DocketNumber: Docket No. 5884-79.
Filed Date: 1/19/1981
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/20/2020
MEMORANDUM OPINION
TANNENWALD,
Petitioner resided in Bangor, Maine, at the time the petition herein was filed. He timely filed his 1974 Federal income tax return with the Internal Revenue Service Center, Andover, Mass.
Sometime prior to 1965, petitioner married Lorraine S. Miller (Lorraine). He and Lorraine were divorced on July 14, 1965. By reason of the divorce judgment, petitioner solely owned the residence located at 74 Royal Road in Bangor.
Petitioner and Lorraine remarried on October 21, 1968. This marriage terminated by divorce on May 30, 1974. The Decree of Divorce of the Superior Court of Maine, in relevant part, ordered that petitioner--
pay to Lorraine Miller as alimony the sum of One Hundred Fifty ($ 150.00) Dollars per week so long as she may remain unmarried; and in addition thereto, the sum of Ninety Six Thousand ($ 96,000.00) Dollars payable in equal annual installments of Eight Thousand ($ 8,000.00) Dollars, the first payment to be made May 30, 1975; and in further addition thereto, Sanford Miller shall convey to Lorraine Miller, subject to any mortgages or other encumbrances of record, but free of any real estate taxes for the*731 municipal year 1974, the family residence located at, known and numbered as 74 Royal Road, Bangor, Maine, provided however, that said Sanford Miller shall be responsible for payment of the outstanding mortgage against the residence according to its terms, and shall install a telephone in the family residence for the account and in behalf of Lorraine Miller; and shall provide Lorraine Miller with a 1974 Chevrolet station wagon in place of her present automobile; such payments and alimony shall constitute full satisfaction of all claims for alimony for a period of twelve (12) years from the date of this decree, and during said period the said Lorraine Miller shall not commence any action seeking an increase in alimony payments.
In 1974, petitioner implemented the foregoing as follows:
(a) He conveyed to Lorraine the residence, which had a net value of $ 33,915.55, together with furniture and fixtures contained therein, which had a value of $ 3,500.
(b) He purchased for Lorraine a station wagon at a cost of $ 5,582.90.
The question for decision is whether the petitioner is entitled to a deduction for alimony under section 215 in the agreed amount of $ 42,998.45, representing*732 the aggregate value of the items set forth above.
Section 71(c)(1) provides that, in general, installment payments discharging a principal sum specified in the decree are not to be treated as periodic payments. However, if the specified principal sum is to be paid, or may*733 be paid, over a period ending more than 10 years from the date of the decree, the installment payments shall be treated as periodic payments under section 71(a) to the extent of 10 percent of the principal sum. Section 71(c)(2).
At the outset, we think it will facilitate matters if we first dispose of an argument by petitioner relating to Maine law. The parties have stipulated that, at the time of the conveyance to Lorraine, the residence was not marital property within the meaning of tit.
*735 Petitioner puts great emphasis on the fact that the divorce decree herein, after providing for the monetary and property payments, specified that "such payments and alimony shall constitute full satisfaction of
There are two possible interpretations which might be accorded the divorce decree. The first is that it should be given a unitary reading, with the provisions relating to the residence and station wagon considered an integral part and extension of the provision relating to weekly alimony and/or the provision for the payment of $ 96,000 in installments over a period of more than 10 years (thereby falling, *736 according to petitioner, within the scope of section 71(c)). The second is that the provision relating to the residence and station wagon should be treated as independent of the other provisions and as constituting a lump-sum payment which is neither "periodic" within the meaning of section 71(a) nor an "installment payment" within the meaning of section 71(c).
The decided cases are clear that "payments pursuant to a divorce decree are not treated as a single stream but rather each type of payment is treated separately and subjected to individual analysis to determine its proper characterization." See
*738 Petitioner's reliance on
Taxpayer's obligation was to provide a home of a value not to exceed $ 40,000 within ten years of the date of the divorce decree. Assuming, arguendo, that the down payment was in discharge of a support rather than a property obligation, it would not constitute a periodic payment. The obligation was to provide a lump sum to the ex-wife.It was not a periodic payment by which the ex-wife shared in the husband's income. The*740 mere fact that taxpayer chose to pay off the basic obligation in conveniently small amounts does not change the character of the basic obligation. It simply permitted taxpayer to arrange for the basic capital transfer in convenient payments. This may not be used as a method of imposing an unjust tax burden upon the ex-wife.
In
The court has a good deal of trouble visualizing or logically considering the conveyance of the $ 35,000.00 house as an installment payment in the sense that each $ 1,500.00 and*741 $ 500.00 payment is an installment payment. It should be noted in this connection that the house and the installment payment are treated separately in the divorce decree. This detracts from any contention that the house was one in a series of installment payments. * * * *742 We think that any analysis of
1. All section references, unless otherwise indicated, are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as amended and in effect during 1974.↩
2. Respondent has not contested petitioner's further deduction of $ 4,500, which apparently represented $ 150 per week made during the period May 30 to December 31, 1974.↩
3. The contents of the residence were not specifically dealt with in the decree, but respondent has made no argument that they should be treated separately from the residence and the station wagon. ↩
4. Accordingly, and for the additional reason that respondent has not raised any issue with respect thereto, we have not directed our attention to the impact of a provision in the divorce decree requiring Lorraine to convey to petitioner any interest she might have had in the family summer residence and two other parcels of real property. Cf.
5. That this case was fully stipulated does not relieve the taxpayer of his burden. See
6. Section 71(c)(2) recognizes that installment payments may be unequal in amount by limiting the taxability of such payment to the receiving spouse to 10 percent of the principal amount, and, indeed, we applied that limitation in
7. Although in his original brief, petitioner makes a passing reference to contingency based upon the power of the divorce court to modify the decree (see
8. Petitioner seeks to distinguish this case by pointing to a statement by the court that the conveyance of the house "was more
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