Cramer v. Comm'r of Internal Revenue

Decision Date29 September 1961
Docket NumberDocket No. 81255.
Citation36 T.C. 1136
PartiesHELEN STEWART CRAMER, PETITIONER, v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, RESPONDENT.
CourtU.S. Tax Court

OPINION TEXT STARTS HERE

Ruth E. Bates, Esq., for the petitioner.

Stephen W. Craig, Esq., and Aaron S. Resnick, Esq., for the respondent.

Petitioner, who was divorced, received support and maintenance payments from her former husband under the terms of a written predivorce agreement. The payments were to cease upon occurrence of specified contingencies, including remarriage or death of the wife, none of which contingencies had arisen. The agreement was not incorporated into or mentioned in the divorce decree. Held, that such payments received by the wife in the taxable year qualify as ‘periodic payments' within the meaning of section 71(a)(1) of the 1954 Code; that the written agreement under which the payments were made, was ‘incident to’ the divorce, within the meaning of said statute; and that such payments are includible in the wife's gross income for the taxable year.

PIERCE, Judge:

Respondent determined a deficiency in income tax against the petitioner for the calendar year 1955 in the amount of $526.

The sole issue for decision is whether certain payments for support and maintenance, which the petitioner received from her former husband in 1955 after the parties had been divorced, and which were paid to her pursuant to a written agreement that had been executed by the parties prior to the divorce but that was not mentioned in the divorce decree, constitute taxable income to petitioner in 1955.

FINDINGS OF FACT.

Some of the facts were stipulated. The stipulation of facts, together with the exhibits attached thereto, is incorporated herein by reference.

Petitioner is a resident of Riverside, California. She filed her individual Federal income tax return for 1955 with the district director of internal revenue at San Francisco, California.

Petitioner was formerly the wife of Sterling S. Cramer (hereinafter referred to as Cramer), whom she had married on June 17, 1926, and from whom she was divorced (as hereafter shown) under a final decree of divorce entered on September 23, 1954. In the spring of 1953, petitioner and Cramer had begun to experience marital difficulties; and at about that time Cramer told petitioner that he did not wish to live with her any more. He suggested that petitioner enroll in Stanford University, so as to better equip herself to earn her own living; and shortly thereafter petitioner followed such suggestion, and did enroll for a summer school course in said university. There was no discussion at this time about a divorce, and petitioner hoped that she and her husband would resume living together when the summer school session ended.

Subsequently in August 1953, petitioner received in the mail from Cramer an instrument which purported to be a property settlement agreement, accompanied by a letter from him asking her to sign the same and suggesting that she consult an attorney acquaintance if she needed legal advice. Petitioner wrote Cramer that she would not sign the instrument. Shortly thereafter Cramer called on petitioner at Stanford; and there the parties together revised the terms of the proposed instrument. The same was not executed at this time; but Cramer shortly thereafter rewrote the instrument to incorporate the revisions, and then mailed it to petitioner for her signature.

On or about August 16, 1953, Cramer again visited petitioner at Stanford; and at that time, petitioner voluntarily executed the agreement and delivered it to Cramer. This agreement was also executed by Cramer; and there is no dispute here that it constituted a valid agreement.

The agreement provided, so far as is here material, as follows:

PROPERTY SETTLEMENT AGREEMENT

STERLING S. CRAMER, husband, and HELEN S. CRAMER, wife, hereby agree that the parties hereto are husband and wife, and that it is their mutual desire to effect a final and complete settlement of their respective property rights with reference to their marital status and to each other, and to effectuate such final and complete settlement they agree particularly as follows:

I

Husband shall pay to wife for her support and maintenance a sum equal to $250.00 after Federal Income Tax, each month in advance, commencing with the first day of July, 1953, and continuing until any of the following events occur:

a. Said HELEN S. CRAMER has completed three collegiate or university years of two semesters or three quarters each; * * *

b. Said HELEN S. CRAMER has been gainfully employed on a fulltime basis for not less than one year.

c. Said HELEN S. CRAMER dies or remarries.

It is hereby understood and agreed hereto that the obligation of husband to pay wife the said sum shall immediately cease upon any of the above named events occuring (sic), and that in no event will said payments be continued beyond June 30th, 1956.

V

Each party does hereby release, relinquish and waive to the other any and all further claims he or she may now have, or may hereafter acquire against the other for support and maintenance, or otherwise * * *

XI

This agreement may, subject to the court's approval, be made a part of any decree of divorce between the parties.

The other portions of the agreement which are not above quoted, pertained principally to arrangements regarding insurance, disposition of household property, mutual releases, nonincurrence of future debts, and retention of separately owned real and personal property.

At the time petitioner executed said agreement, she knew that it was her husband's intention to effect a separation; but she did not want a divorce.

On August 26, 1953, Cramer filed suit for divorce against petitioner in California; and on August 28, 1953, petitioner received a copy of the divorce complaint by mail. Thereupon, she went before a notary where she admitted service, waived notice of further proceedings, and consented to the entry of a default decree of divorce.

An interlocutory decree of divorce was entered September 22, 1953; neither the interlocutory decree nor in the final decree was said agreement of August 16, 1953, mentioned, nor was any provision made in either of such decrees for alimony.

Pursuant to said agreement of August 16, 1953, Cramer deposited to the petitioner's account during the year 1955, the sum of $3,000, representing payments of $250 per month for 12 months. It has been stipulated that said amount was paid pursuant to the provisions of section I of the agreement (hereinafter quoted) which pertained to payments ‘for her support and maintenance.’ None of the contingencies mentioned in section I had arisen.

Petitioner, in her income tax return for the year 1955 did not include in her income the payments so received by her from Cramer; but she did report their receipt and alleged that they were not taxable to her. Respondent, in his deficiency notice, determined that the same were ‘periodic payments' received by her subsequent to the decree of divorce, and that they constituted taxable income to her for the year 1955.

OPINION.

The agreement under which the monthly payments in question were made, was entitled ‘Property Settlement Agreement.’ However, it included several separately numbered sections. Some of these pertained principally to property to property adjustments and mutual releases; and section I (from which we have hereinabove quoted) pertained principally to an obligation of Cramer to make specified monthly payments to petitioner ‘for her support and maintenance.’ This Court has heretofore held that, in such a situation, it is not necessary to press all provisions of an agreement into the same mold, when the parties themselves have differentiated them; and that the taxable effect of each section of the agreement may be determined separately. Edward Bartsch, 18 T.C. 65, affirmed per curiam 203 F.2d 715 (C.A.2).

Here, we are concerned only with the taxability of the ‘support and maintenance’ payments, provided for in section I of the agreement. Since these payments were received by petitioner in 1955, their taxable status is controlled by the 1954 Code. Section 71(a)(1) of said Code pertains to situations where such payments are received by a wife who has theretofore been divorced or legally separated from the payor-husband. It provides, so far as is here material, as follows:

SEC. 71. ALIMONY AND SEPARATE MAINTENANCE PAYMENTS.

(a) GENERAL RULE.—

(1) DECREE OF DIVORCE OR SEPARATE MAINTENANCE.— If a wife is divorced * * * from here husband under a decree of divorce * * * , the wife's gross income includes periodic payments (whether or not made at regular intervals) received after such decree in discharge of * * * a legal obligation which, because of the marital or family relationship, is * * * incurred by the husband under * * * a written instrument incident to such divorce * * *

Subsection (c) of section 71 further provides, so far as here material:

(c) PRINCIPAL SUM PAID IN INSTALLMENTS.—

(1) GENERAL RULE.— For purposes of subsection (a), installment payments discharging a part of an obligation the principal sum of which is, either in terms of money or property, specified in the decree, instrument, or agreement shall not be treated as periodic payments.

(2) WHERE PERIOD FOR PAYMENT IS MORE THAN 10 YEARS.— * * * (not here applicable.)

The above-mentioned provisions of the 1954 Code are substantially the same as the corresponding provisions of section 22(k) of the 1939 Code.1

We turn now to consideration of the applicability of section 71(a)(1) to the present case. The parties have stipulated that petitioner was divorced from her husband, and that the payments involved were made and received subsequent to said divorce. Furthermore, in light of the facts which we have hereinabove found, there can be no reasonable doubt that these payment0 were made by the husband in discharge of a legal obligation incurred because of the marital relationship. Thus,...

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15 cases
  • Kent v. Comm'r of Internal Revenue
    • United States
    • U.S. Tax Court
    • October 31, 1973
    ...221 F.2d 250 (C.A. 8, 1955), reversing 22 T.C. 270 (1954); Barrett v. United States 296 F.2d 309 (C.A. 5, 1961); Helen Stewart Cramer, 36 T.C. 1136 (1961), leaves us with no compulsion to find the Myers decision dispositive. With respect to petitioner's alternative contention regarding his ......
  • Borax v. Comm'r of Internal Revenue
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    • September 20, 1963
    ...mentioned in the decree and even though the parties may not have contemplated divorce when the agreement was made. Helen Stewart Cramer, 36 T.C. 1136 (1961). As stated in Lerner v. Commissioner, supra at 298, ‘the term ‘written instrument incident to such divorce’ was designed, we think, on......
  • Shomaker v. Comm'r of Internal Revenue, Docket No. 88755.
    • United States
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    • May 1, 1962
    ...the total of all payments to be made, namely, $187,500, and that this principal sum is to be paid over a period of 25 years. In Helen Stewart Cramer, 36 T.C. 1136, we took the position, following a number of decisions of Courts of Appeals, that if payments provided for the wife are subject ......
  • Grant v. Comm'r of Internal Revenue
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    • May 6, 1985
    ...was incident to the divorce, not whether there was a written instrument. Petitioner also relies on our opinion in Cramer v. Commissioner, 36 T.C. 1136 (1961), citing Lerner with approval. In Cramer we found that there was a specific instrument that was negotiated, revised, and executed by C......
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