Heirs of Maeso v. Secretary of the Treasury

81 P.R. 610
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedOctober 20, 1959
DocketNo. 11641
StatusPublished

This text of 81 P.R. 610 (Heirs of Maeso v. Secretary of the Treasury) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Puerto Rico primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heirs of Maeso v. Secretary of the Treasury, 81 P.R. 610 (prsupreme 1959).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Pérez Pimentel

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On June 24, 1953, the Secretary of the Treasury notified his decision on reconsideration of deficiency, that is, the final deficiency on income tax, to Maeso Hermanos, S. en C., Carolina, Puerto Rico, for the years 1941 to 1950, inclusive, amounting to $32,144.64. In the aforementioned notification of final deficiency, said taxpayer was informed that if it wished to appeal in accordance with the law, it had to furnish a bond before the Secretary of the Treasury amounting to $33,500.

To challenge said deficiencies, the heirs of Simón Maeso, consisting of Gerardo, Cristina, Andrés, Manuel Maria, Amparo, and Maria Teresa Maeso, the latter represented by her guardian Gerardo Maeso, appeared before the Superior Court. They alleged they had been notified of the deficiencies as Maeso Hermanos, S. en Cthat since the death of their predecessor, the Estate (Sucesión) of Simón Maeso is and has been composed of the same persons; that the Estate is at present in the same condition of co-ownership of undivided property as it existed at the death of its predecessor; that the Estate of Simón Maeso has been filing annually and ever since it was constituted by virtue of law, income tax returns, having filed such returns specifically for the years 1941 to 1950, inclusive; that the Secretary of the Treasury notified the Estate of Simón Maeso, of a deficiency for the sum of $32,144.64, dated June 24, 1953, but addressed those notifications of deficiency to the name of Maeso Hermanos, S. en C.; that the Secretary of the Treasury erred in determining that the Estate of Simón Maeso was a partnership (sociedad) in the years involved in this ease, because although it is true that the heirs called to the succession executed a deed forming a “sociedad,” as a question of fact said sociedad was never duly constituted, nor were any contributions made, and hence, it was never engaged in any activity showing its existence, since it never conducted any commercial or other kind of [612]*612operations; that the Secretary of the Treasury erred in considering the Estate of Simón Maeso as a sociedad, since the last activity of the members of said Estate has been the enjoyment of their property, without having been engaged at any time in a business or lucrative operation; that prior to the date of the filing of the complaint, plaintiffs had furnished a bond for $33,500, according to the sum specified in the notification of deficiencies which was sent to them under the name of Maeso Hermanos, S. en C.;1 that the deficiencies for [613]*613the years 1941 to 1950 for the sum of $32,144.64 flow from two actions of the Secretary of the Treasury, to wit: (a) the reliquidation on the part of the Bureau of Income Tax of the income and general deductions of the Estate of Simón Maeso, and (b) the decision of the Secretary of the Treasury that the Estate of Simón Maeso was a civil partnership (sociedad) and that it should pay taxes as such. The errors committed in the'reliquidation year by year are stated in said complaint.

■ ' Defendant answered denying the existence, for income tax purposes, of the alleged “Sucesión” of Simón Maeso; sustaining the existence of the taxpayer Maeso Hermanos, S. en C., to whom the deficiencies were notified, and alleging that the court lacked jurisdiction to entertain the case since Maeso Hermanos, S. en C., had not furnished the bond required by law to appear in court.

[614]*614At the commencement of the hearing of the case the-Secretary of the Treasury raised the question of lack of' jurisdiction of the court on the ground that the bond in the form it had been presented did not guarantee the payment of the tax which the sociedad Maeso Hermanos, S. en C., to whom the deficiencies had been notified, was definitively-compelled to pay, but that said bond guaranteed the tax liability of the Estate of Simón Maeso, to whom no deficiency had been notified, and that therefore, said bond had been rejected by the Secretary of the Treasury. (See footnote 1.)

At the hearing of the case the Secretary of the Treasury-assumed the position that the taxpayer Maeso Hermanos, S. en C., to whom the deficiencies had been notified, was not in court; that said taxpayer Maeso Hermanos, S. en C. had not furnished the bond required by law to appeal to court and that, therefore, it lacked jurisdiction to entertain the case; that the Estate of Simón Maeso, whose existence as such had been denied in the answer to the complaint, was not a party to the case; that the Secretary of the Treasury was not going to collect from the Estate the tax notified to the [615]*615special partnership Maeso Hermanos, S. en C., and that it would return to the heirs the bond furnished to him by them.

Assuming a different position opposite to the one we liave just presented, the Secretary of the Treasury alleged and tried to sustain with evidence that the Estate of Simón Maeso was a joint venture and that it was compelled to pay the tax in litigation at the rate fixed by law for partnerships.

After receiving documentary evidence presented by both parties and after having heard the testimony of several witnesses introduced by plaintiffs, the lower. court issued an ■order suspending the case on the merits while the privileged ■question of jurisdiction raised by the defendant was determined.

Shortly after this order had been entered, and without further proceedings, the lower court filed with the record an “Opinion and Judgment” in which after referring to the pleadings and to the evidence it reached the following conclusions and decision:

“The sufficiency of the bond is not in issue. The Estate of Simón Maeso, upon furnishing the one required by law, and upon expounding in its complaint that the Secretary of the Treasury has erred in concluding that Maeso Hermanos, J3. en C. exists and should satisfy the tax deficiencies notified, .as a matter of fact, to the afore-mentioned Estate, the latter has supplied to the Secretary of the Treasury with an opportunity to sustain the correction of his decision before this court.
“But defendant has rejected that opportunity offered to him .and insists that this court lacks jurisdiction to entertain the complaint in the above-entitled case.
“In view of this attitude and insistence of the respondent, we conclude that:
“In the present case plaintiff has acted in good faith, and very diligently furnished the bond required in accordance with the law.
“Defendant has withheld such bond in his possession without returning it, since the end of July 1953 until December 17, 1958, on which latter date it was presented in evidence by respondent himself in the above-entitled case as ‘Exhibit C’.
[616]*616“It is obvious that if defendant would not insist that his determination of deficiency refers exclusively to the taxpayer Maeso Hermanos, S. en C., and not to the plaintiffs herein, this court would have jurisdiction to entertain the case and settle the dispute.

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