DocketNumber: Docket No. 7708-72.
Filed Date: 4/30/1975
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/20/2020
MEMORANDUM OPINION
TANNENWALD,
Year | Deficiency |
1968 | $1,599.01 |
1969 | 1,153.47 |
1970 | 2,165.96 |
The parties have agreed on the disposition of some of the items raised in the petition. Remaining for decision is the factual question whether the amount of $3,000 paid to petitioner in each of the above years by the State of North Carolina is excludable from her income as a gift under section 102. *257 1969, and 1970, petitioner received from the State of North Carolina the sum of $3,000, which she did not report as income. The payments were made under authority of
During the period 1941-1945, the statute read somewhat differently:
Broughton was paid an annual salary of $10,500 by the State during his term as governor. He was also enrolled in the state Teachers' and Employees' Retirement System and contributions made to his account, totalling $438.72, were withdrawn by him as of July 1, 1945. At the time of his death, the State owed him no additional salary on account of services rendered by him as governor.
The payments which petitioner received were made directly to her and not to her husband's estate. She performed no services in connection with the payments, and none were expected of her. The State did not withhold any portion of the $3,000 annual payment for taxes. Prior to the years in issue, petitioner received an aggregate amount of at least $5,000.
The payments to petitioner were in the nature of an annuity or pension and thus are specifically included*259 in gross income unless a statutory exemption can be found. Section 61(a)(9) and (11). The only exemption claimed by petitioner is that provided by section 102.
The issue herein is a factual one and the petitioner has the burden of proof.
At the outset, we note we are not engaged in statutory construction in the ordinary sense, where legislative purpose is sought as a guide to the proper application of an ambiguous statute. Unquestionably, the North Carolina General Assembly
The legislation in question was enacted against the backdrop of the following provision in the North Carolina Constitution:
No person or set of persons are entitled to exclusive or separate emoluments or privileges from the community but in consideration of public services. [N.C. Const. of 1968, art. 1, sec. 7.]
Since before Broughton took office, North Carolina has provided some form of pension to the widow of a former governor. The possibility of such a pension entered into the bundle of privileges and rewards held out by the state to induce qualified persons to enter into its employ and suggests that the legislation in question conformed to the constitutional limitation. Such circumstances indicate that the payments to petitioner were intended to represent additional compensation for Broughton's services to the state. See*262
*263 The element of petitioner's financial need has equivocal aspects at best. On the one hand, the presence of such an element in the legislation under which petitioner originally became entitled to payment favors petitioner's claim herein. On the other hand, the elimination of this element in the legislation under which the instant payments were made points in the opposite direction and suggests that the petitioner's circumstances were not the motivating force. See
Petitioner also calls to our attention a favorable private ruling issued by respondent in 1946 to the Attorney General of Indiana with regard to a similar widow's pension law. *265 cited ruling is carefully limited by its terms to the widows of governors who held office
Nor can such an isolated ruling dealing with a fact situation be accorded the weight sometimes given to respondent's rulings as an aid to the construction of the meaning of the words of the statutory provision involved. See
*266 In sum, we hold that petitioner has not carried her burden of proof that the pension she received was a gift in the statutory sense. Consequently, the amounts she received constituted taxable income to her.
To reflect the parties' agreement on other issues,
1. Unless otherwise indicated, all statutory references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as amended and in effect during the years in issue.↩
2. Now
3.
4. See also
5. See also
6.
Froehlinger v. United States ( 1963 )
Great American Insurance Company v. Johnson ( 1962 )
Hilda Bounds v. United States ( 1958 )
ernest-l-poyner-and-union-trust-company-of-maryland-executors-of-the ( 1962 )
laurie-w-tomlinson-individually-and-as-united-states-district-director-of ( 1964 )
Brown v. . Comrs. of Richmond County ( 1943 )
Bogardus v. Commissioner ( 1937 )
Harrill v. Teachers' & State Employees' Retirement System ( 1967 )
Bridges Ex Rel. City of Charlotte v. City of Charlotte ( 1942 )
Robertson v. United States ( 1952 )
Commissioner v. Duberstein ( 1960 )