Nutter v. Commissioner

46 B.T.A. 35, 1942 BTA LEXIS 916
CourtUnited States Board of Tax Appeals
DecidedJanuary 7, 1942
DocketDocket Nos. 99701, 104422.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 46 B.T.A. 35 (Nutter v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Board of Tax Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nutter v. Commissioner, 46 B.T.A. 35, 1942 BTA LEXIS 916 (bta 1942).

Opinions

[37]*37OPINION.

Disney:

The Commissioner added $24,533.19 to the gross estate of the decedent because of the fact, alleged in the petition and admitted in the answer, that the petitioners duly elected to have the property includable in gross estate valued in accordance with the method authorized by subdivision (j) of section 302 of the Kevenue Act of 1926, as added by section 202 of the Eevenue Act of 1935, that is, because the property was to be valued as of one year after the death [38]*38of the decedent and the respondent had included in such value amounts of interest and dividends received by the petitioners between the date of death and the optional date of valuation. Following the decision in Maass v. Higgins, 312 U. S. 443, the respondent concedes error on this issue. A related issue suggested in the stipulation, but not in the pleadings, arises as to whether there should be included in decedent’s gross estate $3,038.89 interest and dividends accrued but not received on February 21, 1937, the date of decedent’s death, or on the other hand $2,073.75 interest and dividends accrued but not received on February 21, 1938, the optional valuation date. Under the Maass case we hold that only the amount of $3,038.89 accrued but not received at the date of decedent’s death should, as to this issue, be included in the gross estate, and that the $2,073.75 should not.

The Commissioner also added $34,069.99 to the decedent’s gross estate. The explanation of the item in the notice of deficiency is “Interest in partnership Nutter, McClennen & Fish.” The figure is the amount of 8 percent of the profit of the firm from March 1, 1937, to August 31, 1938. Upon brief the respondent takes the position that the amount represents the value of the decedent’s interest in the partnership of which, he was a member at the time of his death, and under the agreement of partnership.

The petitioners, relying upon Bull v. United States, 295 U. S. 247, and language therein as to partnerships with no capital investment and no tangible assets, contend in substance that the partnership was one for the practice of law, that no capital was invested, that there were no more than negligible tangible assets, that receipt of the percentage by the estate aftfer the death was contingent upon continuance of the partnership and the earning of profits, that therefore amounts derived from or growing out of the partnership can be included in the gross estate only to the extent of partnership income prior to the decedent’s death, and that amounts paid to the estate based upon partnership earnings after the decedent’s death constitute -xjnot gross estate, but income to the estate. In our opinion, this view disregards the fact that there were in this case capital and tangible assets in amounts not negligible, and further neglects the specific agreement between the partners and the language of the Bull case as to just such an agreement. First: In this matter there appear to have been both an investment of capital in, and tangible property owned by, the partnership and a clear recognition by the partnership in the partnership agreement that each partner had a capital interest; whereas in the Bull case there was neither capital interest nor tangible property owned by the partnership. In the instant proceeding, the partnership balance sheet on February 28, 1937, the date nearest the death of the decedent, sets up for the partnership a “Capital Account” [39]*39of $12,875, a “Plant Account” of $8,932.44, and “Undistributed Profits” $73,634.50, and as to George E. Nutter, “Plant Account” $744.37 and “Capital Account” $1,031.25. Such items can not be called negligible. The capital account represented the interest of the partnership in a working cash balance and the plant account represented the interest of the partnership in such items as books, furniture, and fixtures in the law office. The partnership owned a lease upon its offices ending February 28, 1939, the value of which does not appear in the record. It seems apparent, therefore, that the partnership of which the decedent was a member at the time of his death possessed both capital and tangible assets as distinguished from the partnership in the Bull case. The partnership agreement recognized the capital interest of each partner, for therein reference is made to “cash capital”, “capital”, and “capital items”, and provision is made for disposition of a member’s interest in “capital, assets, receivables”, etc. Second: The Bull case in fact strongly supports the respondent’s view herein, for the Court says:

* * * Where the effect of the contract is that the deceased partner’s estate shall leave his interest in the business and the surviving partners shall acquire it by payments to the estate, the transaction is a sale, and payments made to the estate are for the account of the survivors. It results that the surviving partners are taxable upon firm profits and the estate is not. * * *

In this proceeding we have just the kind of contract referred to by the Court, for it is clearly true that “the effect of the contract is that the deceased partner’s estate shall leave his interest in the business and the surviving partners shall acquire it by payments to the estate”, for the partnership agreement specifically provides that in case of the death of a partner his estate shall receive the usual percentage of net profits for 18 months “and this shall be in full of the retiring or deceasing member’s interest in the capital, the assets, the receivables, the possibilities and the good will of the Firm.” This is an un-^ ambiguous provision for the “s£¿e” of the deceased partner’s interest in the capital, assets, etc., in consideration of the percentage of net profits for 18 months by which “the surviving partners shall acquire it”, in the language of the Bull case. It is not only a plain recognition by all of the partners signing such agreement of the fact of partnership capital and assets, but a careful provision for disposition thereof for a consideration. We can not and should not disregard such agreement and are by the -above language from the Bull case forbidden so to do. In Pope v. Commissioner, 39 Fed. (2d) 420, cited in the Bull case, the Court said that whether there was a sale “depends largely upon what the parties intended”, and the agreement was regarded as evidence of sale.

[40]*40We think that the reliance of the petitioners upon the Bull case is not well placed, for not only were there no physical assets and no capital in that case, but there, as the Court points out, the Government contended that the amounts were both income and corpus, and strenuously asserted, in supporting the treatment of the payments to the estate as income, that the estate sold nothing to the surviving partners. The Court agrees with that assertion and points out that the Commissioner assessed the identical money and “not a right to receive the amount on the one hand, and actual receipt resulting from that right on the other” and that the Commissioner did not view the item “as the measure of value of a right passing from the decedent at death.” Plainly, since in the Bull

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Nutter v. Commissioner
46 B.T.A. 35 (Board of Tax Appeals, 1942)

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Bluebook (online)
46 B.T.A. 35, 1942 BTA LEXIS 916, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nutter-v-commissioner-bta-1942.