Fox v. Rothensies

115 F.2d 42, 25 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 916, 1940 U.S. App. LEXIS 2786
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedSeptember 30, 1940
Docket7284
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 115 F.2d 42 (Fox v. Rothensies) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fox v. Rothensies, 115 F.2d 42, 25 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 916, 1940 U.S. App. LEXIS 2786 (3d Cir. 1940).

Opinion

CLARK, Circuit Judge.

The trial of the case in the District Court reflects a confused procedure. The confusion inheres in the diversity of the taxpayer’s remedies and forums. He can sue the Collector personally as at common law (clearly anachronistic and circumlocutory), 1 he can sue the United States in the Court of Claims, 2 or in the District Court sitting (within a financial limitation) as a Court of Claims, 3 and he can avail himself of a petition to a quasi-judicial body, the Board of Tax Appeals. 4

These varying procedures may and do give rise to varying results for both a practicable and a theoretical reason. Practically, the preparation and trial of tax cases may and does vary with their conduct by the prosecuting and the tax branches of the Department of Justice respectively. Theoretically, their decision may and does vary with the state of the law upon the true province of the fact trier. We illustrate in both aspects from the case at bar. The taxpayer selected as her remedy and forum a suit against the Collector in the District Court. By choosing this ancient and anomalous action she preserved her right to a jury, Bickford, Court Procedure in Federal Tax Cases (Rev.Ed.), above cited, p. 157. Had she not waived it, she might have further complicated the fact finding problem, Holmes and Brewster’s Federal Tax Appeals, above cited, pp. 368, 369.

By concession, the tax turns on certain transfers of cash and real estate as be *43 tween a husband and wife. The questioq arises under section 302 (e) of the Revenue Act of 1926, 26 U.S.C.A. Int.Rev. Code, § 811 (e), which requires the inclusion in a decedent’s estate for purposes of estate tax of property held by entireties except such part thereof as may be shown to have originally belonged to the surviving spouse “and never to have been received or acquired by the latter from the decedent for less than an adequate and full consideration in money or money’s worth”. The wife acquired (by inheritance) certain monies which she kept as her separate estate in a Philadelphia bank. The husband owned, from 1901 to 1931, a certain country place in which both they and their sons (now, with their mother, executors of their father.’s estate) lived. From 1913 through 1921, the wife expended $12,000 of her separate principal, and at minimum, $36,000 of her separate income for the upkeep of the household and the schooling of the two children. The phenomenon of 1929 brought about the usual decline in the husband’s fortune and in 1931 he conveyed the country place, appraised for this suit at $40,000, through a straw man to himself and his wife as tenants by entireties. This conveyance, according to one son and the family lawyer, occurred after, and so probably as the result of, some intramural difficulty.

This recital imports a certain vagueness. We are dealing with bank accounts in a named bank and the use of the money deposited therein. Yet, the testimony offered is entirely oral and the government makes no attempt to compel a surely existing documentary corroboration. This, in spite of the fact that the witness wife is constrained to recall the source, purpose, and minutiae of cash disbursements occurring some 26 years previously. We think that the United States Attorney might well have spared her that burden and the learned district judge and ourselves that disadvantage.

Nor are the findings of fact and conclusions of law of much more assistance. The pertinent ones (finding of fact #11 and conclusion of law #2) are substantially in haec verba. That they should be so illustrates the artificial character of the whole procedure as now prescribed. 5 6That was not, however, really in controversy. The testimony of the wife, her sons, and their lawyer, relates what actually happened. That actual happening appears in the examination of the widow:

“Q. There was no understanding at all when you first made the payment with your husband, was there? A. No.
“Q. In other words, the deed of the transfer of the property is when he said he wanted to repay you back for what you had done? A. Yes.”

Record p. 17

and in the reiterated use by her, R. 14, and by her sons J. L. and C. P. Fox, R. 22, 26, of the word “reimburse” and by her, R. 14, and the family solicitor, R. 29, of the cognate “compensate”. We inserted the phrase “so far as they were allowed to go” for the reason that we do not understand the exclusion of statements of the dead father. We are quite cognizant of the statutory provision making this much criticized 6 rule part of the law of Pennsylvania, 28 P.S. § 322. We had never heard, however, that it applied to inheritance tax proceedings in Pennsylvania 7 or anywhere else. 8 The witnesses’ interest is obviously in favor rather than adverse to the estate. As the plaintiff-appellants’ exception is not pressed, we pass the point.

. What was in dispute was not an express agreement, of any kind, but the existence or non-existence of an implied agreement. As to this both the findings *44 and the opinion are silent. The legal potency of such agreements has been long acknowledged. 9 Sir Henry Maine in his Ancient Law defined them as follows : 10 " * * * In implied contracts, acts and circumstances are the symbols of the same ingredients which are symbolized, in express contracts, by words; and whether a man employs one set of symbols or the other must be a matter of indifference so far as concerns the theory of agreement.” Pages 343-346 (4th Ed.).

The circumstances here are a biological difference and a relationship arising out of that difference. The law has recognized, first, that certain consequences, physical, mental, and emotional, flow from the difference and, second, that the marriage relationship based on the difference does, by way of action and reaction, itself accentuate those consequences. The illustrations are too numerous for exhaustive mention. We list, under their appropriate tag, some specific rules that come to mind. They are: 11 common disaster, independent advice (in this case even pre-marital), husband's coercion to wife’s crime, husband’s liability for wife’s torts, necessaries, and support even after divorce, a married woman’s capacity to contract, to hold separate property, and as an accommodator on negotiable paper. Any understanding

of these rules requires the acknowledgment of three factors. Any one of them may place its ratio decidendi upon more than one consequence and upon the impact of the relationship thereon. Although the difference is static, the lawmakers’ conception thereof may shift and finally, the rule may be ironclad or it may be bottomed on probabilities and so speak in their legal equivalent, rebuttable presumptions. 12

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Bluebook (online)
115 F.2d 42, 25 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 916, 1940 U.S. App. LEXIS 2786, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fox-v-rothensies-ca3-1940.