1983 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 26">*26
Petitioner is the former wife of Charles M. Schulz, the creator and author of the comic strip "Peanuts." At the time of his separation and divorce from petitioner, Mr. Schulz produced the "Peanuts" comic strip for United Feature Syndicate, Inc., pursuant to a syndicate agreement under which he received royalties equal to 50 percent of the net cash proceeds the syndicate realized from the distribution of daily and Sunday comic strips and the licensing of the "Peanuts" characters. In their marriage settlement agreement, Mr. Schulz and petitioner agreed that under California law, she possessed a community property interest in the future earnings he derived from the syndicate agreement to the extent such earnings were attributable to Mr. Schulz' services while he was married to petitioner. Accordingly, Mr. Schulz agreed to make lifetime payments to her which are calculated by multiplying the amounts he receives from the syndicate by specified percentages.
81 T.C. 652">*653 By notice of deficiency dated June 12, 1980, respondent determined deficiencies in petitioners' Federal income taxes in the amounts of $ 107,916, $ 92,976, and $ 118,743 for the years 1975, 1976, and 1977, respectively. The sole issue for decision is whether the income received by petitioner Joyce Doty pursuant to her marriage settlement agreement constituted earned income under former
FINDINGS OF FACT
Some of the facts have been stipulated and are so found. The stipulation of facts together with the exhibits attached thereto are incorporated herein by this reference.
Petitioners Edwin Doty and Joyce Doty resided in Healdsburg, Calif., at the time of filing the petition herein. Edwin Doty is a party to this proceeding solely by reason of having filed a joint income 1983 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 26">*29 tax return with Joyce Doty (hereinafter petitioner). They timely filed joint Federal income tax returns for the calendar years 1975, 1976, and 1977 with the Internal Revenue Service Center, Fresno, Calif.
Prior to her marriage to Edwin Doty, petitioner was married to Charles M. Schulz, the creator and author of the cartoon strip entitled "Peanuts." Petitioner and Mr. Schulz were married in Minnesota during 1949 and remained so until 1973. 81 T.C. 652">*654 They moved to California in July of 1958 and have resided there continuously ever since.
On June 14, 1950, Mr. Schulz entered into an agreement with United Feature Syndicate, Inc. (hereinafter the syndicate), whereby he agreed to produce a cartoon strip entitled "Li'l Folks." Under the terms of this agreement, Mr. Schulz granted the syndicate the exclusive rights to the cartoon and characters contained therein in exchange for a sum equal to 50 percent of the net proceeds received by the syndicate from the sale or other disposition of the cartoon and its characters. The agreement had an original term of 5 years and was renewed by the syndicate for an additional 5 years.
On October 1, 1959, Mr. Schulz and the syndicate executed a new agreement1983 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 26">*30 (the syndicate agreement), which superseded the June 14, 1950, agreement. The syndicate agreement set forth the rights and obligations of Mr. Schulz and the syndicate with respect to the cartoon strip "Peanuts." The syndicate agreement together with its four amendments, dated October 30, 1966; August 7, 1967; March 19, 1973; and August 1, 1974, were in effect during the years in question.
Under the terms of the syndicate agreement, Mr. Schulz agreed to write, draw, color, produce, and deliver to the syndicate 312 different installments of the "Peanuts" cartoon strip in form suitable for daily publication in newspapers or other periodicals at a time at least 6 weeks prior to the scheduled release of each such installment. Additionally, Mr. Schulz agreed to provide the syndicate with 52 different installments of the "Peanuts" cartoon strip in form suitable for publication in Sunday newspapers at a time at least 12 weeks prior to the scheduled release of each such installment. In exchange for Mr. Schulz' providing the syndicate with these installments, the syndicate agreed to use its best efforts to market the installments and to pay Mr. Schulz a sum equal to 50 percent of the net1983 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 26">*31 cash proceeds it received from the sale or other disposition of the installments.
In addition, under the provisions of the syndicate agreement, Mr. Schulz also agreed that during the term of the agreement, the syndicate would have the entire, exclusive, and worldwide right, title, and interest in and to the "Peanuts" cartoon and characters, including the motion picture, radio, dramatic, television, magazine, and book publishing rights and 81 T.C. 652">*655 the right to reproduce the cartoon characters in the form of toys, novelties, games, and other merchandise. In exchange, the syndicate agreed to pay to Mr. Schulz 50 percent of the net cash proceeds it received from the sale of any of the various licenses that it had been granted under the terms of the agreement.
Thus, Charles M. Schulz had one principal obligation under the terms of the syndicate agreement: to draw the "Peanuts" cartoon. The royalties that he received under the syndicate agreement were attributable to his personal efforts and neither his nor petitioner's capital was a material income-producing factor.
The syndicate placed the "Peanuts" cartoon installments it was provided by Mr. Schulz in various daily and Sunday newspapers1983 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 26">*32 and entered into licensing agreements with numerous companies that produced novelties, motion pictures, television programs, and books based on the characters in "Peanuts," including "Charlie Brown," "Snoopy," "Lucy," "Linus," and "Woodstock." From these activities, the syndicate received various royalties, a portion of which was payable to Mr. Schulz pursuant to the terms of the syndicate agreement. The net cash proceeds payable by the syndicate fall into the following general categories:
(a) Proceeds from granting licenses to others to use the "Peanuts" characters (hereinafter novelties). Examples of these proceeds are amounts received from the use of characters on greeting cards, toys, television commercials, and clothing.
(b) Proceeds from the "Peanuts" cartoon page appearing in the Sunday or the weekly newspapers (hereinafter page receipts).
(c) Proceeds from the daily, four-frame "Peanuts" cartoon strips appearing in newspapers (hereinafter strip receipts).
(d) Proceeds from the sale of books (hereinafter publishing).
Pursuant to the syndicate agreement, the syndicate kept full and accurate books of account showing all receipts from its sale of the "Peanuts" cartoons and rights1983 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 26">*33 to the "Peanuts" characters. Although the terms of the various licensing agreements varied with respect to the time payments were due to the syndicate, in each agreement, all proceeds due the syndicate were payable to the syndicate less than 1 year from 81 T.C. 652">*656 the time the sale occurred or revenue was received by the licensees or distributors.
Petitioner and Charles M. Schulz separated on November 15, 1972, and on December 11, 1972, petitioner filed a petition in the California Superior Court for a dissolution of their marriage. A final judgment of dissolution of marriage was entered by the Superior Court on August 7, 1973; however, the court reserved jurisdiction with respect to a division of the community property of the parties.
Petitioner and Charles M. Schulz entered into a marriage settlement agreement on October 17, 1973. The negotiations for this agreement commenced in 1972 and continued throughout most of 1973. At the time of the negotiations, Mr. Schulz was still obligated under the syndicate agreement to continue drawing the "Peanuts" cartoon for a period of around 6 years. Consequently, the parties recognized during the negotiations of the marriage settlement agreement, 1983 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 26">*34 that to the extent Mr. Schulz continued to draw the "Peanuts" comic strip, he was acquiring a separate property interest.
All of the other property owned by petitioner and Mr. Schulz at the time of their separation was community property pursuant to California law. The marriage settlement agreement equally divided all of their property, with the exception of the syndicate agreement, on the basis of actual values. However, with respect to the syndicate agreement, the parties were unable to arrive at a fixed sum to reflect the value of petitioner's community interest in the syndicate agreement.
Petitioner and Mr. Schulz were in agreement that petitioner had a community property interest in the syndicate agreement as of June 30, 1973. 2 However, since Mr. Schulz intended to 81 T.C. 652">*657 continue drawing, the parties recognized that not all of the future royalties payable under the syndicate agreement would be community income. Accordingly, in negotiating a division of the syndicate agreement, the parties agreed that some percentage of the future royalties would be attributable to Mr. Schulz' services while he was married to petitioner and would thus be community income, while the remainder1983 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 26">*35 would relate to Mr. Schulz' services after their divorce and would therefore be his separate property. The parties further agreed that petitioner's interest in the income stream should decline with the lapse of time, since as time passed, an increasingly higher percentage of the royalties paid out under the syndicate agreement would be attributable to Mr. Schulz' services after the termination of their marriage. Accordingly, under the terms of the marriage settlement agreement, the amount of the lifetime payments that Mr. Schulz agreed to pay to petitioner are based on the following percentages of the payments he receives from the syndicate:
Period(s) ended | Percentage | |
6/30/74 | 27 | |
6/30/75 | 25 | |
6/30/76 | 23 | |
6/30/77 | 21 | |
6/30/78 | 20 | |
6/30/79 | 18 | |
6/30/80 | 17 | |
6/30/81 and | ||
6/30/82 | 16 | |
Thereafter | 15 |
1983 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 26">*36 Although the parties assumed in the marriage settlement agreement that Mr. Schulz would continue to draw the "Peanuts" comic strip, petitioner's share of the royalties remains the same even if Mr. Schulz stops drawing the comic 81 T.C. 652">*658 strip. Furthermore, the marriage settlement agreement provides that:
In the event [Charles M. Schulz] either partly or wholly abandons the present strip in favor of some other strip not related to the present strip and the publication of said strip is not controlled by United Features under its present agreement with [Charles M. Schulz], then it is agreed that if the effect of this new strip reduces the amount of income that [petitioner] is to receive under paragraph 3 of Article IV of this Agreement, then there shall be paid to [petitioner] by [Charles M. Schulz] out of the proceeds of the new strip such amounts as will compensate her for any loss of income which she suffers as a direct result of the publication of the new strip; provided, however, that the percentage of the income of the new strip to be paid to the [petitioner] hereunder shall not exceed the percentage that she receives as her share of the Syndicate Payments under paragraph 3 of1983 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 26">*37 Article IV.
The marriage settlement agreement also provides that petitioner's share of the syndicate's payments will cease upon her death, unless she is survived by a child or children from her marriage to Mr. Schulz. In that event, petitioner is provided with a limited power of appointment to distribute the payments she would be otherwise entitled to under the terms of the marriage settlement agreement if she were alive.
The marriage settlement agreement was approved by the California Superior Court on June 6, 1974, which found the division of the community property constituted an equal division. Petitioner and Mr. Schulz carried out the terms of the marriage settlement agreement. With respect to the syndicate agreement, when Mr. Schulz received a payment from the syndicate, his accountant would compute the portion payable to petitioner under the terms of the marriage settlement agreement and Mr. Schulz would then remit that amount to petitioner.
The amounts received by Mr. Schulz pursuant to the syndicate agreement during the tax years in question were substantial as set forth below:
1975 | $ 3,288,916 |
1976 | 3,807,676 |
1977 | 5,106,599 |
These amounts break down into the following1983 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 26">*38 categories:
1975 | 1976 | 1977 | |
Novelties | $ 2,406,914 | $ 2,997,737 | $ 4,210,652 |
Page receipts | 232,053 | 236,737 | 216,703 |
Strip receipts | 269,407 | 274,895 | 319,991 |
Publishing | $ 380,137 | $ 298,218 | $ 358,233 |
Miscellaneous | 405 | 89 | 1,020 |
81 T.C. 652">*659 Pursuant to the marriage settlement agreement, petitioner received $ 777,095, $ 825,149, and $ 1,037,176 from Mr. Schulz during the years 1975, 1976, and 1977, respectively. She reported these amounts on her Federal income tax returns for those years as "earned income" subject to the maximum tax rate under
In his statutory notice of deficiency, respondent determined that the amounts received by petitioner under the marriage settlement agreement during 1975, 1976, and 1977 did not constitute personal service income or earned income within the meaning of
OPINION
The ultimate issue for our decision is whether the income received by petitioner under the marriage settlement agreement constituted earned income, thereby entitling her to the benefits of
In the instant case, petitioner is the former wife of Charles M. Schulz, the creator of the comic strip, "Peanuts." At the time of his separation and divorce from petitioner, Mr. Schulz produced the "Peanuts" comic strip for United Feature Syndicate, Inc., pursuant to a syndicate agreement. Under this agreement, Mr. Schulz received royalties equal to 50 percent of the net cash proceeds the syndicate realized from the distribution of daily and Sunday comic strips and the licensing of the "Peanuts" characters. In their marriage settlement agreement, Mr. Schulz and petitioner agreed that she owned a community property interest in the future earnings he derived from the syndicate agreement to the extent such earnings were attributable to Mr. Schulz' services while he was married to petitioner. Accordingly, Mr. Schulz agreed to make lifetime payments to petitioner that are computed by multiplying the amounts he receives from the syndicate by specified percentages. Since Mr. Schulz intended to continue drawing for the syndicate, these percentages decline with the passage of time in recognition of the fact that an 1983 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 26">*40 increasingly higher percentage 81 T.C. 652">*660 of the royalties paid out under the syndicate agreement would be attributable to his services after the termination of their marriage. The marriage settlement agreement was approved by the Superior Court and pursuant to this agreement, petitioner received $ 777,095, $ 825,149, and $ 1,037,176 from Mr. Schulz during the tax years in question.
Respondent contends that any property interest petitioner may have had in the syndicate agreement was terminated by the marriage settlement agreement so that, consequently, the income she received pursuant to the marriage settlement agreement constituted her current separate property. We disagree. The nature of the amounts received by petitioner is necessarily determined by reference to California law.
The separate or community character of property is fixed at the time of acquisition. Thus, to determine whether income attributable to one spouse's services constitutes community income, it is necessary to determine when the services were performed. If the services were performed during marriage, then the income received therefrom constitutes community income.
These principles1983 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 26">*42 were recognized by the Internal Revenue Service in
The earnings of either spouse acquired during marriage and domicile in California, except the earnings of a wife living separate and apart from her 81 T.C. 652">*661 husband, are community income. It is the status of the employee at the time his services are performed which determines whether compensation for such services is separate or community income for the reason that such compensation has its inception in the performance of services, and the inception of the right to receive income is the time at which its character as separate or as community property is determined.
Accordingly, the courts have found that uncollected accounts receivable of a practicing physician are community property, being the earnings of a husband during marriage.
During the 24 years that Mr. Schulz was married to petitioner, he developed the "Peanuts" characters and drew thousands of daily and Sunday comic strips. Obviously, a portion of the future royalties Mr. Schulz will receive under the syndicate agreement are attributable to his services during1983 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 26">*44 the term of their marriage. Thus, petitioner clearly had a community property interest in the syndicate agreement. In recognition of this interest, the parties made a good faith effort to divide this community property asset between petitioner and Mr. Schulz taking into account Mr. Schulz' obligation to continue to provide services under the syndicate agreement. Accordingly, the parties divided the royalty payments into those attributable to Mr. Schulz' services during the term of his marriage to petitioner and those attributable to his services after the marriage ended. In making these allocations, the parties recognized that the percentage of the royaltv 81 T.C. 652">*662 payments received from the syndicate allocable to Mr. Schulz' services during the term of their marriage would decline with the passage of time. The parties then divided the royalties they estimated were allocable to Mr. Schulz' services during the term of their marriage equally between him and petitioner.
A similar division of community property interests in nonvested pension rights was recognized by the Supreme Court of California in
In dividing nonvested pension rights as community property the court must take account of the possibility that death or termination of employment may destroy those rights before they mature. In some cases the trial court may be able to evaluate this risk in determining the present value of those rights. * * * But if the court concludes that because of uncertainties affecting the vesting or maturation of the pension that it should not attempt to divide the present value of pension rights, it can instead award each spouse an appropriate portion of each pension payment as it is paid. This method of dividing the community interest in the pension renders it unnecessary for the court to compute the present value of the pension rights, and divides equally the risk that the pension will fail to vest. * * * [
We find the division of the future royalties in the instant case to be in accordance with the guidelines for dividing future income streams approved by the Supreme Court of California in
Having resolved this preliminary issue, we now turn our focus to the tax treatment of the income in question. It is well settled that the amounts received by petitioner, representing her community property interest in the future royalties payable under the syndicate agreement, were properly taxable to her.
1983 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 26">*47
the 1983 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 26">*48 term "earned income" includes gains (other than any gain which is treated under any provision of this chapter as gain from the sale or exchange of a capital asset) and net earnings derived from the sale or other disposition of, the transfer of any interest in, or the licensing of the use of property (other than good will) by an individual whose personal efforts created such property.
Although it seems clear that the royalties in this case would satisfy the requirements of earned income under
1983 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 26">*49 81 T.C. 652">*664 Similarly, in
We adhere to the view that the "earned income" requirement was designed merely to prevent the exclusion of passive income, such as rental income, interest, and dividends. If Congress had intended the existence of a
In reaching this conclusion, we quoted the following language from the Senate Finance Committee report accompanying
The intent of the Congress in adopting the "earned income" concept was to limit the applicability of these provisions to the portion of a self-employed person's income which was a result of his individual efforts as distinguished from a return on capital. * * * [S. Rept. 1707, 89th Cong., 2d Sess. (1966),
Subsequent to these decisions, the Service reversed its position as to what constitutes earned income under
Nevertheless, respondent contends that petitioner's income was not earned income because she did not earn it herself. Petitioner, however, argues that, if income is earned income to 81 T.C. 652">*665 Mr. Schulz, it is also earned income to petitioner. In support of her position, petitioner relies primarily on the Ninth Circuit's decision in the case of
"Earned income" means wages, salaries, professional fees, and other amounts received as compensation for personal services actually rendered but does not include that part of the compensation derived by the taxpayer for personal services rendered 1983 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 26">*52 by him to a corporation which represents a distribution of earnings or profits rather than a reasonable allowance as compensation for the personal services actually rendered. * * *
The Commissioner conceded that the architect fees in question were community income and that the taxpayer's husband's half of such income was earned income within the meaning of section 31. Nevertheless, the Commissioner asserted that the taxpayer's half of these fees was not "earned income" since the phrase "personal services actually rendered" under section 31 should be construed to mean personal services actually rendered by the taxpayer.
The Ninth Circuit rejected the Commissioner's argument, holding that --
We think that, if Congress had intended such a limitation, it would have expressed that intent. It did, in the same paragraph, where limitations were intended, express such intent by using the words "by him" and "by the taxpayer." No such words were used in the first part of section 31(a)(1). We conclude, therefore, that no limitation was there intended. [
Furthermore, the court went on to proclaim that even if earned income1983 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 26">*53 were defined as compensation for services actually rendered by the taxpayer, the taxpayer's half of the architect fees in question would still qualify as earned income. In reaching this conclusion, the court reasoned that --
When a married man * * * practices a profession or engages in any gainful occupation or activity, he does so as the agent of a marital community consisting of himself and his wife. * * * He cannot do so in any other way or in any other capacity. Services rendered by him are actually rendered by the community, that is to say, by him and his wife, equally. * * *
81 T.C. 652">*666 That petitioner did not personally participate in the professional labors of her husband is immaterial. One may actually render a personal service without personally performing the acts constituting the service. Otherwise a partnership acting through one of its members, or a principal acting throught [sic] an agent, could not actually render a personal service, the truth being, of course, that such services can be and, in countless instances, are actually so rendered. [
The language of the relevant portions1983 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 26">*54 of the applicable statute in
This Court has relied on the
When the husband, through his labor or management of the community property, earns income, either as a salary or as gain from the sale of stock, as in this case, he does so as agent or manager of the conjugal partnership, referred to as the community. The husband does not acquire ownership of the income. Ownership 1983 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 26">*55 is in the community from the time of acquisition, and he holds title thereto not for himself but as the agent of the community * * *
* * * *
In the instant case, the fact that [the wife] did not personally render the services in the United States and, in fact, was not physically present in this country during the taxable years does not render section 871(c) inapplicable. * * * [
Similarly, in our decision in
The community income so earned is as much the property of one spouse as the other, and it retains its character as the product of the services of the agent of the community in this country when attributed to the other spouse for Federal tax purposes. * * * [
Indeed, even the Internal Revenue Service cited
81 T.C. 652">*667 While community property laws cause income constituting community property to be "received" one-half by each spouse, such laws do not change the nature or character1983 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 26">*56 of the income. The character of community income is established by the circumstances under which it is obtained. * * * For example, one-half of the income earned by one spouse in a community property state is "earned income" of the other spouse for purposes of sections 37(b) and (d)(2) of the Code.
However, despite the clear impact of
With respect to respondent's first contention, he argues that, since the income in question arose from the transfer of property created by artistic effort, petitioner is bound by the restrictions of
Although it is a basic principle of statutory construction that when two statutory provisions could apply, the specific controls over the general provision (
Finally, we direct our attention to respondent's assertion that granting petitioner the benefits of
Respondent is correct in his contention that we have always attempted "to interpret the various statutory provisions in such manner as to produce uniformity of treatment of spouses throughout the country, whether they reside in community property States or elsewhere."
81 T.C. 652">*669 In reaching this conclusion, we note that our finding is based on the fact that petitioner's1983 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 26">*60 share of the community income she received pursuant to the marriage settlement agreement constituted earned income within the definition of
In conclusion, we hold that the income received by petitioner under the marriage settlement agreement constituted earned income, thereby entitling her to the benefits of
1.
2. Specifically, the marriage settlement agreement provides:
"Husband and Wife agree that the community has developed a valuable right in and to the Syndicate Agreement. They agree that this right is of a unique nature and that the amount of income to be generated under this Agreement and the potential for increase or decrease in the amount makes it impossible to determine with any degree of accuracy the present value of the community interest in this Agreement. The determination of the value of the community interest is further complicated by the fact that Husband is obligated to and will continue to render services under this Agreement and that these continued services are necessary to maintain the level of payments pursuant to the Syndicate Agreement.
"The interest of the community in the Syndicate Agreement as of June 30, 1973, [is] herein represented as a percentage of each monthly payment to be received pursuant to said Agreement as provided in subparagraph a. of this paragraph 3. Husband and Wife each agree that the interest of the community in and to these proceeds has been arrived at only after extensive negotiations between their attorneys and accountants and that in the opinion of both Husband and Wife as well as that of their respective advisors, this represents an equal division of the community interest in and to the future proceeds to be received under the Syndicate Agreement. The payments reflected in subparagraph a. of this paragraph 3 represent to Husband and Wife the full amount of their community interest in and to the Syndicate Agreement as of June 30, 1973. The balance of the proceeds received under the Syndicate Agreement are the sole property of Husband representing payment for his services rendered after June 30, 1973 under the Syndicate Agreement. * * *"↩
3. See also
4. The Tax Reform Act of 1976 changed the term "earned taxable income" to "personal service taxable income" for tax years beginning after Dec. 31, 1976. However, because the term "personal service income" continued to be defined by reference to the term "earned income," we will use the term "earned income" herein.↩
5. We treat the effect of the word "or" in a subsequent portion of this opinion.↩