The Estate of Evelyn M. McMorris appeals a tax court decision in favor of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue. The tax court held that the Commissioner properly considered an event occurring after the death of Evelyn McMorris in disallowing her estate’s deduction pursuant to 26 U.S.C. § 2053(a)(3) for payment of federal and state income taxes owed at the time of her death. Exercising jurisdiction under 26 U.S.C. § 7482(a)(1), we reverse and remand with directions to vacate the deficiency assessment at issue here and to recalculate any remaining unrеlated deficiencies owing.
I.
The facts are undisputed. Donn McMorris, Evelyn’s husband, died in 1990, and Evelyn received 13.409091 shares of stock in NW Transport Service, Inc., from his estate. The stock was reported in Donn’s estate tax return at an appraised value of $1,726,562.50 per share as of the date of his death and that value became Evelyn’s basis in the stock. 2 Evelyn, through her conservator Jerry McMorris, entered into an agreement with NW Transport to redeem the stock for $29,500,000.00 (approximately $2,200,000.00 per share), payable over 120 months at ten percent interest.
Evelyn died in 1991, a resident of Colorado. In her federal estate tax return, her estate claimed deductions of $3,960,525.00 and $641,222.00, respectively, for her 1991 federal and state income tax liabilities. Federal income tax in the amount of $3,681,703.00 and Colorado income tax in the amount of $639,826.00 actually were paid with Evelyn’s 1991 individual tax returns. A large part of the income reported on Evelyn’s income tax returns resulted from the gain on redemption of the NW Transport stock.
In January 1994, the Commissioner issued a deficiency notice to Donn’s estate disputing, among оther things, the value of the NW Transport stock. Specifically, the Commissioner valued the stock at $3,618,040.00 per share. Donn’s estate contested the Commissioner’s determinations and, after lengthy negotiations, the parties reached a settlement in January 1996 for an increased value of the NW Transport stock at $2,500,000.00 per share as of Donn’s death. This value became the new basis for the NW Transport stock redeemed by Evelyn. As a result of her increased basis, the taxable gain from Evelyn’s redemption of the stock was eliminated and she realized a loss.
Evelyn’s estate filed an amended 1991 federal individual income tax return seeking a refund of $3,332,443.00. The amended return reflected a loss from redemption of the NW Transport stock and eliminated certain dividend income reported on the original return. Meanwhile, Evelyn’s estate was challenging a deficiency notice received in November 1994 concerning an unrelated gift deduction in the amount of $140,000.00 in her estate tax return. 3 The estate contested the deficiency in tax court and that litigation was ongoing when Eve *1257 lyn’s amended 1991 federal inсome tax return was filed in January 1996.
In March 1996, the Commissioner filed an amended answer in Evelyn's estate tax litigation, asserting an increased deficiency in estate taxes. According to the Commissioner, the estate was no longer entitled to deduct Evelyn’s 1991 federal and state individual income taxes because those liabilities were subject to refunds. Indeed, the Commissioner approved a $3,330,778.00 refund of Evelyn’s 1991 federal income taxes in 1997, but the record filed with this court does not indicate that her estate filed an amended 1991 state income tax return or а protective refund claim with the Colorado Department of Revenue.
Evelyn’s estate later conceded the Commissioner’s original deficiency determination in its entirety (including disallowance of the $140,000.00 gift deduction). However, the estate refused to accept the Commissioner’s view that the estate’s deduction for Evelyn’s income tax liabilities should be limited to the amount ultimately found to be due and owing by Evelyn. The estate instead took the position that post-death events may not be considered in determining the amount of its deduction for Evelyn’s individual income tax liabilities because those liabilities were valid and enforceable claims against the estate at the time of Evelyn’s death. Unable to resolve their differences, the parties submitted the case to the tax court on a fully stipulated basis.
The tax court held that the estate’s deduction for Evelyn’s 1991 federal income tax liability must be reduced by the amount actually refunded in 1997. According to the tax court, it was proper for the Commissioner to consider events occurring after Evelyn’s death in calculating this deduction bеcause the estate challenged Evelyn’s individual income tax liability through her amended return. The tax court also held that the estate’s deduction for Evelyn’s 1991 Colorado income tax liability should be reduced to reflect the proper amount of tax after being adjusted downward as a result of her decreased federal taxable income. Although the record revealed that Evelyn’s estate had not filed an amended Colorado income tax return and Evelyn had not received a refund of any 1991 state income taxes, the tax cоurt reasoned that nothing prevented the estate from seeking such a refund on Evelyn’s behalf. The tax court determined there was an estate tax deficiency of $1,581,593.00 based on the amounts set forth in (1) the original notice of deficiency, and (2) the increased deficiency arising from disallowance of the estate deductions for Evelyn’s 1991 individual income tax liabilities. The estate appeals the latter deficiency determination.
II.
We review decisions of the tax court “in the same manner and to the same extent as decisions of the district courts in civil actions tried without a jury.” 26 U.S.C. § 7482(a)(1). Because this case was submitted to the tax court on a fully stipulated basis, we review the purely legal question presented by this appeal de novo. See
Duke Energy Natural Gas Corp. v. Comm’r,
III.
Section 2053(a)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code authorizes a deduction for “claims against the estate” in calculating the value of a decedent’s taxable estate. 4 *1258 There is no dispute in this case that unpaid income taxes incurred by a decedent prior to death may be deducted as a claim against the estate. See Treаs. Reg. § 20.2053 — 6(f). Rather, the disagreement centers on whether events occurring after a decedent’s death may be considered in calculating that deduction. In particular, the parties debate the effect of the 1996 settlement between Donn’s estate and the Commissioner on the value of the section 2053(a)(3) deduction taken by Evelyn’s estate for her 1991 income taxes. The estate argues the settlement is not relevant because the value of its deduction should be determined as of Evelyn’s death. The Commissioner counters that the settlemеnt was properly considered because the deduction is limited to the actual amount of taxes Evelyn ultimately owed.
This is an issue of first impression in our circuit, notwithstanding the Commissioner’s assertion to the contrary. Specifically, he observes that the Eighth Circuit resolved this issue in his favor in
Jacobs v. Commissioner,
First, unlike the Eleventh Circuit, which chose to adopt all decisions issued by the former Fifth Circuit before its October 1, 1981, split as binding precedent,
see Bonner v. City of Prichard,
Notably, the Act creating the Eleventh Circuit contains nеarly identical language, see
Bonner,
Because we are not bound by
Jacobs
in deciding whether post-death events may be considered in valuing a deduction under section 2053(a)(3), we may answer this question on a clean slate. Neither section 2053(a)(3) nor the tax regulations clearly indicate whether events that occur after a decedent’s death are relevant in calculating a deduction for a claim against the estate. The statute is silent on this issue. The regulations, on the other hand, contain languаge which arguably supports the positions of both parties. For instance, one regulation cited by the estate provides: “The amounts that may be deducted as claims against a decedent’s estate are such only as represent personal obligations of the decedent existing at the time of his death.” Treas. Reg. § 20.2053-4. But, another regulation relied upon by the Commissioner permits estates to deduct a decedent’s tax liabilities as a claim against the estate even if the exact amount is not known, as long as the deduction “is asсertainable with reasonable certainty, and will be paid.” Treas. Reg. § 20.2053-l(b)(3). In light of these apparent inconsistencies, the most we can discern “from these Regulations is that the situation we now face is not expressly contemplated.”
Estate of Smith v. Comm’r,
We therefore begin our analysis with the leading case on this issue,
Ithaca Trust Co. v. United States,
Several courts have relied on the date-of-death valuation rule announced in
Ithaca Trust
to hold that events occurring after a decedent’s death аre irrelevant in valuing an estate’s deduction under section 2053(a)(3).
See Estate of Smith,
Other courts, however, have refused to extend the principle of
Ithaca Tmst
beyond charitable bequest deductions, holding that postmortem events may properly be considered in calculating the value of a claim against the estate deduction.
See Estate of Sachs v. Comm’r,
One explanation for not extending
Ithaca Tmst
to claims against the estate is that the congressional purpose underlying that deduction is different from that of
*1261
deductions for charitable bequests. According to this rationale, the date-of-death valuation rule does not apply to section 2053(a)(3) because the purpose of that deduction is to apрraise the decedent’s actual net worth at death, while the purpose of section 2055 is to encourage charitable bequests by ensuring that if a testator makes a charitable gift in a prescribed form, a deduction will be allowed in a specified amount.
See, e.g., Sachs,
Another justification for not applying
Ithaca Trust
to section 2053(a)(3) is based on the other deductions in the section. This approach plаces heavy reliance on the fact that section 2053(a) allows a deduction not only for claims against the estate but also for funeral and estate administration expenses. Under this view, since these expenses are calculated after death, Congress must also have intended that claims against the estate be ascertained by postmortem events.
See, e.g., Jacobs,
The third reason these courts reject a date-of-death valuation approach is they do not consider it sensible to allow an estate to deduct a claim it does not ultimately owe or pay.
See, e.g., Shively,
We do not find any of these explanations particularly persuasive. Even assuming Congress had differеnt motives for allowing deductions under section 2053 than it did for deductions under section 2055, this distinction “fails to explain why deductions for claims against the estate should be computed [any] differently from charitable bequests.”
Propstra,
These ambiguities, of course, dо not automatically lead to the conclusion that events occurring after a decedent’s death may never be considered in valuing a claim against the estate. But neither do they provide us license to ignore the Supreme Court’s pronouncement that “[t]he estate so far as may be is settled as of the date of the testator’s death.”
Ithaca Trust,
Sound policy reasons support our adoption of the date-of-death valuation principle for section 2053(a)(3) deductions. Specifically, this principle provides a bright line rule which alleviates the uncertainty and delay in estate administration which may
*1262
result if events occurring months or even years after а decedent’s death could be considered in valuing a claim against the estate.
See
Appellant’s Opening Br. at 22 (“This uncertainty would make estate administrators — who are personally liable for the estate tax — more reluctant to satisfy estate obligations and distribute estate assets.”); Robert C. Jones, Note,
Estate and Income Tax: Claims Against the Estate and Events Subsequent to Date of Death,
22 U.C.L.A. L.Rev. 654, 680 (1975) (“A large part of the delay involved in the probate of estates is attributable to a final determination of tax liabilities.... [Allowing postmortem events оccurring during the administration of the estate to govern, contributes to probate delay.”). Our holding resolves these problems by bringing more certainty to estate administration, an ideal which has long been promoted by judge and commentator alike.
See Shively,
Although our holding ultimately benefits the estate in this case, apрlication of the rule we announce today just as easily can favor the Commissioner. As one commentator has observed, when it serves his interests the Commissioner “has not been loathe to employ the principle that deductible claims against the estate become fixed at death.” Craig S. Palmquist,
The Estate Tax Deductibility of Unenforced Claims Against a Decedent’s Estate,
11 Gonz. L.Rev. 707, 712 (1976). For example, in
Estate of Lester v. Commissioner,
We think there is no reason in this case to go beyond the principle of Ithaca Trust Co. v. United States, supra —that the value of the judgment in the divorce proceedings is to be determined as of the date of the husband’s death by the use of the tables employed here by the Commissioner, which take into consideration the contingency of the wife’s death prior to final payment of the installments to become due.
There is no need to go into the effect of events subsequent to the husband’s death, i.e., how the estate finally freed itself of a continuing and admitted liability.
Id. at 507. Thus, as the facts of Lester demonstrate, whether our holding benefits the government or the taxpayer depends on the particular circumstances of each case.
In this case, the tax cоurt concluded it was appropriate to consider postmortem events because the estate later sought a refund of Evelyn’s 1991 federal income tax and could have done the same with regard to her state income tax. Emphasizing that “a claim that is valid and enforceable at the date of a decedent’s death must remain enforceable in order for the estate to deduct the claim,”
McMorris v. Commissioner,
In examining the “enforceable” nature of the estate’s claims in this case, the tax court did not have the benefit of the Fifth Circuit’s subsequent decision in
Smith,
which concluded that “this dichotomy, which distinguishes between enforceability on the one hand and valuation on the other, ... is not a sound basis for distinguishing claims in this context.”
There is only a semantic difference between a claim that may prove to be invalid and a valid claim that may prove to have a value of zero. For example, if given the choice between being the obli-gor of (1) a claim known to be worth $1 million with a 50 percent chance of being adjudged unenforceable, or (2) a claim known to be enforceable with a value equally likely to be $1 million or zero, a rational person would discern no difference in choosing between the claims, as both have an expected value $500,000.
Id. Because the tax court in Smith improperly relied on the “contingent” nature of the estate’s claim to consider post-death events, the Fifth Circuit remanded the case with instructions that the tax court “neither ... admit nor consider evidence of post-death occurrences when determining the date-of-death value of [the] claim.” Id. at 526.
In this casе, instead of focusing on whether the estate’s section 2053(a)(3) deduction for Evelyn’s income tax liabilities “remained enforceable” for an infinite period of time, the tax court should have examined whether the estate properly calculated that deduction as of the date of Evelyn’s death. Had the tax court done so, it would have recognized that the increased deficiency at issue in this appeal was not premised on a date-of-death miscalculation. The increased deficiency was based solely on thе fact that the federal and state income taxes incurred by Evelyn in 1991 became subject to a refund as a result of a settlement between another estate and the Commissioner in 1996. Therefore, the tax court erred when it considered that settlement in calculating the total tax deficiency for Evelyn’s estate.
IV.
We REVERSE the tax court’s ruling that events occurring after death may be considered in valuing a claim against the estate deduction. We REMAND to the tax court with directions to VACATE the determination of the estate tax deficiency at issue and to recalculate any remaining unrelated deficiencies owing.
Notes
. See 26 U.S.C. § 1014; Treas. Reg. 1.1014-3(a).
. The Commissioner also determined the estate’s allowable deductions for Evelyn's 1991 *1257 federal and state individual income tax liabilities were $3,680,038.00 and $639,826.00, respectively. Evelyn’s estate did not contest either of those adjustments.
. In its entirety, section 2053(a) provides:
General rule. — For purposes of the tax imposed by section 2001, the value of the taxable estate shall be determined by deducting from the value of the gross estate such amounts — •
(1) for funeral expenses,
(2) for administration expenses,
(3) for claims against the estate, and
(4) for unpaid mortgages on, or any indebtedness in respect of, propеrty where the value of the decedent’s interest therein, undiminished by such mortgage or indebted *1258 ness, is included in the value of the gross estate,
as are allowable by the laws of the jurisdiction, whether within or without the United States, under which the estate is being administered.
26 U.S.C. § 2053(a).
. See Act of Feb. 28, 1929, ch. 363, 45 Stat. 1346.
. The Estate argues we should not even address this argument because the Commissioner did not present it to the tax court. As a general rule, we will not consider an issue that was not raised below.
See F.D.I.C. v. Noel,
.Following the split, two district courts in our circuit concluded they were bound by the decisions of the former Eighth Circuit.
See Thompson v. St. Louis-San Francisco Ry. Co.,
. The
Jacobs
case was argued and submitted for decision on December 20, 1928.
See
certified copy of docket sheet in
Jacobs v. Commissioner,
No. 8249 (8th Cir.), attached to appellee’s brief. We take judicial notice of this court record.
See Magnum Foods, Inc. v. Continental Cas. Co.,
. Prior to its division, the former Fifth Circuit created two panels: Unit A, which would comprise the new Fifth Circuit (Texas, Louisiana and Mississippi), and Unit B, which would become the new Eleventh Circuit (Georgia, Florida and Alabama).
See
Theodore H. Davis, Jr.,
Likelihood of Confusion Determinations: a Survey of Eleventh Circuit Jurisprudence,
2 J. Intell. Prop. L. 57, 62 n. 6 (1994). Thus, the
Stein
court refers to the Unit A panel and the Unit B panel of the former Fifth Circuit in its decision.
See
. In
Commissioner v. Strauss,
. In
Commissioner v. State Street Trust Co.,
