Harmon v. Commissioner

1 T.C. 40, 1942 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 36
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedNovember 18, 1942
DocketDocket No. 108657
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 1 T.C. 40 (Harmon 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
Harmon v. Commissioner, 1 T.C. 40, 1942 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 36 (tax 1942).

Opinion

OPINION.

Smith, Judge:

Our first question is whether the petitioner and his wife, having made a statutory election to come under the Community Property Law of the State of Oklahoma, effective November 1, 1939, are entitled to report separately their respective shares of community income and deductions pertaining thereto for the period November 1 to December 31,1939.

In the State of Oklahoma, unlike the other community property states, the community property law applies only to husbands and wives who have filed their written election to come under its terms. The pertinent provisions of the community property statutes are found in Title 32, Oklahoma Statutes Annotated, sections 51 to 65, inclusive. Sections 51 and 52 read in part as follows:

Sec. 51. Community Property Law — Election to Come Under Act.
This Act shall be available only to and apply only to husbands and wives and to their property for a period of time from the first day of the month in any year subsequent to their filing their written election to come under the terms of this Act until either an absolute decree of divorce is rendered dissolving their marriage, or until the death of one of them. Laws 1939, page 356, Sec. 1.
Sec. 52. Election to Come Under Act, Form of — Filing.
The written election to come under the terms of this Act, referred to irrSection 1 of this Act, shall be a written instrument signed and acknowledged in duplicate by both husband and wife, stating in substance that they desire to avail themselves of the Act and have same apply to them and to their property on the first day of the next month in any year subsequent to the filing thereof in both the office of the county clerk and the Secretary of State as hereinafter provided. * * * Laws 1939, page 356, Sec. 2.

Sections 53 and 54 provide that all property, both real and personal,- of the husband or wife owned or claimed by them before the effective date of the election.to come under the terms of the community property law, as provided in section 1, and that acquired afterwards by gift, by division of community property, by devise, or by descent, as also “the increase of all lands thus owned or acquired,” shall be their separate property subject to the control of such owner. Section 56 provides in part that:

Sec. 56. Property Deemed Community or Common Property — Control—Bank Deposits.
All property acquired by the husband or the wife after the effective date of the election to come under the terms of the Act as provided in Section 1 of this Act, except that which is separate property of either one or the other, shall be deemed the community or common property of the husband and the wife and each, subject to the provisions of this Act, shall be vested with an undivided one-half interest therein. The wife shall have the management and control and may dispose of that portion of the community property consisting of her earnings, all rents, interest, dividends, incomes and other profits for her separate estate and all other community property the title to which stands in her name. The husband shall have the management and control and may dispose of all other community property, * * * Laws 1939, page 357, Sec. 6.

Section 57 provides that the separate property of the spouses and the community property standing in the name of and subject to the management, control, and disposition of each shall be subject to the debts of such spouse but not to the debts of the other. Section 59 provides that either spouse may sell his or her interest in the community property to the other. Section 60 provides that upon the dissolution of the marriage by decree of court the community property shall be divided between the spouses in such proportions as the court shall deem just and equitable. Section 65 provides:

Sec. 65. Death of Spouse — Administration of Community Property — Interests of Survivor — Homestead.
Upon the death of the husband or the wife, the surviving spouse shall administer all community property in the same manner and with the same duties, privileges and authority as are vested in a surviving partner to administer and settle the affairs of a partnership upon the death of the other partner, as provided by Section 1197, Oklahoma Statutes 1931; provided that the surviving husband or wife shall not be disqualified from .acting as executor or administrator of the estate of the deceased husband or wife; and provided further, that the survivor of the husband or wife shall pay out- of the community property, except the homestead and exempt property, all debts of the community, whether created by the husband or the wife; and provided further, that when all debts of the community shall have been fully satisfied the survivor shall transfer and convey to the administrator or executor of the deceased one-half of the community property remaining to be administered and distributed as other property of the estate either subject to the terms of the will of the deceased or under the laws of descent and distribution as the case may be, and thereafter all the interest of the surviving partner in said community property shall be that of a tenant in common; and provided further, that any interest in a homestead so conveyed shall not be subject to administration under the laws of this state, except in the manner provided by law at the time of the enactment of this Act. Laws 1939, page 300, Sec. 15.

The Oklahoma community property law is said to be patterned after the Texas community property statutes (see Vernon’s Civil Statutes of the State of Texas Annotated, Revision of 1925, Title 75, ch. 3) and in some of its provisions bears a close resemblance to the community property law of that state and those of the other community property states. The election provisions contained in section 51 above, however, are not found in the statutes of any other state. It is chiefly in reliance upon this dissimilarity of the state statutes, that is, the election privilege offered by the Oklahoma statutes, that the Commissioner seeks to distinguish this case from such cases as Poe v. Seaborn (Wash.), 282 U. S. 101; Hopkins v. Bacon (Tex.), 282 U. S. 122; Goodell v. Koch (Ariz.), 282 U. S. 118; Bender v. Pfaff (La.), 282 U. S. 127; and United States v. Malcolm (Cal.), 282 U. S. 792. The cited cases hold that under the community property laws of the respective states a husband and wife each has a vested one-half interest in the community income which they can each report in his separate income tax return.

The Commissioner terms the statutory election which petitioner and his wife made to come under the Oklahoma community property law an “anticipatory arrangement” such as the Supreme Court held in Lucas v. Earl, 281 U. S. 111, to be ineffective to shift the tax burden on the husband’s earnings to the wife. The Commissioner’s position is that the rule of Poe v.

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Harmon v. Commissioner
1 T.C. 40 (U.S. Tax Court, 1942)

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Bluebook (online)
1 T.C. 40, 1942 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harmon-v-commissioner-tax-1942.