ (slip op. at 39).    As respondent

points out, the buy and hold investment philosophy by definition

resulted in passive entities designed principally to hold the

DuPont and Exxon stock.    Active management, trading, or

“churning” of the portfolios as a means of generating profits was

not intended.    Furthermore, because each trust was funded with

the stock of a single issuer, asset diversification did not

ensue.

       The Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit has in a similar

vein suggested that the mere holding of an untraded portfolio of

marketable securities weighs negatively in the assessment of

potential nontax benefits available as a result of a transfer to

a family entity.    Estate of Thompson v. Commissioner, 382 F.3d at

380.    As a general premise, this Court has agreed with the Court

of Appeals, particularly in cases where the securities are
                                -58-

contributed almost exclusively by one person.    See Estate of

Strangi v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2003-145; Estate of Harper v.

Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2002-121.     In the unique circumstances

of this case, however, a key difference exists in that decedent’s

primary concern was in perpetuating his philosophy vis-a-vis the

stock of the WTC trusts in the event of a termination of one of

those trusts.    Here, by contributing stock in the Revocable

Trust, decedent was able to achieve that aim with respect to

securities of the WTC trusts even exceeding the value of his own

contributions.    In this unusual scenario, we cannot blindly apply

the same analysis appropriate in cases implicating nothing more

than traditional investment management considerations.

     To summarize, the record reflects that decedent’s desire to

prevent sale of core holdings in the WTC trusts in the event of a

distribution to beneficiaries was real, was a significant factor

in motivating the creation of Schutt I and II, was appreciably

advanced by formation of the business trusts, and was unrelated

to tax ramifications.    The Court is thus able to conclude in this

case that Schutt I and II were formed for a legitimate and

significant nontax purpose without further probing the parties’

disagreement as to whether, in theory, an investment strategy

premised on buy and hold should offer just as much justification

for an entity premised thereon as a philosophy that focuses on

active trading.
                                -59-

     As regards other factors considered indicative of a bona

fide sale, these too tend to support the estate’s position.     The

contributed property was actually transferred to Schutt I and II

in a timely manner.    Entity and personal assets were not

commingled.   Decedent was not financially dependent on

distributions from Schutt I and II, retaining sufficient assets

outside of the business trusts amply to support his needs and

lifestyle.    Nor was decedent effectively standing on both sides

of the transactions.

     Concerning this latter point, it is respondent’s position

that “there were no ‘arm’s-length negotiations’ between the

decedent and the bank concerning any material matters affecting

the formation and operation of the business trusts.”    Respondent

maintains that WTC, while ostensibly an independent third party,

simply represented the interests of decedent’s children and

grandchildren and that decedent dictated all material terms.

     The Court, however, is unpersuaded by respondent’s attempts

to downplay the give-and-take reflected in the record.    As

detailed in the facts recounted above and the stipulated

exhibits, WTC representatives thoroughly evaluated the business

trust proposals, raised questions, offered suggestions, and made

requests.    Some of those suggestions or requests were accepted or

acquiesced in; others were not.    Such a scenario bears the

earmarks of considered negotiations, not blind accommodation.
                                -60-

There is no prerequisite that arm’s-length bargaining be strictly

adversarial or acrimonious.

       Regardless of whether the Schutt I and II transactions

should be subjected to the heightened scrutiny appropriate in

intrafamily situations, the record here is sufficient to show

that the negotiations and discussions were more than a mere

facade.12   The Court concludes that the transfers to Schutt I and

II satisfy the bona fide sale requirement for purposes of

sections 2036 and 2038.

       Adequate and Full Consideration

       In this Court’s recent discussion of the adequate and full

consideration prong in Estate of Bongard v. Commissioner, 124

T.C. at __ (slip op. at 48-49), four factors were noted in

support of a finding that the consideration requirement had been

met:    (1) The interests received by the participants in the


       12
       The Court also notes that Wilmington Trust Company (WTC)
was founded in 1903 by the duPont family and has among its
clients numerous duPont descendants. According to public filings
with the Securities and Exchange Commission, WTC subsequently
became the principal operating and banking entity of Wilmington
Trust Corporation, a financial holding company which as of Dec.
31, 1997, was publicly traded with 33,478,113 shares outstanding
and 10,164 shareholders of record, had total assets of $6.12
billion, and possessed stockholders’ equity of $503 million.
Given this size and scope, WTC’s historical connection to the
duPont family is not germane to our analysis. Likewise, although
Mr. Sweeney has served as a director of WTC and/or Wilmington
Trust Corporation since 1983 and his firm has served as outside
counsel to WTC, he during 1997 was one of 21 directors, and both
Mr. Sweeney and Mr. Howard testified credibly that the
relationship made the participants more circumspect, rather than
less, in their dealings.
                                 -61-

entity at issue were proportionate to the value of the property

each contributed to the entity; (2) the respective assets

contributed were properly credited to the capital accounts of the

transferors; (3) distributions from the entity required a

negative adjustment in the distributee’s capital account; and (4)

there existed a legitimate and significant nontax reason for

engaging in the transaction.   Given these circumstances, we

concluded that the resultant discounted value attributable to

entity interest valuation principles was not per se to be equated

with inadequate consideration.    Id. at __ (slip op. at 49-50).

     The Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit has likewise

opined that while the dissipated value resulting from a transfer

to a closely held entity does not automatically constitute

inadequate consideration for section 2036(a) purposes, heightened

scrutiny is triggered.   Estate of Thompson v. Commissioner, 382

F.3d at 381.   To wit, and consistent with the focus of the Court

of Appeals in the bona fide sale context, where “the transferee

partnership does not operate a legitimate business, and the

record demonstrates the valuation discount provides the sole

benefit for converting liquid, marketable assets into illiquid

partnership interests, there is no transfer for consideration

within the meaning of § 2036(a).”       Id.

     In reaching this conclusion, the Court of Appeals referenced

the “recycling” of value concept first articulated by this Court
                              -62-

in Estate of Harper v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2002-121.    Estate

of Thompson v. Commissioner, supra at 378-381.   As we explained

with respect to the situation before us in Estate of Harper v.

Commissioner, supra:

     to call what occurred here a transfer for consideration
     within the meaning of section 2036(a), much less a
     transfer for an adequate and full consideration, would
     stretch the exception far beyond its intended scope.
     In actuality, all decedent did was to change the form
     in which he held his beneficial interest in the
     contributed property. We see little practical
     difference in whether the Trust held the property
     directly or as a 99-percent partner (and entitled to a
     commensurate 99-percent share of profits) in a
     partnership holding the property. Essentially, the
     value of the partnership interest the Trust received
     derived solely from the assets the Trust had just
     contributed. Without any change whatsoever in the
     underlying pool of assets or prospect for profit, as,
     for example, where others make contributions of
     property or services in the interest of true joint
     ownership or enterprise, there exists nothing but a
     circuitous “recycling” of value. We are satisfied that
     such instances of pure recycling do not rise to the
     level of a payment of consideration. To hold otherwise
     would open section 2036 to a myriad of abuses
     engendered by unilateral paper transformations.

     Respondent contends that the instant case features the genre

of value recycling described in Estate of Harper v. Commissioner,

supra, and subsequent cases such as Estate of Strangi v.

Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2003-145.   Respondent, stressing that

decedent enjoyed all incidents of ownership related to the

contributed stock both before and after the transfers (e.g., the

right to the income generated, the right to sell the stock and

reinvest the proceeds, the right to vote the shares), maintains
                               -63-

that contribution to Schutt I and II engendered no meaningful

change in decedent’s relationship to the assets.

     Again, however, this reasoning disregards unique factual

circumstances present in this case that were not involved in

Estate of Harper v. Commissioner, supra, and its progeny.

Undoubtedly, looking in isolation at the relationship of a

decedent to his or her assets may be sufficient where the

decedent’s contributions make up the bulk of the property held by

the relevant entity and no suggestion of any benefit beyond

change in form is evident.   Yet here, where others contributed

more than half of the property funding the entities and the

record reflects that decedent used his own assets primarily to

alter his relationship vis-a-vis those other assets, the analysis

must look more broadly at the transactions.   In that decedent

employed his capital to achieve a legitimate nontax purpose, the

Court cannot conclude that he merely recycled his shareholdings.

     Furthermore, with respect to the additional criteria cited

in Estate of Bongard v. Commissioner, supra at ___ (slip op. at

48-49), each participant in Schutt I and II received an interest

proportionate in value to its respective contribution, the

capital contributions made were properly credited to each

transferor’s capital account, and distributions required a

negative adjustment in the distributee’s capital account.

Liquidating distributions would also be made in accordance with
                                -64-

capital account balances.    Hence, existing precedent shows that

decedent is considered to have received adequate and full

consideration as used in sections 2036(a) and 2038 for his

transfers to Schutt I and II.

II.   Conclusion

      The Court has concluded in the unique circumstances of this

case that decedent’s transfers to Schutt I and II constitute bona

fide sales for adequate and full consideration for purposes of

sections 2036(a) and 2038.   Because the record supports finding

that both prongs of this test have been met, respondent has

failed to carry the burden of proving otherwise.     Accordingly,

the transfers to Schutt I and II are excepted from inclusion in

decedent’s gross estate under either section 2036(a) or 2038.

The Court therefore need not probe other arguments by the parties

with regard to the application of these statutes.

      To reflect the foregoing and to give effect to the parties’

stipulations,


                                            Decision will be entered

                                       under Rule 155.
