Estate of Wardwell v. Commissioner

301 F.2d 632
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedApril 5, 1962
DocketNo. 16799
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 301 F.2d 632 (Estate of Wardwell v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of Wardwell v. Commissioner, 301 F.2d 632 (8th Cir. 1962).

Opinion

RIDGE, Circuit Judge.

In this case the Tax Court ruled that a subscription made and paid by a taxpayer as a “room endowment” to the building fund of a charitable institution admittedly having a tax-exempt status under Section 501(c) (3) of I.R.C.1954, 26 U.S.C.A. § 501(c) (3), was not a “gift” within the ambit of Section 170 (c) (2), I.R.C.1954, 26 U.S.C.A. § 170(c) (2), because it was made with a “motive” and “expectancy” by the donor “to secure, room occupancy” and “benefits of an éeonomie nature” from the charitable institution to which the subscription was made. As a consequence the Tax Court sustained the Commissioner’s disallowance of any part thereof as a charitable deduction as claimed in an individual tax return made for that year, 1956.

The salient facts gleaned from the majority opinion1 of the Tax Court (35 T. C. 443) are these: Shortly after the death of her husband, Marjorie M. Ward-well, made invalid by Parkinson’s Disease, applied for admission in Friendship Haven, Inc., Fort Dodge, Iowa, a nonprofit, charitable corporation, organized in 1946 under the laws of the State of Iowa (hereinafter sometimes referred to as the “Home”). Friendship Haven, Inc. operates a home “for aged and infirm ministers and members of the Methodist Church, and any other persons of good moral character who would be at home in a Christian environment.” The Home has two buildings with five wings each. One wing of each building is for service facilities, such as the diningroom, hobbies and infirmary; the other four wings are [634]*634used for residence. Generally, applicants for admission must meet certain requirements, such as being sixty-five years of age,' of good moral character, and free from communicable disease. Usually an applicant makes written application for admission to the Home. The Home does not keep a waiting list of applicants. The time between the date of the admission application and actual admission varies due to limitation of facilities, time involved in making application, and the existence of an emergency situation such as an applicant being in dire need of special care as the Home furnishes.

July 8, 1956, a letter was sent to Friendship Haven, Inc. on behalf of Mrs. Wardwell, inquiring if it would be possible for her to be admitted to the Home. The Executive Director of the Home called on her. She was then an invalid, confined to her bed; — her two sons were in the Air Corps — and she was dependent upon hired help and the help of friends to care for her. The Director of Friendship Haven, Inc. personally discussed with Mrs. Wardwell the services offered and available at the Home. Mrs. Ward-well offered to transfer her home (sold in 1957 for $14,000.00) in return for life-care in the Home. That offer was rejected. It was then explained to her that “room endowments” were a feature of financing the building of the Home, but life-care contracts were not entered into by Friendship Haven, Inc.

On July 11, 1956, Mrs. Wardwell submitted an application in usual form for admission to the Home. July 19, 1956, she was informed that her application had been approved “subject to working out satisfactory arrangements.” In the letter so informing her it was stated that “it was rather felt that for you to give a room and pay your monthly care would be fairer to you and your estate. The Board wants to be fair and render service for payment received.” Mrs. Wardwell was not then sixty-five (65) years of age, and there were problems of personnel and space to be worked out before she could be admitted into the Home. One wing of Friendship Haven, Inc.’s West Building was then under construction.

Friendship Haven, Inc. conducted various fund-raising activities, amongst them, being the room-endowment plan. This, consisted of soliciting individuals to make endowments of $5,000.00 to endow a room in the East Building; and $7,500.00 to endow a room in the newer West Building. Such an endowment did not give the individual making it any property rights in Friendship Haven, Inc., nor in the room endowed. In the usual operation of the Home the endower or some person designated by him could have a name-plate placed on a room and could himself occupy, or designate someone else to occupy, that room, depending generally upon the facilities available when application for residence in the Home was made. It is conceded that such an endowment when made was to the Building Fund of the Home.

August 13, 1956, Mrs. Wardwell executed a Membership Agreement with Friendship Haven, Inc. by which the Home agreed to provide an unfurnished room for her, together with light, heat, board, laundry, and also nursing and infirmary care for which she was to pay $95.00 a month, plus an extra fixed charge for infirmary care. On the same date, she executed a subscription pledge to Friendship Haven, Inc. as follows:

“FRIENDSHIP HAVEN, INC.
Fort Dodge, Iowa.
August 13, 1956.
Northwood Iowa
Town State
“In consideration of the like promise of others, I promise to pay FRIENDSHIP HAVEN, INC., the sum of $7,-500.00 (Seven Thousand Five Hundred Dollars) upon the following terms and conditions:
“1. $750.00 (Seven Hundred Fifty and no/100 Dollars) will be paid on or before August 13, 1956, and the balance remaining will be paid on or before October 1, 1956.
[635]*635“2. It is my intention to give the full amount of this pledge to FRIENDSHIP HAVEN, INC. In the event of my death before it is fully paid I therefore agree that FRIENDSHIP HAVEN, INC., shall have a valid claim against my estate for any unpaid balance then remaining.
“Marjorie M. Wardwell Signature”

Payments were made on that pledge by Mrs. Wardwell or her Guardian as recited therein.

When Mrs. Wardwell applied for admission to Friendship Haven, Inc., she expressed the desire to spend one more Christmas in her home and enter Friendship Haven, Inc. in January of 1957. However, on September 4, 1956, her Guardian wrote a letter to the Home, inquiring “whether or not her room would be available by October 1, 1956, instead of January 1, 1957 as previously planned.” She entered the Home on September 29,1956. On September 28,1956, the day before she entered the Home, the remaining balance of $6,750.00 due October 1, 1956 by the terms of the pledge, was paid by her Guardian. Because of her physical condition at that time, Mrs. Wardwell was taken directly to the infirmary where she stayed until her death on March 31, 1959, with the exception of a few visits to the room she endowed, made in a wheel chair when she had a special nurse. Because she required infirmary care, Mrs. Wardwell paid Friendship Haven, Inc. $200.00 each month during her stay in the Home.

A federal income tax return for the year 1956 was timely filed for Mrs. Ward-well with the District Director of Internal Revenue at Des Moines, Iowa, reporting therein her income for the entire year 1956, and her husband’s income from January 1, 1956 to and including the date of his death on June 11, 1956. Among other deductions claimed in that return was a charitable deduction in the amount of $3,223.81 made to Friendship Haven, Inc. as a consequence of the $7,500.00 pledge paid as above, as reduced by statutory limitation of Section 170(b) (1), supra.

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Related

Estate of Monroe v. Commissioner
124 F.3d 699 (Fifth Circuit, 1997)
In Re Morton Shoe Co., Inc.
40 B.R. 948 (D. Massachusetts, 1984)
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518 F.2d 242 (Seventh Circuit, 1975)
Estate Of O. J. Wardwell
301 F.2d 632 (Eighth Circuit, 1962)

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Bluebook (online)
301 F.2d 632, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-wardwell-v-commissioner-ca8-1962.