Court Opinion

ID: 4631139
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-11-21 03:08:59.731887+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:57:40.613214
License: Public Domain

Ralph E. Hedges, Petitioner, v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, Respondent.  Stanley Hedges Childress, Petitioner, v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, RespondentHedges v. CommissionerDocket Nos. 29288, 29469United States Tax Court18 T.C. 681; 1952 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 146; June 30, 1952, Promulgated *146 Decisions will be entered under Rule 50.  Income -- Trust -- Fiduciary -- Beneficiaries -- Delayed Receipt -- Sections 142, 161, 162.  -- A fiduciary held stock in his own name which he failed to disclose and have distributed to the beneficiaries as an asset of the estate of a decedent to which it belonged and which he was administering. The heirs were unaware that he held the stock. The fiduciary continued to hold the stock and received dividends on it as a fiduciary and was liable for tax on the dividends so that when the stock and dividends were later turned over to the heirs they were not taxable in the year of receipt on the dividends for prior years.  Kenneth C. Hawkins, Esq., and A. R. Kehoe, Esq., for the petitioners.John H. Pigg, Esq., for the respondent.  Murdock, Judge.  Hill and Withey, JJ., concur in the result.  Tietjens, J., dissenting.  Kern, Turner, and Raum, JJ., agree with this dissent.  MURDOCK*682  The Commissioner determined deficiencies and penalties under section 294 as follows:1944Petitioner1945, deficiencyDeficiencyPenaltyRalph E. Hedges$ 23,484.38$ 10.61$ 132.00Stanley Hedges Childress33,762.08The deficiency for 1945 is not contested.  The issues for decision are whether $ 57,439 received by each petitioner in 1944 is taxable income.FINDINGS OF FACT.The petitioners filed their income tax returns for 1944 with the collector of internal revenue for the district of Washington.  Each used the cash receipts and disbursements method of reporting his income.John T. Hedges and Kittie J. Hedges were married in 1888.  They moved *148  to Yakima, Washington, about 1902 and resided there until they died. They had two children, the petitioner, Ralph E. Hedges, born in 1896, and Ruth Hedges Childress who predeceased her mother and left as her only surviving issue the petitioner, Stanley Hedges Childress, born July 29, 1916.  Kittie died intestate on March 23, 1923.  John became her executor in October 1923.The community property of John and Kittie, as listed by him in the administration of Kittie's estate, had an appraised value of $ 36,429.17.  A distribution of one-fourth of the assets to Ralph, one-fourth to Stanley, and one-half to John was ordered on October 4, 1924.  John was awarded a fee of $ 1,200 as administrator of Kittie's estate and was discharged as administrator on October 4, 1924.The community property of John and Kittie at the time of her death included 14,200 shares of stock of Sunshine Mining Company.  Some of those shares were in Kittie's name but John had all shares transferred to his name shortly after Kittie died. John did not list any of the Sunshine Mining Company shares as assets or otherwise mention them in the administration of Kittie's estate.  Ralph and Stanley were each entitled to*149  3,550 of those shares upon the death of Kittie as her heirs, and John was entitled to 7,100 of those shares as his portion of the community property of himself and Kittie.John executed on January 12, 1924, what proved to be his last will, the first paragraph of which was as follows:Realizing that my son, RALPH E. HEDGES, has or will come into possession of practically one-quarter of such estate as I have created, prior to the making of this, my Will, and is therefore suitably provided for, I hereby give and bequeath unto my said son RALPH, the sum of FIVE ($ 5.00) DOLLARS.*683  He left the remainder of his estate to Jessie Ames Belton, whom he married on April 5, 1924.  John asked Jessie at the time he married her never to let Ralph know that Kittie and John had owned the Sunshine Mining Company stock and said he did not have to declare that stock in the inventory of Kittie's estate because it had no value.  John died on February 1, 1944, survived by Jessie and the two petitioners.The following table shows the year, rate, and total for 3,550 shares of the dividends declared on Sunshine Mining Company stock:Amount attributableYearPer shareto3,550 shares1927$ 0.08$ 284.001928.12426.001929.22781.001930.16568.001931.0271.001932.10355.001933.25887.501934.682,414.0019351.404,970.0019362.257,987.5019373.0010,650.0019382.207,810.0019391.605,680.0019401.605,680.0019411.304,615.001942.551,952.501943.451,597.501944.20710.00Total$ 57,439.00*150  The petitioners learned for the first time after the death of John that the community property of Kittie and John at the death of Kittie had included shares of Sunshine Mining Company stock and that the number of those shares was 14,200.  Each petitioner filed a claim against the estate of John setting forth the fact that John had not disclosed the ownership of the 14,200 shares of Sunshine Mining Company stock in the administration of Kittie's estate and had thereby deprived each of the petitioners of the 3,550 shares of that stock to which he was entitled in the distribution of that estate.  They also set forth that dividends in the amount of $ 57,439 had been paid on each block of 3,550 shares during the time it had stood in the name of John and each petitioner was entitled to have turned over to him 3,550 shares of the stock, $ 57,439 representing the dividends thereon, and 6 per cent interest on the dividends from the date of declaration.John still held the stock at the time he died and his estate contained sufficient funds to make proper restitution to the two petitioners.  Jessie, as executrix of John's estate, knew that the petitioners were entitled to the stock and the dividends*151  and, with the approval of the Court, turned over in 1944 to each of the petitioners 3,550 shares of Sunshine Mining Company stock and cash or other property in the *684  amount of $ 57,439 which the two petitioners agreed to accept in full settlement of the amounts due them.Dividends on all of the shares of Sunshine Mining Company stock standing in the name of John were reported on his income tax returns for the years 1934 through 1943, inclusive, except that the record does not show whether or not they were reported on his return for 1936.  The record does not show whether or not John reported the dividends for the years prior to 1934.Ralph paid legal expense of $ 21,000 in 1944 in connection with the recovery of the shares of stock and the $ 57,439 from the estate of John.The Commissioner, in determining the deficiency against Ralph, added $ 42,780.67 to the income shown on the return and explained that $ 57,479 received in 1944 in settlement of the claim against the estate of John constituted taxable income and "the $ 21,000 of legal expenses incurred by you in 1944 was incurred in part for the recovery of capital and in part for the recovery of income and that deduction*152  is allowable only to the percentage that $ 57,439.00 bears to $ 82,289.00, the total of income and capital recovered."The Commissioner, in determining the deficiency against Stanley, added $ 57,439 to income with the explanation that it represented taxable income received in settlement of a claim filed against the estate of John.All facts stipulated by the parties, including all joint exhibits, are incorporated herein by this reference.OPINION.The Commissioner argues that John properly reported the dividends since he received them under color of title and claim of right; they were not taxable to a trust ex maleficio or any other trust recognized as a taxpayer; and the petitioners are taxable in 1944 with the $ 57,439 which they received, not as heirs of Kittie, but as creditors of John's estate under a claim, the gravamen of which was loss of profits, since under no sound theory could the dividends have been reported by or for them in the years of payment by the corporation.  The petitioners argue that the dividends were taxable currently to a constructive trust of which John was trustee.  They state that the tax which the Commissioner has already received on the dividends*153  from John substantially exceeds that which would have been due if the income had been properly reported during those years either by a fiduciary or by the two petitioners whose income was much less than John's during those years.  They point out that to pile up all of this income in the one taxable year 1944 would impose upon them a very high tax and would be an extreme hardship in view of the fact that *685  they were entitled to receive this income over a long series of lower tax years during which their tax burdens, if any, would have been small, and the fault of John should not impose upon them the hardships inherent in the determination of the Commissioner.John became the administrator of Kittie's estate and held title to the two blocks of stock while acting as fiduciary. The record does not show the value of that stock at the time Kittie died but obviously John thought it had some value because he was careful to conceal it from the lawful owners and to have it placed in his name.  He knew it was community property. The probate court ordered distribution of Kittie's estate and discharge of the administrator on October 4, 1924.  That would have properly terminated the administration*154  and settlement of her estate for all purposes had the administrator not intentionally omitted the stock from the list of assets subject to administration.  He thereafter necessarily continued to hold the shares in a fiduciary capacity and there was no complete and legal settlement of Kittie's estate until the part thereof which belonged to these two petitioners was turned over to them in 1944 along with amounts equivalent to the dividends on the stock paid during the time when it was wrongfully withheld from their possession by John, the administrator of Kittie's estate.Both parties agree that the determining factor in the petitioners' acquisition of the equivalent of the dividends is the basic nature of the claim upon which the recovery was made.  The real basis for the petitioners' claims against the estate of John was the rights which they acquired as heirs of Kittie.  John, during his lifetime, or a new administrator for Kittie's estate after his death, could have been required to distribute to the petitioners not only the stock but also funds equivalent to the dividends. The two petitioners, learning for the first time of their rights, asserted them as heirs of Kittie, they*155  were not contested, and the property which John had been holding was turned over to its owners.Section 142 requires "every fiduciary" to file a return if the gross or net income which he is to report exceeds stated amounts.  Section 161 (a) (3) imposes a tax upon "Income received by estates of deceased persons during the period of administration or settlement of the estate." Section 162 (c) allows the estate of a deceased person during the period of administration or settlement of the estate a deduction for the amount of the income of the estate "for its taxable year, which is properly paid or credited during such year to any legatee, heir, or beneficiary, but the amount so allowed as a deduction shall be included in computing the net income of the legatee, heir, or beneficiary."*686  The only question here is whether the entire amounts which the petitioners received in 1944 are taxable income to them for that year.  If they had recovered interest on the dividends it would have been taxable to them in its entirety in 1944, and likewise if John had sold the stock and the petitioners had sued him for their loss of dividends on the stock, their recovery might have been taxable *156  in its entirety in the year received because only then would they have had an unconditional, unqualified right to receive it.  Cf.  , certiorari denied . However, those things did not happen.  John concealed from Kittie's heirs the fact that he held the stock and was receiving the dividends. The gravamen of the claim of the petitioners was not for loss of profits but was for the stock which belonged to them as heirs of Kittie and for the dividends received on that stock, both of which John, who was administrator of Kittie's estate, possessed at the time he died. Both John and his executrix knew and admitted that the stock and dividends belonged to the petitioners.  They required John, through his estate, to account to them for what was already theirs.Those dividends were taxable to some taxpayer when they were received.  The petitioners were not the ones, however, since they used a cash method, they had not received the dividends, and they did not even know during those years of their rights to the stock or to the dividends. Regulations 111, section*157  29.161-1, provides that the period of administration or settlement of an estate is the time actually required to administer and settle the estate whether it is longer or shorter than the period specified in the local statute for settlements of estates.  That regulation has been approved in a number of cases in some of which it was held that the "period of administration or settlement of the estate" of a deceased person for the purposes of sections 161 (a) (3) and 162 (c) may differ from the period of administration of the estate terminated by an order of the probate court.  , revd., ; , affd.  ; ; ; . The probate court in the present case would not have closed the administration and discharged John as administrator of Kittie's estate if it had known that he was holding Sunshine Mining Company stock *158  belonging to the estate which he had not included in the administration of the estate.  John actually received dividends on the stock in each year from 1927 until 1944, and if the Commissioner had had knowledge of the facts he could have taxed those dividends to John in a fiduciary capacity as they were received under his regulation and section 161 (a) (3).  No distribution of those dividends was made to the heirs in *687  any taxable year except the year 1944.  Thus, no deduction under section 162 (c) was proper for any year except 1944.  The dividends declared and paid in 1944 were actually distributed to the petitioners in that year and are deductible by the fiduciary and taxable to the petitioners for 1944.  John, so far as the record shows, never filed any income tax returns as administrator of the estate of Kittie or as a trustee for the estate which would bar the Commissioner from collecting any taxes lawfully due from him as administrator or trustee of that estate.  Since the dividends for years prior to 1944 were taxable to the fiduciary without deduction, they were not thereafter taxable to the petitioners when finally distributed to them.  ,*159  affd.  ; .Ralph has failed to show that the Commissioner's allocation of the attorney fee was improper.Decisions will be entered under Rule 50.  TIETJENSTietjens, J., dissenting: The majority opinion apparently is based on the theory that John, despite the fact that the probate court had discharged him as administrator and closed the administration and despite the fact that he had wrongfully had the stock transferred to his own name, had collected the dividends as his own thereafter and paid income tax thereon in his individual capacity, was, nevertheless, still a fiduciary within the meaning of sections 161 and 162 of the Code and that the period of administration of the estate still continued under Regulations 111, section 29.161-1.  I think this theory is erroneous.  It is appreciated that periods of administration may extend for purposes of the regulations beyond the time the administration is closed by the appropriate court, for instance, in the case of administering after discovered assets.  But, here, John was in no sense acting with reference to the stock*160  on behalf of the estate or in its interest.  He was really a wrongdoer in that respect.  I do not think his actions extended the "period of administration." Aside from this theory it seems to me the case is governed by the principles stated in Virginia Hansen Vincent, 18 T. C. 339, and the dividends disgorged to the petitioners and made available to them for the first time in 1944 should be taxed to them in that year.