E. W. Brown, Jr. And Gladys Slade Brown v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue

215 F.2d 697, 46 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 580, 1954 U.S. App. LEXIS 4367
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 22, 1954
Docket14640_1
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 215 F.2d 697 (E. W. Brown, Jr. And Gladys Slade Brown v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
E. W. Brown, Jr. And Gladys Slade Brown v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 215 F.2d 697, 46 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 580, 1954 U.S. App. LEXIS 4367 (5th Cir. 1954).

Opinion

DAWKINS, District Judge.

This is a petition to review the decisions of the Tax Court in four consolidated cases involving deficiencies assessed against petitioners for the years 1945 and 1946. Petitioners are husband and wife who filed separate returns for those years under the Texas community property laws.

Dr. E. W. Brown and his wife, Carrie L. Brown, accumulated considerable community property consisting of commercial and residential properties in Texas and Louisiana. Upon his death in 1917, Dr. Brown devised his interest in the community to his three children, E. W. Brown, Jr., (one of the petitioners here), *698 H. L. Brown and Mrs. Fannie Brown Moore. He requested that his estate remain intact for ten years. The following year, Mrs. Moore died intestate, survived by her husband and a daughter, Babette Moore (later married to E. R. Odom). By mutual consent of all parties, the estate of Dr. Brown was left undivided, being operated primarily by his widow and two sons.

In addition to her interest in the property of the former community, Mrs. Carrie Brown owned a large separate estate, including properties in Texas and Louisiana. In actual operation, the business connected with her own properties was intermingled with that of the former community, and she was considered to be in control of all properties. In 1923 and 1924, she financed the organization of Brown Paper Mill, Incorporated, a large pulp and paper manufacturing firm located at Monroe, Louisiana, and she remained an active officer in that company until her death in 1941, participating in its many transactions as such. She also remained very active in the management and operation of all her other properties.

In 1931, Mrs. Brown executed her will, wherein she devised her property in the proportions of three-sevenths to each of her two sons and one-seventh to Babette Moore Odom, her granddaughter. On several occasions beginning in 1932 she made gifts of certain property to her sons, particularly several in December, 1934, of cash and Brown Paper Mill stock aggregating nearly $3,000,000.

A short time after her death, her will was admitted to probate, with the properties of her estate being valued for the purpose of Federal estate taxation in excess of $5,000,000. The property was kept intact and operated in connection with the administration of her estate by her two sons, testamentary co-executors. In March, 1945, the Federal estate tax was finally concluded and paid; during the same month, inheritance taxes were paid to the State of Texas. Inheritance taxes to the State of Louisiana were actually paid in May, 1945, but liability for Louisiana taxes was not definitely concluded until the entry of a judgment on May 6, 1946. Upon payment of these sums, the executors and the owners of all rights in the property formerly comprising the community between Dr. Brown and Mrs. Carrie Brown commenced a partition thereof.

In August, 1945, E. W. Brown, Jr., and H. L. Brown received a letter from Babette Odom, addressed to them as co-executors of Mrs. Carrie Brown’s estate. In the letter Mrs. Odom questioned the capacity of her grandmother to make the will of 1931 and the gifts in 1932 and subsequently, particularly the large gifts in December, 1934. She requested her uncles as co-executors to cause themselves in their individual capacities to make restoration to the estate of the gifts or the value thereof.

The brothers employed attorneys to investigate and advise them as to the merits and effect of these contentions; and they were advised that while it was the opinion there was no merit in fact or law in the claims, disastrous consequences would result if such a cloud were cast upon the multitude of transactions in which their mother had participated, by the publication of the Odom contentions through suit or otherwise. Consequently, they were advised to attempt full settlement of the controversy.

With the assistance of their attorneys, the brothers effected a settlement with Mrs. Odom, evidenced by a lengthy and detailed agreement. By its provisions, Mrs. Odom was required to relinquish all claims over and above the legacy left her by her grandmother and to agree never to institute suit questioning the validity of any of the transactions in which her grandmother participated — in consideration for which the brothers paid her more than $300,000 out of their portions of the estate. Further, the brothers agreed not to charge the estate executors’ fees and to pay their attorney’s fees and other legal expenses out of their portions of the estate. There was also included their agreement to buy Mrs. Odom’s Brown Paper Mill stock at a stated price per share; and finally the *699 settlement required a full partition of the estate properties.

The executors maintained an office for the supervision and administration of the estate and employed accountants and others to keep and audit the records pertaining to the estate. The estate was operated as such during 1946; and no final report or account was filed by the executors during that year. Neither were the executors discharged by the beneficiaries or by the court in 1946.

On their separate returns for 1945, petitioners deducted the attorney’s fees and other legal expenses paid by E. W. Brown, Jr., in connection with the Odom claims and settlement. The Commissioner disallowed the deduction, and also attributed to the taxpayers individually their proportionate share of the estate income for the year 1946. The Tax Court upheld the Commissioner on both points, ruling (1) that the legal expenses were incurred and paid to perfect or defend title to the properties and were therefore capital expenditures not deductible under Section 23(a) (2) of the Internal Revenue Code; 1 *and (2) that the estate should have been terminated, and was for tax purposes, in 1945 when all necessary administrative duties had been performed.

Petitioners, of course, contend that the Tax Court’s decision was clearly erroneous on both points, arguing (1) that the legal expenditures were made in the operation, management and conservation of income-producing property 2 and therefore deductible under the quoted statute; and (2) that it was inconsistent with the evidence and therefore arbitrary to find that the estate was terminated in 1945.

Legal Expenses.

This problem has been considered in many cases, too numerous to cite, each being decided on its facts; and we have found none involving the precise situation presented here. Whatever else may be gleaned from a study of the cases, it is certain that there is no hard and fast rule by which it can easily be determined whether such expenditures are or are not deductible. In each such case, the court must examine the circumstances which gave rise to the expenditure; and the difficulty encountered in reaching the solution is readily seen from the opinions and the dissents handed down in the reported cases.

Of course, when property is held for the production of income, any expenditure which relates to the perfection or defense of the taxpayer’s title to the property can, in one sense, be said to have been an expenditure for the conservation of the property.

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Bluebook (online)
215 F.2d 697, 46 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 580, 1954 U.S. App. LEXIS 4367, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/e-w-brown-jr-and-gladys-slade-brown-v-commissioner-of-internal-revenue-ca5-1954.