1958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 196">*196
Attorney expenses incurred to contest Alien Property Custodian's seizure of petitioner's income-producing property,
30 T.C. 204">*204 Respondent determined a deficiency of $ 42,443.24 in petitioners' income tax for 1953. The only remaining issue is whether expenses of 30 T.C. 204">*205 litigation in connection with a suit to recover property "vested" by the Attorney General, under authority of the Trading With1958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 196">*198 the Enemy Act, are deductible in 1953 when paid.
FINDINGS OF FACT.
All the facts are stipulated and they are hereby so found. Madeleine duPont Ruoff, hereafter refererd to as petitioner, and Hermann F. Ruoff, her husband, are citizens of the United States, residing at Mahwah, New Jersey. They filed their joint Federal income tax return for 1953 with the collector of internal revenue for the district of Delaware. They kept their books and made their 1953 tax return on the cash basis.
On September 23, 1948, the Attorney General of the United States issued a vesting order under the Trading With the Enemy Act, relating to petitioner's property. By that order he (a) found petitioner to be a citizen of an enemy country, Germany, (b) determined that the national interest of the United States required that she be treated as a German national, and (c) vested in himself all of petitioner's property in the United States, as identified on a schedule annexed to the order. He amended the vesting order
On September 23, 1948, petitioner owned various corporate stocks and corporate and municipal bonds of an aggregate value of approximately $ 2,000,000. Before, at, and after September 23, 1948, those stocks and bonds produced annual dividends and interest income aggregating about $ 75,000. The property vested in the Attorney General included these stocks and bonds.
On September 23, 1948, petitioner was the life beneficiary of the income of a trust established by herself in 1927 for her own benefit and that of her sons as remaindermen. The value of the corpus of the trust approximated $ 250,000 with an annual income of approximately $ 10,000. The property vested in the Attorney General included petitioner's interest in this trust. It also included an interest in a mortgage requiring periodic principal and interest payments amounting to about $ 240 per year.
On October 7, 1948, petitioner retained attorneys to pursue whatever administrative and judicial remedies were available to secure the return of the vested property. On November 10, 1948, the attorneys filed with the Attorney General1958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 196">*200 petitioner's notice of claim under the Trading With the Enemy Act for the return to her of the vested property. On November 15, 1948, they filed a civil action under the Trading With the Enemy Act in the United States District Court for the 30 T.C. 204">*206 District of Columbia on petitioner's behalf against the Attorney General for the return to her of the vested property, alleging that petitioner was at all material times the lawful owner of the vested property. The defendant, the Attorney General, denied the allegation.
On August 12, 1953, petitioner's attorneys and the Attorney General entered into a stipulation settling these matters. The stipulation provided that the vested property should be returned to petitioner, but that the Attorney General should retain the income increment thereon from the date of vesting to the date of the stipulation. On November 23, 1953, the Attorney General returned the vested property to petitioner in accordance with the stipulation. The property returned to petitioner included State and municipal bonds in the face amount of $ 88,000. The settlement stipulation also provided for the sale of petitioner's life interest in the trust to the Attorney 1958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 196">*201 General.
Representation of petitioner in these matters required that her attorneys do extensive preparatory work, make numerous appearances and arguments in court, and attend many conferences with departmental officials. Petitioner paid $ 67,800.72 to her attorneys in 1953, which was reasonable compensation for the services rendered.
Petitioner and her husband deducted $ 67,800.72 from gross income on their 1953 income tax return as legal expense. Respondent disallowed this deduction, but in recomputing petitioner's gain realized from the sale to the Attorney General of the life interest in the trust, respondent allocated to the basis of the life interest $ 8,594.81 of the total legal fees of $ 67,800.72.
OPINION.
The enactment of
"The test accordingly seems to us to be whether prior to the amendment such a deduction as that now in controversy would have been permitted to a taxpayer admittedly engaged in carrying on a trade 30 T.C. 204">*207 or business. The application of that test shows that the defense-of-title rule had been repeatedly applied in the trade or business situation, and that such taxpayers1958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 196">*203 were equally required to capitalize the outlay."
1958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 196">*204 Giving petitioner's claim its broadest scope, and assuming without deciding that the contest with the office of the Alien Property Custodian was one to "recover" petitioner's property and to safeguard and defend it rather than to acquire property whose ownership she had lost, it is clear that petitioner's right to the property itself was to some degree involved 31958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 196">*206 and that her situation thus still falls within the rule. In essence, the litigation between petitioner and the Alien Property Custodian had as its subject only the petitioner's title to and possession of the seized property. Here there can be no question of a possible business expense since it is apparently conceded that petitioner was not engaged in any business. Cf.
It is not clear to what extent petitioner is here contending that one purpose of the litigation was apart from and beyond the specific matter of possession and title to the property and involved the clearing of petitioner's status as that of an "enemy." But even if made, such an argument could not avail her since the objective described would then be purely personal and an expressly forbidden deduction under
Some confusion is no doubt engendered by the words employed to carry into effect the purpose of
The taxpayer now urges that the expenses incurred by him in defending his title are deductible under
It would be idle to suggest that all the authorities in this field can be reconciled. See Brookes, "Litigation Expenses and the Income Tax,"
Seaton claimed for himself and associates a participating interest in petitioner's commercial use of the patent. This claim and the expenses incurred in resisting it bore no special relation to 1940 or any other year. Seaton demanded part or all of the earnings of the business for all years, 1958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 196">*210 a right in or to the income-producing asset that petitioner resisted, not a claim against specific income therefrom.
Similarly, in
The distinction between capital expenditures and business expenses is generally made by looking to the extent and permanency of the benefit derived from the outlay. The benefit from business expenses is generally realized and exhausted within a year and the expense is therefore1958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 196">*211 said to be of a recurring nature. * * * On the other hand, an item of expense is of a capital nature where it results in the taxpayer's acquisition or retention of a capital asset, or in the improvement or development of a capital asset in such a way that the benefit of the expenditure is enjoyed over a comparatively lengthy period of business operation. * * * A capital expenditure is thus nonrecurring, even though many similar expenditures are made by the taxpayer. The one-year period referred to above is not, of course, a touchstone to be arbitrarily applied, but is resorted to in definition as an aid in expressing the distinction.
We conclude that the present situation is no different from those in which it has repeatedly been held that expenses incurred in defense of title must be capitalized and are not deductible as current items. On this issue we view respondent's determination as correct.
Fisher,
The Trading With the Enemy Act was not an uncommon war measure. It authorized the Attorney General to issue vesting orders, seizing the property of persons who were
Pending the outcome on the merits, it was, of course, necessary to provide that some agency (in this instance, the Alien Property Custodian) sequester, conserve, control, and administer the property seized. It is clear, however, that the interest of the person whose property was seized did not terminate with the seizure. His right to substantiate his position was preserved unless and until either the time for filing claim had passed or, if claim was timely filed, final adverse decision on the merits.
To my mind, in prosecuting his claim, the person whose property was seized was not in any realistic sense defending title under circumstances usually present in the "defense of title" type of case. In the instant case, no issue is raised as to whether title was in claimant at the time of seizure. The rights of the claimant revolved around the question of whether or not she was an enemy national under the1958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 196">*214 Act. In the interim, of course, it was necessary that the Alien Property Custodian have appropriate duty, power, and authority to deal with the property seized, without which provision there would have been either chaos or an absolute seizure without the saving opportunity of demonstrating ultimately that the seizure was in error.
Under the facts indicated above, I do not think the decisive factor may be permitted to rest upon the generalized use of the words "defense of title to property" because, to my mind, the use of the quoted words is not appropriate to the circumstances. It seems to me that the claimant was merely pursuing her statutory right to prevent (if she could prove her case) the ultimate confiscation of her property, 30 T.C. 204">*211 and that her action in so doing was one of conservation of her basic interest in the property within the meaning of
I agree with the majority statement that "the enactment of
The mere fact that the property in question consisted of capital assets does not require the conclusion that expenditures for its preservation or protection must be capitalized. Such a view would, in my opinion, be in conflict with
I realize that the distinction1958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 196">*217 between capital expenditures and current expenses may not always be drawn with precision. Nevertheless, a classification of the payment of the legal fees actually in 30 T.C. 204">*212 issue, in one category or the other, is essential to the decision in the instant case. In my judgment, the attorneys' fees paid for legal services in the single matter of the prosecution and settlement of the claim to the return of the seized property, partake of the essence of ordinary and necessary current expenses for specific acts looking to the immediate conservation of an interest in property rather than of capital expenditures to be allocated in some manner to basis. The only suggested supporting principle to the contrary is the "defense of title" principle which, to my mind, for the reasons already explained, is not here applicable.
In addition to the foregoing expression of my own views, I concur in the dissenting opinion of Judge Forrester.
Forrester,
I feel that the Attorney General's actions in this1958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 196">*218 case did not take or question Mrs. Ruoff's title as such -- indeed they confirmed and recognized it, much in the nature of a condemnation proceeding -- but did question her activities and therefore her status. It is true that had she done nothing or had she defended against the vesting order unsuccessfully, her title would have passed to the Attorney General, but the important consideration is that title would not pass
Secondly I do not feel that either the taxing statutes or the Commissioner's regulations here involved require or intend further capitalization treatment after taxpayer has once acquired a perfect and unquestioned title.
In order to further develop my point mentioned first above, I feel that a fuller statement of the facts relating to the Attorney General's vesting order is required.
It is true that petitioner remained in Germany during World War II even though as an American citizen she was entitled to apply for repatriation; however, her husband and her children were at that time German citizens and could not have left Germany because of the war. At the termination of hostilities petitioner applied for and received a United States passport1958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 196">*219 and returned to the United States where she has remained since except for a short journey abroad in 1947.
The Attorney General's Vesting Order issued on September 23, 1948, and amended on October 1, 1948, was issued pursuant to the Trading With the Enemy Act, 40 Stat. 411,
By
1958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 196">*221 shall be vested with all of the powers of
The Custodian's power to dispose of vested property by sale or otherwise as provided above was, however, limited by
then such * * * property shall be retained in the custody of the Alien Property Custodian, * * * until any final judgment * * * in favor of the claimant shall be fully satisfied * * * or until final judgment * * * shall be entered against the claimant or suit otherwise terminated.
30 T.C. 204">*214 The sole remedies of any person whose property has been taken under authority1958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 196">*222 of the Trading With the Enemy Act, as provided in such Act, are found in
1. Considering now the first proposition noted above, respondent maintains that petitioner is not entitled to deduct legal fees paid to
Questions concerning the deductibility of expenditures under
1958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 196">*225 The instant question of deductibility, or necessity for capitalization, of expenses incurred in contravention of a vesting order under the Trading With the Enemy Act is one of first impression. In order to answer this question we must first understand the exact nature and legal consequences upon property rights of such a vesting order and then apply this understanding in the light of the adjudicated cases concerning deductibility and capitalization. 2
Respondent cites the following authorities for the proposition that the Attorney General's act of vesting petitioner's property in the United States pursuant to the Trading With the Enemy Act immediately divested petitioner of title and of every beneficial right to, or interest in, 1958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 196">*226 the property.
In
Alien enemy owners were divested of every right in respect of the money and property seized and held by the Custodian * * *. The title acquired by the United States was absolute * * *. Congress intended after the war justly to deal with former owners * * *. But that intention detracted nothing from title acquired by the United States * * *
As of what point in time was the Supreme Court speaking? The facts were that this was a suit in equity brought in 1934 as to property which1958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 196">*227 had been "vested" during World War I. The suit was brought not under
The case of
In
Between 1900 and 1914 Hackfeld divided1958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 196">*229 his time between Germany and Hawaii and he was in Germany at the outbreak of and during the war.
Hackfeld retained Silliman to represent him as his attorney in 1923 and as the result of claims filed by Silliman, fraudulently representing Hackfeld as a United States citizen, President Coolidge allowed Hackfeld's claim in 1924.
This suit against Silliman sounds in fraud and seeks damages in the amount of Presidential allowance.
One of Silliman's defenses was that the alleged cause of action accrued in 1924 and was therefore barred by the statute of limitations. In ruling against this contention, the court held that the United States was acting in its own behalf (and not as a trustee) and that consequently statutes of limitations were ineffective.
An exact statement of the facts again makes it clear, first that this court was dealing with an
30 T.C. 204">*217 The case of
Again the facts are complicated. One Mary Martha Taylor in 1932 made a will leaving a bequest outright to one of four attorneys who should survive her and at the same time entered into a secret written agreement with them that the taker would convey the property received to Mrs. Taylor's illegitimate daughter, Mrs. Sakrausky, or her issue. Mrs. Taylor died in 1943, whereupon one of the four lawyers, Tibbetts, became vested, and months thereafter and before Mrs. Taylor's will was admitted to probate, Tibbetts died.
The secret agreement of 1932 received notoriety in a New York Surrogate's Court action between Tibbetts' personal representative and the next named of Mrs. Taylor's four lawyers and the Attorney General, believing that Mrs. Sakrausky and her issue were enemy aliens, issued vesting orders against her and her issue and filed this declaratory judgment action to have established that a constructive trust existed in their favor.
In resisting this action the defendants (Tibbetts' executrix and George F. Lewis, the second of the four lawyers named by Mrs. Taylor) urged that the nationalities of Mrs. Sakrausky and her issue were an issue. This court1958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 196">*231 properly held that only claimants were given remedies under
It is obvious that no understanding of the exact nature and legal consequences upon property rights of a vesting order,
Under section 7c the President may seize all property which he decides to have enemy character, and under section 7e all who comply with his demands get immunity in all courts. But nothing is settled by the capture itself except
Thus it is apparent what the scheme of the act was. The reduction to possession of enemy property should be absolute, final and incontestable; it was to proceed by ex parte investigation and without right of review; it should include all property that the Alien 1958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 196">*232 Property Custodian decided to have enemy character. But it adjudicated nothing and its effect upon any right
In an earlier opinion,
The act intends the
* * * *
The purpose [of the Act] was to accomplish a swift, certain, and final
A similar interpretation of the effect of the Alien Property Custodian's vesting power on property relationships appears in the recent case,
These cases lead me to the clear conclusion that a strict application of the language of respondent's cited cases is not warranted as to those whose enemy status is not finally1958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 196">*234 determined and the vesting order "matured." This is not to say that prospective determination of the legal effect of an act of the sovereign, and therefore the rights, detriments, and remedies of the one proceeded against, shall depend upon ultimate resolution of the very fact there in issue, for that would beg the question; it is rather to put into proper perspective the guideposts furnished us by the adjudicated cases. I feel the conclusion is inescapable that title, as such, passes for the first time at the final conclusion in favor of the Government of claimant's remedial actions under the Trading With the Enemy Act or when the prescriptive time under such Act has run.
In the instant case petitioner immediately took the prescribed protective steps and her status -- the only issue really in question --
From a tax standpoint, this conclusion would seem to be correct. For if we follow respondent's theory to its logical conclusion, we would have to assume that petitioner sustained a loss in the amount of her pre-September 23, 1948, basis as the result of the Attorney General's vesting order of that date. Likewise, upon reacquiring the property in 1953, petitioner would obtain a basis for the property equivalent to her post-September 23, 1948, expenses. This would consist solely of legal fees and expenses allocable to the acquisition of title. Sec. 113 (a) (1).
This result is obviously not intended by the statute, nor do we understand respondent to press the analogy of his cited cases to this extent. Thus, in determining petitioner's gain from 1958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 196">*236 the sale of her life estate in the Hiebler Trust (the trust established by petitioner in 1927) pursuant to the settlement stipulation, respondent allowed petitioner a basis for determining gain computed by adding petitioner's pre-September 23, 1948, basis and the portion of legal fees attributable to the recovery of possession of this life estate. We therefore can only assume that respondent does not regard the vesting order as wiping out petitioner's ownership of the vested property to the extent that a loss was sustained by her in 1948.
2. Having therefore determined that petitioner did not reacquire title to the property in 1953, the next question becomes whether or not petitioner made capital expenditures measured in the amount of the legal expenses paid during that year. In order to answer this question we must look to
Applying
The trouble with this approach is that, at least from a tax standpoint, the costs of litigation are more akin to expense items than to capital improvements. The aspect of purchase is absent; also absent is a disposition of the vested property prior to November 23, 1953, sufficient to permit the computation of loss unless, as in
I prefer instead to think of petitioner's litigation expenses in terms of
I find a close analogy to this situation in condemnation cases and cases of regulatory orders, in each of which the sovereign takes actions which if unsuccessfully resisted or circumvented would result in loss of title or of value. In
In allowing expense treatment, this Court said at pages 1297 and 1298:
We next note that the litigation was not1958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 196">*240 in defense of title or to perfect petitioner's title. It was to enjoin the taking of the land itself by the exercise of the power of condemnation, a right of sovereignty. Petitioner's title was assumed to be valid and the effectiveness of the condemnation, if successful,
* * * *
30 T.C. 204">*221 * * * it is undoubted that petitioner could have employed a watchman to remain on this very property to prevent unlawful entry or misuse by trespassers. An expenditure for such a purpose would have been an ordinary and necessary expense and allowable as such. Similarly, it would seem that if court action were necessary to oust a trespasser and a lawyer were employed to eject him, the fee paid would be a comparable expense of the business. * * *
In
During 1948 the Louisville board of aldermen passed a resolution permanently closing the street and the city attorney then filed suit to dispose of certain formalities which he considered necessary (although taxpayer disagreed) and in this lawsuit certain third persons were made parties.
Taxpayer considered that none of these third parties had any valid claim to title to the street, but in order to save time and get the matter settled, it paid $ 7,500 to the attorney representing them, paid $ 2,000 directly to one of them, and paid a fee of $ 500 to the city attorney, all of which $ 10,000 it treated as an expense item on its income tax return, to which action the Commissioner disagreed, contending for capitalization.
In allowing expense treatment, the court stated that if paid in acquisition of property it should be capitalized but if paid in the protection of an existing property right it should be deducted as an expense, and held that in this case the1958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 196">*242 $ 10,000 was a deductible and necessary expense "for the permanent protection of its property * * *." "The payment of $ 9,500 [to adverse claimants] by plaintiff added not one cent of value to the property." The court cites and relies upon
The case of
In 1947, the Texas Railroad Commission had issued an order regulating the production of oil and gas which would have restricted taxpayer's production and profits, absent unitization treatment which facilitated proper spacing and secured the most scientific use of the natural reservoirs, etc.
In affirming the District Court which had allowed expense treatment, the court observed that the Government had conceded that the Texas restrictions with respect to spacing imposed an economic burden on operating1958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 196">*243 except under pooling agreements and that economic 30 T.C. 204">*222 advantages were made possible by unitization. The Government contended that the taxpayer's leases represented a capital investment and that unitization had increased their capital value. The court observed, "This approach gives too much consideration to form and too little to substance. Let us examine the nature of the property right as was evidenced by the leases and the extent to which that right was changed by the pooling and unitization."
(Thus, in this case action of the sovereign, Texas, would have taken from the taxpayer a portion of the value of his property, his original title to which was undisputed. In Ruoff action of the sovereign would have deprived the taxpayer of all of her property, her original title to which was not disputed. The taxpayer here mitigated the effect of the sovereign's action by unitization, while the taxpayer in Ruoff mitigated the effect by resisting the "vesting order." In neither case was the taxpayer's original title questioned in any degree.)
This court states that the phrase in
The court quotes at great length with approval from its former decision in
The court also cites
Turning now to the second proposition set forth at the start of this dissent, I think it is clear that one of petitioner's objectives in her actions to prove that she was not an enemy was to recover her property which had been "vested." Insofar as her legal expenditures relate to this objective petitioner's case must therefore stand or fall upon the meanings of
Before discussing the precedents available, 1958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 196">*245 it should be pointed out that cases arising under the business deduction provision,
On appeal the Court of
The Supreme Court, in reversing, reasoned that the trustees were under a duty to hold and conserve the trust property, and until distribution, to receive income from it. It held that the Court of Appeals had erred in limiting the test of deductibility to situations where the fees related to the "production of income." Expenses are equally deductible where they are reasonable in amount and bear a reasonable and proximate relation to the management of "property held for the production of income." In sustaining the taxpayer's position concerning the deduction of attorneys' fees in connection with the unsuccessful contest of the income tax deficiency, the Supreme Court stated:
What we have said applies with equal force to the expenses of contesting the tax deficiency.
The facts of the instant case are dissimilar, yet the theory of
The requirement of
The stipulation of facts in the instant1958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 196">*249 case evidences the fact of payments in the year 1953 and that the payments were ordinary and necessary in the sense that they were reasonable in amount. Doubt exists only as to the reasonable and proximate relation of said payments to the management (or, by implication, conservation or maintenance) of property held for the production of income.
Respondent's position is that petitioner "lost her ownership" of the vested property on September 23, 1948, and that her expenditures were to "reacquire" title to the vested property. Petitioner's argument, although not too clear, is that the expenditures were to conserve her property. The idea of conservation, at least in theory, would negate the counter position of acquisition.
It suffices to point out that if the expenses of losing title or ownership to a part of the trust principal are held to be for the "management" of property held for the production of income, then the expenses incurred in successfully protecting title or ownership to investment or income-producing property should similarly be regarded as for the "conservation" or "maintenance" of property held for the production of income.
30 T.C. 204">*225 In contending for capitalization, respondent argues that his position is supported by Regulations 118, section 39.23 (a) - 15 (k). 4 Respondent's argument is that the lack of a comma between the words "property" 1958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 196">*251 and "and" within the parenthetical element has the effect of imposing a requirement that the investment property must be of such character as to be includible in income when recovered and that if not of that character, then the expenditures are not deductible expenses.
In testing this argument it will be of value to compare the above-quoted portion of the regulation with its other portions which treat of investment property and amounts of income and we find eight such examples 5 all of which show that respondent is not only asking for an interpretation of subsection (k) which is opposed to the ordinary1958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 196">*252 sense and meaning of the words there used but is also opposed to the obvious treatment of "investment property" and "amounts of income" accorded by all other portions of this same regulation. Also, respondent's argument in effect assigns identical meaning to "investment property" and "amounts of income." I do not feel that any interpretation such as that asked by the respondent is justified.
1958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 196">*253 Respondent also relies upon that portion of Regulations 118, section 39.24 (a)-2 (a ), which reads, "The cost of defending or perfecting 30 T.C. 204">*226 title to property constitutes a part of the cost of the property and is not a deductible expense."
We first note that this entire subsection (a) is introduced by the words "Amounts paid for
Next, comparing the language used by the Commissioner in Regulations 118, section 39.23 (a)-15, with his language employed in section 39.24 (a)-2, we find that the former reads: "[A]n expense may be deducted under
To attempt to bring the quoted language of section 39.23 (a)-15 into harmony with any other meaning of the quoted portion of section 39.24 (a)-2, relied upon by respondent, could result only in the complete obliteration of the quoted part of section 39.23.
The meaning which I have attributed above to the quoted portion of section 39.24 results in the word "or" being read as a conjunction, thus giving to the word "defending" approximately the same meaning as the word "perfecting" for here the word "perfecting" obviously means making perfect that which had previously been imperfect, thereby adding to and enhancing the value of the previously imperfect title to property. If read "defending and perfecting," the phrase comes into harmony with the plain meaning of the statutes, the other portions of section 39.24 (a)-2 and of section 39.23 (a)-15.
It would be erroneous to state1958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 196">*255 that my views on the deductibility of the costs of protecting or conserving title go seemingly unchallenged by the decisions, but, as previously observed, each of the cases in this field is in a sense sui generis, and there is substantial support for my conclusions; also I note that without substantial exception, the decisions which have used the touchstone of "defense of title" to require capitalization treatment involve factual situations where the title,
The taxpayer in
We cannot agree that these fees which the petitioner paid in defense of the lawsuit were any the less deductible because his liability, if proved, might have destroyed his equitable title to the stock he held. His right to keep it was certainly in issue and in that sense his title to it was defended, to be sure, but the title as such was not
The instant case differs from
The two cases also differ in that petitioner, in the instant case, sought to protect her title to specific property, i. e., the vested property, while the taxpayer in
30 T.C. 204">*228 But for these distinctions the two cases closely resemble each other. In both, the respective taxpayers sought to protect the present quality and quantity of their ownership against the claims of an adverse party. In both, the taxpayers expended moneys for legal assistance to aid them in accomplishing this objective and in both, the amounts were reasonable and proximately related to the purpose of conserving either business property or property held for the production of income. As mentioned earlier, the fact that deduction was granted in the
Respondent's attempt to distinguish this case from the instant case on the basis that the taxpayer would have secured title to the property in any event is ineffectual. If the property had been included in the estate of the deceased husband the taxpayer would not have obtained the property on the strength of her own title but instead through her husband's devise so that the property would have been subject to his debts, costs of administration, possible will contest suits, and other hazards. The legal expenses were therefore for the purpose of defending or conserving her own title.
The taxpayer in
Marian paid the fee to conserve and maintain her remainder interest in the trust corpus by having left as a part thereof the income of the trust which was withheld from the life beneficiary and properly set aside as corpus in the form of reserves for depreciation and depletion of that corpus as oil or gas was removed. The vested remainder interest which Marian held in one-fourth of the trust corpus was property held by her for the production of income within the meaning of
Thus,
In
The defendants in the suits brought by the firm admitted the firm's ownership of the lands in question. * * * To treat as an addition to the cost of land the amount of an expenditure made, after ownership was acquired, to enable the owner, * * * to possess and use the land for business purposes, undisturbed by intruders or trespassers, would involve a disregard of the difference between the cost of
In
I note here that
The1958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 196">*264 cost of the recovery of these balances through the Mixed Claims Commission comes directly within the specifications of deductions for expenses. The proceedings before the Mixed Claims Commission were for the purpose of recovering assets for the taxpayer. It is not questioned but that the attorneys were paid the amounts claimed in connection with the transaction of this business. Such fees are deductible as an expense of the business.
We regard the reasoning of the court as applicable to the case now before us. The proceedings in settlement of petitioner's claim and civil suit were for the purposes of recovering possession of her investment property and conserving her admittedly perfect original title thereto. For petitioner to employ lawyers to defend a business owned by her from threatened destruction would be both ordinary and necessary. Cf.
Petitioner here had held perfect title to income-producing property for an uninterrupted period of many years without challenge 7 and the attack giving rise1958 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 196">*266 to this litigation depended upon wholly extraneous and later circumstances and could not have been made at the time title was obtained. Under these circumstances the expenses of defending title are clearly current deductions which can in no way be regarded as increasing the value of the property.
1.
In computing net income there shall be allowed as deductions:
(a) Expenses. -- * * * * (2) Non-trade or non-business expenses. -- In the case of an individual, all the ordinary and necessary expenses paid or incurred during the taxable year for the production or collection of income, or for the management, conservation, or maintenance of property held for the production of income.↩
2. That case, to be sure, was reversed by a divided court (C. A. 2)
3. Although petitioner says in her brief that the issue in the litigation was "whether [petitioner] was an 'enemy' who could not recover her vested property," she further describes it as involving:
"whether [petitioner's] presence in Germany * * * barred her from
"whether * * * she had * * * a residence in the United States, and * * * was * * * thus entitled to
"whether certain acts * * * deprived her of any right to
Except for the "recovery" thus in issue the Alien Property Custodian's right to absolute title and to deal with the property as owner is unmistakably apparent. See, e. g., Trading with the Enemy Act,
4. Respondent has nevertheless conceded that an allocation of the fees should be made so that the amount attributable to income will be deductible. He says: "It is suggested that if the Court indicates the method, the determination of the amount of the fee allocable to the claim for taxable income and related adjustments be left to stipulation by counsel for the parties * * *." This concession will, of course, be given effect and the only reasonable method apparent to us is to permit deduction of that proportion of the fee which the claim to taxable income, if eventually successful, would have borne to the total claim. This computation may be submitted in the proceeding under Rule 50.↩
5. That this was the case here cannot be questioned. "As a practical matter, [petitioner's] payments to her counsel were certainly made
1.
(a) General Rule. -- In computing net income no deduction shall in any case be allowed in respect of -- * * * * (2) Any amount paid out for new buildings or for permanent improvements or betterments made to increase the value of any property or estate;↩
2. Respondent contends that having lost title to the vested property, petitioner has nothing to which her expenses can be related. This argument avails nothing for even respondent admits that petitioner immediately gained the procedural rights specified in the Trading with the Enemy Act.↩
3. See
4. REGULATIONS 118.
Sec. 39.23 (a) - 15
* * * *
(k) Expenditures incurred in defending or perfecting title to property, in recovering property (other than investment property and amounts of income which, if and when recovered, must be included in income), or in developing or improving property, constitute a part of the cost of the property and are not deductible expenses. * * *↩
5. [1.] * * * an expense may be deducted * * * only upon the condition that:
(1) It has been paid * * * (i) for the production or collection of income which, if and when realized, will be required to be included in income for Federal income tax purposes, or (ii) for the management, conservation, or maintenance of property held for the production of such income; * * *
[2.] * * * (2) It is an ordinary and necessary expense for either or both of the purposes stated in subparagraph (1) of this paragraph.
[3.] * * * Expenses, to be deductible * * * must bear a reasonable and proximate relation to the production or collection of taxable income or to the management, conservation, or maintenance of property held for the production of income.
[4.] * * * Thus, any amount allocable to the production or collection of one or more classes of income which is not includible in gross income or to the management, conservation, or maintenance of property held for the production of such income is not deductible * * *
[5.] (e) * * * expenses of carrying on transactions which do not constitute a trade or business * * * and are not carried on for the production or collection of income or for the management, conservation, or maintenance of property held for the production of income, but which are carried on primarily as a sport, * * * are not allowable * * *
[6.] (e) * * * The question whether or not a transaction is carried on primarily for the production of income or for the management, conservation, or maintenance of property held for the production or collection of income, rather than primarily as a sport, * * *
[7.] (g) Fees for services of investment counsel * * * paid * * * in connection with investments held by him are deductible * * * only if (1) they are paid or incurred by the taxpayer for the production or collection of income, or for the management, conservation, or maintenance of investments held by him for the production of income; * * *
[8.] (j) Reasonable amounts paid * * * for the services of a guardian * * * in connection with the production or collection of income * * *, or in connection with the management, conservation, or maintenance of property, held for the production of income, * * *↩
6. Cf.
7. According to her sworn statement in Exhibit 3 of the Stipulation, petitioner had owned these stocks and bonds since 1935 and earlier dates.↩