George F. Collins, Jr. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue

388 F.2d 353
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedMarch 7, 1968
Docket9260
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 388 F.2d 353 (George F. Collins, Jr. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
George F. Collins, Jr. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 388 F.2d 353 (10th Cir. 1968).

Opinion

HILL, Circuit Judge.

This petition for review is from a decision of the Tax Court of the United States determining that a transfer of certain shares of corporate stock by petitioner to his wife was, for Federal income tax purposes, a disposition of property and a taxable transaction.

The pertinent basic facts are not in dispute and may be summarized as follows: In 1942, petitioner, George F. Collins, Jr., married Beverly Lorton. Without question, Beverly brought property not exceeding $10,000.00 into the marriage. Petitioner, at that time, owned 167 shares of stock in the Liberty Glass Company and was in the process of inheriting a great number more shares of stock from the estate of his late father. Eventually, petitioner received 664 shares of common stock and 2,003 shares of preferred stock in Liberty from this estate. Because of the prosperity of the company stock dividends were declared from time to time and by 1951 petitioner owned a total of 132,960 shares of Liberty stock.

In 1959, Beverly filed suit against petitioner asking for divorce, a just and equitable division of the property jointly acquired between the parties during marriage, alimony and other relief. Immediately prior to the filing of this divorce suit the parties had entered into an agreement in writing wherein the purpose was stated “to finally and for all times settle and determine their property rights, any right of support and maintenance of Second Party by First Party, together with all other rights existing * * * growing out of their said marriage relation.”

Beverly was granted a divorce, the property settlement agreement was approved by the court and pursuant thereto petitioner transferred 26,592 shares of Liberty Glass stock to Beverly. All of the other provisions of the agreement *354 were complied with. Petitioner did not consider the transfer of the stock to be a taxable transaction but the respondent, in 1965 sent petitioner a notice of deficiency because of the transaction and this litigation resulted. In the Tax Court petitioner urged that there should be no deficiency because the transfer was in recognition of property rights and thus not a taxable event and in any event the deficiency as found by the Commissioner was based on a gain of $880,184.81 whereas the actual gain was no more than $458,840.81. The Tax Court found that there was a taxable disposition but that the Commissioner’s deficiency was too high and lowered the amount of the deficiency to $128,006.20. 1

Petitioner bottoms his case upon an Oklahoma statute, 12 Okl.Stat.Ann. § 1278, 2 and the numerous Oklahoma Supreme Court decisions interpreting the statute. He contends that this statute gives each spouse a vested interest in property jointly acquired during their marriage and the extent of that vested interest shall be determined by the court in any action brought to terminate the marriage relationship.

The Commissioner seeks to sustain the decision of the Tax Court by arguing that the Oklahoma statute did not vest any property right in petitioner’s spouse prior to the divorce decree; that her marital rights did not resemble those of co-ownership; she had no descendible interest in the stock; she could not have prevented the disposition of the stock by the husband at any time prior to the divorce; she had no claim to a fixed percentage of the property but the extent of her claim was subject to a judicial determination of what was “just and reasonable”; and, that determination depended upon factors other than her efforts during the marriage to enhance the value of the property, e. g., her needs, her station in life, costs of educating the children, etc.

A very similar situation was presented to the Supreme Court in United States v. Davis, 370 U.S. 65, 82 S.Ct. 1190, 8 L.Ed.2d 335. The Supreme Court noted that the controlling statutory language 3 is too general to include or exclude conclusively the transaction presently in issue. The argument presented there was basically the same as that presented in the instant case. The taxpayer claimed that the disposition of the property was a division of jointly owned property and thus non-taxable while the government contended that the disposition was more in the nature of a taxable transfer of property in exchange for the release of an independent legal obligation. The facts of the Davis case show that the taxpayer and his wife made a voluntary property settlement and separation agreement calling for support payments to the wife and minor child in addition to the transfer of certain personal property to the wife. In question was an item of 1,000 shares of Dupont stock specifically called a “division in settlement of their property.” The divorce and property settlement were pursuant to Delaware law. The Supreme Court found that the transaction was not *355 a division of property by co-owners but was merely a satisfaction of a burden placed on the husband’s property. 4 The court went on to note that to hold the disposition taxable would be in accord with decisions of the Tax Court and various Circuit Courts.

This court applied United States v. Davis in Pulliam v. C.I.R., 10 Cir., 329 F.2d 97. In so doing the court looked at Colorado’s law relative to the wife’s interests and found the liability of the husband leading to the division of property was “more in the nature of a personal obligation” and thus a taxable disposition.

There is no dispute but that we must, as the Supreme Court did in the Davis case and this court did in Pulliam v. C.I.R., supra, look to the state law controlling the disposition of the property to determine the exact nature of that disposition for tax characteristic purposes. It is petitioner’s contention in the instant case that an examination of the pertinent Oklahoma law reveals that the disposition was the division of jointly owned property.

Oklahoma is not a community property state, nonetheless petitioner argues that Oklahoma by statutory command has created unique rights in the partners to the marriage that resemble those found in the community property states. The statute in question, 12 Okl.Stat. Ann. § 1278, 5 has received considerable comment in Oklahoma cases although only inferentially do the majority of these cases benefit us in determining the actual rights established by the statute. One of the earliest Oklahoma cases that considers the effect of section 1278 is Thompson v. Thompson, 70 Okl. 207, 173 P. 1037. Therein the court states that the statute regards property of married persons as falling into two classes, separate and “property which has accumulated by the business side of the marriage. This latter character of property, very similar in conception to community property of the community property states, is regarded as being held as a species of common ownership.” Id. at 1038. The tenor of the Oklahoma cases dealing with this problem is that the division is of jointly owned property and is to be considered separate from the husband’s obligations of alimony and support and maintenance.

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Bluebook (online)
388 F.2d 353, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/george-f-collins-jr-v-commissioner-of-internal-revenue-ca10-1968.