Schmitt v. State Tax Commission

383 P.2d 97, 234 Or. 455, 1963 Ore. LEXIS 462
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJune 12, 1963
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 383 P.2d 97 (Schmitt v. State Tax Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schmitt v. State Tax Commission, 383 P.2d 97, 234 Or. 455, 1963 Ore. LEXIS 462 (Or. 1963).

Opinions

DENECKE, J.

This is an appeal from the Oregon Tax Court concerning the Oregon Personal Income Tax. The taxpayers claimed a charitable contribution as a deduction. The deduction was disallowed.

The plaintiffs, Mr. and Mrs. Herman Schmitt, deeded an interest in income property to Mr. Herman Schmitt, as trustee. At the same time the parties entered into a trust agreement. The principal terms of the agreement were: (1) The net income of the property was to be paid to Mr. and Mrs. Schmitt during their lifetimes and to the survivor; (2) Upon the survivor’s death the principal and any accrued income was to be paid to two charities; (3) The trustee had powers usually conferred upon a trustee; and (4) The trust was irrevocable.

The remainder interest which would eventually pass to the charities was actuarially computed to be $5,790. This amount was taken as a charitable deduction for the tax year in which the conveyance in trust was made.

The Tax Commission demurred to the taxpayers’ complaint appealing from the ruling of the Tax Commission. The Tax Court sustained the demurrer.

The cause of the dispute is a difference in the language of the federal statute and the state statute. The federal statute reads:

“* * * the term ‘charitable contribution’ means a contribution or gift to or for the use of—
[457]*457“(2) A [charitable] corporation, trust, or community chest, fund, or foundation — .” (Emphasis added.) 26 TTSGA § 170(e).

This contribution would constitute a charitable deduction for federal income tax purposes.

The Oregon statute, OB¡S 316.340, is similar, with one important exception. It defines a charitable contribution as a contribution “To a [charitable] corporation” and omits the phrase, “or for the use of.”

The plaintiffs contend that the omission was of no significance because the phrase, “for the use of,” as used in the federal statute, is redundant and surplusage.

If the federal act had not contained the words, “or for the use of,” one might very well conclude that a contribution in trust, i.e., “for the use of,” was to be treated the same as a contribution directly to a charitable organization. The charity will receive as much ultimate benefit as the beneficiary of a remainder as it would if it were the direct donee of a gift. The existence of the federal law with the additional phrase, however, presents a different problem.

It has been the intent of the Oregon Legislature to bring “our income and excise tax laws in substantial conformity with corresponding provisions of the federal law when such could be accomplished without sacrifice to legislative independence and yet retain certain distinct and different features from the federal code.” Ruth Realty Co. v. Tax Commission, 222 Or 290, 294, 353 P2d 524 (1960).

When certain words or phrases found in the federal statute are omitted in the comparable Oregon statute a question arises as to the significance of the omission.

To lawyers, “for the use of” means something different than “to.” A contribution “to” a charity does [458]*458not have the same legal form as a contribution to a trustee “for the use of” a charity. The end result may be the same, but the form of getting there is different. There are numerous instances in which the same end legal result can be attained but the tax consequences will vary considerably depending upon the form the transaction takes to reach the end result. Based upon words alone, the presence of “for the use of” in the federal statute and their absence in the Oregon statute would reasonably lead to the conclusion that the Oregon statute did not intend to treat contributions “for the use of” a charity as a deduction.

If the words themselves are not considered clear enough to furnish a satisfactory answer we can look and see whether the comparative history of the federal income tax and the Oregon income tax reveals any answer.

The United .States Revenue Act of 1918 provided that contributions “io” charities were deductible. There was no “or for the use of” in the law at that time. The 1918 law was substantially like the prior federal acts.

In 1920 an Office Decision of the Treasury Department construed a transaction in which there was a contribution to a trustee, a trust company, which was to distribute the corpus and income to charity. The trust company was not a qualified trust and the contribution was held nondeductible because “there is no provision in the income tax law for the deduction of charitable contributions to a trust.” OD 669, 3 Cum Bull 187 (1920). The United States Revenue Act of 1921, 42 Stat 241, § 214(a) (11), amended the 1918 act and made contributions “to or for the use of” charities deductible. This additional phrase, “or for the use of,” has continued in all subsequent federal acts.

[459]*459Oregon had its first income tax in 1923. Oregon Laws 1923, ch 279, § ll(j), stated: “In computing the taxpayer’s net income, there shall be allowed as deductions any contributions or gifts made within the taxable year as the same are defined in section 214 of the federal income tax law of 1921.” This law was repealed by initiative in 1924.

In IT 1776, II-2 Cum Bull 151 (1923), the Bureau ruled on a transaction in which a donor transferred bonds to a trustee with the income to a beneficiary for life and the remainder to a church. The Bureau considered this a charitable deduction as of the date of transfer to the trustee. It stated: “There was an immediate gift to the church of a definite right which has a present cash value.” No mention was made of the phrase, “for the use of.”

In 1928 the General Counsel’s Memorandum 3016 was promulgated. It concerned a transaction in which funds were placed in trust with the income to beneficiaries and upon their death, the corpus to a charity. VII-1 Cum Bull 90. The General Counsel was of the opinion that the contribution to the trust was a proper charitable deduction. Reliance was placed upon IT 1776, referred to above. No reference was made to the phrase, “for the use of,” in reaching the conclusion that the gift in trust for charity was deductible.

In 1927 the Oregon Legislature passed another income tax. Oregon Laws 1927, ch 129. This stated that contributions “to” charities were deductible; “for the use of” was not used. The language of this section of the Oregon statute, §ll(i), appears to be a consolidation of the language of the federal Revenue Act of 1916 and the federal Revenue Act of 1918.

The 1927 Oregon income tax was voted down by the people. However, in 1929 another income tax was [460]*460passed which, with amendments, survived until 1953. Oregon Laws 1929, eh 448. The charitable deduction section was taken almost verbatim from the 1927 act, Ul(i).

In 1929, in H. H. Bowman, 16 BTA 1157, 1162 (1929), the Board of Tax Appeals considered the significance of “for the use of” as found in the federal act. The Board stated:

“The wording of the part of the 1918 Act above set forth differs materially from that of the Revenue Act of 1921. In the former Act Congress has limited the deduction to contributions or gifts made to corporations,

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Bluebook (online)
383 P.2d 97, 234 Or. 455, 1963 Ore. LEXIS 462, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schmitt-v-state-tax-commission-or-1963.