Robert A. Henningsen, and Cross and R.A. And Margaret Henningsen v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, And

243 F.2d 954, 51 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 225, 1957 U.S. App. LEXIS 5095
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedApril 27, 1957
Docket7327
StatusPublished
Cited by80 cases

This text of 243 F.2d 954 (Robert A. Henningsen, and Cross and R.A. And Margaret Henningsen v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, And) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robert A. Henningsen, and Cross and R.A. And Margaret Henningsen v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, And, 243 F.2d 954, 51 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 225, 1957 U.S. App. LEXIS 5095 (4th Cir. 1957).

Opinion

SOPER, Circuit Judge.

This case requires a review of a decision of the Tax Court which sustained determinations by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue of a deficiency in income tax of Robert A. Henningsen for the year 1946 and a deficiency in income tax of Robert A. Henningsen and Margaret Henningsen, his wife, for the year 1947. The question in dispute was whether the taxpayers were residents of China or the United States in the taxable years.

Originally the Commissioner determined a deficiency for the year 1946 in the sum of $73,677.25 and also an addition to the tax for failure of the taxpayer to file a return for that year. The Commissioner also determined a deficiency in income tax of husband and wife for the year 1947 in the sum of $18,694.44. During the taxable years the taxpayer was an employee of the Henningsen Produce Company, a China Trade Act corporation, and received from it certain bonus payments. One of these was in the amount of $100,000 which was included by the Commissioner in the taxpayer’s income for the year 1946. During the hearing before the Tax Court the evidence indicated that this sum was received in 1947 rather than in 1946 and the taxpayer was allowed to amend his petition in the 1946 case so as to challenge the Commissioner’s determination on this point. The Commissioner was also allowed to amend his answer in this case. About a month later the Commissioner filed an amended answer in the 1946 case denying that the bonus was received in 1947 —and also filed an amended answer in the 1947 case in which he set up the claim that if the bonus was in fact received by the taxpayer in 1947, the deficiency in that year would be $96,423.-44 in lieu of $18,694.44 as previously determined. The Tax Court held that the money was received in 1947 and also held that the Commissioner’s claim for an increased deficiency in the latter year was timely and proper. The Tax Court’s final decision was that the taxpayer owed a deficiency for 1946 in the amount of $3049.50 and a penalty in the sum of $762.38 under § 291(a) of the 1939 Code, 26 U.S.C.A. § 291(a), and that *956 Robert A. and Margaret Henningsen owed a deficiency in income tax for 1947 in the sum of $96,423.44. The Commissioner filed a cross-petition in this court claiming that the bonus of $100,000 should be included in the taxpayer’s income for the year 1946 and not for the year 1947.

Section 116(a) (1) of the Internal Revenue Code 1939, 26 U.S.C.A. § 116 (a) (1), exempts from taxation amounts received from sources without the United States in the case of an individual citizen of the United States who establishes to the satisfaction of the Commissioner that he is a bona fide resident of a foreign country during the entire taxable year. Section 116(a) (2) provides that, in case of an individual citizen of the United States who has been a bona fide resident of a foreign country for at least two years before the date on which he changes his residence to the United States, earned income received from sources without the United States attributable to the period of foreign residence shall be exempt from taxation.

The most important factual question is whether Henningsen, a citizen of the United States, was a bona fide resident of China or of the United States during the taxable years. 1 Evidence bearing on this matter may be summarized as follows:

The taxpayer was born in the United States in 1905. In October 1929, when he was a resident of Portland, Oregon, he left the United States with his wife and baby to accept full-time employment in Shanghai, China, with the Henning-sen Produce Company, a China Trade Act, 15 U.S.C.A. § 141 et seq., corporation previously organized by members of his family. He became a bona fide resident of China and remained there, except for vacation trips to the United States, until November 1941.

In July 1940, pursuant to warnings as to the war situation, his wife and three children came to the United States where they remained until January 1947. The taxpayer himself came to the United States in August 1940. The family took up its residence in Portland, Oregon, in a house purchased by the taxpayer in 1936 and thereafter occupied by his wife’s parents. In 1940, the taxpayer sold this property and bought another residence in a suburb of Portland in which he lived with his family until 1944.

In the meantime, in August 1940, it was agreed between U. S. Harkson, the brother-in-law of the taxpayer, who was. the president of the Produce Company* the taxpayer’s brother Anker, who was vice-president and manager of the company, and the taxpayer, who was secretary, treasurer and assistant manager* that in view of the war situation in China only one of them should remain in Shanghai as manager of the company’s operations and that they should rotate as manager until the situation cleared up, and that the taxpayer should take the first tour of duty. Accordingly he returned to Shanghai the latter part of 1940 and remained there until November 1941 when his brother replaced him and he returned to his family in the United States.

In April 1942, he went to Brazil and put a dried egg factory into operation for a corporation which the Produce Company controlled. He remained in Brazil until November 1942 when he returned to Oregon where his family had remained in the meantime.

From February 1943 until February 1944 the taxpayer served with the Office of Strategic Services, first in Washington, D. C. and later in San Francisco. During this period his wife and children remained in the residence in Portland.

From March 1944 until June 1945 the taxpayer resided in Lamesa, Texas, where he managed a dried egg factory. During a portion of this period his wife and children were with him. After his *957 return to Portland he purchased another residence property in that city, which he subsequently sold in December 1946.

From August 1945, after the termination of the war, the taxpayer lived in San Francisco in order to make arrangements for the company’s return to Shanghai. He worked at this location until February 1946, when he left Los Angeles for Shanghai and upon arrival took up his duties with the Produce Company. His family, in the meantime, remained in the Portland residence until August 1946, when they moved to another residence in Gearhart, Oregon, purchased by the taxpayer. In January 1947, the wife and children left the United States for Shanghai, where they lived with the taxpayer in an apartment until July 1947. In August 1947, Hark-son purchased the stock of the taxpayer and his brother in the Produce Company and thereupon they terminated their employment with the company. The taxpayer made a profit upon the sale of $21,457, which was reported on the joint return of the taxpayer and his wife for the year 1947.

During the calendar years 1946 and 1947 the taxpayer received a total of $152,500 for services rendered the Produce Company, consisting of salaries in the amount of $30,000 and bonus payments of $122,500. One of the bonus payments amounting to $100,000 was transferred by telegraph on January 15, 1947 to the National City Bank of New York to be credited to the taxpayer’s account in the U. S. National Bank of Portland. The Produce Company deducted this payment on its 1946 income tax return.

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Bluebook (online)
243 F.2d 954, 51 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 225, 1957 U.S. App. LEXIS 5095, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robert-a-henningsen-and-cross-and-ra-and-margaret-henningsen-v-ca4-1957.