1979 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 73">*73
This case is before us on petitioner's motion for reconsideration of our decision in
72 T.C. 849">*850 SUPPLEMENTAL OPINION
This case is before us on petitioner's motion for reconsideration of our opinion in
In our original opinion, we held that it would be necessary for both the husband and wife to have their domiciles in Louisiana in order to create a marital community in which both spouses would share in the earnings of the Louisiana domiciliary. 11979 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 73">*76 See
1979 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 73">*77 The issue presented to us by petitioner on this motion is whether the laws of Louisiana, which deny petitioner a domicile in Louisiana and the benefits of that State's community property law, are constitutional under the
Petitioner argues that we need not determine whether her husband has a property right in her income in the event we hold
1979 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 73">*79 While we agree with petitioner that she need not show that she would ultimately prevail in her lawsuit in this Court in order to have standing to challenge the constitutionality of the Louisiana statute (
In this regard, petitioner contends that the constitutional infirmity (if there is one) would be resolved by Louisiana granting to either spouse the ability to take his or her own domicile and that the nonresident and nondomiciliary spouse would have a community property interest in the Louisiana domiciliary spouse's property. If this were the case, petitioner would prevail, assuming she maintained a separate, Louisiana domicile.
We disagree. The rationale underlying
1979 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 73">*83 If we reject as unconstitutional the rule that the wife's domicile is that of her husband by operation of law, it would seem to follow that she should not automatically obtain the benefit of owning a half-interest in her husband's earnings since the rationale for providing her with that benefit no longer exists. It is clear that the husband, who does not take his wife's domicile, does not receive the benefits of his wife's domicile. We believe on this basis that if
In short, we do not believe that under any interpretation of Louisiana law, whether article 39 is constitutional or unconstitutional, petitioner's husband would have a property interest in petitioner's income. This is so because we have determined that, absent
1. Under Louisiana property law, a claim for wages of a wife who is living with her husband belongs to the community.
2. As in effect during the years in issue. Louisiana has adopted sweeping changes in its community property laws. See Acts 1978, No. 627 (relating generally to equal management of property by spouses). Sec. 6 repealed tit. VI, Vol. III, La. Civ. Code, comprised of arts. 2325 through 2437. Sec. 9 of Act 627 provides in pertinent part that "Except for R.S. 9:2831 through 2835, Section 1, Section 2, Section 6, Section 7, and Section 8 of this Act shall take effect on January 1, 1980, and shall be applicable to the property and obligations of all spouses whether the spouses were married or whether property was acquired or an obligation was incurred prior to or after January 1, 1980, unless the spouses have adopted a matrimonial regime by express contract."↩
3. We realize that the modern trend is to recognize separate domiciles for a husband and a wife if in fact they are residing in and intend to maintain separate domiciles and both parties agree.
We expressed some doubt, however, in our original opinion at n. 3 that Louisiana would permit a wife living amicably with her husband to maintain a separate domicile. See
We also noted at n. 3 that there were no special circumstances (as that term has been applied by the Restatement of Conflict of Laws and the courts) that make it unreasonable for petitioner to take her husband's domicile by operation of law. See
Petitioner's argument, as we understand it, is that she has met the test for retaining her Louisiana domicile absent her marriage to Eric and that upon finding art. 39 unconstitutional, we must use the test which applied in the absence of her marriage. In n. 2 of our original opinion, we stated that petitioner showed that she had a fixed intent to return to Louisiana (her domicile of origin) and that under
4. The Louisiana Supreme Court in
5. It is not entirely clear that under this fact pattern, with the roles of petitioner and her spouse exchanged, that Louisiana would have granted a woman a property right in her husband's property, although both petitioner and respondent have assumed this to be so. In
"None of these classes includes what we now have before us -- husband and wife domiciled in different places (Kansas and Spain), residing in one place (Spain), which is also the jurisdiction where the money was earned. In that situation it may be that the law of the earner's own domicile (Kansas) determines ownership (see Restatement (Second) of Conflicts + BB 258, comment c) but it also may be that Spain has the more significant relationship to the spouses and to the earnings -- and therefore that its internal law should prevail on ownership. See Restatement (Second) of Conflicts, + BB 258(1). We need not try to solve that problem
See also
6. Cf.
7. It is well established that a court will refrain from deciding a constitutional issue where other reasons can be found for the decision.
8. The wife's obligation to live with her husband must be construed with the right of the wife to put an end to the matrimonial relation for any causes listed in
9. In situations in which there is a conflict between the domicile of the husband at the time of marriage and that which the parties intend to permanently adopt at the time of marriage and in which they take up their residence, Louisiana courts have sometimes provided the wife (and husband) with a domicile other than the husband's domicile at the time of marriage. See
10. We note that under
See G. Bilbe, "Constitutionality of Sex-Based Differentiations in the Louisiana Community Property Regime,"
11. In the event art. 39 is unconstitutional in regard to property rights, another alternative to finding that a wife may take a domicile separate from her husband (while living amicably together) would be to hold that the couple has only one domicile but that it is necessary to look to the facts and circumstances of the couple, in a gender-neutral manner, to determine where the marital domicile is. We held in our original opinion that under such a theory, the marital domicile would be England.↩