Hurd v. Commissioner

9 T.C. 681, 1947 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 63
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1947
DocketDocket No. 11556
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 9 T.C. 681 (Hurd 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
Hurd v. Commissioner, 9 T.C. 681, 1947 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 63 (tax 1947).

Opinions

OPINION.

Murdock, Judge:

The petitioners first contend that the assessment and collection of the deficiency is barred by the statute of limitations requiring that the estate taxes be assessed within three years after the return was filed. Sec. 874 (a). Their argument is that the Commissioner knew, or should have known, that 156 East 82nd Street1 was not the address of Patricia Kendall Hurd at the time the notice of deficiency was sent to her; consequently, the deficiency notice was not “mailed” to her as required by section 871 (a) (1), and, therefore, the running of the statute of limitations provided in section 874 was never suspended by the mailing of a notice under section 871 (a). Although the address of Patricia Kendall Hurd was shown in the telephone directory as 67 Park Avenue, the petitioners seem to think that the notice should have been sent to 60 Broadway, which the telephone directory listed as the address of the estate of George F. Hurd, and which was also the office of the attorneys for the executors of his estate. One of these attorneys, who signed and swore to the return as the attorney or agent who had prepared it, gave his address on the return as 60 Broadway. Exhibit No. 5 is .stamped “Received October- 6, 1944, Upper New York Division.” It was produced at the trial from the files of the respondent. Except for the acknowledgment, it is as follows:

Know An Men by These Presents that Estate of George F. Hxjbd, by Patricia Kendall Hurd, one of the executors, of 60 Broadway, New York 4, New York, has, and by these presents does, constitute and appoint Francis B. Hamlin and Aibert E. James, of 60 Broadway, Borough of Manhattan, City, County and State of New York, -its true and lawful attorneys to appear before the Treasury Department, and specifically before the Commissioner of Internal Revenue, in all matters connected with the Federal estate tax return filed in its behalf, giving and granting unto said attorneys full power and authority to appear and act for said estate in its place and stead in all matters arising out of or connected with said Federal estate tax, as fully as it might do itself, with full power of substitution in the premises.
In Witness Whereof, the Estate of George F. Hurd has caused these presents to be signed by one of its executors this 19th day of September, 1944.
Estate of George F. Hurd,
By [Signed] Patricia Kendall, Hurd,
Patricia Kendall Hurd, one of the executors.

Counsel for the petitioners argue that the Commissioner was aware of the correct mailing address of the estate, the entity to which communications should have been addressed, from the date of the filing of that power of attorney, and thereafter recognized that address by mailing communications to the estate to that address.

If the notice of deficiency was inadequate to suspend the running of the statute of limitations, then why would it be adequate to give the Tax Court jurisdiction in this case? Counsel for the petitioners must have had this in mind, for he states in the first paragraph of the petition that it is for a review of the deficiency and also for the dismissal of the petition for lack of jurisdiction, although thereafter in the petition he refers to the statute of limitations rather than to lack of jurisdiction. If the Court had no jurisdiction, it could not pass upon the statute of limitations or any other question except jurisdiction and it would "not- have authority to hold that there was no deficiency because the statute of limitations had run, but would have to dismiss the proceeding for lack of jurisdiction, without any decision as to the amount of the deficiency. Cf. Henry M. Day, 12 B. T. A. 161; Oscar Block, 2 T. C. 761. Furthermore, section 875 expressly provides that the running of the statute of limitations provided in section 874 shall be suspended “(and in any event, if a proceeding in respect of the deficiency is placed on the docket of the Board [now the Tax Court], until the decision of the Board becomes final), and for 60 days thereafter.” Here, a proceeding in respect of the deficiency has been placed on the docket of the Court, and unless it is dismissed for lack of jurisdiction, the running of the statute would seem to be suspended in any event.

However, it is not necessary to decide either of these suggested questions. One of the obvious purposes for requiring an executor (in this case executrix) to give his address in the return is to have him officially notify the Commissioner of his address, to be used by the Commissioner wherever necessary, as, for example, in mailing a notice of deficiency. The present executrix thus officially notified the Commissioner that her address was 156 East 82nd Street. An executor, having given his address in the return, should thereafter give the Commissioner reasonable notice of any change in that address. The executrix in this case never advised the Commissioner that 156 East 82nd Street was no longer her address or that she desired to be addressed at some other place. The reference to 60 Broadway in the power of attorney (Exhibit 5) is not a notice that 156 East 82nd Street was no longer the residence and proper address of the executrix. It is immaterial that the Commissioner used 60 Broadway in communicating with the attorneys for the estate or with the estate itself prior to the issuance of the notice of deficiency. That was an office building in which the attorneys for the estate had their office, which office also appears to have served as the office of the estate. The Commissioner is required by section 871 (a) (1) “to send notice of such deficiency to the executor by registered mail” if he determines that there is a deficiency in estate tax. The Commissioner, having been officially notified of her address, would subject himself and the revenues to unnecessary risk if he discarded that address and used another selected from a telephone book which might easily be the address of a wholly different person by the same name. Cf. Commissioner v. Rosenheim, 132 Fed. (2d) 677, reversing 45 B. T. A. 1018. The notice of deficiency was mailed within the meaning of the statute when it was sent by registered mail to the executrix at 156 East 82nd Street. The statutory period for assessment and collection had not expired at that time. Its running was immediately suspended by the mailing of that notice and is still suspended.2

Tbe decedent, by means of the separation agreement of January 31, 1934, and various changes in and endorsements of the policies, completely divested himself of all incidents of ownership in the nine policies of insurance on his life. Any doubts as to the completeness of this divestiture which might arise from consideration of the policies and endorsements alone are resolved by the separation agreement and decree. Zies v. New York Life Insurance Co., 237 App. Div. 367; 261 N. Y. S. 709; Locomotive Engineers Mutual Life & Accident Ins. Assn. v. Locke, 295 N. Y. S. 689; affd., 277 N. Y. 584; Anna Rosenstock, 41 B. T. A. 635. The parties have stipulated that the transfers of the policies were not made in contemplation of death in the sense that the decedent, when he executed them, had a present apprehension from some existing bodily or mental condition that death was near at hand and no such fear or apprehension was the dominant motive for the assignments.

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Hurd v. Commissioner
9 T.C. 681 (U.S. Tax Court, 1947)

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Bluebook (online)
9 T.C. 681, 1947 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 63, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hurd-v-commissioner-tax-1947.