Wilkins v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE

161 F.2d 830, 35 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1379, 1947 U.S. App. LEXIS 3283
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedMay 23, 1947
Docket4228
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 161 F.2d 830 (Wilkins v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilkins v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, 161 F.2d 830, 35 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1379, 1947 U.S. App. LEXIS 3283 (1st Cir. 1947).

Opinion

WOODBURY, Circuit Judge.

This petition for review of a decision of the Tax Court of the United States raises the question of the deductibility by a member of a partnership engaged in the practice of law of his proportionate part of a certain payment made by his firm to the estate of a deceased partner. The applicable sections of the Internal Revenue Code are quoted in the margin. 1 . The regulations are silent on the point. The facts were stipulated.

In 1941 the partnership of which the taxpayer was then a member operated under an agreement containing this provision: “In case of the death of' any partner, the partnership shall not be deemed to be dissolved and the value of such partner’s interest in the assets and business of the firm shall be taken to be a sum equivalent to his percentage of one quarter of the amount distributed by this firm and its predecessors as net profits during a period of two years next preceding the death, the term ‘his percentage’ meaning the percentage of the profits to which he was entitled at the time of his death. The sum thus determined to represent the value of such partner’s interest in the assets and business of the firm shall be paid to his estate in such installments as the surviving partners shall *831 find convenient, provided that at least one half of the sum shall be paid within six months and the whole within a year. The partnership shall not be deemed to possess any good-will, and if upon the death of any partner the surviving partners or a majority in interest of them shall continue the practice of law as a firm they shall have the right to use the name of the deceased partner as a part of the firm name if they so desire.”

On March 3, 1941, a partner died and on April 1 following the surviving partners, including the taxpayer, formed a new .partnership to carry on their practice. During the remainder of that year the new firm made payments to the estate of the former deceased partner according to the agreement in the stipulated total amount of $10,-587.46. The partnership return for that year showed this payment and the amount distributed to each partner. On his individual return the taxpayer showed only the amount he actually received from the partnership which corresponded to his distributive share as shown on the partnership return.

The Commissioner eliminated the payments to the deceased partner’s estate from the partnership return, allocated those payments among the surviving partners, including the taxpayer, in proportion to each partner’s share in the profits of the firm, and in consequence determined a deficiency in the taxpayer’s income tax for 1941. The Commissioner explained his action by the statement that in his opinion the amount distributed to the deceased partner’s estate “constitutes a partial payment for the interest of the decedent in the partnership and not a distribution of earnings subsequent to the date of his death.”

On the taxpayer’s petition for redeter-mination of the deficiency assessed by the Commissioner the Tax Court disapproved the characterization of the payments to the deceased partner’s estate as the price paid for the decedent’s interest in the partnership. It based this rejection on findings that “no incoming partner had ever paid in any capital upon his admission to the firm”; that its “books, typewriters, office supplies, etc., were merely incidental”, and were not “regarded by the members as-items of a capital nature in which they would have an interest upon retirement or death,” each understanding “that upon his death or retirement, the only right he or his estate had was to his share of earned but uncollected fees”; that “the firm had no lease on its office space”, and that the partners agreed that their firm should be deemed not to possess any good will. In-short it found that capital was not a factor of any substantial significance in the firm’s activities and that it had none in any real sense of the word. Therefore it concluded that the deceased partner had no interest in the firm which his estate could sell and hence “In nó true sense can the transaction before us be characterized as the purchase and sale of a partnership interest.”

The Tax Court sustained the deficiency assessed by the Commissioner, however,, on the ground that the payments to the.deceased partner’s estate constituted the price paid by the continuing firm for the decedent’s interest in fees earned by the firm prior to his death but not collected until thereafter. It noted that the “payment to which the estate was entitled was of a sum certain, payable at all events having no aspects of a distributive share of partnership income”, which it said distinguished this case from Bull v. United States, 295 U.S. 247, 55 S.Ct. 695, 79 L.Ed. 1421; Walter T. Gudeon, 32 B.T.A. 100; and Charles F. Coates, 7 T.C. 125 and then it said: “In substance, under the partnership agreement and by virtue of the payment made, the surviving partners acquired from the decedent or his estate the right to collect in future years when due, and keep as their own, fees in which the decedent had an interest.” This it said for “practical purposes * * * is equivalent to the acquisition of a receivable for a cash consideration,” and finding no statutory warrant for deducting a capital outlay in the year made from current income from other sources, it sustained the Commissioner’s determination of deficiency.

It conceded, however, that in the future as the fees are collected they will not be income in toto to the partnership, but will be income to it only to- the extent that thev *832 exceed the pro rata part of the capital outlay allocable thereto. But it said that since there was no evidence to show the amount of these fees collected in the taxable year, and since it would be an unwarranted assumption and doubtless a perversion of fact to say that all of them had been collected in that year, there could be no “downward adjustment, of the partnership income” for tire year in question on this account. It recognized that the possibility of obtaining this deduction afforded small consolation to the surviving partners since to take it they would be obliged to keep elaborate accounts over a number of years, as they had done* before when a partner died or retired, with the result that “the purpose for which the particular provision of the partnership agreement here under consideration was adopted will not be accomplished.” But, it observed in conclusion, “the Bull, Gudeon and Coates cases, supra, point to a method under which the purpose might be accomplished 'with the desired result.”

The taxpayer takes the position that the decision of the Tax Court is unrealistic. He says that in actual fact no partner in the firm thought of himself as buying anything from the decedent’s estate, and that the decedent when he signed the partnership agreement did not think he was committing his estate after his death to a sale of anything to his surviving associates.

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Related

Sumers v. Commissioner
36 T.C. 467 (U.S. Tax Court, 1961)
Silling v. Commissioner
27 T.C. 701 (U.S. Tax Court, 1957)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
161 F.2d 830, 35 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1379, 1947 U.S. App. LEXIS 3283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilkins-v-commissioner-of-internal-revenue-ca1-1947.