Cotnam v. Commissioner

28 T.C. 947, 1957 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 124
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedJuly 31, 1957
DocketDocket No. 55797
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 28 T.C. 947 (Cotnam v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cotnam v. Commissioner, 28 T.C. 947, 1957 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 124 (tax 1957).

Opinion

OPINION.

TurNer, Judge:

The first issue is whether respondent erred by including in income the $120,000 received by petitioner from the estate ■ of Thomas Shannon Hunter. Respondent determined that the amount was gross income within the purview of section 22 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1939. His position is that petitioner’s claim against the estate and her lawsuits which resulted in the judgment for $120,000 were based on a breach of contract by the decedent, Hunter.

Petitioner contends, first, that none of the $120,000 is taxable because it was in the nature of a bequest, and secondly, that if any amount is taxable, then only that amount which she actually received, after her attorneys retained their legal fees, is taxable.

She seeks to invoke section 22 (b) (3), which excludes from gross income “the value of property acquired by gift, bequest, devise, or inheritance.” She does not claim to have received a “gift” or an “inheritance,” but rather that the amount received was in the nature of a legacy and as such was not income to her.

In support of her contention, the petitioner relies to a large extent on the opinion of the Supreme Court of Alabama in Merchants National Bank v. Cotnam, 250 Ala. 316, 34 So. 2d 122, which affirmed the judgment she had obtained in the Circuit Court, the parties having incorporated the opinion by reference in their stipulation of facts. Petitioner argues that the holding of the Alabama court was that Hunter “created a trust on his descendable property” to provide a legacy to her to the extent of one-fifth of his estate; that she was entitled to have her status as a legatee declared and adjudged as if a will had been made according to the agreement with Hunter, and that the agreement, “having operation as a will,” passed to her one-fifth of the property owned by the decedent at the time of his death.

Petitioner seems to think that under section 216, title 61, of the Code of Alabama, 1940, as amended,1 she had the right to have her status as a “legatee” declared and adjudged. In the above opinion, the Alabama Supreme Court stated:

We have held that the proceeding under section 216, supra, as amended, was not intended to lead to a personal judgment, but was only for the purpose of declaring a status. It is in the nature of a declaratory judgment to determine the validity of the claim which has been filed against the estate. * * *
The judgment in this case was that i>laintiif have and recover of defendant. On such a judgment an execution is due to issue ipso facto, and without an order to that effect. * * *
The parties and the court tried this ease in the circuit court on appeal as if it were a common law action begun as such. To that extent it does not conform to section 216, supra, hut we see no reason why the parties cannot with the consent of the court convert it into such an action and have a personal judgment accordingly rendered. We will therefore not disturb it on account of its nature.

The court, in referring to the agreement petitioner had with Hunter, stated:

We have held that agreements of this kind, when they are not within the statute of frauds, or when the statute of frauds has been complied with, are binding, and “create an equitable right in the nature of a trust enforceable against the personal representative of the deceased as a covenant to stand seized to the use of the promisee.” And that “if one in such manner agrees to provide a legacy out of Ms estate, or a certain sum so payable at his death, Ms personal representative succeeds to the estate of decedent encumbered with a burden in the nature of a trust to pay the same as contracted by decedent. Such a right being contractual, is not affected by a will or its probate.” (While in life he may dispose of his estate.) “But out of what he leaves, which descends or is subject to his will, he has bound himself for a valuable consideration, effective against his personal representative, that his promisee shall have a stipulated sum. He has thereby created a trust on his descendable property to that extent.” Those principles have been repeatedly reaffirmed. * * *

A claim for damages for the breach of a contract is also an alternative remedy available to her, * * * and an account for services rendered on a quantum meruit. * * *

The court, in discussing the consideration of the agreement, in part, stated:

There is ample authority to the effect that a promise by the claimant as set out in the amended claim, and in the claimant’s pleading in the circuit court, is in terms and on its face such a valuable consideration as will support an agreement on the part of decedent as claimant insists. Such was the legal effect of the agreements held sufficient in several of our cases. * * *

From reading the above excerpts, as well as the opinion itself, we are unable to find any support for petitioner’s contention. She had no right under section 216 of the Alabama Code to have a status of “legatee” declared. She could have had the legality of her claim declared. The judgment she obtained was not a declaratory judgment, but was a personal judgment. The action she brought as well as the claim she prosecuted was based on a breach of contract, which contract and breach she proved to the satisfaction of a jury and the courts.

In John Davies, 23 T. C. 524, the wife, Gertrude, had performed services in accordance with a similar agreement, the terms of which were not carried out by the decedent-promisor. She filed her claim against the estate of the decedent and on compromise, after a trial in which the jury could not reach a verdict, received the sum of $8,500. When the Commissioner determined that the money received was income, she presented to this Court contentions similar to those petitioner has presented here. As in the case of petitioner, Gertrude was not named in any will of the decedent and did not contest any will of his. She was not an heir, and did not sue as an heir. She could not and did not rely upon a mere promise of the decedent, unsupported by any consideration, to leave her property by his will, but in her claim mentioned some valuable consideration moving from her to the decedent for whatever she was claiming from his estate. We held that Gertrude did not receive the $8,500, or any part of it, by bequest, devise, or inheritance from the decedent. “She did not reoeive anything by inheritance from him because she was not related to him in any way and claimed no relationship, and she did not receive anything by bequest or devise because he left no will. She received the $8,500 as a result of a settlement of a claim against the estate of an intestate. She alleged that her claim was fully supported by consideration in the form of services performed by her and her agreement at his request to continue those services. * * * The petitioners have failed to show that any part of the $8,500 was received as a gift or that the determination of the Commissioner is incorrect. Cole L. Blease, 16 B. T. A. 972.”

The fact that Gertrude’s recovery was through a compromise and petitioner’s was through a personal judgment is of little moment.

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Bluebook (online)
28 T.C. 947, 1957 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cotnam-v-commissioner-tax-1957.