Harvey v. United States

185 F.2d 463, 39 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1295, 1950 U.S. App. LEXIS 4309
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedNovember 30, 1950
Docket10110
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 185 F.2d 463 (Harvey v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harvey v. United States, 185 F.2d 463, 39 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1295, 1950 U.S. App. LEXIS 4309 (7th Cir. 1950).

Opinion

LINDLEY, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff, as executrix of the estate of her deceased husband, Arlington C. Harvey, filed an estáte tax return showing no tax due. The Commissioner assessed a deficiency in the amount of $32,151.30, which, with interest, she paid under protest. Her claim for refund having been rejected, she instituted suit in the District Court for recovery of the tax paid, and obtained judgment. The principal contention of the government on appeal is that the trial court erred in de *465 ciding that certain property held by plaintiff and her husband in joint tenancy came within the scope of the exception contained in Section 811(e) of the Internal Revenue Code, 26 U.S.C.A. § 811(e), and, consequently, was not part of the decedent’s taxable estate.

Section 811(e) provides that the gross estate of a decedent shall include the value at the time of his death of all property held as joint tenants by the decedent and any other person, “except such part thereof as may be shown to have originally belonged to such other person 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: Provided, That where such property or any part thereof, or part of the consideration with which such property was acquired, is shown to have been at any time acquired by such other person from the decedent for less than an adequate and full consideration in money or money’s worth, there shall be excepted only such part of the value of such property as is proportionate to the consideration furnished by such other person * *

The tax return disclosed that the decedent was, at the time of his death, joint owner with his wife of property of the value of $200,709.78. Plaintiff asserted the right to deduct $143,450 from the gross value, because of contributions made by the wife, out of “funds and property separately owned” by her, in acquisition of the jointly held property. However, the Commissioner determined that the entire value of the jointly owned property, $201,-859.78, should be included in the decedent’s gross estate, on the basis of his finding that all of the property was held in joint tenancy and that no part thereof had been shown to have belonged originally to the wife and never to have been received or acquired by her from the decedent for less than an adequate consideration in money or money’s worth.

The stipulation of facts and the District Court’s findings disclose that the decedent had, from time to time, made gifts of money and property to his wife, which, through successive investments, sales and reinvestments with resulting gains, had been transmuted into other property. The wife was at no time gainfully employed and had no property at the time of her marriage. In other words, the only assets acquired or owned by her were those given her by her husband, plus the profits and income produced by them, in either their original or converted forms, and the wife’s contributions toward acquisition of the property which she held in joint tenancy with her husband at the time of his death, of necessity, emanated from these sources. The jointly held property is not the gift property itself, in either its original or transmuted form, but property traceable to (1) the profits made through sales of the original gift property and successive reinvestments of the proceeds of such sales or (2) the rents, interest and dividends produced by such property in its original or converted form, while title thereto was in the wife. The question presented by this appeal, then, is whether such profits and income, realized from property originally received by the wife as a gift from her husband and traceable into property which was held by them as joint tenants at the time of the husband’s death, come within the exception to the requirement of Section 811(c) that the entire value of property held in joint tenancy shall be included in the decedent’s gross estate.

The District Court, disapproving the stand taken by the Commissioner, held the profits and income from the gift property to be within the exceptions set forth in Section 811(e), reasoning that profits on resale of property given to and thereafter owned by the wife, dividends on stock, rentals from real estate and interest on bonds, from all of which sources came the money and property contributed by the wife to the jointly held property, were “her own income”; that such profits and income, received by her when she held full title to the stocks, real estate, bonds and property which produced them, were not received or acquired by her from her husband within the meaning of Section 811-(e), but constituted accumulated income from property “separately owned” by decedent’s wife within the meaning of the *466 Code and Section 81.23 of Treasury Regulations 105.

If the government’s contention that the Commissioner correctly determined that the full value of the jointly owned property should have been included in the decedent’s gross estate for estate tax purposes is to prevail, it must show (1) that, at least for the purposes of Section 811(e) of the Internal Revenue Code, profits and income which are produced by gift property subsequent to the making of the gift do not belong “originally” to the donee but are “received or acquired” by her from the donor, for the statute expressly exempts such part of the jointly held property as “originally” belonged to the surviving joint tenant and was not “received or acquired”, by her from the decedent for less than an adequate and full consideration, or, in the alternative, (2) that the words “or produced by property which had been received or acquired” be read into the statute, so that the exception clause of Section 811(e) would read: “except such part thereof as may be shown to have originally belonged to such other person and never to have been received or acquired or produced by property which was received or acquired by the latter from the decedent for less than an adequate and full consideration in money or money’s worth * * * The cases relied on by the government fall short, we think, of establishing either of these postulates.

In Tyler v. United States, 281 U.S. 497, 50 S.Ct. 356, 74 L.Ed. 991, the Supreme Court, in sustaining- Sections 201, 202 and 401, 402, of the Revenue Acts of 1916 and 1921, the forerunners of the present Section 811(e) of the Internal Revenue' Code, against attacks of unconstitutionality, held only that it was not arbitrary, capricious or violative of the due process clause of the Fifth Amendment to require that there be included in the gross estate of a decedent the total value of the property held by him and another as tenants by the entirety, the specific property having come to the tenancy as a gift from the decedent. Dimock v. Corwin, 306 U.S. 363, 371-373, 59 S.Ct. 551, 83 L.Ed. 763, and Fernandez v. Weiner, 326 U.S. 340, 66 S.Ct. 178, 90 L.Ed. 116, likewise involve questions of constitutionality, the former holding that the statutory provision here involved was applicable and, when so applied, constitutional where the property held in joint tenancy had originally been received by the surviving joint tenant, prior to the passage of the statute,

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Bluebook (online)
185 F.2d 463, 39 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1295, 1950 U.S. App. LEXIS 4309, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harvey-v-united-states-ca7-1950.