Bailey v. State Tax Commission

2 Or. Tax 399, 1966 Ore. Tax LEXIS 41
CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedJune 28, 1966
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2 Or. Tax 399 (Bailey v. State Tax Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bailey v. State Tax Commission, 2 Or. Tax 399, 1966 Ore. Tax LEXIS 41 (Or. Super. Ct. 1966).

Opinion

Edwajbd H. Howell, Judge.

The issue in this case is whether, under the applicable Oregon income statutes and regulations, the plaintiffs are entitled to deduct as a business expense certain wages paid to unemancipated minor children.

Plaintiffs are orchardists and farm 300 acres of cherries, apples and peaches in Wasco County. During 1963 seven of plaintiffs’ children worked in the orchards and plaintiffs deducted the amount paid the minor children as a business expense. The defendant disallowed the wages and plaintiffs filed suit in this court. The defendant commission found, and the parties stipulated at the trial, that the wages in dispute were paid by plaintiffs, that the amounts thereof were reasonable and that the children involved were unemancipated minors.

OHS 316.305(1) (a) provides:

“Expenses. In computing net income there shall be allowed as deductions:
“(1) All the ordinary and necessary expenses, *401 paid during the tax year in carrying on any trade or business, including:
“(a) A reasonable allowance for salaries or other compensation for personal services actually rendered;
U# * * * * »

The defendant’s regulation under the above statute, Reg 316.305(1) (a)-(A), which constituted the basis for the defendant’s disallowance of plaintiffs’ claim, states in part:

“The parent is legally entitled to the services of his unemancipated minor children and allowances which he gives them, whether such be in consideration of services or otherwise, are not allowable deductions in his return of income.”

This regulation is based, in part, on the common law rule that a parent having the legal control and custody of an unemaneipated minor child is entitled to the services of such child. 39 Am Jur, Parent & Child, §31.

The regulation is also based upon a former federal regulation, Reg 111, §29.24-1, which existed from 1918 to 1954 and which also denied the deduction of wages paid by parents to minor children. It stated in part:

“* * * If the father is entitled to the services of his minor children, any allowances which he gives them, whether said to be in consideration of services or otherwise, are not allowable deductions in his return of income. * * *”

*402 The plaintiffs argue that the defendant’s regulation denying the deduction is invalid because it is inconsistent with ORS 316.515, the separate return statute for minors. This statute states:

“Return of minor. A minor shall file his own return and include therein all items of income, including income attributable to his personal services, and such income shall not be included on the return of his parent. All expenditures by the parent or the minor attributable to such income shall be deemed to have been paid or incurred by the minor. However, any tax assessed against the minor, to the extent attributable to income from personal services, shall, if not paid by the minor, for all purposes be considered as having also been properly assessed against the parent. For the purposes of this section the term ‘parent’ includes any individual who is entitled to the services of a minor by reason of having parental rights and duties in respect of such minor.”

The above statute is similar to § 73 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, the separate return statute for minors, which reads:

“(a) Treatment of Amounts Received.— Amounts received in respect of the services of a child shall be included in his gross income and not in the gross income of the parent, even though such amounts are not received by the child.
“(b) Treatment of Expenditures. — All expenditures by the parent or the child attributable to amounts which are includible in the gross income of the child '(and not of the parent) solely by reason of subsection (a) shall be treated as paid or incurred by the child.
“(c) Parent Defined. — For purposes of this ■section, the term ‘parent’ includes any individual who is entitled to the services of a child by reason of having parental rights and duties in respect of the child.
*403 “(d) Cross Reference.—
“For assessment of tax against parents in certain cases, see section 6201(c).”
Section 6201(c):
“(c) Compensation of Child. — Any income tax under chapter 1 assessed against a child, to the extent attributable to amounts includible in the gross income of the child, and not of the parent, solely by reason of section 73(a), shall, if not paid by the child, for all purposes be considered as having also been properly assessed against the parent.”

The federal history of this issue and the position taken by the Internal Revenue Service are important. While the federal decisions on the same issues are not binding on the State of Oregon, they are instructive. Kuhns et ux v. State Tax Com., 223 Or 547, 557, 355 P2d 249 (1960).

Prior to January 1944 the federal regulation 111, § 29.24-1, denied a deduction to the parent for wages paid to unemaneipated children if the father was entitled to their services under the state law. The parent was required to report in his return the earnings of a minor child if under the law of the state where they resided the parent had the right to such earnings.

With many minor children earning substantial amounts of income during World War II some rule as to the taxability of such income, whether to the parent or to the child, had to be set up in the interest of uniformity and clarity. Vol 2, Mertens, Law of Federal Income Taxation, § 17.04a. Consequently in 1944 § 22(m), a separate return statute for minors, was added to the Internal Revenue Code of 1939. This section, which is substantially the same as § 73 of the present *404 1954 Internal Revenue Code, provided that amounts received for the services of a child are taxable to the child and not to the parent.

Shortly after the enactment of § 22(m) the Internal Revenue Service issued the first of several rulings deciding the effect of the amendment.

In 1945, Income Tax Ruling 3767, Cum Bull 1945, p 101, was published and after considering the Schultz case and the regulation prohibiting the deduction, the Internal Revenue Service concluded that they were no longer applicable since the enactment of § 22 (m) and specifically found that the wages paid unemancipated children were now deductible by the parent. The same ruling was reiterated in the next Bulletin, Income Tax Ruling 3812, Cum Bull 1946-2, p 29, where it was stated:

“* * *

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Bluebook (online)
2 Or. Tax 399, 1966 Ore. Tax LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bailey-v-state-tax-commission-ortc-1966.