Estate of Charles W. Ford, Citizens & Southern Nat'l Bank v. Commissioner

4 T.C.M. 321, 1945 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 264
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedMarch 16, 1945
DocketDocket No. 3673.
StatusUnpublished

This text of 4 T.C.M. 321 (Estate of Charles W. Ford, Citizens & Southern Nat'l Bank 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
Estate of Charles W. Ford, Citizens & Southern Nat'l Bank v. Commissioner, 4 T.C.M. 321, 1945 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 264 (tax 1945).

Opinion

Estate of Charles W. Ford, the Citizens and Southern National Bank, Administrator, v. Commissioner.
Estate of Charles W. Ford, Citizens & Southern Nat'l Bank v. Commissioner
Docket No. 3673.
United States Tax Court
1945 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 264; 4 T.C.M. (CCH) 321; T.C.M. (RIA) 45098;
March 16, 1945
John W. Townsend, Esq., 1366 Nat. Press Bldg., Washington, D.C., and M. H. Barnes, Esq., 1018 Citizens & Southern Nat. Bank Bldg., Atlanta, Ga., for the petitioner. Frank M. Thompson, Jr., Esq., and S. Earl Heilman, Esq., for the respondent.

DISNEY

Memorandum Findings of Fact and Opinion

DISNEY, Judge: This proceeding involves a deficiency of $2,273.12 in estate tax. The issues are whether*265 there should be included in the gross estate of the decedent the sum of $19,750 representing payments made by the decedent prior to his death to 20 nephews and nieces in consideration of the promise of each to give him board and care for a period of ten months when requested by the decedent, and whether additional allowances should be made for expenses of administering the decedent's estate.

Findings of Fact

The petitioner is the duly appointed administrator of the estate of Charles W. Ford, who died intestate at Atlanta, Georgia, on July 18, 1941, at the age of 73 years. The estate tax return was filed with the collector for the district of Georgia. The decedent's wife died in 1939. He never remarried and never had any children. His nearest surviving relatives were certain nieces and nephews.

Between March 29, 1940, and April 2, 1940, the decedent transmitted by letter to each of 19 adult nieces and nephews, a check for $1,000, and a check for $750 to another niece, each accompanied by a form of receipt in decedent's handwriting. The decedent had previously loaned $250 to the niece who received the smaller payment and deducted this indebtedness from the check sent to her. The*266 receipts, reading as follows, were signed by the various payees of the checks and returned to the decedent by letter:

"Received of Charles W. Ford a check for One Thousand dollars for which I promise to board and care for the said Charles W. Ford for ten (10) months at any time in the future the said Charles W. Ford may desire the said board and care. Should the said Charles W. Ford not choose to take advantage of said board and care, then it is understood I will be relieved of any further obligations to the said Charles W. Ford his heirs and assigns."

The contents of the letters were substantially the same as the receipts, all of which receipts were in the possession of the decedent at the time of his death. The decedent did not discuss the payments with the payees of the checks before he mailed them.

The decedent never lived with any of the relatives to whom he made the payments, but he had visited with and was fond of them and they were friendly to him. They had homes of their own and were the only relatives of the decedent in a position to give him a home in the event he needed another one. One of them predeceased the decedent. Practically all of them lived outside of Georgia. *267 The decedent never made a demand for the board and care referred to in the receipts.

From the time his wife died until his death the decedent lived alone in a 7 or 8 room house he had acquired in 1936. He employed a housekeeper.

He was a very religious man, paid cash for what he purchased, and at the time of preparing the receipts for his nephews and nieces to sign, he remarked that he did not want to be under any obligations to any one, and that if he had to make his home with any one of them he wanted to feel that his board and care had been paid for in advance. His desire was to arrange matters so that he would always be welcome in the homes of the payees, if anything happened to him.

The decedent's health was good at the time he made the payments. The only serious illness suffered by him prior to his death occurred in about 1924 and involved an infection in a leg. The decedent was a jolly man and had a cheerful outlook on life. He had no physical impairments, had good hearing, wore glasses only to read with, took good care of himself, including his diet, and never complained of heart trouble or any other physical ailment. He drove his own automobile. Practically every day*268 for about 12 years prior to his death he walked from his home to his office, a distance of three or four miles, and frequently walked the return trip.

The decedent's business for about 20 years prior to his death was managing about 100 houses, which he owned and rented, principally to Negro tenants. He looked after the properties; did some of the repair work and gave instructions for other necessary work; collected rents; maintained desk space, in the office of a former business associate, from which he conducted his business activities; loaned money, and did his own bookkeeping.

Prior to his death decedent expressed his intentions of providing for the college education of a child then about 2 years of age. His plans were never carried out. About one and one-half years before he died the decedent discussed with a business associate the matter of making a will. At that time he remarked that he did not know how to make it, although he had been thinking of it and that he might execute one some time.

On the morning of his death, a very warm day, the decedent drove his automobile to one of his tenant houses where he worked from 9 o'clock until late in the afternoon making repairs*269 to the porch roof of the house and cutting down a tree about 10 inches in diameter and cutting up some of the limbs of the tree. After completing the work, he collapsed and died the same day in an ambulance enroute to a hospital. The coroner gave coronary occlusion as the primary cause of decedent's death. His surviving heirs-at-law were 25 nieces and nephews and children of two deceased nieces.

Decedent's parents celebrated their fiftieth wedding anniversary. Some of his brothers and sisters lived to be about 70 years of age.

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Related

Cain v. Commissioner
43 B.T.A. 1133 (Board of Tax Appeals, 1941)
Wright v. Commissioner
43 B.T.A. 551 (Board of Tax Appeals, 1941)
Tillotson v. Commissioner
44 B.T.A. 644 (Board of Tax Appeals, 1941)

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4 T.C.M. 321, 1945 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 264, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-charles-w-ford-citizens-southern-natl-bank-v-commissioner-tax-1945.