Butterworth v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue

63 F.2d 944, 12 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 341, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 3643, 12 A.F.T.R. (RIA) 341
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedMarch 3, 1933
Docket4902
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 63 F.2d 944 (Butterworth v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Butterworth v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 63 F.2d 944, 12 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 341, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 3643, 12 A.F.T.R. (RIA) 341 (3d Cir. 1933).

Opinion

WOOLLEY, Circuit Judge.

William B. Butterworth, a resident of Pennsylvania, died in 1921. By his will he bequeathed eertain property to his wife absolutely and gave the residue of his estate to the petitioners, as trustees, to pay “the net income arising therefrom” unto his wife for life, with remainders over. His wife elected to take under the will in lieu of the interest in her husband’s estate which the law of Pennsylvania gave., her. For several years the trustees paid her amounts which, in the aggregate, did not exceed the value of the interest in the estate to which, but for her election, she would have been entitled under tbe law. In filing income tax returns for the years 1924 and 1925, the trustees, when “computing the net income of the estate or trust,” deducted from gross income the part which they had distributed to the widow during those years, pursuant to terms of the applicable Revenue Acts as there stated and then understood. The Commissioner of Internal Revenue disallowed the deductions and, accordingly, assessed deficiency taxes against the trustees, whereupon they appealed to the United States Board of Tax Appeals. The Board sustained the Commissioner. The trustees are here by petition asking this court to review and annul the Board’s action.

The controversy before the tax tribunals and now before this court is the result of decisions by the Circuit Courts of Appeals for the First, Second and Eighth Circuits in Warner v. Walsh, 15 F.(2d) 367, United States v. Bolster, 26 F.(2d) 760, 59 A. L. R. 491 and Allen v. Brandeis, 29 F.(2d) 363, wherein those courts held, in one form or another, that when a widow relinquishes her statutory rights in her husband’s estate by ■electing to take in lieu thereof provisions made for her in his will, she takes as purchaser for a valuable consideration as though she had bought an annuity (People ex rel. Right v. Lynch, 255 N. Y. 323, 174 N. E. 696, contra), and money from the trust, ■earned as income, afterwards received by her under the will constitutes a return of her capital and therefore is not taxable, Eisner v. Macomber, 252 U. S. 189, 40 S. Ct. 189, 64 L. Ed. 521, 9 A. L. R. 1570, until the payments she has received shall have equalled the value of her surrendered statutory rights. The Commissioner of Internal Revenue, realizing the effect of these decisions on taxation, revised the practice of the department by Rule I. T. 2506. In an effort to close the breach thus made in the collection of taxes, the Board of Tax Appeals, going a step beyond the decisions and deciding a question— the right of a fiduciary in computing net income of a trust to deduct the amount distributed to the widow — with which those courts were not confronted, sustained the Commissioner, holding that the widow, in ease of election, became a purchaser, not in the sense in which the law distinguishes a taking by purchase from a taking by inheritance but a purchase by contract; that she purchased with her capital (her surrendered statutory rights) and what she received from the trust was capital returned; that, being a purchaser, she was not a beneficiary under the trust, that is, not a “pure beneficiary”; and that, in consequence, the fiduciary could not deduct for the distribution to- her under the statutes which allowed a deduction only of distributions to “beneficiaries.”

The practical effect of the Board’s decision, if it stands, is to impose an unexpected tax burden upon the trust or upon other beneficiaries and, oddly enough, upon the widow herself. If it does not stand, the government will lose taxes; those which are not paid by the widow under the decisions and those which, because of deduction of income distributed, are not paid by the trust. The legal effect of the Board’s decision on this ease is reflected in the three questions of law submitted:

(1) Whether or not payments made by trustees to the widow under a will in ease of her election represent a return of capital?

(2) If capital, is it deductible by the fiduciary in computing net income of the trust?

(3) Though under the decisions the widow is, on election, a purchaser of the provisions ma.de for her benefit in her husband’s will, is she still a “beneficiary” within the terms of the Revenue Acts which permit a fiduciary “in computing net income of the estate or trust” to deduct the amount of income it has “distributed currently * * * to the beneficiaries” ?

To these submitted questions we add one of our own: Whether the cited decisions, which, as we read them, extend and are limited to a finding that income of a trust in the hands of a widow after election is not taxable, affect the meaning of the Revenue Acts which the Congress had previously passed in respect to deductions allowed the fiduciary in distributing income to beneficiaries?

*946 The pertinent provisions of the Revenue Acts, section 219 (a) (2), (b) (2) (43 Stat. 253; 44 Stat. 9 [26 USCA § 960 note]), whether of .1924 or 1926 which were identical in number and terms, and are now superseded by other acts, clearly provided several things in regard to the imposition and computation of taxes on trust estates: (1) That the tax shall be upon income; (2) that it be upon income either accumulated in trust for future purposes or upon income which has been or is to be distributed currently by the fiduciary to beneficiaries; (3) that it be computed upon net income of the trust; (4) that it be computed in the manner provided in section 212; (5) that, as an exception to- the last provision, in computing net income for a taxable year there shall be allowed the fiduciary, as an additional deduction, “the amount of income of the * * * trust * * * which is to be distributed currently by the fiduciary to the beneficiaries”; and (6) that the “amount so allowed (the fiduciary) as a deduction shall be included by the beneficiaries in computing their taxable net income whether distributed or not.”

In a word, the statutes intended that the trustees shall show in their returns distribution of income to beneficiaries; that they may then deduct the same; and thereafter the beneficiaries shall pay the taxes on the amounts which they severally have received.

It should be noted that the first question submitted to us — whether payments to the widow, after election, of income from a trust constitutes a return of capital and therefore is not taxable — is the same question submitted to and decided by the three Circuit Courts of Appeals. Au altogether different question before this court — one to which the widow, now exempt, is not a party- — -is whether the fiduciaries of the trust in returning income may deduct what they had distributed to the widow as a beneficiary and thus avoid taxes against themselves for that amount? As the first question is not before this court, we shall, of course, not pass upon it. The second submitted question is stated as a corollary of the first. We shall not discuss it— except casually in connection with another phase of the ease. We shall, however, assume without deciding that the way in which the Circuit Courts of Appeals decided the question before them was right. We shall also assume that those courts, not having before them the question which is before this court, did not rulé on that question.

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Bluebook (online)
63 F.2d 944, 12 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 341, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 3643, 12 A.F.T.R. (RIA) 341, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/butterworth-v-commissioner-of-internal-revenue-ca3-1933.