Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Linde

213 F.2d 1
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJune 7, 1954
Docket13417
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 213 F.2d 1 (Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Linde) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Linde, 213 F.2d 1 (9th Cir. 1954).

Opinion

POPE, Circuit Judge.

The respondent was the widow of Herman C. Lange who died December 10, 1943. The decedent was a farmer and owned and operated vineyards near Lodi, San Joaquin County, California. He marketed his wine grapes by delivering them to cooperative marketing associations of which he and other grape growers were members. The marketing associations processed their members' grapes into wine and other grape products and marketed the products on behalf of the members. The members of these associations delivered agreed quantities of grapes to the wineries of the associations where they were commingled with those of other members and each year they became a part of what was termed a wine pool for that year. Each member was assigned a percentage of interest in the pool. Ultimately the net proceeds from the sales of the products were returned to the members of the pools in proportion to their percentage of interest therein, all in accordance with the provisions of written agreements made between the association and the individual members. 1

Respondent was the sole legatee under the will of Lange. The estate was closed in 1944. In that year decedent’s share of certain liquidation proceeds of the associations’ pools were paid to the estate and in 1945 decedent’s share of additional liquidation proceeds then payable were paid to the respondent taxpayer.

The principal question presented by the petition now before us is the contention that these payments received by respondent in 1945 in the amount of $38,484.12 constituted items of gross income in respect of a decedent taxable under section 126 of the Internal Revenue Code. 2 The Commissioner’s determina *3 tion to that effect was rejected by the Tax Court, Rose J. Linde, 17 T.C. 584. After examining the provisions of the marketing agreements between the decedent and the cooperative associations, that court concluded that notwithstanding the fact that these agreements referred to the members “selling” and the Associations “purchasing” the wine grapes, and notwithstanding other provisions indicating that the associations took title to the grapes and exercised rights of ownership over them, yet the parties never intended a sale of grapes to the associations to take place; that the relationship between the decedent and the associations which arose out of these agreements and the delivery of the grapes from which the proceeds here in question arose, was one of trust; and that the association was a trustee or agent in respect to the grapes and the resultant proceeds and not a buyer pursuant to a sale.

In reaching this conclusion the Tax Court relied upon certain decisions dealing with the relationship between the members and such associations under California law. 3 The Tax Court pointed out that the payments received by the respondent in 1945 were the net proceeds of sales of products made by the associations in that year or in the latter part of 1944 after the date of decedent’s death. It held: “Since such sales were not made during decedent’s lifetime there could be no distributable proceeds due him when he died. Accordingly, no right to income from this source arose during the decedent’s lifetime.”

While the Commissioner does undertake to argue that under the marketing agreements here involved there was a sale of grapes to the associations, we find it unnecessary at this stage to reach that question; for it is our judgment that even assuming that sales were not made by decedent during his lifetime, yet the amounts paid to the respondent taxpayer in 1945 pursuant to and in accordance with the agreements with the associations constitute “income in respect of a decedent” within the meaning of section 126. We cannot agree with the Tax Court’s conclusion that if such sales did not take place during the decedent’s lifetime, section 126 has no application to the proceeds thus received by the taxpayer.

The decision of the Tax Court cannot be squared with that in O’Daniel’s Estate v. Commissioner, 2 Cir., 173 F.2d 966, 968. The decedent in that case had been an officer of a corporation which had a bonus plan in which the decedent had participated for a number of years. Decedent had no enforceable right under that plan to an allotment of a bonus for any year until the share was designated by the proper officer. Decedent died in 1943 and no share of the bonus for 1943 was designated until 1944, several months after his death, when the share was paid to his estate. It was held that such sum was gross income in respect of the decedent within the meaning of section 126(a)(1)(A). This was held notwithstanding decedent during his lifetime had no enforceable right to receive that amount. But attention was called to the fact that the payment represented compensation for services and that if decedent had lived to receive such amount it would have been includible in his gross income and reportable and taxable in that year as income for services. The court said: “The bonus was derived through rights he had acquired, which even if not fixed at the time of his death were then expectancies which later bore fruit.” In our view the statement just quoted is equally applicable to the proceeds of the wine pools received by the respondent taxpayer in the year 1945. *4 Cf. also Bausch’s Estate v. Commissioner, 2 Cir., 186 F.2d 313.

We think that the text of section 126 as well as the history of the legislation relating to the income of a decedent demonstrate the soundness of the O’Daniel decision and that the principles there expressed must be applied in the instant case. If the decedent had lived until the day when these crop pool proceeds were paid to him the payments so received would have been ordinary income. Sec. 126 itself contains strong evidence of congressional intent to see to it that the tax upon income which would have been derived had the decedent lived should not be lost to the treasury in consequence of his death. Thus subpara-graph (3) of section 126(a) provides that “the amount includible in gross income under paragraph (1) * * * shall be considered in the hands of the es-state or such person to have the character which it would have had in the hands of the decedent if the decedent had lived and received such amount.” The payments which the taxpayer received in 1945 were realized under and in consequence of contracts and deals made by .the decedent in his lifetime. No act or thing taken or performed by the taxpayer operated to procure or to give rise to this payment. Such payments had their source exclusively in the decedent’s contract and arrangement with the cooperative associations. And since in his hands had he lived and received these amounts they would have had the character of ordinary income, the quoted provision of subdivision (3) would make it appear that they have the same character, that is, ordinary income, in the hands of this taxpayer who acquired the right to receive that amount by bequest from the decedent within the meaning of subdivision (C) of subparagraph (1) of section 126(a). See footnote 1, supra.

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Bluebook (online)
213 F.2d 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commissioner-of-internal-revenue-v-linde-ca9-1954.