1956 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 119">*119 Decision will be entered for the respondent.
1. The principle of collateral estoppel held not applicable in the present proceeding where the question of whether certain alimony payments received by petitioner were taxable income to petitioner under the
2. Alimony payments received by petitioner during the taxable years 1945 to 1948, inclusive, held to be taxable income to petitioner under
26 T.C. 864">*864 OPINION.
Respondent determined deficiencies in income tax of $ 5,220.70, $ 4,291.25, $ 3,833.61, and $ 1,551.43 for the calendar years 1945, 1946, 1947, and 1948, respectively.
The issues are (1) whether our decision in
The facts were stipulated. The stipulation is incorporated herein by this reference. Only those facts which are deemed necessary to an understanding of the issues are summarized and set forth below.
Petitioner is an individual residing at Los Gatos, California. The returns for the taxable years involved herein were filed with the then collector of internal revenue for1956 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 119">*122 the second district of New York.
On September 28, 1949, this Court decided in
This Court in
(a) That petitioner and Dodge were married May 17, 1928.
(b) That petitioner and Dodge entered into an agreement on August 4, 1933, not incident to any divorce, which provided among other things for the settlement of property rights, for periodic payments by the husband to the wife; that the husband was to pay all United States and State income taxes which petitioner might be required to pay because of such alimony payments; that such provision for payment of taxes by the husband was not binding on respondent1956 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 119">*123 and could not prevent him from determining taxes due from petitioner based on such alimony payments.
(c) That petitioner and Dodge entered into another agreement on October 23, 1939, incident to the divorce of October 26, 1939, making certain changes in the original agreement of August 4, 1933, and increasing the payments thereunder and providing for approval of the agreements by the Circuit Court of the County of Wayne in the pending divorce proceeding between the parties.
(d) That the final decree of divorce of petitioner and Dodge, dated October 26, 1939, approved, ratified, and confirmed the above-mentioned agreement of August 4, 1933, as amended by the agreement of October 23, 1939.
Petitioner received from Dodge $ 15,000 for each of the years 1945, 1946, and 1947 and $ 8,750 in the year 1948 in accordance with the above-mentioned agreements and divorce decree.
Respondent in determining the deficiencies herein included in petitioner's income the amounts which petitioner received from Dodge on the ground that such amounts represent alimony taxable to petitioner pursuant to
Dodge filed United States income tax returns for the1956 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 119">*124 years 1945 through 1948. The parts of said returns material to this proceeding are set forth in the stipulation of facts at item 9 thereof, and are summarized herein from (a) to (d), as follows:
(a) He had gross taxable income as follows:
1945 | $ 3,953.43 |
1946 | 4,722.00 |
1947 | 5,094.41 |
1948 | 7,556.55 |
26 T.C. 864">*866 (b) He had deductions in each of said years in excess of his entire gross taxable income, excluding any deductions for alimony paid to his first wife or to his second wife, petitioner.
(c) He paid his first wife alimony of $ 4,999.92 in each of said years.
(d) He paid petitioner (his second wife) alimony of $ 15,000 in each of the years 1945, 1946, and 1947 and $ 8,750 in the year 1948.
Dodge received distribution from the Anna Dodge Dillman Trust of tax-exempt interest on municipal bonds in the following amounts:
1945 | $ 146,295.35 |
1946 | 145,288.00 |
1947 | 145,175.84 |
1948 | 145,093.41 |
The specific source of funds used by Dodge to pay alimony to petitioner is unknown.
The parties in the present proceeding are identical with the parties in
The matters and issues raised in the present proceeding are identical1956 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 119">*125 with the matters and issues raised in
The facts and legal principles in
We do not agree with respondent that the doctrine of collateral estoppel or estoppel by judgment, as it is often called, bars as a matter of law the consideration of the constitutional questions which were 26 T.C. 864">*867 specifically pleaded in the present controversy but which were neither pleaded nor considered by this Court in the prior action. Two relatively recent Supreme Court decisions are conclusive as to this point. See
Prior to the enactment of subsection (k) of
These amendments are intended to treat such payments as income to the spouse actually receiving or actually entitled to receive them and to relieve the other spouse from the tax burden upon whatever part of the amount of such payments is under the present law includible in his gross income. * * *
The constitutionality of
If alimony per se is taxable income, although never prior to 1942 had it been so considered by the treasury regulations and rulings and judicial authorities interpreting the income tax law, then there is no reason why the husband should not pay tax when he earns the money and the wife pay tax on the same1956 U.S. Tax Ct. LEXIS 119">*129 money when she receives it as alimony. Yet the Senate and House Reports on the 1942 amendments both make clear that no new tax is contemplated by these sections, and that the sole and only purpose of the sections is to transfer the tax burden on certain income from one party to another. No shift can be made, of course, or was intended, if there is no tax burden in the first place, which is the situation in the instant case.
We do not believe the constitutionality of
We think the test of the constitutionality of
The Supreme Court, in
Finally, petitioner contends that although the parties have stipulated that the specific source of funds used by Dodge to pay the amounts 26 T.C. 864">*869 of alimony to petitioner "is unknown" we should nevertheless find that the alimony was paid from Dodge's tax-exempt income and that the payments retained such tax-exempt status in petitioner's hands and should, therefore, be excluded from her gross income under
Decision will be entered for the respondent.
Footnotes
1. The Senate Report further stated that:
"The full amount of periodic payments received under the circumstances described in
section 22 (k)↩ is required to be included in the gross income of the recipient whether such amounts are derived, in whole or in part, from income received or accrued by the source to which such payments are attributable. Thus, it matters not that such payments are attributable to property in trust, to life insurance, endowment, or annuity contracts, or to any other interest in property, or are paid directly or indirectly by the obligor husband from his income or capital. * * *"