Estate of Lincoln v. Commissioner

1 T.C.M. 326, 1942 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 12
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedDecember 24, 1942
DocketDocket No. 107924.
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1 T.C.M. 326 (Estate of Lincoln 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 Lincoln v. Commissioner, 1 T.C.M. 326, 1942 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 12 (tax 1942).

Opinion

Estate of Alan M. Lincoln, Bankers Trust Company and Elizabeth H. Lincoln, as Executors of the Last Will and Testament of Alan M. Lincoln, Deceased v. Commissioner.
Estate of Lincoln v. Commissioner
Docket No. 107924.
United States Tax Court
1942 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 12; 1 T.C.M. (CCH) 326; T.C.M. (RIA) 42685;
12/24/1942.
*12 George Craven, Esq., 20 Exchange Place, New York City, for the petitioner. Clay C. Holmes, Esq., for the respondent.

DISNEY

Memorandum Findings of Fact and Opinion

DISNEY, Judge: This proceeding involves a deficiency in estate taxes, determined by the Commissioner in the amount of $8,325.65. The issues not settled by stipulation, and therefore remaining for decision are:

(1) Whether payments to the petitioners as executors, aggregating $21,874.13, comprise part of decedent's gross estate, or whether they constitute income of the estate;

(2) Whether, if the payments are includible in gross estate, there should be allowed as a credit against state tax liability the sum of $1,959.36 paid by the petitioners as income taxes;

(3) Whether $750, in cash and value of property set off by petitioners and delivered to the decedent's widow, should be allowed as a deduction from gross estate;

(4) Whether $400, the amount of a pledge to a church made by decedent in his lifetime and paid by petitioners since his death, should be allowed as a deduction from gross estate;

(5) Whether the proceeds of life insurance policies comprising the corpus of an inter vivos trust created by decedent*13 and includible in gross estate should be reduced, for estate tax purposes, by the amount of receiving commissions paid to the trustee; and

(6) Whether $250, the face amount of a promissory note payable to and held by the decedent at the time of his death, should be included in gross estate.

The parties have filed a stipulation of facts which we adopt and incorporate herein by reference. Such parts thereof as are necessary to an understanding of the issues are included in our findings of fact made from other evidence.

Findings of Fact

The petitioners are the executors of the will of Alan M. Lincoln, who died on December 7, 1937, a resident of Westchester County, New York. The estate tax return was filed with the collector of internal revenue for the fourteenth district of New York, on March 7, 1939. No election was made thereon to have valuation of the gross estate determined on the optional valuation date.

For many years, first as a salesman and later as a partner, the decedent had been associated with the firm of Clarke & Company of New York City, dealers in paper. At the time of his death he and Henry T. Eaton were the sole members of the firm. Their principal source of income*14 derived from the sale of paper manufactured by Crocker-Burbank & Co. Association, of Fitchburg, Massachusetts, for which the partnership was the major sales representative.

Up until about five years prior to decedent's death, Clarke & Company had merely purchased paper from the manufacturer and attempted to dispose of it at a higher price. A about that time, however, it was feared that the falling-off of business, as the result of a general economic depression, would make it unprofitable for the firm to continue operations in the manner theretofore followed. An oral agreement was entered into between Crocker-Burbank & Co. Association and Clark & Company by the terms of which the former agreed to pay to the latter whatever sums as would, together with its profits from other business, be sufficient to give it a fixed annual profit of $60,000. Profits from other business ordinarily ran from $7,000 to $8,000 a year and would not alone have been sufficient to meet expenses of the business. Although the agreement was no more than an informal understanding between the parties, terminable at the will of either, it remained in force at the time of death of the decedent.

The partnership agreement*15 between decedent and Eaton entitled the former to a two-thirds and the latter to a one-third share of net profits. Articles Fifth and Sixth provided that a Reserve for Doubtful Accounts should be created by setting aside one-half of one per cent of gross sales, and that, in the event of death of a partner, the reserve should be maintained and continued until full payment for the interest of the deceased was made, and that his estate should share in such reserve in the same proportion that the deceased partner would have shared had he lived, and for the same period that his estate should be entitled to share in the profits of the business.

Article Seventh of the agreement provided:

Seventh: In the event of the death of either of the parties hereto, the surviving partner shall have a period of four months from the date of death within which to decide whether to continue or to liquidate the business, his decision in this regard to be evidenced in writing signed by him and delivered to the representative of the deceased partner.

Should the surviving partner decide to liquidate the business, the business of the partnership shall be terminated upon the date of delivery of the aforesaid*16 writing signed by the surviving partner, and the surviving partner shall forthwith undertake the liquidation of the partnership as of that date, the interest of the deceased partner in the profits, and his right to interest upon his capital account to the date of such termination, and in the proceeds of liquidation, to be the same as though he were living, all such sums to be paid to his personal representative from time to time and as promptly as practicable and whenever funds are taken by the liquidating partner on account of his share.

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Bluebook (online)
1 T.C.M. 326, 1942 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-lincoln-v-commissioner-tax-1942.