Gilkey v. Tax Commission

280 N.W. 406, 228 Wis. 297, 1938 Wisc. LEXIS 186
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJune 21, 1938
StatusPublished

This text of 280 N.W. 406 (Gilkey v. Tax Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gilkey v. Tax Commission, 280 N.W. 406, 228 Wis. 297, 1938 Wisc. LEXIS 186 (Wis. 1938).

Opinion

FaiRCHILd, J.

The board of review, the commission, and the circuit court reached variant results in this case not because they differed as to the facts, but because they followed different theories of the law.

The board of review was influenced by the case of Hoeper v. Tax Comm. (1931) 284 U. S. 206, 216, 52 Sup. Ct. 120, 76 L. Ed. 248, in which the United States supreme court determined that an assessment of income tax against a husband, computed on the combined total of his income and that of his wife, as required by a Wisconsin statute, was in [300]*300violation of the due-process and equal-protection clauses of the Fourteenth amendment. In that case the court said:

“Under the law of Wisconsin the income of the wife does not at any moment or to any extent become the property of the husband. He never has any title to it, or controls any part of it. That income remains hers until the tax is paid, and what is left continues to be hers after that payment. The state merely levies a tax upon it. What Wisconsin has done is to tax as a joint income that which under its law is owned separately and thus to secure a higher tax than would be the sum of the taxes on the 'separate incomes.”

Looking to the trust instrument, the board conclúded that the father had parted with his property completely, and that the income from the trust, since it was the individual income of the son, could not, under the rule in the Hoeper Case, be added to that of the father. It therefore concluded that the additional assessment was void.

The commission reversed the board without writing an opinion in support of its decision. It appears to have been influenced by an argument which the assessor made in a brief submitted to the board, which was as follows:

“The provisions of the above paragraph make it possible for George L. Gilkey, as father of a minor child, to benefit to the extent of ,$5,000 from the earnings of the property of the minor child. If it were not for this provision of the. trust, it would be necessary for George L. Gilkey, as father, to expend a sum sufficient for the care, support and education of his son from his private income.. The fact that this sum may be expended from the income of the minor child by the express provision of the trust confers a distinct benefit to the taxpayer, George L. Gilkey, and also confers a degree of control over the income of the trust up to $5,000. We believe that that provision in the trust makes a distinct difference between the Hoeper Case above referred to and the case now at hand.”

The circuit court found that the sum of $5,000 which Gilkey took in 1931 was not in excess of expenditures previ[301]*301ously made by Gilkey as an individual for the car.e, support, education, and maintenance of his minor son, then aged sixteen years, and that the payment was made and intended as, a reimbursement for such advances. The court concluded that this $5,000 was therefore a reimbursement rather than income.

Upon the appeal to this court, the commission has relied upon Douglas v. Willcuts (1935), 296 U. S. 1, 10, 56 Sup. Ct. 59, 80 L. Ed. 3, and upon Helvering v. Schweitzer (1935), 296 U. S. 551, 56 Sup. Ct. 304, 80 L. Ed. 389, a memorandum opinion reversing Schweitzer v. Comm’r (C. C. A., 7th Cir. 1935), 75 Fed. (2d) 702. Counsel for the taxpayer have attempted to distinguish the Douglas Case and have relied upon the Hoeper Case.

In Douglas v. Willcuts there was a trust agreement between Douglas and his wife, who secured a divorce shortly after the trust was created. Income of the trust was to go to Mrs. Douglas in lieu of alimony, but under the law' of Minnesota, where the parties were divorced, the whole arrangement was subject to> the control of the court. The federal tax officials determined that Douglas. should include in his taxable income the amount of income paid to- Mrs. Douglas under the provisions of the trust, because he was receiving the benefit of that income through the discharge of his legal obligation to support his divorced wife.. This view was sustained by the court, which ruled that certain provisions of the statute, relating to income from trust estates, were inapplicable, saying:

“These provisions have appropriate reference to cases where the income of the trust is no longer to be regarded as that of the settlor, and we find no warrant, for a construction which would preclude the laying of the tax against the one who through the discharge of his obligation enjoys the benefit of the income as though he had personally received it.”

[302]*302That case appears to be distinguishable from the present because the Douglas trust was subject tO' the control of the court, and any excess income beyond that necessary to discharge the husband’s obligation was to be paid to him. Upon death of the divorced wife, the corpus was to revert to the husband. In the present case, the trust estate is clearly and irrevocably the property of Gilkey’s son. We might dis-' tinguish the Douglas Case because of that fact, if it were not for the Schweitzer Case which we have mentioned above.

In the Schweitzer Case there was a trust set up by a father for the support, maintenance, and education of his minor children. Upon arriving at a certain age, the children were to receive equal portions of the estate, and the trusts were revocable only with the consent of the wife, who' had a contingent interest in th§ remainder. The circuit court of appeals concluded that the corpus of this trust really belonged to the children, and that the income of the trust was not taxable to the father. It distinguished the Douglas Case, which had not yet been decided by the supreme court, and refused to accept the doctrine of the circuit court in that case with respect to a benefit from the discharge of a legal obligation. But upon appeal taken in both cases, the United States supreme court affirmed the Douglas decision and reversed the Schweitzer decision in a memorandum which cited the Douglas Case as controlling.

While the Douglas Case is not binding upon this court in the present controversy, we think that its reasoning may well be applied to the facts here presented. It appears from the terms of the trust agreement that Gilkey contemplated the application of trust income to the discharge of his legal obligation to support and educate his minor son. Clearly, it was his duty to1 support and educate him in a manner consistent with the circumstances of the family. Upon Gilkey’s own testimony, it appears that the $5,000 which was allocated to [303]*303the son was no more than his fair share of the total expense of the family for the year 1931, and that the sums expended for the minor’s benefit were no greater than might have been expected under the circumstances. It is therefore clear that Gilkey received a benefit from the money taken from the trust estate.

There is another consideration which convinces us that the $5,000 which Gilkey took in 1931 must be regarded as income to him, in spite of the fact that it was no more than he had actually expended for the support and education of his son.

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Related

Hoeper v. Tax Comm'n of Wis.
284 U.S. 206 (Supreme Court, 1931)
Douglas v. Willcuts
296 U.S. 1 (Supreme Court, 1935)
Burke v. . Turner
85 N.C. 500 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1881)
Helvering v. Schweitzer
296 U.S. 551 (Supreme Court, 1935)
Abrams v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co.
106 N.W. 1091 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1906)
Guardianship of Thienhaus
185 N.W. 531 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1921)

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Bluebook (online)
280 N.W. 406, 228 Wis. 297, 1938 Wisc. LEXIS 186, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gilkey-v-tax-commission-wis-1938.