Estate of Shelton v. Commissioner

68 T.C. 15, 1977 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 124
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedApril 11, 1977
DocketDocket No. 4674-73
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 68 T.C. 15 (Estate of Shelton 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 Shelton v. Commissioner, 68 T.C. 15, 1977 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 124 (tax 1977).

Opinion

Forrester, Judge:

Respondent has determined the following deficiencies in petitioner’s Federal income taxes:

Taxable Amount year of deficiency

1968. $4,446.33

1969. 8,139.57

1970 . 71,216.38

There are two issues for our decision: (1) Whether petitioner, the estate of a deceased, unrestricted Osage Indian, should be taxed on income from its headright shares of the Osage tribal mineral trust; and (2) whether a certain portion of the interest element of a refund of taxes paid by the estate of decedent’s mother, of which decedent was the sole residuary beneficiary, is includable in petitioner’s gross income pursuant to sections 61 and 451.1

FINDINGS OF FACT

Some of the facts have been stipulated and are so found.

Jacqueline E. Shelton (decedent) died on May 17, 1967, a resident of Wyandotte County, Kans. Donald C. Little (Little) and Johnnie Mohon (Mohon) qualified as coexecutors of decedent’s estate in the domiciliary probate proceedings in Kansas and ancillary proceedings in Oklahoma and Colorado. At the time of filing the petition herein, Little was a resident of Wyandotte County, Kans., and Mohon was a resident of Pawhuska, Okla. Little and Mohon filed U. S. Fiduciary Income Tax Returns (Form 1041) on behalf of petitioner for the taxable years 1968, 1969, and 1970 with the Internal Revenue Service Center, Austin, Tex.

Issue 1

Decedent was the daughter of Mary Jacqueline Elkins (Elkins) who died testate on June 8, 1932. Elkins died a restricted Indian of the Osage tribe because she had never received a certificate of competency.

As of the date of her death, decedent owned 10.77837 shares in the Osage tribal mineral trust (headrights). Decedent had inherited 8.5 Osage headrights from her mother and she purchased an additional 2.27837 Osage headrights through the Osage Indian Agency (agency) at Pawhuska, Okla.

Decedent was an unrestricted Osage Indian at the time of her death because she had received a certificate of competency on September 29, 1950. '

Under the Osage tribal mineral trust, the agency receives the gross mineral royalties from leases of the tribe’s mineral interests, deducts administrative expenses for management purposes and for operation of the Osage Tribal Council, and then divides the balance according to the various headright interests. Unrestricted Osage Indians receive the full amount allocated to their account on a quarterly basis since the agency has no authority to withhold any part of a quarterly headright payment from an unrestricted Osage Indian. Under certain circumstances, the agency can revoke a certificate of competency.

No Osage, whether restricted or unrestricted, may sell his headright, but any Osage may by will devise his headrights to a non-Indian whether or not related by blood, marriage, or adoption, and an Osage may purchase headright shares from a non-Osage who has inherited such shares.

During the taxable years 1968, 1969, and 1970, the agency reported to the coexecutors that headright income had been paid to petitioner in the following amounts:

1968. $23,180.34

1969. 22,755.48

1970. 20,080.39

On the Federal income tax returns which the coexecutors filed on behalf of petitioner for the taxable years 1968 and 1969, they included, in gross income, the headright income received in those years. On November 19, 1970, however, the coexecutors filed a refund claim (Form 843) requesting the repayment of all income taxes paid on behalf of petitioner for the taxable year 1968 on the theory that the headright income which they had included in gross income for 1968 was not taxable. Petitioner’s 1968 taxes were refunded with interest on February 17, 1971, and mailed directly to the Kansas domiciliary coexecutors. On May 20, 1971, the coexecutors filed an amended Federal income tax return on behalf of petitioner for the taxable year 1969. Such amended return for 1969, as well as the return filed for the taxable year 1970, did not include headright income in petitioner’s gross income for those years.2 In his statutory notice, respondent included such headright income in gross income for the years in question.

Issue 2

The superintendent of the agency and the executor of the estate of Mary Jacqueline Elkins, deceased (Elkins estate), filed a Federal estate tax return on which an assessment of $75,638.85 was made in April 1936.

In 1943, the United States Tax Court entered a stipulated decision that the total estate tax liability of the Elkins estate was $63,563.38 of which $330.19 had been paid, resulting in a deficiency of $63,233.19.

In March 1943, the superintendent of the agency paid under protest $69,408.82. Of such amount, $63,233.19 represented payment of the additional tax and $6,175.63 represented payment of interest thereon.

In 1969, there was a change in the position of the Internal Revenue Service (Service) regarding the Federal estate taxation of restricted Osage Indians and the Service announced that it would accept refund claims from those estates of restricted Indians which were affected by such change of position, regardless of when the Indians had died or when the estate tax returns for their estate had been filed. In September 1969, the agency filed a claim for refund of the estate tax paid on behalf of the Elkins estate.

In January 1970, the Internal Revenue Service paid $150,241.96 to the agency as a refund of Federal estate taxes paid on behalf of the Elkins estate. Of such amount, $57,663.54 was allocated to principal and $92,578.42 to interest. The full amount of such refund was credited by the agency to the Elkins estate’s account on January 12, 1970. Decedent was the sole residuary beneficiary under the will of Elkins, her mother. In a letter dated March 17, 1970, the superintendent of the agency advised petitioner’s coexecutors that, upon receipt of an additional coexecutors’ bond, the agency would disburse the Elkins estate’s tax refund to them as coexecutors of decedent’s Oklahoma ancillary probate estate. Little protested payment of the refund through the Oklahoma probate proceeding and asserted that it should be paid through the Kansas domiciliary proceeding.

On August 29, 1969, the law firms of Wilkinson, Cragun & Barker (Wilkinson) and Files & Mahan (Files) applied to the Secretary of the Interior for payment of legal fees for services rendered in obtaining Federal estate tax refunds paid to Osage Indians, including the refund to the Elkins estate, even though some of the beneficiaries of such refunds, such as petitioner, had not entered into contracts with these firms. The Secretary rejected the claims of the Wilkinson and Files firms and these firms subsequently informed the Secretary that they intended to seek a judicial determination of their entitlement to such fees.

Pending the outcome of such suit, the superintendent of the agency withheld 20 percent of the Elkins estate’s tax refund.

On August 13, 1974, pursuant to the judgment entered in the suit brought by Wilkinson and Files, the agency paid to these firms $378,457.72.

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Related

Green v. Commissioner
1993 T.C. Memo. 152 (U.S. Tax Court, 1993)
Estate of Poletti v. Commissioner
99 T.C. No. 29 (U.S. Tax Court, 1992)
Jourdain v. Commissioner
71 T.C. 980 (U.S. Tax Court, 1979)
Estate of Shelton v. Commissioner
68 T.C. 15 (U.S. Tax Court, 1977)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
68 T.C. 15, 1977 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-shelton-v-commissioner-tax-1977.