Publicker v. Commissioner
This text of 11 T.C.M. 519 (Publicker 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.
Opinion
Memorandum Findings of Fact and Opinion
This proceeding involves gift tax deficiencies for 1946 and 1947 in the respective amounts of $13,875 and $43,162.50. The only question in issue is the value at the date of the gifts of several pieces of diamond jewelry which petitioner gave to her daughter in 1946 and 1947.
Findings of Fact
Petitioner is a resident of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. She filed gift tax returns for 1946 and 1947 with the collector for the first district of Pennsylvania. In her 1946 return she reported, among others, a gift to her daughter, Helen P. Neuman, of a diamond ring valued at $50,000. Respondent determined that the ring had a value at the date of the gift of $100,000.
*207 In her 1947 return petitioner reported gifts to the same donee of another diamond ring valued at $115,000 and a pair of diamond ear clips valued at $6,000. Respondent determined that the gifts had a value of $240,000.
The subject matter of the 1946 gift was a marquise-cut diamond of 20.5 carats in an iridium platinum setting with two tapered, bullet shaped diamonds. The donor purchased the ring April 9, 1941, from Joseph Milner of the firm of The House of Milner, wholesale and retail diamond merchants of Philadelphia, for $45,000. She paid a ten per cent Federal excise tax on the purchase. She reported the gift in her 1946 gift tax return at a value of $50,000. Respondent determined in his deficiency notice that the ring had a value at the date of the gift of $100,000.
The fair market value of the 1946 gift was $58,500.
The 1947 gifts were an emerald-cut diamond weighing 33.5 carats in a ring mounting and a pair of marquise-cut diamond ear clips of.56 carat. The ring and ear clips were purchased by the donor from Harry Winston, Inc., New York, New York, February 5, 1947, for $200,000, plus 20 per cent, $40,000, Federal excise tax. Respondent valued the gifts in his deficiency*208 notice at $240,000.
The value of the 1947 gifts were not less than $240,000.
Opinion
LEMIRE, Judge: Aside from their wide difference of views on the actual sale value of the diamonds, based on the testimony of their expert witnesses, the parties are in further disagreement as to whether the values now in question are the wholesale or the retail values of the diamonds and whether the excise tax paid on the purchases by the donor is or is not to be taken into consideration in determining value.
The gift tax under
It is not unlikely that any satisfactory sale of the diamonds under consideration by either the donor or the donee at about the time of the gifts would have had to be negotiated through an established dealer or commissioned merchant who would have charged the seller a fee or commission for his services.
We held in
As a basis for a possible distinction of the instant case from the Gould case, supra, we do have here considerable other evidence than the mere circumstances of the sales. We have the testimony of four expert witnesses, three for the petitioner and one for the respondent, all of whom we deem well qualified. One of petitioner's witnesses placed a value of $46,650 on the 1946 gift and a value of $114,500 on the 1947 gifts. A second witness for petitioner valued the 1946 gift at about the same amount and the 1947 gifts at $78,590. Petitioner's third witness placed values of $51,250 on the 1946 gift and $122,000 on the 1947 gifts. These values were all said to be wholesale values, the amounts which a dealer would have been willing to pay, and were exclusive of any Federal excise tax. Respondent's witness placed a value of $90,000 on the 1946 gift and a value of*211 $201,000 on the 1947 gifts, exclusive of Federal excise taxes. Petitioner's witnesses are all well-established diamond merchants. Respondent's witness is not a dealer but he has had considerable experience as an appraiser of diamonds such as those under consideration. We have found it impossible to reconcile the testimony of the various expert witnesses.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
11 T.C.M. 519, 1952 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 206, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/publicker-v-commissioner-tax-1952.