1950 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 301">*301
1. Income from farming operations conducted by husband and wife on husband's separately owned farm in the State of Washington
2. The fair market value of farm improvements acquired by inheritance determined for depreciation purposes.
14 T.C. 8">*9 This proceeding involves deficiencies in income tax as follows:
1943 | $ 3,066.62 |
1944 | 707.16 |
1945 | 1,044.05 |
Total | 4,817.83 |
The year 1942 is also involved because of the forgiveness feature of the Current Tax Payment Act of 1943.
The issues presented for our determination1950 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 301">*302 are whether respondent properly determined that all of the income produced during the years 1942 through 1945 from a farm in the State of Washington which petitioner inherited in 1939 was the separate income of petitioner, or whether it was the community income of petitioner and his wife, as claimed by the petitioner, and whether the petitioner is entitled to greater deductions for depreciation on farm buildings than the amounts allowed by respondent for the years here involved.
Some of the facts were stipulated and are so found. The stipulation filed is incorporated herein by reference.
FINDINGS OF FACT.
The petitioner and his wife, Blanche I. Minnick, were married in 1907, and have at all times since resided at Walla Walla, Washington. Their individual income tax returns for the years 1942 through 1945 were filed with the collector of internal revenue for the district of Washington.
In the year 1909 petitioner first started operating a farm of approximately 950 acres in Walla Walla County, Washington, which belonged to his brother, George D. Minnick. During all the years from 1909 through 1939 the petitioner and his wife devoted their entire personal services to conducting the1950 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 301">*303 farming operations thereon. The farm machinery and equipment used in farming operations belonged to the petitioner and his wife. One-third of the crops produced on the farm was paid to the petitioner's brother as rent for the farm. The remaining two-thirds of the crops produced was retained by the petitioner and his wife as the tenants' share.
George D. Minnick died August 17, 1939. During the administration of his estate from the date of his death to June 30, 1941, when the estate was distributed, the petitioner and his wife continued to 14 T.C. 8">*10 operate the farm as before, paying one-third of the crops produced to the decedent's estate as rent.
As one of his brother's heirs, petitioner inherited the farm through the decree of distribution on June 30, 1941. He and his wife also purchased an adjoining tract of similar farm land of about 90 acres on September 18, 1941. Thereafter, they farmed both tracts throughout the years here involved, using their community farm machinery and equipment.
For many years prior to June, 1941, the petitioner and his wife had maintained separate checking accounts, but the funds therein were regarded and treated as community funds. Deposits and1950 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 301">*304 withdrawals were made in whichever account was more convenient at the time. No attempt was made by petitioner, either before or after June, 1941, to separate the income received by him or his wife, but all funds received from all sources were treated as community funds and deposited in the two checking accounts indiscriminately. All income received during the taxable years 1942 through 1945 was reported by the petitioner and his wife as community income for Federal tax purposes.
When George D. Minnick died on August 17, 1939, there were a number of farm buildings on the 950-acre tract which remained in use on the farm throughout the years here involved. These included a dwelling house which the petitioner and his wife occupied as a residence and numerous out buildings. The total appraised value of the farm for estate tax purposes was $ 62,330.73, on an acreage basis with all improvements included. Petitioner at some time late in 1941 or early in 1942 estimated the fair market value of the improvements on the farm as of August 17, 1939, as $ 3,500 for the dwelling house, $ 2,650 for other buildings, and $ 2,200 for fences. Petitioner claimed depreciation on that basis for each1950 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 301">*305 of the taxable years here involved. Respondent determined that the depreciable basis of the farm buildings in 1941 was $ 1,830.32, which was their cost basis in the hands of the estate of George D. Minnick. Respondent allowed depreciation on the farm buildings for the years here involved on that basis, but disallowed depreciation deductions claimed on the dwelling house and fences.
There were 13 farm buildings used in the production of farm income. All were of frame construction, 20 or more years old, and in need of repairs, but were usable. They had an aggregate fair market value on August 17, 1939, of $ 2,400 and a remaining useful life of 20 years.
There were also on the farm 4 miles of combined 26-inch hog wire and 3-strand barbed wire fences, having a fair market value of $ 1,400 on August 17, 1939, and 4 miles of 4-strand barbed wire fences, 14 T.C. 8">*11 having a fair market value on that date of $ 800, all of which had a remaining useful life of 10 years.
OPINION.
Petitioner contends that under Washington law all of the income for the taxable years from the 950-acre farm which he inherited from his brother and from the 90-acre tract which he and his wife purchased in 1941 was1950 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 301">*306 community income. Respondent concedes that the income from the 90-acre tract was community income, but contends that the 950-acre tract was the separate property of petitioner and that all of the income from it is taxable to the petitioner individually.
Petitioner concedes that the 950-acre tract which he inherited from his brother is his separate property, but argues that the income derived from it was earned by the personal labor of his wife and himself and by the use of community farm machinery and equipment and is therefore community income. He also argues that his wife's earnings from butter, eggs, and cream and their joint earnings from the 90-acre farm acquired by purchase were so commingled with the earnings from the 950-acre farm as to make segregation of separate and community income impossible.
Determination of the community or separate nature of the income from the 950-acre farm depends upon the laws of the State of Washington.
The general principles with respect to separate and community property under §§ 6890 and 6892, Remington's Revised Statutes of Washington, with citations to Washington decisions which established them, were assembled and restated in
(2) The status of property, whether real or personal, is to be determined as of the date of its acquisition. * * * [Citations omitted.]
(3) The status of property, when once fixed, remains so in character until changed by deed, 1950 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 301">*308 by agreement of the parties, by operation of law, or by the working of some form of estoppel. * * * [Citations omitted.]
14 T.C. 8">*19 (4) Separate property continues to be separate property through all of its changes and transitions so long as it can be clearly traced and identified, and its rents, issues, and profits likewise are and continue to be separate property. * * * [Citations omitted.]
* * * *
(6) Where separate funds have been so commingled with community funds that it is no longer possible to distinguish or apportion them, all of the commingled fund, or the property acquired thereby, is community property. * * * [Citations omitted.]
(7) The rule last above stated is subject to the qualification that when the community property is inconsiderable in comparison with the separate property, the mass remains separate property. * * * [Citation omitted.]
In the
The Supreme Court of Washington, applying the rules set out above, held that:
Unquestionably, the four hundred eighty acres originally owned by Mr. Witte and the one hundred fifty acres subsequently inherited by him from his mother remained his separate property throughout the years that he retained them. * * * Unquestionably also, Mr. Witte would have been entitled to retain as his own the "rents, issues, and profits" of his separate property, had he kept them separate,
* * * whether or not she [the wife] rendered the manual assistance referred to above is immaterial, for even if she did not, the personal earnings of the husband nevertheless belonged to the community. Nor can those personal earnings be held to be inconsequential * * *.
* * * the income from the home place during that period represented both the earnings by personal effort and the rental value of the property * * *. [Emphasis supplied.]
14 T.C. 8">*13 Respondent argues that in the
Respondent has long maintained this position with respect to the nature of income derived from separately owned farm lands. See
In
In
* * * there is nothing in the present bill to take the case out of the general rule that the skill or labor of either spouse in carrying on farming or other like operations has nothing to do with the question of the ownership of the 14 T.C. 8">*14 crops or other proceeds thereof. In such cases the title to the products grows out of the title to the land itself, and belongs to its owner. * * *
We note, however, that no Washington cases were cited in support of the quoted statements and that those statements were by way of dicta, the holding of the case having to do only with the increase in value of the land and improvements on it.
We conclude that the cases cited by respondent in
As we understand these decisions of the Supreme Court of Washington [
See also
In this case there is no doubt that the personal1950 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 301">*315 services of petitioner and his wife contributed substantially to the profits earned from the petitioner's separate farm, and we think that a satisfactory allocation between the return from the separate property and the return from community efforts can be made on the evidence of record. See
The rule is that the rents, issues, and profits of separate property are separate property. * * * The complication arises in this case from the fact that the separate property did not produce in and of itself all the profits which accrued to the business. These profits were increased by the labor and effort of the husband and wife, whose earnings after their marriage of course constituted community property. The difficulty here is to apportion those profits between the original separate property and the subsequent community earnings.
For a number of years1950 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 301">*316 the petitioner and his wife had been operating the farm on a community basis and had been paying one-third of 14 T.C. 8">*15 the crops grown thereon to the owner as rent. In the absence of any evidence to the contrary, we think that one-third of the crops grown during the taxable years here involved was the fair rental value of the land and the amount allocable to the land, as the separate income of the petitioner, while two-thirds of the crops produced were the result of the personal efforts of the petitioner and his wife and constituted community income.
Our findings of fact as to the value of the buildings and fences on the petitioner's farm as of August 1939 are dispositive of the depreciation issue raised in this case. It is only necessary to point out that the dwelling house and brick cellar, used for food storage, were for petitioner's personal use rather than for the production of income, and are not subject to depreciation for tax purposes.
Petitioner also claims depreciation deductions for the years here involved on certain other assets, including a spring box, cooler house, concrete water trough, concrete spring box in field, and a concrete water reservoir. However, petitioner1950 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 301">*317 did not raise any issue in the pleadings with respect to these assets, and any treatment of them here would be outside the scope of our jurisdiction in this proceeding.
Opper, J., dissenting: We are confronted again by the anomalous position which the community property law has attained in the field of Federal taxation. See
But the question before us is with regard1950 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 301">*318 to the power and intent of the Revenue Act * * *. Even if we * * * assume that the wife had an interest in the community income that Congress could tax if so minded,
Although the Supreme Court was there discussing the law of California, the same power exists in the husband in the State of Washington.
1950 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 301">*319 The further inconsistency arises that although in
1950 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 301">*320 The
1. Of special interest is Revenue Act of 1926, sec. 1212.↩
2.
3. In that case it was held according to the headnote that, under the law of Washington, land which was the separate property of the husband remained so at his death and did not become to any extent community property "because of improvements made with the proceeds of crops raised thereon though produced by the joint labor of both husband and wife."↩