The taxpayer and his wife were married in 1903 in the Province of Alsace-Lorraine, then a part of the German Empire. Immеdiately prior to the marriage they entered into an antenuptial agreement containing the following provisions:
“Property acquired during the period of the mamage shall be conclusively considered as jointly held.
“There remains, therefore, to each spouse as his or her respective contributed fortune, whatever belonged to suсh party at the time of the marriage, and further whatever such party may after the marriage contract acquirе through inheritance, legacy, gift or otherwise, based upon individual title, including also any future legacy. The community property of the parties to the marriage is only what the contracting parties to this marriage may acquire in any way during the period of their married life, whether as earnings or through good fortune, including also any income from their community prоperty or from the contributed fortune. Any debts that have been brought in remain the obligation of that one of the contracting parties from whom they originated.”
At the time of the making of the marriage contract, the community property system as between husband and wife prevailed as the law of Alsace-Lorraine, but it never existed in New York where they residеd during the years 1925 and 1926.
The Commissioner of Internal Revenue determined that the whole of the taxpayer’s earnings in New York during 1925 аnd 1926 was taxable to him, while he, on the other hand, insisted that but half of it was taxable to him and the other half to his wife. The Board of Tax Appeals affirmed the determination of the Commissioner, and, from its orders adjudging that there were deficiencies upon the petitioner’s income tax for the years 1925 and 1926, this appeal was taken.
*716 The question presented is whether an antenuptial agreement, made in Alsace-Lorraine, which provided that the earnings of either spousе should constitute community-property, vested in the wife such an interest in the earnings of the husband in New York as to make only one-half thereof taxable to the husband.
Section 213 of the Revenue Act of 1924, as well as section 213 of the Revenuе Act of 1926, 26 USCA § 954 (a), provides that: “(a) The term ‘gross income’ includes gains, profits, and income derived from salaries, wages, or compensation for personal service * * * of whatever kind and in whatever form paid. * * * The amount of all such items shall be included in the gross income for the taxable year in which received by the taxpayer. * * * ”
' If, when the husband derived inсome from his salary in 1925 and 1926 no marriage contract had been made but New York had had a system of community propеrty like that of Alsa'ee-Lorraine, the wife would have become the owner of one half of the husband’s salary as fast as it accrued, and he would have only been obliged to include the other half in his gross income when computing his income tax. Poe v. Seaborn,
In Lucas v. Earl,
In Lucas v. Earl, the matrimonial domicile was in California, where at that time the statutes gave the wife no vested interest in the husband’s earnings. The marriage contract,' providing that subsequent earnings of the spouses should be оwned jointly, was held insufficient to give the wife such a vested interest as the earnings arose. In the case at bar the taxрayer entered into a marriage contract in terms like the one in Lucas v. Earl,.supra, but in a place (Alsace-Lorraine) where the community system of law affecting married people gave a wife a vested interest in onе-half of her husband’s earnings from the moment that they accrued. The community system of law prevailing at the matrimonial domicile would have no extraterritorial effect and the rights of the wife in her husband’s income would be determined by the law of the subsequent domicile where it was earned. In re Majot’s Estate,
While the antenuptial contract made in Alsace-Lorraine would be recognized in New York (In re Majot’s Estate,
The beneficial rights of the wife were equitаble, and such rights the Supreme Court has distinctly held insufficient to limit the husband’s responsibility for reporting and paying an income tax upon his full earnings. Their decision precludes us from giving him any greater rights here.
The orders of the Board of Tax Appeals are affirmed.
