T. M. Stanback, T. M. Stanback and Ada M. Stanback, Fred J. Stanback, Fred J. Stanback and Elizabeth C. Stanback v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue

271 F.2d 514
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedNovember 20, 1959
Docket7855
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 271 F.2d 514 (T. M. Stanback, T. M. Stanback and Ada M. Stanback, Fred J. Stanback, Fred J. Stanback and Elizabeth C. Stanback v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
T. M. Stanback, T. M. Stanback and Ada M. Stanback, Fred J. Stanback, Fred J. Stanback and Elizabeth C. Stanback v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 271 F.2d 514 (4th Cir. 1959).

Opinion

HAYNSWORTH, Circuit Judge.

Here we deal with the taxation of the income of a family partnership during years preceding 1951. Involved are questions of collateral estoppel to relitigate the tax recognition of the partnership agreement and of the Commissioner’s duty to tax capital earnings proportionately to the owners of the capital.

The taxpayers, two brothers, had a proprietary medicine business which they *516 conducted as partners. In 1937 and 1938, each transferred an undivided six per cent interest in the partnership to each of three trusts he had created for the benefit of his wife and minor children. 1 At the time of the initial transfer, a new limited partnership, valid under, and for the purposes of, state law, was created, in which the taxpayers were the general partners and the trustees of the several trusts were limited partners. Each partner’s participation in income was proportionate to his capital interest, nothing being allocated to the general partners for their personal services.

Gift tax obligations which arose upon these transfers were settled after the Commissioner had increased the reported values of the transferred interests.

For the tax years 1938 and 1939, the Commissioner attributed all of the partnership income to the taxpayers and assessed deficiencies accordingly. In the Tax Court, the Commissioner’s position was that the trusts were invalid for tax purposes under the Clifford doctrine. 2 The Tax Court disagreed, 3 and the Commissioner did not press his contention further.

For the tax year 1941, however, the Commissioner again assessed deficiencies based upon a reallocation of all partnership income to the taxpayers. This time, the Commissioner’s theory was that the partnership, rather than the trusts, was not entitled to tax recognition. Recognizing the tax validity of the trusts, he contended there was no bona fide intention that the trustees should be partners in the conduct of the proprietary medicine business. In actions for refund, the question of the intention of the parties when they entered into the partnership agreement, which arose under Culbertson, 4 was submitted to a jury. The jury found for the Government. We affirmed, 5 holding there was evidence to support the jury’s verdict and that the previous decision of the Tax Court on the Clifford question did not create a collateral estoppel upon the Government so as to prevent its questioning the right of the partnership to tax recognition. 6

For the tax years 1943-49, the taxpayers contest the Commissioner’s assessments upon the grounds (1) that our earlier decision in Stanback was wrong, and (2) that, in any event, the trusts should be recognized for tax purposes as the owners of the income which their capital interests produce. The Tax Court found a collateral estoppel which prevented relitigation of the first question, *517 but agreed in principle with the alternative contention, though it limited annual recognition of trust income to ten per cent of the gift tax valuation of the trusts’ capital interest plus ten per cent of the trusts’ interest in a surplus capital account which had been created after formation of the limited partnership and prior to the period in question.

The opinion of the Tax Court 7 contains an elaborate and careful discussion of the collateral estoppel question with which we agree in principle. But the Tax Court also found that the trusts collectively are the actual owners of an undivided 36% interest in the partnership and recognized a limited amount of income as being attributable and taxable to the owners of those capital interests. The finding, supported by the testimony and uncontested here, makes applicable rules which require avoidance of the bar of collateral estoppel and a holding that the partnership is valid or a holding, which reaches the same result, that the investor is entitled to the fruits of his investment and should not be limited to that portion of the fruit which a trier-of-fact considers a reasonable return upon the original investment. 8

Commissioner v. Culbertson 9 overturned the inflexible, but objective, tests many courts had applied to determine the validity of family partnerships. The absence of fresh capital and of new vital services was no longer to be treated by the lower courts as decisive. Answers were to turn upon a subjective test, the true intention of the parties. In most of the cases in which the old standards were not met, the trier-of-fact was permitted, but not required, to draw an ultimate inference favorable to the taxpayer. Culbertson offered hope of tax recognition of many family partnerships, but did not supply predictable tax consequence to present transactions.

The Tax Court and other federal courts have not been uniformly liberal in applying the Culbertson rule. Perhaps a restrictive approach was influenced by the fact that in many cases, as here, the partnership agreement gave the partner having a donated capital interest a participation in profits having no apparent, or reasonable, relation to the earnings of his capital. Unconditional recognition of such a partnership and an allocation of earnings in accordance with the agreement would result in a diversion of current income from the one who earned it to one who did not, a violation of a fundamental principle of taxation.

It has long been recognized, however, that the earnings of capital should be taxed to the real owner of the capital who receives the income, rather than to some other. 10 Whether one may be said to be technically a partner, if he is the real owner of an undivided interest in a business, earnings properly attributable to that interest should be taxed to him 11 If he be the true owner of the interest, it matters not that the interest was given *518 to him, as the Tax Court recognized in this case.

In 1951, Congress legitimatized family partnerships. 12 To partnerships in which capital is a material income producing factor, it applied the basic rule of Blair v. Commissioner. If one owns an interest in such a partnership, he must be recognized as a partner though he acquired the interest as a gift, but partnership earnings may be reallocated to attribute reasonable compensation and a proportionate capital return to the donor of the interest.

Though the Congressional Committees expressed the opinion that the statute was a declaration of existing law, they made it clear it was an application of the principle that income from property should be attributed for taxation to the owner of the property. 13

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Bluebook (online)
271 F.2d 514, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/t-m-stanback-t-m-stanback-and-ada-m-stanback-fred-j-stanback-fred-ca4-1959.