Rosalind F. Kaufman v. United States

462 F.2d 439, 30 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5809, 1972 U.S. App. LEXIS 8887
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJune 20, 1972
Docket71-3543
StatusPublished

This text of 462 F.2d 439 (Rosalind F. Kaufman v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rosalind F. Kaufman v. United States, 462 F.2d 439, 30 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5809, 1972 U.S. App. LEXIS 8887 (5th Cir. 1972).

Opinion

CLARK, Circuit Judge:

The facts of this gift tax case are undisputed. It is the effect upon these facts of the legal emanations flowing from Commissioner of Int. Rev. v. Chase Manhattan Bank, 259 F.2d 231 (5th Cir. 1958), which this appeal must settle.

Taxpayer, Rosalind Kaufman, and her deceased husband were residents of Louisiana (a community property state) until the time of her spouse’s death on July 24, 1967. During their marriage, community funds were used to purchase certain life insurance policies on Mr. Kaufman. The beneficiaries were revoc-ably designated by Mr. Kaufman at the time he purchased the policies; upon his death the designations became irrevocable. At the time of Mr. Kaufman’s death, title to the policies still remained in the community. The proceeds were paid to the named beneficiaries in the following way:

Taxpayer $174,918.98

Taxpayer’s two

daughters 72,000.74

Total $246,919.72

The United States takes the position, and the district court agreed, 338 F.Supp. 23, that upon Mr. Kaufman’s death the taxpayer made a taxable gift of 36,000 dollars or one-half the amount paid to the daughters. Taxpayer argues that the 72,000 dollars came entirely from the deceased’s share of the community since she received her share plus part of his. We agree with the taxpayer and reverse the judgment of the district court.

Both parties agree that this Court’s holding in Chase Manhattan is disposi-tive, depending of course upon how one interprets its holding in the light of this ease. In Chase Manhattan the deceased husband created an insurance trust which was to be funded at his death from the proceeds of designated insur- *441 anee policies. The trust provided for a life estate for his wife with gifts over at the wife’s death. As in our ease, at the husband’s death, the designations became irrevocable. The question, as in our case, was the wife’s gift tax consequences. This court held that the wife owed a gift tax on half of the entrusted insurance proceeds less the value of the life estate the wife received in that half. The value of the life estate in half the proceeds was less than the wife’s share of the community (or half the proceeds). We interpret Chase Manhattan to hold that the wife gave away that portion of her share of the community that she did not keep. The question we must answer to decide the instant appeal is whether Chase Manhattan mandates any gift tax liability when the wife receives all of her share or more of the community. We hold that it does not.

The United States contends that Chase Manhattan supports its position that the taxpayer owes a gift on 36,000 dollars because it views this holding as simply subjecting every dollar to a sort of joint tenancy by both community partners. Thus, under the facts of this case, the United States seeks to tax one-half of any gift a deceased spouse might make, no matter how large or small and irrespective of any evidence of donative intent by the surviving spouse. Under the correct interpretation of Chase Manhattan, since the wife received more than her share of the total community insurance proceeds, no gift can be constructively presumed. 1

The approach of the United States not only subverts Chase Manhattan but leads to double taxation and tax inequality against residents of community property states. Under the United States’ theory, the 36,000 dollars, with which the wife presumptively gifted her daughters, will actually be taxed twice. Such a result completely subverts the design of the gift and estate tax laws as comprehensive and complementary, but not duplicative, schemes of taxation. This is best illustrated by the following example. 2 Assume that from a 247,000 dollar estate the taxpayer received 123,500 dollars at her husband’s death, or exactly the amount of her community interest. Assume further that the remaining 123,500 dollars is bequeathed as a gift to a third person. The deceased’s taxable estate will be 123,500 dollars. At the taxpayer’s death, her taxable estate will also be 123,500 dollars. Thus when both spouses have died the full estate of 247,000 dollars will have been taxed. But under the rule contended for by the United States, one-half of all monies not given to the wife are taxed as a gift made by her at the time of her husband’s death. Thus, she would owe a gift tax on 61,750 dollars which represents one-half of the half of the community property not bequeathed to her, but made a bequest by her husband to another. This would plainly mean that, upon the single event of the husband’s death, the same 61,750 dollars would be taxed once through the estate tax on the husband’s estate, and once as a gift tax assessed to the wife on her husband’s death.

Utilizing this same example in the setting of a common law state demon *442 strates that the government’s position violates the national policy of tax equalization since such double taxation would not occur. In such a state the deceased’s gross estate would be 247,000 dollars, but since he left 123,500 dollars to his wife, he receives the full marital deduction of 123,500 dollars and an estate tax is levied only on the remaining one half. The wife’s taxable estate upon her later demise will be the 123,500 dollars left to her. The difference occurs because in the common law state the absence of a community ownership theory would prevent the claim of a constructive gift since the wife would have had no property interest for the United States to presume she gave away at the time of her husband’s death. 3

The United States argues, however, that no such discrimination between community property and common law states actually exists. Using for its example the sums involved in the instant case, it correctly points out that the estate of a similarly situated wife in a common law state would receive a credit under 26 U.S.C.A. § 2013 (1967) against her own estate tax liability of the amount of estate tax attributable to 51,500 dollars in the husband’s estate. 4 The 51,500 dollars represents the difference between the 175,000 dollars she actually received and the 123,500 dollar portion thereof that had not previously been taxed. Following this same argument, the United States asserts that a wife in a community property state would receive a credit on 87,500 dollars. Thus the 36,000 dollar (87,500 dollars minus 51,500 dollars) gift tax discrimination in the community property state discussed above would be remedied at this second taxing stage. The United States inexplicably arrives at the 87,500 dollar figure by taking one-half of 175.000 dollars. It argues that since this 87,500 dollars was taxed in the husband’s estate the wife will get a credit on that amount in her estate. But this ratiocination is spurious. The wife’s credit in a community property state will be only 51,500 dollars because this is all that she received that was previously taxed. 123,500 dollars of the 175.000 dollars she received was hers to begin with. This line of argument is in error for another reason.

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Related

Cox v. United States
286 F. Supp. 761 (W.D. Louisiana, 1968)
Kaufman v. United States
338 F. Supp. 23 (W.D. Louisiana, 1971)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
462 F.2d 439, 30 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 5809, 1972 U.S. App. LEXIS 8887, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rosalind-f-kaufman-v-united-states-ca5-1972.