STONE, CHAIRMAN v. Sample

62 So. 2d 307, 216 Miss. 287, 16 Adv. S. 46, 1953 Miss. LEXIS 635
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 19, 1953
Docket38621
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 62 So. 2d 307 (STONE, CHAIRMAN v. Sample) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
STONE, CHAIRMAN v. Sample, 62 So. 2d 307, 216 Miss. 287, 16 Adv. S. 46, 1953 Miss. LEXIS 635 (Mich. 1953).

Opinion

*291 Roberds, P. J.

This proceeding involves the legality of a hack income assessment by the State Tax Commission against Clark Sample. The trial court disaffirmed the assessment and the Commission appeals.

The question arises under these circumstances ’: About the year 1940 Sample purchased certain mineral rights in this State. He was then, and for many years had been, a married, man and a resident citizen of Texas. The money used by him in purchasing the mineral interests belonged in equal part to himself and his wife as community property under the laws of Texas. The conveyances were to Sample alone. Royalties had been paid upon such minerals for a number of years. This was done by cheeks to Sample. He deposited the checks in a community account of himself and wife in a Texas bank — in fact, the same account from which the* funds had been withdrawn to pay for the minerals. From the time income began to be realized from oil production upon the property, beginning about 1941, Sample had made income tax returns to the State of Mississippi upon such income in the name of himself and wife, and had paid the tax by checks drawn upon the same bank account in Texas. No question had been raised by the Tax Commission to this manner of reporting and paying taxes until the year 1951, when the Commission contended the returns for taxes should have been based upon the income of Sample alone, instead of jointly with his wife, thereby placing Sample in a higher income bracket and increasing the annual tax. On January 18, 1952, the Commission, after a hearing, made an addi *292 tional income assessment against Sample in the aggregate amount of $1,264.53 for the years 1947, 1948 and 1949? with interest thereon from the due dates of said amounts for the respective years. On appeal by Sample the circuit court held that the additional assessment was illegal and void. The. above stated facts are not in dispute.

■ Section 9222, Miss. Code 1942, imposes a tax, at the rate specified in that section, upon the net income from all property “owned” in this state by nonresidents of Mississippi.

Sample contends that, while he holds the legal title to the minerals, they were purchased by joint funds of himself and wife and he holds such title in trust for himself and wife, and the property and income therefrom, in equity and in fact, is the joint property of himself and wife. The Commission says the trust is illegal and of no effect under Section 269, said Code, requiring all trusts in land in Mississippi, to be in writing and recorded, else they are void. But that Section, by its express terms, has no application to resulting and constructive trusts, and this Court, in construing and applying thaft section, has so held in cases too numerous for citation. And, if it be true, and the fact is not contested here, that half of the purchase price of the minerals was the property of Mrs. Sample, then a trust resulted in favor of Mrs. Sample and he holds title in trust to her one-half interest. Barton v. Magruder, 69 Miss. 462, 13 So. 839; Tanous v. White, 180 Miss. 566, 191 So. 278; Ryals v. Douglas, 205 Miss. 695, 39 So. 2d 311; Chichester v. Chichester, 209 Miss. 628, 48 So. 2d 123. How she came by the money is not material. Here she was the owner by virtue of the community laws of Texas. The result is the same as though she had acquired ownership by inheritance or gift or in any other lawful manner. The controlling fact is she was the owner. The source of her title, or ownership, is immaterial.

*293 The Commission says Mr. Sample — not Mrs. Sample — is asserting the trust and he cannot do that. No authority is cited for the stated proposition. However, the assumption that Mrs. Sample is not claiming the benefit of the trust is not well taken. Through the years the returns upon the income from the property have been made and the taxes have been paid in the joint names and out of the common funds of Mr. and Mrs. Sample. Mrs. Sample has thereby made claim to one-half of the income since income began to accrue.

The Commission invokes the rule that real property is controlled by the law of its situs. That, of course, is true. This is not an effort to transport the Texas community law into this state. The title of Mrs. Sample to a half interest in the property in Mississippi does not result from application of the community law of Texas to the real property in Mississippi. The trusteeship comes about as a result of using her money in the purchase of the property regardless, as above stated, how or where she acquired title to the money. The same result would have come about had she acquired such title in a noncommunity property state. There is no prohibition against a nonresident of Mississippi asserting a resulting trust in lands in this state.

The Commission says Sample is estopped to assert dual ownership. Assuming but not deciding, that the Commission is in position to invoke estoppel if it exists, we cannot see that the doctrine applies here. Mrs. Sample has not been misled, or caused to act to her detriment; besides, as stated, both parties have recognized the joint ownership since the minerals were acquired.

The Commission urges that it would be unable, or, at least, put to great disadvantage, in endeavoring to collect the tax against Mrs. Sample; that if warrant were issued against the land, as provided by Section 924-8, said Code, to collect the tax owing by Mrs. Sample, it would be served upon land to which Mrs. Sample has no *294 title. That, however, begs the question. Had that procedure been adopted, the question of true ownership would then, as now, have been involved, and subject to be established. However, with joint returns having been made through the years, Mrs. Sample would not have been in good position to deny that she was the owner of a one-half interest in the property. And certainly she could not successfully do so now after asserting, in the manner shown by this litigation, her claim thereto. Besides, the difficulty in collecting the tax could not determine the rights of the parties to the property.

The Commission cites Hammonds v. Commissioner of Internal Rev., 106 Fed. 2d 420; Commissioner v. Skaggs, 122 Fed. 2d 721, and Jones v. Trapp, 186 Fed. 2d 951. But the facts of those cases are not the same as in the case at bar. In the first case, Hammonds and wife lived in Oklahoma. That State has no community property law. Mrs. Hammonds, by her labor acquired oil and gas leases in Texas. These were sold at a profit. Hammonds and wife treated these leases and the profit as community property, and made tax returns charging themselves, each, with half of such profits. The Commissioner disallowed this return and charged the wife with the entire profit. In Texas whatever is gained by the labor of either spouse is community property. The court held that the leases, so acquired by labor and services of the wife, became community property. It said: “. . .

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Bluebook (online)
62 So. 2d 307, 216 Miss. 287, 16 Adv. S. 46, 1953 Miss. LEXIS 635, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stone-chairman-v-sample-miss-1953.