Tompkins v. Commissioner

13 T.C. 1054, 1949 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 6
CourtUnited States Tax Court
DecidedDecember 22, 1949
DocketDocket No. 20728
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 13 T.C. 1054 (Tompkins 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
Tompkins v. Commissioner, 13 T.C. 1054, 1949 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 6 (tax 1949).

Opinion

OPINION.

LeMire, Judge:

The respondent determined a deficiency in estate tax in the amount of $11,106.29. Several adjustments were made in the estate tax return which are not controverted. The questions presented for our consideration are, first, whether respondent erred in adding to the gross estate $40,271.33 representing the value of a one-half interest in the assets of a partnership of which the decedent was a member at the time of his death, and $1,500 representing the value of growing crops on land leased by the decedent.

The principal facts are set out in a written stipulation of facts which we incorporate herein by reference. The facts pertaining to the first issue are in substance as follows:

The decedent, Ray E. Tompkins, died December 15, 1944, and his widow, Stella Tompkins, was named executrix of his estate. The decedent was a resident of Umatilla County, Oregon, and his estate tax return was filed with the collector of internal revenue for the district of Oregon.

At the time of his death, and for several years prior thereto, the decedent was an equal partner with Michael R. Nibler in a business of treating and cleaning peas, wheat, and other grains, handling and selling farm implements and equipment, and operating a gasoline service station. On the date of decedent’s death,.December 15, 1944, the partnership assets had a fair market value of $86,993.67, exclusive of the insurance policies on the lives of the partners.

The partnership was formed by a written agreement dated December 3, 1941. Under that agreement and a supplemental agreement dated January 24, 1944, the parties agreed that the firm should acquire and pay the premiums on insurance policies in the amount of $25,000 on the life of each of the partners, payable to the surviving partner, and that the surviving partner should have the right of purchasing the deceased partner’s share of the partnership assets for $25,000. Such policies were taken out in accordance with the partnership agreement. Policies of the face amount of $15,000, taken out under the supplemental agreement of January 24, 1944, on the life of each partner, carried double indemnity provisions in the case of accidental death.

The material part of the original agreement dated December 3,1941, reads as follows:

It Is Further Understood and Agreed that the business shall pay as part of the operating cost the premiums for $10,000.00 life insurance policies to be carried upon the life of each partner, payable to the surviving partner; and it is specifically understood and agreed that in the event of the death of either partner the survivor shall become the sole owner of all of the assets of the partnership upon the payment of the sum of $10,000.00 to the estate of the deceased partner. Upon becoming the sole owner of the partnership assets and business, the surviving partner shall assume responsibility for all obligations of the partnership business.
It Is Further Understood and Agreed that the surviving partner shall, upon the payment of the aforementioned sum, retain the life insurance policy upon his life as part of the assets of the partnership business and shall own the same free and clear of any claims of the heirs of the deceased partner.

The agreement of December 3,1941, was amended by a supplemental agreement entered into January 24,1944, whereby the amount of insurance on the lives of the partners was increased from $10,000 to $25,000. In other respects the original agreement remained in force and effect.

The right to change the beneficiary of each of the policies was reserved to the insured under the standard provisions of the policy contracts.

All premiums on the policies were paid by the partnership and charged to partnership expenses.

The decedent was killed in an accidental fall on December 15, 1944. By reason of his accidental death the proceeds of the insurance policies which the partnership carried on his life amounted to $40,271.33. That amount was paid to the surviving partner, Nibler, the sole beneficiary, who, in the exercise of his option under the partnership agreements, paid the entire amount to the decedent’s estate in exchange for decedent’s interest in the partnership assets. While the agreements were that the deceased partner’s interest might be purchased by the surviving partner for $25,000, Nibler construed them as requiring him to pay over the entire amount of the insurance proceeds to the decedent’s estate.

The estate tax return filed on behalf of decedent’s estate included the entire amount of the insurance, $40,271.33, in the value of the gross estate, but did not include any value for the decedent’s interest in the partnership assets. The respondent, in determining the deficiency, increased the gross estate by $40,271.33 representing the book value of decedent’s share in the partnership assets, that is, $43,496.84, reduced to $40,271.33 by reason of the option agreement.

The stipulated facts on the remaining issue are as follows:

On the date of his death, the decedent was occupying and operating, certain farm property in the State of Oregon under an annual lease agreement. The acreage had been cultivated and planted in wheat about October 10, 1944. The land had been sown with an early harvest crop of peas during the summer of 1944 from which a voluntary growth reappeared with the wheat planted in the fall of 1944. In February or March, 1945 the wheat and interspersed peas growth were ploughed under and a new crop of wheat thereafter was planted.
No value was placed on the said growing crop in the Federal estate tax return filed by the petitioner herein and the said growing wheat crop was valued by the respondent in the amount of $1,500.00, as of December 15, 1944.

Substantially the same question as here presented under the first issue was considered by this Court in Boston Safe Deposit & Trust Co. et al., Executors, 30 B. T. A. 679; M. W. Dobrzensky, Executor, 34 B. T. A. 305; and Estate of John T. H. Mitchell, 37 B. T. A. 1. In the Boston Safe Deposit & Trust Go. case it was held that the proceeds of insurance policies on the life of a deceased partner, which, under a preexistent agreement between the partners, were to be applied, and were applied, as part of the consideration for the transfer of the insured’s interest in the partnership to the surviving partners, were not included in the gross estate as “insurance received by the executor under a policy taken out by the decedent upon his own life,” within the meaning of section 302 (g) of the Revenue Act of 1926, which corresponds to section 811 (c) of the code. Respondent there sought to include in the gross estate not only such insurance proceeds, but also the full value of the deceased partner’s interest in the partnership assets.

The question again arose in M. W. Dobrzensky, Executor, supra, in which we held, modifying Boston Safe Deposit & Trust Co.

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Bluebook (online)
13 T.C. 1054, 1949 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tompkins-v-commissioner-tax-1949.