DocketNumber: Docket No. 6603-81
Citation Numbers: 1982 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 38, 79 T.C. No. 32, 79 T.C. 503
Judges: Featherston
Filed Date: 9/22/1982
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
1982 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 38">*38
Petitioner Janet H. Davis was a cousin of Howard R. Hughes, Jr. After Mr. Hughes' death, petitioner was adjudged a legal heir of Mr. Hughes by a Texas Probate Court, but numerous questions remained as to whether and to what extent, if any, she would share in his estate. These questions included the State in which Mr. Hughes was domiciled, the applicable law on descent and distribution on intestacy, and the validity of numerous alleged wills offered for probate.
79 T.C. 503">*503 Respondent determined a deficiency in the amount of $ 4,533 in petitioners' Federal income tax for 1977. The issues for decision are whether petitioners are entitled to deductions for legal fees incurred (1) in litigation affecting1982 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 38">*40 their right to share in the Estate of Howard R. Hughes, Jr., deceased, and (2) in obtaining advice on whether they should put their separate assets in a revocable trust.
FINDINGS OF FACT
Janet H. Davis (sometimes referred to herein as petitioner) was a legal resident of Houston, Tex., when the petition was 79 T.C. 503">*504 filed. She was the wife of Platt W. Davis during 1977, and for that year they filed a joint Federal income tax return with the Internal Revenue Service Center, Austin, Tex. Platt W. Davis died on January 27, 1979, and Janet H. Davis, along with Platt Davis III and Richard Davis, was appointed coexecutrix of the Estate of Platt W. Davis.
On the 1977 joint income tax return of petitioner and Mr. Davis, they claimed "miscellaneous deductions" in the total amount of $ 8,772 as follows:
Legal fees incurred to protect interest in property | $ 8,224 |
Safe-deposit box rental | 54 |
Professional fees | 494 |
Total | 8,772 |
In the notice of deficiency, respondent disallowed the deduction of $ 8,224 claimed as legal fees and $ 18 of the $ 54 claimed for safe-deposit box rental. Petitioner concedes the $ 18 disallowance for safe-deposit box rental.
Petitioner and her husband1982 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 38">*41 paid legal fees in the following amounts on the dates indicated:
Payee | Amount | Date |
(a) Vinson & Elkins | $ 2,003.12 | Oct. 24, 1977 |
(b) Estate of James Patrick Houstoun | 78.44 | Feb. 3, 1977 |
(c) Andrews, Kurth, Campbell & Jones | 5,802.82 | Nov. 27, 1977 |
(d) Estate of James Patrick Houstoun | 161.59 | June 23, 1977 |
(e) Reimbursement of payments | (6.15) | December 1977 |
(f) Sewell, Junell & Riggs | 150.00 | Jan. 29, 1977 |
Total amount paid | 8,189.82 |
Petitioner concedes the $ 34.18 difference between the legal fees deduction claimed on the return and the amount here shown as paid.
The disputed legal fees were incurred in connection with the Estate of Howard R. Hughes, Jr., deceased. Mr. Hughes left some heirs related to him through his mother and other heirs related through his father. Related to Mr. Hughes through his mother were three branches of the family -- the Houstouns, the Lummises, and the Ganos. Petitioner Janet H. Davis was a first cousin of Mr. Hughes through the Houstoun branch of the family. After Mr. Hughes' death, Annette Gano Lummis and William R. Lummis were appointed as coadministrators of the estate in Texas by the Probate Court in Harris County; 79 T.C. 503">*505 1982 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 38">*42 petitioner was adjudicated by the Probate Court to be one of the legal heirs of the estate under the laws of Texas.
Proceedings were instituted for the administration of Mr. Hughes' estate or assets thereof in California, Nevada, Louisiana, Delaware, and the Bahamas, as well as in Texas. A dispute arose as to whether Mr. Hughes was domiciled at his death in California, Nevada, or Texas. Because the laws of the several States on taxation and descent and distribution in the case of intestacy differ, the interests of some of Mr. Hughes' heirs or potential heirs might be affected by the determination of the location of his domicile.
Further, shortly after Mr. Hughes' death, numerous purported wills were offered for probate. More than 100 purported wills were filed for probate in Nevada alone. Although many of these wills were summarily denied probate, others produced extensive litigation.
William R. Lummis, one of the heirs who had worked for Mr. Hughes and for his corporation, Hughes Tool Co., recommended that the Gano and the Houstoun heirs retain a law firm, Vinson & Elkins, to work out a settlement agreement among themselves and with the paternal heirs, who were represented by1982 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 38">*43 California lawyers. Under the terms of the agreement as finally developed, the maternal and paternal heirs agreed that William R. Lummis would represent all of them in connection with the estate for a period of 10 years. They also agreed upon a formula for the ultimate division of the estate, regardless of which jurisdiction is determined to have been Mr. Hughes' domicile at his death.
The payment of $ 2,003.12 on October 24, 1977 (item (a) in the foregoing table), to Vinson & Elkins was part of petitioner's share of the fee for that firm's services in working out the settlement agreement. The payment of $ 78.44 (item (b) in the table) to the Estate of James Patrick Houstoun represented reimbursement to the Houstoun estate for the remainder of petitioner's share of the Vinson & Elkins fee.
On October 1, 1977, Mr. Hughes' maternal heirs entered into an agreement with a law firm, Andrews, Kurth, Campbell & Jones (Andrews-Kurth) to continue the prosecution of their claims to the estate on a contingent fee basis. Under the terms of the agreement, the maternal heirs agreed to reimburse Andrews-Kurth for out-of-pocket expenses in connection with 79 T.C. 503">*506 various lawsuits and to share1982 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 38">*44 any distribution of the estate in accordance with an agreed formula. The principal lawsuit handled by the firm prior to and during 1977 was with respect to the so-called "Mormon" or "Dummar" will, which named Noah Dietrich as the executor and which was ultimately found to be a forgery. Another lawsuit was filed with respect to a so-called lost will which named the Hughes Miami Medical Institute as the sole beneficiary of Mr. Hughes' estate. Certain other lawsuits have been filed. The $ 5,802.82 payment to Andrews-Kurth (item (c) in the above table) represents petitioner's share of that law firm's out-of-pocket expenses totaling $ 103,000 in connection with those lawsuits prior to October 1, 1977.
Summa Corp., an outgrowth of the old Hughes Tool Co. which held a large part of Mr. Hughes' assets, was organized in Delaware, and, therefore, administration proceedings with respect to the Hughes estate were instituted in that State. The $ 161.59 payment to the Estate of James Patrick Houstoun on June 23, 1977 (item (d) in the above table), was reimbursement to that estate of petitioner's share of the fee of Prickett, Ward, Burt & Sanders of Wilmington, Del., for legal services in connection1982 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 38">*45 with those proceedings. Of this sum, $ 6.15 was refunded in December 1977 as an overpayment (item (e) in the above table).
Sometime after Mr. Hughes died, most of the family members on his mother's side of the family considered the advisability of setting up some type of revocable, grantor, inter vivos trust to protect their own assets from involvement with the Hughes estate and its complications. Some of them had substantial estates, and they were concerned that their individual estates be preserved from entanglement with the Hughes estate litigation. Petitioner paid Sewell, Junell & Riggs $ 150 (item (f) in the above table) on January 29, 1977, for advice on whether she should create such a trust and for drafting a revocable inter vivos trust agreement. The trust was not created.
In the notice of deficiency, as explained above, respondent disallowed the disputed legal expenses. Petitioner has alleged in the petition that she incurred the expenses in order to protect her interest in the Hughes estate.
79 T.C. 503">*507 OPINION
Petitioner's principal argument is based on
We agree that the legal expenses are not deductible under
Prior to the adoption of the predecessor of
The line of demarcation between currently deductible and capital expenditures is often a shadowy one and "It would be idle to suggest that all the authorities in this field can be reconciled."
1982 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 38">*50 Under the origin and character standard, it is clear that petitioner's legal expenses were not incurred in the conservation or protection of income-producing property. In the context of
At the time petitioner incurred the disputed litigation legal fees, she neither owned nor used any of the Hughes estate; she "held" none of it "for the production of income" or otherwise 79 T.C. 503">*509 within the meaning of
Petitioner's legal fees thus were not incurred in the conservation of property she "held," within the meaning of
Petitioner's interest in the estate was essentially a money claim dependent in amount on the amount of cash in the estate after the conversion to cash of the estate's assets and after allowance of all expenses of administration. A mere money claim of this sort is not property held for the production of income and petitioner never held the property for the production of income or otherwise until after the determination of the Probate Court with respect to the disputed extraordinary fees and distribution of the estate assets. The expense here in issue is analogous to an expense of perfecting or protecting title to property and not deductible as an expense of managing, maintaining, or conserving property.
For other cases denying a
The testimony is that petitioner consulted the attorneys on the need for segregating her and her husband's assets into a revocable trust because of the possibility that their already-owned property might become entangled in some way in the anticipated Hughes estate litigation. We interpret this to mean that petitioner1982 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 38">*55 was concerned that the Hughes litigation might include a lawsuit in which an adverse judgment might have to be satisfied in part from her and her husband's property.
The anticipated claims from which protection was sought by creating a trust thus did not arise from the management of already-owned property, which included stocks, bonds, savings accounts, and a subchapter S corporation, 1982 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 38">*56 or any of the 79 T.C. 503">*511 activities in connection therewith from which petitioner and her husband derived income. Rather, the potential claims that prompted the consultations were expected possibly to arise from the Hughes litigation. Had claims against petitioner or her property actually arisen from her involvement in the Hughes estate, they would have been nondeductible as capital expenditures (sec. 263) or possibly personal expenses (sec. 262).
The reasoning of
We find no significant distinction in the fact that the legal fees for which deduction is claimed were paid for arranging a transfer of stock interests, leasing real property, and creating a trust rather than for conducting 79 T.C. 503">*512 litigation. * * * Although nominally an agreement for the purchase of the wife's property, it served ultimately to protect respondent's [the taxpayer's] income-producing property from an assertion of his wife's latent marital rights. It would be unsound1982 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 38">*58 to make deductibility turn on the nature of the measures taken to forestall a claim rather than the source of the claim itself.
In the
1. All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 as in effect during the tax year in issue, unless otherwise noted.
In the case of an individual, there shall be allowed as a deduction all the ordinary and necessary expenses paid or incurred during the taxable year -- * * * * (2) for the management, conservation, or maintenance of property held for the production of income;↩
2. Sec. 121(a), Revenue Act of 1942, ch. 619, Pub. L. 753, 56 Stat. 798, 819.↩
3. In
"The origin and character of the claim with respect to which an expense was incurred, rather than its potential consequences upon the fortunes of the taxpayer, is the controlling basic test of whether the expense was 'business' or 'personal' and hence whether it is deductible or not * * *"
In
4. If she ultimately recovers nothing from the Hughes estate, she may be entitled to a capital loss deduction, but we need not decide that issue here.↩
5.
"Expenses paid or incurred in protecting or asserting one's rights to property of a decedent as heir or legatee, or as beneficiary under a testamentary trust, are not deductible."↩
6. Respondent argues that petitioners failed to show that the assets to be protected were "property held for the production of income" within the meaning of
7. It is unclear exactly what claims against her property petitioner hoped to forestall by creating the trust. If a claim arose because of petitioner's efforts to establish or perfect a right to part of the Hughes estate, then the expenses in defending the claim would be capital ones, analogous to the fees paid to Andrews-Kurth. If, on the other hand, the dreaded claim stemmed simply from the fact that petitioner was related to Mr. Hughes, its origin in family connections might render it a "personal" expense. In either case, expenses connected with such a claim would be nondeductible. It is also unclear from the record why petitioner thought placing the property in a revocable trust would protect it from creditors; perhaps legal advice that it would not explains why a trust was not created.↩
8. The question in
United States v. Hilton Hotels Corp. , 90 S. Ct. 1307 ( 1970 )
John M. And Florence B. Sturgeon v. Dennis J. McMahon as ... , 255 F.2d 685 ( 1958 )
Alonzo O. Bliss and Dawn H. Bliss v. The United States , 373 F.2d 936 ( 1967 )
Manufacturers Hanover Trust Company, as Trustee Under ... , 312 F.2d 785 ( 1963 )
Anchor Coupling Company, Inc. v. United States , 427 F.2d 429 ( 1970 )
Marion A. Burt Beck v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue , 194 F.2d 537 ( 1952 )
George L. Schultz and Margaret F. Schultz v. Commissioner ... , 420 F.2d 490 ( 1970 )
Hermann F. And Madeleine Dupont Ruoff v. Commissioner of ... , 277 F.2d 222 ( 1960 )
E. W. Brown, Jr. And Gladys Slade Brown v. Commissioner of ... , 215 F.2d 697 ( 1954 )
United States v. Gilmore , 83 S. Ct. 623 ( 1963 )
United States v. Patrick , 83 S. Ct. 618 ( 1963 )