MEMORANDUM OPINION
DAWSON,
Petitioners have conceded one adjustment to income. The isues remaining for our decision relate to the Federal income tax consequences of the court ordered property settlement incident to the divorce of petitioner James G. Carson, Jr. from his former wife, Mary Todd Carson. We must decide whether, as a result of the property settlement, petitioner James G. Carson (1) is entitled to recognize a capital loss of $905 and (2) received a basis of $26,400 in certain medical accounts receivable.
All of the facts have been stipulated. The stipulation of facts and joint exhibits are incorporated herein by this reference. The pertinent facts are summarized below.
James G. Carson, Jr. (petitioner) and Karen K. Carson were legal residents of Napa, California, when they filed the petition in this case. They filed a timely joint Federal income tax return for the taxable year 1973 on the cash receipts and disbursements method of accounting.
1978 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 326">*327 Petitioner separated from his former wife, Mary Todd Carson, on July 1, 1972. On July 12, 1973, an Interlocutory Judgment terminating the marriage of petitioner and Mary Todd Carson was filed in the Superior Court of the State of California. The Interlocutory Judgment included a court ordered property settlement, portions of which follow:
To achieve a substantially equal division of the community property:
A. Respondent [Mary Todd Carson] is awarded as her sole and separate property all of the following:
[Enumerated items of community property 1) through 11) with each assigned a specific agreed value (aggregate value of these items was $94,350). Enumerated items 12) to 27) without a value assigned to them.]
28) Cash payment to equalize division of community property in the amount of $1,488.00.
B. Petitioner [James G. Carson, Jr.] is awarded as his sole and separate property all of the following:
[Enumerated items of community property 1) through 5) with each assigned a specific agreed value.]
6) Petitioner's accounts receivable - net value $26,400.00;
[Enumerated items of community property 7) through 11) with each assigned1978 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 326">*328 a specific agreed value (aggregate value of items 1) through 5) and 7) through 11) was $81,425). Enumerated items 12) through 47) without a value assigned to them.]
D. Each party is awarded an undivided one-half (1/2) interest as tenants in common in the BCS Ltd Partnership.
* * *
1) The fair market value for the Good Will shall be the sum of $20,000.00;
2) Petitioner shall pay to Respondent one-half (1/2) of the value of the Good Will at $200.00 per month, commencing August 31, 1973, without interest until the full $10,000.00 is paid in full; provided, however, that if Petitioner gets over two(2) months behind in such payments, then the unpaid balance shall draw seven percent (7%) interest.
The total agreed net value assigned to the community assets in petitioner's marriage dissolution proceeding was $185,275, including $20,000 goodwill from petitioner's medical practice. Mary Todd Carson received $94,3501978 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 326">*329 of the community property pursuant to the Interlocutory Judgment. Petitioner received community assets having a total value of $90,925 after reduction for community liabilities for which he became solely liable. In addition each received numerous other items to which no agreed value was assigned; these items were largely of a personal nature, some with sentimental value, and apparently were equally divided. Each took an undivided one-half interest in the BCS Ltd. partnership. The Interlocutory Judgment also purported to award petitioner accounts receivable with a net value of $26,400. In fact, pursuant to California law 1 these accounts receivable were already petitioner's separate property since they were earned in his medical practice subsequent to the time of his separation from his wife on July 1, 1972. Finally, Mary Todd Carson was awarded from petitioner's separate property $10,000 in the form of a personal note from petitioner to compensate her for one-half of the goodwill and, purportedly to equalize the division of community property, a cash payment of $1,488.
1978 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 326">*330 Under the Supreme Court's decicsion in
An exception to the general rule requiring the transfer in settlement to be treated as a taxable event occurs in community property states if the transfer1978 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 326">*331 of property occurs incident to an equal division of community property. In that situation each spouse holds an undivided one-half interest in the entire community prior to the divorce and after the divorce holds as separate property items valued in the aggregate at approximately one-half the value of the total community property. Despite this effective exchange of interests in the property, the arrangement is treated as a nontaxable partition. The origin of this exception is in the early case of
In the instant1978 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 326">*332 case we are faced with an unusual fact pattern. Under the property settlement petitioner and his former wife each received community assets of approximately equal aggregate value. In addition, however, Mary Todd Carson was awarded from petitioner's separate property cash of $1,488 and his personal note for $10,000. Petitioner contends that the award of petitioner's separate property causes the overall settlement to be a substantially unequal and therefore taxable transfer.
In disallowing the claimed capital loss, respondent, on the other hand, has focused his analysis on the final holdings of community property apart from the separate property. After the property settlement petitioner held property valued at 49.1 percent of the aggregate of community assets which were assigned a value and his wife held the remainder. This nearly equal division of community assets, respondent contends, requires characterization of the property settlement as a nontaxable partition.
We agree with respondent's conclusion that the loss may not be recognized, but reach that conclusion via a slightly different analytical route. Since the Interlocutory Judgment specifically provided that the $10,0001978 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 326">*333 personal note was to compensate petitioner's former wife for her share of the goodwill which was community property, such portion of the goodwill was the subject of a sale or exchange in which petitioner took a cost basis. See
The second issue for our decision is whether, as a result of the court ordered property settlement, petitioner received a basis of $26,400 in certain accounts receivable which were at all times his separate property. Petitioner contends that these accounts receivable were transferred to the divorce court's jurisdiction in consideration of the divorce and property settlement and upon the distribution of the assets to him he took a fair market value basis in them. 2 Petitioner's argument is without merit. A mere recital in a divorce decree purporting to award to a party to the divorce property which at all times prior to and subsequent to the judgment was already that party's separate property has no effect on the party's1978 Tax Ct. Memo LEXIS 326">*335 basis therein.
The three cases relied on by petitioner are distinguishable from this case. In
In
The case of
Accordingly, on the facts of this case we hold that the petitioner did not acquire a basis of $26,400 in the accounts receivable because of the court ordered division of community property assets. Since the accounts receivable were clearly not the subject of a sale or exchange, the petitioner is not entitled to increase his basis in them.
1.
2. Even if we were to accept petitioner's contention that an effective transfer to the court's jurisdiction occurred in consideration of the divorce and property settlement, that would not help petitioner's case. Such a conclusion would require petitioner to recognize gain upon the transfer to the court measured by the difference between the fair market value of the accounts receivable, $26,400, and petitioner's basis in them, $0, which would be characterized by the nature of the accounts receivable in petitioner's hands as ordinary income. Cf.