Hughes v. United States

196 F. Supp. 37, 8 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5293, 1961 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5594
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Texas
DecidedJuly 26, 1961
DocketCiv. A. 2815
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 196 F. Supp. 37 (Hughes v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hughes v. United States, 196 F. Supp. 37, 8 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5293, 1961 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5594 (E.D. Tex. 1961).

Opinion

SHEEHY, Chief Judge.

This is an action for refund of Federal income taxes assessed against and paid by the Plaintiffs, husband and wife, for the years 1954,1955 and 1956. The Court has jurisdiction under the provisions of 28 U.S.C.A. § 1346(a). The pertinent facts, most of which were stipulated, are as hereinafter stated.

Plaintiffs were married on August 18, 1931, and have never been divorced. Plaintiffs timely filed their joint individual income tax returns for each of the three years involved herein and paid the taxes shown due thereon. The Commissioner of Internal Revenue, hereinafter referred to as Commissioner, determined that additional taxes in the amount of $21,021.90 were due for the year 1954, which amount, together with interest in the amount of $4,774.85, was paid by Plaintiffs on or about January 27, 1959. For the year 1955 the Commissioner determined that additional taxes in the amount of $18,885.54 were due. Said additional taxes, together with interest, were paid by the Plaintiffs as follows: on September 17, 1958, taxes of $1,352.-20 plus interest of $197, and on January 27, 1959, taxes of $17,533.34 plus interest of $2,930.47. The Commissioner determined that for the year 1956 additional taxes in the amount of $7,784.22 were due. These additional taxes, with interest, were paid by Plaintiffs as follows: on September 17, 1958, taxes of $7,334.42 plus interest of $628.20, and on January 27, 1959, taxes of $449.80 plus interest of $48.19. Plaintiffs timely filed claims for refunds of the additional taxes and interest paid, and each of said claims was disallowed and thereafter Plaintiffs timely instituted this suit.

The additional taxes assessed against the Plaintiffs were assessed by the Commissioner because he disallowed deductions made by Plaintiffs for attorneys’ fees and related expenses paid by W. R. Hughes in connection with two divorce actions instituted by Mrs. Hughes and hereinafter mentioned.

On August 28, 1953, the Plaintiff, Lilia Long Hughes, instituted a suit against the Plaintiff, W. R. Hughes, seeking a divorce. In her petition she alleged that she and W. R. Hughes owned a community estate consisting of real and personal property of a value in excess of a million dollars. In addition to praying for a decree of divorce, Lilia Long Hughes prayed that W. R. Hughes be required to return into the court an inventory and appraisement of all of the property accumulated by him since August 18, 1931; that a writ of injunction issue restraining the said W. R. Hughes from disposing of any part of said property or from contracting for any debts on account thereof; that upon the decree of divorce being granted there be an equitable partition of the community property of W. R. Hughes and herself. On August 28,1953, the District Court of Gregg County entered in said cause an order ordering W. R. Hughes to file within 20 days a complete inventory, under oath, of all property, real, personal or mixed, within his possession or under his control which had been accumulated since August 18, 1931. In that proceeding Lilia Long Hughes, through her attorneys, contended that practically all of the property, both real and personal, acquired by W. R. Hughes after August 18, 1931, was community property. On April 8, 1954, that action or proceeding, on motion of Lilia Long Hughes, was dismissed.

On August 25,1954, Lilia Long Hughes instituted another suit in the District *39 Court of Gregg County, Texas, seeking a divorce from W. R. Hughes and a judgment for her one-half of all of the community property of W. R. Hughes and herself. In that action she further prayed for the appointment of an auditor to audit the records of W. R. Hughes and herself and for a restraining order restraining W. R. Hughes from selling, transferring, withdrawing, encumbering or otherwise hypothecating any of the property, real, personal or mixed, in his possession and under his control. On August 25,1954, the restraining order as prayed for was granted. In the second action Lilia Long Hughes contended as she did in the first divorce action that practically all of the property, real and personal, acquired by W. R. Hughes subsequent to her marriage to W. R. Hughes was community property of W. R. Hughes and herself. On September 14, 1956, the second divorce action was dismissed on motion of Mrs. Hughes.

The Plaintiff, W. R. Hughes, did not oppose either of the above mentioned divorce actions insofar as Mrs. Hughes sought a divorce, but he did oppose most strenuously Mrs. Hughes’ claims and contentions that most or all of the property acquired by W. R. Hughes subsequent to his marriage to Mrs. Hughes was community property.

As a direct result of the two divorce actions instituted against him by Mrs. Hughes, W. R. Hughes incurred and paid attorneys’ fees and related expenses during the year 1954 in the amount of $33,877.50, during the year 1955 in the amount of $26,200 and during the year 1956 in the amount of $10,010.50. Of said attorneys’ fees and related expenses incurred and paid by W. R. Hughes the following amounts were allocated to the property rights issue that was presented in the two eases: for the year 1954 the sum of $33,067; for the year 1955 the sum of $23,580 and for the year 1956 for the sum of $9,009.45. The parties stipulated that these amounts so allocated to the property rights issue were reasonable and proper. In the income tax returns filed by the Plaintiffs for the years in question the Plaintiffs claimed as deductions said attorneys’ fees and related expenses allocated to the property rights issue. The Commissioner disallowed these deductions, and it is because of such disallowances that the additional income taxes, with interest, were paid by the Plaintiffs for those years, and it is those additional taxes and interest that Plaintiffs seek to recover herein.

The Plaintiffs contend that said attorneys’ fees and related expenses paid by Mr. Hughes were ordinary and necessary expenses incurred for the production or collection of income or for the management or conservation of property held for the production of income within the meaning of Section 212 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 (26 U.S.C.A. § 212). The Defendant, on the other hand, contends that said fees were either nondeductible personal expenditures or nondeductible capital expenditures.

During the pendency of the divorce actions there was standing in the name of W. R. Hughes a vast amount of properties which had been acquired after his marriage to Mrs. Hughes. Among these properties were some corporate stocks, a number of saving and loan certificates and a rather substantial amount of municipal bonds, but the bulk of the property standing in the name of Mr. Hughes were royalty interests in oil and gas mineral estates. Most of these properties were income producing. At the time of his marriage to Mrs. Hughes, Mr. Hughes owned certain properties, including royalty interests in oil and gas mineral estates, which properties during the period from August 18, 1931, to June 30, 1956, produced income to W. R. Hughes in excess of $1,500,000. The major portion of the properties standing in the name’ of W. R. Hughes at the time of the divorce actions and that was acquired by him after his marriage to Mrs. Hughes was the separate properties of Mr. Hughes. The income on that separate property from August 18, 1931, to June 30, 1956, exceeded the sum of $3,800,000. During the same period of time the income from properties which constituted the com *40 munity property of Mr. and Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
196 F. Supp. 37, 8 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5293, 1961 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5594, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hughes-v-united-states-txed-1961.