Henderson v. Department of Revenue

5 Or. Tax 153, 1972 Ore. Tax LEXIS 23
CourtOregon Tax Court
DecidedDecember 22, 1972
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 5 Or. Tax 153 (Henderson v. Department of Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Henderson v. Department of Revenue, 5 Or. Tax 153, 1972 Ore. Tax LEXIS 23 (Or. Super. Ct. 1972).

Opinion

Carlisle B. Roberts, Judge.

The plaintiffs • appealed from the Department of Revenue’s Order No. 1-72-13, requiring the plaintiff wife to pay personal income taxes pursuant to ORS chapter 316 on alimony payments received and reportable for the income tax years 1967,1968 and 1969. The plaintiffs sought to have these periodic payments excluded from gross income by being classified as “child support” instead of “alimony.”

On February 17,1967, a decree of divorce was filed respecting the plaintiff wife and her former husband which awarded to the wife the care, custody and con *154 trol of their children, a 12-year-old son, an 11-year-old daughter and an 8-year-old daughter. The decree provided that the defendant husband would pay “for the maintenance and support of plaintiff and the aforesaid minor children,” the sum of $400 per month beginning the 17th day of February, 1967, all in accordance with Exhibit “A,” an “Agreement Regarding Property, Custody and Support” which, by reference, was incorporated into the decree. The agreement stated:

“3. Husband shall pay commencing with February 15,1967, to the Clerk * * * for maintenance and support of wife and the minor children, the sum of $400.00 per month. This sum will be reduced by $100.00 per month as each child reaches the age of twenty-one (21) years or is emancipated, whichever may first occur. The maintenance and support of wife and the minor children shall also he reduced by the sum of $100.00 per month upon the remarriage of wife or upon her reaching the age of sixty-five (65), whichever occurs first.”

The plaintiff wife having married the plaintiff husband, an “Order Modifying Divorce Decree” was entered on May 24, 1967, altering the provisions quoted above:

“* # * by striking therefrom the monthly payment payable to the Clerk * * * in the sum of $400.00 and substituting in lieu thereof a monthly payment in the amount of $300.00. This order to he effective the 4th day of May, 1967.”

On August 9,1972, there was filed a second “Modification of Decree of Divorce,” which states:

“It is hereby ORDERED that the exclusive care, custody and control of [the son], be changed from plaintiff to defendant, subject to reasonable visitation rights in plaintiff; and, it is further
“ORDERED that the provision for maintenance *155 and support as provided for in the Decree of Divorce dated February 17, 1967, and reduced to the sum of $300.00 per month by order dated May 23, 1967, shall remain unchanged, notwithstanding the change of custody provided herein, and defendant shall pay said sum * *

During the years 1967 and 1968, the pertinent Oregon statutes were ORS 316.115 and 316.370, which are based upon the Int Rev Code of 1954, § 71. For the year 1969, the Oregon personal income tax statute incorporates the federal law, including the Int Rev Code of 1954, § 71. Accordingly, the state follows federal rulings and decisions relating to the Int Eev Code of 1954, § 71, in construing the pertinent Oregon law, unless clear reason to the contrary appears. Pac. Supply Coop. v. State Tax Com., 224 Or 556, 356 P2d 939 (1960); Ruth Realty Co. v. Tax Commission, 222 Or 290, 294, 353 P2d 524 (1960); State v. Burke et al., 126 Or 651, 269 P 869, 270 P 756 (1928).

For a number of years, the issue raised in the present suit was frequently litigated. As stated by Judge Medina in Weil et al. v. Comm., 240 F2d 584 (2d Cir 1957), 50 AFTR 1389, 57-1 USTC ¶ 9346:

“The cases construing and applying the terms of the statute have been numerous. In the bewildering maze of different types of separation agreements, containing a great variety of clauses requiring payments to the wife for her own maintenance and for the support of minor children, the Tax Court seems gradually to have drifted into a series of decisions, including the one at bar, which conclude that a particular agreement does ‘fix’ sums ‘payable for the support of minor children,’ when it plainly does not.
“The key words of the statute are ‘payable for.’ * * * The wife is not relieved of taxability on sums which she in fact expends for the support of *156 minor children, but only on such sums as ‘the terms of the * * * instrument fix * * * as * * * payable for’ that purpose. * * *”

The court finds that sums actually paid for the support of minor children out of alimony may not be claimed by the wife when she is free to use the money for other purposes. The court concluded:

“We hold that sums are ‘payable for the support of minor children’ when they are to be used for that purpose only. Accordingly, if sums are to be considered ‘payable for the support of minor children,’ their use must be restricted to that purpose, and the wife must have no independent beneficial interest therein. * * *”

In the same year, in the case of Eisinger et al v. Comm., 250 F2d 303 (9th Cir 1957), 1 AFTR2d 381, 58-1 USTC ¶ 9132, cert denied, 356 US 913, 78 S Ct 670, 2 L Ed2d 586 (1958), the court, construing language very similar to that found in the present case, purported to distinguish the Weil decision and held that the language required one part of the payment to be deemed alimony and the other part to be child support. Plaintiffs rely on this decision.

A good discussion of this whole problem is found in 5 Mertens, Law of Federal Income Taxation, § 31A.06, at 66:

“* * * In 1961 this dispute was put to rest by the Supreme Court when it supported the view of the Second Circuit and held that the agreement, to ‘fix’ with reasonable clarity any specific amount or portion of the periodic, payments as payable for the support of the children, must specifically designate the amounts or parts thereof allocable to the support of the children. It is not enough that this amount is left to inference or conjecture.”

The case relied upon by Mertens was Comm. v. Lester, *157 366 US 299, 81 S Ct 1343, 6 L Ed2d 306 (1961), aff'g 279 F2d 354 (2d Cir 1960), 5 AFTR2d 1583, 61-1 USTC ¶ 9463. (See also Annot, 6 L Ed2d 1370.)

In the Lester ease, the Commissioner of Internal Revenue cited the language in the agreement of the divorced parties, incorporated into the decree, providing, “* * * in the event that any of the [three] children of the parties hereto shall marry, become emancipated, or die, then the payments herein specified shall * * * he reduced in a sum equal to one-sixth of the payments which would thereafter otherwise accrue. * * *” It was the Commissioner’s view that this was sufficient language to identify one-half of the periodic payments as having been “payable for the support” of the taxpayer’s minor children and therefore not deductible by him under the Internal Revenue Code.

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Related

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5 Or. Tax 390 (Oregon Tax Court, 1974)

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Bluebook (online)
5 Or. Tax 153, 1972 Ore. Tax LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henderson-v-department-of-revenue-ortc-1972.