Estate of Mulconroy v. Commissioner
This text of 1956 T.C. Memo. 170 (Estate of Mulconroy 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.
Opinion
Memorandum Findings of Fact and Opinion
TURNER, Judge: Respondent determined a deficiency in estate tax against the estate of Joseph J. Mulconroy, deceased, in the amount of $19,128.30. * The questions are whether the respondent erred (1) in including in decedent's gross estate 100 per cent of two United States Treasury Bonds, 50 per cent of which is claimed to have belonged to the decedent's sister, (2) in disallowing the deduction of $60,000, represented as a claim of the sister of the decedent; and (3) in disallowing the deduction of attorney's fees in the amount of $10,000. Petitioner asserts that because*123 of additional work of counsel primarily with respect to the estate tax matter, the attorney's fees, and the deduction therefor, should be increased. Other issues raised have been abandoned.
Findings of Fact
Virginia C. Mulconroy is the executrix of the will of her brother, Joseph J. Mulconroy, deceased, letters testamentary having been granted on May 3, 1949, by the Register of Wills at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. She is a resident of Philadelphia, as was Joseph J. Mulconroy, who died on April 17, 1949, in Philadelphia. The estate tax return was filed on July 18, 1949, with the collector of internal revenue for the first district of Pennsylvania.
Joseph was unmarried and he and Virginia lived in a home they jointly owned.
Joseph had not been in active business since 1942. Prior to 1942, he had operated a business of manufacturing high pressure hose and hose couplings. Originally the business was incorporated, and James J. Mulconroy, the father of Joseph and Virginia, was the controlling stockholder. The corporation was known as the*124 Mulconroy Hose Company. James also had two children by another marriage. At some undisclosed date, each of the four children received from their father a one-sixth interest in the corporation. The mother of Joseph and Virginia, after the death of her husband, owned one-third of the stock of the company, which she gave to Joseph and Virginia on some undisclosed date before her death, which occurred in 1935. Virginia permitted Joseph to keep her stock for her. On another date not shown, Virginia and Joseph purchased the interests of their two half sisters for $40,000, the payment being made "out of the business." At some time prior to 1936, the corporation was liquidated and the business and assets were taken over or acquired by Joseph, who thereafter operated the business as his individual enterprise until 1942, when he sold it.
The estate tax return showed a gross estate of $132,625, and a net estate of zero.
Petitioner reported as a part of the gross estate $7,500, representing one-half of a $5,000 2 1/2 per cent United States Treasury Bond, dated December 11, 1944, and one-half of a similar $10,000 bond, dated June 1, 1945, a statement being added that Virginia claimed that the*125 bonds belonged to her. On the return, the bonds were reported as payable to Joseph J. Mulconroy "or" Virginia C. Mulconroy. Respondent determined the value of the two bonds to be respectively $5,073.44 and $10,100, with accrued interest in the respective amounts of $11.12 and $84.72, all of which he determined as a part of the gross estate.
Among the deductions claimed on the return, and under "Debts of Decedent," was an item of $60,000 described as "Virginia C. Mulconroy, amount due her." The deduction so claimed was disallowed by the respondent in his determination herein, the stated ground being that "the evidence submitted does not prove that a valid debt existed."
Petitioner's counsel rendered routine services for the estate, and a reasonable remuneration therefor, which it is expected will be paid, is $2,500.
Opinion
The three adjustments made by respondent in his determination and now questioned by petitioner are questions of fact, and the burden of proving error rests on the petitioner.
With respect to the United States Treasury Bonds, the petitioner does not contest respondent's determination of value, but under the issue as pleaded, claims that the bonds belonged*126 one-half to Virginia and that the respondent accordingly erred in including the entire value thereof in the decedent's gross estate.
The bonds were issued to Joseph J. Mulconroy "or" Virginia C. Mulconroy, and under
Considering the great lapse of time between the withdrawal of the $15,000 on May 10, 1943, and the purchase of the bonds, we are unable to relate the withdrawal and the $15,000 so withdrawn to the purchase of the bonds.
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1956 T.C. Memo. 170, 15 T.C.M. 887, 1956 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-mulconroy-v-commissioner-tax-1956.