Estate of Schneider v. Comm'r

29 T.C. 940, 1958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 251
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedFebruary 25, 1958
DocketDocket Nos. 54289, 54290, 54291, 54292, 54293, 54294, 54295, 54296
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 29 T.C. 940 (Estate of Schneider v. Comm'r) 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.

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Estate of Schneider v. Comm'r, 29 T.C. 940, 1958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 251 (tax 1958).

Opinion

OPINION.

Van Fossan, Judge:

The first issue is that of fraud. Eespondent urges that the decedent filed a false and fraudulent return for each of the years 1944 through 1950. The establishment of fraud in each particular year is essential to further consideration of the case for that year. If there was no fraud, the statute of limitations has run against any deficiency which may exist.3

To establish fraud by direct proof of intention is seldom possible. Usually it must be gleaned from the several transactions in question and the conduct of the taxpayer relative thereto. M. Rea Gano, 19 B.T.A. 518, 532.

Respondent reconstructed decedent’s income for the years in question by the net worth method. A net worth statement introduced and supported by the respondent at the trial differed from the statement attached to the notice of deficiency. We accept the later computation as superseding the original determination.

All items in the respondent’s present calculation were stipulated or determined from exhibits in evidence, with the exception of the opening and closing balances of decedent’s checking account and several personal expenditures. The opening balance was estimated from a transcript of the account beginning July 29, 1944. The closing balance was determined from working papers which reconciled the opening and closing balances. Miscellaneous personal expenditures were estimated.

Petitioners urge that decedent’s personal and nondeductible expenses were reflected in his returns and should not be added to net income as reported. However, estimates of personal expenses made by the respondent when computing decedent’s income were inclusive of, rather than additional to, amounts reflected in decedent’s returns.

Decedent’s net income, as computed by respondent, exceeded net income as reported for each of the tax years in question. During the years 1944 through 1947 this discrepancy was particularly large.

Petitioners urge that apparent increases in net worth were due not to unreported income but rather to the transfer of assets held by decedent prior to 1944. Requests by the respondent for information as to the nature and amount of these prior-held assets elicited no response from petitioners, nor has any evidence been introduced tending to confirm their existence. Had the decedent possessed such assets and revealed the amount and nature thereof he might have disclosed the savings banks accounts or otherwise convicted himself of fraudulent conduct in failing to file returns in the years when he made no return.

Other facts cast further doubt upon the tenability of petitioner’s contentions. In keeping with decedent’s attitude in reporting prior to 1943, his annual net income could not have exceeded $3,500. In 1943 his reported net income was $5,398. Decedent carried six life insurance policies. In 1932 and some subsequent years premiums amounted to $1,634.34 annually, such sum being more than half of his reported net income. Moreover, between 1939 and 1942 he borrowed $10,266 against these life insurance policies.

Decedent’s professional activities were presumptively recorded on patient cards. However, the admissions records of Beth Israel Hospital, which he patronized exclusively, establish that the number of his patients admitted to the hospital in 1946 and 1947 greatly exceeded the number recorded on his patient cards for those years. Examination of the 27 claims paid decedent by a prepayment medical care plan throughout 1949 and 1950 reveals that in 17 cases decedent’s fee listed on the claims exceeded the fee recorded on his patient cards. In some instances the differential amounted to $50. Clearly, the patient cards do not accurately reflect decedent’s earnings or income.

We conclude, on the whole record, that respondent has not only negatived the existence of any substantial assets held by decedent prior to January 1, 1944, but also has shown a source from which the net worth increases might well have flowed, i. e., unrecorded professional earnings. In the absence of contrary evidence we accept as correct respondent’s revised net worth computations. Holland v. United States, 848 U. S. 121 (1954).

The decedent repeatedly informed internal revenue agents, auditing his income tax returns for 1945, 1946, and 1947, that he had no bank account other than a checking account at the Corn Exchange Bank and Trust Company and that this account represented all his taxable income. This statement was absolutely and knowingly false. In actuality, he had unrevealed cash in 37 different savings banks totaling $120,017.53 on December 31,1947.

Eighty-three of the 84 deposit slips used by decedent to make deposits in his checking account in the Corn Exchange Bank and Trust Company between January 4 and December 26, 1947, show deposits of checks only. In the same period he made 71 deposits in savings accounts, only 4 of which contained checks, the remaining 67 being in currency. No explanation is offered for this segregation of checks and currency.

During 1944,1945,1946, and 1947 Schneider deposited large sums in 37 savings accounts in 37 different savings banks, in trust for various individuals. Such accounts are commonly known as Totten trusts. Totten trusts are tentative and revocable at will until the depositor dies or completes the gift in his lifetime by some unequivocal act or declaration, such as permanent delivery' of the passbook or notice to the beneficiary. If the trustor dies without revocation the presumption arises that an absolute trust was created as to the balance on hand at the death of the depositor. In re Totten, 179 N. Y. 112, 71 N. E. 748 (1904).

Petitioners urge that decedent delivered the passbooks of these Totten trust accounts to Catherine Smith and Jules Schneider, and thereby made the trusts irrevocable. Catherine Smith testified that after each of the 11 trusts was established for her, Schneider gave her the passbook and that she at all times retained possession of it, keeping it under lock and key. She further stated that she made no withdrawals from these accounts. As a matter of banking practice in New York she, as a beneficiary, could not have made withdrawals during decedent’s lifetime.

Among an aggregate of 11 withdrawals, totaling $13,767.66, from the various trust accounts, 2 withdrawals — 1 of $1,000 and another of $3,600 — were made, prior to decedent’s death, from separate trust accounts established by decedent for Catherine Smith. Notation of these withdrawals was entered in the passbooks. The inference is inescapable that the withdrawals were made by decedent and that he must have had possession of the passbooks at the time of the withdrawals. This inference is in direct conflict with Catherine Smith’s testimony; therefore, we find it impossible to give credence to her testimony as to decedent’s action and the ownership of the accounts. We conclude that by the very act of making withdrawals decedent demonstrated that he regarded the trusts as still owned by him and revocable by him at any time. Attention is also called to the corroborating fact that the administratrix, in preparing the estate tax return, enumerated the savings bank accounts and stated that—

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29 T.C. 940, 1958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-schneider-v-commr-tax-1958.