105 T.C. No. 23
UNITED STATES TAX COURT
WALTER R. RIPLEY, DONEE-TRANSFEREE OF MILDRED M. RIPLEY, DONOR,
AND
MELYNDA H. RIPLEY, DONEE-TRANSFEREE OF MILDRED M. RIPLEY, DONOR,
Petitioners v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
Docket No. 26209-93. Filed November 8, 1995.
In 1983 the donor made gifts of parcels of real
estate valued at $93,300 to Ps, husband and wife, as
tenants in common. During the same year the donor made
gifts of other parcels of real estate to a different
donee. Controversy arose between the donor and R as to
the valuation of the gifts to the other donee. As a
result of the donor's timely consents, the 3-year
period of limitations for assessment, sec. 6501(a),
I.R.C., was extended to Apr. 18, 1990. On Feb. 9,
1990--68 days prior to expiration of the extended
period--R sent the donor a notice of gift tax
deficiency. On Feb. 25, 1992, a stipulated decision
was entered by this Court based upon a computation that
left intact the $93,300 valuation of the gifts to Ps
but significantly increased the value of the gifts to
- 2 -
the other donee, resulting in a gift tax deficiency
substantially in excess of $93,300.
1. Held, (a) since, pursuant to sec. 6503(a)(1),
I.R.C., the limitations period for assessment (as
extended) against the donor was suspended upon the
issuance of the notice of deficiency until the decision
of this Court became final and for 60 days thereafter,
and (b) since, pursuant to secs. 7481(a)(1) and 7483,
I.R.C., the decision became final upon the expiration
of the 90-day period without the filing of an appeal,
even though a stipulated decision, (c) the period of
limitations for assessment against the donor was
therefore extended 90 days plus 60 days, a total of 150
days, notwithstanding the donor's waiver of the sec.
6213(a), I.R.C., restrictions on assessment. (d)
Moreover, the 68 days that the period for assessment
was suspended by the issuance of the notice of
deficiency must be "tacked on" to the 150 days--a total
of 218 days from Feb. 28, 1992, or until Oct. 1, 1992.
(e) Accordingly, since, pursuant to sec. 6901(c),
I.R.C., the period for assessment against the initial
transferee extends for 1 year the period of limitations
for assessment against the transferor, the period of
assessment against Ps extended to Oct. 1, 1993. The
notices of transferee liability to Ps, issued on Sept.
17, 1993, were therefore timely.
2. Held further, the gift tax lien imposed by
sec. 6324(b), I.R.C., is not an encumbrance which
reduces the value of the gifts in Ps' hands, for which
they are liable as transferees.
G. Nelson Mackey, Jr., for petitioners.
Scott Anderson, for respondent.
OPINION
RAUM, Judge: Respondent issued notices of donee/transferee
liability to petitioners, each in the amount of $93,300. At
issue is: (1) Whether the period of limitations for assessment
- 3 -
of transferee liability prescribed by section 6901(c)(1)1
expired, and (2) the amount of petitioners' transferee liability
under section 6324(b).
The liability at issue results from gifts made by Mildred M.
Ripley (donor) in 1983 to her son, petitioner Walter R. Ripley
and petitioner Melynda H. Ripley, Walter's wife. At the time the
joint petition in this case was filed, petitioners resided in
Greenville, Virginia.
On December 30, 1983, the donor made a gift to petitioners,
as tenants in common, of two parcels of real estate located in
Jacksonville, Florida, which then had a total value of $93,300.
Petitioners thus became transferees of the donor, as defined in
section 6901(h). That same year, the donor made another gift of
real property to her son Joseph.
On her gift tax return for 1983, filed in 1984, she reported
the value of the property given to petitioners as $93,300, and
the value of the property given to Joseph as $84,139. On
examination, the IRS took the position that the value of the
property given to Joseph should be substantially increased.
Within the 3-year limitations period prescribed by section
6501(a), the donor and respondent signed a Form 872, Consent to
Extend the Time to Assess Tax. Subsequent timely consent
1
Unless otherwise indicated, all section references are to
the Internal Revenue Code in effect at the time of the donor's
gifts.
- 4 -
agreements further extended the assessment period until April 18,
1990. The donor and the IRS were unable to resolve their
differences, and on February 9, 1990--68 days prior to the April
18, 1990 expiration of the extended assessment period--respondent
sent the donor a notice of gift tax deficiency in the amount of
$467,183. She timely filed a petition with this Court, and the
case was placed on the Court's docket. On February 25, 1992, a
stipulated decision was entered settling the donor's liability at
$239,124. The $93,300 value of the property transferred to
petitioners was not changed by this decision. Pursuant to the
decision, the donor waived the restrictions of section 6213(a),
which prohibits assessment and collection of the deficiency until
the decision of the Tax Court becomes final. (More hereinafter
about when the decision becomes "final".)
The Commissioner assessed the additional gift tax against
the donor on April 7, 1992. On September 17, 1993, a notice of
donee/transferee liability was issued to each petitioner for
$93,300 of the donor's unpaid gift taxes.2
2
The IRS also attempted to collect the gift taxes from
Joseph Ripley. On Sept. 2, 1993, the IRS mailed Joseph, as a
donee of Mildred Ripley, a notice of intention to levy listing
tax and interest due in the amount of $654,973.04. On Sept. 17,
1993, the Commissioner mailed to Joseph a notice of transferee
liability for the donor's unpaid gift tax in the amount of
$651,047.40. The IRS attempted to enforce its lien by serving
Joseph with notices of levy and notices of seizure for two
parcels of real estate in Florida on Dec. 17, 1993. Joseph moved
to restrain assessment and collection until his petition for
redetermination was heard. In Ripley v. Commissioner, 102 T.C.
(continued...)
- 5 -
1. Timeliness of Notices of Donee/Transferee Liability
Petitioners argue that the Commissioner issued the notices
of donee/transferee liability after the limitations period
expired. We hold that the notices were timely.
Section 6901(a)(1)(A)(iii) provides that the liability of a
transferee of property shall be assessed and collected in the
same manner and subject to the same limitations as the liability
of the donor. In accordance with section 6901(c), the period of
limitations for assessment against an initial transferee "shall
be * * * within 1 year after the expiration of the period of
limitation for assessment against the transferor". And section
6901(h) defines "transferee" as including a donee. Moreover,
petitioners have already stipulated that they are transferees.
Therefore, the period of limitations for assessment applicable to
petitioners expired 1 year after the expiration of the donor's
limitations period. In order to decide whether an assessment
2
(...continued)
654 (1994), this Court denied Joseph's motion and held that IRS
collection efforts pursuant to sec. 6324(b) are not otherwise
subject to the normal deficiency procedures set forth in secs.
6211 through 6216.
Joseph's petition for redetermination is currently set for
trial in Richmond, Virginia, on Jan. 22, 1996. Of course, if
Joseph is found to be liable as a donee/transferee, and if he
pays the amount so determined, petitioners herein might be
relieved of liability of all or at least a portion of the $93,300
for which we have found them liable, depending upon how much
Joseph pays.
Also, we do not express any view as to the rights of
petitioners and Joseph inter sese.
- 6 -
against petitioners was barred by limitations, we must first
determine when the donor's period of limitations expired.
Section 6501(a) provides generally that assessments of tax
must be made within 3 years after the taxpayer files a return.
Pursuant to section 6501(c)(4), this 3-year period may be
extended by the consent in writing of the Secretary and the
taxpayer, and the expiration period thus extended may be further
extended by subsequent timely agreements in writing. In this
case, the donor and the Commissioner entered into valid
successive consent agreements (Forms 872) extending the
assessment period to April 18, 1990.
However, section 6503(a)(1) suspends the 3-year section
6501(a) limitations period (as extended) upon the issuance of a
statutory notice of deficiency. Section 6503(a)(1) provides in
pertinent part:
The running of the period of limitations provided in
section 6501 * * * shall (after the mailing of the
notice under section 6212(a)) be suspended for the
period during which the Secretary is prohibited from
making the assessment or from collecting by levy or a
proceeding in court (and in any event, if a proceeding
in respect of the deficiency is placed on the docket of
the Tax Court, until the decision of the Tax Court
becomes final), and for 60 days thereafter. [Emphasis
added.]
- 7 -
As provided by section 7481(a)(1),3 a decision of the Tax
Court becomes "final" when the period for appeal expires without
the filing of an appeal. And, pursuant to section 7483, the
period for appeal ends 90 days after a decision is entered in the
Tax Court. Moreover, it has been uniformly held in a number of
cases where the issue has been analyzed that the 90-day period is
applicable even in the case of a stipulated decision. Pesko v.
United States, 918 F.2d 1581 (Fed. Cir. 1990); Sherry Frontenac,
Inc. v. United States, 868 F.2d 420 (11th Cir. 1989); Security
Indus. Ins. Co. v. United States, 830 F.2d 581 (5th Cir. 1987);
Lansburgh v. United States, 699 F. Supp. 279 (S.D. Fla. 1988);
Becker Bros., Inc. v. United States, 61 AFTR 2d 88-1147, 88-1
USTC par. 9262 (C.D. Ill. 1988).
Accordingly, since the decision in the donor's case was
entered February 25, 1992, it became final 90 days thereafter.
And, pursuant to section 6503(a)(1), the running of the section
6501 period of limitations was further suspended for that 90 days
plus 60 days after the 90 days, or a total of 150 days from
February 25, 1992, the day that the stipulated decision was
3
Sec. 7481(a)(1) provides:
(a) Reviewable Decisions.--Except as provided in
subsections (b), (c), and (d), the decision of the Tax
Court shall become final--
(1) Timely notice of appeal not filed.--Upon
the expiration of the time allowed for filing a
notice of appeal, if no such notice has been duly
filed within such time; * * *
- 8 -
entered. Also, at the time of the issuance of the deficiency
notice (February 9, 1990), there remained unexpired 68 days of
the section 6501 period of limitations, which had been extended
to April 18, 1990. That remaining period of 68 days was
suspended by the issuance of the deficiency notice, and should
therefore be further added to the 150-day suspension provided by
section 6503(a)(1), for a total of 218 days. Such addition of
the unexpired 68 days to the period of suspension is firmly
supported by established law. It has long been held that it is
appropriate to add or "tack on" the days remaining when the
limitations period was interrupted or suspended by the issuance
of a deficiency notice. McClamma v. Commissioner, 76 T.C. 754,
758 (1981); see also Bales v. Commissioner, 22 T.C. 355, 359
(1954) (quoting Olds & Whipple v. United States, 86 Ct. Cl. 705,
22 F. Supp. 809, 819 (1938) (interpreting section 277(b) of the
1926 Revenue Act, the predecessor of section 6503(a)(1): "We
think the language of the statute is not reasonably susceptible
to any other construction. It plainly states that the running of
the statute of limitation shall be suspended and this can only
mean that when the period of suspension ceases the limitation
period again commences to run.")).
With the addition of the 68 days to the 150 days, the
limitations period for assessment against the donor expired no
earlier than October 1, 1992. Since, pursuant to section
6901(c), the limitations period for assessment of the transferees
- 9 -
extended for 1 year after that date, the period for assessment of
petitioners as transferees expired no earlier than 1 year after
October 1, 1992, namely, October 1, 1993. Because the
Commissioner issued the notices of transferee liability on
September 17, 1993, the limitations period against petitioners
had not expired, and the notices were timely.
Petitioners argue that the limitations period for assessment
against the donor ended on the date the assessment was made,
April 7, 1992. Petitioners focus on the donor's waiver of the
section 6213(a) restrictions on assessment. They contend that
the waiver put an end to the suspension of the period of
limitations.
This argument has been considered and rejected by other
courts. In Sherry Frontenac, Inc. v. United States, 868 F.2d 420
(11th Cir. 1989), the taxpayers asserted that their waiver of the
prohibition against assessment pursuant to section 6213(a)
removed the 90-day appeal period provided in sections 7481(a) and
7483. Id. at 423. In an opinion with which we agree, the
Eleventh Circuit held that the waiver under section 6213(a) did
not have any effect upon the date when the orders became final
under sections 7481(a) and 7483. Id. The U.S. Claims Court
followed this decision in Pesko v. United States, 19 Cl. Ct. 687,
689 (1990) ("the waiver had no impact on the availability to the
IRS of the entire 150-day tolling period"), affd. 918 F.2d 1581
(Fed. Cir. 1990). We follow Pesko and Sherry Frontenac.
- 10 -
Petitioners rely upon Elizalde v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo.
1984-243, a case that is distinguishable. In the first place,
the transferee prevailed there on the ground that she was not
liable as a transferee wholly apart from any issue relating to
limitations. Second, even in respect of limitations the Court's
analysis of the problem did not take into account what we regard
as the controlling final parenthetical "in any event" clause in
section 6503(a)(1), posing a serious question whether the point
was ever properly presented to the Court by the parties.
Moreover, the Court ultimately held that the period of
limitations had not expired, and it was therefore not necessary
in that case to consider whether the period of limitations was
extended for 90 days after the entry of the stipulated decision
prior to the addition of the 60 days, as we have done here--a
matter that is of critical significance in this case. Finally,
Elizalde was distinguished in a well-reasoned opinion by Judge
Friedman of the Federal Circuit in Pesko v. United States, 918
F.2d at 1583-1584. We do not find it necessary to comment
further on Elizalde.
Petitioners make other arguments concerning the expiration
date of the limitations period. They focus on the consent
agreement, which provides in pertinent part:
(1) The amount of any Federal Gift (Form 709) tax
due on any return(s) made by or for the above
taxpayer(s) for the period(s) ended December 31, 1983
may be assessed at any time on or before April 18,
1990. However, if a notice of deficiency in tax for
- 11 -
any such period(s) is sent to the taxpayer(s) on or
before that date, then the time for assessing the tax
shall be further extended by the number of days the
assessment was previously prohibited, plus 60 days.
(2) This agreement ends on the earlier of the above
expiration date or the assessment date of an increase in the
above tax that reflects the final determination of tax and
the final administrative appeals consideration. * * *
Petitioners argue first that the expiration date under paragraph
(1) is April 26, 1992. Starting from the February 25, 1992,
stipulated decision, they add 60 days from the last sentence of
paragraph (1). They contend that the donor's waiver of the
prohibition against assessment under section 6213(a) terminated
the suspension of the limitations period. The addition of this
60 days brings the last day of the limitations period to April
26, 1992. With the addition of the 68-day tacking period, the
last day of the limitations period is brought to July 4, 1992.
Paragraph (2), however, provides that the limitations period
expired on the earlier of the paragraph (1) expiration date, July
4, 1992, as figured above, or "the assessment date * * * that
reflects the final determination of tax and the final
administrative appeals consideration." Petitioners reason that
the latter date is April 7, 1992, the date the IRS made the
assessment based on the stipulated decision entered by this
Court. Because the earlier of July 4, 1992, and April 7, 1992,
is April 7, 1992, petitioners argue that the limitations period
for assessment against the donor expired on April 7, 1992, and
that the 1-year extension of the limitations period against
- 12 -
transferees expired on April 7, 1993. Sec. 6901(c)(1). Since
the notices of donee/transferee liability were not issued to
petitioners until September 17, 1993, petitioners contend that
the notices were untimely.
Respondent argues, and we have held above, that the decision
of the Tax Court does not become final until the appeal period in
sections 7481(a) and 7483 has expired, even when the decision is
a stipulated one. Petitioners respond that the "final
determination of tax" language does not depend on the finality of
the Tax Court decision. Form 872 is designed to ensure
assessment of tax. Once the Commissioner made the assessment,
they argue, regardless of the status of the case under sections
7481(a) and 7483, there was no longer any need to extend the time
to assess, and therefore the limitations period in the agreement
would logically end upon assessment.
Although petitioners' position appears superficially to be
sound, a closer examination of the problem leads to the opposite
conclusion. A nearly identical argument was presented and
rejected in a carefully reasoned opinion in Lansburgh v. United
States, 699 F. Supp. 279 (S.D. Fla. 1988). There, the taxpayers
had entered into a consent agreement with the IRS, Form 872-A,
Special Consent to Extend the Time to Assess Tax. Id. at 281.
The parties reached a settlement, and a stipulated decision was
entered by this Court. Id. The Court held that section 6503(a)
made the assessment timely because section 6503(a) applied to all
- 13 -
the limitations periods under section 6501, including those
extended by agreement pursuant to section 6501(c)(4), stating (at
283):
any extension agreement which gives rise to a
prohibition against assessment is subject to Section
6503(a). Whenever the taxpayer and the IRS extend the
limitations period for assessment to a point in time
triggered by the sending of a notice of deficiency, the
Government has the benefit of the suspension contained
in Section 6503(a), and if a notice of deficiency is in
fact sent, thereby triggering a period of prohibition
against assessment, the taxpayer cannot rely on any
contrary clause in the extension agreement to
eviscerate Section 6503(a)'s protection. Moreover, if
the taxpayer files for a redetermination of deficiency
in the Tax Court, the second parenthetical provision of
Section 6503(a) operates to further suspend the
limitations period until 60 days after the decision of
the Tax Court becomes final. * * * [Emphasis added.]
The same result had been reached in an alternative holding
in Ramirez v. United States, 210 Ct. Cl. 537, 538 F.2d 888, 893
(1976), where the Court stated:
Since the agreement entered into between the parties
was clearly done under authority of section 6501(c)(4),
the extended contractual period of limitation was as
much a "period of limitations provided for in section
6501" as was the otherwise controlling general 3-year
period provided for in section 6501(a). Consequently,
upon the mailing of the notice of deficiency by the
government, section 6503(a)(1), on its own suspended
the extended contractual period of limitation for the
same 150 days and, without the aid of the automatic
extension proviso in the agreement, the assessment
would have been timely in any case. [Fn. ref.
omitted.]
We agree with the analysis in Ramirez and Lansburgh and
reach the same result here. Although the consent agreement would
apparently on its face result in the expiration of the assessment
- 14 -
period on April 7, 1992, we find that the Form 872 executed in
this case is an extension agreement as described in section
6501(c)(4). As such, the agreement is independently subject to
the application of section 6503(a)(1), which suspends the running
of the limitations period "until the decision of the Tax Court
becomes final and for 60 days thereafter." As described in
detail above, the limitations period of the donor would expire no
earlier than October 1, 1992. According to section 6901(c)(1),
the 1-year extension for assessment against a transferee would
expire no earlier than October 1, 1993. Because the notice of
donee/transferee liability to each petitioner was issued on
September 17, 1993, each notice was timely.
2. The Amount of Petitioners' Transferee Liability
Having concluded that the Commissioner's assessment is not
barred by the statute of limitations, we turn to the amount owed
by petitioners. The donor entered into a stipulated decision
which found a deficiency in gift tax for 1983 in the amount of
$239,124. Section 6324(b), however, limits the liability of a
donee to the value of the gift received. The Commissioner
accordingly issued to each petitioner a notice of
donee/transferee liability in the amount of $93,300.4
Petitioners argue that their liability should be reduced by the
amount of gift tax they now will be required to pay.
4
There is no dispute between the parties that the value of
the property transferred to petitioners was $93,300.
- 15 -
The language of section 6324(b) is relatively
straightforward. It establishes personal liability on the part
of the donee for unpaid gift tax, but limits that liability to
the value of the gift received.
Petitioners contend that their subsequent liability for
unpaid gift tax results in an encumbrance on the property
transferred. They go on to argue that such an encumbrance should
be taken into account to reduce the value of the gift received.
We do not agree.
While it is well established that an encumbrance on the
property transferred, such as a mortgage, will be taken into
account when valuing the property, that is not the situation
here. In the case of a mortgage, the gift in substance is the
gift of the equity in the property. However, in this case there
was no encumbrance on the property when it was transferred.
Petitioners were subject to no liability until the donor failed
to pay the gift tax rightfully owed.
True, section 6324(b) places a lien on the transferred
property unless the gift tax is paid, but that lien is not an
encumbrance that reduces the value of the gift. The value of the
gift is measured by the fair market value of the property
transferred. Sec. 2512. Fair market value is the price at which
property would change hands between a willing buyer and a willing
seller, neither being under any compulsion to buy or sell and
both knowing the relevant facts. Sec. 25.2512-1, Gift Tax Regs.
- 16 -
And section 6324(b) specifically provides that "Any part of * * *
the gift transferred by the donee * * * to a purchaser * * *
shall be divested of the lien imposed by this subsection". The
purchaser takes title free and clear of the lien. Thus, the gift
tax lien would not be likely to affect the amount a buyer would
be willing to pay for the property in light of the unambiguously
explicit language of the statute just quoted above. The
liability of the donee is unlike an encumbrance such as a
mortgage. A mortgage attaches to the property at the time of
transfer, thereby reducing its value, and is properly taken into
account when valuing the gift. Donee liability, in contrast,
does not reduce the value of the property when given, and should
not be taken into account when valuing the gift.
We also note that the gift tax is a tax on the donor's
making of a gift, and is "'measured by the value of the property
passing from the donor'." Robinette v. Helvering, 318 U.S. 184,
186 (1943) (quoting Treasury Reg. 79, art. 3). The value of the
gift is its value in the hands of the donor, not the donee.
Goodman v. Commissioner, 156 F.2d 218, 219 (2d Cir. 1946), affg.
4 T.C. 191 (1944); Rohmer v. Commissioner, 21 T.C. 1099, 1105
(1954). Thus, that value is not "necessarily determined by the
measure of enrichment resulting to the donee from the transfer".
Sec. 25.2511-2(a), Gift Tax Regs. Petitioners cannot use their
subsequent liability for unpaid gift tax to reduce the value of
the gift. See Rohmer v. Commissioner, supra at 1106 (withholding
- 17 -
payments to be paid from gift proceeds do not reduce value of
gift); Rev. Rul. 81-230, 1981-2 C.B. 186 (value of gift not
reduced for additional tax that could subsequently be imposed
under section 2032A(c)).
This Court has previously addressed this argument. In Gray
v. Commissioner, a Memorandum Opinion of this Court dated June 7,
1944, 3 T.C.M. (CCH) 552, 555, 44 P-H Memo T.C. par. 44,203 at
646, it was stated:
In the instant proceeding, however, the property
transferred by the donor was not subject, at the time
of transfer, to any lien, mortgage or pledge. The
statute (section 510 Revenue Act of 1932) makes the
donee "personally liable for such [gift] tax to the
extent of the value of such gift." It contains no
provision authorizing a reduction on account of any
lien resulting from the gift. The obvious intent of
the legislation, especially the transferee provisions
of the statute (Sec. 526 Revenue Act of 1932), is to
protect the revenue by providing, in effect, that one
who receives property by gift may, if necessary, be
required to pay all of it (but no more) over to the
fiscus. If the construction urged upon us by the
petitioners should be adopted it is obvious that many
situations could arise where a donee would be permitted
to retain a portion of the gift even though the tax, or
a substantial portion of it, be unpaid. * * *
See also Moore v. Commissioner, 146 F.2d 824, 826 (2d Cir. 1945),
affg. 1 T.C. 14 (1942); Pitcairn v. Commissioner, a Memorandum
Opinion of this Court dated May 22, 1944, 3 T.C.M. (CCH) 584,
489-90, 44 P.H. Memo T.C. par. 44,185 at 585-86. We reach the
same conclusion here.
Petitioners argue that the situation before us is similar
to, and should be treated as, a "net gift" transaction. Where a
- 18 -
"net gift" is made, the donor and donee agree that the donee will
bear the burden of the gift tax. The value of the property
transferred is reduced by the amount of the gift tax paid by the
donee, resulting in the net amount transferred by gift, or the
"net gift". The IRS has provided an algebraic formula for
determining the amount of gift tax owed on a "net gift" in Rev.
Rul. 75-72, 1975-1 C.B. 310. It is important to keep in mind
that once the "net gift" is calculated, the full amount of the
gift tax is paid on that "net gift".
When a "net gift" is made, a portion of the property is
transferred by gift and the remaining portion is transferred by
sale. The Supreme Court in Diedrich v. Commissioner, 457 U.S.
191 (1982), held that the donor realizes taxable income to the
extent that the amount of the gift tax assumed by the donee
exceeds the donor's basis in the property. Thus, the donee's
payment of the gift tax is the consideration for the amount
transferred by sale, and the balance is transferred by gift. In
the present case, however, there was no sale of a portion of the
property to the donees. This case does not involve a net gift,
and the amount of the gift is the total value of the property
transferred.
Petitioners' reliance on the "net gift" concept and Rev.
Rul. 75-72, supra, shows a misunderstanding of the nature of
their liability. Petitioners here are not liable for the tax
stemming from the transfer of property to them as the donee,
- 19 -
pursuant to an arrangement with the donor, would be in a "net
gift" transaction. Petitioners are liable as transferees for the
amount of property they received by gift because the donor did
not satisfy her primary obligation for the gift tax owed.
Had a "net gift" been made, petitioners would have paid the
resulting gift tax and the amount of the gift would have been
reduced accordingly. However, if the donor had not paid the full
amount of gift tax owed for that period, petitioners still would
remain liable as transferees up to the full amount of the gift
pursuant to section 6324(b). See LaFortane v. Commissioner, 29
T.C. 479, 489 (1957), affd. 263 F.2d 186, 194 (10th Cir. 1958).
The end result is that petitioners could be required to pay the
full value of the property received. A portion would be paid as
tax (the gift tax paid for the donor as consideration for the
"net gift"), and a portion would be paid to satisfy their
transferee liability, up to the full value of the gift received.
What petitioners argue for here is a result better than what
they could receive had a net gift been made. In essence, what
petitioners argue is that any amount they now are required to pay
should "purchase" a portion of the property they received,
ultimately leaving them liable for less than the full value of
what was transferred to them. Rev. Rul. 75-72, supra, provides
no support for such an argument. Petitioners' liability herein
is their personal liability to the Government, measured by what
- 20 -
they received. What they pay is not consideration for what they
received as in the case of a net gift.
Petitioners' theory would allow them to keep a portion of
the property received from the donor at the expense of the
Treasury. Such a result is contrary to section 6324(b). See
Moore v. Commissioner, supra. Petitioners are liable for the
full value of the property transferred, without any reduction.
Decision will be entered
for respondent.