United States v. G. Richard Shafto

246 F.2d 338, 51 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 870, 1957 U.S. App. LEXIS 5450
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedJuly 15, 1957
Docket7437
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 246 F.2d 338 (United States v. G. Richard Shafto) 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
United States v. G. Richard Shafto, 246 F.2d 338, 51 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 870, 1957 U.S. App. LEXIS 5450 (4th Cir. 1957).

Opinion

SOPER, Circuit Judge.

This suit was brought by G. Richard Shafto, the taxpayer, to secure a refund of additional income taxes collected from him in the years 1944 to 1947. The taxes were assessed upon rents paid by lessees of a property owned by the taxpayer, and the question for decision is whether the rents were taxable to him or to his wife, who had received the rents under assignments of the leases and had reported them in her separate income tax returns. The taxpayer made the assignments with *340 out consideration in order to minimize his income taxes and also to build up an estate for his wife. She used the rent money in part to buy another piece of property and in part to pay the premiums on an insurance policy which will provide an annuity for her when she reaches the age of fifty-five. All rentals were deposited in her separate bank account, free from control of the husband, and were expended for her individual purposes exclusive of her clothing, maintenance and support and exclusive of anything as to which the husband under a legal or moral duty would provide. There was no collusion or secret agreement between husband and wife under which he was to get any part of the rents that were payable under the leases.

The leases covered a two-story building and lot owned by the taxpayer at 3718-3720 Main Street, Columbia, South Carolina. The first floor and lot were leased to tenants for commercial use and the second floor, which was divided into two apartments, was leased to other tenants for residential purposes. By an indenture dated April 29, 1940, which was recorded in the office of the Clerk of the County Court, the taxpayer as owner of the property leased the first floor and adjoining lot to J. Drake Edens as a grocery store for a term of five years ending May 31, 1945, at a rental of $75.-00 per month. The taxpayer agreed in the lease to remodel and improve the ground floor and store front and to pay all charges for upkeep of the exterior of the building and structural defects. By indorsement this lease, together with all the rents derived therefrom, was transferred and assigned to the wife on July 21, 1941.

On the expiration of this lease a new lease was made on June 26,1944, between the taxpayer as owner and a partnership of which Edens was a member, for the term of five years ending May 31, 1950, at the monthly rental of $85.00. This lease was also recorded in the office of the Clerk of the County Court and assigned by similar written indorsement to Mrs. Shafto on June 26, 1945.

During the term of this lease an addition was erected to the rear of the store, and the partnership, which in the meantime had been incorporated, agreed to a rental of $237.54 per month for a term of ten years. A new lease to this effect was executed between the taxpayer as lessor and the corporation as lessee under date of June 4, 1947, after Mrs. Shafto had been notified and had given her consent. This lease was also recorded in the office of the Clerk of the County Court and an assignment dated June 5, 1947, from the taxpayer to his wife was indorsed thereon in which “all rights as landlord including the within lease, together with all rents, profits, income and liabilities derived” therefrom were assigned to Mrs. Shafto.

Prior to the taxable period 1944 to 1947, written leases of the two apartments on the second floor were executed by an agent of the taxpayer as lessor and individual tenants as lessees for the term of one month at a rental of $17.50 per month. These leases were also assigned to the wife and recorded. Similar oral or written leases were executed and in effect during the taxable years and the rents were collected by the agent of the taxpayer and paid to the taxpayer’s wife, but there was no recording of these leases and no written assignment, although the rents were handled as if both leases and assignments were in force.

It was stipulated that the assignments of the leases of the first floor of the property were irrevocable under the South Carolina law and it was held by the Judge that, under the statute of frauds §11-101(4) of the South Carolina Code, the taxpayer retained the power to annul at will the assignments of the rents on the apartments on the second floor.

For the calendar year 1941 the taxpayer made federal gift tax returns in which he reported, among other gifts, the five-year lease dated May 29, 1940, which he valued at $3,600.00 as of June 1, 1941, with no gift tax due. No subsequent gift tax returns were made.

*341 All the rents from the store property as well as the apartments were paid to the wife and reported in her separate income tax returns for the taxable years. In his separate returns for these years, the taxpayer claimed and was allowed deductions from gross income for depreciation, repairs, insurance, and county and city taxes paid with respect to the property. The Commissioner of Internal Revenue took the position that all of the rents should be charged as income to the taxpayer and accordingly assessed the additional taxes here involved, giving him credit for over-assessments of taxes resulting from the elimination of this income from his wife’s returns.

The District Judge held that the rents from the apartments were chargeable to the taxpayer but that the rents from the first floor commercial property were taxable to his wife. The Judge was of the opinion that the wife acquired no practical control over the apartments because the leases were of uncertain duration and the taxpayer retained the power to annul the assignments of the rents at will; and hence he held that the transactions were nothing more than gifts of future income.

But with regard to the assignments of the leases on the store property he •said:

“As to the first class of leases, those which were assigned in writing and were for a fixed duration, it is apparent that plaintiff assigned to his wife something more than a mere right to receive rents. The assignments gave her the status of landlady as to the lessees of the premises. It was she with whom they had to deal during the lease terms. The effect of each assignment was to create in her an estate for years in the premises. American Law Institute Restatement of Property, Section 19. She was, for all purposes, an intermediate lessee holding under plaintiff and over sub-lessees. She acquired a valuable property interest, and the rents which she received were the product of that property interest.”

The Judge relied for this conclusion on the decision in Lum v. Commissioner, 3 Cir., 147 F.2d 356, where a similar decision was made.

In our view this conclusion is not tenable because the assignments of the leases on the store property actually conveyed nothing more than the right to receive the rents, and this is true whether we regard them as transfers of an interest in real property or as transactions affecting the liabilities of the parties in the realistic field of federal income taxation.

When the food store leases were executed the tenant became vested with a possessory estate for years in the property and the taxpayer-owner retained the reversion in fee to which the rents were attached as an incident. 1

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Bluebook (online)
246 F.2d 338, 51 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 870, 1957 U.S. App. LEXIS 5450, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-g-richard-shafto-ca4-1957.