De Witt v. Commissioner

31 T.C. 554, 1958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 12
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedDecember 19, 1958
DocketDocket No. 65240
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 31 T.C. 554 (De Witt 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
De Witt v. Commissioner, 31 T.C. 554, 1958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 12 (tax 1958).

Opinion

Mulroney, Judge:

The respondent determined a deficiency in the income tax of petitioners for the year 1953 in the amount of $10,590.02. The sole issue presented here is the deductibility of a certain sum paid by petitioner Byron R. DeWitt to his former wife, Elinor P. DeWitt, after their divorce, pursuant to a written agreement between them, which agreement had been incorporated in the divorce decree.

FINDINGS OF FACT.

Some of the facts were stipulated and they are found accordingly.

Byron K.. DeWitt and Helen W. DeWitt are husband and wife. They live at Pavilion, New York, and they filed their joint income tax return for the year 1953 with the district director of internal revenue at Buffalo, New York. Helen W. DeWitt is a party by virtue of the joint return, so hereinafter the term “petitioner” will refer to Byron.

On May 14, 1953, a divorce action was pending between petitioner and his former wife, Elinor, in the Supreme Court of Genesee County, New York. On said date the parties to the divorce action entered into a memorandum of agreement, which' contained the following clause:

The party of the first part, the husband, agrees to pay to the party of the second part, the wife, for her maintenance and support and for the maintenance and support of the two infant daughters, Judith M. DeWitt and Deborah G. DeWitt, the sum of Thirty Thousand ($30,000.00) Dollars annually, payable in equal monthly installments of Two Thousand Five Hundred ($2,500.00) Dollars in advance beginning as of the 1st day of February, 1953.

It was further provided in said agreement “that the provisions of this agreement shall be fully incorporated into and made a part of the interlocutory and final decree of divorce which may be granted to the party of the second part in the action pending as aforesaid and shall become effective only if and when incorporated into such decrees.”

An interlocutory decree of divorce was entered in the action on June 4, 1953. Thereafter, on September 8, 1953, the interlocutory judgment of divorce became final and the final decree entered on said date incorporated the May 14,1953, agreement.

Thereafter, on September 8,1953, petitioner paid Elinor $16,422.59 representing:

Installments February to September, inclusive, under alimony provision (8 months at $2,500)_$20,000.00
Offsetting items, representing salaries received by Elinor P. DeWitt from corporations controlled by Byron R. DeWitt, and taxes withheld on same_:_ 3, 577.41
16,422.59

After said payment, petitioner made four additional payments to Elinor in the year 1953 totaling $10,000. Petitioner took a deduction in his income tax return for the year 1953 in the total amount of $26,422.59 paid to Elinor in the year 1953 and Elinor included in her individual income tax return for the year 1953 the said amount paid by petitioner and she paid the income tax thereupon shown to be due.

Respondent allowed the four payments totaling $10,000 which were paid in 1953 subsequent to the divorce and $2,500 of the September 8, 1953, payment of $16,422.59 and disallowed the balance, or $13,922.59, stating in the notice of deficiency that said sum “is not an allowable deduction under the provisions of section 23 (u) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1939.”

In 1956 Elinor filed a claim for refund in the amount of $7,171.72 due to the overstatement of the alimony income in her 1953 income tax return in the amount of $13,922.59.

OPINION.

The agreement between the petitioner and Elinor provided for payments of $2,500 a month beginning with February 1953 but further provided nothing was to be paid thereunder unless the agreement was incorporated in a divorce decree in a divorce action then pending between the parties. It was incorporated in the decree entered the following September and thereafter in September and the remaining months of 1953 petitioner paid Elinor the full amount due under the agreement and Elinor included the payments in her 1953 income and petitioner took deduction therefor under section 23 (u) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1939.1 Respondent disallowed the deduction of the portion of the payment made after the entry of the decree, allocable under the agreement to the months prior to September 1953, the month when the decree was entered.

Section 23 (u) gives the divorced husband a deduction for the amount he pays his divorced wife that is includible in her gross income under section 22 (k). Section 22 (k) provides as follows:

Alimony, Etc., Income. — In the case of a wife who is divorced or legally separated from her husband under a decree of divorce or of separate maintenance, periodic payments (whether or not made at regular intervals) received subsequent to such decree in discharge of, or attributable to property transferred (in trust or otherwise) in discharge of, a legal obligation which, because of the marital or family relationship, is imposed upon or incurred by such husband under such decree or under a written instrument incident to such divorce or separation shall be includible in the gross income of such wife, and such amounts received as are attributable to property so transferred shall not be includible in the gross income of such husband. * * *

This is a case where it is peculiarly necessary to place the exact issue in proper perspective. Respondent states the issue to be: “Whether a payment made subsequent to a divorce for periods prior to the divorce are deductible under Section 23 (u) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1939.” The few lines of argument in respondent’s brief are devoted to a charge that petitioner “is attempting to circumvent the decided cases [where it was held payments made prior to a decree of divorce are not deductible] and the intent of Sections 22 (k) and 23 (u).” There is really no issue of intent or interpretation under section 23 (u). Every one admits that the statute gives the husband the deduction for “payment * * * made within the husband’s taxable year” of the “amounts includible under section 22 (k) in the gross income of his wife.” And it adds nothing to the solution of the problem here to charge the petitioner with trying to get around the statutes, or the intent thereof, by, as respondent states, “arranging in an agreement between the parties that payment for periods prior to the divorce would be paid after the divorce decree.”

While the inquiry here is as to the amount of petitioner’s deduction, the design of the two sections makes whatever he pays, that is includible in the wife’s gross income, deductible in his. The payments here were periodic. Gale v. Commissioner, 191 F. 2d 79, affirming Elsie B. Gale, 13 T. C. 661. Respondent does not argue otherwise. Therefore, the precise question comes down to whether the divorced wife may, under section 22 (k), omit a portion of the payment she receives after the entry of the divorce decree, from inclusion in her gross income. If she can do this, then the husband’s deduction is decreased by the amount the wife can lawfully omit from her gross income.

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Related

Mavity v. Commissioner
42 T.C. 283 (U.S. Tax Court, 1964)
De Witt v. Commissioner
31 T.C. 554 (U.S. Tax Court, 1958)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
31 T.C. 554, 1958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-witt-v-commissioner-tax-1958.