Seeley v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue. Seeley v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue

186 F.2d 541
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedFebruary 1, 1951
Docket118, 119, Dockets 21738, 21739
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 186 F.2d 541 (Seeley v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue. Seeley v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Seeley v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue. Seeley v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 186 F.2d 541 (2d Cir. 1951).

Opinion

L. HAND, Chief Judge.

The taxpayers — in one proceeding, a husband and wife, in the other, the husband alone — petition to review assessments against them upon their income taxes for the years 1943 and 1944; we shall disregard the wife and speak as though the husband alone were concerned. The question is of his gross income in the years in question: in particular, whether there should be included in it sums which he ■earned for services performed outside the United States. In short, the question is whether as to these amounts he brought himself within § 116(a) of the Internal Revenue Code. 1 The facts on which the appeal turns were as follows. In 1937 Seeley, the taxpayer,' was in the employ of the General Motors Overseas Operations; and on March 1 of that year he was appointed “managing director” of a Swedish corporate affiliate of that organization. With his wife and two children he went to Stockholm, where he leased and furnished an apartment, and where he lived until February, 1941, — nearly four years. The children went to school in Stockholm, Seeley joined business and social clubs and all his activities were there, for he had no home in the United States, and indeed he made only one trip back here, for a little over two months in 1939. The General Motors Overseas Operations called him back in February, 1941, because of the war, and when he arrived, his passport was taken up, and he was told to go on vacation. When he came back from his vacation at a time not stated, he was told that he could not go back because of the war, and that he would have to wait until the authorities would allow his return. From June 1, 1941, to September, 1941, he was employed in New York, and then he was made “staff assistant, Pacific Region.” Meanwhile he had leased an apartment in Bronxville, New York, for his family where all lived until June 20, 1942, when he was sent to London.

His wife and children did not go with him to London, because they would not have been admitted; his wife moved to an apartment in Manhattan, his son was at college and his daughter was at a school in Massachusetts. In London his duties were “to find out just what was happen-nig to the divisions of General Motors Overseas Operations” and “periodically to report to the general manager in New York.” There were five of these “divisions”; four were manufacturing companies, and the other was an assembly plant; Seeley was a director of two. He remained in London until June, 1944, except *543 for three trips home: the first, from September 27, 1942, to November 25; the second, from May 2, 1943 to July 9; and the third, from December 23, 1943, to February 25, 1944. The first two weeks of each was counted as vacation, the rest of the time was “devoted to business matters pertaining solely to English operations.” When he came back to the United States on June 15, 1944, he was at once given a vacation until October 1, 1944; and thereafter he was assigned to an appointment in New York, where he served until August 25, 1945, when he and his wife went back to Stockholm and he took up his old duties. The Swedish corporation paid his salary until September 1, 1941, after which all his pay came from the New York corporation. He paid no income taxes either in Sweden or England. Based upon these facts he takes two alternative positions: first, he says that he “resided” in Stockholm throughout the years 1943 and 1944; second, he says that, if that is not true, he “resided” in England from June 20, 1942, until he got back on June 15, 1944; and that the five days, by which this period was short of two years, is to be counted as part of the vacation after his British job, and fill out the two years made necessary by the statute. 2

In a jurisprudence like our own, where governmental power is for most purposes limited territorially, it often becomes necessary to measure the rights and duties of a person, physically present in a place, by the permanence of his attachment to it; and obviously there may be any number of different degrees of attachment. The most permanent is “domicil,” and ranging down are “residence,” “habitancy,” “sojourning,” “transience,” and perhaps others. In any given case the word chosen from among these is to be interpreted by its context: that is, by the underlying purpose of the statute or doctrine as a whole, in which it appears; and in the case of a statute that makes particularly authoritative any regulations of the officials charged with its administration. 3 In the case of this statute Judge Chesnut, after a careful examination of the sources, has said that “the statute was originally enacted in 1926 * * * for the purpose of encouraging our foreign trade by enabling United States citizens engaged in business in a foreign country to compete with other Nationals there engaged”; 4 and with this we agree. Moreover, he ruled in that case that the agent of an American company who had been employed as the “chief active officer” of its business in Spain did not cease to “reside” there because the war detained him for seven months in this country, to which he had come back to report to his principal. We should hesitate to distinguish between an absence of seven months and the sixteen months between February, 1941, and June 20, 1942, during which Seeley was in New York, before he went to London; particularly in the light of our own decision in Neuberger v. United States. 5 However, it is not necessary to decide the point, because Seeley does not argue that, if he acquired a “residence” in London and kept it till he left, he had a parallel “residence” in Stockholm over the same period. We will not say that it is never possible to have two independent “residences” at the same time; but we do say that the statute here before us certainly did not contemplate such a possibility, for that would have defeated its purpose. Since, for the reasons we shall give, we hold that Seeley did acquire a “residence” in London, it follows that he did not keep his “residence” in Stockholm at the same time.

As we have said, the statute is one in which the regulations are especially authoritative, because they serve to implement a purpose, not set forth in detail. Section 29.116-1 of Regulations 111 declares : “Whether the individual citizen of the United States is a bona fide resident of a foreign country shall be determined in general by the application of the principles of sections 29.211-2, 29.211-3, 29.211-4 and 29.211-5 relating to what constitutes residence or non-residence * * * *544 in the United States in the case of an alien individual.” Of the sections so incorporated the first — § 29.211-2 — declares that a man’s intentions determine whether he is a “resident” or a “transient”; and that one who is present without any “definite intention as to his stay” is a resident; though he is not, if he has a “definite purpose which in its nature may be promptly accomplished.” On the other hand, when an extended stay may be necessary to accomplish his purpose, “he becomes a resident,” if “he makes his home temporarily" where he has gone.

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Bluebook (online)
186 F.2d 541, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seeley-v-commissioner-of-internal-revenue-seeley-v-commissioner-of-ca2-1951.