Mauldin v. Commissioner

60 T.C. No. 78, 60 T.C. 749, 1973 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 73
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedAugust 27, 1973
DocketDocket No. 314-71
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 60 T.C. No. 78 (Mauldin 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
Mauldin v. Commissioner, 60 T.C. No. 78, 60 T.C. 749, 1973 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 73 (tax 1973).

Opinion

Featherston, Judge:

Respondent determined deficiencies in petitioners’ Federal income taxes for 1965,1966, and 1967 in the amounts of $7,877.86, $8,560.17, and $6,517.40, respectively, and an addition to tax under section 6651(a)1 in the amount of $2,140.04 for 1966. Due to concessions by petitioners, the issues remaining for decision require (1) the valuation of certain charitable contributions made during 1965 (corporate stock), 1966 (a collection of cartoons), and 1967 (original manuscripts and sketches) and (2) a determination of whether there was reasonable cause for petitioners’ delay in filing their 1966 return.

FINDINGS OF FACT

General

William H. Mauldin (hereinafter petitioner or Mauldin) and Natalie E. Mauldin filed joint Federal income tax returns for 1965, 1966, and 1967. Their 1965 and 1966 returns were filed with the district director, Chicago, Ill., on August 1, 1966, and June 20, 1968, respectively. Their 1967 return was filed with the Internal Revenue Service, Manhattan, New York, on October 18, 1968. At the time the petition was filed, petitioners2 were legal residents of Santa Fe, N. Mex.

Petitioner was born in Mountain Park, N. Mex., on October 29, 1921. Even as a child he was intensely interested in drawing. While still in high school, he took a correspondence course in cartooning, paying for it by doing drawings, posters, and other artwork for local industrial, commercial, or individual clients. In 1939 he studied cartooning at the Chicago (Illinois) Academy of Fine Arts.

In September 1940 petitioner enlisted in the Arizona National Guard. Five days later the National Guard was federalized, and petitioner was automatically taken into the Army. While in infantry training he began drawing cartoons for the 45th Division News (hereinafter called the News). This was initially done during his spare time, but later he became a member of the publication’s staff. He remained in the United States until 1943, when he was sent overseas to Sicily and was assigned to the Mediterranean edition of Stars and Stripes, the Army’s wartime newspaper.

Some of petitioner’s cartoons for these two Army publications, the News and Stars and Stripes, depicted two young enlisted men named Willie and Joe. At first these characters were clean-shaven recruits, but gradually they evolved into a dirty, dull-eyed, bearded, combat-weary team. They brought petitioner international fame. His work came to the personal public attention of General George S. Patton, who threatened to ban Stars and Stripes from his area unless Willie and Joe were spruced up. His works were admired by General Eisenhower. His relationship with General Patton and other officers gave petitioner much publicity at home as well as among his fellow soldiers in Europe.

Petitioner’s cartoons for the News and Stars and Stripes were brought together and published with accompanying text in several collections, including “Star Spangled Banter” (1941 and 1944) “Mud, Mules and Mountains” (1944), and “Up Front” (1945). After he returned to civilian life in June 1945, a collection of his postwar cartoons was published under the title “Back Home” (1947), and many of his Army cartoons were later collected in “Bill Mauldin’s Army” (1951). In 1952 petitioner visited the battlefront in Korea and reported the experience in “Bill Mauldin in Korea” (1952). His other books, containing numerous cartoons, include “Sicily Sketchbook” (1944), “A Sort of Saga” (1949), and “I’ve Decided I Want My Seat Back” (1965).

In 1958 petitioner joined the staff of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch as an editorial cartoonist. A collection of his political cartoons covering the late Eisenhower and early Kennedy years was published as “What’s Got Your Back Up?” (1961). In June 1962 he moved to the Chicago Sun-Times and began working under a syndicated political cartoonist contract with Field Enterprises, Inc. (hereinafter Field). His latest book, “The Brass Bing,” was published in 1971. Through the years he has written numerous articles which have been published in magazines and other periodicals. His cartoons are currently carried in about 250 newspapers throughout the country.

Three of petitioner’s books, “Up Front,” “Back Home,” and “The Brass Ring,” were Book-of-the-Month Club selections. The first of these books, “Up Front,” was on the bestseller list for at least a year and sold millions of copies.

Petitioner’s cartoons and writings have brought him many awards. He 'became the youngest Pulitzer Prize winner, at the age of 23, when he won journalism’s highest honor in 1944 for one of his “Willie and Joe” cartoons. He added a second Pulitzer award in 1958 on the plight of the late Soviet author, Boris Pasternak: a cartoon of two prisoners in Siberia, one of whom was saying to the other, “I won the Nobel Prize for Literature. What was your crime?” In 1961 he received the Reuben Award from the National Cartoonists Society as cartoonist of the year.

Petitioner’s drawings depicting a grieving Lincoln, published at President Kennedy’s death, and a cartoon showing a field of graveyard crosses and bearing the legend “It’s Ike himself. Pass the word,” published at President Eisenhower’s death, received nationwide attention. In a display at the Marshall Library Foundation is a series of panels depicting the life of General George C. Marshall, and in the center of the last panel, which includes the flag from his coffin and a photograph of the honor guard at the National Cathedral, is a Mauldin cartoon showing Willie and Joe standing at a simple cross on which General Marshall’s five-star helmet is hanging.

When petitioner received his second Sigma Delta Chi (the national fraternity for journalism) award in 1970 for the Eisenhower cartoon, he was cited for his “rare ability to speak for a nation with a stroke of the pen.”

Issue 1. The 1965 Charitable Contribution

Throughout the period in controversy in this proceeding, petitioner was employed by Field to draw political and editorial cartoons for the Chicago Sun-Times. The first employment agreement between petitioner and Field was signed on June 4, 1962, covering the period from June 23,1962, to June 22,1965. On June 17,1965, a similar agreement was executed covering the period commencing on the expiration of the first agreement and ending on June 22, 1975. However, either party could give notice of termination prior to March 22, 1970, and in case of such notice the second agreement was to terminate on June 22, 1970.

Both agreements provided that Field was to copyright in its own name — or, in the case of the June 1965 agreement, in its own name or that of the Chicago Sun-Times — “all material delivered by Mauldin hereunder which shall be published.” During the respective terms of the agreements, Field was to be the owner of “all copyright and proprietary rights whatsoever in the cartoons and all art work relating thereto, and the titles, trade mark, trade name or names, characters, subject matter and plot or theme of or relating to the cartoons.” Upon termination of the respective agreements, Field was to “assign and transfer to Mauldin or his legal representatives,” these rights and the artwork in cartoons petitioner delivered to Field during the terms of the agreements.

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Bluebook (online)
60 T.C. No. 78, 60 T.C. 749, 1973 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mauldin-v-commissioner-tax-1973.