Blanco v. Tax Court of Puerto Rico

72 P.R. 799
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedNovember 29, 1951
DocketNo. 255
StatusPublished

This text of 72 P.R. 799 (Blanco v. Tax Court of Puerto Rico) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Puerto Rico primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blanco v. Tax Court of Puerto Rico, 72 P.R. 799 (prsupreme 1951).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Todd, Jr.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The Tax Court of Puerto Rico dismissed the complaint filed by Pura Blanco Widow of Serra against the decision of the Treasurer of Puerto Rico denying her petition for refund of part of the income tax paid by the petitioner-corresponding to the year 1946. To review said decision we-issued the writ of certiorari in the present case.

There is no controversy as to the facts, which were stipulated by the parties in the lower court as follows:

“1. Juan P. Serra was petitioner’s husband and father of' Ana Cecilia and Maria Cecilia Serra Blanco, who were born on October 11, 1926 and June 20, 1928 respectively.
“2. Juan P. Serra died in San Juan, Puerto Rico on May 6, 1945.
“3. By an order entered on June 22, 1945 by the Hon. Judge Ricardo La Costa, Jr., District Judge of the Judicial District of San Juan, Puerto Rico, Civil Case No. R-5654, the said Court designated and declared sole and universal heirs of said Juan P. Serra his minor children, Ana Cecilia and Maria Cecilia Serra Blanco, and his widow Mrs. Pura Blanco, in the usufructuary-quota established by law.
“4. After the corresponding notice of death was filed, the-respondent, the Treasurer of Puerto Rico, on January 23, 1946 liquidated the inheritance tax to be paid by the heirs of Juan P. Serra, imposing an inheritance tax of $12,022.54, to each of the two minor daughters that is, the inheritance tax of both children amounted to $24,045.08, the whole property of the decedent and his wife being appraised at $412,729.55.
“5. The Exhibits A-G are an inventory of the property appraised at their assessment value for the purpose of the inheritance tax.
[802]*802“6. The total inheritance tax amounted to $24,045.08, and the payment of said taxes was made on February 6, 1946.
“7. Within the term fixed by law, the petitioner filed an income tax return for 1946, enumerating all the income which she alleges having received during the said year from all the property which belonged to her and her deceased husband in the following manner:
“Interest on mortgages, bonds, bank deposits and debt claims $6, 078. 05
“Income derived from rents (of real property) 17, 528. 50 “Dividends and Profits 21, 258. 20
“Agriculture 66.88
“Gross Income $44, 931. 63
“The petitioner claimed the following deductions:
“Property taxes $3, 512. 53
“Depreciation 1, 692. 30
“Repairs 2, 755. 91
“Donations 311.00
“Half of medical services, etc. 455. 00
“Other expenses 1, 907. 88
“Total Deductions $10, 634. 62
“8. The incomes reported represent the income derived from the property belonging to the petitioner and her daughters and the deductions claimed represent all the expenses and payments which the petitioner and her daughters claim as deductible, with respect to the property belonging to them.
“Nothing stipulated in this paragraph shall be understood in the sense that the Treasurer of Puerto Rico accepts the correction of the items listed as income or deductions nor shall it affect the right of the Treasurer of Puerto Rico to notify ■or assess deficiencies in connection with the year in question if he should determine that such deficiencies are proper.
“9. The petitioner claimed credits and personal exemption in the sum of $2,800; she reported a taxable income of $31,497.01, and an income tax amounting to $11,023.47, which was paid in two equal instalments in 1947.
“10. The petitioner did not claim as deduction the inheritance tax paid on the estate inherited by her daughters on February 6, 1946 amounting to $24,045.08.
[803]*803“11. Within the term fixed by law the petitioner requested the refund of $9,784.04 paid by her as income tax for 1946, for the items listed, alleging that in the return filed she had not included, among the deductions claimed, the inheritance tax amounting to $24,045.08 and paid February 6, 1946, and that said tax was deductible under § 16 of the applicable law, and that the said petition was dismissed by the respondent on November 14, 1947 by an administrative decision which reads thus:
“ ‘You are hereby notified that this Department has decided to deny your petition for refund of income tax for 1946, since the inheritance tax paid by your daughters Ana Maria (sic) and María Cecilia Serra, case No. 2324-A, is not deductible in the tax return filed by you on the said tax year.’
“That the liquidation of the conjugal partnership existing between the petitioner and her deceased husband, Juan P. Serra and the partition of the property of said decedent, was made by virtue of deed number five, executed in San Juan, Puerto Rico, on February 26, 1946 before Notary G. E. González.”

Petitioner also offered documentary evidence which was admitted without objection and in regard to the payment of the inheritance tax the lower court stated in its opinion the following:

“On February 4, 1946 the District Court issued an Order authorizing the guardian ad litem, Heliodoro Blanco, to draw funds from the National City Bank — San Juan and Bayamón branches — in order to pay the inheritance tax. It is stated in this Order that on January 30, 1946 the guardian ad litem had filed in Court a motion applying for the approval of the partition and distribution of the estate, to which an. inventory was attached, and which motion was argued in open Court, the district attorney intervening on February 4, 1946. The guardian ad litem moved for the withdrawal of funds to pay the inheritance tax to be charged do the hereditary estate of the minors to which the District Attorney and the mother of the children consented. When the said withdrawal of funds was authorized the Court stated the following: ‘that the said amount or sum will be deducted from the hereditary estate of the said minors upon executing the final partition and distribution of the estate [804]*804of the late Juan Primitivo Serra in the proportion of $12,022.54 to each one.’
“On February 7, 1946 the inheritance tax was paid to the Treasurer.”

Even though the petitioner assigns six errors, her contention, in the Tax Court as well as in this Court, may be summed up as follows: (1) that the income tax return filed by the petitioner for the year 1946 is equivalent to and should be considered as the tax return of the heirs of Juan P.

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72 P.R. 799, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blanco-v-tax-court-of-puerto-rico-prsupreme-1951.