Ramos v. Commissioner

38 T.C. 820, 1962 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 83
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedSeptember 11, 1962
DocketDocket No. 84507
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 38 T.C. 820 (Ramos 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
Ramos v. Commissioner, 38 T.C. 820, 1962 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 83 (tax 1962).

Opinion

OPINION.

Murdock, Judge:

The Commissioner determined a deficiency of $9,753.19 in income tax of the petitioners for 1954. The facts have been presented by a stipulation which is adopted as the findings of fact.

The petitioners, husband and wife, filed their joint return with the director of internal revenue for the Lower Manhattan District of New York.

The only issue for decision is whether $20,000 paid by Arturo in 1954 to Pauline V. Hoving is deductible under section 212(2), I.R.C. 1954, as an ordinary and necessary expense for the conservation or maintenance of property held for the production of income or whether it was a capital expenditure for the defense or perfection of title or to obtain undisputed title to a life estate in certain trust property and/or for the further purpose of defending or perfecting title to the remainder interest in that property for his children.

Henry H. Eogers executed a trust instrument on November 5,1927, in contemplation of his daughter Millicent’s marriage to A. H. P. Ramos. The marriage took place as agreed on November 7, 1927. The net income of the trust was payable to Millicent for life and at her death the trust was to be divided into equal shares, one to be held in trust for and the income paid for life to each surviving child of the aforesaid marriage. Thereafter the corpus was to be paid to that child’s issue per stirpes; or in default of issue to his brothers or sisters or their issue; and in case of default of such beneficiaries, to the grantor or those entitled under his will. The petitioner, Arturo, is one of the two children of the marriage which ended in divorce on December 12,1935. Arturo was born on November 14, 1928, and his brother, Paul, was born on February 18,1981. Henry H. Eogers died on July 25, 1935. He left by his will a part of his residuary estate in trust for his second wife, Pauline, for life. She survived him and by remarriage became Pauline V. Hoving. She was not Millicent’s mother. Millicent died on January 1, 1953.

The trustee of the Henry H. Eogers trust of 1927 filed a petition in the Supreme Court of New York in December 1953 for settlement of its account as trustee, for construction of the trust indenture and of Eoger’s will, and for instruction as to the disposition of the trust assets. It had not paid any trust income to Arturo or Paul up to that time. Pauline filed an answer in that proceeding in which she asserted that the continuance of the 1927 trust for Arturo and Paul after the death of Millicent contravened section 11 of the New York Personal Property Law, in that those beneficiaries were not in being when the trust was created. She therefore claimed that the corpus of the trust belonged, as a resulting trust, to the residuary estate of Eogers, in which she had an interest. Pauline also argued that the New York rule against perpetuities was violated and the contingent remainder interests failed.

Answers filed in the proceeding included one by Arturo and one on behalf of his infant son, Arturo III. Arturo claimed that the trusts for him and his brother were valid. The proceeding was settled on November 29,1954, by a stipulation including the following:

2. The respondent, Panline Y. Hoving, hereby withdraws her answer to the petition in this proceeding and consents that an order be entered herein construing the secondary trusts established under said trust indenture as valid trusts and that the Trustee thereof shall administer the same as provided by the terms of said trust indenture.
3. The respondent, Pauline Y. Hoving, assigns and transfers to the respondents, Arturo Henry Peralta Eamos and Paul Jaime Peralta Eamos any and all interest or claim in and to any part of the trust fund established under the aforesaid trust indenture dated November 5,1927.
4. In consideration of the foregoing provisions and upon the entry of an order embodying all of the terms and provisions of this stipulation, the respondents Arturo Henry Peralta Ramos and Paul Jaime Peralta Ramos shall pay, from their own funds, the sum of $40,000 to the respondent, Pauline V. Hoving.

The court entered an order dated December 6, 1954, in accordance with the stipulation. Arturo and Paul each paid Pauline $20,000 in November 1954 and Pauline assigned to them equally all right, title, and interest which she had or might acquire in the 1927 trust. The trustee set up separate equal trusts for the lives of Arturo and Paul. Arturo has received since then the income of the trust set up for his benefit. He received no income from the trust during 1954 but for the years 1955 through 1961, he received income from the trust which varied from $13,647.72 in 1955 to $18,031.71 in 1961. The portion thereof representing tax-exempt interest varied from a low of 32.85 percent in 1956 to a high of 50.21 percent in 1960.

Section 212(2) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, upon which the petitioners place their reliance, is as follows:

SEC. 212. EXPENSES FOR PRODUCTION OF INCOME.
In tbe case of an individual, there shall be allowed as a deduction all the ordinary and necessary expenses paid or incurred during the taxable year—
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(2) for the management, conservation, or maintenance of property held for the production of income; or

The petitioners argue that “The payment of $20,000 by petitioner to Pauline V. Hoving in 1954 was deductible as an expense paid for the conservation or maintenance of property held for the production of income within the provisions of section 212(2) Internal Revenue Code.” The Commissioner argues that “Petitioner’s 1954 expenditure of $20,000 for the purpose of obtaining undisputed title as a life tenant of a secondary trust and for the further purpose of defending and protecting title to the corpus of that trust for the future benefit of his children as remaindermen therein represents a nondeductible capital expenditure.”

The following relating to the provisions of section 212 (1) and (2) is from Judge Raum’s opinion in Robert L. Wilson, 37 T.C. 230:

These provisions had their origin in a 1942 amendment to the 1939 Code.1 Prior thereto the only comparable provisions were found in section 23(a) (1) which allowed deductions for ordinary and necessary expenses “in carrying on any trade or business.” By the 1942 amendment the deductions previously allowed only with respect to carrying on a trade or business were extended to certain nonbusiness situations. In form, the old deduction for business expenses was continued in section 23(a) (1) (A) of the 1939 Code and the new deduction for nonbusiness expenses was incorporated in the new provisions of section 23(a) (2). And it is section 23(a)(2) of the 1939 Code from which section 212 of the 1954 Code, here involved, was derived.
But, while the new provisions extended the deduction to certain nonbusiness situations, not theretofore covered by the revenue laws, the same limitations and qualifications applicable to the deductibility of business expenses were likewise applicable to the new deduction for nonbusiness expenses. This much is now clear beyond serious question.

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KELCE v. COMMISSIONER
1978 T.C. Memo. 506 (U.S. Tax Court, 1978)
Bertram v. Commissioner
1978 T.C. Memo. 247 (U.S. Tax Court, 1978)
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1966 T.C. Memo. 270 (U.S. Tax Court, 1966)
Estate of McCauley v. Commissioner
1965 T.C. Memo. 139 (U.S. Tax Court, 1965)
Ramos v. Commissioner
38 T.C. 820 (U.S. Tax Court, 1962)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 T.C. 820, 1962 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ramos-v-commissioner-tax-1962.