*223 Decision will be entered for the respondent.
1. Petitioner, recipient of assets of insolvent taxpayer-corporation, of which petitioner's decedent had been stockholder, held liable for unpaid taxes of the taxpayer as a transferee under
2. Held, that no issue arises in this proceeding with respect to the liability of the administrator as a fiduciary under R. S. 3467, in the absence of a deficiency notice addressed to him personally.
*871 OPINION.
Respondent determined against petitioner, as transferee, deficiencies in income and declared value excess profits taxes in the respective amounts of $ 1,762.87 and $ 1,049.24 for the period January 1 to November 16, 1942, all of which are placed in issue by this *872 proceeding. Petitioner, by failure to contest either at the hearing or on brief, has apparently conceded the propriety of the deficiencies against the transferor, and the sole issue is petitioner's liability for such taxes as transferee of the taxpayer's assets under the circumstances disclosed by the present record.
All of the facts were stipulated or were established by the pleadings or are deemed to be admitted pursuant to order of the Tax Court under Rule 18. They are hereby found accordingly.
Petitioner is the duly appointed administrator of the estate of L. E. McKnight, deceased. Decedent, who died in September or October, 1942, was the principal stockholder and president of a corporation known as Merchants Warehouse Co., apparently organized under the laws of Tennessee. The company was placed in liquidation on November 17, 1942.
Petitioner received *225 the proceeds of all of the assets distributed in the liquidation, amounting to $ 7,052.20, and has now disbursed them all in discharge of various claims against the corporation, decedent, and the estate, as follows:
Date paid | Description | Amount |
Prior to Apr. 15, 1943 | Accrued expense of corporation | $ 446.64 |
Prior to June 27, 1943 | Social security taxes | 338.29 |
Oct. 1943-Dec. 1945 | Administration expenses of estate | 669.42 |
Oct. 1945-Dec. 1945 | Widow's allowance in sum of $ 5,000 allowed by | |
court in administration of estate | 5,097.85 | |
Oct. 1945 | Settlement of personal judgment against | |
decedent entered in 1940 | 500.00 | |
Total | 7,052.20 |
The provisions under which it could be, and apparently is insisted that a transferee liability exists are the transferee section of the Internal Revenue Code (
R. S. 3467 is inapplicable to this proceeding. 1 The deficiency notice was directed, not toward L. *226 T. McCourt "in his own person and estate," but only against the decedent's estate. The latter is the proper and sole party to these proceedings, and the administrator appears here only in his representative capacity.
Discussion of the transferee section can be guided by the propositions advanced by the parties. The issues apparently are, first, whether any *873 part of the distributions to petitioner are eliminated by reason of its failure to receive notice of the Commissioner's claim; and, second, and principally, whether the nature of the obligations*227 paid by petitioner and their relationship to the availability of funds for payment of the claim presently in controversy, relieve petitioner of its transferee liability.
On the first question we take it as well settled that a mere transferee of property acquired without consideration, and in violation of the rights of creditors, can not avoid liability under
On the second question respondent has met the burden of proof imposed upon him by
Of all the payments relied upon, the only one as to which there is even a possibility that petitioner has thus discharged its burden is the payment of the social security taxes, which, being of equal dignity with those in issue, may perhaps be said to furnish a defense. With respect to all of the balance, the petitioner is liable as a transferee.
Such cases as
Decision will be entered for the respondent.
Footnotes
1. Sec. 3467. Liability of Fiduciary.
Every executor, administrator, or assignee, or other person, who pays, in whole or in part, any debt due by the person or estate for whom or for which he acts before he satisfies and pays the debts due to the United States from such person or estate, shall become answerable in his own person and estate to the extent of such payments for the debts so, due to the United States, or for so much thereof as may remain due and unpaid.↩