Strasser v. Commissioner

1986 T.C. Memo. 579, 52 T.C.M. 1140, 1986 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 30
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedDecember 8, 1986
DocketDocket No. 30007-84.
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1986 T.C. Memo. 579 (Strasser v. Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Strasser v. Commissioner, 1986 T.C. Memo. 579, 52 T.C.M. 1140, 1986 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 30 (tax 1986).

Opinion

ELVIRA R. STRASSER, Petitioner v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
Strasser v. Commissioner
Docket No. 30007-84.
United States Tax Court
T.C. Memo 1986-579; 1986 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 30; 52 T.C.M. (CCH) 1140; T.C.M. (RIA) 86579;
December 8, 1986.
Elvira R. Strasser, pro se.
Lewis R. Mandel, for the respondent.

KORNER

MEMORANDUM FINDINGS OF FACT AND OPINION

KORNER, Judge: Respondent determined a deficiency in petitioner's 1981 Federal income tax of $8,986.

After concessions, the issues that we must decide are:

1. Whether petitioner is entitled to a charitable contributions deduction in excess of the amount determined by respondent.

2. Whether petitioner is entitled to damages from alleged improper treatment*32 by respondent.

3. Whether petitioner is entitled to protection from future improper treatment by respondent.

4. Whether respondent's alleged improper treatment of petitioner entitles petitioner to carry her 1981 charitable contributions forward beyond the five-year limit imposed by section 170(d). 1

5. Whether petitioner is bound by her stipulation that she is entitled to a charitable contribution of $12.50 per page for the 64 pages of papers she donated to the United States in 1981.

6. Whether petitioner is entitled to reimbursement for the expense of the court appearance of one of her witnesses.

7. Whether petitioner is entitled to a new trial to allow her to present additional evidence of the fair market value of the literary rights she donated in 1981.

8. Whether petitioner is entitled to have this Court channel her pleas for relief to the proper forum, if this Court determines that it lacks jurisdiction over her claims.

FINDINGS OF FACT

Some*33 of the facts have been stipulated and are so found. The stipulation of facts and the exhibits attached thereto are incorporated herein by this reference.

At the time she filed her petition herein petitioner was a resident of Stony Brook, New York. She timely filed her Federal individual income tax return for 1981.

Petitioner is a Doctor of Philosophy and is a Professor of Mathematics at the State University of New York at Stony Brook. She is the widow of David Rapaport, who had been a prominent psychoanalyst prior to his death in 1960. Rapaport left a large volume of writings, two collections of which, his correspondence file and his manuscript file, are relevant to this case.

The correspondence file consists of approximately 7,570 pages of correspondence between Rapaport and others, organized in alphabetical files by the first letter of the last name of the person Rapaport was corresponding with. The file consists of both letters received by Rapaport and letters sent by Rapaport and includes, inter alia, correspondence between Rapaport and other prominent psychoanalysts in which psychoanalytic theories are discussed. Approximately fifty percent of the pages contained in*34 the correspondence file are letters sent to Rapaport by others, and many of the copies of the letters in the file sent by Rapaport are unsigned carbon copies. Petitioner did not own the literary rights to letters sent to Rapaport by others. None of Rapaport's letters in the correspondence file have been published.

The manuscript file consists of copies of published articles, lecture notes, speeches, book reviews, and successive drafts and revisions of Rapaport's textbooks and papers. The contents of the manuscript file were listed on an inventory and designated items 1 through 239. The first 100 items of the manuscript file contain a total of 4,946 pages. The 4,946 pages include multiple copies of many of the items. Some of the items in the manuscript file have been published. 2

After Rapaport's death, petitioner began donating his papers to the United States. In 1961, petitioner placed the correspondence file on deposit with the Library of Congress. A document entitled Instrument of Deposit and Dedication signed by petitioner on December 29, 1962, governed*35 the terms of the deposit. The instrument provided that petitioner was depositing the papers in the Library of Congress for a term of not less than ten years and reserved access to the papers for 50 years to (1) herself, (2) persons she, or after her death her daughters, designated in writing, and (3) Dr. Merton M. Gill, an associate of Rapaport's. The instrument additionally reserved for petitioner all literary rights in the papers for her lifetime. The instrument specified that it was also to govern future deposits of papers in the Library of Congress. The instrument declared that petitioner intended to transfer title to the deposited papers to the United States of America in installments, for the benefit of the Library of Congress, by future execution of a deed of gift for each installment.

By a document entitled Instrument of Gift dated December 29, 1962, petitioner transferred to the United States title to alphabetical files A-E, F-I, and M-R of the correspondence file, subject to the 50 year restriction on access and the lifetime reservation of literary rights provided in the Instrument of Deposit and Dedication. Petitioner donated the remainder of the correspondence file*36 to the United States in 1966, subject to the same restrictions on access and the same reservation of literary rights.

On December 24, 1969, petitioner deposited the manuscript file in the Library of Congress. Petitioner transferred in installments title to the papers in the manuscript file to the United States for inclusion in the collections of the Library of Congress. Each installment was made under the terms of an instrument of gift that reserved for petitioner all literary rights in the papers for her lifetime.

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1986 T.C. Memo. 579, 52 T.C.M. 1140, 1986 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/strasser-v-commissioner-tax-1986.