McMillan v. Commissioner

31 T.C. 1143, 1959 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 222
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedMarch 16, 1959
DocketDocket No. 69808
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 31 T.C. 1143 (McMillan 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
McMillan v. Commissioner, 31 T.C. 1143, 1959 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 222 (tax 1959).

Opinion

TietjeNS, Judge:

The Commissioner determined a deficiency in income tax for the year 1955 in the amount of $132.

Tbe issues for decision are (1) whether an infant taken into petitioners’ home on February 11, 1955, preliminary to adoption, which eventuated in February 1956, could properly be claimed as a dependent in 1955; (2) if not, whether the amount expended for support of the infant in 1955 can be deducted as a charitable contribution; and (3) whether a $75 payment in 1955 to the Family and Children’s Service Association as a so-called adoption service charge is properly deductible as a charitable deduction.

FINDINGS OF FACT.

The petitioners are husband and wife residing in Dayton, Ohio. They filed a joint income tax return for 1955 with the district director of internal revenue at Cincinnati, Ohio.

The petitioners by final decree of adoption issued by the Probate Court of Montgomery Comity, Ohio, on February 8, 1956, legally adopted the child, Carol Ethelyn McMillan.

Carol was not related to the petitioners by blood or by marriage in 1955. She was placed in the home of the petitioners at their instance by the Family and Children’s Service Association on February 11, 1955, and has continuously resided in said home since that date.

The petitioners and the Association agreed that an adoption service charge of $150 was to be paid by the petitioners to the Association in two installments of $75, the first to be paid at the time the child was placed in the petitioners’ home, and the second payment to be made at the time of the entry of the final decree in the adoption proceedings.

The petitioners were not required by court order to pay any sum to the Association as an agency fee, adoption fee, or adoption service fee, but on March 1, 1955, the petitioners made a payment of $75 to said Association pursuant to the foregoing understanding with the Association that an adoption service charge in such amount would be paid by them.

The payment of $75 made by the petitioners to the Association on March 1,1955, was placed by the Association in its general operating fund and was used by it for the general purposes of the Association.

The Association had not made and did not at that time or thereafter make any administrative arrangement in its personnel structure, accounting system, or otherwise which had the effect in any way of applying the payment of $75 for the specific care of Carol or for the performance of any specific service to or for the sole benefit of Carol or the petitioners.

The general funds of the Association are derived primarily from the Community Chest Association of Montgomery County, from endowment incomes, and from fees for services.

From the date of the surrender of Carol to the Association in 1954, until the placement of Carol in the home of the petitioners on February-11, 1955, she was cared for in a boardinghome selected by the Association, and the amount of $50 a month was paid by the Association to the operator of the boardinghome in consideration of such care.

The Association does not regard the adoption fee payments as a charitable contribution, but instead views them as a fee for service to cover part of the cost of operating an adoption program.

During the period from February 11, 1955, through December 31, 1955, the petitioners furnished Carol’s sole support in the approximate value and cost to the petitioners of $520.

ULTIMATE FINDINGS.

During the taxable year 1955 Carol was not the dependent of the petitioners within the meaning of section 152 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954.

The cost of the support furnished Carol Ethelyn McMillan by the petitioners in the year 1955 and the $75 adoption fee paid to the Family and Children’s Service Association in the year 1955 are not deductible by the petitioners.

OPINION.

On their income tax return for 1955, the petitioners claimed Carol as a dependent. The Commissioner denied the claim as not provided for under section 152(a)(9), I.R.C. 1954. The Commissioner also determined that the payment of the agency fee and the expenditures for the support of Carol during the probationary period in 1955 in connection with her eventual adoption were not deductible as charitable contributions under section 170, I.R.C. 1954. He determined that the expenditures were personal expenses of the petitioners and so nondeductible under section 262, X.R.C. 1954.

Carol was not related in the taxable year to the petitioners by blood or marriage. Therefore, as we see it, petitioners could not claim her as a dependent unless she came within the purview of section 152 (a)(9). That section defines a dependent to be “[a]n individual who, for the taxable year of the taxpayer, has as his principal place of abode the home of the taxpayer and is a member of the taxpayer’s household.” (Emphasis supplied.)

As in Robert Woodrow Trowbridge, 30 T.C. 879, on appeal (C.A. 9) the issue comes down to the meaning of the phrase “for the taxable year of the taxpayer.” Carol did not have her abode in petitioners’ home during the entire year 1955. For some time before February 11, 1955, Carol had her place of abode elsewhere and had no relationship of any kind to petitioners. This lack of relationship, except for the fact of her having been brought into petitioners’ home in February of 1955 where she continued to live throughout the remainder of that year, continued until her adoption on February 8, 1956. The Commissioner’s Income Tax Regulations, section 1.152-1 (b), state, in part:

Section 152(a) (9) applies to any individual * * * who lives with the taxpayer and is a member of the taxpayer’s household during the entire tawable year of the taxpayer. * * * The taxpayer and dependent will be considered as occupying the household for such entire taxable year notwithstanding temporary absences from the household due to special circumstances. * * * [Emphasis supplied.]

There were here no “special circumstances” calling for “temporary absences from the household.” As a matter of fact, Carol did not become a member of the petitioners’ household until February 11, 1955, and the interim from January 1, 1955, until that date, in our opinion, cannot qualify as a temporary absence from a household of which she had never been a member before that time.

As pointed out in the Trowbridge case, supra, the reports of both the Ways and Means Committee of the House and the Finance Committee of the Senate support the interpretation placed on section 152 (a)(9) by the regulations. In the reports it was stated: “Paragraph 9 is intended to apply only when the taxpayer and such other members of his household live together in such household during the entire taxable year (except for temporary absences due to special circumstances).” (Emphasis supplied.) H. Rept. No. 1337, 83d Cong., 2d Sess. (1954), p. A41; S. Rept. No. 1622, 83d Cong., 2d Sess. (1954), p. 193.

Accordingly, the Commissioner is sustained on the dependency issue. Robert Woodrow Trowbridge, supra.

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Bluebook (online)
31 T.C. 1143, 1959 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 222, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcmillan-v-commissioner-tax-1959.