Carter v. Commissioner

36 B.T.A. 60, 1937 BTA LEXIS 781
CourtUnited States Board of Tax Appeals
DecidedJune 8, 1937
DocketDocket Nos. 78878, 78879, 78880, 78881.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 36 B.T.A. 60 (Carter v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Board of Tax Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carter v. Commissioner, 36 B.T.A. 60, 1937 BTA LEXIS 781 (bta 1937).

Opinion

[66]*66OPINION.

Hill:

Petitioners allege that respondent, in determining the deficiencies, erred in treating as distributable income of the partnership and including in taxable income of each of the petitioners, other than the estate of Robert Burkham, deceased, their respective proportionate interests in the amount paid to the estate of decedent during the taxable year, pursuant to the partnership agreement of January 1,1927. Substantially, the position of the petitioners is that the sum paid to the deceased partner’s estate was that portion of the income from fees received by the partnership which was due the decedent’s estate, and was received by the partnership as trustee for such estate.

The facts were stipulated by the parties, and on this issue, among other things, it is stated, that neither of the petitioners nor any members then constituting the copartnership “received any part of the sum * * * paid to the estate of Robert Burkham, deceased, but pursuant to the terms of the agreement of January 1, 1927 herein referred to, said sum was received by the co-partnership with the duty imposed to pay the same to the said estate of Robert Burkham, deceased, which duty was duly performed, as aforesaid.”

The meaning intended to be expressed in the quoted stipulation (which we have not included ⅛ our findings of fact above) is not entirely clear, but we need not construe it. If it was meant to say that the money out of which the sum in controversy was paid to the decedent’s estate was not first “received” by the partnership it is contrary to the facts otherwise clearly established by the record and must be rejected. William Ernest Seatree, 25 B. T. A. 396; Volunteer State Life Insurance Co., 35 B. T. A. 491. If the parties intended to stipulate that the sum was received by the partnership not as its own property but in trust for the estate of the deceased member, then the stipulation amounts to a legal conclusion and must be disre[67]*67garded. Unless the fund when received belonged to the partnership, obviously it could not constitute distributable income taxable to the members. This involves the very question which has been submitted to the board for decision. “A stipulation concerning the legal effect of admitted facts is ineffective, and will be treated as a nullity.” Swift & Co. v. Hocking Valley Railway Co., 243 U. S. 281, 289. If the parties meant to stipulate that the fund was not actually distributed to the members, it is of no materiality. In any event, therefore, it will be disregarded.

It is conceded by all parties that the death of Robert Burkham dissolved the old partnership, and that the new partnership organized by the surviving members paid the amount in controversy to the decedent member’s estate under and pursuant to the terms of the partnership agreement of January 1, 1927; also that the principal purpose of the agreement was to eliminate a partnership administration upon the death of a partner and an accounting over a long period of time by the surviving partners.

Solution of the problem presented here depends upon whether the sum paid to Burkham’s estate represented his share of fees earned by the partnership prior to but uncollected at the time of his death, or whether such payments constituted the consideration paid by the surviving members for Burkham’s interest in the old partnership and its assets. Bull v. United States, 295 U. S. 247.

The nature of the transaction, we think, is fully disclosed by the terms of the partnership agreement pursuant to which it was carried out, which provided that in the event of death of any member of the firm his heirs, executors, or administrators should receive a sum equal to one-half of the amount actually received by such deceased partner during the two calendar years next preceding such death, “in lieu of all interest which the heirs, executors or administrators of such deceased partner may have in any fees received by the firm subsequent to the date of such death ⅜ * * and in full payment of the interest of such deceased partner in the library and office equipment of the firm.” The partnership agreement further recited that “each member of the firm hereby agrees in the event of his death that no administration of the firm or its assets shall be required, and waives all right thereto and agrees that the payment made to his heirs, executors or administrators as above provided, shall be taken and received by them in full payment for his interest in the firm and its assets.”

The conclusion seems inescapable to us that by the payment of a definitely ascertainable consideration, which is the amount here in controversy, the surviving partners of the old partnership purchased all of the interest of the deceased Burkham in the firm and its [68]*68assets. The parties have stipulated that one of the purposes of the partnership agreement was to fix at death a definite sum for payment to the estate of a deceased member, regardless of whether, in the absence of such agreement, the amount payable to the deceased partner’s estate for his interest in the partnership would have been greater or less than the amount fixed by the agreement.

Whether the interest of the deceased Burkham had in fact a fair value of more or less than the amount paid under the contract, and whether or not the survivors derived a profit from their purchase of his interest for such sum, does not appear from the record. No question is raised on this point. Likewise, it does not appear what assets, if any, the partnership owned other than a library and office equipment of undisclosed value. The petitioners offered no evidence as to these matters. But in the state of the record before us, they are in any event immaterial.

The fact remains that the surviving partners purchased the interest of Burkham in the firm and its assets, for a stated consideration. Thereupon, they became the exclusive owners of all uncollected fees, whether the services for the rendition of which such fees were received were performed either prior or subsequent to his death. It was out of such fees that the amount in question was paid to Burkham’s estate* The amount, therefore, constituted distributive income of the new partnership when received, and is taxable to the petitioners to the extent of their respective interests, whether in fact distributed to them or not. (Sec. 182 (a), Revenue Act of 1932.)

The partnership did not act in a fiduciary capacity in respect of any of the fees collected after the death of Burkham. His estate had no interest therein. Under the partnership contract- it had only the right to demand payment of the stipulated amount. It was not entitled to payment out of fees; and in case no fees had been collected within the time fixed for payment, the estate would still have been entitled to receive the amount agreed upon, and the partnership could have fully discharged its obligation by payment out of any fund, whether or not it embraced fees collected subsequent to Burkham’s death.

In Willard C. Hill, 14 B. T. A.

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Related

John G. Madden & Anne Madden v. Commissioner
5 T.C.M. 559 (U.S. Tax Court, 1946)
Estate of Jones v. Commissioner
3 T.C.M. 97 (U.S. Tax Court, 1944)
Heiner v. Mellon
304 U.S. 271 (Supreme Court, 1938)
Carter v. Commissioner
36 B.T.A. 60 (Board of Tax Appeals, 1937)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
36 B.T.A. 60, 1937 BTA LEXIS 781, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carter-v-commissioner-bta-1937.