Heide v. Commissioner

8 T.C. 314, 1947 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 283
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedFebruary 17, 1947
DocketDocket No. 9093
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 8 T.C. 314 (Heide 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
Heide v. Commissioner, 8 T.C. 314, 1947 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 283 (tax 1947).

Opinions

OPINION.

Black, Judge'.

The Commissioner has determined a deficiency of $1,528.48 in petitioner’s income tax for the year 1943. The deficiency is due to the Commissioner’s action in disallowing as a deduction a payment of $3,000 which the petitioner made in the taxable year as a surcharge in connection with his trusteeship in four trusts. The adjustment is explained in the deficiency notice as follows:

(a) It Is held that the deduction of $3,000.00 claimed for surcharge paid in connection with judicial settlement of trust accounts is not allowable under section 23(a)(2) of the Internal Revenue Code as amended. It is held, further, that no deduction in respect thereof is allowable under the provisions of any other subsection of section 23 of the Internal Revenue Code as amended.

Petitioner, by an appropriate assignment of error, contests the correctness of this adjustment made by the Commissioner. On account of the “forgiveness” feature of the income tax laws of the periods involved, the deficiency has been determined for the year 1943 although the deduction involved was claimed for 1942.

The facts have been stipulated and we adopt them as our findings of fact. They may be summarized as follows:

The petitioner resides in New York City and filed his tax returns for the years 1942 and 1943 with the collector for the second district of New York.

The petitioner is an executive of a candy manufacturing business in New York City. That is his only business.

The petitioner and his three brothers were cotrustees in each of four trusts created in 1914 by the petitioner’s father. The income from each of the four trusts was to be paid to one of the four sisters of the petitioner. Each trust was to terminate upon the death of its respective beneficiary and the corpus is then to be distributed generally to the heirs of that beneficiary. Under the trust instruments the ti-ustees were authorized to manage and handle the corpus of each trust, to invest funds, collect dividends and other income, and distribute same according to the trust provisions.

From the time of the assumption of the duties of the trust to 1938, the petitioner and his cotrustees had collected no fees or commissions for services to the trust estates and had made no accounting of their affairs. On November 25, 1939, the four cotrustees instituted proceedings in the Supreme Court of the State of New York in each of said trusts for an intermediate accounting for the period April 13, 1914, to December 31, 1938, but each proceeding was subsequently extended into a final accounting for these trustees. In their accounts the four trustees made claim for commissions on income and principal which they alleged were due from each of the four trusts.

In the accounting proceedings objections to the proposed accounts were filed by certain remaindermen and by the special guardian appointed by the court to protect the interests of infant and incompetent remaindermen. These objections in general related to (a) allegations that certain of the trust securities had been improvidently and negligently exchanged or held after depreciation and default, and (b) the trustees’ method of computing principal commissions and their failure to take or reserve certain of the income commissions. The New York Supreme Court referred the four proceedings to a referee to take and state the accounts, to hear the objections, and to report thereon to the court. After extensive and protracted hearings before the referee, the parties to the proceedings entered into stipulations of settlement which provided, among other things, for (a) the withdrawal of all objections, (b) the waiver by the trustees of all principal and income commissions for acting as trustees of these trusts and the resignation of such trustees, and (c) the payment by the trustees of $3,000 to each of the four trust estates.

These stipulations of settlement were approved by the referee in his reports to the court. The stipulations of settlement and the referee’s reports were all confirmed by orders of the Supreme Court of the State of New York, which also approved the accounts as amended and discharged the trustees. Pursuant to the terms of settlement, the petitioner in 1942 paid his proportionate share to the four trusts, which payments totaled $3,000. The petitioner in his income tax return for 1942 claimed these payments as deductions, itemizing the $3,000 as follows:

Pro rata share of surcharge paid Nov. 25, 1942, pursuant to order of Supreme Court, New York County, upon judicial settlement of the account of trustees of trust for the benefit of Clara Heide Magee_ $750.00
I’ro rata share of surcharge paid December 14,1942, pursuant to order of Supreme Court, New York County, upon judicial settlement of the account of the trustees of the trust for the benefit of Johanna M.
Leyendecker_ 750.00
Pro rata share of surcharge paid December 14,1942, pursuant to order of Supreme Court, New York County, upon judicial settlement of the account of the trustees of trust for the benefit of Marie Heide_ 750. 00
Pro rata share of surcharge paid December 14,1942, pursuant to order of Supreme Court, New York County, upon judicial settlement of the account of trustees for the benefit of Bertha Heide_ 750.00
3,000.00

In the case of John Abbott, 38 B. T. A. 1290, we held that one who regularly engages in the business of serving for pay as a trustee and as an executor and incurs and pays a liability growing out of the conduct of such business, is entitled to a deduction for the amount so paid. In the Abbott case protracted and extensive litigation seemed imminent over a claim by the beneficiaries of a testamentary trust that the trustees, of whom Abbott was one, had mismanaged the trust. Abbott’s aged cotrustee was in ill health and was much disturbed by the threatened litigation, and Abbott wished to be rid of the matter. Therefore, a settlement was agreed upon between the interested parties, under which the trustees paid $17,500 in settlement of the claims of mismanagement and the accounts as filed were allowed. Of this, Abbott paid $10,000. In allowing Abbott the deduction, we said:

From the findings, which are substantially a narrative of the evidence, it is beyond doubt that the petitioner's regular business included serving for pay as a trustee and as an executor. In the course of this business and as an incident thereof he was required to pay $10,000 as a liability growing out of the conduct of the business. Clearly such circumstances of the payment support its deduction, and it should have been allowed. Koruhauser v. United States, 276 U. S. 145. Respondent cites Stuart v. Commissioner, 84 Fed. (2d) 368 and Stephen H. Tallmam, 37 B. T. A. 1060, to support the disallowance; but in both, the ground of the disallowance was that the particular occasion for the taxpayer’s payment was liability in an isolated fiduciary activity which was not itself incidental to a trade or business regularly carried on. They are, therefore, unlike this case and distinguishable from it in crucial facts.

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Heide v. Commissioner
8 T.C. 314 (U.S. Tax Court, 1947)

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Bluebook (online)
8 T.C. 314, 1947 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heide-v-commissioner-tax-1947.