DocketNumber: Docket No. 2400-70 SC.
Citation Numbers: 30 T.C.M. 783, 1971 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 142, 1971 T.C. Memo. 190
Filed Date: 8/4/1971
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/20/2020
Memorandum Findings of Fact and Opinion
INGOLIA, Commissioner: The respondent determined a deficiency in the petitioner's income tax for the calendar year 1967 in the amount of $205.49. The issue before the Court is whether payments of $30 a week totalling $1,170 made by the petitioner's former husband constituted income to the petitioner under
In 1941 the petitioner married Michael Lerner. They have a son, Jack. In 1964 the petitioner separated from her husband. In 1965 she brought an action for support against him in the Queens County Family Court of the State of New York. On May 27, 1965, the Court ordered petitioner's husband to pay $60 per week "for and toward the support of Toby Lerner and aforementioned child". Mr. Lerner paid this amount until 1967 when it was reduced to $30 per week.
On September 18, 1967, the petitioner and her husband entered into a separation agreement. It provided, in part, that:
"6. Husband, during his lifetime, agrees to pay to Wife, the sum of THIRTY ($30.00) DOLLARS per week, on Tuesday of each week, until Wife's death or remarriage whichever sooner occurs, such payments being for Wife's support and maintenance."
The agreement did not contain any provision for the support and maintenance of the petitioner's son on any regular basis. However, it did provide that:
"10. Husband agrees to pay to his son, JACK B. LERNER, the sum of $500.00 on*144 January 1, 1968, towards said son's senior college year expenses.
11. Depending upon Husband's financial circumstances, Husband shall render every possible financial assistance to his son JACK B. LERNER, if required, until said son attains the age of 25 years."
On October 9, 1967, petitioner's husband obtained a divorce from her in the First Civil Court of the Bravos District, State of Chihuahua, Republic of Mexico. The separation agreement was incorporated into the divorce decree. In her 1967 tax return, petitioner reported as income those payments she received from her former husband 784 from the date of the separation agreement, totalling $390 ($30 per week for 13 weeks). She did not report those payments received from January 1, 1967 through September 17, 1967, totalling $1,170 ($30 per week for 39 weeks). The respondent included the $1,170 in petitioner's income.
Opinion
"The agreement must expressly specify or 'fix' a sum certain or percentage of the payment for child support before any of the payment is excluded from the wife's income. The statutory requirement is strict and carefully worded. It does not say that 'a sufficiently clear purpose' on the part of the parties is sufficient to shift the tax. It says that the 'written instrument' must 'fix' that 'portion of the payment' which is to go to the support of the children. Otherwise, the wife must pay the tax on the whole payment. We are obliged to enforce this mandate of the Congress."; and, in quoting from the report of the Office of the Legislative Committee to the Senate Finance Committee: "If an amount is specified in the decree of divorce attributable to the support of minor children, that amount is not income of the wife… If, however, that amount paid*146 the wife includes the support of children, but no amount is specified for the support of the children, the entire amount goes into the income of the wife…" In the instant case the Order specified that the payments were to be made "for and toward the support of Toby Lerner and aforementioned child". It did not "fix" any amount of money or any specified part of the payment as being for the support of the petitioner's child. Consequently, since under the decision in The fact that the original Order provided for payments of $60 which were later reduced to $30 does not aid the petitioner's case. The record is devoid of any evidence indicating that the language of the original Order was changed insofar as the purpose of the payments is concerned. Indeed, since the payments were reduced in late 1966 or 1967 and the separation agreement, executed in the same year, provided for support payments for the petitioner and not her son, it would appear that the payments were not even intended as child support. Finally, the fact that an "Order" rather than a "Decree" was involved and that the petitioner was neither legally separated nor divorced from her husband when the payments in question were made, will not preclude the application of Reviewed and adopted as the report*148 of the Small Tax Case Division. Decision will be entered for the respondent. 785
1. All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 unless otherwise indicated.↩
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