Mandel v. Commissioner

23 T.C. 81, 1954 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 68
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedOctober 18, 1954
DocketDocket No. 40567
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 23 T.C. 81 (Mandel 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
Mandel v. Commissioner, 23 T.C. 81, 1954 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 68 (tax 1954).

Opinion

OPINION.

Rice, Judge:

The first issue raised herein is whether payments to petitioner’s divorced wife for the support and maintenance of his two children, which were not taxable to the wife when the children were minors, became taxable to her and, hence, deductible to petitioner when the children reached their majority. The answer to the question presented must be found in the terms of the agreement pursuant to which the payments in issue were made.

The petitioner argues that the sums paid to Edna for the support of Noel and Leon, III, after they reached their majority, qualify in all respects with the requirements of section 22 (k) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1939; most important of whjch are that they were periodic payments made in discharge of a legal obligation which arose from the marital or family relationship, imposed by a written instrument incident to divorce.

We have set forth verbatim, in our findings, the third section of the agreement signed by petitioner and Edna on November 29, 1932. It is apparent that their agreement went far beyond the provisions of an ordinary separation agreement. Petitioner not only undertook to provide support and maintenance for his wife until she remarried, and for his minor children until they reached their majority; he undertook to provide the children with a substantial monthly income for the rest of their lives. The petitioner, however, reserved options as to the specific manner in which payments for the children might be made. Generally, they were to be made to Edna, but if the children married or if, after becoming 21 years of age, they maintained residences separate and apart from Edna, then petitioner could make the payments directly to them. The agreement also provided that even after a child’s 16th birthday, if he or she were married or lived apart from Edna, one-half of the amount for such child’s support might be paid directly by petitioner to that child.

During the years in question, petitioner made all payments to Edna. However, none were for her support and maintenance since she had remarried in 1946. They were exclusively for the children. We think that, under the terms of the agreement, that part of the payments made to Edna, after Noel and Leon, III, became 21 years of age, were made to her only as a conduit through which petitioner paid monthly sums to his two children. Noel married prior to reaching her 21st birthday; she thereafter maintained her own home, separate and apart from her mother; and Edna in fact either paid to or for her sums equivalent to the amount received for her from petitioner, or caused one-half of petitioner’s monthly checks to be deposited directly in Noel’s bank account.

Leon, III, lived separate and apart from Edna after his 21st birthday ; and, even prior thereto and always thereafter, she paid to him or caused to be deposited in his bank account the amounts received from petitioner for him.

Petitioner, obviously, could have paid the sums in question directly to his children. Every condition was present under which he could have exercised the option available to him. It is inconceivable to us that Congress could have intended that petitioner, by failure to exercise his option of making payments directly to the children, but instead to Edna, could impose tax liability on her at his discretion.

Moreover, we cannot believe Congress ever intended that payments to children throughout their lives, such as those here in question, even though provided for in a written agreement incident to'divorce, should be taxable to the wife. Its purpose iii adding sections 22 (k) and 23 (u) to the Internal Revenue Code of 1939 was to correct an inequitable situation, which it felt existed under then applicable law. Its intent was expressed by the clear and direct language of the Report of the Committee on Ways and Means,3 page 46:

5. Alimony and Separate Maintenance Payments.
The existing law does not tax alimony payments to the wife who receives them, nor does it allow the husband to take any deduction on account of alimony payments made by him. He is fully taxable on his entire net income even though a large portion of his income goes to his wife as alimony or as separate rnainte-nánce payments. The increased surtax rates would intensify this hardship and in many cases the husband would not have sufficient income left after paying alimony to meet his income tax obligations.
The .bill would correct this situation by taxing alimony and separate maintenance payments to the wife receiving them, and by relieving the husband from tax upon that portion of such payments which constitutes income to him under the present law. * * * Moreover, the portion of such payments going to the support of minor children of the husband does not constitute income to the wife nor a deduction to the husband. * * *

In support of bis position, petitioner relies on Feinberg v. Commissioner, 198 F. 2d 260 (C. A. 3, 1952) ; Robert Lehman, 17 T. C. 652 (1951); and Robert Wood J ohnson, 10 T. C. 647 (1948). All of those cases are clearly distinguishable on their facts from the one here before us. In the Lehman case, we considered the question of the deductibility by the divorced husband of payments to his mother-in-law, pursuant to terms of an agreement between him and his former wife, that such payments were “for and in behalf” of the wife. We permitted the deduction there, saying, at page 653: “If the payments had been to a landlord, a grocer, or the like, there would be no question of them being taxable to [the wife].” Clearly, the payments here were not “for and in behalf” of Edna, but were specifically “for and in behalf” of Noel and Leon, III.

The J ohnson case concerned only the question of whether unsegregated payments to the wife for the support of herself and her minor son were made pursuant to an agreement incident to the divorce. We concluded on the whole record that the payments were made pursuant to a written instrument executed as an incident to the divorce. In the final sentences of our Opinion, we stated, pages 654, 655:

It is true that the periodic payments here involved were for the support and maintenance of both petitioner’s wife and their minor son. However, as we have found, there was no designation of the part of such periodic payments which was to be payable for the support of the minor child, Dora H. Moitoret, 7 T. C. 640; Robert W. Budd, 7 T. C. 413; affirmed without opinion, C. C. A., 6th Cir., June 10, 1947. Moreover, prior to the tax years before us, petitioner’s son had attained Ms majority. * * * [Emphasis added.]

That language does not support the petitioner’s claim herein. The question of whether a part of the payments made to the wife after the son reached his majority would be taxable to her was not presented, and we do not consider that part of our Opinion quoted above as so holding.

The Feinberg case reversed this Court’s holding that the payments there in question were not made pursuant to an agreement incident to a divorce. At the end of the Court of Appeals’ opinion is found ibis statement, page 263:

There remains to be determined, the question as to whether the entire amounts of the payments were properly deducted.

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Related

Hirshon v. Commissioner
27 T.C. 558 (U.S. Tax Court, 1956)
Ball v. Commissioner
1955 T.C. Memo. 84 (U.S. Tax Court, 1955)
Mandel v. Commissioner
23 T.C. 81 (U.S. Tax Court, 1954)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
23 T.C. 81, 1954 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 68, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mandel-v-commissioner-tax-1954.