Towner v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue

182 F.2d 903, 39 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 585, 1950 U.S. App. LEXIS 3989
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJune 5, 1950
Docket21595_1
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 182 F.2d 903 (Towner 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
Towner v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 182 F.2d 903, 39 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 585, 1950 U.S. App. LEXIS 3989 (2d Cir. 1950).

Opinion

CLARK, Circuit Judge.

Petitioners seek review of a decision of the Tax Court, 12 T.C. 962, upholding the Commissioner’s determination of an estate tax deficiency to the extent of $159,447.63 against the estate of Margaret Ruth Brady Farrell, late of Albany, New York, of whose estate they are executors. In making their return they deducted from the gross estate, upon computation of the net estate for tax purposes, a portion of the indebtedness represented by a certain note made by the decedent'and shown in the estate tax return as $331,938.33. Of this sum, $33,400 is coneededly deductible. As to the balance, the question is whether the estate should be allowed a credit under I. R. C. § 812(b), 26 U.S.C.A. § 812(b), since it was entitled .to reimbursement from the son when the executors paid the note after the mother’s death. The Commissioner ruled against the-deduction, the Tax Court sustained him, and this petition for review followed.

The facts found by the Tax Court were either stipulated or appeared from the evidence of Neile F. Towner, one of the executors. Beginning in 1927, the decedent’s son, Anthony Brady Farrell, obtained cash on short-term notes to the total sum of $325,550 from the National Commercial Bank and Trust Company of Albany. These notes showed the son as maker and the decedent as endorser except for one where she appeared as maker and he as endorser. The renewals upon maturity were in similar form until at a later date they took the form of showing the decedent as maker and the son as the payee-endorser. In 1932 and 1933, he obtained the additional sum of $33,400 from the bank upon three notes in this form. All the notes were renewed from time to time until in 1937 they were consolidated into a single one for $357,400 made by the decedent and endorsed by the son. This note, too, was renewed from time to time, the amount due being reduced to $332,400 by reason of a payment of $25,000 on account made by the decedent in 1941. The last renewal note was dated May 24, 1944, and matured on August 24, 1944, after the decedent’s death which occurred on August 14.

In 1939, the decedent turned over her business affairs to Mr. Towner, who had previously represented her as an attorney. When he discovered the three notes, totaling $33,400, all executed after the effective date of the gift tax, he questioned her about them. As he testified, she then said: “That is my debt. I will think it over and I intend to pay it, and Anthony is under no obligation whatsoever to pay the note.” He then told her that she should have included the three notes in a gift tax return. She replied that she was not a business woman and was not familiar with the gift tax. He advised her that the proper way to handle the matter was to have Anthony give her his three notes, plus interest, for these notes. Pursuant to this advice, the decedent did obtain three demand notes from Anthony on or about March 20, 1942, in the total amount of $33,400, plus interest. After her death Anthony paid this indebtedness to the decedent’s estate over objection and upon the insistence of the executors. (This is the item allowed as deductible by the Commissioner.) The executors, however, paid the entire amount with interest to the bank, without further claim for reimbursement against Anthony and then asserted this deduction in their estate tax return in the total sum of $331,938.33, the amount payable as of the decedent’s death after credit for unearned discount. After the decision below, how *905 ever, they did start suit for reimbursement against Anthony in the state court as they attempted to show by motion for a rehearing, to be postponed until after decision in the state action. Denial of this motion below is also assigned as error here.

In its decision the Tax Court found that the decedent did not intend to and did not .relieve Anthony from his liability on the notes. Since therefore he was obligated to reimburse the estate and had ample means to do so — having received approximately $6,000,000 under his grandfather’s will upon his mother’s death — the executors were not entitled to the claimed deduction in the estate tax. Petitioners contend, however, that under controlling New York law Mrs. Farrell signed the renewal notes not as surety or accommodation maker, but as principal debtor, intending to assume and assuming sole liability for the debt to the bank. Alternatively they contend that although they conferred a benefit on Anthony in paying the indebtedness the New York courts would not impose an obligation on Anthony to indemnify the estate, it being neither unjust nor inequitable that Anthony retain the benefits so conferred upon him. We must therefore turn to New York law, since the allowable deductions from gross estate under I. R. C. § 812(b) (3) must be of those claims against an estate “as are allowed by the laws of the jurisdiction, whether within or without the United States, under which the estate is being administered.”

Turning therefore to petitioners’ first contention, we find that N. Y. Negotiable Instruments Law, Consol.Laws, c. 38, § 55 provides: “An accommodation party is one who has signed the instrument as maker, drawer, acceptor or indorser, without receiving value therefor, and for the purpose of lending his name to some other person.” Admittedly the decedent received no value in exchange for her signature on the notes. Therefore she was an accommodation party unless her signature was for some reason other than lending her name to her son in order to enable him to obtain credit from the bank. The only reason of this sort suggested in the record is that she intended to repay the bank herself, and thus, in effect, make a gift to her son of the amount borrowed. This could ■be the case either if the transaction from the beginning was intended as a gift to Anthony, or if, having first expected Antony to repay the note, she later determined to release him from his liability.

On the issue thus framed we have the finding of fact of the Tax Court that “decedent never made an effective gift to Anthony of the amount of the original indebtedness nor of her right to be reimbursed if she were required to pay the notes in question.” While this is persuasive as to the force of the evidence evaluated by an experienced trier of such issues in that court, yet as it presents an interwoven problem of law and fact we shall re-examine it.

The contention that decedent actually intended to release her son from his obligation to repay the money he had obtained from the bank depends, in the final analysis, only upon her single statement, made in connection with her discussion of gift taxes with her lawyer in 1939, to the effect that the obligation is “my debt” and “Anthony is under no obligation whatsoever to pay the note.” Even giving the fullest credit to the lawyer’s recollection of her words and their setting, reading them with all nuances favorable to petitioners’ claim, we still cannot discover a definite and unequivocal intent to make a gift, or to release Anthony from his liability. The statement to the lawyer could not itself have been a donative transaction, as petitioners concede. But they rely on Doty v. Willson, 47 N.Y. 580, 583, which held that where it is uncertain whether the delivery of money was intended as a loan or a gift an explicit declaration afterward of an intention to make a gift of the money is competent. That case does not go far enough to cover the present one.

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182 F.2d 903, 39 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 585, 1950 U.S. App. LEXIS 3989, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/towner-v-commissioner-of-internal-revenue-ca2-1950.