1941 BTA LEXIS 1164">*1164 Held, that the sole or principal support of a first cousin or other individual of a more remote degree of blood relationship does not entitle the taxpayer to the exemption of a "head of a family."
45 B.T.A. 193">*193 This case involves deficiencies in income tax in the following amounts: 1936, $930; 1937, $930; 1938, $885, which result in each instance from the respondent's disallowance of petitioner's claimed exemption of $2,500 as head of a family, under section 25(b)(1) 45 B.T.A. 193">*194 of the Revenue Acts of 1936 and 1938 1 and article 25-4 of
1941 BTA LEXIS 1164">*1165 Petitioner filed Federal income tax returns for 1936, 1937, and 1938 with the collector of internal revenue for the district of Maryland at Baltimore, Maryland.
The facts were stipulated and those pertinent may be briefly stated.
FINDINGS OF FACT.
Petitioner is a spinster, aged 62, living in Washington, D.C., and in Massachusetts. Her principal home is Washington, where she winters, but she is frequently absent and then her house is closed. During the years in question she assumed and afforded the sole or main financial support of eight female cousins, all incapable of self-support either by reason of age or ill health. None of them lived with her. They were domiciled in the District of Columbia, Virginia, Maryland, Pennsylvania, and Massachusetts. Four of them were first cousins, three were second cousins, and one was a first cousin once removed. The age and physical or mental ailments of each and the amounts of petitioner's contributions to them are detailed in the record, but need not be set out here. The four first cousins, children of petitioner's paternal uncle, may almost be said to 45 B.T.A. 193">*195 be a legacy, for they lost their parents when young and were maintained1941 BTA LEXIS 1164">*1166 by petitioner's father and later by her mother, and since then, except when their husbands could support them, they have been supported by petitioner herself, in some cases for over 20 years.
Petitioner herself is not well, for she suffers from nervous or metabolic disturbances, and her physician advises against the nervous strain which would be imposed upon her if she tried to maintain these relatives, themselves invalids, as inmates of her own household. And, even if this were not the case, the Washington house itself is not large enough to accommodate them.
OPINION.
KERN: The case presented is one of law and involves two questions - (1) whether the term "head of a family", as construed in respondent's regulations as applying to an individual "closely connected * * * by blood", applies to a first cousin; and (2) whether actual residence in the same household with petitioner of the dependents as to whom family headship is claimed is, in the circumstances presented here, necessary to bring the case within the statute.
Since our resolution of the first question will render any answer to the second unnecessary, we shall not discuss the latter here.
Headship of a family1941 BTA LEXIS 1164">*1167 connotes ordinarily the status which a man acquires by marriage, or by acquiring both wife and children, or children by adoption. This is the normal condition. But it may also connote the position assumed by a child, one or both of whose parents may be still living, when the child, because of the age or infirmity of his parents, supplants the father as the economic mainstay of the household. This in an inversion of the normal condition. The same headship would remain, of course, if that child continued to keep his younger, or infirm, brothers and sisters from want by his exertions; certainly, at least, during their minority. The concept is familiar to us all. The only difficulty, like most difficulties in the law, is to know where to draw the line. But if the word "family" be kept steadily in view we can not go far wrong. That term, as used in the statute, can not refer to all persons descended from a common ancestor, or, in other words, related in blood. The semibarbaric Gaels of North Britain and Ireland once treated it so and thus extended its meaning to the whole sept, or clan, as the Hebrew children did in an earlier age; but the fluidity of modern social relations has1941 BTA LEXIS 1164">*1168 long since done away with such patriarchal concepts, even in the South of our own country where almost any degree of consanguinity once entitled one to the familiar address of "cousin." We think of "family" as the immediate family, that is, the father and mother and the children of that common father and mother. An 45 B.T.A. 193">*196 orphaned nephew or niece often becomes even at this day, when the social security established and maintained by Government is rapidly replacing family dependencies hitherto relied on, the member in every true sense of that small household called "the family." A niece stands, under Canon law rules familiar to all common lawyers at least since Blackstone, 2 Com. 206 (see Co. Litt. 23), in the third degree of consanguinity to her supporting uncle who may claim the tax exemption. It is obviously such a "close" relation as the regulations speak of, and we have so held.
But when we go beyond the third degree of consanguinity - and the nearest blood relation here was that of a first cousin and therefore of the fourth degree - we must answer the question1941 BTA LEXIS 1164">*1169 whether such a relative shall also be brought within the household as a matter of family moral obligation, so as to entitle her protector to the tax benefit? Petitioner confesses that she can find no authority to support the claim. The Circuit Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia has held that a second cousin does not fall within the statutory category.
There remains only the petitioner's argument that her first cousins have stood virtually in the relation of brothers and sisters to her from infancy because, early bereft of their own parents, they were taken into her family by her parents and maintained there until the death of those parents and since that time have been maintained largely by petitioner's own contributions, although in a separate household. Our only answer is that we are not trying to measure the mutual love and affection and lovingkindness which in such circumstances must have subsisted in this relation. The gratitude offered their kinswoman, the petitioner, by these dependents no doubt carries its own reward, but it must not affect our determination. 45 B.T.A. 193">*197 The circumstances here are unusual, and we must be governed by norms of conduct. See Cardozo, J., in 1941 BTA LEXIS 1164">*1171
Respondent allowed the deduction of all claims in respect of petitioner's cousins as dependents and denied only the family headship exemption. We think he was right.
Decision will be entered for the respondent.
Footnotes
1. SEC. 25. [REVENUE ACT OF 1936.] CREDITS OF INDIVIDUAL AGAINST NET INCOME.
* * *
(b) CREDITS FOR BOTH NORMAL TAX AND SURTAX. -There shall be allowed for the purposes of the normal tax and the surtax the following credits against net income:
(1) PERSONAL EXEMPTION. - In the case of a single person, a personal exemption of $1,000; or in the case of the head of a family or a married person living with husband or wife, a personal exemption of $2,500. A husband and wife living together shall receive but one personal exemption. The amount of such personal exemption shall be $2,500. If such husband and wife make separate returns, the personal exemption may be taken by either or divided between them.
SEC. 25 [REVENUE ACT OF 1938.] CREDITS OF INDIVIDUAL AGAINST NET INCOME.
[This section is identical with that of the 1936 Revenue Act above, except that after the words "single person" there is added the phrase: "or a married person not living with husband or wife."] ↩
2. ART. 25-4. [Regulations 94 and 101.] Personal exemption of head of family.↩ - A head of a family is an individual who actually supports and maintains in one household one or more individuals who are closely connected with him by blood relationship, relationship by marriage, or by adoption, and whose right to exercise a family control and provide for these dependent individuals is based upon some moral or legal obligation. In the absence of continuous actual residence together, whether or not a person with dependent relatives is a head of a family within the meaning of the Act must depend on the character of the separation. If a father is absent on business, or a child or other dependent is away at school or on a visit, the common home being still maintained, the additional exemption applies. If, moreover, through force of circumstances a parent is obliged to maintain his dependent children with relatives or in a boarding house while he lives elsewhere, the additional exemption may still apply. If, however, without necessity the dependent continuously makes his home elsewhere, his benefactor is not the head of a family, irrespective of the question of support. A resident alien with children abroad is not thereby entitled to credit as the head of a family. As to the amount of the exemption, see article 25-3.