Oscar K. Diamond and Helen J. Diamond v. Walter R. Sturr, Collector of Internal Revenue, Charles Bruen and Anna Bruen v. Walter R. Sturr, Collector of Internal Revenue

221 F.2d 264, 47 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 433, 1955 U.S. App. LEXIS 5173
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedMarch 28, 1955
Docket23217-23218
StatusPublished

This text of 221 F.2d 264 (Oscar K. Diamond and Helen J. Diamond v. Walter R. Sturr, Collector of Internal Revenue, Charles Bruen and Anna Bruen v. Walter R. Sturr, Collector of Internal Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oscar K. Diamond and Helen J. Diamond v. Walter R. Sturr, Collector of Internal Revenue, Charles Bruen and Anna Bruen v. Walter R. Sturr, Collector of Internal Revenue, 221 F.2d 264, 47 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 433, 1955 U.S. App. LEXIS 5173 (2d Cir. 1955).

Opinion

221 F.2d 264

Oscar K. DIAMOND and Helen J. Diamond, Plaintiffs,
v.
Walter R. STURR, Collector of Internal Revenue, Defendant.
Charles BRUEN and Anna Bruen, Plaintiffs,
v.
Walter R. STURR, Collector of Internal Revenue, Defendant.

No. 102.

No. 103.

Docket 23217-23218.

United States Court of Appeals Second Circuit.

Argued December 16, 1954.

Decided March 28, 1955.

John T. DeGraff and Mortimer M. Kassell, Albany, N. Y., Miriam Wernick, Brooklyn, N. Y., of counsel, for plaintiffs.

H. Brian Holland, Ellis Slack, Joseph F. Goetten, Washington, D. C., and Theodore F. Bowes, Syracuse, N. Y., for defendant.

Before SWAN, FRANK and HINCKS, Circuit Judges.

During 1949 Oscar Diamond and Charles Bruen were employees of the State of New York. New York provided them with food and lodgings at the state institutions where they worked, and withheld federal income taxes on the value of the food and lodging so provided. Diamond and Bruen filed with the Commissioner of Internal Revenue timely claims for refunds on the ground that the food and lodging received by them were not compensation and therefore not taxable. The Commissioner disallowed their claims, and the present suits were then instituted.1

FRANK, Circuit Judge.

1. The Internal Revenue Code taxes "salaries, wages, or compensation for personal service * * * of whatever kind and in whatever form paid." Section 22, I.R.C., 53 Stat. 574, 26 U.S.C.A. § 22. The applicable Treasury Regulation, in 1949, provided that "If * * * living quarters or meals are furnished to employees for the convenience of the employer, the value thereof need not be * * * added to the compensation otherwise received. * * *" Regulation 111. Regulation 29.22(a)(3).2 At that time, the Treasury interpreted the Regulation as follows: "As a general rule, the test of `convenience of the employer' is satisfied if living quarters or meals are furnished to an employee who is required to accept such quarters and meals in order to perform properly his duties." Mim. 5023 (1940 — 1 C.B. 14) (subsequently retroactively modified).3

By this interpretation, the food and lodging furnished taxpayers Diamond and Bruen were `for the convenience of the employer' and therefore not taxable as compensation. Diamond, senior psychiatrist at a state mental institution, was required by state statute, New York Mental Health Law No. 34, to reside on the premises as a condition of his employment. Bruen, housefather to thirty-two delinquent boys at a state training school, and Mrs. Bruen, housemother to the same group, were required to live in the cottage in which the delinquents were housed. Their bedroom had a window overlooking the dormitory. Specifically the Bruens were on duty from 6:00 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. daily, and generally they were required to be available after 9:00 P.M. for emergencies. Their apartment had no cooking facilities.

Their living conditions illustrate how minimal were the economic benefits to them of the food and lodging supplied. The Bruens, for example, were not permitted to have their daughter reside with them, and they maintained a separate home some thirteen miles from the school where they might spend their weekly evening off and where their daughter lived during her college vacations. Husband and wife could not dine together, as one had to be on duty with their charges while the other ate. The Diamonds lived in a building which also housed an assortment of mental patients — some noisy, some profane, some disturbed. Their young daughters had no restricted play space, and could only romp in an area traversed by hospital traffic, including ambulatory mental patients. Under these circumstances — the meagerness of the furnished facilities, the requirement that the employees live at their posts of duty and be available for call at all times, the absence of any showing that the parties regarded their room and board as compensation — we hold that the food and lodging furnished to the Diamonds and the Bruens were not compensation and not taxable, at least until December 31, 1948.

On that day — one day before the taxable year in question — the Commissioner of Internal Revenue revoked an earlier ruling and ruled that the value of food, lodging and other maintenance furnished employees of the state of New York, whose salaries were classified under the New York Civil Service (Feld-Hamilton) Law4, was compensation for federal tax purposes. His ruling was without reference to whether the employee received significant economic benefit from the food and lodging. Whether conditions of employment required living on the post and constant availability for duty was specifically disavowed as a relevant factor in determining whether the maintenance furnished was compensation. If the Commissioner's ruling was valid, it results in a determination contrary to the "convenience of the employer" test in the two cases at bar, for both Diamond and Bruen were employees classified by the Feld-Hamilton Law during 1949.

2. "Treasury regulations and interpretations long continued without substantial change, applying to unamended or substantially reenacted statutes, are deemed to have received congressional approval and have the effect of law." Helvering v. Winmill, 305 U.S. 79, 83, 59 S.Ct. 45, 46, 83 L.Ed. 52. Regulation 111, Section 29.22(a) (3) in its earliest form was enacted in 1920.5 It was amended in 19406 but without serious change. The Treasury's interpretive bulletin, issued at the time of the amendment,7 made clear that employees such as Diamond and Bruen need not count food and lodging received as compensation. The Regulation stood untouched between 1940 and the 1954 revision of the Internal Revenue Code, and the interpretive bulletin stood untouched until retroactively modified in 1950, several months after the close of the tax year in question.

Particularized interpretations issued by the Treasury during the 1921-1948 period were consistent with the 1940 interpretive bulletin. See, e. g., 1 C.B. 71, O.D. 265 (seamen); 4 C.B. 1459, O.D. 814 (fishing and canning workers); 4 C.B. 1634, O.D. 915 (hospital employees); I.T. 2253, V-I-C.B. 32 (domestics); I.T. 3420, 1940-2 C.B. 40 (Army nurses); I.T. 2232-II-2 C.B. 144 (Public Health, Coast Guard and Geodetic Survey employees). There is one inconsistent interpretation in C.B. 4-1633, O.D. 914, I.T. 2051, C.B. III-2-1673 (employees of the Indian Bureau of Department of Interior) ("compensation" determined by accounting entry on books of Interior Department). Using this standard, however, Diamond and Bruen would not be taxable, since the books of New York list the items in question as "maintenance."

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Diamond v. Sturr
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Bluebook (online)
221 F.2d 264, 47 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 433, 1955 U.S. App. LEXIS 5173, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oscar-k-diamond-and-helen-j-diamond-v-walter-r-sturr-collector-of-ca2-1955.